Knickers Jump to Early Lead (Image Credits: Pixabay)
Las Vegas – The Vegas Golden Knights mounted a stunning comeback from a three-goal deficit for the second straight game Saturday night at T-Mobile Arena, but Dylan Strome’s shootout winner delivered a 5-4 defeat to the Washington Capitals.[1][2] Jack Eichel and Rasmus Andersson fueled the rally with key contributions, yet the Knights could not secure the victory needed in their tightening Pacific Division chase. The loss marked their third straight defeat, leaving them hungry for a rebound with nine games remaining.[3]
Knickers Jump to Early Lead
Washington wasted little time asserting dominance. Hendrix Lapierre opened the scoring at 6:06 of the first period on an even-strength tally assisted by Ivan Miroshnichenko and Brandon Duhaime.[2] The Capitals peppered the net early, ringing posts from Dylan Strome and others while outshooting Vegas through the opening frame.
The second period brought more pressure. Justin Sourdif converted a power play at 1:55, with assists from Connor McMichael and Cole Hutson, pushing the lead to 2-0. Anthony Beauvillier followed at 6:49, deflecting a Ryan Leonard shot past Adin Hill for a 3-0 advantage, assisted by Leonard and Sourdif.[1] Vegas appeared stunned as former Knight Logan Thompson stood tall in net.
Special Teams Ignite Vegas Turnaround
The Golden Knights flipped the script with a ferocious second-period surge. Nic Dowd, facing his former team after a March 5 trade, ignited the comeback at 10:38 with an unassisted shorthanded goal, stripping Leonard and roofing it for 3-1.[2] Just 25 seconds later, Andersson danced past Cole Hutson, deked Thompson, and slid home his shorthanded tally at 11:03, assisted by Eichel, trimming the gap to 3-2.
Momentum shifted decisively. Eichel tied the game at 13:18, pouncing on a loose puck in front with Andersson assisting, completing a three-goal burst in 2:40.[3] The pair of shorthanded strikes marked only the second time in franchise history Vegas scored twice short-handed within 25 seconds.[3]
- Nic Dowd (10:38, SHG, unassisted) – First goal as a Knight
- Rasmus Andersson (11:03, SHG, assist: Eichel) – Dazzling individual effort
- Jack Eichel (13:18, ES, assist: Andersson) – Game-tying rebound
Third-Period Swings and Overtime Stalemate
Vegas carried the fire into the third. Mitch Marner sniped a power-play one-timer at 0:31, carryover from the second, assisted by Pavel Dorofeyev and Eichel for a 4-3 lead.[2] Three of the Knights’ four goals came on special teams, showcasing their penalty-kill prowess.
Penalties mounted, however. A double-minor high-stick on Strome, slashing by Andersson, and tripping by Marner created chaos. Strome capitalized on the power play at 8:54 (or 11:56 per some reports), fed by Hutson and Alex Ovechkin, knotting it at 4-4.[1] Overtime solved nothing, setting up the skills competition.
Strome Seals It in Shootout
The shootout unfolded tensely. Strome opened with a backhand deke for the 1-0 Caps edge. Andersson wired a wrist shot, but Thompson snagged it. Leonard’s attempt sailed wide on Hill, Eichel’s backhand found iron, Pierre-Luc Dubois missed wide, and Dorofeyev was denied. Washington’s lone tally proved decisive.[2]
| Round | Capitals Shooter | Result | Knights Shooter | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Dylan Strome | Goal | Rasmus Andersson | Saved |
| 2 | Ryan Leonard | Saved | Jack Eichel | Saved |
| 3 | Pierre-Luc Dubois | Miss | Pavel Dorofeyev | Saved |
Hill finished with 17 saves on 21 shots (.810 SV%), while Thompson denied 25 of 29 (.862) and shone in the breakaway contest.[3]
Standings Squeeze Tightens
The Knights slipped to 32-26-15, five games under.500 since the Olympic break at 5-10-2. They trail Edmonton by three points for second in the Pacific while holding a four-point cushion over Los Angeles after the Kings’ loss.[1] “We need two points. There’s no sugarcoating it,” said Andersson.[1]
Coach Bruce Cassidy urged perseverance: “We’ve got to stick with it.” Nic Dowd savored the eruption after his goal: “It just felt good to get on the board and hear the building erupt.”[1] Nine games loom, including home dates against Winnipeg and Calgary.
Key Takeaways
- Vegas scored three goals in 2:40 to erase 3-0 hole, second straight rally for a point.
- Two shorthanded goals in 25 seconds – rare franchise feat.
- Playoff pressure mounts: three points from second, four ahead of third.
The Knights showed grit but must convert points into wins down the stretch. Resilience defines champions, yet consistency remains the key. What do you think of Vegas’ latest rollercoaster – playoff bound or fading fast? Tell us in the comments.
