Capitals Seize Early Momentum (Image Credits: Pixabay)
Las Vegas — Dylan Strome scored the tying goal late in regulation and delivered the lone shootout tally as the Washington Capitals claimed a 5-4 victory over the Vegas Golden Knights on Saturday night at T-Mobile Arena.[1][2] The contest swung wildly after Washington built a 3-0 lead only to see Vegas storm back with four straight goals. Strome’s heroics helped the Capitals secure two vital points in their push for an Eastern Conference wild-card spot.[3]
Capitals Seize Early Momentum
Hendrix Lapierre opened the scoring at 6:06 of the first period, tapping home a loose puck after Ivan Miroshnichenko won a battle along the boards.[1] The fourth-line forward drove to the net and slipped the puck past Adin Hill stick side, giving Washington a 1-0 edge. Tension mounted late in the frame when Capitals forward Aliaksei Protas collided head-first with Vegas center Nic Dowd during a puck chase; both players left the ice, though Dowd later returned.[3]
Washington extended its advantage in the second period. Justin Sourdif converted a power-play chance at 1:55, one-timing a pass from Connor McMichael from below the goal line.[1] Anthony Beauvillier followed at 6:49, redirecting a Ryan Leonard feed to the far post for a 3-0 cushion. The Capitals appeared firmly in control midway through the middle frame.
Vegas Mounts Stunning Comeback
The Golden Knights ignited their rally with back-to-back short-handed strikes. Nic Dowd, a former Capital acquired earlier in March, stripped Leonard and fired under Logan Thompson’s arm at 10:38 to cut the deficit to 3-1.[4] Rasmus Andersson struck 25 seconds later, bursting through the neutral zone past three defenders before tucking the puck inside the right post, making it 3-2.[1]
Jack Eichel leveled the score at 3-3 with 6:42 left in the second, capitalizing on an Andersson rebound for a wrist shot.[4] Vegas coach Bruce Cassidy praised the shift in energy: “We needed something positive to happen offensively. We can’t get down or sorry for ourselves if we don’t score.”[1] The period ended tied, setting up a tense third.
Third-Period Power Plays Decide Regulation
Mitch Marner put Vegas ahead 4-3 just 31 seconds into the third on a power-play one-timer from the point, screened past Thompson.[1] The Capitals refused to fold. Dylan Strome answered at 8:54 with a power-play one-timer off a Cole Hutson feed, beating Hill with four seconds left on the man advantage to forge a 4-4 deadlock.[2]
Overtime solved nothing, sending the game to a shootout. Strome deked and backhanded past Hill for the winner, his team-leading fourth shootout goal of the season. Thompson, facing his former club, denied all three Vegas attempts to earn the victory.[3]
Key Stats and Standouts
Washington went 2-for-6 on the power play, while Vegas managed 1-for-something but added two short-handed goals, their fifth of the season.[2] Thompson stopped 25 shots overall, continuing his strong run with four wins in as many starts against Vegas. Hill made 17 saves on 21 shots.
| Period | Capitals | Golden Knights |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | 1 | 0 |
| 2nd | 2 | 3 |
| 3rd | 1 | 1 |
| SO | 1 | 0 |
| Total | 5 | 4 |
- Hendrix Lapierre (1G), Justin Sourdif (1G, 1A; 9th multipoint game as rookie), Anthony Beauvillier (1G)
- Cole Hutson (2A; first career multipoint game)
- Jack Eichel (1G, 2A), Rasmus Andersson (1G, 1A), Nic Dowd (1G SHG), Mitch Marner (1G PP)
Strome reflected on the resilience: “We did a good job of regrouping. We didn’t let their power play goal to start the third get us down.”[1] The win boosted Washington to 37-28-9, closing within four points of a wild-card berth. Vegas dropped to 32-26-16, marking their third straight loss and 12th defeat in 16 games.[1]
Key Takeaways
- Strome’s two goals (one reg, one SO) proved decisive in a game full of momentum swings.
- Vegas’ short-handed outburst erased a 3-0 hole but couldn’t hold the late lead.
- Thompson’s shootout mastery against his old team sealed two crucial points for Washington’s playoff hopes.
This thriller underscored the Capitals’ grit amid adversity, from Protas’ injury to the second-period collapse. As both teams eye the stretch run, such battles could define their seasons. What do you think about Strome’s performance? Tell us in the comments.
