Saturday, November 29, 2008

Theodore blanks lifeless Habs

WASHINGTON (AP)—Jose Theodore tried to downplay the importance of his shutout against his old Montreal Canadiens teammates.

Theodore, who spent parts of 10 seasons with Montreal before being traded to Colorado in March 2006, made 28 saves for the first shutout with Washington in the Capitals’ 3-0 victory over the Canadiens on Friday night.

Theodore’s second game against Montreal was a lot better than his first. He allowed eight goals in a loss to the Canadiens on Oct. 21, 2006, with Colorado.

Alex Ovechkin, Tomas Fleischmann and David Steckel scored to help the Capitals win their seventh straight at home—the longest streak since also winning seven in a row from Nov. 17-Dec. 16, 2000. Washington is 9-0-1 at home, and is 15-0-1 since March 9.

This season didn’t start well for Theodore. He was pulled after allowing four goals in 30 minutes in the opening game in Atlanta and, after sitting in favor of Brent Johnson for four games this month, he’s back in favor.

Fleischmann opened the scoring at 11:03 of the first period. In back of his own net, Montreal’s Francis Bouillon tried to flip the puck down the ice, but Fleischmann intercepted it just in front of the net. He tapped the puck to Michael Nylander, who immediately returned it to Fleischmann, and the winger sent it past Jaroslav Halak for his ninth goal of the season. Fleischmann has five goals in his last eight games.

Ovechkin added his 13th goal of the season, and his fourth in the last two games at 3:42 in the third when he skated at Halak, who was making his first appearance in the last seven games, and shot it cleanly past him. Ovechkin has scored in 10 straight games. During those 10 games, he has 11 goals and 11 assists.

Two minutes after Ovechkin’s goal, Washington had a two-man advantage for 1:42, but couldn’t score. About 3 minutes later, Steckel scored his fourth goal of the season.

Theodore was tested in the second period, with the Capitals clinging to a 1-0 lead. Neither team scored, but the Canadiens were clearly more aggressive— outshooting Washington 13-7 and failing to capitalize on some center.

Halak played well, his coach thought, but his teammates didn’t.

“Jaro—that’s where I’m embarrassed,” Montreal coach Guy Carbonneau said. “We come up with that kind of game, and that kind of effort—and I’m really sad for him.’

Carbonneau was grudging in praise of the former Canadiens goalie.

“He was lucky at some times,” Carbonneau said. “He made the saves when he had to. We didn’t really test him.”

The victory was Washington coach Bruce Boudreau’s 50th since he took over the team on Thanksgiving Day 2007, tying him for sixth place among Capitals. He reached 50 wins in 84 games, the fastest to the mark in team history.

Notes

Montreal begins a seven-game homestand—its longest in history—on Saturday against Buffalo. The Canadiens’ next road game is Dec. 16 at Carolina. … Capitals D Tom Poti was scratched because of a groin injury. Seven Washington regulars missed the game because of injuries. To replace Poti, the Capitals recalled D Bryan Helmer from Hershey. The 36-year-old Helmer played in his first NHL game since April 2004 with Phoenix.

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