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  • So Close: Ch. 4 – The Start of the 1997-98 Regular Season

    So Close: Ch. 4 – The Start of the 1997-98 Regular Season

    With training camp and the preseason in the books, the Washington Capitals would enter the 1997-98 regular season with two key players missing, but with lots of optimism.

    The Season Opener

    On October 1st, 1997 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, the Washington Capitals started their 1997-98 season on the road against the Toronto Maple Leafs, but they did so without all-star forward Peter Bondra and young defender Sergei Gonchar. However, despite both players missing, the team was still enthusiastic.

    For general manager George McPhee and head coach Ron Wilson, this was the beginning of a new era for the Capitals, beginning at the historic Maple Leaf Gardens. “It’s going to be a neat atmosphere,” Wilson said. “I played there as a player, and they put on a pretty decent show. It’s very Canadian with different politicians, and a Canadian bagpipe group comes and plays ‘O Canada.’ It’s a great old building.”

    After going 6-1-2 in the preseason, the players reminded each other the exhibition games don’t count toward the standings, and the confidence they built was warranted. “Sure it doesn’t mean anything, but it makes you feel good,” captain Dale Hunter said. “We’re upbeat. Everyone really expects to get a quick start. It’s been a long time since we’ve played, and we’re ready.”

    Going into their season opener, four younger players got the opportunity to play. Jaroslav Svejkovsky, who turned 21 a few days later, filled in for Bondra on the first line with Adam Oates and Joe Juneau. Center Jan Bulis, 19, and winger Richard Zednik, 21, played on the second line with veteran Steve Konowalchuk. Finally, forward Jan Benda, 25, played with Michal Pivonka and Chris Simon on the third line. To round out the forward corps, Kelly Miller, Dale Hunter, and Craig Berube played on the fourth line.

    “I really didn’t know how good they were,” Wilson said. “They basically all deserve to be in the top two lines. This team didn’t make the playoffs last season, and it might be good to get some fresh faces and enthusiasm around here.”

    Going into the game, Wilson started veteran goalie Bill Ranford for the Capitals, but an awkward incident took place 2 minutes and 29 seconds into the game. Ranford took a Per Gustafsson shot to the groin, requiring trainer Stan Wong to come out and check on him. Ranford remained in the game, but then the fireworks went off.

    Seconds after Ranford took the shot off the groin, Toronto forward Igor Korolev took a tripping penalty, putting the Capitals on powerplay. With the man advantage, Svejkovsky scored the first goal of the season for the Capitals, taking a 1-0 lead. Defenseman Calle Johansson and Juneau provided assists on the goal 3:07 minutes into the game. Then 1 minute, 31 seconds later, defenseman Joe Reekie would score to grow the Capitals’ lead to two. However, defenseman Sylvain Cote was called for interference, and with the powerplay, Toronto’s Korolev made up for his earlier penalty by scoring to get the Maple Leafs back within one. The Capitals responded with goals from Juneau (12:22) and Zednik (18:06) to give them the commanding 4-1 lead. The Capitals got one more powerplay opportunity during the first period, but they did not capitalize on it. The Capitals also gave the Maple Leafs two more powerplay chances, but the penalty killers were up to the task.

    Going into the second period, Ranford would not be able to continue playing, so Olaf Kolzig replaced him between the pipes for the Capitals. In the final 40 minutes of play, Kolzig stopped all 19 shots he faced. Maple Leafs goaltender Felix Potvin also made 19 saves in the final two periods to keep the score at 4-1 in favor of the Capitals. Despite the win, the Capitals needed to clean up facets of their game, and one of those was staying out of the penalty box. The Capitals went 1 for 4 on powerplay, but they gave the Maple Leafs seven powerplays, and one goal while on the penalty kill.

    “As a coach, you couldn’t script it any better to come out of the first period with a 4-1 lead, but I watched the New York Yankee-Cleveland Indians game [Sept. 30th] and Cleveland lost after scoring five in the first inning,” Wilson said. “So you think sometimes that’s the worst thing that can happen. It’s so hard after going up 4-1 to keep everyone’s attention focused.”

    However, the players still had a lot of excitement after the win. “I feel like I could have scored even more tonight – a hat trick,” said Svejkovsky. “I’m nervous before every game, but this one I was more because it’s our first game and it’s important to start winning. We couldn’t have asked for more tonight.”

    “I think I proved something to [Wilson] in camp, so I think he had confidence in me,” Kolzig said. “It was good to get in there right away.”

    “I knew if I got it to Reekie, he would score,” joked forward Steve Konowalchuk. The goal would mark Reekie’s sixth career goal as a Capital in the 5 years since he had been with the team.

    Defenseman Mark Tinordi spoke with caution though. “I don’t think we played our best, but we got the goals early and held on,” Tinordi said. “We did well in the preseason, but it’s still only exhibition, so you still wonder what’s going to happen when the hitting gets harder and the shots are for real. Now we’re off for real.”

    Bondra Returns

    Heading into the season opener, Peter Bondra did something he hadn’t done in a while, watch the game from home. Still dealing with his suspension from the team while wanting to renegotiate his contract, Bondra wasn’t in Toronto with the team as he hoped. “I’ll watch the game on TV, and for sure, it’s strange,” Bondra said. “Basically, I’m just waiting for this to be resolved. If it goes on for more than [another] week or so, I may go back to Slovakia. My brother coaches a team there that I could practice with twice a day.”

    On October 2nd, 1997, Bondra had his suspension lifted, and returned to the Capitals. With the suspension lifted, Bondra could return to the lineup for the Capitals home opener against the Buffalo Sabres at US Airways Arena. “I’m not sure about playing [Oct. 3rd] because of the time off–we’ll see after the morning practice,” Bondra said. “But I want to get back and play hockey. That’s what I have always wanted. I’m looking forward to it.”

    “The parties have agreed that neither the club nor the player will comment on contract issues,” general manager George McPhee said in a statement. “Peter’s focus will be hockey, starting with practice Friday.”

    Developments around the league and in Washington softened Bondra’s position on holding out. Both Keith Tkachuk of the Phoenix Coyotes and John LeClair of the Philadelphia Flyers, were also holding out with their teams over renegotiation issues. Both the Flyers and Coyotes took similar stances as McPhee’s. Both LeClair and Tkachuk returned to their teams. Also, for Bondra, another factor was public opinion. With this being Bondra’s second holdout in 2 years, public sentiment was not on his side.

    A third factor in Bondra’s decision to return was he seemed pained with being away from the game. “It was hard to watch on TV,” Bondra said of the regular season opener. “I don’t feel like hockey’s my job; I really love it. So it’s hard for anyone who feels like that to just sit there.”

    Forward Steve Konowalchuk said there were no hard feelings from the locker room toward Bondra. “He’s obviously one of our top players, so he’s welcome on any team, any time,” Konowalchuk said. “Guys know that everyone has to do what they think is right for themselves. We know he still wants to help the team win and we know he’ll do everything he can to make that happen.”

    On October 3rd, 1997, the Capitals played to a sold out crowd at US Airways Arena, and a segment of the crowd booed Bondra as he skated on the ice during player introductions. However, those boos turned to cheers as Bondra scored a pair of goals in the first 2 minutes of the third period to guide the Capitals to a 6-2 victory over the Buffalo Sabres.

    “I feel great–when you’re excited, your feet are going to fly,” Bondra said. “It was hard [to miss playing time], especially to watch [the season opener] on TV. Even my daughter asked me, ‘Daddy, why don’t you play?’”

    Sergei Gonchar Agrees to Terms with the Capitals

    Just like with Bondra, Sergei Gonchar wasn’t with the Capitals for their season opener in Toronto, and with a deadline coming up in a few days, getting Gonchar signed was a priority. “We are still making decisions, but I’ve thought about it, and I feel very comfortable here,” Gonchar said in a telephone interview. “If I play in Germany, the money is tax free, and I get an apartment and a car and don’t have to drive a speed limit. That sounds okay to me. What the Capitals are offering now, I wouldn’t be happy, and if you’re not happy, you don’t play well.”

    On October 6th, 1997, Gonchar ended his holdout by agreeing to a one year contract with the Washington Capitals. Per his agent, Jay Grossman, the one year deal will pay a base salary $1.15 million, but the bonuses included in the contract could push it up to $1.3 or $1.4 million. “What really clinched the deal is that these were legitimate bonuses, some for things he’s already done in the past,” Grossman said. “We’re pleased with the outcome, having Sergei back in the lineup of what appears to be a team on the move.”

    Gonchar did not play for any team in Europe on or after October 1st, so he did not have to clear waivers in order to join the Capitals.

    After returning to the team, Gonchar didn’t play in his first two games back, but made his regular season debut on October 11th, 1997 when the Capitals hosted the New York Islanders. Gonchar scored a powerplay goal in the game. “When you can end the period with a goal like that, it’s always a big boost for the team,” forward Joe Juneau said. “After that point, we had control of the hockey game.”

    “I think he was a little shocked with the tempo of the game, so he struggled at times a little early,” coach Ron Wilson said. “But as the game wore on, he’s a great athlete, he made some adjustments. Seeing him jump in from the blueline, there aren’t many guys who get to the net faster.”

    October

    On October, 3rd, 1997, the Capitals placed goaltender Bill Ranford on injured reserve, and they recalled goalie Martin Brochu from the Portland Pirates. “You get hit all the time, and you feel kind of brutal for the rest of the day, but it’s not like that this time,” Ranford said. “I had a numbness in my right leg that went all the way up to my kidneys.”

    For the home opener, Olaf Kolzig was scheduled to start with Ranford as his backup then have Ranford start against the New Jersey Devils the next night, but late October 2nd, the team doctors told coach Ron Wilson that Ranford should not be on skates for a week. “I thought he was 100 percent to go, but then the doctors told me he has to rest,” Wilson said. “But this is a great chance for Olie [Kolzig] to play, and I’d be confident putting Brochu in there if we needed him.”

    In the Capitals home opener on October 3rd, 1997, they routed the Buffalo Sabres 6-2. Along with Bondra’s two goals, the Capitals got goals from forwards Craig Berube and Richard Zednik, and defensemen Calle Johansson and Phil Housley. Kolzig stopped 21 of 23 shots faced. “We’re all looser out there, and when that happens, you play better,” Berube said. “I’m just trying to play my game, bang around in front of the net. When you have a guy like Dale Hunter passing to you, you are going to score some goals.”

    On October 4th, 1997, the Capitals played host to the New Jersey Devils, and Zednik remained hot. He got his third goal in as many games, which helped propel the Capitals to a 4-1 victory over the Devils. “When he finishes like that, you have to have him on your hockey club,” coach Ron Wilson said. “We’re feeling real good about ourselves right now. This was our best game–not just getting offense but smothering the other team.” 

    Forwards Steve Konowalchuk and Hunter, and defenseman Mark Tinordi got the other goals for the Capitals while Kolzig stopped 23 of 24 shots faced, for the victory.

    On October 8th, 1997, the Capitals tied a franchise record with their defeat of the New York Islanders 6-3 at Nassau Coliseum. The Capitals started the season 4-0, and tied their franchise best, previously set by the 1991-92 club. The game featured forward Adam Oates recording a hat trick and two assists for a five point game. Forwards Yogi Svejkovsky, Berube, and Bondra recorded the other three goals for the Capitals in the victory. 

    “Sure, there was a little [payback],” Kolzig said, noting that during the 1996-97 season the Islanders owned them, including three shutout losses. “They embarrassed us last year. They owned us.”

    With Ranford on the shelf, Olaf Kolzig, who was viewed as the backup, built a foundation for himself with the past 3 2/3 games. “For me, it’s good to get in there now because I don’t play as much the rest of the season,” Kolzig said. “I feel like I proved something to the coach, that if he needs me, he can count on me.”

    Kolzig’s 1.64 goals-against-average, .938 save percentage, and 3-0 record proved what his teammates knew about him all along. “Olie’s more than a backup to us,” forward Steve Konowalchuk said. “He’s had some unfortunate breaks over the years, but I think this season it’s going to come through that he could be a number one a lot of places.”

    On October 9th, 1997, goalie Bill Ranford found himself back between the pipes for the Capitals in Buffalo for another matchup with the Sabres. Despite a first period goal from Tinordi and a third period tally from Johansson, the Capitals faltered in the second and third periods, giving up five goals in a 5-2 loss to the Sabres. “I was obviously not as sharp as I’d like, so it was pretty disappointing,” Ranford said. “Everything that could have gone wrong did.”

    On October 11th, 1997, the Capitals bounced back against the Islanders with a 3-1 victory. Along with Gonchar’s tally, forward Jan Bulis netted his first career NHL goal, and Svejkovsky also scored for the Capitals. Kolzig turned aside 17 of 18 shots faced. “We came into [the Islanders game] having to bounce back from a really bad game in Buffalo,” Kolzig said. “We had a slow start, but we really put it together the rest of the game.”

    On October 15th, 1997, the Capitals hit the road, starting with a visit to Chicago to take on the Blackhawks. However, before the game, coach Ron Wilson was eager for rookie forwards Yogi Svejkovsky, Jan Bulis, Jan Benda, and Richard Zednik to experience the singing of the national anthem at United Center. The traditional opening, including constant clapping from fans and an opera singer, “is one of the greatest things,” Wilson said. “I love this building. We’ve got guys here who have never heard it, and it should pump them up.”

    In the game, Kolzig stopped all 30 shots faced to earn his first shutout of the season to lead the Capitals to the 2-0 victory over the Blackhawks. Both goals came in the third period as forward Chris Simon netted his first of the season followed by an empty netter by Johansson. 

    “Tonight was a game where whomever let in the first goal was going to lose,” Kolzig said. “It was good because the last five or six games I’ve had so much offensive support, I haven’t been put in this situation where one goal could determine the game. So I felt real confident and real strong that I made the saves that I had to.”

    “It was an ugly kind of game without much flow,” Wilson said. “We were just happy to get into the third period tied. Then [Peter] Bondra made a great play, and we pretty much rode the horse in the last 10 minutes of the third period.”

    Going into the October 18th game, Wilson wanted the Capitals to return to their forechecking style going into their game against the Montreal Canadiens at Molson Centre. “Our forecheck has tailed off,” Wilson said. “Our goals are going down and so are our chances and shots because we’re not creating any turnovers. They’re sort of reverting back to last year’s style of play a little bit. They’re waiting to create chances off the rush, which generally aren’t there in the NHL.”

    18 Oct 1997: Joe Juneau #90 of the Washington Capitals in action during a game against the Montreal Canadiens at the Molson Center in Montreal, Canada. The Capitals defeated the Canadiens 3-2. Mandatory Credit: Robert Laberge /Allsport

    The Capitals rallied to defeat the Canadiens 3-2 when forward Kelly Miller scored a late shorthanded goal to push the Capitals to victory. “It’s been a rough start for me, so it was just nice to get back in there and help the team win, and I did help the team out tonight in a big way,” Miller said. “It’s satisfying.”

    Forwards Chris Simon and Jan Bulis scored for the Capitals while defenseman Dave Manson and forward Saku Koivu struck for the Canadiens. The win improved the Capitals record to 7-1.

    On October 22nd, 1997, the Capitals went to McNichols Arena to take on the Colorado Avalanche. The Capitals started strong with forward Peter Bondra scoring on the powerplay in the first period for the 1-0 lead. In the second period, forwards Michal Pivonka and Adam Oates scored for the Capitals, but an Adam Foote goal allowed the Capitals to enter the third period with the two goal lead. Then the Capitals collapsed as the Avalanche got goals from forwards Valeri Kamensky, Joe Sakic, and Wade Belak to defeat the Capitals 4-3. 

    “They came at us a lot harder in the third period, and we exposed the puck in the middle of the ice,” Wilson said. “And once the cat was out of the bag, we couldn’t respond.”

    “We blew it, that’s all there is to it,” defenseman Brendan Witt said. “We can’t lose these games. We let up, we got a little cocky and it bit us in the foot.”

    On October 23rd, the Capitals turned their focus to their former head coach Jim Schoenfeld and his new team, the Phoenix Coyotes. “As a player, you always want to win against your old teammates after you’ve been traded; it’s a matter of pride,” defenseman Phil Housley said. “In this case, I know a lot of guys want to play well because it’s Schoney…give a little something extra.”

    The Capitals lost both Svejkovsky and Pivonka to injuries, but tied the Coyotes 3-3, with the Capitals blowing another third period lead. “[At the start of the third period] we fell completely asleep,” Wilson said. “We should have learned from our mistakes [against Colorado] but we fell asleep. And then every time we wanted to get going, we had a penalty.”

    For the Capitals, the loss of Svejkovsky and Pivonka added to the number of forwards the Capitals had out due to injury. They joined Craig Berube (hip flexor), Andrei Nikolishin (knee), and Pat Peake (illness). The Capitals recalled forward Ryan Mulhern from the Portland Pirates so general manager George McPhee could see what Mulhern could do. 

    “It’s an opportunity to find out what we have,” McPhee said. “He’s kind of feisty, he’s scored a lot and he shoots the puck well. He’s come a long way in a hurry. The other reason is that when guys play well, you want to reward them.”

    On October 25th, 1997, the Capitals visited the St. Louis Blues, ending the road trip on a low point. The Blues dominated the Capitals with a 5-2 victory, and the Capitals lost forward Chris Simon to a shoulder injury. “We made a lot of mental mistakes and got caught out of position,” Wilson said. “In the first half especially, we didn’t respect how hard the Blues were going to work. Things started to break down, we didn’t trust each other and we sort of imploded as the game went on.”

    With the injuries piling up, the Capitals recalled forwards Todd Krygier and Andrew Brunette. “Our goal scorers are out–that’s a heavy portion of our offense,” Wilson said. “So we have to make sure the guys we are putting in can score. Todd Krygier is a very good skater, and Andrew Brunette showed in training camp that he’s [a good scorer] around the net. We’re going to need help on our powerplay, and Krygier can forecheck and generate things with his speed.”

    The Capitals also sent forward Jan Benda to Portland. “It’s important that he gets more ice time and the opportunity to score some goals,” McPhee said. “He seems to be lacking some confidence, and that’s the surest way to get a guy going.”

    On October 29th, 1997, at home, the Capitals continued to struggle. They lost two more players to injury as defenseman Sergei Gonchar strained his back, and forward Joe Juneau strained his groin. The Capitals also continued to falter, losing to the Dallas Stars 4-3. “We’re allowing teams to get second and third shots,” defenseman Joe Reekie said. “We have to concentrate a little harder in the defensive zone. We can’t start worrying about scoring until we get out of our zone.”

    “It’s not our young players, it’s the veterans that let [goalie] Olie [Kolzig] down,” Wilson said. “I obviously see what we have to work on in practice–defensive zone coverage. We’re not getting the job done in our own end. All you can ask a goalie to do is watch the first shot.”

    “We have to be stronger in front of our own net,” center Dale Hunter said. “Olie played great, but we didn’t clear the rebounds in front of him. They changed the momentum and we made mistakes. If you keep playing that way, eventually it’s going to go in.”

    To end October, the Capitals hosted the Philadelphia Flyers for a Halloween matchup. After going down two goals, the Capitals mounted a comeback with goals from forward Steve Konowalchuk and defenseman Calle Johansson to tie the game at two. In the third period, both Kolzig and the Flyers goalie Ron Hextall took over, stopping all 15 and 14 shots faced respectively, ending the game in a 2-2 tie. 

    “That’s where the goaltenders comes up big, and he did and I did,” Kolzig said. “I thought it was a great hockey game to watch. I love this. This is what I’ve been waiting for for the last 3 or 4 years.”

    However, the Capitals lost defenseman Mark Tinordi to a sprained knee injury late in the second period to add to the Capitals injury woes. “It seems like we’re dropping like flies, but we have to keep our heads up and concentrate on playing like we did [against Philadelphia],” defenseman Brendan Witt said. “The last couple of games, we got the lead and then let them back in it. We didn’t do that, especially after they scored that shorthanded goal in the second period.”

    The Capitals ended October with a 7-4-2 (W-L-T) record.

    November

    The Capitals entered November looking to get back to their winning ways, but on November 1st, they fell to the New Jersey Devils 3-1. “We had a couple of breakdowns, and a team like that takes advantage,” coach Ron Wilson said. “We’re a little thin in terms of finishing plays up front, so we have to work a little harder to create opportunities. But when you have chances and you don’t shoot, that’s not good enough. We have to put more shots toward the net.”

    Goalie Bill Ranford made his return from a back injury. “There were some good saves but definitely some ugly ones,” Ranford said of his performance. “I was happy with the way it went, but we didn’t win tonight and that’s a disappointment.”

    “They were missing some guys and they looked a little tired in the last two periods,” Devils goaltender Martin Brodeur said. “They had some chances at the end, but they are struggling right now.”

    On November 4th, 1997, the Capitals played host to the Vancouver Canucks for a matchup that would carry meaning for general manager George McPhee. However, in an ironic twist of fate, McPhee wasn’t in town for the game. Instead, he was in Dallas, TX for the NHL’s general managers meetings. “I’m sort of glad I’m not there; it’d be one of those really emotional games,” McPhee said. “I don’t think I’m even going to watch it. I just want people to tell me that we won when it’s over.”

    And win they did. The Capitals ended their six game winless streak with a 2-1 victory over the Canucks. After the Capitals gave up the first goal to the Canucks, forward Peter Bondra and defenseman Calle Johansson scored, securing the win. “I’m just happy we won the game,” defenseman Phil Housley said. “We’ve been in a little rut, as Vancouver has, and we’re just happy to get things rolling again and start somewhere.”

    “I’m glad we got the two points, but there were a lot of parts of our game I wasn’t happy with,” Wilson said. “We had a lack of commitment in our end. On their goal, we didn’t backcheck. And in the last few minutes, the goalie shouldn’t have to make a stop on three or four point-blank shots while we’ve got people standing outside the blueline.”

    However, Wilson praised goaltender Olaf Kolzig for his performance against the Canucks. “Olie hasn’t met a bump in the road and I’m happy for him,” Wilson said. “Bill Ranford is healthy now, and because they’re going to alternate for a while, this is sort of a little test for Olie to see if he stays sharp and to see how it affects his game emotionally and mentally. He was outstanding.”

    On November 6th, 1997, the Capitals shipped up to Boston for a match with the Bruins for the first time since their blockbuster trade back in March. For forward Adam Oates and goalie Bill Ranford, this was a game they circled on the schedule, and so did former Capitals goalie Jim Carey. However, Carey didn’t get the start for the Bruins, which went to Byron Dafoe, another former Capitals goaltender. When asked about playing Dafoe over Carey, Bruins coach Pat Burns said: “I don’t care if he [Carey] did or not… Jim’s had some hard times and struggled at home. It’s not the end of the world. He’ll be back, he’ll play better, but I have to win hockey games and Byron is playing well.”

    The Capitals fell to the Bruins 2-0 at the FleetCenter. “They raised the level of their game and we just didn’t show enough character to battle,” Wilson said. “That’s four or five times now on the road when our forwards don’t get any shots in the third period. I mean, literally get to the net or even make the effort to get there. We literally throw our hands up and surrender. It’s frustrating to watch.”

    When asked about the injuries plaguing the Capitals, Wilson said it had little to do with the loss. “We can’t say it’s because we don’t have some players in the lineup–the top players have to show up and make an effort to do something,” Wilson said while noting more players were expected to return for the next game. “I guess now you take people out of the lineup. If you don’t want to play hard on the road, don’t play. We get some healthy people back this weekend, and we’ll get some people out of there who don’t want to compete. You have to compete at home and on the road. It’s 82 games, and we can’t just play hard at home, you have to try on the road as well.”

    “I don’t want to get in a situation when my response is a negative one,” Wilson continued. “So if I keep seeing the same things from certain people, they won’t play. It doesn’t matter who they are, they just won’t play. Yelling and screaming doesn’t do anything; it’s ice time that corrects things.”

    Defenseman Mark Tinordi addressed Wilson’s concerns with his teammates. “[I] told the guys I think we need better practices to get our heads ready for games. In practices we’ve been doing some lazy stuff, missing passes and cheating a little. It doesn’t seem like a big deal, but it’s creeping into our games, and we have to stop that.”

    “I think that’s a very good thing; if I was a coach, that’s the same way I would be,” forward Chris Simon said. “If you give a guy a hard time, it can go in one ear and out the other. We’re all grown men, so yelling sometimes doesn’t help. The most effective thing is to take away ice time. If you’re doing something wrong, and you’re told once or twice, and after that you don’t listen, you shouldn’t be out there, because you don’t care or you’re not smart enough.”

    On November 8th, the Capitals hosted the Edmonton Oilers in what would be an encouraging win, but it was marred by comments Simon made toward Oilers forward Mike Grier after the final buzzer. 

    The game was momentous for a variety of reasons, but especially for forward Pat Peake who made his season debut after missing time due to illness and then needing additional time to recondition his heel, which he shattered in the 1996 playoffs. “The way I look at it, it’s been two years,” Peake said. “It’s been a tough road, but the coaches and George [McPhee] have been very, very supportive. They’ve done a lot for me.”

    On November 9th, and with Simon suspended, the Capitals traveled to Florida to take on the Panthers. In what would be a tightly contested matchup, mistakes late in the third period allowed the Panthers to score two goals giving them a 3-2 victory over the Capitals. “Just missed my man coverage there, and that’s the game,” forward Craig Berube said. “The guys played a hard-fought game, and it was a shame to lose it. We can’t make mistakes like that, though, bottom line.”

    “I don’t think we were tired, we just made a couple of mistakes in our own end,” Wilson said. “That’s not from being tired, it’s not paying attention when you get out there, not sensing a situation.”

    On November 12th, the Capitals offense burst onto the scene in Pittsburgh, defeating the Penguins, 4-1. After a scoreless first period Peter Bondra, Ken Klee, Adam Oates, and Phil Housley scored, propelling the Capitals to victory. The offense re-emerged under strange conditions with six forwards out due to injury and Simon suspended, putting Housley and Klee in the lineup as forwards. 

    “You never know when they’re going to go in,” said forward Steve Konowalchuk, who had a potential third period goal waived after video review. “Sometimes you can have your full lineup in there and you don’t score at all. Sometimes you don’t have the guys and they go in anyways. Tonight was just a fun game. We got up a couple and really relaxed, and it paid off.”

    For Housley, who normally plays defense, it wasn’t the first time he played forward for the Capitals, but it was the first time this season. “Sometimes it’s a relief to play forward because if you make a mistake, you’re not the last guy back there, so you can try things you normally don’t try on defense,” Housley said.

    On November 13th, the Capitals traveled to Buffalo to battle the struggling Sabres, and picked up the 3-2 victory when Peter Bondra scored his tenth goal of the season in the third period. Goaltender Olaf Kolzig earned his tenth win of the season in his 16th game played. “We talked about establishing a winning streak,” coach Ron Wilson said. “Sometimes you stumble toward a losing streak, it’s the same way you get out going toward winning. You don’t have a bad spell and then win six games in a row. Usually you sputter a bit, you have a couple setbacks, and then you get going, and I think we’re about ready to get up and going again.”

    On November 15th, the Capitals ended their road trip with a matchup against the Montreal Canadiens. Forwards Chris Simon and Joe Juneau returned from suspension and injury respectively for the Capitals. Plus, Peter Bondra scored his second straight third period game-winning goal to give the Capitals the 3-2 victory, and snap the Canadiens seven-game winning streak. 

    “We kept it simple and we had a good game,” said Bondra, who had two goals in the game. “I’ve been playing better defensively and have been more aggressive, and I’ve gotten some good plays from my teammates.”

    A quarter way through the season the Capitals compiled a record of 12 wins, 7 losses, and 2 ties with 26 points for fourth best in the Eastern Conference.

    On November 18th, goalie Bill Ranford made his first start at home for the Washington Capitals as they hosted the Colorado Avalanche. Peter Bondra recorded two goals for the second straight game in a wild 6-6 tie. “This looked like two teams that have been on the road for two months and were playing at a neutral site,” Avalanche forward Claude Lemieux, who had three goals and two assists for five points, said. “That’s what’s going to happen when you play as much as we do, but you just have to hang in there.”

    “Their team is very good, they have a lot of skill, but we scored six goals, too,” Bondra said. “We had a chance to win the game, they had a chance to win–it was like a roller coaster.”

    The Capitals claimed forward Jeff Toms off of waivers on November 19th, from the Tampa Bay Lightning. The Lightning was trying to send the 6-foot-5, 200 pound winger to the minors.

    On November 22nd, the Capital’s four game undefeated streak snapped in a 5-2 loss to the San Jose Sharks at home. “We actually played pretty hard toward the end of the third period; if we had played that way the rest of the game, it would have been a different story,” forward Chris Simon said. “They out-worked us and did the little things well.”

    “We recognized what was going on–they’ve played one game in the last week,” Sharks coach Darryl Sutter said. “We thought they may be a little flat defensively. But with their skill, they’d also be hitting on all cylinders the other way and they had a lot of chances in the first period. [Goaltender Kelly Hrudey] made some big saves for us.”

    The Capitals faced off with the Florida Panthers on November 23rd, and got back into the win column with a 5-2 victory. Bondra had another two-goal game, and goalie Olaf Kolzig made 28 saves on 30 shots faced for the victory. “It’s a funny game,” forward Adam Oates said. “Two weeks ago, I thought we outplayed them and we lost, and tonight in the second period they outplayed us and we scored two goals and that made the difference. But overall, in the last 10 games we’ve been pretty solid.”

    “For the first period, we dominated for 15 minutes, and all we could come up with was one goal,” coach Ron Wilson said. “In the second period, they completely dominated us, and we scored two goals. In the third period, we got back to doing what we did successfully in the first period. Our gunners are scoring and feeling good about themselves.”

    After giving US Airways Center its sendoff, the Capitals hit the road to close out November. On November 27th, the Capitals fell to the Ottawa Senators 3-1. The win ended the Senators 9-game winless streak. “I asked the guys what was the problem here with Ottawa last year, and they said ‘We have to forecheck them and dump the puck in, we have to be patient’,” coach Ron Wilson said. “But then we just didn’t just do the things we were supposed to do. We didn’t deserve [to win] this. I almost would have been embarrassed to get a point, because it wouldn’t have been the right message to our team. To give that effort and come up with a point wouldn’t have been the right reward. The right team got rewarded. This isn’t just about who has more skill. It’s who’s willing to get their nose dirty, and we weren’t tonight.”

    After a lackluster effort in Ottawa, Wilson sent his team a message with a long, exhausting practice. “It was supposed to wake us up; he was a little frustrated at our effort,” defenseman Phil Housley said. “I remember him saying once, before training camp, that he’d never punish us off the ice or away from the game, that it’s always going to be on the ice. Let’s just say, now I know what he means.”

    “We have guys who, if it’s not going right, they fold up after the first five minutes,” Wilson said. “This isn’t just about who has more skill. You have to work hard to win every night. The teams that do seem to handle us are the ones where we go into the game as a group without the same respect. You look and say there’s not as much talent on that team, but it’s the teams that are disciplined for 60 minutes that are the ones that give us trouble. That’s why I’m afraid to play the Bruins; that’s the way the Bruins play. I remember coaching the Mighty Ducks and our success against Washington was based on the same principles. It was work hard for 60 minutes, get in their faces and they won’t make adjustments. We’re going to have to start to adjust.”

    “If you didn’t get that message at practice, you’re not a very smart person,” forward Adam Oates said. “But I think the remedy will come [Saturday, November 29th]. There’s that statistic that we haven’t been able to come back at the end of games, and that has some merit–you can’t argue with that. We have to start picking it up. It’s our job.”

    On November 29th, goalies and best friends Olaf Kolzig and Byron Dafoe faced each other for the second year in a row. Both goalies were drafted by the Capitals in 1989, but Dafoe was traded to the Los Angeles Kings during the summer of 1995. Dafoe then landed in Boston via trade in August 1997. “It’s a little different than in L.A.,” Kolzig said. “He played well. He had no chance on Bondra’s goal. It was one of the best shots I’ve seen, and he made numerous saves to keep them [Bruins] in the game. They got a point tonight because of him.”

    “I thought we played great; we had to kill seven penalties,” coach Ron Wilson said after the Capitals tied the Bruins 1-1. “Every time we got something going, we sat in the penalty box. But in spite of what [one] might think in the third period, I think we played well the whole game. We got the point, although there were too many opportunities missed in the first two periods where we could have built ourselves a cushion.”

    The Capitals had 6 wins, 6 losses, and 2 ties for the month of November.

    With the first two months of games in the rearview mirror, we turn our attention to two incidents that took place in November 1997. Stay tuned for Chapter 5 – Ugly Incidents and Diversity Training.

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    RESOURCES

    • Alexander, Rachel. “Caps Ready to Break the Ice,” October 1, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/10/01/caps-ready-to-break-the-ice/c9e6b7e6-9a0d-4392-b9b1-0d931b7189ba/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “For Caps, A Grand Opening,” October 2, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/10/02/for-caps-a-grand-opening/43e3f8a3-732f-4471-8e3d-8035928f58d2/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Caps’ Bondra to Return From Suspension,” October 3, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/10/03/caps-bondra-to-return-from-suspension/622e1ab8-7506-4237-be8b-1d1ae979d5dd/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Capitals Notebook: Ranford Placed on Injured Reserve; Kolzig Gets Start,” October 4, 1997. https://montgomery.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/hnpwashingtonpost/historical-newspapers/capitals-notebook/docview/1458329838/sem-2?accountid=47412.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “With Two Goals, Bondra Breaks the Ice,” October 4, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/10/04/with-two-goals-bondra-breaks-the-ice/e4d0f70f-cd3e-4cf1-83f5-5741baac65f1/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Another Goal for Zednik, Another Win for Capitals,” October 5, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/10/05/another-goal-for-zednik-another-win-for-capitals/116b4e90-bfb6-4ab8-a3af-0d69cca58c06/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Caps Savor Win-Win-Win Situation,” October 6, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/10/06/caps-savor-win-win-win-situation/7c2078ea-c661-4a31-a2cb-25abe26f5bee/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Capitals Agree to Terms With Gonchar,” October 7, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/10/07/capitals-agree-to-terms-with-gonchar/7a4452fd-6ea2-45a3-9bdb-36d2c0257c3e/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “In a Grand Performance, Oates Leads Capitals, 6-3,” October 9, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/10/09/in-a-grand-performance-oates-leads-capitals-6-3/e9beb229-ef62-43be-8195-c72c83399b30/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Capitals Notebook: Back From Groin Injury, Ranford Minds the Net Again,” October 10, 1997. https://montgomery.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/hnpwashingtonpost/historical-newspapers/professional-hockey/docview/1457119263/sem-2?accountid=47412.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Undefeated No More, Caps Are Buffaloed, 5-2,” October 10, 1997. https://montgomery.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/hnpwashingtonpost/historical-newspapers/undefeated-no-more-caps-are-buffaloed-5-2/docview/1457120645/sem-2?accountid=47412.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Gonchar Returns With a Goal,” October 12, 1997. https://montgomery.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/hnpwashingtonpost/historical-newspapers/capitals-3-islanders-1/docview/1444634350/sem-2?accountid=47412.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Gonchar Is Slowly Getting Up to Speed,” October 16, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/10/16/gonchar-is-slowly-getting-up-to-speed/9daff391-28cf-4fb0-bbc2-99a9cdc0699a/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Kolzig, Caps Shut Down Winless Blackhawks, 2-0,” October 16, 1997. https://montgomery.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/hnpwashingtonpost/historical-newspapers/kolzig-caps-shut-down-winless-blackhawks-2-0/docview/1457163118/sem-2?accountid=47412.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Capitals Have More Goals in Mind,” October 18, 1997. https://montgomery.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/hnpwashingtonpost/historical-newspapers/capitals-have-more-goals-mind/docview/1458159907/sem-2?accountid=47412.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Capitals Rally Past Canadiens,” October 19, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/10/19/capitals-rally-past-canadiens/8c0d520b-6822-49f3-9004-96f90e56671d/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Capitals Collapse in Third and Lose Their Second, 4-3,” October 23, 1997. https://montgomery.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/hnpwashingtonpost/historical-newspapers/capitals-collapse-third-lose-their-second-4-3/docview/1456311775/sem-2?accountid=47412.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Date With Schoenfeld Tops the Calendar,” October 23, 1997. https://montgomery.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/hnpwashingtonpost/historical-newspapers/capitals-notebook/docview/1456308795/sem-2?accountid=47412.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Caps Give Schoenfeld A Tie, 3-3,” October 24, 1997. https://montgomery.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/hnpwashingtonpost/historical-newspapers/caps-give-schoenfeld-tie-3/docview/1457221755/sem-2?accountid=47412.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Capitals Recall Mulhern; Injuries Mount on Road,” October 25, 1997. https://montgomery.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/hnpwashingtonpost/historical-newspapers/professional-hockey/docview/1457209829/sem-2?accountid=47412.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Simon Is Hurt as Winless Streak Extends to 3,” October 26, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/10/26/simon-is-hurt-as-winless-streak-extends-to-3/e5cf909a-41c4-4f2e-9a0f-aab3d1063b8d/?itid=sr_1_10307cd8-f4aa-421c-907d-51d1cd24095a.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Back Home, Caps Go Forward,” October 28, 1997. https://montgomery.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/hnpwashingtonpost/historical-newspapers/back-home-caps-go-forward/docview/1458161584/sem-2?accountid=47412.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Caps Lose More Players, Another Lead, to Dallas, 4-3,” October 30, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/10/30/caps-lose-more-players-another-lead-to-dallas-4-3/f43586c2-e8e2-4ce6-b19a-91506ff35847/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Caps Get It Half Right, 2-2,” November 1, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/11/01/caps-get-it-half-right-2-2/e275f701-3042-4d01-896c-693406c4d96f/?itid=sr_1_c08954d7-3f5f-4b17-9aeb-98598a5851d5.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Caps Continue Winless Ways By Losing to the Devils, 3-1,” November 2, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/11/02/caps-continue-winless-ways-by-losing-to-the-devils-3-1/5c02a577-ee64-4570-a6ae-955f1b1e3bd9/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “With Old Team in Town, Caps’ McPhee Won’t Be,” November 4, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/11/04/with-old-team-in-town-caps-mcphee-wont-be/0cb0733b-3b12-4688-8c0c-023a28639c7b/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Capitals Break a Long Skid, 2-1,” November 5, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/11/05/capitals-break-a-long-skid-2-1/a587c0f8-ea1d-4853-9fb6-bf010815851e/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Carey Not on Thin Ice, But He Is on the Bench,” November 6, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/11/06/carey-not-on-thin-ice-but-he-is-on-the-bench/23813f9c-358c-4a4b-bfd8-8b6ad7342020/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Trade Wind Blows Way Of Bruins,” November 7, 1997. https://montgomery.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/hnpwashingtonpost/historical-newspapers/trade-wind-blows-way-bruins/docview/1457297899/sem-2?accountid=47412.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Wilson Hopes His Capitals Get the Point,” November 8, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/11/08/wilson-hopes-his-capitals-get-the-point/05574e24-e5b7-4c0e-85c1-72f5ecafd749/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Alleged Slur Mars Caps’ Win,” November 9, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/11/09/alleged-slur-mars-caps-win/ebbf5841-467f-425f-97b3-cab0b08ec1c9/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Niedermayer’s Assist Goal Sink Washington,” November 10, 1997. https://montgomery.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/hnpwashingtonpost/historical-newspapers/panthers-3-capitals-2/docview/1458333064/sem-2?accountid=47412.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Burst of Offense Propels Capitals, 4-1,” November 13, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/11/13/burst-of-offense-propels-capitals-4-1/3f297399-6a03-481d-a8bb-8c49ef4218e2/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Capitals Hold off Sabres, 3-2,” November 14, 1997. https://montgomery.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/hnpwashingtonpost/historical-newspapers/capitals-hold-off-sabres-3-2/docview/1455985102/sem-2?accountid=47412.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “For Capitals, Three Is Lucky Number,” November 16, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/11/16/for-capitals-three-is-lucky-number/df88b599-e97a-491c-b90e-6f0e97892b55/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Capitals Able to Match Avalanche of Goals,” November 19, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/11/19/capitals-able-to-match-avalanche-of-goals/c8b6784d-4efa-46eb-9b3f-08aab11fbe95/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Hull Refutes Olympic Boycott Threat,” November 20, 1997. https://montgomery.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/hnpwashingtonpost/historical-newspapers/hull-refutes-olympic-boycott-threat/docview/1457298578/sem-2?accountid=47412.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Sharks’ Early Explosion Snaps Caps’ Streak, 5-2,” November 23, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/11/23/sharks-early-explosion-snaps-caps-streak-5-2/5f71a86c-c6bb-457b-9ef6-8869d0c53a1b/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Capitals Top Panthers, 5-2, Win Fourth Consecutive Road Game,” November 24, 1997. https://montgomery.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/hnpwashingtonpost/historical-newspapers/capitals-top-panthers-5-2-win-fourth-consecutive/docview/1458334402/sem-2?accountid=47412.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Caps Trying to Correct Breakdowns,” November 29, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/11/29/caps-trying-to-correct-breakdowns/a52a0c9f-a478-4d22-bd2c-7e49c0963921/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Goalies Kolzig, Dafoe Are Fit to Be Tied,” November 30, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/11/30/goalies-kolzig-dafoe-are-fit-to-be-tied/f8bf0d96-ead2-4357-a208-cd4742c649a2/.
  • Mike’s STH Xperience – Caps Get Leafy

    Mike’s STH Xperience – Caps Get Leafy

    Welcome to Mike’s Season Ticket Holder (STH) Xperience!

    This season is my first one as a Season Ticket holder for the Washington Capitals, and in place of doing Caps Game Recaps, I’ll be sharing my experience being a STH during the 2024-25 season. Here I’ll be sharing all of the photos that I take during pregame warmups, along with any FB/IG Reels and TikToks I create at the games.

    I will also be doing this for any other games I may go to, whether it’s in Hershey for the Bears, or at other NHL venues for games.

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    The Washington Capitals are back at home as they host the Toronto Maple Leafs before leaving for a three game road trip.

    #Caps50Facts

    The 4th overall pick of the 1979 NHL Draft by the Washington Capitals, forward Mike Gartner played 10 seasons with the Capitals and recorded 397 goals and 392 assists for 798 points in 758 games played before being traded to the Minnesota North Stars. Gartner would then end up with the Toronto Maple Leafs after being traded by the New York Rangers on March 21st, 1994. Gartner spent the next two seasons with the Leafs. #Caps50Facts

    Jersey Tracking

    Thoughts on the Game

    Well this one started with promise, and then ended with a thud. The first two periods the Caps played well, and had the 3-1 lead going into the third period. But for whatever reason, the third period was not good hockey for the Capitals.

    Though, for now I also want to focus on the officiating. It was suspect when it came to a few things. For one, the fact that the situation room in Toronto got involved, not once, but twice on goals that shouldn’t have counted, and didn’t, was very interesting. Also, the goalie interference call that waived the goal by John Carlson was suspect, because let’s be honest, what is goalie interference these days?

    But yea, this game is one the Caps need to shake off, and set their sights on a dangerous Colorado Avalanche team on Friday night.

    Photos and Reels/TikToks

    https://www.instagram.com/reel/DCVP2bkMf1J/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igsh=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==

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  • VFTG – Ep. 97: Shadow Transmission Rally Rangers

    VFTG – Ep. 97: Shadow Transmission Rally Rangers

    It’s Morphin Time!

    Audio Version:

    On today’s episode of Voices from the Grid, Brian and Sasha talk about the Power Rangers Turbo episodes “Shadow Rangers”, “Transmission Impossible”, and “Rally Ranger”.

    Opening Music:
    “Start All Over Again” by Eyeshine
    With Written Permission

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  • NHL Stars of the Week – Hellebuyck Stays Hot

    NHL Stars of the Week – Hellebuyck Stays Hot

    Today the National Hockey League announced their Three Stars of the Week for the week of November 4th through 10th.

    First Star – Connor Hellebuyck (G – WIN)

    • Hellebuyck (3-0-0, 0.33 GAA, .989 SV%, 2 SO) stopped 88 of the 89 shots he faced across three appearances – yielding his lone goal with 1:22 remaining in regulation in his final outing of the week – as the Jets (14-1-0, 28 points) extended their winning streak to six contests to become the first team in NHL history to win 14 of their first 15 games of a season. Hellebuyck was flawless in his first two starts, making 21 saves in a 3-0 victory against the Utah Hockey Club Nov. 5 and denying 35 shots (including 17 in the third period) in a 1-0 triumph versus the Colorado Avalanche Nov. 7. He then made 32 saves (including 18 in the final frame), extending his shutout streak to a franchise-record 191:47 before allowing a goal on his final shot against of the week, in a 4-1 win over the Dallas Stars Nov. 9. The 31-year-old Hellebuyck, the reigning Vezina Trophy winner, leads the League (minimum: 6 GP) with 11 victories, a 1.83 goals-against average, a .935 save percentage and three shutouts through his first 12 appearances of 2024-25. He is the ninth goaltender in NHL history to win 11 of his first 12 games of a season and the sixth to do so this century, following Jack Campbell (2020-21 w/ TOR), Carey Price (2016-17 w/ MTL), Kari Lehtonen (2011-12 w/ DAL), Martin Gerber (2007-08 w/ OTT) and Brent Johnson (2000-01 w/ STL).
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    Second Star – Nathan MacKinnon (C – COL)

    • MacKinnon paced the NHL with eight assists, nine points and a +6 rating (tied) across three contests (1-8—9) to propel the Avalanche (7-8-0, 14 points) to a pair of victories. He matched a franchise record with five helpers in a 6-3 win against the Seattle Kraken Nov. 5, becoming the second player in League history (after Wayne Gretzky: 4x) to record multiple season-opening point streaks of at least 13 games (also 2019-20: 13 GP). MacKinnon then was held off the score sheet for the first time in 2024-25 as part of a 1-0 loss to the Winnipeg Jets Nov. 7, but bounced back with 1-3—4 (his 26th career four-point performance) as Colorado snapped the Carolina Hurricanes’ eight-game winning streak with a 6-4 triumph Nov. 9. The 29-year-old MacKinnon, the reigning Hart Memorial Trophy and Ted Lindsay Award winner, leads the NHL with 22 assists and 29 points (7-22—29) – as well as 10 power-play assists (tied) and 13 power-play points (3-10—13) – through 15 total contests this season. His 22 helpers are the most by any player through their first 15 games of a campaign since 2005-06, when Peter Forsberg (25 w/ PHI) and Jason Spezza (22 w/ OTT) surpassed and equaled that total, respectively.
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    Third Star – Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen (G – BUF)

    • Luukkonen ranked second in the NHL with 86 saves (on 90 shots against), going 3-0-0 with a 1.30 goals-against average and .956 save percentage to guide the Sabres (7-7-1, 15 points) to a perfect week. He tied a season high with 37 stops (including 13 in both the first and third periods) in a 5-1 victory against the Ottawa Senators Nov. 5. Luukkonen then made 25 saves in a 6-1 win over the New York Rangers Nov. 7 and 24 stops – plus three shootout saves – in a 3-2 triumph versus the Calgary Flames Nov. 9. The 25-year-old Luukkonen, who has won three straight games for the second time this season (also Oct. 19-26), owns a 6-4-1 record, 2.64 goals-against average and .910 save percentage through 11 total appearances in 2024-25.
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    *All Graphics courtesy of the NHL, Winnipeg Jets, Colorado Avalanche, and Buffalo Sabres.

    *Player Profiles written by NHL PR Staff.

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  • Mike’s STH Xperience – Sid v. Ovi

    Mike’s STH Xperience – Sid v. Ovi

    Welcome to Mike’s Season Ticket Holder (STH) Xperience!

    This season is my first one as a Season Ticket holder for the Washington Capitals, and in place of doing Caps Game Recaps, I’ll be sharing my experience being a STH during the 2024-25 season. Here I’ll be sharing all of the photos that I take during pregame warmups, along with any FB/IG Reels and TikToks I create at the games.

    I will also be doing this for any other games I may go to, whether it’s in Hershey for the Bears, or at other NHL venues for games.

    The Official Men’s Personal Care Products of TXHT.

    The rivalry is renewed as the Pittsburgh Penguins visit the Washington Capitals.

    #Caps50Facts

    Defenseman Yvon Labre would begin his NHL career with the Pittsburgh Penguins, but was selected by the Washington Capitals in the 1974 Expansion Draft. Labre would go on to score the Capitals first ever home goal, become captain in 1976, and become the first player to have their number retired when his number 7 was retired on Nov. 22nd, 1981.

    Jersey Tracking

    Thoughts on the Game

    For the first time since the home opener, the Washington Capitals have fallen at home, this time to the Pittsburgh Penguins. It was not an ideal start for the Caps as they trailed 2-0 early in the game, but Rasmus Sandin’s first of the season would get the Caps back on track.

    Then in the second period Andrew Mangiapane would strike to tie the game at two, however, the bounces and calls went the Pens way as they would defeat the Caps 4-2. The loss was inevitable for the Caps at home, and while it would have been better to have happen against another team, it’s fitting that the only other loss at home would be against a Metro Division rival.

    Overall though, I think the Caps played a good game. It just ultimately came down to bounces and calls, and they weren’t in favor of the Caps this game.

    Photos and Reels/TikToks

    https://www.instagram.com/reel/DCI6LaBBkau/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

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  • Mike’s STH Xperience – Smashing Country

    Mike’s STH Xperience – Smashing Country

    Welcome to Mike’s Season Ticket Holder (STH) Xperience!

    This season is my first one as a Season Ticket holder for the Washington Capitals, and in place of doing Caps Game Recaps, I’ll be sharing my experience being a STH during the 2024-25 season. Here I’ll be sharing all of the photos that I take during pregame warmups, along with any FB/IG Reels and TikToks I create at the games.

    I will also be doing this for any other games I may go to, whether it’s in Hershey for the Bears, or at other NHL venues for games.

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    The Washington Capitals return to action as they host the Nashville Predators.

    #Caps50Facts

    The Nashville Predators joined the NHL for the 1998-99 season, and with former Washington Capitals General Manager at the helm, selected forward Andrew Brunette from the Capitals in the Expansion Draft. On December 26th, 1998, the Capitals visited Nashville for the first time, but the Predators defeated them 3-1.

    Jersey Tracking

    Thoughts on the Game

    This was a gritty matchup for the Washington Capitals as they hosted the Nashville Predators for Country Music Night. The Predators, who are near the bottom of the Central Division, are still looking for their identity, but what they did do was take the battle to the Capitals.

    The game was physical, and at times the Predators were the bigger team, in regard to size that is, and it forced the Capitals to fight throw the Predators stingy style of play. It was a nice game that brought a little diversity to the Capitals.

    Alex Ovechkin got goal number 861. The man is on fire right now, and Dylan Strome recorded his 200th career assist on Ovechkin’s 8th of the season. The 3-2 victory also gave Ted Leonsis his 1000th victory as owner of the Washington Capitals.

    Photos and Reels/TikToks

    https://www.instagram.com/reel/DCDKBGdOspr/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igsh=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==

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  • VFTG – Ep. 96: Shift Into Turbo

    VFTG – Ep. 96: Shift Into Turbo

    It’s Morphin Time!

    Audio Version:

    On today’s episode of Voices from the Grid, Michael, Ben, Brian, and Sasha talk about the Power Rangers Turbo episodes “Shift Into Turbo” Parts 1-3.

    Opening Music:
    “Start All Over Again” by Eyeshine
    With Written Permission

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  • NHL Stars of the Week – Ovi Climbs His Way to Top Honors

    NHL Stars of the Week – Ovi Climbs His Way to Top Honors

    Today the National Hockey League announced their Three Stars of the Week for the week of October 28th through November 3rd.

    First Star – Alex Ovechkin (LW – WAS)

    • Ovechkin scored in all four of his contests, leading or co-leading the NHL in goals (5), points (9) and plus/minus (+7) to power the Capitals (8-3-0, 16 points) to a 3-1-0 week. He notched two goals, his 174th career multi-goal performance (2nd in League history), in a 5-3 triumph over the New York Rangers Oct. 29. Ovechkin then posted back-to-back 1-2—3 games, in a 6-3 victory against the Montreal Canadiens Oct. 31 and a 7-2 win versus the Columbus Blue Jackets Nov. 2. He became the fourth player in NHL history to record consecutive three-point outings at age 39 or older, joining Jean Ratelle (2x, last: Nov. 27-29, 1980: 1-5—6 w/ BOS), Tim Horton (March 5-6, 1969: 2-4—6 w/ TOR) and Gordie Howe (Oct. 27-31, 1968: 2-4—6 w/ DET). Ovechkin finished the week with one goal in a 4-2 loss to the Carolina Hurricanes Nov. 3, making him the first player to register a four-game goal streak at age 39 or older since Jaromir Jagr from March 20-25, 2013 (4-3—7 w/ DAL). Ovechkin, who ranks second on Washington with 7-7—14 through 11 appearances this season, now has 860 goals in his NHL career – 35 shy of passing Wayne Gretzky’s League record.
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    Second Star – Martin Necas (C – CAR)

    • Necas shared the League lead with 3-6—9 in three games, tallying multiple points in each contest to lift the Hurricanes (8-2-0, 16 points) to a perfect week and their sixth straight victory dating to Oct. 22. He collected 1-1—2, highlighted by an assist on Sebastian Aho’s overtime winner, in a 4-3 triumph against the Vancouver Canucks Oct. 28. Necas then registered 1-3—4, both his third career three-assist and four-point performances, in an 8-2 win versus the Boston Bruins Oct. 31. He added 1-2—3, including the tying goal and an assist on the game-winner, in a 4-2 victory over the Washington Capitals Nov. 3. The 25-year-old Necas, who has found the score sheet in each contest during Carolina’s current six-game winning streak (5-10—15), ranks ninth in the NHL with 6-12—18 through 10 total appearances this season. His 18 points are tied with Eric Staal (9-9—18 in 2005-06) for the most by a Hurricanes/Whalers player through the team’s first 10 games of a campaign.
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    Third Star – Sidney Crosby (C – PIT)

    • Crosby factored on seven of the Penguins’ eight total goals (all except an empty-netter in their final contest), totaling 4-3—7 and two game-winning goals in three appearances to lead Pittsburgh (5-7-1, 11 points) to a pair of victories. He posted three helpers, his 64th career three-assist game (t-6th in NHL history) and 180th career three-point performance (7th in NHL history), in a 5-3 loss to the Minnesota Wild Oct. 29. Crosby then scored twice in each of his next two outings, highlighted by his 22nd career overtime goal (2nd in NHL history) in a 2-1 triumph over the Anaheim Ducks Oct. 31 and 93rd career game-winning goal (t-14th in NHL history) in a 3-1 victory against the Montreal Canadiens Nov. 2. The 37-year-old Crosby, who leads the Penguins with 5-9—14 in 13 total contests this season, will face Ovechkin for the 70th time in the regular season and 95th time overall when Pittsburgh visits Washington this Friday, Nov. 8 (7:30 p.m. ET, ESPN+, Hulu, SN, TVAS).
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    *All Graphics courtesy of the NHL, Washington Capitals, Carolina Hurricanes, and Pittsburgh Penguins.

    *Player Profiles written by NHL PR Staff.

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  • So Close: Ch. 3 – Training Camp

    So Close: Ch. 3 – Training Camp

    With a new general manager and coach in place, and with a key player re-signed to a new deal, the Washington Capitals went into training camp ready for a fresh start going into the 1997-98 season.

    Coming Back to a New Regime

    On September 9th, 1997 training camp for the Washington Capitals began, but like the typical first day of training camp, the players spent their time filling out forms and undergoing physical exams. Once those were all done, the players were excited to get back on the ice. For many it was a fresh start, for others an opportunity to prove they could be full timers on the Capitals.

    “That’s the best part about the whole thing,” new Capitals coach Ron Wilson joked from his new office at Piney Orchard in Odenton, MD. “If I put hoops of fire out on the ice and told everyone to jump through the flames, they’d go. Changes like this seem to get everyone on their toes.”

    “I would say the players understand this is a new regime, that they have to give us their best,” new general manager George McPhee said. “We don’t want them to leave it all in training camp, but the young guys realize there are jobs to be had.”

    After having a disappointing season that saw the team go 32-40-9 and miss the playoffs, most players seemed eager to make a fresh start. “We’re anxious to get going because of last year, but we really do feel good about what we can do this year,” defenseman Joe Reekie said. “Joe [Juneau] and Adam [Oates] have been skating real fast, real smooth and handling the puck well, so it makes you feel pretty good about your chances.”

    Wilson already looked to revamp the offense, and young players such as left wingers, Jaroslav Svejkovsky and Alexandre Volchkov, who spent most of the last season in the American Hockey League and juniors, respectively, would have a chance to make the regular roster. Defense, however, was harder to crack. Defensemen Sergei Gonchar, Reekie, Mark Tinordi, Calle Johansson, Sylvain Cote, and Phil Housley, seemed entrenched in the lineup. Ken Klee impressed his teammates last season with his dogged play, and Brendan Witt, who spent most of the last season with the Portland Pirates, expected to play full time in the upcoming season for the Capitals. Between the pipes, goaltenders, Bill Ranford and Olaf Kolzig, came into training camp as the starter and backup, respectively.

    “I’m going into this with an open mind, with no real preconceived notions about anyone,” Wilson said. “This is going to be about them learning to trust one another and learning to trust the coaching staff. We’re going to keep it simple.”

    Coming out of the first day of training camp, there was a sense of excitement about Wilson’s new system. “In the past, a lot of guys were really not allowed to do their thing,” forward Joe Juneau said, referring to former coach Jim Schoenfeld’s more conservative, defensive-oriented system. “We played games on our heels instead of going at them right away, but this should be a lot more fun for the fans and players.”

    Juneau continued, “[We] won’t just be making sure [other teams] don’t score against us, we’ll be trying to score more than the other team. You can’t go in the game worrying about the other team. They should be worrying about us. We have a lot of depth at every position. We had a good team [last season.] We had the cards, they were just not okayed the right way.”

    Another thing the players liked was the change to the team’s off-ice regimen. The change by Wilson was, in part, to help the players combat the exhaustion he believed contributed to a team-record 369 man-games lost to injury last season.

    “Strength training will now be on individual programs, not in a group,” Wilson said. “I’m going to try to avoid using post-practice work as a form of punishment or conditioning. I believe in a day off a week to rest.” Wilson’s intention was for the players to practice and scrimmage, and nothing else.

    Learning the New System

    After getting the players on the ice for the first time for training camp, Wilson was happy to see the enthusiasm. “Everyone was paying attention, especially in practice,” he said. “Being the first day, some guys get a little nervous, but we’ll give them a few days to settle in.”

    One player Wilson took notice of was forward Chris Simon. Simon had spent the summer rehabilitating his lower back and improving his conditioning. After being acquired from the Colorado Avalanche in November of 1996, Simon missed 26 games with injuries and was hampered in several others. He also missed training camp last season, as he had extensive, and eventually-failed, contract negotiations with Colorado.

    “I think last year was very disappointing for myself, in that a team made a trade for me and paid me what I was asking and then I was injured all year,” Simon said. “I did commit myself this year, finally. Usually I dread coming to camp because I’m not in shape, but this year, I feel great.”

    As training camp progressed, Wilson looked to get the defense more active in the team’s offense. “We want to get our defensemen involved in the offense, and that’s one of my goals in the first week to set that seed in their head,” Wilson said. “Of all people, Joe Reekie scored a goal [during the scrimmage]. That’s a scary thought right there. We’ll worry about defending a little later as camp goes on; right now I want to get their feet moving and involved in the offense.”

    One player Wilson wanted to excel under his system was defenseman Brendan Witt. Witt was criticized by the former regime for abandoning his defensive role to get involved in the offense, but a 30-game stint in the minors and the new attitude in Washington, gave him the right skills for the right time. “With a new coaching staff, it’s a different philosophy and we can start with a clean slate,” Witt said. “I’m feeling more comfortable jumping in the play, realizing where everyone is. Last year, it seemed you get so scared to make the mistake. This year it’s more positive and try to make plays. We’re not going to be playing run-and-gun hockey, but he wants the defense to be an option, a threat.”

    “This is going to be a breakthrough season for Brendan,” Wilson said. “He was involved in the offense, got some hits and was involved in a fight. He looks like he’s a real team-type person; I like that. The enthusiasm he brings is going to be very important to our team.”

    Heading into training camp, the players heard that McPhee and Wilson wanted to make the offense more creative and lighten the team’s rigorous conditioning program. However, theory and practice were two different things, and after a few days of training camp, the players have a better idea. “Practice was really high-tempo, and the drills were a lot different,” forward Kelly Miller said. “There’s more flow, more skating and more catching passes at full speed. It’s really very interesting.”

    “You noticed it from the first practice,” defenseman Calle Johansson said. “Everybody’s been saying it. Before, it was skate up the ice, take a slap shot, stop. Now you have to think a little bit, pass the puck and really just use your brain a little bit, more than in the past.” For Johansson, this was the first time he saw this style of practice in Washington, but it was familiar to him from when he was growing up in Sweden.

    In fact, Wilson played in Europe for 6 years, and he applied some of those lessons he learned to how he coached. “The way practice is structured I picked up from a couple of Swedish coaches that I enjoyed playing for,” Wilson said. “I enjoyed the practices, the tempo, and I felt I was in the best shape of my life. My practices aren’t static, where you stand and watch and move in straight lines. There’s a lot of circling, and you’re not stopping and starting everywhere.”

    Another thing Wilson tried to help the players, was he posted explanations for all of the drills on the locker room bulletin board, so the players could familiarize themselves with their tasks before they stepped on the ice. Wilson also focused on the Capitals forecheck, as both McPhee and he agreed it needed vast improvement. “I don’t think they’re aggressive enough,” Wilson said. “There’s a lot of standing around. You have to be moving when you’re attacking and when you’re try [sic] to forecheck as well. I want to get people moving and start looking for holes and be ready to jump into them. The whole point of practice is to get guys to jump into open spaces.”

    One player critical to how the team forechecked was Adam Oates. When coming to Washington in March via trade, Oates was critical of the Capitals’ relatively stagnant forecheck, but he noticed the differences under Wilson. “I found out when I came here they didn’t have a forecheck at all,” Oates said. “I’ve seen it a few times with [Peter Bondra], where he plays the defensive spot. I get on him, I say ‘you can’t do that,’ and he says, ‘I’m so used to being defensive-minded.’ Obviously we don’t want to give up defense, but here’s a guy scoring 45 goals who could probably score another 10. There will be times when we’re at their end and he’ll be backing up because that’s what he’s been told to do for so long. I’m not a guy who ever wants to be backing up if I don’t have to.”

    First Test of the Preseason

    On September 14th, 1997, the Capitals played in their first preseason game in Albany, NY to face off with the New Jersey Devils. The game would show a Capitals team trying to make the transition from a grinding defensive system to a more creative offensive system. Unfortunately for the Capitals, they were a team trapped somewhere in the middle.

    The Capitals looked confused at times, and toward the end of the game, they looked tired as they lost to the Devils, 4-1. The game also saw the Capitals get outshot by the Devils, 41-16. However, head coach Ron Wilson was more concerned with player evaluation than with the final result of the game. “We had quite a few young defensemen we gave an opportunity to, and we are trying to change the way we play a little bit,” Wilson said. “It’s a learning process and it identifies some things we need to work on in practice: forechecking, faceoffs, faceoff coverage, and of course some work in the defensive zone.”

    On September 17th, 1997, the Capitals began a road trip involving four games in 4 days; a schedule Wilson would not have chosen. “It’s good to get games, but it’s not good the way we are doing it,” Wilson said. “Traveling all over the place, we are going to be tired and we don’t have much quality practice time.” This was the team’s first set of four games in 4 days too, with the Capitals ending preseason with another stretch of four games in 4 days.

    “I can’t play guys three nights in a row, so we go into the last four exhibition games with six lines out of necessity,” Wilson said regarding his decision to keep enough players on hand to carry the load. “We’ve got to get down to more workable numbers, but the four and four really handcuffs us.”

    On September 23rd, 1997, forward Peter Bondra had been suspended, so Wilson turned to Jaroslav Svejkovsky, 20, to skate in Bondra’s place in their preseason game against the Philadelphia Flyers. “He’s been excellent,” Wilson said. “I think he’s ready to step up to another level in terms of scoring goals. We want to play him on one of our top two lines.”

    Svejkovsky, who played 19 games with the Capitals the previous season, said he felt better at this training camp than at the previous year’s. “Being in Portland really helped me a lot,” Svejkovsky, whose nickname was “Yogi,” after the cartoon bear, said. “The hardest for me was the defense, and I think I’ve improved there. I feel comfortable out on the ice.”

    After losing their first preseason game and the suspension of star winger Peter Bondra over a contract dispute, the Capitals would go undefeated (6-0-2) to finish the preseason. “It’s been a very competitive training camp. It kind of gets me salivating about how good we might be. We certainly have more confidence built up,” Wilson said.

    Contract Negotiations

    Sergei Gonchar

    The Capitals welcomed 68 players to training camp, though one was absent. Defenseman Sergei Gonchar, a restricted free agent, remained in his native Russia while waiting to come to terms on a new contract. Gonchar told the press in a phone interview he planned to play with a team in Russia while his agent, Jay Grossman, and McPhee worked out a deal.

    “I’m just waiting,” Gonchar said. “I’m ready to miss all of training camp, but I’m skating here every day to keep myself in shape.”

    18 Oct 1997: Sergei Gonchar #55 of the Washington Capitals in action during a game against the Montreal Canadiens at the Molson Center in Montreal, Canada. The Capitals defeated the Canadiens 3-2. Mandatory Credit: Robert Laberge /Allsport

    On September 10th, 1997, Gonchar’s agent publicly spoke on the contract negotiations, and it was not all positive. “A trade is where I see this heading because a deal doesn’t look likely,” Grossman said. “Their offer would put him virtually as the lowest-paid defenseman on the team. We’re looking for a deal that would put him in the middle of the players he’s comparable to on the team, in the league.”

    Grossman continued, “I just don’t think we’re getting anywhere. The answer seems to be to seek a move because I don’t see any way he’s going to get the compensation he’s looking for.”

    McPhee noted Grossman had not requested a trade directly, but the comments were not surprising. “It’s what they resort to when they’re not getting their way,” McPhee said. Last season, Gonchar made $400,000, and with that contract expired, he was seeking between $1.5 million and $2 million a year. As a restricted free agent, the Capitals owned his rights, but other teams could sign him to an offer sheet. However, no teams pursued him, and if they did, the Capitals had the right to match any offer sheet or receive draft picks as compensation.

    According to the NHL Players Association, going into the 1997-98 season Mark Tinordi is the Capitals highest-paid defenseman ($2.575 million), followed by Phil Housley ($2.5 million), Sylvain Cote ($1.5 million), Brendan Witt ($1.4 million), Calle Johansson ($1.25 million), Joe Reekie ($965,000), and Ken Klee ($475,000).

    During the 1996-97 season, Gonchar did not meet expectations with 13 goals and 17 assists in 57 games played, even though he did lead Capitals defensemen in goals, and was second to Housley in points by defensemen. The former general manager David Poile called Gonchar “certainly one of the best young defensemen in the game right now.”

    “I have no idea why they are taking the position they are,” Grossman said. “I know there are a number of teams out there who would love to take him in a minute, not only for the asset he is now, but for what he can do in the future.” However, unlike Poile, who was working on a long-term contract with Gonchar before he was released from the team, McPhee focused more on what Gonchar had accomplished than his potential.

    “There’s a system in place that the older players, the longer they are in the league, the more benefits they reap,” McPhee said. “When a player is a bona fide player and an all-star, I’ll pay him that way.”

    After the Capitals played their first preseason game, Grossman spoke to the press regarding Gonchar’s contract negotiations. “Part of it’s money, but part of it is also opportunity,” Grossman said. “We have to put him into an environment where he can flourish and get chances to play a decent amount. We think Washington still has to make some choices in that regard.”

    On September 22nd, 1997, the Capitals resumed talks with Gonchar. With an October 1st deadline looming, both sides understood if Gonchar continued to play in Europe after October 1st, and a new contract were to be signed, Gonchar would need to go through waivers in order to play for the Capitals that season. However, the odds of Gonchar clearing waivers, and not being claimed by another team, was very slim. If that scenario were to play out, the Capitals would instead opt to wait until the summer of 1998 to re-sign Gonchar, thus leaving him out of the league for a year.

    Peter Bondra

    All Star right winger Peter Bondra, who had 3 more years left on his contract, but was trying to renegotiate, had been vague about whether he would report to training camp. “Peter hasn’t told me anything to indicate otherwise,” Bondra’s agent Rich Winter said. Bondra had been participating in informal skates at Piney Orchard for the past 2 weeks before training camp started. During the informal skates, Bondra emphasized he was excited about the new season, despite his contract situation.

    On September 18th, 1997, via Bondra’s public relation’s firm in a statement, Bondra left the team that afternoon after a discussion with general manager George McPhee, where he told him he would not be playing in that night’s preseason game against the Florida Panthers. Bondra wanted to remain with the team and continue practicing, but McPhee would not allow Bondra to board the team bus or plane if he did not play in the game. According to the statement, Bondra “has been locked out and refused permission by general manager George McPhee to practice with the team. Furthermore, Bondra has been advised by McPhee that he has been suspended by the team due to the fact that he will sit out preseason games while his contract is being renegotiated.”

    When asked if Bondra had been suspended by the team, McPhee said: “No. He called me this afternoon and said he was not going to play.” McPhee also said the team would make an official statement at a later time regarding the situation.

    Bondra’s contract had been in discussions for renegotiating since the 1996-97 season, when David Poile was still general manager. Bondra’s then current contract was scheduled to pay him $1.75 million for the 1997-98 season and $2 million for the following two seasons. Bondra’s agent, Rich Winter, said the reason Bondra did not want to continue to play in any preseason games until a new deal could be agreed upon was because he was “concerned about the possibility of a serious injury.” Per League sources, the Capitals offered Bondra between $3 and $3.3 million for the remainder of his contract, and they also wanted to add at least 1 more year to the deal. Per those same sources, Bondra’s camp was looking for more than $4 million per season.

    This would mark the second time Bondra held out. Fellow Capitals forward Michal Pivonka and he played seven games with the Detroit Vipers of the International Hockey League at the start of the 1995-96 season while their contracts were being negotiated.

    Coach Ron Wilson expressed disappointment over the developments. “I’m disappointed because we’re trying to create some chemistry among some players, so that process is going to be on hold for a while, but it gives me the chance to give some other players a chance for a while,” Wilson said. “No one’s going to take Peter’s job, but for some guys, it’s a chance for an upgrade, like from coach to first class.”

    On September 19th, 1997, McPhee announced he would not negotiate a new contract with Bondra until he returned to training camp and played in the team’s remaining preseason games. When telling Bondra he was suspended, McPhee informed him his stance was a violation of his current contract, and Washington was formally suspending him. “As a result of the breach, there will be no further discussion until the club has a commitment that the player will report to camp and practice and play,” McPhee said, reading a statement. “We explained that he was under contract for 3 more years and that fact could not be ignored. Furthermore, this was not fair to his teammates.”

    When reached at his Maryland home for comment, Bondra said, “They agreed to renegotiate last year, and we’ve already tried to push them” in other ways. “My bonuses are so high, it’s hard to play for the team the way it is right now. I’m not even looking for market value. We’re just trying to get a fair deal.”

    The Capitals position with Bondra also resembled what the Philadelphia Flyers were working on with forward John LeClair. LeClair, like Bondra, was also widely considered underpaid, and both had 3 years left on their deals. However, unlike Bondra, LeClair would not report to training camp when it started, and the Flyers would not continue the negotiations until LeClair returned to camp, which he did the day Bondra was suspended by the Capitals.

    Another comparable was Phoenix Coyotes forward Keith Tkachuk, who also wanted to renegotiate his contract. What the Coyotes did was different from the Capitals and Flyers. Instead of suspending Tkachuk, the Coyotes told him they would rather he practice with the team but not play because of the possibility of injury, the same stance Bondra held. “[McPhee] has some rules and I know everyone has to respect them,” Bondra said. “But I don’t want to play right now, because if I get seriously injured, we probably won’t be able to do a new deal. And that’s when you get injured, when you are trying hard not to be and your mind isn’t completely in the game. I do want to practice, and that’s why I’ve been at training camp the whole time. This is an exciting season for us and we have a new coach to learn from, too.”

    On September 22nd, 1997, Bondra’s situation remained the same as McPhee would not reach out to discuss a new deal. “We’re going nowhere,” Bondra said. “I can tell George that I will be in practice, but I can’t promise him I’d play in a game, because I’d be looking over my shoulder the whole time to be sure no one is going to slam me into the boards. It doesn’t seem like he’s even interested in picking up the phone to work out [a new contract.] I can call out a window, but I don’t think that’s going to help. I mean, look at Keith Tkachuk. Why can’t we do something like that here?”

    Contract disputes remained in the air, and the regular season was about to begin. Stay tuned for Chapter 4 – The Start of the 1997-98 Regular Season.

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    RESOURCES

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    • Alexander, Rachel. “For Caps, Time for a New Beginning,” September 9, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/09/09/for-caps-time-for-a-new-beginning/2a6ccf2a-a6d6-424b-8a56-567d843d4fe7/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Caps Are Happy Campers: However, Gonchar Remains in Russia,” September 10, 1997. https://montgomery.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/hnpwashingtonpost/historical-newspapers/caps-are-happy-campers/docview/1453720288/sem-2?accountid=47412.
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    • Alexander, Rachel. “Capitals Want the Defense Involved in Their Offense,” September 12, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/09/12/capitals-want-the-defense-involved-in-their-offense/b84894d6-af14-4c2d-a7b9-e52ddd3a695e/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Caps Praise New Practice Regimen,” September 13, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/09/13/caps-praise-new-practice-regimen/e77dd98c-36e4-4c7f-8cf6-1bdff293d4e5/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “In Opener, Not Much Of an Exhibition,” September 15, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/09/15/devils-4-capitals-1/58ab7e8a-8674-47de-88db-41efc55b15aa/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Wilson Wants Capitals To Give Their Best Shots,” September 16, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/09/16/wilson-wants-capitals-to-give-their-best-shots/ba55ac4a-6ac8-4e33-a4f5-94933ade3699/.
    • Kuhns, Will. “Capitals’ Road Show Getting an Early Start,” September 17, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/09/17/capitals-road-show-getting-an-early-start/9cdecf03-e26d-4188-9134-ee52402bd315/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “In Contract Talks, Bondra Leaves Caps,” September 19, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/09/19/in-contract-talks-bondra-leaves-caps/f9b6d04e-3996-4d7b-95a4-0623249960a5/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Bondra Told to Join Caps Before Any Negotiation,” September 20, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/09/20/bondra-told-to-join-caps-before-any-negotiation/2d42e313-f7a0-4d18-8ac5-04f8823dd5f4/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Gonchar, Capitals Resume Talks,” September 23, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/09/23/gonchar-capitals-resume-talks/13cd1fc4-01a7-429e-93db-1d360c8da39c/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “With Bondra Out, Svejkovsky Steps In,” September 24, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/09/24/with-bondra-out-svejkovsky-steps-in/b25dab70-6a04-49e3-b523-505a2bc40f75/.
    • Alexander, Rachel. “Capitals Nurture Their Young,” September 30, 1997. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1997/09/30/capitals-nurture-their-young/4334eaba-ab08-4960-981e-db587e93eb64/.
  • Mike’s STH Xperience – For Johnny Gaudreau

    Mike’s STH Xperience – For Johnny Gaudreau

    Welcome to Mike’s Season Ticket Holder (STH) Xperience!

    This season is my first one as a Season Ticket holder for the Washington Capitals, and in place of doing Caps Game Recaps, I’ll be sharing my experience being a STH during the 2024-25 season. Here I’ll be sharing all of the photos that I take during pregame warmups, along with any FB/IG Reels and TikToks I create at the games.

    I will also be doing this for any other games I may go to, whether it’s in Hershey for the Bears, or at other NHL venues for games.

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    To finish their homestand, the Washington Capitals hosted the Columbus Blue Jackets.

    #Caps50Facts

    In 21 games against the Washington Capitals, forward Johnny Gaudreau recorded four goals and 16 assists for 20 points during his time with both the Calgary Flames and Columbus Blue Jackets. Gaudreau’s last game against the Capitals was on Dec. 21st, 2023.

    Jersey Tracking

    Thoughts on the Game

    Boy was this a game. Five goals on 8 shots in the first period was one way to start a game. I feel bad for Daniil Tarasov. I understand the Blue Jackets played the night before, but he really got left out to dry by his team in the first period. The second and third periods were better for the Jackets, but it was too much to comeback from against a very on point Capitals team.

    However, I will say this. I wasn’t impressed with Hendrix Lapierre and Dylan McIlrath this game. While Lapierre would make a good play here and there, I wasn’t overly impressed with his overall game. Same with McIlrath. There were a few giveaways that he did that made me cringe a bit.

    Alex Ovechkin is now on pace for 49 goals and passing Wayne Gretzky and hitting 900 goals this season. Per our friend Ted Starkey, at the current pace Ovechkin is on, he’ll pass Gretzky on March 22nd, and hit 900 goals in the Home Finale on April 13th. So it’s definitely going to be fun to see how this continues to play out this season. I’m still rooting for 50 goals from Ovi so he takes sole possession of first place for most 50 goal seasons.

    Also, stick taps to the Capitals for having the 50/50 Raffle proceeds going to the John & Matthew Gaudreau Foundation.

    Photos and Reels/TikToks

    https://www.instagram.com/reel/DB4izOXuAab/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igsh=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==

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