National Hockey League
Holtby's 20th straight start a good one as Capitals shut out Flyers
National Hockey League

Holtby's 20th straight start a good one as Capitals shut out Flyers

Published Jan. 14, 2015 11:17 p.m. ET

 

Don't leave it to Beaver. Leave it to Matt Niskanen, the newly proclaimed "Eddie Haskell" of the Washington Capitals.

Niskanen, the defenseman with the low-key public persona, leveled Scott Laughton with a clean, open-ice hit that sent the forward flying backward with helmet off, a defining moment late in the second period of the Capitals' 1-0 win over the Philadelphia Flyers on Wednesday night.

"He's like Eddie Haskell," Washington coach Barry Trotz said. "He's got the young face and all that, but he'll run into you, he'll give you the stick."

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Trotz then realized that some of the younger reporters would have no clue about Eddie Haskell, the teenager who would take politeness to the extreme with adults to cover up his scheming ways in the long-ago comedy "Leave It To Beaver."

"Black and white TV," Trotz added with a chuckle. "I'm showing my age now."

Laughs aside, the hit knocked Laughton out of the game. He didn't return for the third period, and neither coach Craig Berube nor Flyers general manager Ron Hextall would categorize the injury as anything other than "upper-body." They wouldn't say whether Laughton will play in Thursday night's home game against the Vancouver Canucks.

For Trotz, the knockdown came at the right time.

"It actually energized us. I thought we were sort of flat in the second, and they sort of had a little push on, and a lot of urgency," Trotz said. "I thought it changed us. It gave us some momentum."

Enough momentum to finish another shutout in Braden Holtby's iron-man run. The goalie made 21 saves in his 20th consecutive start. It was his fourth blank slate of the season, including three since he became too hot to rest.

Holtby is 14-2-4 during his starting streak, and he hasn't allowed more than one goal in his last three games. He also played in his 26th consecutive game, extending his franchise record. He has rediscovered his form under new goaltending coach Mitch Korn.

"He's very calm in the net. There's no panic. There's no extra movement," Trotz said. "He's made a transformation."

Jason Chimera's first-period goal was all the Capitals needed as they won for the 14th time in 19 games overall and for the seventh straight home game. Chimera's face was bloody after the game, the remnants of a gash to the face that required stitches.

Holtby was nearly matched by Flyers goalie Rob Zepp, the 33-year-old rookie who filled in for the second straight game while Steve Mason is out because of an upper-body injury. Zepp made 25 saves, including a terrific left pad stop on Eric Fehr late in the second period.

But Zepp never had a chance when Chimera redirected the puck after Niskanen flung it toward the net from the blue line 3:13 into the game.

"We played well, but we don't deserve a point," Berube said. "We missed some opportunities offensively."

NOTES: Flyers D Carlo Colaiacovo returned to the lineup after being a healthy scratch for the previous 26 games. He replaced Braydon Coburn, who could be sidelined for four weeks with a lower-body injury. ... Philadelphia has lost six consecutive road games.

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