Dallas Stars troll Donald Trump with attendance joke (Photo)
It’s been a tumultuous and divisive week in America, but there is one thing we can all trust and agree on.
There were 1.5 million people at the Caps-Stars game.
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It’s been a tumultuous and divisive week in America, but there is one thing we can all trust and agree on.
There were 1.5 million people at the Caps-Stars game.
It’s been like 400 years since the Caps last won in Dallas, but don’t tell that to the 2016-17 team. A relatively sloppy, chippy affair and a few unfortunate officiating calls led to a 3-1 deficit, but the boys battled back and eventually won the game in an extra frame.
Andre Burakovsky got the party started with his ninth of the season beating three Stars players to a loose puck and burying a wrister behind Atlanta Thrasher great Kari Lehtonen. Soon after, Adam Cracknell would tip home a Jordie Benn point drive that went to review before being deemed a goal. We ended twenty minutes tied at one.
Patrick Eaves slotted a rebound home past Philipp Grubauer to make the game 2-1 Dallas and then controversy struck. Jamie Benn’s tap-in goal was originally washed out for “goaltender interference” by the officiating crew, but after review they reversed the call and the period would end 3-1 Stars.
The Great Eight left his mark on this one, tallying his 22nd of the season on the power play to make it 3-2 and the game would be tied only moments later as TJ Oshie tipped in his 17th of the year, also on the man advantage.
Jay Beagle won it early in overtime. Point streak to 13 games.
Caps beat Stars 4-3!
By Chris Cerullo 4 years ago
As NHL.com correspondent for Dallas, Sean Shapiro’s job is to cover that city’s hockey team, but that’s not all he does. On Saturday night, Shapiro went above and beyond his regular duties to give this important news:
There are a couple dinosaurs at the game.
By Peter Hassett 4 years ago
The Caps dads trip continues as the Caps take on the Dallas Stars in Texas tonight. John Carlson will not play again, since his lower-body injury has still not healed. Isabelle Khurshudyan, from the Washington Post, reported that Carlson did take some time to skate around the ice and said his injury was getting better. Hopefully, we’ll see him back on the ice soon. Meanwhile, the Stars begin their four home game stretch and will try to get a win they desperately need.
Puck drop is at 8:00 PM. Giddy up, Texas. I love Tyler Seguin.
Team | Record | SA% | PDO | Power Play | Penalty Kill |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dallas Stars | 19-20-8 | 49.4% | 98.7 | 17.1% | 75.2% |
Washington Capitals | 30-9-6 | 53.1% | 103.3 | 19.1% | 86.1% |
By Elyse Bailey 4 years ago
Photo: Ronald Martinez
This weekend’s game between the Washington Capitals and Dallas Stars had the makings of an epic Saturday night bout. The Caps and Stars are the two highest scoring teams in the National Hockey League. They boast three of the league’s top four goal scorers and five of the top 15 point producers. Both teams are the best in the respective conferences, making this a possible, albeit premature Stanley Cup Final preview. Instead of a title fight, we got an episode of Tiny House Hunters as we sat stupefied, trying to make sense of the madness — at least for most of the game.
The first period wasn’t pretty, but the Caps made it to the dressing room with the score nil-nil.
In the second, the carnage began. Mattias Janmark opened the scoring on a two-on-one less than two minutes into the frame. Despite Braden Holtby’s best efforts, Dallas’s deadly Jamie Benn and Tyler Seguin went to work, hitting the back of the net three more times. By the time the period was over, the the Capitals were getting outshot 25-11 and Seguin was just four goals behind Alex Ovechkin for the league lead.
Ovi added a PPG in the third to ruin Kari Lehtonen’s shut out and put Seguin back in his place. The next shot the Capitals took hit back of the as well as Justin Williams made it a two goal game, somewhat making up for his idiotic turnover that cost the Caps a goal earlier in the game. Resident good at hockey lately person Andre Burakovsky added his 15th point in 12 games to make it a one goal game. But the hole was just too big. Dallas held on with despite ending of high drama. Stars edge Caps, 4-3.
By Chris Gordon 5 years ago
Photo: Melissa Lynn Photography
Tonight, the Caps go head-to-head with the Stars in what promises to be a gnarly hockey game. The Caps are merely aiming to pad their 17-point Metro lead (yawn), while the Stars are hoping to edge the Blackhawks for first in the Central. Both teams are offensive juggernauts and among the NHL’s best, if not the best.
Valentine’s Day is looming and the Caps are riding a five-game win streak, so cuddle your cat and/or break out the bubbly. The game is at 8, and it’s on CSN.
Team | Record | Possession | PDO | Power Play | Penalty Kill |
Washington Capitals | 40-9-4 | 52.2% | 102.1 | 24.2% | 83.8% |
Dallas Stars | 35-15-5 | 53.8% | 100.0 | 22.1% | 80.0% |
By Margaret Stuart 5 years ago
Photo: Patrick Smith
The Capitals followed up a 2-1 overtime win over the Detroit Red Wings on Wednesday with a 3-2 loss at home to the Dallas Stars the following night. Evgeny Kuznetsov scored the OT winner against the Red Wings, and Alex Ovechkin finally scored goal number 484 on the Stars to become the highest scoring Russian player in the NHL.
By Hana Imiolczyk 5 years ago
For all intensive purposes, the Caps and Stars are both great teams–to the point that their talent is basically one in the same. In Thursday’s match-up, each team basically had the puck at their beckon call irregardless of the other team’s wishes. It was firewagon hockey. “I could care less,” each team basically said of the other’s attempts at defense, which was a mute point. Instead, offense basically wrecked havoc.
Tyler Seguin gave the Stars some leadway after a daring stretch pass and some net-front fury from Patrick Sharp, which wasn’t goalie interference after all. Nick Backstrom extracted revenge with a big bounce from the back boards to tie the game up before the first intermission.
A scoring pause began in the second period, but ex-Cap Cody Eakin nipped that in the butt in the third period with a heatseeker. In response, Alex Ovechkin became the best Russian scorer ever with a tip-in to tie the game. The Stars restored the lead by stripping John Carlson and getting Jason Spezza to rip a quick shot on net.
Stars beat Caps 3-2.
By Peter Hassett 5 years ago
The offensive juggernaut that is the Dallas Stars marches into the nation’s capital tonight. The Stars are a high speed, high-octane team that can make any team look silly. Tyler Seguin and Jamie Benn sit second and third in the NHL in points right now and form an absurdly talented first line with Patrick Sharp.
The Stars are possibly the most entertaining team to watch in the league. They have more events (that is, a shot attempt by either team) per 60 minutes of play than any team in the league. But don’t take this to mean their defense is terrible. While they do play a more open style of game, they rank in the middle of the league in shot attempts allowed.
Pay no mind to all the talk of the Caps’ lack of success against the Stars over the past seven years or so. Unless, of course, you believe a team’s name effects the outcome of the game, because that’s the biggest similarity in all of the Caps losses to the Stars.
The fun begins at 7 PM on CSN.
Team | Record | Possession | PDO | Power Play | Penalty Kill |
Washington Capitals | 12-4-1 | 54.4% | 100 | 21.8% | 85.4% |
Dallas Stars | 15-4-0 | 53.3% | 100.3 | 29.3% | 79.3% |
By Patrick Holden 5 years ago
In things-that-are-really-happening news, NHL.com’s Katie Brown is reporting that the Dallas Stars are listening to some special music ahead of their game tonight against the Capitals. They were pumping Shania Twain jams in the visitor’s locker room of Verizon Center.
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