Playing seven games in 11 nights - and only one of them at home - to start the month of April, the Caps went 4-3-0 over that stretch. They finished off that grueling span with an 8-1 stomping of the Bruins in Boston on Sunday night, taking advantage of an injury-depleted Bruins team that was playing for the fifth time in seven nights.
"I think it'll be good to be back home," says Caps center Nic Dowd, who netted his eighth goal of the season in Sunday's win in Boston. "There is obviously a sense of comfort when you get back there.
"I think tonight was good because I think we finally played a consistent 60 minutes of hockey. We had a good start, we had a good middle and a good finish. With all of the times we have had one or the other and it has led to wins, but it leaves you wanting more at the end of the game. In this game we had a lot of guys step up and do different things, and I think everyone played their "A" game tonight."
Three players - T.J. Oshie, Lars Eller and Conor Sheary - scored two goals each, and Washington scored three times on the power play, with Oshie, Sheary and Tom Wilson scoring the extra-man tallies. Washington's power play now ranks fourth in the NHL with a 25.5% efficiency rate.
"I feel like it was just one of those nights where we were clicking," says Sheary of the power play. "People were in their right spots, our breakouts were good, our entries were good. Our recoveries were really good, and then when we got chances to score, we executed. You don't get it like that every night, but when you do you've got to take advantage. Hopefully that's some momentum for us moving forward."
Following this two-game homestand, the Caps head back out on the road for four straight games. But once that road swing is over, the Caps will finally be able to host fans at Capital One Arena - beginning with an April 27 home date against the New York Islanders - and they'll finish out the 2020-21 schedule by playing six of their final eight contests on home ice.
Philadelphia had a mixed weekend, defeating the Bruins 3-2 on Saturday afternoon before falling to Buffalo by a 5-3 count on Sunday. The loss to the Sabres leaves Philly four points behind Boston for the final playoff berth in the East Division with 15 games remaining for the Flyers, and with the Bruins holding two games in hand. The Flyers aren't dead in the water, but they don't have any games remaining against the Bruins.
With the Flyers' playoff hopes fading, Philly sold off impending unrestricted free agent Raffl - who had played all 504 of his career contests with the Flyers - and well-traveled defenseman Erik Gustafsson, whose stay in Philly was short and unmemorable. Gustafsson went to Montreal for a seventh-round pick after a 24-game stint on the Philly blueline this season.
Philadelphia also signed forward Scott Laughton to a five-year contract extension on Monday.