"This weekend was a prime example of it," says Caps coach Todd Reirden. "Two hard-fought wins - to be able to scratch and claw our way out of a four-point weekend. So that's huge for our team, and then shootout points are important.
"Speaking on Pheonix's behalf, from where he has come from in his very first shootout to where he is now, it's a much different goaltender in there. He puts his time and his work in and they have a good plan on how they can improve and get better between him and Scott, and Braden as well. That's an area where he has improved over the last couple of years, for sure."
Copley relieved Holtby early in the Oct. 19 game against Florida, and he found himself in his first NHL shootout that night after the Caps rallied from three goals down to force overtime, then the shootout.
"That one then didn't really go like we wanted," recounts Copley. "So it was something that me and Scotty worked on in practice, and we've continued to focus on that area. Thankfully, it worked out tonight."
The Caps last endured the occurrence of shootouts in both ends of back-to-back games nearly a year ago, right after the 2017 holiday break. Washington lost a 1-0 shootout decision to the Rangers in New York on Dec. 27, 2017 and prevailed over the Boston Bruins by a 4-3 count in the skills competition at home a night later.
That Bruins shootout came in the 39th game of the 2017-18 season, and Washington got through the final 43 games of the season without dealing with any more shootout situations; they had only four of them all season, a franchise record low for a full 82-game slate. The Caps dealt with only three shootouts in 2012-13 when a lockout shortened the season to just 48 games.
Streaking -Although he did not become the first player in NHL history to refcord hat tricks in three straight games on Saturday, Alex Ovechkin scored the game-tying goal for Washington against the Sabres, netting his 29th of the season late in the second period. The goal extended his scoring streak to 14 straight games (17-6-23) a personal best for the Caps' captain.
Ovechkin certainly had some looks and some opportunities in Saturday's game; he finished the night with eight shots on net and 11 shot attempts to lead all skaters on both sides in both categories for the night. Linemates Nicklas Backstrom and T.J. Oshie were looking for Ovechkin all night, as were his power play cohorts. To their credit, the Sabres bent but did not break in "limiting" the Caps' captain to a single goal.
He has now scored a goal in six straight games, his longest streak since a seven-game spree during his rookie season of 2005-06.