The good news for the Maple Leafs is that they have a coach who anticipates this, veterans who know this and young players who have the right temperament for this, particularly Matthews. He has the even keel of an aircraft carrier. He went through a 13-game goal drought from Oct. 27 through Nov. 22 and a seven-game goal drought from March 2 through March 16, and he kept on keeping on, amid the media frenzy of Toronto, no less.
"He went through a stretch of games where he hadn't scored in a while, and his personality and his approach has been the same, and that's impressive," center Brian Boyle said. "It might sound like a small thing."
It's not.
The Capitals should start better than they did in Game 1. They won't have opening-night jitters and won't get caught off-guard by the Maple Leafs. They were the top defensive team in the NHL in the regular season, allowing 2.16 goals-against per game. Goaltender Braden Holtby has a .938 career save percentage in the playoffs.
There might be a whole lot of nothing going on at times. So be ready for it. Relish it.
"The intensity from Game 1 to Game 2 is different, and so now you've got to up the ante," Babcock said. "But you've got to enjoy that, love it, love the fact there's no room but you're still going to get the job done."