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HockeyRecap

Penguins again shatter Capitals' Cup dream, Sens up next

Marc-Andre Fleury turned back the clock with a brilliant 29-save shutout, Bryan Rust and Patric Hornqvist scored and the Pittsburgh Penguins beat the Washington Capitals 2-0 in Game 7 on Wednesday night to advance to the Eastern Conference finals.

Fleury has 29-save shutout, Rust gets game-winner

Game Wrap: Penguins blank Capitals to advance to East final

7 years ago
Duration 1:30
Pittsburgh beats Washington 2-0 in Game 7, Marc-Andre Fleury 29 saves.

Marc-AndreFleurythanked his stick and flashed a smile so wide it could be seen through his mask.

This was vintageFleury, and he has the Pittsburgh Penguins one step closer to another Stanley Cup.

Fleury stopped all 29 shots in a turn-back-the-clock performance to shut out the Washington Capitals 2-0 in Game 7 on Wednesday night, sending Pittsburgh to the Eastern Conference finals to face the Ottawa Senators.

This was the Fleury who backstopped the Penguins to the Cup in 2009 and was almost unbeatable early in the second-round series, and his return was all they needed to eliminate the Presidents' Trophy winners in a meeting of the NHL's top two teams.

"We're not in this position moving on if he doesn't play the way he did," said captain Sidney Crosby, who assisted on Bryan Rust's opening goal. "There were times where they had sustained pressure throughout games and he made some big saves that allowed us to stay in the game and allowed us to stay patient. He was huge for us all series long."

Fleury thought it was the Penguins' best team game of the playoffs, a theory that teammates and coach Mike Sullivan echoed. They were again outshot as they were in every game of the series, this time only 29-28, but Rust and Patric Hornqvist scored on Braden Holtby, and Fleury shut the door.

It was as complete a game as Pittsburgh has had through two rounds, even though it was without injured defenceman Trevor Daley and winger Carl Hagelin. Crosby looked like himself again in his third game back from a concussion, and the rest of the team followed.

'They just always find a way to respond'

"They just always find a way to respond the right way to any of the challenges or the adversities that this league throws at us, and they did it again tonight," Sullivan said. "I think these guys are at their best when the stakes are high. ... I thought that was the closest thing to the Penguins identity that we've seen in the playoffs so far."

Pittsburgh Penguins captain Sidney Crosby and goalie Marc-Andre Fleury celebrate following the Penguins 2-0 win over the Washington Capitals in Game 7. (Patrick Smith/Getty Images)

It was far from Capitals hockey, which was on display in victories in Games 5 and 6. Chances came and went as Washington failed to get beyond the second round for the seventh time in as many chances in the Alex Ovechkin era.

"Without goals, you can't win the game," said Ovechkin, who played the seventh-most of any Capitals forward at 18:22 and was on the ice for each goal. "Plenty of chance to score. Just didn't do it. Made a couple mistakes, and it cost us."

Mistakes by Ovechkin and defencemen Matt Niskanen and Kevin Shattenkirk in clearing the puck out of the defensive zone led to Rust's goal 8:49 into the second and Hornqvist's 4:14 into the third. Ovechkin had one of the Capitals' best scoring chances of the game from the slot, and his shot went off the shaft of Fleury's stick.

It was so close Ovechkin raised his arms thinking he'd scored. That's when Fleury smiled and said something but not to a teammate.

"I talk to my stick, maybe," Fleury said. "I say thank you and say good job."

Hip Check: Penguins, Fleury get last laugh in Game 7 win over Capitals

7 years ago
Duration 0:32
Marc-Andre Fleury completes shutout performance in Game 7 with highlight-reel save on Alex Ovechkin as Pittsburgh Penuins advance to the Eastern Conference final.

The Penguins thanked Fleury for yet another stellar performance. After allowing nine goals on 142 shots through the first four games, he allowed nine in Games 5 and 6 before bouncing back with this effort that sent the Capitals plunging into an off-season of change and Pittsburgh into its fifth East final in 10 years.

Playing only because No. 1 Matt Murray was injured prior to the playoff opener and with his future uncertain, Fleury was at his best in the biggest game of the season so far.

"I think that we're kidding ourselves if we don't give Flower an awful lot of credit," centre Matt Cullen said. "He stole us more than one game this series and he kept us in a lot of others. We give him a lot of credit, and we're all so happy for him and proud of him. You can't ask for a better teammate than Flower with what he's gone through the last couple years and to step up the way he has."