Washington
Washington Capitals Beat Columbus Blue Jackets, 2-1 (OT); Aliaksei Protas Scores Twice, First Career OT Winner
Photo: @Capitals
The Washington Capitals beat the Columbus Blue Jackets by a score of 2-1 in overtime at Nationwide Arena on Thursday to extend their point-streak to eight games (7-0-1) and road winning-streak to 10, where they have outscored opponents 48-21. Washington improved to 20-6-2 (.750 points percentage) this season. Goaltender Charlie Lindgren made 32 saves in his fourth consecutive win.
Washington’s Lines
Aliaksei Protas — Pierre-Luc Dubois — Tom Wilson
Connor McMichael — Dylan Strome — Taylor Raddysh
Hendrix Lapierre — Lars Eller — Andrew Mangiapane
Brandon Duhaime — Nic Dowd — Ivan Miroshnichenko
Martin Fehervary — John Carlson
Rasmus Sandin — Matt Roy
Jakob Chychrun — Trevor Van Riemsdyk
Lindgren
Logan Thompson
Scratched
- LW Jakub Vrana
- D Dylan McIlrath
- D Alexander Alexeyev
Injured
- Ovechkin (fractured fibula)
- LW Sonny Milano (upper-body)
- C Nicklas Backstrom (hip)
- RW T.J. Oshie (back)
Columbus’ Lines
James Van Riemsdyk — Sean Monahan — Kent Johnson
Dmitri Voronkov — Cole Sillinger — Kirill Marchenko
Zach Aston-Reese — Adam Fantilli — Mathieu Olivier
Mikael Pyyhtia — Sean Kuraly — Kevin Labanc
Zach Werenski — Dante Fabbro
Ivan Provorov — Damon Severson
Jake Christiansen — Jack Johnson
Jet Greaves
Elvis Merzlikins
Scratched
- D Jordan Harris
- G Daniil Tarasov
Injured
- RW Justin Danforth (lower-body)
- RW Yegor Chinakhov (upper-body)
- D Erik Gudbranson (upper-body)
- RW Boone Jenner (upper-body)
First Period
Scoring
Stats
- 11-6 Washington in shots
- .579 Washington on faceoffs
- Columbus did not score on the only power play
- 9-2 Columbus in hits
- 7-7 in blocked shots
- 8-4 Columbus in giveaways
Graphics: Natural StatTrick
Second Period
Scoring
- 14:12, 1-0 Columbus (PPG): Werenski wristed one from the top past the glove of Lindgren with Voronkov screening Lindgren in front after Kent Johnson fed him from the right half-wall. Werenski became the first Blue Jackets defensemen to score 100 career goals.
100 NHL GOALS FOR ZACH WERENSKI! pic.twitter.com/ELtkyej862
— SleeperNHL (@SleeperNHL) December 13, 2024
Stats
- 25-22 Washington in shots
- 16-14 Columbus in the second
- .643 Washington on faceoffs
- Columbus converted on one of their five power plays
- Washington did not on their first
- 12-8 Columbus in hits
- 11-10 Columbus in blocked shots
- 14-5 Columbus in giveaways
- 5-1 Washington in takeaways
Third Period
Scoring
- 0:31, 1-1: Protas ripped one past the glove of Greaves after Dubois entered the zone, took three Blue Jackets defenders with him, and fed Protas across the ice with no one covering him. Protas has recorded four points (two goals) in his last three games. Dubois extended his point- and assist-streak to three games (1-3-4). Strome has recorded at least one point in 21 of Washington’s 28 games.
A pretty, pretty feed and finish between PLD and Pro pic.twitter.com/3TUbKR3j0B
— Washington Capitals (@Capitals) December 13, 2024
Stats
- 36-29 Washington in shots
- including 12-7 in the third
- .613 Washington on faceoffs
- 19-12 Columbus in hits
- 16-14 Columbus in blocked shots
- 16-10 Columbus in giveaways
- 6-3 Washington in takeaways
Overtime
Scoring: Protas ripped a wrist shot over the blacker of Greeves from the high slot after Chychrun dropped the puck for him for his first career overtime winner.
BALLGAME BY THE BELARUSIAN 🇧🇾
Aliaksei Protas single-handedly wins it for the Capitals, tucking both WSH goals on the night pic.twitter.com/MYU7tGfeWQ
— B/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) December 13, 2024
Shots: 36-33 Washington but 3-1 Columbus in overtime
Washington remained a point ahead of the New Jersey Devils for first place in the Metropolitan Division with four games in hand and rose five ahead of the Carolina Hurricanes (who have played one more game).
The Capitals are the second team in the NHL to reach 20 wins (Winnipeg Jets: 21 wins) this season and have tied the franchise record for fewest games to 20 wins in a season. The Capitals have a road record of 12-2-0 (.857) this season and own the highest road point percentage in the NHL. Washington is 11-1-1 in their last 13 games against the Blue Jackets dating back to the 2021-22 season and have won six-straight games at Nationwide Arena.
Next game: Saturday vs. Buffalo Sabres (7 PM ET, Monumental Sports Network in-market, ESPN+ out-of-market)
By Harrison Brown
Washington
Indie Films Opening July 3: ‘Young Washington’ Marches Into Theaters
July 4 weekend is a quiet one for new indie releases, leaving the field to Angel Studios’ PG-13 wide release Young Washington on 2,700 screens.
From Angel and Wonder Project, the film, timed to the 250th anniversary of the founding of the U.S., stars British actor William Franklyn-Miller as the young man who would go on to become the nation’s first president.
Directed by Jon Erwin (I Can Only Imagine, Jesus Revolution), with Mary-Louise Parker as George’s mother, Ben Kingsley as Virginia Gov. Robert Dinwiddie, and Kelsey Grammer as wealthy nobleman Lord Fairfax. See Deadline review.
Synopsis: “Before he was the Father of a Nation, he was a soldier fighting to survive. A single misstep thrusts young George Washington into the center of a global conflict, testing his honor, loyalty, and courage. As alliances crumble and the frontier erupts into war, he must confront not only his enemies but the man he’s becoming.”
The action is set in the 1750s with Washington as a young man eager to fight, initially as a British officer in a period of complex loyalties. He enlists at 23 and leads a disastrous campaign against the French in Ohio but fights brilliantly and his career takes off.
Elsewhere this frame, Music Box Films is out with a 4K restoration of Ross McElwee’s Sherman’s March July 3-9 at Film Forum. It will lead into Venice award-winning Remake, McElwee’s new documentary, which premieres at the NYC art house July 10.
Sherman’s March, which won the Grand Jury prize at the 1986 Sundance Film Festival, was ranked as one of the highest-grossing documentary films of all time until the mid-1990s. In it, McElwee sets out to make a movie about Union Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman’s March to the Sea towards the end of the American Civil War, but keeps getting sidetracked by his own love life. He’ll appear in-person for post-screening Q&As on July 8-9.
Kino Lorber opens Sasha Waters’ Mary Oliver: Saved By the Beauty of the World, on the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, at the IFC Center in New York today, expanding to select theaters nationwide in the coming weeks. The documentary includes new recitations of her work by fans as varied as Stephen Colbert, Lucy Dacus, Steve Buscemi and Oprah Winfrey and Helena Bonham Carter alongside stories from longtime friends like John Waters.
World premiered in March at the True/False festival in Columbia, MO, screened at DOC NYC Spring Selects, the Martha’s Vineyard Film Festival and the Miami Film Festival. Waters gained access to Oliver’s personal archives to make the film.
Citizen Kane is also back via Fathom Entertainment at about 900 theaters on July 5 and July 8. It’s for the 85th anniversary of the 1941 classic directed by and starring Orson Welles as publishing tycoon Charles Foster Kane. The rerelease includes exclusive insight from Leonard Maltin.
Washington
Buying Here: Mount Washington condo offers front-seat view of fireworks for $499,000
Washington
Review: Our critic cannot tell a lie: ‘Young Washington’ is the dullest of history lessons
It’s the 250th birthday of the United States of America and how better to celebrate than with a big-screen hagiography of America’s first president, George Washington? “Young Washington” arrives in theaters just in time for the Fourth of July with a chiseled, hot young actor in the lead role and the sheen of a prestige HBO drama, though the result isn’t really big-screen spectacle or appointment television. It feels more like something to be watched on the AV rig in a middle school social studies class. At least there won’t be a quiz at the end.
But there could be, because the plot of “Young Washington” plays out with all the thrill of a textbook chapter. It takes place mostly around 1753-55, at the advent of the French and Indian War. We open in medias res when the 23-year-old Col. Washington (William Franklyn-Miller) lurches from a dysentery-riddled nap directly into battle in the Pennsylvania woods, his battalion on the back foot, surrounded by gore and gunpowder. Another officer describes how dire the situation is while George ponders saving his men and asks, “What could be worth the risk?” Washington steels his gaze and we cut to black. You can almost hear the eagles scream, guitars riff and engines rev.
“Young Washington” is produced and distributed by Angel Studios, the faith-based movie studio that churns out films based on true stories that either feature freak accidents, strange illnesses or, more recently, unique stories from the past in which faith in God is a factor. Apparently, our nation’s founding also falls under this umbrella.
The film is directed by Jon Erwin, one of the in-house Angel Studios mainstays, who also helmed “Jesus Revolution,” “I Still Believe” and “I Can Only Imagine.” Erwin gives the whole project a kind of gritty, visceral approach — very “Game of Thrones” in red coats. It’s violent, muddy, the contrast is high and too many drone shots soar over the forest treetops.
Though it opens with a bang, this 1755 battle framing device gives way to the George origin story, starting with his father’s death 12 years earlier, when the 11-year-old George is bereft that he’ll have to sacrifice his education in order to become a tenant farmer and provide for his family including his mother, Mary (Mary-Louise Parker, doing a bizarre accent).
His older half-brother Lawrence (John Foss) takes him under his wing and teaches him, and the young George grows into a smart, bright, ambitious young man, whose dreams of becoming a British officer are dashed because he doesn’t have formal education, a fortuitous marriage or his own land. But he’s bootstrapped himself into intelligence and with savvy networking and know-how, he becomes indispensable to the British, volunteering as a major to survey land and negotiate treaties with the Native tribes and French army. It’s all a bunch of politicking and petty disputes until it escalates into all-out war thanks to an ill-advised ambush.
Sir Ben Kingsley, Kelsey Grammar (who starred in “Jesus Revolution”) and Andy Serkis play the British officers who begrudgingly, at times, believe in George and his capabilities, though a lot of the film is about a young man getting rebuffed by snobbish British officers.
He’s the kind of character who always makes the noble choice, does and says what’s right, and sees everyone as equals (including enslaved African men and Native American allies). He inspires his brother and others that the world can change and takes inspiration from his mother, who encourages him to continue his path and do it as God’s servant.
Unfortunately, this doesn’t make for a character that’s in any way complex or interesting at all. Franklyn-Miller is certainly pretty, serving as a fine face for this story, but the screenplay (by Erwin, Diederik Hoogstraten and Tom Provost) flattens his character into a basic cookie-cutter hero. Audiences, including the middle school social studies students, deserve better and more nuanced stories about this country and the values it was built upon.
“Young Washington” is propaganda in the form of a history lesson wrapped in a summer blockbuster. If only it were even slightly entertaining — maybe they’ll tackle that in the inevitable sequel.
‘Young Washington’
Rated: PG-13, for sequences of strong war violence and some bloody images
Running time: 2 hours, 5 minutes
Playing: Opens Friday, July 3 in wide release
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