DENVER — The Washington Capitals understood Monday’s round with the NHL-leading Colorado Avalanche would certainly be a top-level video game with rate, ability and also physicality on both ends of the ice. It was thought the Capitals would certainly be the ones frantically going after versus a powerful challenger, yet rather they took control in a 3-2 win at Round Field.
Washington
With playoffs nearing, suddenly hot Capitals beat NHL-best Avalanche
Marcus Johansson racking up the game-winner midway with the 3rd duration after Conor Sheary required a turn over in the center of the ice. Sheary dished the puck to Johansson, that linked on a glossy shot with 9:14 staying.
“It boggled the mind,” Johansson stated of Sheary’s suitable play. “Both the takeaway and also the pass was top-class. It was enjoyable to see that enter.”
Ilya Samsonov likewise excited, making 24 conserves, as the Fundings broke Colorado’s nine-game winning touch.
Washington briefly seemed in difficulty after Artturi Lehkonen connected ball game at 2 on a goal-mouth shuffle with 11:47 left in the 3rd. Nonetheless, also after the Capitals shed the following difficulty for goaltender disturbance, Johansson racked up the victor and also the Avalanche’s violation couldn’t provide down the stretch.
“When you are playing a group like that, it gets your focus today,” Capitals Train Peter Laviolette stated. “The information are essential, the job principles is very important. Right from the beginning, I believed our individuals were great. It was fantastic ahead in right here and also, today, to bet the leading group in the organization.”
Washington, which pertained to Denver on the heels of an 8-4 win Saturday in Montreal, has actually won 6 of its last 7 video games. In the postseason race, the Fundings (96 factors) still being in the 2nd wild-card place in the Eastern Meeting yet are just one factor behind third-place Pittsburgh in the Metropolitan Department and also have one video game in hand.
The win began the Fundings’ penultimate week of the routine period. Washington has 2 even more video games on its prolonged five-day journey: Wednesday in Las Las Vega and also Friday in Arizona.
“This is a great time to obtain our video game going and also obtain the best way of thinking … this is the manner in which we wish to play,” Johansson stated. “This is exactly how it is mosting likely to remain in the playoffs. It was an enjoyable environment available tonight. It was fantastic.”
The Fundings held a 2-1 lead getting in the 3rd duration Monday many thanks to Alex Ovechkin, that racked up the only objective in an unique teams-filled 2nd duration. After the captain attracted a tripping fine to place Washington on the man-advantage, he mosted likely to the front of the web to touch in a pass from Evgeny Kuznetsov at 13:27.
Ovechkin has actually racked up 6 objectives in his previous 7 video games and also 48 this period, which links Teemu Selanne (in 2006-07) for the most in organization background by a gamer 36 or older.
The Avalanche lacked 5 regulars Monday: Gabriel Landeskog, Nazem Kadri, Devon Toews, Andrew Cogliano and also Erik Johnson. It likewise quickly shed Josh Manson late in the initial duration after he had an uncomfortable accident with Johansson along the boards. Manson was back to begin the 2nd duration.
An amusing initial duration, driven by rate and also physicality, finished connected 1-1.
Garnet Hathaway provided the Capitals a 1-0 lead after he made an excellent private use the fifty percent wall surface just 5 mins in. Hathaway, that currently has 100 occupation factors, pressed the puck past Jack Johnson prior to he had open ice and also defeat Darcy Kuemper handwear cover side. Hathaway’s objective stired up a Colorado group that consisted of lots of Washington followers. He commemorated by leaping onto the boards, interesting the Caps followers.
Valeri Nichushkin connected the video game with his shot from the left circle past Samonov with 2:55 left in the opening structure.
Below’s what else to find out about the Fundings’ roadway win:
Samsonov obtains one more examination
Laviolette provided Samsonov both hardest competitions on the group’s five-game journey. Samsonov didn’t measure up to assumptions in his initial go-round in a 7-3 loss to Toronto recently, when he was drawn after permitting 4 objectives on 19 shots.
Versus Colorado, Samsonov held his very own in the initial 2 frameworks, permitting one objective on 15 shots. While Samsonov amazed, the Fundings are still placing him and also Vitek Vanecek with dry run to figure out the group’s No. 1 goalkeeper for the postseason. Washington will certainly play 6 video games in 10 days to finish the routine period, providing lots of possibilities for its netminders to confirm they should have the leading place in the fold.
Vanecek made 28 conserves in his begin versus Montreal recently.
The video game was chippy early, with the groups incorporating for 32 hits in the initial duration. Tom Wilson got on the getting end of numerous hits from Kurtis MacDermid in the initial, with Wilson giving out one in return.
By the end of the 2nd duration, which was loaded with fines, Colorado had 28 hits, while Washington had 25. Both groups incorporated for 73 hits by the end of the competition. Ovechkin do with 6 hits while Hathaway do with 5.
Versus a solid challenger, the Fundings’ fine kill was significant on the Avalanche’s 3 power-play efforts. Colorado was incapable to discover the daytime past Samsonov on its initial effort, and also the secondly was stopped after Cale Makar was dented for disturbance 22 secs right into Colorado’s male benefit.
The Fundings have actually exterminated 10 straight opposing power-play chances over their last 3 video games. Washington’s fine kill has actually permitted just one objective in its last 6 video games.
Washington
Opinion: Politics past will haunt Washington in 2025. It won't be pretty
To look back over the politics of the past year is to see a preview of the coming one. It’s not pretty.
Donald Trump, as president again, will of course dominate the news in 2025, but he did so as well in 2024 (and as far back as I can remember, it seems). A year ago, he’d so reestablished his death grip on the Republican Party post-Jan. 6 that he essentially wrapped up its presidential nomination in January, after back-to-back knockouts in Iowa and New Hampshire. A baker’s dozen Republicans had the temerity to get in the race, but they didn’t really run against him.
Opinion Columnist
Jackie Calmes
Jackie Calmes brings a critical eye to the national political scene. She has decades of experience covering the White House and Congress.
“Fear [of Trump] is so palpable” among Republicans, lamented one, former House Speaker Paul Ryan. That’s truer than ever now, after Trump’s improbable comeback from defeat and disgrace.
He moseyed through a campaign first against President Biden and then Vice President Kamala Harris, doubling as a criminal defendant and taking time out for one trial and legal battles over three other indictments. He became the first U.S. president convicted of felonies, but parlayed a platform of victimhood and retribution to election.
Trump will also dominate Congress in the new year, given that both the Senate and House will have Republican majorities. Yet their margins are so slim, and divisions so deep, that neither they nor Trump will really have control. Legislation will be hard won or, in many cases, not won at all. That’s good news, considering Republicans’ talk of more deep tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy, and of spending cuts in programs all Americans rely on.
We got an early feel for the chaos ahead during Congress’ humiliating lame-duck finale over government funding this month. House Republicans, in nearly provoking a Chrismukkah federal shutdown, reprised the dysfunction and factionalism that plagued them all year and made for the least productive Congress since the Depression (not least because of their failed obsession with impeaching Biden). Having first made U.S. history by ousting a speaker in the just-concluded Congress — former Bakersfield Rep. Kevin McCarthy — some House Republicans (and allies in Trumpland) are already predicting that Speaker Mike Johnson of Louisiana won’t survive the new one.
But Congress’ clownish closing wasn’t all Johnson’s fault. It mostly owed to the ham-handed 11th-hour meddling of Trump and unelected “First Buddy” Elon Musk.
First Musk blew up a bipartisan funding bill — “a crime,” he called it on X, spreading falsehoods about its content and going so far as to threaten Republican lawmakers’ reelections. (Adding to his prior threat against Republican senators who oppose Trump’s Cabinet nominees.)
Then Trump, not one to let the guy riding shotgun grab the reins, demanded that Republicans vote against any budget bill that didn’t also repeal the nation’s debt limit. In the end, they actually defied him, passing a bill that was silent about the debt limit.
But the debt ceiling wrangling will resume soon; the Treasury Department said Friday that it would near the borrowing limit in January, which would require it to take “extraordinary measures” until Congress and the president act.
I’ve long argued for getting rid of the debt limit, a World War I-era anachronism, but not for the same reasons as Trump. Mine: The debt limit does nothing to limit spending — Congress and presidents have already approved the funds. It merely lets lawmakers, Republicans mostly, preen as fiscal conservatives by voting no, inviting chaos in the process, despite their past votes for the spending and tax cuts that accounted for the debt (knowing most Democrats will vote aye and prevent default). Trump’s reason? He wanted to avoid a debt limit fight next year when his priorities — tax cuts and open-ended spending for mass deportations — would add to the red ink.
Whatever the rationale, repealing the 107-year-old debt limit law isn’t something Congress should deal with in a last-minute lame-duck rush. And the fact is, Republicans don’t want to forfeit their demagogic prop. They proved it by saying no to Trump.
Next season’s showdown will be just one skirmish in an emerging multifront “MAGA civil war,” as Axios put it. In particular, look for immigration policy fights pitting immigrant-friendly Silicon Valley tech bros against “America First” anti-immigrant hard-liners.
Again, we got a pre-inaugural preview: Entrepreneur-provocateur Vivek Ramaswamy, Trump’s choice along with Musk to advise him on slashing both federal spending and regulations, incited a Christmas Day MAGA brouhaha — and anti-India invective — on social media when he called for admitting more skilled foreign workers to the United States. American culture, he posted, has for too long “venerated mediocrity over excellence.” When Musk sought to mediate, the South Africa-born mega-billionaire likewise became a target of xenophobic vitriol.
Speaking of Musk, stay tuned for the inevitable clash of egos — his and Trump’s — in 2025.
Then there are the sidelined Democrats.
Biden will be gone from the scene, but he’s already seemed to be for much of 2024. After delivering a rousing State of the Union address in March, Biden showed up for his June debate with Trump so addled that the party backlash forced him from the ticket. Post-election, the apparently embittered president has been “quiet quitting” — a sad end to what’s been, in its first years, a consequential presidency.
Yes, Democrats will be the minority in Congress. But as 2024 showed, Republicans will need their support to pass essential government-funding bills, giving Democrats leverage over the final products. Meanwhile, Democrats will spend 2025 doing what many of them hankered to do in 2024: Look for new leadership, new direction and new ideas.
By the time of the 2026 midterm elections for Congress, Democrats can count on one thing: They’ll look better to many voters compared to the Republicans after the mayhem of all-Republican governance that’s ahead.
@jackiekcalmes
Washington
Metra train hits car in Washington Heights
A South Side Metra line was delayed Saturday night after a train struck a car in Washington Heights.
A Metra Rock Island train on its way to Joliet hit a car around 7:30 p.m. near the 103rd Street station at 10355 S. Vincennes Ave. in Washington Heights, the rail system said.
Trains in both directions were stopped, and the duration of the delay was unknown.
No other information was immediately available.
Washington
Washington Commanders Roster Moves: Phidarian Mathis release opens up spot for Jonathan Allen's return from IR
The Washington Commanders have reportedly waived former Ron Rivera 2nd round pick DT Phidarian Mathis. This was an expected move from the team for several reasons. He has been a healthy scratch for the last three games and practice squad DT Carl Davis was elevated to get playing time over him. Dan Quinn called it “internal competition” which means he was beat out for his spot. His first two year’s were plagued by injuries, now healthy, he’s just not good enough.
Jonathan Allen has been on injured reserve since tearing his pectoral against the Baltimore Ravens in Week 6. His injury wasn’t as serious as first feared and he’s now set to rejoin the team. His 21-day practice window was opened last Wednesday, but he was limited on practice last week and wasn’t activated. Allen’s been a full participant this week, and will need to be activated by 4pm today to play against the Atlanta Falcons tomorrow night. He is expected to be on a snap counts during his first game back since October
Earlier in the week Greg Joseph was waived from the practice squad, and he was signed to the Jets practice squad the next day. Zane Gonzalez is healthy, and Austin Seibert is eligible to return from IR next week. His spot was filled with the signing of 9-year veteran WR Chris Moore.
We have released K Greg Joseph from the practice squad
— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) December 23, 2024
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