Games

Recap
 
Knuble gives Flyers commanding series lead
PHILADELPHIA 4, WASHINGTON 3 (2OT)
 

PHILADELPHIA (Ticker) -- Jeff Carter began the scoring 42
seconds into the game. Nearly 86 minutes later, he helped
finish it.

Carter set up Mike Knuble for a goal at 6:40 of the second
overtime, lifting the Philadelphia Flyers to a 4-3 victory over
the Washington Capitals in Game Four of their Eastern Conference
quarterfinal series on Thursday.

Carter finished with two goals and an assist and Daniel Briere
added his league-leading fifth tally of the postseason for the
sixth-seeded Flyers, who grabbed a three-games-to-one lead over
the third-seeded Capitals.

"I'm really excited for our team and the way we were able to
find a way to win," Philadelphia coach John Stevens said. "I
really thought that Washington came out and came at us hard. ...
We found a way to get it done. It's great to see the
excitement in our team after a win like that."

"I thought in the second overtime, we were the much better
team," Briere said. "You have to give them credit because they
battled hard tonight. They were hungrier for pucks and they
battled hard. That's why it took us so long to clinch the win."

Calder Trophy candidate Nicklas Backstrom, Alexander Semin and
defenseman Steve Eminger scored for Washington, which hosts Game
Five on Saturday afternoon.

"Well, you never give up and it's not over yet," said Capitals
superstar Alex Ovechkin, who recorded two assists. "It's not
over. That is all I can say - it's not over."

"We'll take it one game at a time," Washington's Sergei Fedorov
added. "I think that it's possible. We'll get some rest,
regroup and we'll go at it again. ... That's what is good about
the playoffs - you just never know."

Capitals coach Bruce Boudreau gave no credence to the fact his
team is behind due to a lack of playoff experience and believes
it can overcome the deficit.

"That's a bunch of crap and stuff that people make up, that it's
a young team," he said. "You win your home game (on Saturday)
and you've got to win on the road. Then you take it home and
you take care of business there. I'm sure they're counting us
out, but when we had to win seven in a row (at the end of the
regular season), we did it. So don't count us out."

Fresh off a victory in the pivotal third game of the series, the
Flyers wasted little time gaining the edge in this one as
Carter received a cross-slot pass from Knuble and put a
backhander from the inner edge of the right faceoff circle
inside the left goalpost just 42 seconds into the first period.

"It was huge," Carter said of the early goal. "Anytime you can
get a lead in a series is big. To get a goal in the first
minute when they were already going hard was really great."

Just under 86 minutes later, the 23-year-old returned the favor.

Following a scramble near the right post in double-overtime,
Carter gained possession of the puck behind the net and came
around to the left side before making a cross-crease pass to
Knuble, whose backhand shot was stopped by Cristobal Huet.

However, Knuble grabbed the rebound and lifted it over the
goaltender's left pad, ending the longest game of this
postseason and giving Philadelphia a commanding lead in the
series.

"The play just ended up behind the net, and (Carter and Scottie
Upshall) are just tenacious on the puck," Knuble said. "(Huet)
stopped the first one, but it just ended up on my forehand and I
chipped it up and over. It was a big thrill."

"They got a few pokes at it. It ended up behind the net and on
the other side," said Huet, who fell to 1-3 lifetime in playoff
overtimes. "I was able to make the first save and then he was
able to put the rebound in. I think that he put it over my
glove."

Knuble believed it was the biggest goal of his career thus far.

"Besides your first goal in the league, which is a big thrill,
this one was a huge thrill," he said. "To score in a hockey
town like Philadelphia, and at this point in the season to put
our team up 3-1, is a huge thrill."

Stevens was extremely impressed with the line of Carter, Knuble
and Upshall, which accounted for three goals and four assists in
the game.

"I thought that line was tremendous," Stevens said. "Having to
play the bulk of the minutes against the Ovechkin line and to
come up with three goals for us, it was just a tremendous effort
from the whole line."

After Carter's early goal, a pair of youngsters netted their
first career postseason tallies as Washington cashed in on two
power plays later in the first to move ahead.

Backstrom received a cross-slot pass from Ovechkin and put a
shot inside the right post at 2:41 to forge a tie. With 7:01 to
go and the Capitals on a 5-on-3 advantage, Semin converted a
cross-crease feed from the right side by Backstrom, giving
Washington a 2-1 edge.

Carter knotted the contest with 87 seconds left in the period.
From the top of the left circle, defenseman Jaroslav Modry
dished to Carter, who waited for Huet to commit before firing
the puck into the net for his third goal of the series.

Eminger got to a loose puck in the right circle and beat
netminder Martin Biron at 5:56 of the second to put the Capitals
back in front, 3-2.

"We tried to take it to the net," Eminger said. "I just tried
to put it on the net. We had a good screen. I don't think that
Biron saw it. I was just throwing on the net there."

Huet made it stand by making a brilliant diving save on Upshall
just over nine minutes into the third.

"They shot and it was blocked and it went behind the net," Huet
said. "They put it back in play and Upshall was able to have a
good shot. I was desperate to make the save. A lucky save."

But with 9:59 remaining in the period, Mike Richards made a
cross-crease pass to Briere, who beat Huet from the left side of
the crease to draw the Flyers even.

"Mike gave me a great pass," Briere said. "At least I think it
was a pass because I couldn't see much. It was right on my
tape. I couldn't see it cross ice because there were so many
bodies near the net. He just gave me a perfect pass and I had
an open net to shoot at."

Biron made a number of big saves in the first overtime, denying
Fedorov on a 2-on-1 rush less than three minutes into the
session and using his right skate to stop defenseman Tom Poti
from in front a minute later.

"It was my first time playing in an overtime game in the
playoffs," Biron said. "It was a lot of fun. The pace of the
game is so high and the stakes of the game are so high. ...
Everything is just amped up to 10. You don't want to make any
mistakes."


 
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