Justin Sourdif had three goals and two assists and the Washington Capitals hung on to beat the visiting Anaheim Ducks 7-4 on Monday night.
Connor McMichael had four assists, Alex Ovechkin scored two goals, and Ryan Leonard and John Carlson each had a goal and an assist for the Capitals, who built a 5-1 lead before needing two empty-net goals to seal the win.
Charlie Lindgren made 41 saves for Washington, which entered the game having lost two straight and three of four.
Chris Kreider, Alex Killorn, Jacob Trouba and Beckett Sennecke scored for the Ducks, who have lost six in a row (0-5-1).
Petr Mrazek made 19 saves on 24 shots in his first start since Nov. 30. Lukas Dostal took over at the start of the third period and made three saves.
Kreider ended a 15-game goalless skid when he scored with a one-timer from the right circle off a cross-ice pass from Olen Zellweger for a 1-0 lead at 6:33 of the first period.
Washington tied the score 1-1 at 15:56 when Sourdif scored with a wrist shot from between the hash marks.
Anaheim turned over the puck over coming through the neutral zone and Sourdif scored with a wrist shot from the top of the right circle for a 2-1 lead at 18:58 of the second.
Leonard banked the puck off Mrazek from below the goal line to make it 3-1 at 5:54 of the second, Sourdif completed his first NHL hat trick when he scored on a backdoor pass from Leonard for a 4-1 lead at 7:30, and Ovechkin scored with a wrist shot from the left circle to make it 5-1 at 8:52.
Ducks forward Ryan Strome failed to convert a penalty shot at 11:51, but the Ducks would score twice before the end of the period and the Capitals would miss a penalty shot of their own.
Killorn scored from the right circle off a turnover in the Washington zone to cut it to 5-2 at 12:56. After Trouba made it 5-3 at 14:12 with a shot from the right point, Leonard hit the post with a backhand try on his penalty shot at 18:16.
Sennecke swept a loose puck into the net as he was falling in the high slot to cut it to 5-4 at 9:22 of the third, his third goal in three games and his 14th of the season to lead NHL rookies.
However, Carlson scored into an empty net with 1:14 left to make it 6-4 and Ovechkin did the same with 42 seconds remaining for the 7-4 final.
–Field Level Media




