The "last game against them" to which Laviolette refers is a Jan. 10 game in Washington. After the Caps took a 2-0 lead in the first, Boston roared back for six straight goals en route to a 7-3 victory.
"For sure the overtime win was nice, particularly because we haven't done well in that regard," says Caps center Lars Eller. "So I'd like to think that gives it a little bit of a mental boost. But generally speaking, I think we should just be hungry to turn the last two weeks around, how we've been playing. [We need] everybody to do a little bit better.
"We're going to go up against a team here next game that we got a little bit embarrassed by at home, so I think you can find the motivation wherever you want, there's plenty of places. I think we're capable of better play than we did [Tuesday]; I know we got two points, but I think we've got another gear, level, pace to our game, and we've got to find it sooner than later."
Since starting the season with a 14-3-5 record in their first 22 games, the Caps have slipped some, going 8-6-4 in 18 games since. Tuesday's win over Winnipeg lifts them to 2-3-2 in their last seven, and the Caps want to push to collect as many points as they can get in these next seven games in 15 nights between now and the All-Star break.
"We've been inconsistent the last five or six games," says Caps defenseman Justin Schultz. "I thought we've played one of our best games of the year [Saturday] on the Island, then follow it up with a kind of a dud against Vancouver [on Sunday]. We're just looking for a little more consistency. We show it at points in the game when we're not playing well, we've just got to do it for a full 60 and hopefully string together a few wins here and get the confidence back."