Saturday night marks the eighth and final regular season meeting of the Capitals and the Pittsburgh Penguins, who'll be going head-to-head for the second time in three nights. Pittsburgh won the opener of the two-game set in the District on Thursday night, claiming a 5-4 overtime victory on Jake Guentzel's goal at 2:11 of the extra session.
Both the Caps and Pens earned playoff berths with the outcome of Thursday's game; the Caps doing so for the seventh straight season and for the 13th time in the last 14 years. Pittsburgh extended its postseason streak to 15 straight seasons, the longest active streak in the NHL.
Although both teams will be among the 16 Stanley Cup playoff entrants vying for the coveted chalice, there is still the matter of the East Division title to be settled as the final days of the season unfold. The Caps and Pens currently sit atop the divisional standings with 69 points each, but Washington has six games remaining to just five for Pittsburgh.
Pittsburgh has won five of the seven games in the season's series to date, but the Caps have earned at least a point in six of the seven games. While the Pens (5-2-0) have pulled 10 points from the seven games against Washington, the Caps (2-1-4) have scraped together eight, and could square the season's series and claim sole possession of the top spot in the division with a regulation win in Saturday's finale.
Four of the seven games between the Caps and the Pens have been all even after 40 minutes of play, and those are the four games that have gone to overtime.
"They've been tight games," says Caps coach Peter Laviolette. "[Thursday] night the difference was that we went down on an odd-man rush and didn't score, and they countered on an odd-man rush and scored. That was the difference in the game. It's tight. Every game has been tight, and I don't expect anything different [Saturday].
"There are definitely things that I think we could have done to clean it up. I thought that we did generate chances, I thought we contained them pretty well. But they were also able to score five goals, so there is definitely room for improvement. But the games are so tight that it comes down to maybe one thing that you could have done better, or a couple of things that you could have done better. And so we'll work to try to make that happen."