"I saw [Ovechkin] toe-dragging," recounts Wilson, "so then it came to me and I tried toe-dragging. And it worked out. Sometimes it happens; once in a while."
On the very next shift, the Caps doubled their lead. With Washington occupying Kraken territory, Nick Jensen crept up from the right point with the puck. Unable to find a shooting lane, he fed Nic Dowd down low, just above the goal line on the left side. Dowd didn't have much of an angle, so he teed up Dmitry Orlov for a one-timer from just above the left circle. Orlov cranked it through the five-hole of Kraken goalie Chris Driedger. Orlov's second goal in as many games was also the Caps' second on as many shots, and second in a span of 34 seconds.
Washington killed off a Seattle power play late in the first, but less than a minute later the Kraken got on the board, cutting the Caps' lead in half. Vitek Vanecek flashed his left pad to deny Riley Sheahan from just above the paint, but the Caps' goalie couldn't get to Joonas Donskoi's rebound shot, which made it a 2-1 contest at 16:56 of the first.
Seattle struck again off the rush in the first minute of the middle frame, tying the game at 2-2. Colin Blackwell netted the tying tally, cutting to the middle and beating Vanecek on the stick side at the 58-second mark.
Midway through the second, the Caps went on their own first power play of the game. It took nearly the entirety of the two minutes, but Washington vaulted back in front. The Caps teed up half a dozen shots during the man advantage, getting five of them on net. With time winding down to less than 10 seconds on the power play, Ovechkin's shot from the office was blocked. Wilson retrieved and fired, and Driedger made the save. Conor Sheary was perfectly positioned for the rebound, and he buried it for a 3-2 Caps lead at 11:48, with seven seconds remaining on the manpower advantage.