Reeling from a stretch in which they've won only five times in 15 games (5-8-2) since the calendar flipped to 2022, the Caps take a quick trip north of the border to take on the Montreal Canadiens on Thursday night. The game marks the Capitals' first visit here in just over two years, since Washington earned a 4-2 victory over the Canadiens on Jan. 27, 2020 at Bell Centre.
The Caps navigated their way past the midway mark of the season before losing consecutive games in regulation for the first time in 2021-22, and for the first time since last April. But after falling 5-4 to Columbus on Tuesday night at Capital One Arena, the Caps have now dropped consecutive regulation games twice in a span of two weeks. All four of those losses have also come consecutively at home, the first time Washington has dropped four in a row in regulation in D.C. since it dropped six straight home games in regulation nearly 15 years ago, from Oct. 26-Nov. 26, 2007.
The loss to the Jackets was particularly vexing because the Caps scored first for the first time in their last six home games and lost hold of two leads in the second period, a two-goal lead and a one-goal advantage. After falling down a goal early in the third, the Caps pulled even at 4-4 on Tom Wilson's 6-on-5 goal with 2:26 left. But for the second straight game, the Caps came away empty-handed in a game that was all even with five minutes left. Boone Jenner's goal with 42.2 seconds left won it for the visitors.
"[Tuesday] night we had an opportunity to win a game, and we failed," says Caps coach Peter Laviolette. "We didn't get it done. And so, no excuses on that from us. It needed to be better in certain areas through the game, it certainly needed to be better once we tied the game and had it on the line and had a point in front of us. We needed to get that done and push it to overtime and try to get the second point, and we didn't.