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The New York Islanders take on the Washington Capitals on Friday night at NYCB Live - Nassau Coliseum at 7 p.m. Buy tickets. Watch on MSG+, MSG GO or NHL.TV. Listen live on 88.7FM WRHU, 103.9FM LI News or online at radio.com/islanders. Read the game preview. Check the game notes.


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BOYCHUK SHAKEN, BUT OKAY, AFTER SKATE SCARE:

The two-inch scratch on Johnny Boychuk's neck was still puffy and reddish pink on Friday morning, the result of Mitch Marner's skate catching him in the neck at the end of the second period.
The scratch, still just 14 hours fresh, showed just how close Boychuk had come to a very scary situation. As Barry Trotz put it, a few "mili-inches" and Boychuk could have been in serious jeopardy. That was not lost on Boychuk.
"It was really scary. You feel it hit your neck and just thoughts go through your mind," Boychuk said. "I'm just happy that nothing serious happened."
Those thoughts, of course, were about his family, especially as a father of three.
"He said there's so many things that race through your head," Trotz said. "You're a dad, you have family all that stuff and to think you'll be lying on the ice in a pool of blood, trying to hang on, he's very lucky."
Trotz said Boychuk was visibly pale during the intermission after his close call. He came back out for the third period, but skipped a shift or two as he gathered himself.
"Last night, in between periods when I went off I was in shambles," the usually bubbly Boychuk said in serious tones. "It was tough to even go out there again in the third and play even a couple shifts. I kept them extremely short."
Boychuk is available for the Islanders on Friday and is expected to play in a divisional clash against the Washington Capitals.
"Johnny was more shaken up mentally from that. That near-death experience, it can shake you up a bit," Trotz said.
As shaken as he was by the experience, Boychuk's lighthearted personality started to shine back through while addressing the media on Friday.
"Last night was difficult, but it's a new day today and you try to just do what you can and try to work hard and do what you can to help your team," Boychuk said. "I know tonight it'll be a good game again and I just have to keep your composure like Will Ferrell says and keep on truckin'."


ISLES LOOKING TO RE-FOCUS AFTER EMOTIONAL WIN:

Between the atmosphere and the opponent, Thursday's 6-1 win over Toronto was a 10/10 on the intensity scale. Naturally, the only place that can go is down, so the challenge for the Islanders will be to keep their intensity high when they get back to work on Friday.
So while a back-to-back against the reigning Stanley Cup champions may seem like a bad thing on paper, it might be the type of heated, important game the Isles need to avoid an emotional letdown.
Head Coach Barry Trotz said it'll be a good test for his team, to see how the move on from an emotional win. The Cup-winning coach said that's the type of daily mentality needed in the playoffs.
"That's how the playoffs are, very emotional the next day, win or lose, you have a sense of okay, I have to regroup, I have to refocus on the next thing," Trotz said. "That's where I trust our group is going to refocus on that. I trust our group will have to play with some backbone in the back to backs."
The Islanders should have some confidence taking on the Caps in a back-to-back situation. They shut out the Caps 2-0 on Jan. 18 on the second night of a back-to-back, the night they leapfrogged Washington for first place in the Metro Division. The Capitals lurk two points back of the Islanders, so the Isles know the stakes of Friday's showdown.
"Last night's game was emotional for the fans and everybody, but this one is arguably more important than last night's game," Brock Nelson said. "We have to follow it up. We can't get sit back and think about how great last night was. You have to follow it up and build off it."


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TROTZ ON THE CUSP OF 800 WINS:

It's not on the forefront of Barry Trotz's mind, but it would be a little poetic for him to get his 800th career win against his former team.
Trotz is currently sitting at 799, which ranks fourth all-time on the NHL's wins list, trailing only Scotty Bowman (1,244), Joel Quenneville (890) and Ken Hitchcock (840).


HOLTBY TO START:

Braden Hotlby will start in goal for the Capitals on Friday. Holtby is 22-16-4 with a 3.01 GAA, a .908 SV% and two shutouts. Holtby was the goaltender in the team's two meetings this season, allowing a combined three goals over the two meetings.


CAPITALS PROJECTED LINEUP:

Alex Ovechkin - Evgeny Kuznetsov - Tom Wilson
Jakub Vrana - Nicklas Backstrom - TJ Oshie
Andre Burakovsky - Lars Eller - Brett Connolly
Carl Hagelin - Nic Dowd - Travis Boyd
Michal Kempny - John Carlson
Dmitri Orlov - Matt Niskanen
Brooks Orpik - Nick Jensen
Braden Holtby