The Bruins made some changes to their power play after going 2-for-11 in the first three games of the series, including moving David Pastrnak from the left circle to the right circle, and it paid off in Game 4, when they were 3-for-5 with goals from Pastrnak, Brad Marchand and Matt Grzelcyk.
Now it's the Capitals' turn to change something on their power play.
Washington is 3-for-17 with the man-advantage in the series, including 1-for-7 in Game 4. Despite Ovechkin scoring on the power play in the third period of the 4-1 loss, the Bruins have focused on taking away his one-timer from left circle, so the Capitals have to look for openings elsewhere.
"There's options from the other side, there's options down low, there's options in the middle, there's options up top," Capitals coach Peter Laviolette said. "I think the execution can be a little bit better with what we're doing."