The period ended, and everyone knew what that meant: dishes.
"We won't do dishes until [intermission]," McFate said. "No one gets up. There's a new guy in here or someone from another station? And he gets up to do dishes and the hockey's still on? Yeah, he gets stuff thrown at him. 'Sit down!'"
The bells kept going off. The firefighters kept rushing off. The Capitals kept scoring. By the middle of the second, there was one man left in the kitchen, and Washington led 3-1. In the end, Washington won 3-2 and tied the best-of-7 series 1-1.
But you know dinner will be on time again for Game 3 at Washington on Saturday (8 p.m. ET; NBCSN, CBC, SN, TVAS).
"It gives us more opportunity to be together as a crew," Brinkerhoff said. "Guys hang out more here in the kitchen. Guys joke with each other more. There's more camaraderie. There's more bonding. There's more laughing. There's better times, so that when you do have those serious calls, you can cope with it a little bit better because we're actually a tighter group."