Then Ovechkin took rushes on the third line with center Lars Eller and right wing Tom Wilson, and forward Andre Burakovsky, who had been playing with Eller and Wilson, was in a red jersey and skating in Ovechkin's usual spot on the top line with center Nicklas Backstrom and right wing T.J. Oshie.
In that Bizarro World moment, you had to wonder what Capitals coach Barry Trotz was thinking.
The Capitals are down 3-1 against the Pittsburgh Penguins in the Eastern Conference Second Round and need a win in Game 5 at Verizon Center in Washington on Saturday (7:15 p.m. ET; NBC, CBC, SN, TVA Sports) to stay alive. Of the 296 teams in NHL history that have trailed 3-1 in a best-of-7 series, 28 (9.5 percent) have come back to win, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.
In what was a huge missed opportunity for the Capitals, the Penguins won 3-2 in Game 4 on Wednesday despite being without forwards Sidney Crosby (concussion) and Conor Sheary (concussion), defenseman Kris Letang (season-ending neck surgery) and goaltender Matt Murray (lower body). Crosby and Sheary might play Saturday, making the task even more difficult for the Capitals.
Desperate times sometimes call for desperate measures, but dropping Ovechkin, the most prolific goal-scorer of his generation, to the third line and replacing him with Burakovsky, who is skilled but has no goals in 10 games in the 2017 Stanley Cup Playoffs and three in 33 career NHL postseason games, seemed drastic.