Fleischmann ends drought

Published April 5, 2009 4:00am ET



Six different players score as Caps beat Thrashers

Caps notes
» With the victory, Washington (48-23-8, 104 points) is again two points ahead of New Jersey (49-26-4, 102 points) for second place in the Eastern Conference.
» The Caps and Devils each have three games remaining. Washington would win the tiebreaker for the No. 2 seed.
» As of Sunday night, Washington would host No. 7 seed Montreal (41-27-10, 92 points) in the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs. The Canadiens still have four games left to hold onto their seed.Up next »
Caps @ ThrashersWhen » Tuesday, 7Where » Philips ArenaTV/Radio » CSN/1500 AM
The Caps don’t get much time to gloat over their win vs. the Thrashers. Washington concludes the regular-season with a three-game road trip beginning Tuesday night in Atlanta. F Ilya Kovalchuk notched his 42nd goal of the year on Sunday. In 41 career games against Caps, he has 22 goals and 28 assists. Washington leads the season series 3-2.

Report CardFirst StarAHL call-up Keith Aucoin is making it hard for Caps to send him back to Hershey. Aucoin scored a power-play goal, just missed another when he banged a shot off the left post and even assisted on the team’s fifth goal.Second StarWashington trailed 3-2 entering third period. It took just over five minutes for Caps F Brooks Laich to assist on game-tying and go-ahead goals. He also put game away with an empty-netter for goal No. 20 on the year.Third StarF Eric Fehr scored a spectacular go-ahead goal in third period. Drove around one Atlanta player, bulled through another and when a deflected shot/pass bounced back to him he roofed the puck over Atlanta G Johan Hedberg. Oops!Not sure what Caps G Jose Theodore was trying to do in the final minute with his team up two. But it certainly appeared he was aiming for a goal of his own. Instead, puck went right to Vyacheslav Kozlov for a goal against.From the bench» Bruce Boudreau was a mad scientist on Sunday. He switched lines at will. He put Aucoin on the power play for the first time during any of his recall stints and was rewarded with a goal. » Thrashers coach John Anderson has done his best under difficult circumstances in his first year. But Atlanta will miss the postseason for the seventh time in nine years.

The relief etched on Tomas Fleischmann’s face was visible even from Verizon Center’s cheapest seats.

Fifteen games without a goal. Just two scores in his last 33 games. In the midst of a breakthrough season, Fleischmann suddenly found himself stuck in neutral with the postseason fast approaching.

But the 24-year-old Czech was all smiles after scoring during Sunday’s 6-4 win over the Atlanta Thrashers. Teammate Milan Jurcina had joked before each of the previous three games that Fleischmann was due, that the drought was about to end, and his friend just laughed every time.

But after converting an Atlanta turnover into an unassisted goal in the first period it was a case of a — repeated, at least — prophecy come true. Fleischmann was one of six different Caps players to score against the Thrashers — and none were named Alex Ovechkin.

That was the best sign of all after the team’s final regular-season home game of the year. In fact, each goal scorer also added at least one assist. Forward Brooks Laich led Washington with an empty-net goal with 13 seconds left and two assists.

“That [turnover] was a break for me and there haven’t been a lot of bounces for me lately,” said Fleischmann, who has had two goals waved off in the last month. “But every game is different. I hope to keep going like that.”

The Caps were just 1-for-7 on their power play, allowed a shorthanded goal early in the second period and trailed 3-2 entering the third.
 
Then again, who needs an extra man? Michael Nylander, Eric Fehr and Alex Semin each scored at even strength for Washington in the third before Laich salted the game away. For Nylander, it was his second goal in 20 games. For Fehr, it was his third in the last 22. Combined with Fleischmann’s breakthrough, the Caps’ secondary scoring was better than it has been in weeks — and at exactly the right time.

“I hope [Sunday] does wonders for [Fleischmann’s] confidence,” said Caps coach Bruce Boudreau. “I’ve been in his situation and I saw the relief in his eyes when he finally scored. You start to doubt yourself after a while no matter who you are.”