National Hockey League
Washington 4, Minnesota 3
When: 8:00 PM ET, Thursday, February 11, 2016
Where: Xcel Energy Center, Saint Paul, Minnesota
Referees: Frederic L'Ecuyer, Mike Leggo
Linesmen: Tim Nowak, Jay Sharrers
Attendance: 19213

SAINT PAUL, Minn. -- Much as when a blizzard hits, when left winger Alex Ovechkin starts scoring, sometimes the best bet is to just hang on and hope for the best.

Ovechkin, the NHL's leading goal-scorer, scored three times in the second period of the Washington Capitals' 4-3 win over the Minnesota Wild on Thursday.

Goaltender Braden Holtby made 33 saves and left winger Jason Chimera scored an empty-net goal in the final minute for Washington, which won its fifth consecutive game and became the first 40-game winner in the NHL this season, improving to 40-9-4.

"It's how fast he gets it off and he can place it," Capitals coach Barry Trotz said in praise of Ovechkin, who now has 34 goals. "A lot of times in those close areas, you've got to elevate the puck, and he's got the ability to elevate it in real tight areas. It's hard for goaltenders to read it off the stick. He's really good."

The hard-luck Wild got goals from centers Charlie Coyle and Mikael Granlund and defenseman Ryan Suter, but they could not find a way out of the slump that has plagued them for a month. Goalie Devan Dubnyk had 29 saves for Minnesota (23-21-10).

Washington led 3-1 in the third period when Suter's shot from the blue line found its way through a crowd and hit the upper right corner of the net, giving Minnesota some hope.

Chimera's empty-netter made it 4-2 before Granlund scored with 3.6 seconds left for the final margin. The latest loss puts the Wild at 1-10-2 in their last 13 games, leading to speculation that coach Mike Yeo could be fired in the coming days.

"There will never be a time where I start feeling sorry for myself or for our group," said Yeo, looking dejected but forcefully claiming optimism. "I'll never stop trying to find a solution. And maybe the solution is to stop trying to find a solution. Maybe it's to leave it alone and just kind of put it in their hands, and let's just go work it out."

Washington outshot the Wild 10-8 in the scoreless first period. Each team had chances on the power play, and Minnesota had a two-man advantage briefly, but the goalies held fast.

The deadlock was broken early in the second when a fortunate bounce led to Ovechkin's first goal. A shot from the point by right winger T.J. Oshie deflected off the stick of Wild left winger Zach Parise and landed right on the stick of Ovechkin, who was all alone in the right circle. Ovechkin's low shot caught a scrambling Dubnyk between the pads and slid over the line to put the Capitals up 1-0.

"Sometimes you have a 100 percent chance and you didn't score and you think like, 'Oh, maybe it's not your night,'" Ovechkin said. "The first one was kind of a lucky goal, it hit my shaft and goes right between his legs. I was kind of surprised, but a goal's a goal, so I'll take it. Second one was finally score on the (power play), off the boards and put it in."

Ovechkin doubled the lead barely three minutes later. This time, a long-range shot by defenseman John Carlson sailed just wide left of the net but bounced hard off the end boards to Ovechkin, who was parked at the left of the crease. His quick flip of the puck went behind Dubnyk.

"The puck finds him. When it does, he obviously doesn't make any mistakes," Dubnyk said. "The puck just went to him on all three goals. If he's ripping them by me, then I'll figure something else out. But every single puck ends up on his tape and he doesn't make a mistake. That puck off the wall, I don't think anybody else on the ice is putting that one in the net."

Minnesota got a puck past Holtby later in the second to make it 2-1, after the goalie stopped a blast by Wild captain Mikko Koivu from the top of the right circle. The rebound was loose at the top of the crease, and Coyle was able to battle past the goalie and backhand a shot into the net. It was Coyle's fifth goal in the past eight games.

Ovechkin completed the hat trick -- the 14th of his career and first since 2013 -- in the waning minutes of the second, popping off a shot that hit the right post, deflected off Dubnyk's back and landed over the goal line.

Minnesota challenged the play, claiming the Capitals were offside, and replays showed Capitals center Nicklas Backstrom corralling the puck at -- and possibly over -- the blue line, but the video was not completely clear, so the goal stood.

NOTES: The Capitals hoped to have D Brooks Orpik back in the lineup for the first time in three months, but he was not ready. Orpik is recovering from a broken bone he sustained while blocking a shot in a 1-0 loss at Detroit on Nov. 10. ... Minnesota D Jared Spurgeon missed his second consecutive game while recovering from a bone bruise. He practiced with the team on Thursday morning but was given another game to rest. ... Washington will conclude a three-game Central Division road trip on Saturday in Dallas against the Stars. The Wild's three-game homestand wraps up Saturday afternoon when the Boston Bruins make their only trip to Minnesota this season.
Top Game Performances
 
Washington   Minnesota
Alex Ovechkin 3 Points Ryan Suter 2
Alex Ovechkin 3 Goals Ryan Suter 1
Nicklas Backstrom 3 Assists Zach Parise 2
Alex Ovechkin 1 Power Play Goals Ryan Suter 1
N/A Short Handed Goals N/A
Braden Holtby .917 Save Percentage Devan Dubnyk .906
Braden Holtby 33 Saves Devan Dubnyk 29
Team Stats Summary
 
Team Shots Goals Power Play Penalty Kill Penalty Mins Face Offs Won
Washington 33 4 1-5 4-5 10 22
Minnesota 36 3 1-5 4-5 10 46
Upcoming Games
  • Minnesota will play their next game at home against Boston. The Wild have a W/L % of .500 after a win and .367 after a loss.
  • Washington will play their next game on the road against Dallas. The Capitals have a W/L % of .725 after a win and .846 after a loss.