Patric Hornqvist buries OT winner to give Pens commanding 3-1 lead

1:15

Penguins get it done without Letang and Maatta

Barry Melrose breaks down the Penguins were able to defeat the Capitals in Game 4 without Kris Letang and Olli Maatta.


PITTSBURGH -- Penguins forward Patric Hornqvist makes a living by working in tight spaces. Given a rare moment of freedom from his usual spot parked in front of the opponent's net, he pushed the Washington Capitals to the brink of elimination.

Hornqvist fired a loose puck between Braden Holtby's legs 2:34 into overtime to give the Penguins a 3-2 victory Wednesday night in Game 4 of the tightly contested second-round series.

Washington's Mike Weber tried to steer the puck out of harm's way in front of the net, but it went right to Hornqvist charging in from the right circle. Hornqvist buried it for his fifth goal of the postseason to give the Penguins a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven Eastern Conference semifinals.

"That's a big win,'' Hornqvist said. "Now we have to stick with it. We haven't done anything yet."

Maybe, but the Penguins can advance to the conference final with a victory in Game 5 in Washington on Saturday after sending the Capitals to a third straight loss. Washington dropped three consecutive games just once while capturing the Presidents' Trophy for posting the league's best record. Now the Capitals are three periods away from an eighth playoff series loss to the Penguins in nine all-time postseason meetings.

"We have to have the mentality shift by shift, period by period, try to turn it around," said Washington captain Alex Ovechkin, who had seven of his team's 36 shots but was held without a point.

The Penguins survived despite missing defenseman Kris Letang, serving a one-game suspension for an illegal hit on Marcus Johansson in Game 3. The makeshift group at the blue line that included Brian Dumoulin and Justin Schultz played just fine in the absence of perhaps Pittsburgh's most indispensable player. The Penguins blocked 14 shots and clogged the area in front of the net to protect rookie goaltender Matt Murray.

"It wasn't a perfect game by any stretch, but we're playing against a pretty good opponent, and Tanger's a tough guy to replace," Pittsburgh coach Mike Sullivan said. "Guys had to play more minutes, more significant roles. I thought the group of them did a tremendous job."

Matt Cullen and Trevor Daley also scored for Pittsburgh, and Murray stopped 34 shots to improve to 13-1 in his last 14 starts, including a 6-1 mark in the postseason. Penguins captain Sidney Crosby left briefly in the third period after getting slashed by Ovechkin, but his presence early in overtime helped set up the winner.

"I thought it was worse than it was," Crosby said. "I don't think it was anything other than that. Initially, you think maybe you're not coming back, so it's not a great feeling, but I don't think there was any intention there. I'm trying to keep a puck in, and he's trying to make sure that I don't. He caught me there, but that's part of it. Whenever you win it's always a better feeling, there's no doubt."

The series has had its share of nasty and borderline moments, including Evgeni Malkin rocking Daniel Winnik with a big hit Wednesday night, but Crosby said he feels that's part of playoff hockey.

"It's intense. It's physical," he said. "I think it's normal when each game goes along. That kind of heightens. I think it's what everyone thought. It's intense. You watch the other games, and it's very similar. I don't think it's anything out of the ordinary, but [it has] picked up each game."

Pittsburgh had been on the wrong end of sudden-death overtime eight straight times since beating the New York Islanders in Game 6 of the first round in 2013. The drought ended when a Conor Sheary shot from the point was stopped by Weber before it got to Holtby. Weber then nudged it across the slot to an awaiting Hornqvist. Holtby, who was focusing on Crosby standing right in front of him, couldn't get his legs closed fast enough.

"I have to get over there quicker than I did," Holtby said.

Jay Beagle and John Carlson scored for Washington, and Holtby made 29 saves.

The Capitals now have to rally from a 3-1 deficit, something they've done only twice in the franchise's 41 seasons. Washington had the league's best record in one-goal games during the regular season but is just 2-4 in one-goal contests in the playoffs.

"We have the experience, the composure," Holtby said. "It's just a matter of putting it to use now and keep pushing forward. Hopefully, the bounces will go our way sooner or later."

The Capitals dominated Game 3 everywhere but the scoreboard, falling 3-2 behind a spectacular 47-save performance by Murray. Washington coach Barry Trotz insisted there was "a good vibe" coming from his club, pointing to the way his team tilted the ice as proof the results would come if the Capitals kept at it.

The Penguins realized they were lucky to escape Game 3 with the series lead and responded with a far better performance even with Letang missing.

Still, Washington needed just 2:58 to take its first lead since Game 1 as Beagle flipped a backhander Murray's way despite being nearly parallel to the goal line. The shot sailed over Murray's shoulders and into the far top corner.

Daley's first playoff goal in nearly two years tied it later in the period, as his shot from the top of the right circle deflected off Washington's Karl Alzner and by Holtby. Cullen, playing between a pair of forwards -- Tom Kuhnhackl and Oskar Sundqvist -- who were born when Cullen was well into his teens, put Pittsburgh in front by taking a stretch pass off the boards from Dumoulin and beating Holtby low.

Justin Williams stripped Derrick Pouliot deep in the Pittsburgh zone and slipped it across the ice to Carlson, who had little trouble firing it over Murray's extended glove set the stage for the latest dramatic moment in a series that is living up to its considerable hype.

"A lot of us have been on both sides of the 3-1 series," Crosby said. "I think you understand that when you have a team in that position you have to take advantage of it and take advantage of that opportunity."

NOTES: Pittsburgh went 0-for-4 on the power play and is 0-for-14 with the man advantage during the series. ... The Capitals scratched D Nate Schmidt, who struggled in Game 3. ... Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Gerrit Cole watched from the front row next to the Washington bench and was caught on camera good-naturedly yelling at the Capitals before being chastised by an usher.

ESPN's Pierre LeBrun and The Associated Press contributed to this report.