LAS VEGAS — The Save in slow motion is just as incredible. The Save on the fourth, fifth and sixth viewing is just as absurd. The Save in person looked like magic and on television like a product of special effects.

But in real time, unfolding with the Washington Capitals desperate to protect a slim one-goal lead, eager to tie the Stanley Cup finals and carry momentum home to Washington for Game 3, the Save was simply sublime, as good a hockey play as the franchise has ever seen, the kind that fans will talk about for years. Replays and superlatives don’t do it justice.

Jay Beagle called it the “save of the year.”

“Maybe the save of a lifetime,” the veteran Capitals center said.

“Thank God he’s our goalie,” said captain Alex Ovechkin.

“Once he made that save, I knew we were gonna win the game,” added Washington Coach Barry Trotz.

Advertisement

The only one who didn’t seem impressed was the man who made the play that secured the first Stanley Cup finals victory for a franchise that began playing hockey 44 years ago.

“A guy made a good play,” Braden Holtby told NBC’s Pierre McGuire after the game. “That’s hockey sometimes.”

Only it isn’t. Not usually. The stakes aren’t usually so high. What looks inevitable doesn’t typically feel so close.

Holtby had already more than earned his per diem in Wednesday’s 3-2 victory, batting away an onslaught of Golden Knights shots during Washington’s successful 5-on-3 penalty-kill earlier in the third period. The Capitals were two minutes away from the win but victory hardly felt assured. That’s when the puck bounced hard off the backboard behind Holtby’s net and was greeted by a charging Cody Eakin, the Golden Knights’ veteran center.

Holtby slid to his left to seal the corner, but Eakin zipped a pass in front of the net to teammate Alex Tuch, ready for a one-timer.

“My heart stopped on the bench,” said Capitals forward Andre Burakovsky.

Advertisement

Holtby didn’t have time to slide to his right, and as Tuch fired, the goaltender extended himself as far as he could. Tuch appeared to have a wide-open net but his bullet was met by Holtby’s stick and promptly smothered beneath it.

“I’ve seen a lot of those kind of saves before,” said defenseman John Carlson, “but with the magnitude of the situation and just how strong he had to be … that was probably the nicest one I’ve seen.”

Fans and teammates alike were breathless – first from fear, then from an eruption of relief and joy. As Nicklas Backstrom described it, everyone sporting a red sweater Wednesday night went through a breakneck swing of emotions. “I was like, ‘Oh no,'” the Capitals center said. “But then I was like, ‘Oh yes.'”

Said Beagle: “I was just yelling in his ear. He was probably telling me to shut up. I was just so fired up he made that stop.”

The Golden Knights, too, immediately knew what the Save meant: the series would be even as it moved east to Washington. Vegas had tried to seize momentum and Holtby stopped it and buried it with his stick. “This time of year, you need things like that to move on,” said Golden Knights defenseman Nate Schmidt.

On the night, Holtby stopped 37 of 39 Vegas shots. He looked every bit the steely-eyed player who shut out Tampa Bay to lock up the Eastern Conference title. But it was the Save that had everyone buzzing. The stop quickly swept over social media, ready-made for highlight shows.

Advertisement

“Greatest save I’ve ever seen,” tweeted former Capitals goaltender Olie Kolzig, who made more than a few in his days in the crease, which included Washington’s last trip to the finals in 1998.

Holtby wasn’t flipping through his phone, liking tweets or replaying the video. He answered every postgame question thoughtfully but with a level of enthusiasm usually reserved for filling out a grocery list.

“I try to disconnect myself from social media,” he said. “We’re a group trying to win hockey games. Whoever has to step up to make plays, we’re all there as a team to support each other. We get huge plays from different guys throughout the playoffs. It’s one of those things to help us win a game. Now we move forward to the next game. We have a goal in mind that’s a lot bigger than some save and social media.”

He’s right, of course. He needn’t discuss the Save ad nauseam. But Capitals fans will – throughout this series and possibly for years to come.


Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.