


Hurricanes 6, Capitals 4
Carolina remains in control
Foegele’s 2 goals help Hurricanes win 4th straight vs. Capitals

Lucas Wallmark, Jordan Staal, Martin Necas and Andrei Svechnikov also scored for the Hurricanes as they snapped a three-game losing streak on the opening night of a seven-game homestand. Petr Mrazek stopped 25 shots.
Nic Dowd, Alex Ovechkin, Evgeny Kuznetsov and Radko Gudas scored and John Carlson had two assists for the Capitals, who lead the NHL with 59 points and had won three of their last four games.
However, Foegele and the Hurricanes remained hot against their Metropolitan Division rival, with wins in four straight games dating back to the Stanley Cup playoffs in the spring.
Foegele had four goals and two assists in the playoffs last season against the Capitals as Carolina eliminated Washington in seven games in the Eastern Conference semifinals. He added an assist Oct. 5 to help the Hurricanes win 3-2 in overtime at Washington, and had a role in all three of Carolina’s second-period goals Saturday.
He converted a cross-ice pass from Jordan Staal on a two-on-one break just eight seconds into the second period to stretch Carolina’s lead to 2-0. After Dowd ripped a shot past Mrazek to halve the lead, Foegele fed Hamilton for another score on a two-on-one break to restore the two-goal advantage.
Ovechkin cut the lead to 3-2 with a slap shot high into the net behind Mrazek on a power play, and Washington had a chance to even the score on another man-advantage opportunity late in the second period.
Foegele struck again with 6:58 left in the second, crashing the net to poke the puck past Braden Holtby for a short-handed goal to send Carolina into the third period with a 4-2 lead.
Ovechkin’s 256th career power-play goal vaulted him past Teemu Selanne into third-place on the NHL’s all-time goal list with the man advantage. Ovechkin trails only Dave Andreychuk (274) and Brett Hull (265) on the career power-play goals list.
Kuznetsov scored while Foegele was in the penalty box two minutes into the second period to cut the deficit to 4-3, but Necas scored 1:20 later on a rebound of Erik Haula’s shot that was stopped by Holtby.
In the first period, Carolina was not able to convert during 55 seconds with a two-man advantage but scored just eight seconds after the Capitals’ first penalty expired when Nino Niederreiter fed Wallmark for a shot that beat Holtby inside the far post.