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Capitals win 13th straight, beat Thrashers 5-2
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WASHINGTON — The Washington Capitals are getting great goaltending and explosive offense. It's a combination no one has been able to stop.

The Capitals' team-record winning streak stands at 13 games after a 5-2 victory over the Atlanta Thrashers on Friday night.

Alex Ovechkin scored his NHL-leading 39th goal, and Michal Neuvirth made 43 saves to help kept alive the longest streak in the NHL in nearly nine years.

"It's difficult to stay at a pace when every team you're playing is coming at you in waves because they're the ones who want to end it," Capitals coach Bruce Boudreau said. "The reason winning streaks are tough is because you have to be at the top of your game all the time."

The 13-game winning streak is the NHL's longest since New Jersey won 13 straight in 2001. The last time a team had a longer streak was when Pittsburgh set the NHL record with 17 in a row from March 9-April 10, 1993.

"I think it doesn't matter if they're on a roll or not. They've been pretty good the last three years," Atlanta goalie Ondrej Pavelec said. "They're just playing great."

The Capitals also matched the franchise record of 10 consecutive home victories in a half-empty Verizon Center. The game was announced as a sellout, but many fans stayed home as a snowstorm hit the nation's capital.

Tobias Enstrom and Rich Peverley scored for the Thrashers, playing a day after trading scoring star Ilya Kovalchuk to New Jersey.

Neuvirth started in goal for Washington after being called up from Hershey of the AHL earlier in the day. He ran into trouble less than 3 minutes into the game when Peverley's shot bounced off Neuvirth's shoulder and Enstrom scored on the rebound.

Neuvirth — who has won four games for the Capitals during this streak — made nearly every play the rest of the way.

After Washington took a 2-1 lead on Nicklas Backstrom's goal 41/2 minutes into the second period, Neuvirth faced a flurry of shots. Atlanta had 22 shots in the period and Neuvirth stopped all of them. The best was an acrobatic catch above his head as
he fell to a sitting position on the ice late in the second period.

"I was not that sharp in the first but I think I was getting better every minute," said Neuvirth, sent to Hershey on Jan. 31.

Neuvirth's play set up Washington to take control in the third period. Goals by Alexander Semin and Jason Chimera 1:08 apart in the third period gave Washington a three-goal cushion. An empty-net goal by Mike Green iced the win for the Capitals, who haven't lost since Jan. 12 at Tampa Bay.

"The guys want to win more than anything," Boudreau said. "That's why they come out in the third period and they're pretty well in control so far in the third period lately."

Ovechkin tied it at 1 on a power play at 13:41 in the first period, after leaving the offensive zone to get a new stick from the bench. Backstrom found Ovechkin with a pass as soon as he skated back across the blue line, and Ovechkin fired a slap shot past Pavelec.

Neuvirth could do little about Peverley's short-handed goal in the third period. The puck was knocked in by Semin, who slipped while trailing the play.

The Capitals will attempt to win their 14th straight against the Pittsburgh Penguins at home Sunday.

"We want to win, but the most important thing is to win in the future," Ovechkin said. "Right now we keep winning, but we're thinking about the playoffs and what we have to do to be better in the playoffs."

NOTES: Atlanta has lost three straight. ... Backstrom did not play in the third period. Boudreau said he had flu-like symptoms but he should be fine for Sunday's game. ... Green returned to the Capitals lineup after serving a three-game suspension for elbowing Florida's Michael Frolik in the head. ... Goalie Braden Holtby was assigned to Hershey to make room for Neuvirth. ... Atlanta center Marty Reasoner played his 600th NHL game.
Community Events
Thrashers headed to Canada after team's sale
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WINNIPEG, Manitoba — The wait is over for Winnipeg hockey fans.

For Atlanta, it means saying goodbye to another NHL team.

True North Sports and Entertainment scheduled a news conference Tuesday at Winnipeg's MTS Centre to make "a significant community announcement."

True North has been in negotiations with the owners of the Atlanta Thrashers to buy the NHL team and move it to Winnipeg. The deal is reportedly worth $170 million, which includes a $60 million relocation fee that would be split by the rest of the league.

Winnipeg has been without NHL hockey since the Jets moved to Phoenix in 1996. The Thrashers entered the league three years later as an expansion franchise, but ownership problems, a losing team and dwindling attendance doomed the club. The team ranked 28th out of 30 teams this year with an average attendance of less than 14,000.

Assuming the deal goes through - it still must be approved by the other owners - Atlanta would become the first city in the NHL's modern era to lose two teams.
The Flames moved to Calgary in 1980 after eight seasons in Atlanta.

True North was making its announcement one day before the start of the Stanley Cup final, which begins Wednesday in Vancouver between the Canucks and the Boston Bruins.
While there was no prohibition on announcing major news during that series, the league preferred to get the Thrashers' sale off its plate before opening its signature event.

For weeks, the two sides had been working through complex legal details on the sale and relocation of the team, while leaving open the possibility that a local buyer would emerge late in the process. No one ever came forward with a serious offer, according to the Thrashers' ownership group, Atlanta Spirit, and the city's mayor, Kasim Reed.

"It is going to hurt the city but we will withstand it just fine and we will get through it," Reed said.

NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman said on his weekly radio show that the inability to find an owner who wanted to keep the team in Atlanta was a barrier the league couldn't overcome.

"It would be one of those head scratchers where you say, 'Look at all of this great corporate opportunity, look at all of this grass roots hockey, why doesn't somebody want to own a team here?'" Bettman said. "And that would be a difficult, but unfortunate, situation to be dealing with if it has reached, or does reach, that point."

Bettman was asked if Atlanta had hopes of landing another NHL team if it lost its second franchise.

"The prospect of leaving Atlanta isn't something that I'm particularly fond of," he said. "So I can't even contemplate the notion of what would happen after that in terms of coming back. We respect the importance of Atlanta as a city. It's a big market, but this is a franchise that's got a problem in that market."

Team president Don Waddell says there remains some hope for a late development until a sale is made official and approved by the NHL board of governors, which is scheduled to meet June 21 in New York. But considering Atlanta Spirit, which also owns the NBA's Atlanta Hawks and the operating rights to Philips Arena, has been trying for years to sell the hockey team, that seems highly unlikely.

Also, any potential owner would have to agree to become a tenant at Philips Arena, a major stumbling block because it would cut into potential revenue from sources such as concessions, parking, luxury suites and other events.

"Ownership still is committed to selling at a greatly reduced price to anyone committed to Atlanta," Waddell said.