NHL PLAYOFFS

Flyers stay alive, go back to Philly

Philadelphia goalie Michal Neuvirth uses a shin pad to make a save during the third period Friday on a shot by Washington center Jay Beagle (83) during the Flyers’ 2-0 victory over the Capitals in Washington. Philadelphia will host Game 6 on Sunday with a chance to tie the series.
Philadelphia goalie Michal Neuvirth uses a shin pad to make a save during the third period Friday on a shot by Washington center Jay Beagle (83) during the Flyers’ 2-0 victory over the Capitals in Washington. Philadelphia will host Game 6 on Sunday with a chance to tie the series.

WASHINGTON -- Michal Neuvirth made a playoff career-high 44 saves and the Philadelphia Flyers beat the Washington Capitals 2-0 in Game 5 on Friday night to stay alive in their first-round series.

Neuvirth was dominant, carrying the team on his shoulders and blunting Alex Ovechkin and the Capitals' every charge to cut the series deficit to 3-2 and send it back to Philadelphia for Game 6 on Sunday.

Ryan White scored the lone goal for the Flyers against Braden Holtby, with the puck deflecting in off Washington defenseman Taylor Chorney and past the goalie.

Chris VandeVelde added an empty-netter late.

Holtby was barely tested in making 10 saves.

The pressure is now on the Presidents' Trophy-winning Capitals, who led the series 3-0 before Neuvirth replaced Steve Mason in goal for Philadelphia. Washington lost back-to-back games in regulation for the first time all season.

Sidelined by a lower-body injury for three weeks, Neuvirth only played two games since March 4 before making his Flyers playoff debut in Game 4 on Wednesday, stopping 31 of 32 shots against the team that drafted and developed him.

Neuvirth faced the Capitals in relief while with the New York Islanders in the 2015 playoffs, but this was his big opportunity. Some of his former teammates made sure it was a busy one.

The Capitals fired plenty of shots against Neuvirth, hemming the Flyers in their zone and forcing him to be sharp. The 28-year-old Czech made a big glove save on Daniel Winnik short-handed attempt early in the second period to keep the Capitals off the board, and then Philadelphia finally gave him some support.

Three seconds after another unsuccessful power play, White was credited with the goal when it banked off Chorney's skate and in. The Flyers fell to 1 for 21 on the power play in the series but remained alive.

Neuvirth was singlehandedly the reason for that as he sprawled to stop Karl Alzner, denied Ovechkin and robbed Marcus Johansson in the second period. In the third he denied Dmitry Orlov on a rush and smothered the puck and handled a slap shot from Ovechkin.

On a Capitals power play midway through the third, Neuvirth made another stand and always looked in control while facing an onslaught. VandeVelde scored an empty-netter with 30.8 seconds left to seal it.

The 33-shot disparity (44 to 11) tied the second-biggest margin by a losing playoff team since 1989-90, according to STATS.

Before the game, a Washington reporter asked Flyers Coach Dave Hakstol if he thought Neuvirth had done a good job when he filled in for Mason in the regular season.

"First of all, I guess I'd argue the point of Neuvy filling in for us," Hakstol said. "Neuvy's never been filling in for us. He's one of two very important players for us" in the net. "He did for us (in Game 4) exactly what he's done in the regular season: He goes in and provides that calm presence and gives us an opportunity to win."

Sports on 04/23/2016

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