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Overtime win clinches postseason berth

WASHINGTON — Jake Guentzel scored his 22nd goal 2:11 into overtime to lift the Pittsburgh Penguins to a 5-4 victory over the Washington Capitals on Thursday night in a result that clinched both teams’ place in the playoffs.

Guentzel’s winner on a one-time redirection of John Marino’s pass came after Washington’s Tom Wilson forced overtime with 14.3 seconds to play.

The result, combined with the New York Islanders’ regulation win over the New York Rangers, ensures both teams will be among the Eastern Division’s four playoff teams.

“We’re going to enjoy this one tonight,” Penguins coach Mike Sullivan said. “By no means are any of us satisfied — we understand there’s a lot of work to do here. But we’re going to take a deep breath tonight and enjoy it.”

Kasperi Kapanen scored his ninth and 10th goals of the season, Frederick Gaudreau added a goal in his return from injury and Zach Aston-Reese also scored for the Penguins, who have now won five of their seven meetings with the Capitals.

Colton Sceviour and Jared McCann each had two assists for Pittsburgh.

T.J. Oshie scored his 18th goal, Daniel Sprung added his fourth in three games. Dmitry Orlov also scored and had an assist for Washington before Wilson’s late leveler.

Pittsburgh’s Tristan Jarry made 33 saves and Washington’s Vitek Vanacek made 30 stops.

Kapanen gave his team the lead midway through the third. McCann spotted him breaking down the right with a cross-ice pass, and with his defender beat, Kapanen lifted a shot over Vanacek’s blocker side into the top right corner to make it 4-3.

Wilson leveled it on a 6-on-5. Evgeny Kuznetsov tracked down his own miss, then spun and snuck a tight feed to him in front of the crease, and Wilson lifted a shot over Jarry’s shoulder.

“It’s never good when you give up a goal like that within the last, how many seconds there,” Guentzel said. “But you’ve just got to look at it (as), you’ve got a point, and you’ve got to try to get the next one. You’ve got to move by it pretty quick.”

Of the Penguins’ five wins in the season series, this was the fourth via overtime or shootout. Afterward, both sides said Thursday’s contest had a postseason feel.

“I think these last couple games have been playoff-style hockey,” Guentzel said. “There might not be as much ice out there and it’s just two teams who are defending hard.”

The Penguins and Capitals meet again in Washington Saturday, completing their season series.

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