"I was glad the period ended, to be honest with you," said Flyers defenseman Kimmo Timonen. "You don't score on a five-on-three like that, or after, it usually bites you in the [butt]."
Timonen and the power-play unit on which he plays did more biting later.
His shot produced the rebound that Joffrey Lupul chipped into a wide-open net for the game-winner 6:06 into overtime for a 3-2 win. It ended the series - and Timonen's exhausting evening.
He logged 28 minutes, 24 seconds of ice time, more than anyone except his defensive partner, Braydon Coburn. Usually, Timonen marked Russian dynamo Alex Ovechkin, the league's top scorer and an MVP favorite.
"Timo was unbelievable," coach John Steven gushed. "He looked like he could play all night out there. He's playing against Ovechkin . . . Timo embraced that challenge. He wanted it."
"To be honest," Timonen said, "I'm pretty tired."
To be honest, he didn't look like it.
Ovechkin scored twice in Game 6 on Monday and once last night, but last night he scored off a Jason Smith turnover, not on Timonen's watch, and Ovechkin's assist last night came on the power play. Before Game 6, Ovechkin had scored once.
By the end of last night's game, Ovechkin - 11 years younger, 4 inches taller, 20 pounds heavier than Timonen - clearly was drained, misfiring and dealing errant passes.
"It was tough," Timonen, 33, said of marking Ovechkin, 22. "He's the MVP, in my mind. A great player. An unbelievable scorer."
Afterward, Timonen longed for fluid replenishment and rest. Little wonder: He played just over 27 minutes in Monday's devastating loss, about 4 minutes more than any other player.
When Caps defenseman Tom Poti was whistled for tripping, the first penalty since two-thirds of the way through the second period, Timonen was surprised - and energized.
"I knew, then, we'd get chances," he said.
They needed the extra man. The Capitals had dominated the Flyers in the third period and early on in overtime.