John Carlson's 3-point night helps Capitals beat Rangers 5-2

WASHINGTON -- John Carlson's longtime defense partner thinks he's a future Norris Trophy winner.

That might be this season the way he's going.

Carlson added three assists to his historic start, T.J. Oshie scored two power-play goals and the Washington Capitals beat the New York Rangers 5-2 Friday night for their second consecutive home victory.

Carlson tied Edmonton captain Connor McDavid for tops in the NHL with 17 points and leads the league with 14 assists.

"He's been amazing so far," said Michal Kempny, who has repeatedly predicted Carlson would one day win the Norris as the league's best defenseman. "He's a great guy, great teammate, obviously great defenseman. He's unreal. He's hot right now, and he's feeling it."

The 29-year-old Carlson assisted on one of Oshie's goals and scores by Nic Dowd and Michal Kempny in the Czech defenseman's return from a hamstring injury. Kempny and Carlson played together during the Capitals' 2018 Stanley Cup run.

Already the seventh defenseman in NHL history with 14-plus points in his first eight games of the season and the first to do so in 30 years, Carlson has six multipoint games in nine opportunities.

"Chances happen, chances get created and sometimes they go in and sometimes they don't," Carlson said. "They seem to be going in right now, which is nice. Just keep working the same way."

Oshie got credit for his first power-play goal when Rangers defenseman Marc Staal knocked the puck into his own net. He deflected Carlson's point shot past New York goaltender Henrik Lundqvist for his second.

Kempny drove to the net and scored in the first period of his first game action since tearing his left hamstring in March and undergoing surgery in April.

"I felt pretty good, actually," Kempny said. "My legs felt good. Obviously not an easy situation for me. But I got to say just thank you to all of the staff, whole organization, my teammates, my family, my friends who were supporting me all the way through here and help me. It means a lot to me."

Braden Holtby stopped 26 of 28 shots to bounce back from a rough start Monday against Colorado.

"I didn't really like how I was playing," Holtby said. "It was nice to get a couple days to work on a couple things, get back to feeling comfortable in certain situations. It wasn't perfect tonight, but it's going in the right direction."

At the either end of the ice, Lundqvist stopped Jakub Vrana on a penalty shot and made 29 saves to help keep New York in the game in the second half of a back-to-back set. Pavel Buchnevich had a power-play goal, and top offseason addition Artemi Panarin scored his third of the season for the Rangers, who have only played five games this season to Washington's nine.

Coach David Quinn was not too thrilled about how his team defended against Washington.

"We were just weren't mentally sharp at all," Quinn said. "We lost our way, and no matter what structure we were supposed to be in, there was a lot of purposeless hockey tonight."

Game notes
The Capitals have won seven in a row against the Rangers. ... Garnet Hathaway sealed it with an empty-net goal with 27.7 seconds left. ... With an assist on Kempny's goal, Capitals captain Alex Ovechkin registered his 1,219th point and passed Jean Beliveau for 42nd on the career scoring list. ... Capitals D Jonas Siegenthaler played two nights after colliding with teammate Richard Panik during a game against the Maple Leafs and leaving with a left shoulder injury. Panik was placed on long-term injured reserve with an upper-body injury and will miss at least 10 games. ... F Brendan Lemieux returned to the Rangers lineup, replacing Greg McKegg. ... Nationals ace Max Scherzer dropped a baseball as part of a ceremonial faceoff to honor Washington's first World Series appearance since 1933.

UP NEXT

Rangers: After three games in 17 days to start the season, New York continues a busy stretch by hosting the Vancouver Canucks on Sunday.

Capitals: Open a five-game road trip Sunday at the Chicago Blackhawks, with stops in Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver and Toronto to follow.

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Follow AP Hockey Writer Stephen Whyno on Twitter at https://twitter.com/SWhyno

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