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Monumental Sports Network televises more than 500 live professional and collegiate sporting events per year. The network holds the exclusive regional cable television rights to the NHL's Washington Capitals and the NBA's Washington Wizards—airing all games that are not nationally exclusive—as well as the Washington Mystics of the WNBA.
The series focused on a fictional football team headed by the heiress of the teams' legacy, Amanda Carey, and their coach, Jock Stone. During the series, the Hurricanes football team would either be battling a renegade football club, the Gorgons, managed by Stavros Garkos, for pitch supremacy, or having wild, unpredictable adventures off the field in exotic world touring locations.
After 19 seasons on WDCA, the Capitals moved their over-the-air broadcasts to WBDC (channel 50) for the 1995–96 season. [12] All 82 games were televised for the first time in the 2001–02 season. [13] The Capitals have not aired any games over-the-air locally since the end of the 2005–06 season. [14]
The Canes, hosting the Washington Capitals on Sunday in a Metro Division game, went to a shootout before the Caps won 2-1. Evgeny Kuznetsov, shooting second, had the only shootout goal, scoring ...
A last-gasp goal was the final indignity the Hurricanes suffered as they were swept out of the playoffs. “It didn’t feel like a 4-0 series to me,” Sebastian Aho said. “But it is what it is.”
The 30-year-old goalie spent parts of six seasons toiling in the AHL before finally playing a full NHL season with Washington last year. He began in a backup role, but earned more ice time as the ...
The Capitals played at the Capital Centre from their inaugural season in 1974 to 1997, when they moved to the MCI Center, now known as the Capital One Arena. In 49 completed seasons, the Capitals have qualified for the Stanley Cup playoffs 33 times, making two Stanley Cup Finals appearances during the 1997–98 and 2017–18 seasons, winning ...
The 2008–09 Washington Capitals season was the team's 35th in the National Hockey League. The Capitals finished the regular season with a record of 50–24–8 and a team-record 108 points, and they won their second consecutive Southeast Division championship.