traction (trak’-shun): noun -- the adhesive friction of a body on some surface, as a wheel on a rail or a tire on a road.
In last night’s 3-2 loss to the Vancouver Canucks, the lack of traction – in the game and for the season – was on display. Let’s leave aside, for the moment, that it was Roberto Luongo in net for the Canucks – a goaltender the Caps haven’t beaten since the
And it wasn’t as if the Caps’ chances were of the poor variety, but there was a subtle difference in the nature of the attempts. The top scorers on the top two lines – the players you’d expect having the most chances taken (Alex Ovechkin, Alexander Semin, Chris Clark, Viktor Kozlov) – had 33 attempts on Wednesday. Last night?...24. A substantial number of those 24 attempts were of the quality variety – Luongo having to sprawl across the mouth of the cage to foil a one-timer from Ovechkin and then, with the game in the balance in the waning moments, turning away Semin from in close being perhaps the most visible examples of fine chances.
It comes down to traction…the Caps just couldn’t really find any last night, just as they haven’t (yet) this season, save for those first three games. They are a shot, a save, or a hair’s breadth away from having a big night or a decent streak. Last night was typical of that – no Caps played especially poorly, but there were some bad plays that the opposition took advantage of (much as
It was unfortunate, because the Caps put on an incredibly dominating performance in one underrated aspect of the game – faceoffs. We pointed out coming in that
The Caps were equally dominating in physical play, outhitting the Canucks, 32-12, as befitting the biggest team in the league. Milan Jurcina led the hit parade with five, but Matt Bradley and Donald Brashear chipped in four, themselves.
Among the notable numbers at the individual level, Brian Pothier played like he was at an arcade game (or was wearing a number “8” jersey)…eight shots on goal, another four attempts blocked. Add in two hits and a couple of blocked shots on his own in more than 27 minutes of ice time, and it was a pretty good game from the blueliner.
Ovechkin had his second straight multiple point game (1-1-2), and complemented his game with a couple of hits and three blocked shots. The demonstration of Ovechkin’s more well-rounded game continues, and not at the expense of consistency.
The Peerless does have to doff his prognosticator’s cap to Alexander Semin in one regard. The kid didn’t back down when getting tangled up with Willie Mitchell during one lengthy sequence last night. Mitchell is a pretty tough fellow – not in the brawler sense, but he throws his weight around effectively. Semin and he tangled, and when Mitchell decided the time was ripe to throw that weight around, Semin gave it right back…then went after him again…and again. The two tussled from one side of the ice to the other, but while Mitchell wasn’t any the worse for wear in the exchange, kudos to Semin for taking care of his own business.
The Peerless gets the feeling the Caps are this close to breaking out – in a game and over a stretch of games. But it’s getting to where they need to demonstrate that pretty quickly.
3 comments:
You know it is not going to be a good night when just take your seat in the upper deck your team captain takes an offensive zone interference penalty.
In any event, I agree with much of what you said. However, I don't know how you can say that no Caps played poorly. I always get mocked on Caps message boards when I say this, but I have played hockey my whole life and I am still right: Donald Brashear is worse than a waste of a roster spot. He played what, 5 shifts last night, and still he managed to take the stupid and unnecessary (HOOKING) penalty that led to the game-winning goal for the Canucks. Not only that, but his four hits combined had less impact that Ovechkin's one hit near the end of the second period. He's a goon, and it is not the first time he has cost the Caps a huge goal. The fact that you can make a viable argument for him having a roster spot says something about NHL hockey as a whole.
I am also still scared that Olie seems to gives up at least one goal a night that goes 5-hole or trickles under him. Are his pads mini-hovercraft? That needs to stop if the Caps are going to post some wins.
I think the talent is there to make the playoffs. I was happy to see two power play goals last night. But this team is yet to meld. Players continue to take stupid penalties. The chemistry is off.
Just one other note. Echoing what I have read on some other blogs, the officiating last night was weak. The calls against Clark and Brashear that I mentioned were questionable. That being said, they were still unacceptable under the circumstances.
Also, I hear that Clark is out for tonight's game, but suffered no major injuries. Good news, that was a scary moment.
I'm less concerned after nine games this year than last year. It might have been nice, but a fast start in the first ten games was probably a pipe dream, the three gamer to open the year notwithstanding.
There are a lot of new elements here in important roles, and it will take time for them to mesh. I just keep in the back of my mind that the Penguins were little more than a .500 team in early January last year and finished with 105 points. I don't expect anything quite that dramatic, but I think the Caps will still compete (successfully) for a playoff spot.
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