Friday, February 05, 2010

A TWO-point night: Caps 5 - Thrashers 2

OK, so… the Caps score an own goal on their own power play… their top center misses the last 20 minutes with “flu-like” symptoms… they started a rookie goalie who was just called up from Hershey (again)… their biggest hitter was credited with no hits… they were outshot 45-32…

And they still won, 5-2.

The Caps climbed into a tie for fourth for the longest winning streaks in NHL history with their 13th consecutive win, this one over the Atlanta Thrashers. It was another case of another team starting with spit and vinegar, then wilting when the Caps finally got their rhythm.

No, we don’t see that as a lasting formula for winning, but it’s working now, and you really can’t argue with success. The Caps fell behind, again (the third straight game they allowed the game’s first goal), but roared back after suffering that insult with four goals of their own.

Again, as it has been so often in this streak, it was a case of balance. Ten skaters registered points on the five goals, and the points were spread rather evenly among the lines…

Ovechkin-Backstrom-Knuble: 2-3-5, +4
Semin-Fleischmann-Laich: 1-1-2, +1
Chimera-Morrison-Fehr: 1-0-1, -3
Gordon-Steckel-Bradley: 0-2-2, +3

But while the Caps were having fun at the offensive end of the ice, Michal Neuvirth was spending 60 minutes saying, “uh, you got another goalie prospect here…” Neuvirth saved 44 of 45 shots off Thrasher sticks, the odd goal being scored after he made a save of Rich Peverley, who was in on a breakaway, but watched helplessly as Alexander Semin (charging hard to try to make up for having his attempted cross-ice pass at the other end stripped off his stick by Peverley to create the breakaway) kicked the puck back into his own net. Otherwise, Neuvirth was sublime.

Other stuff…

- Break stick, go to bench, pick up another, skate back, score goal. It really isn’t that easy, is it?

-- Alex Ovechkin has now been captain for 17 games. The Caps are 16-1-0 over that span of games. Rather impressive. But Ovechkin’s numbers look positively “1980’s” in those 17 games. His “per-82 games” pace looks like this… 63-92-155, +96. That’s right, plus-96. In those 17 games, the Caps have allowed 41 goals. Number of goals Ovechkin has been on the ice for?... six.

-- With two minutes to go in what would be the Caps 13th straight win, they had scored 61 goals during the streak. Mike Green finally got his first during this streak with an empty netter for the fifth goal and 62nd in this streak.

-- So, another clean hit followed up by a guy stepping in as “The Equalizer.” This is really getting old. Nice to see John Erskine dispose of that nonsense with a straight left that caught Chris Thorburn flush on the cheek. Robert McCall, he ain’t.

-- When was the last time David Steckel was held to 30 percent on draws? October 24th – 48 games ago. In fact, the only Caps who won more than he lost (those taking more than one faceoff) was they guy who missed the last period – Nicklas Backstrom.

-- Jason Chimera’s bomb from down the left side had a lot of “8” in it. He just overpowered Ondrej Pavelec with the shot.

-- And isn’t Chimera looking like a fine pickup… 19 games, 4-6-10, plus-5, and he’s been a sturdy presence.

-- And there was the continuing refrain of the Caps wearing down goalies. Tonight’s victim, Ondrej Pavelec, allowed one goal on the first 15 shots he faced, then one in seven, then allowed goals on consecutive shots 1:08 apart early in the third.

-- As for those goals 1:08 apart, that looks like the 13th time in the last 12 games that the Caps have scored goals less than three minutes apart.

-- Yes, the Thrashers outshot the Caps 45-32, but the attempts were another story. The Caps had 73 to Atlanta’s 67. Early on, the Thrashers held a puck-possession and territorial advantage, but that evaporated as the game wore on.

-- As for the other young guns among the forwards and their 82-game paces since the change in captain, Nicklas Backstrom is now on a 48-72-120, +77 pace, and Alexander Semin is on a 58-68-126, +58 pace. Shoot, Tomas Fleischmann is on a point-a-game pace (14-68-82 per-82 game pace over the last 17 games).

-- Watching Semyon Varlamov is the Fourth of July, with roman candles and sparklers. Watching Michal Neuvirth is sitting under the tree at a picnic sipping on iced tea. Both enjoyable, both capable of making you happy.

It was a good win, a solid win. It wasn’t without hiccups, but for the second game in a back-to-back with all the distractions of weather and the news surrounding the opponent, it was a fine night for the men in red. It’s hockey weather this weekend in the DC region, and when Sunday rolls around, we would expect that the Caps will be ready for some hockey and some roast Penguin for Sunday dinner. Tonight, though, was a warm cup of hot cocoa on a snowy night.

Ok, you....you dirty dozen

I don't know who did this, but they get a doff of the prognostitorial chapeau for their inspired art work (click the image for a larger version)...

Friday... The 13th?







































Horror for opponents...

...Joy for Caps fans.





(photos: AP, Getty Images)

The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!! -- Caps vs. Thrashers, February 5th

The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!

Here we are, coming to you live from McMurdo Station…uh, Washington, DC, where the Caps will host the Atlanta Thrashers… the Ilya Kovalchuk-less Atlanta Thrashers. The Thrashers parted ways with the elite left wing last night, sending Kovalchuk to the New Jersey Devils for a quartet of assets whose names are likely to be lost to history before too long. For the record, the price that Atlanta extracted from the Devils for perhaps the second most electrifying player in the game (plus Anssi Salmela) is:

John Oduya, a competent defenseman

Niclas Bergfors, a former first-round draft pick who started the year rather well (5-9-14 in his first 18 games), but who does not have a goal in 2010 and has only one assist in 16 games.

Patrice Cormier, currently serving a season-ending suspension for flinging an elbow at the head of Mikael Tam in a QMJHL game.

A first round draft pick, which would seem to be no better than perhaps 25th in the entry draft, given where the Devils are likely to finish in the standings.

Needless to say, the cousins have opinions on the matter. Fearless, what’s your take?

“Not an impact player in the bunch. Yes, they got a couple of guys who might – and the operative word there is ‘might’ – be top-six forwards in a few years in Bergfors and Cormier, but they couldn’t pry Mattias Tedenby or Jacob Josefsen from the Devils, who might have better upsides.”

Cheerless?

“AH-HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA…”

Uh, OK then…Fearless, what does this tell Atlanta fans?

“That Don Waddell isn’t much of a horse trader…”

Cheerless, would you agree?

“AH-HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA…”

Uh, yeah… What about Oduya?

“He’s not a bad defenseman, but he’s probably a third pair even on that team, behind Enstrom, Kubina, Bogosian, and Hainsey. If Kubina is moved, he moves up the depth chart.”

Cheerless, what do you think of getting the first rounder?

“AH-HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA….”

“I think cuz is going to pop a blood vessel…”

“hoo-hoo…I was just readin’ the Thrasher message boards… they thought they were getting Zubrus or Ralston. And those folks are geniuses compared to the ‘experts.’ One of those ESPN guys had Kovalchuk going for Travis Zajac, Dainius Zubrus, and Andy Greene. Yeah… that works.”

Not a good day for the pundits…

“And that goober who names himself after a former Flyer?...He had the Thrashers wanting two of Hartnell, van Riemsdyk, and Giroux from Philadelphia… geez, why not ask for a lifetime supply of cheese steaks, too? "

Yeah… Eklund… often, well… always wrong, but never in doubt. But that leaves the Thrashers gasping for offense as they take the Verizon Center ice – we think – for tonight’s sled dog race…uh, hockey game at Verizon Center.

The Thrashers were already something of an offense-challenged team, given that Kovalchuk had 31 goals (of the 162 the Thrashers have) and that Atlanta had only 41 goals in 16 games since the start of the new year (2.56/game). The overall numbers look like this…



The top scorer for Atlanta is now Maxim Afinogenov. Ironic, isn’t it, that a player that was given up for dead, unwanted by a lot of teams in the off-season has found his scoring touch and will be the Thrashers’ big offensive weapon heading into this game. The difficulty, though, is that since putting up a 2-2-4 effort against the Islanders on January 2nd, he is 2-3-5 in his last 14 games.

With Kovalchuk’s departure, Rich Peverley now takes over the top spot in goal scoring, tied with Afinogenov (17). He has had a decent start to the new year with five goals in his last 15 games. He doesn’t have a goal against the Caps this year and is a minus-4 in three games (he does have three assists).

Nik Antropov looks to have been a pretty good off-season signing by the Thrashers. He is third on the club in goals (13), tied for second in points (42), and has the best plus-minus on the club by a wide margin (plus-17). He has had only two minus games in his last 18 contests. He has 20 points in 27 career games against the Caps (7-13-20), including three assists in two games this year.

The Thrashers get a significant amount of scoring out of their blueliners – four of them are in double-digit points. But they also have a couple of defensemen who are on the far side of minus-10 (Ron Hainsey and Zach Bogosian). For Hainsey, he has a grand total of only three points in 2010 (all assists), and he has been a plus player in only four times in 16 games. Bogosian is 1-3-4 in 2010 (but without a point in his last six games) and has been a plus player only three times in 16 games. Oduya might be expected to shore up the defensive end of the ice, but with only four points this year (2-2-4) the Thrashers are not going to be getting a lot of offensive production there (whether he plays in this game is iffy, given travel and that sort of thing).

In goal Atlanta has a difficult mix to sort out. Johan Hedberg is 36 years old and provides stability and, occasionally, some fine efforts. He recently had a three game run in which he allowed only a single goal in each game. But that is sandwiched by a four game streak to start the year in which he allowed 14 goals (1-1-2, .857 SV) and his last two appearances, in which he allowed three and four goals (61 saves on 68 shots -- .897 SV) in splitting two decisions.

At the other end of the spectrum, Ondrej Pavelec is only 22 years old, and he’s had the struggles 22-year old goaltenders often have. He is 3-3-1 in eight appearances since January 1st (3.16, .902), and he has lost his last two decisions, a 5-2 loss to Carolina on January 21st and a 2-1 loss to Tampa Bay last Tuesday. You would have to think Hedberg would get the call in this one, if only because Pavelec is 0-1-1, 5.73, .836 in two appearances against the Caps this season. Hedberg isn’t a lot better – 0-1-0, 4.73, .826.

The Peerless’ Players to Ponder

Atlanta: Evander Kane

With Kovalchuk gone, Kane might now get to jump start his development a little more. He is now the “franchise player” in waiting. A lot to ask of a youngster who is still only 18. Kane has 11 goals in this, his rookie season, but he has only three in his last 32 games, one since New Year’s Day. He has yet to register a point against the Caps (0-0-0 in three games).

Washington: Braden Holtby

Does the kid get his NHL debut? If so, one could do worse than have it come against the Thrashers, who might be expected to still be sorting out the Kovalchuk deal and that all of a sudden has become a very offense-challenged team. You would have to say Holtby has exceeded expectations so far this year. He started in South Carolina and is 7-2-3, 2.95, .911 with the Stingrays. He has spent a lot of time in Hershey, where his numbers are even better – 16-2-1, 2.04, .928. If he gets the nod and manages a win, you would have to say his season went from “exceeding expectations” to perhaps “meteoric.”

(edit: Michal Neuvirth was called up, so that meteor apparently doesn't get to flash across the sky tonight).

Keys:

1. Focus, focus, focus. This will be an odd game. The Thrashers are playing their first game without Ilya Kovalchuk in their organization, the Caps are coming home after a hard-fought, come-from-behind win, and there is the weather that could play havoc with team travel and keep the crowd down. Being able to maintain focus will be a chore.

2. Play Fehr. Eric Fehr has five goals in 12 career games against the Thrashers, including one in two games this season. He has five goals in 16 games since the start of the new year. It doesn’t sound like a lot until you see that he is stuck around 12 minutes of playing time a night. Fehr does not have a goal in his last six games.

3. All for one and one for all. If Holtby gets the start, giving the kid a helping hand – playing responsibly and not leaving him out to dry, not taking bad penalties – will be important to getting the kid off on the right foot.

In the end, the Caps are rolling, while the Thrashers are spinning their wheels (6-6-4 since the start of the year). The Caps could get caught looking ahead to Pittsburgh on Sunday, but they’ve been good at tending to the business at hand during this streak, even if their level of play seems to have slipped a notch in the last three games. Still, the Caps should keep the fun run going…

Caps 5 – Thrashers 3