The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals take the road on Friday to visit
balmy Sunrise, Florida, and the Florida Panthers.
It’s John Vanbiesbrouck Bobblehead Night at BB&T Center
(which, if you follow the Panthers, stands for “Bad, Bogus, and Terrible”
Center). What better bobblehead could
represent the Panthers? He is a guy who
is eligible to join AARP (he turned 50 on September 4th), a goalie
who played 449 games over 11 seasons in New York (of course!) before “retiring”
to Florida at age 30 (ok, he was claimed on waivers from Vancouver, four days
after the Rangers traded him to the Canucks) to grow bananas in his backyard,
palm trees on his front lawn, and go on mall tours to teach fans about hockey.
The thing is, though, Beezer was part of what made the
“glory days” of the Panthers franchise glorious. In his first season there – in 1995-1996, the
third season of the franchise’s existence – he backstopped the Panthers to the
Stanley Cup final. And while the
Panthers might have been swept by the Colorado Avalanche in that 1996 final, he
went down fighting, yielding the only goal of Game 4 in the 105th
minute – the third overtime.
Bobble on, Beezer.
As for the current version of the Panthers, the only thing that growls – infrequently at that – is the canned panther growl on the public address system. Florida is not a very good team. They seem to have transplanted their Southeast Division mojo to their realigned Atlantic Division home rather nicely.
As for the current version of the Panthers, the only thing that growls – infrequently at that – is the canned panther growl on the public address system. Florida is not a very good team. They seem to have transplanted their Southeast Division mojo to their realigned Atlantic Division home rather nicely.
What they have done lately is play better. They will bring a run of three wins in their
last four games, their only loss coming against the Chicago Blackhawks, who
seem to have that effect on most teams.
The Panthers’ 3-1-0 run over the last week has not been due
to special teams. Florida did not score
a goal in any of the four games and is 0-for-13 dating back to their 4-2 loss
to Ottawa on December 3rd.
Their penalty killing has been about as frustrated, going 7-for-11 (63.3
percent). A big bite of that is having
allowed power play goals on each of Chicago’s three power plays in the
Blackhawks’ 6-2 win over the Panthers on December 8th. They are 7-for-8 in their three wins.
If the Caps are taking this team lightly, they do so at
their peril. After an abysmal start
(3-11-4 in their first 18 games), the Panthers are 7-6-1 in their last 14
games. They are not measuring for space
in the rafters for a Stanley Cup Champions banner, but Florida is at least
treading water, so to speak.
A big part of that was Tim Thomas, who was the goalie of
record in 13 of those 14 games (Scott Clemmensen took the loss against the
Blackhawks). The former Boston Bruin
hero has a respectable 2.50 goals against average in those 13 games and a .914
goals against average.
Here is how the clubs compare overall, numbers-wise.
1. The Florida
Panthers do not handle the competitive portions of games very well. Small surprise for a team that is tied for
28th in the league in standings points.
But here is an example. In 5-on-5
close situations, the Panthers have the second worst shooting percentage in the
league (5.1 percent). Only Buffalo, which seems intent on establishing the
current era’s standard for miserable play, is worse (4.8 percent).
2. As if that was not
bad enough, Florida has the worst – yes, even worse than Buffalo – save
percentage in 5-on-5 close situations (.890).
3. Only one Panther –
Brad Boyes – is on a pace to score 20 goals (21). Only Scottie Upshall (46) and Tomas
Fleischmann (42) are on a pace for 40 or more points.
4. As part of their
recent 3-1-0 run the Panthers beat the Detroit Red Wings twice. The last time they did that at all, let alone
did it in one season (which they have not yet done in franchise history), was a 3-1
win on February 8, 1996 followed by a 4-2 win at Detroit the following season,
on October 29, 1996.
5. If possession is
your thing, beware. In 5-on-5 close
situations, Florida has better possession numbers than do the Caps. Looking at Fenwick-for percentages, there are
the Panthers sitting in 17th place (49.3 percent), while the Caps
are at 25th (47.4 percent).
Corsi-for? Florida is 17th
(49.6 percent), while the Caps are 22nd (48.2 percent).
1. As you probably
already know by now, if Alex Ovechkin records a hat trick in this game, it will
make 50 goals in his last 50 games.
2. Meanwhile, Nicklas
Backstrom has 40 assists in his last 44 games.
Since Backstrom came into the league in the 2007-2008 season, only four
players have more assists than his 331 assist total – Henrik Sedin (401), Joe Thornton (365),
Martin St. Louis (350), and Ryan Getzlaf (333).
3. Eleven rookie
goaltenders have dressed this season.
Philipp Grubauer ranks third among them in goals against average (1.36)
and third in save percentage (.959).
4. Washington has the
fifth-best record in the league when trailing after two periods. Don’t get all excited about that. A 4-9-1 record is still a 4-9-1 record.
5. Only Toronto (28)
and Buffalo (25) have been outshot in more games than the Caps (22). The Caps are 11-10-1 in games where they are
outshot by their opponent, 5-2-1 when they outshoot them.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Florida: Scott Clemmensen
Tim Thomas left the ice early in Thursday’s practice for the
Panthers, and the club called up Jacob Markstrom from their San Antonio
affiliate in the AHL. That means that backup Scott Clemmensen could be getting the call for the Panthers on Friday. Clemmensen faced the Caps in the teams’ only
meeting of the season to date, allowing two goals on only 23 shots in a 3-2
Gimmick win for the Caps on November 2nd. He has not been as good since. In three appearances since facing the Caps,
one in relief, Clemmensen is 0-2-0, 3.86, .845 in 140 minutes of work. He is barely better against the Caps over his
career – 4-7-3, 3.77, .861 in 21 career appearances.
Washington: Marcus
Johansson
Ovechkin scores the goals, Backstrom sets the table, and
Johansson… Well, lately it is hard to
figure out what Johansson is doing, at least offensively. In his last ten games, Marcus Johansson has
two assists, He has only one shot on
goal in each of his last four games.
More disturbing, he has one even strength goal on 36 shots for the
season (2.8 percent). He does have eight
assists at even strength, which is not bad, but he presents little scoring
threat from the left side of the top line.
Yes, Ovechkin has 96 shots on goal at even strength for the season, but
Johansson’ ability to present even just a little more of a scoring threat could
open things up even more for the top line.
He is 3-6-9, plus-4, in 14 career games against the Panthers.
Keys:
1. Shop.NHL.com. If you shop on the NHL.com website (do not consider this an endorsement), you will
note that the Florida Panthers are represented among the merchandise
offerings. They are an NHL team, and if
the Caps take them as lightly as they did, oh, Carolina a little while ago, or
if they peek ahead to their home-and-home against the Flyers following this
game, it will be a hard night.
2. Score first. This is the NHL, so this goes without
saying. However, there is only one team
in the NHL that has fewer wins when scoring the first goal than the five
Florida has (that would be ghastly Buffalo, with no wins when scoring
first). But that’s because Florida
scores first so infrequently, only nine times in 32 games. Only Buffalo has scored first fewer times
(5).
3. It’s 18 skaters,
not one. It’s easy to get mesmerized by
Alex Ovechkin when he’s in a zone, but the Caps are not going to get four of
every five goals off Ovechkin’s stick and still win games. He’s not going to have a 200 goal
season.
In the end…
On paper, this is a game that should be over by the second
intermission. The thing is, there is
that home-and-home against the Flyers on Sunday coming up on Sunday and
Tuesday, and there are issues involving those games that could be a bit of a
distraction here. This is where coaches
and the team’s leaders need to step up and enforce focus on the matter at
hand. These are two points that the Caps
have no business giving away.
Capitals 5 – Panthers 2
I noticed that 3 of 4 former "Southleast" teams are in playoff spots now in the Eastern Conference. I like it...
ReplyDelete