We are about to embark on our annual look at the Washington
Capitals’ season “by the tens,” but before we delve into the individual player
reviews, the unpleasant way in which this season unfolded got us to thinking
about just how that unpleasant result came about. One way to look back at that matter is in
looking at “the tens” in a bit of a different way.
This is the second year of a new coaching regime. Adam Oates and his assistants did not get the
benefit of a full year in 2012-13 to install all the bells and whistles of
their hockey philosophy and have it become second nature to the players on the
ice. Last year, we thought this year
would be the season to see those concepts bloom, having had the benefit of what
amounted to a 55-game test drive last season (48 regular season games and a
playoff round).
If you extend that line of thinking into this season, it
would be reasonable to think that the Caps would be: a) improved in their
performance at the start of the season compared to their start last season, and
b) better at the end of this season than at the start of the 2013-14 campaign.
So… were they? Better,
that is. Let’s take a look at the first
proposition, that the Caps getting a second start under Oates would be better
this season than last. We can do that first
by looking at ten-game start segments. Let’s
start with wins and losses (note: teams making the playoffs are shaded):
Neither the 2012-2013 team nor the 2013-14 team was fast out
of the gate in their first ten games. If
anything, the 2012-13 team had an easier time of it – fewer teams played that
would ultimately make the playoffs – but did worse, losing eight of their first
ten games. The 2013-14 Caps had a worse
five-game start (1-4-0 compared to 1-3-1) but righted themselves sooner (4-1-0
in the last half of their first ten games compared to 1-4-0). A record of 5-5-0 is an improvement over
2-7-1, but hardly something to get excited about.
What about overall scoring? Did the Caps improve in their goals
for/against and shots for/against in their first ten games from year to year? Yes, they did, rather dramatically in fact. The Caps scored five more goals in their first
ten games of the 2013-14 season than they did to open the 2012-13 season (not
counting shootout-winning goals against Calgary and Winnipeg) – and half-goal
per game improvement – and they allowed six fewer goals, year-to-year (note: games in which opponents out-shot the Caps are shaded):
Then there is special teams.
If there was clear improvement from the ten-game start in 2012-13 to
that in 2013-14, it is here. The Caps
were almost 50 percent more efficient on the power play, year-to-year (from
20.0 percent to 29.7 percent). The penalty kill was improved in two ways. There was the improvement in efficiency, from
77.8 percent to 88.2 percent. But there
was also the improvement in limiting shorthanded situations faced. The Caps faced 11 fewer such situations in
their first ten games in 2013-14 than they did in their first ten games in
2012-13, a 24 percent improvement:
Those are the gross measures of comparison. What about the underlying numbers? Let’s look at those numbers in even strength
situations. Here the numbers are more
disturbing. Corsi events – all shots
directed at the opponent’s net – increased substantially in total both for the
Caps and their opponents from the first ten games of 2012-13 to the first ten
games of 2013-14. However, one might
also consider the events per minute of time.
This is where things get disturbing.
For the Caps, the number of Corsi events per minute of even strength
time increased by only 1.8 percent (from 0.89 to 0.91). For opponents, though, the increase was more
significant, from 0.87 events per minute of even strength time to 0.94, an 8.5
percent increase (numbers from extraskater.com).
(click for larger images)
It gets worse when one controls for blocked shots – the Fenwick measure. Again, total Fenwick events increase for both teams, but as in the case of the Corsi measure, the Fenwick events per minute of even strength ice time increase far more for opponents. For the Caps, the change in Fenwick events was insignificant, a 0.1 percent increase. For opponents the increase in Fenwick events per minute of even strength ice time was 15.4 percent.
These numbers were reflected in the shot values, as
well. Tracking with the Corsi and
Fenwick results, total shots at even strength increased for both the Caps and
their opponents over the first ten games of 2013-14 compared to 2012-13. But on a shots-per-minute basis at even
strength, opponents saw their shots increase by 19.1 percent, compared to a 1.1
percent increase for the Caps. On a
year-to-year basis looking at the first ten games, the picture was not
pleasant.
What might have allowed the Caps to salvage a slightly
better record in their first ten games this year compared to last, at least at
even strength, comes down to shooting percentages. It was not so much their own shooting
percentage that improved, from 6.3 to 7.0 percent, as it was the shooting
percentage of opponents reduced.
Conversely, the save percentage of Caps goaltenders. The Caps improved here at even strength from
a .888 save percentage in the first ten games of 2012-13 to .917 in the first
ten contests of 2013-14. Overall,
though, the improvement from 2-7-1 to 5-5-0 in the first ten games of the
respective seasons looks to come down to special teams, not even strength
play. And that was not enough to give
the Caps a winning record coming out of the gate to start this season.
The year to year differences are one thing in looking at
improvement over time, but there is also the matter of whether the Caps
improved as this past season wore on.
That might be done looking at their first ten games and their last ten
contests.
Again we can ask, “were they?” Better, that is. In terms of wins and losses, yes and no. The Caps had that 5-5-0 record in their first
ten games to start the 2013-14 season, earning ten standings points. In their last ten games there were 4-3-3,
good for 11 standings points. But there
also was the matter of those three extra-time losses, all coming in the
Gimmick. That left the Caps with six
losses in those last ten games and those three points left on the table in the
freestyle competition hurting their cause to reach the post-season:
Let’s go through the same drill here as for the year-to-year
comparison. First, overall scoring. The Caps played a somewhat tighter game late
than they did early. Their goals per
game were down slightly, but their goals allowed dropped even further. It was not a case of tightening up on shots
allowed, though. The Caps allowed 34
shots on goal per game in their first ten games of the 2013-14 season, 33.9 in
their last ten games. That difference is
mitigated somewhat by the Caps playing an extra ten minutes in their last ten
games (four shootout results versus two in their first ten games), but not
enough to suggest significant improvement in holding opponents’ shot totals
down.
More to the point, the Caps were outshot nine times in their
last ten games (a 4-3-2 record) versus being outshot five times in their first
ten games (2-3-0 record). It was their
own shot totals, down from 31.9 shots per game in their first ten games to 26.3
in their last ten that was putting them on their heels.
As for special teams, it would have been next to impossible
to maintain the 29.7 percent power play conversion percentage over their first
ten games consistently over ten-game stretches.
That said, the 21.2 percent conversion rate was quite respectable. The penalty kill finished strong as well
(85.7 percent), even compared with the start to the season (88.2 percent). Here, as with the year-to-year comparison of
first ten games, the effectiveness of the penalty kill in the last ten games of
the 2013-14 season was as much limiting opportunities. The Caps saw their shorthanded situations
faced drop from 34 in their first ten games of the season to 28 in the last
ten. And that was a drop from 45
situations faced in the first ten games of the 2012-2013 season. That might reflect the state of the game in
the NHL, where power play opportunities are dropping generally. Nevertheless,
it made for a Capitals penalty kill that allowed only four power play goals,
the same number as in the first ten games, despite a lower penalty kill rate.
The underlying numbers paint an unkind portrait,
though. Corsi events at even strength
dropped through the floor, in total (from 456 to 392) and in events per minute (0.91
to 0.75) of even strength ice time. Meanwhile,
Corsi events for opponents went in the other direction, from 473 in their first
ten games of the season (0.94/minute) to 533 (1.02 per minute). That the Caps’ Corsi events per minute
dropped by 17.4 percent while their opponents had theirs increase by 8.3
percent made for a difficult conclusion to the season.
The Fenwick event numbers and shot totals painted a similar
picture. The Caps saw their total and
event-per-minute results drop from their first ten games to their last
ten. Much of that might be attributed to
the quality of competition in the last ten games; five of their last ten games
were played against teams that finished in the top six in Corsi-for percentage at even strength.
(click for larger images)
What saved the Caps, at least enough to post a 4-3-3 record in their last ten games, was once more a matter of even strength percentages – shooting and save percentages. The Caps posted an 8.9 percent shooting percentage in their last ten games, substantially better than their 7.0 percent in their first ten games. It was the save percentage that stood out, though. The .936 save percentage was much better than their .917 to start the season.
But even this is something of a mirage. If you break that last ten-game segment into
equal parts, the first five games were played to a 4.7 percent shooting
percentage and a .897 save percentage at even strength. The Caps, needing to win these games to hang
onto any semblance of competition for a playoff spot, went 0-3-2 in those
games. In the last five games they had a
13.4 percent shooting percentage at even strength and a .936 save
percentage. It was too little, far too
late.
In the end, the Caps have played 130 regular season games
under this coaching regime. Will it be
the groundwork for a better team down the road?
Perhaps it will, perhaps not. But
at the moment it is hard to see where this team has improved over the past two
seasons, either in their overall performance numbers (goals scored and allowed,
special teams) or their underlying productivity numbers (Corsi, Fenwick, shots
for and against). Certainly not in their
wins and losses. The only positive blip
in all of this looks like the ten games we did not subject to this review – the
last ten games of the 2012-2013 season that the Caps played to an 8-1-1 record
(part of an 11-1-1 finish) to sneak into the playoffs. It was a
brief, pleasant interlude in what looks like a very mediocre performance over
the last two seasons.
additional information obtained from hockey-reference.com
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