Week 2 for the Washington Capitals looked a lot like Week 1 – extra time, trick shot competitions, and… Corsi! It made for a good week overall.
Record: 2-0-1
The best that can be said about Week 2 was that it was a
solid effort – a come-from-behind charge from twice being down three goals to
earn a standings point against the San Jose Sharks, a dominating 6-2 win over
previously undefeated the New Jersey Devils, and a gritty 2-1 Gimmick win over
the Florida Panthers. On the other hand,
there were the two trick shot competitions.
Not earning regulation/overtime wins is a spillover from last season
when the Caps had the fourth lowest percentage of wins coming in regulation
time or overtime (73.7). The Caps have
one (oops..make that two) ROW among their three wins to date, but then again, they have not lost a game
in regulation time, either, the only team in the East not to have done so over
the first two weeks of the season.
Offense: 4.00/game (season: 3.40/game; rank: T-4th)
Nine different players shared in the 12 goals scored for the
week, Alex Ovechkin leading the team with three. The story, though, might have been Marcus
Johansson. He was the other Caps with a
multi-goal week, notching two in the three games of Week 2. The work project for Johansson to begin this
season was to shoot more. He has done just
that. The six shots he recorded for the
week made it 11 in five games. Last
season he did not record his 11th shot on goal for the season until
his 12th game.
Sixteen players shared in the point scoring for the week,
led by the “middle aged” guns. Alex
Ovechkin (3-1-4), Mike Green (1-3-4), and Nicklas Backstrom (1-2-3) led the
way, along with Troy Brouwer (1-2-3).
Backstrom went into the last game of the week needing one point in what
was his 500th career game to reach the 500-point plateau. He came up short, but he has (one hopes) many
years ahead of him to build a career point-a-game resume.
Defense: 2.67/game (season: 1.80/game; rank: T-6th)
The numbers of note here are: 23, 28, 21. Those were the shots on goal against the Caps
for the week. It made five straight
games in which the Caps allowed fewer than 30 shots on goal. Factor in that the Caps have played in three
65-minute games, and they are allowing only 23.8 shots per 60 minutes. Last year the Caps did not have their fifth
game with fewer than 30 shots until Game 33.
The last time that the Caps had five consecutive games allowing fewer
than 30 shots on goal was December 15-26, 2011, when the Caps limited Winnipeg,
Colorado, Nashville, New Jersey, and Buffalo to a total of 126 shots.
The low shot volumes against was a reflection of very good
overall possession numbers for the week.
The Caps had a 54.30 percent Corsi-for percentage at 5-on-5 for the week
(numbers from war-on-ice.com).
Goaltending: 2.53 GAA / .889 SV (season: 1.71 GAA / .928 SV
/ 1 SO)
It was not a particularly efficient week in net for the Caps
(.889 save percentage). The problem was
the first period. In three games Braden
Holtby and Justin Peters were a combined 23-for-28 in saves in the opening
frame (.821). After that they were fine
(41-for-44; .932 save percentage), but that was a matter of damage
control. The silver lining there is that
while Holtby and Peters went a combined 17-for-22 on saves in the first period
in the first two games of the week (.773 save percentage), Peters stopped all
six shots he faced against Florida to end the week.
Power Play: 3-11 / 27.3 percent (season: 25.0 percent; rank:
T-9th)
It was a good week that would have been even better,
perhaps, but for lack of opportunity.
That would mean the Florida game to end the week. The Caps had only two power plays against the
Panthers, one of them lasting all of seven seconds. Thus, it is not surprising that Washington
took an oh-fer on the man advantage in that game and did not register a shot on
goal.
In the first two games of the week the Capitals dominated on
their man advantage. A 3-for-9 record
(33.3 percent) was the result of pounding San Jose and New Jersey with 17 shots
in 13:51 of total power play time. Alex
Ovechkin had eight of those 17 shots, so neither the Sharks nor the Devils were
taking away his personal space. What the
Caps got, though, was support. Marcus
Johansson scored on his only power play shot of the week; Andre Burakovsky was
1-for2.
Penalty Killing: 9-11 / 81.8 percent (season:90.0 percent; rank: 5th)
The penalty killers had a bit of a confounding week. On the one hand, 9-for-11 is not an
especially impressive mark. Then again,
allowing two goals on only 13 shots in 19:53 of shorthanded ice time is. The two goals were scored from almost
precisely the same spot at the same end of the ice in the same
circumstances. Against San Jose a Matt
Nieto shot from the right point got through traffic, and goalie Braden Holtby
made the initial save. However, he could
not cover the loose puck, and the Caps could not clear it. Defenseman Matt Irwin pounced on the loose
puck on the weak side to Holtby’s right and scored before anyone could defend
him. Against Florida it was Dylan Olson
firing from above the right wing faceoff circle. This time it was Justin Peters making the initial
save but failing to cover the loose puck.
It made its way to the right of Peters where Brad Boyes pinched in on
the weak side to bury it.
On both occasions a Caps defenseman – John Carlson against
San Jose, Brooks Orpik against Florida – were occupied trying to keep an
opponent at the top of the crease to the goalie’s left from getting a whack at
the puck, leaving that weak side area down low open to a player pinching
in.
Even Strength Goals For/Goals Against: 9-6 / plus-3 (season 5-on-5 GF/GA ratio: 1.71; rank: 7th)
If the Caps needed to change one thing in terms of results
this season, it was to turn around their 5-on-5 performance from last
season. At 5-on-5 in 2013-2014 the Caps
scored 139 goals at 5-on-5 and allowed 155, a ratio of 0.90:1. In Week 2, the Caps were 9-6 to the good, a
ratio of 1.50:1 and making them 12 up and seven down for the season
(1.71:1). That was the product of
outshooting opponents by a 75-56 margin for the week at even strength. Of those 75 shots, 22 of them came off the
sticks of Joel Ward, Jason Chimera, and Eric Fehr. That line was often the Caps’ best last
season, and they are picking up where they left off.
Faceoffs: 105-for-197 / 53.3 percent (season: 48.9 percent; rank: 18th)
It was a good week overall but perhaps a bit
misleading. The Caps won more than 53
percent of total draws taken, but that was skewed by a 41-for-63 (65.1 performance)
against Florida to end the week. The
Caps were underwater against San Jose (49.2 percent) and New Jersey (46.4
percent. What the Caps were able to do
consistently was to win in the offensive zone.
They were over 50 percent in all three games – 55.0 percent against San
Jose, 55.2 percent against New Jersey, and 56.0 percent against Florida. It was not as impressive in the defensive
end, a 66.7 percent mark against Florida offset by going 43.8 percent against the
Sharks and 40.0 percent against the Devils.
It was the rookies who struggled in the circle for the
week. Evgeny Kuznetsov was 13-for-28
((46.4 percent), while Andre Burakovsky was 10-for-23 (43.5 percent). At the other end, Nicklas Backstrom was 57.7
percent on a 30-for-52 effort, while Troy Brower was 13-for-20 and 65.0
percent.
Goals by Period:
Cold starts and hot finishes. The Caps allowed five of the eight goals
allowed in Week 2 in the first period of their three games. They scored five of their own in the third
period of those games. It was in the
second period that the week might have been defined, though. Falling behind in the San Jose game by a 3-0
score in the first period and being held to a 2-2 tie by the Devils after 40
minutes in their contest in the middle game of the week, the Caps outscored the
Sharks, 3-1, and the Devils, 1-0, in the second periods of those games.
In the end…
It is hard to argue with results, and a 2-0-1 week is never
going to be a bad thing. There were
bumps along the way – the first period against San Jose, the manner in which
the power play goals were allowed among them – but the Caps are tied in
standings points with the New York Islanders and Ottawa Senators for second
place in the Eastern Conference, just two points behind the Montreal Canadiens
with a game in hand.
It is a good start to the season for the Caps, quite an
improvement on the 1-4-0 five-game start of last season that put the Caps
squarely in a hole that they seemed to spend the rest of the season trying to
climb out of. It is just the thing they
needed as they head west to take on Edmonton, Calgary, and Vancouver in Week 3.
1 comment:
Don't they have two ROW (Boston, New Jersey)?
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