The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
For the second time in a week, the Washington Capitals head
back to D.C. after skating on the road to face the second half of a
back-to-back set of games at Verizon Center.
Last week it was a game in Tampa against the Lightning on Saturday
followed up by a contest with the Arizona Coyotes the following night downtown
on F Street. This week it is a Friday
tilt in Chicago against the Blackhawks followed by a quick trip back to
Washington to face the Carolina Hurricanes at The Phone Booth.
The ‘Canes are coming into the second half of their own set
of back-to-back games, having beaten the Columbus Blue Jackets in Raleigh on
Friday night. Oddly enough, that contest
against Columbus was the back-half of a home-and-home set of games against the
Blue Jackets.
Carolina started the 2014-2015 season as if they were
determined to win the top spot (or bottom, if you will) in the Connor McDavid
Sweepstakes. The Hurricanes did not win
a game in October, losing their first eight games (0-6-2), the first time in team
history that they club went without a win in its first eight contests. It was not as if the Hurricanes were
unlucky. They were outscored 32-15 (4.0
– 1.9 per game). Their power play was
5-for-26, a respectable 19.2 percent, made less so by the fact that it was
1-for-17 in the last six games of the month (5.9 percent) after going 4-for-9
in their first two games. The penalty
kill was 23-for-29, not bad (79.3 percent), but they could see “bad” from
there.
Things have changed, though.
The Hurricanes have won four in a row to start November. They have done it with defense and
goaltending. While Carolina has scored a
respectable 13 goals in those four games (3.25 per game), they allowed only six
goals 1.50 per game. Cam Ward was the
goalie of record in each of the four wins.
It has been a tale of two four-game segments for Ward. In his first four segments he was 0-3-1,
3.95, .840. In his last four, Ward is
4-0-0, 1.48, .944, with one shutout. Ward
has spent a lot of his career facing the Caps, 33 of his 469 games in the NHL. In those appearances he is 16-12-4, 2.56,
.921, with four shuouts.
It will not be Ward facing the Caps, though.
Coach Bill Peters said last night it would be Anton Khudobin getting the call
for Saturday night’s game. Khudobin has
not had the spark after a slow start the Ward has had, with a record of 0-3-1,
3.24, .891 in his four appearances so far.
He has not appeared in a game since October 24th, when he
allowed five goals on 28 shots in a 6-3 loss to the Edmonton Oilers. Khudobin is 3-1-0, 2.74, .913 in four career
appearances against Washington.
If there is a Hurricane to watch in this game, it will be
Elias Lindholm. The fifth overall draft
pick in 2013 is 4-2-6 in the Hurricane’s four-game winning streak, including
the game winning goal in three of the wins, one of them the overtime winner
last night against Columbus. In three
appearances against the Caps in his young career, Lindholm has one goal on one
shot.
Here is how the Caps and 'Canes compare so far this season:
Here is how the Caps and 'Canes compare so far this season:
1. Whatever Carolina’s
recent good fortune, they have lost each period so far this season, outscored
by 10-8 in the first period of games, 14-9 in the second, and 13-10 in the
third period. In that four-game winning
streak, however, the profile is different, outscoring teams 5-1 in the first,
5-3 in the second, and holding them even in the third, 2-2. Carolina has the only overtime goal, that
coming last night against the Blue Jackets.
2. Only three teams in the league have scored fewer 5-on-5
goals than the Hurricanes (18).
Winnipeg, Buffalo, and Florida are those teams behind Carolina. At the
other end, only seven teams have allowed more 5-on-5 goals than the Hurricanes
(27).
3. Carolina has been
an equal opportunity loser so far. They
have a sub-.500 winning percentage in one-goal games (2-1-2), two-goal games
(1-2), and decisions of three or more games (1-3).
4. If the Caps
out-shoot the Hurricanes, it is a good indicator that the Hurricanes are in
trouble. Carolina is 0-4-2 when teams
out-shoot them.
5. Just don’t give up the first goal against the
Hurricanes. Carolina is 4-0-1 when
scoring first, 0-6-1 when allowing the first goal. They are the only team without a regulation
loss when scoring first and without a win when allowing the first goal. Carolina and Buffalo are the only teams
without a win when trailing first in games.
1. Last night was the
Caps’ first win of the season when allowing the game’s first goal (1-4-3).
2. Only four teams
have more 5-on-5 goals than the 28 scored by the Caps. Last season the Caps were tied for 21st
in 5-on-5 goals scored.
3. Last night was the
Caps’ second win of the season when not scoring a power play goal, their first
in regulation time. They are 2-1-1 in
such games.
4. The Caps improved
to 2-3-3 in one-goal decisions, but that just means they are still 29th
in the league in winning percentage in such games, with only Colorado behind
them.
5. Last night was the
first time that the Caps allowed 40 shots in a game this season. Last season they allowed 40 or more shots 13
times with a 7-4-2 record in those games.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Carolina: Alexander Semin
No goals, three assists, three points, three more seasons at
$7 million per after this one. Not
exactly a “value” player, eh? Alexander
Semin has been all but invisible in ten games so far this season. He has been a healthy scratch twice in his
last four games. He did manage an assist
against Columbus last night, he first point since he recorded two assists
against the New York Islanders in Game 2 on October 11th. It is part of what looks to be a slow air
leak in his production ever since he arrived in Carolina. After he closed the 2012-2013 season fast
with three goals in his last four games, he has 22 in 75 games over the last
two seasons, not exactly what Carolina fans might have had in mind when he was
signed away from the Capitals. In nine
career games against the Caps, Semin is 2-5-7, minus-2.
Washington: Nate Schmidt
The Caps sign two big-name free agent defensemen. Mike Green enjoys a resurgence from the blue
line. John Carlson and Karl Alzner have
their faithful fan followings. Dmitry
Orlov is recuperating from a broken arm.
Meanwhile, there is Nate Schmidt, plugging along. He is not getting a lot of ice time (14:30 a
game, sixth among the regular six defensemen), but he is managing it well. He does not have a point (the only one of the
regular six without one), but he is a plus-7, best on the team, and he has been
on ice for only five goals against, again best on the team. Not every defenseman is an Erik Karlsson (or
a Mike Green) in the offensive end, and not every defenseman is Shea Weber in
the defensive end. Some guys are
effective without anyone knowing about it.
Consider yourself informed.
In the end…
Carolina is playing well, doing it with an improved
defense. That will be tested tonight
when Anton Khudobin steps between the pipes in place of Cam Ward. At the other end, the Caps had a good win against
the Chicago Blackhawks on Friday night, but it was hardly a win in the manner
the coaches would have drawn up – a three-goal offensive burst in the last five
minutes of the third period while being otherwise dominated by the home team to
the tune of 40 shots and a 2-to-1 disadvantage in shot attempts. This is an opportunity for the Caps to get
back on track with their game plan in the first of a three-game home stand. Sounds like an idea…
Capitals 4 – Hurricanes 2
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