For the second straight night, the Washington Capitals
spotted an opponent a multi-goal lead.
For the second straight night, the Capitals clawed their way back to tie
the game. For the second straight night
they gave up two third period goals. For
the second straight night, the Capitals lost a one-goal game.
On Saturday night, it was a 5-4 loss to the Dallas Stars,
leaving the Capitals without a point on their short two-game road trip. Dallas got started early, courtesy of a power
play when Nicklas Backstrom was sent off for holding just 100 seconds into the
game. Dallas broke down the Capitals’
penalty killers at the Washington blue line, and Jason Spezza was able to fling
a pass cross ice to Tyler Seguin who was all alone. Seguin cut in and beat goalie Justin Peters to
start the scoring.
Dallas scored again in the first period, this one coming
late in the period when Erik Cole deflected a Jyrki Jokipakka drive to make it
2-0, Stars, at the first intermission.
When the Stars took a 3-0 lead barely four minutes into the second
period on a goal by Spezza converted what was a 3-on-1 break for the Stars
after a turnover by the Caps at the Dallas blue line, it looked as if it would
be an early end to the competitive portion of the evening.
Just 1:17 after the Spezza goal, Eric Fehr started the Caps’
comeback. It started when Brooks Laich
chipped the puck up the wall and out of the defensive zone. Joel Ward picked up the puck in the neutral
zone and headed up ice. Fehr darted in
from the weak side and was in position to receive a nice saucer pass from
Ward. Taking just an instant to settle
the puck, Fehr snapped it past goalie Kari Lehtonen to get the Caps on the
board.
The Caps made it 3-2 just after a power play expired 16
minutes into the period. The Stars let
Matt Niskanen skate out of the Caps’ end and all the way into the Dallas end
before he was challenged. When finally
challenged by two Stars, Niskanen nudged the puck to his left where Andre
Burakovsky was gliding in. Burakovsky
took one step and rifled a shot over Lehtonen’s glove to make it 3-2 at the
second intermission.
Washington made it all the way back just 21 seconds into the
third period when an Antoine Roussel shot from the left point was blocked by
Nicklas Backstrom. The puck caromed into
the neutral zone where Alex Ovechkin picked it up in stride. Ovechkin skated in alone on Lehtonen, deked
him to the ice, and tucked the puck inside the near post past Lehtonen’s left
pad to tie the game at three apiece.
That would be the high point of the game for the Caps.
Dallas scored two goals 16 seconds apart, Roussel making up for the Ovechkin
goal with his 11th of the year when he got up from being knocked
down by Backstrom, headed to the net, and put in a loose puck from the edge of
the crease. Jamie Benn gave the Stars
some insurance 16 seconds later when he converted a Tyler Seguin pass off a
3-on-2 rush.
Dallas would need that insurance. Backstrom got the Caps back within a goal
with 3:26 left in the contest. After
pinning the Stars in their own end, Ovechkin circled out on the left side and
snapped a pass to the middle that Backstrom one-timed past Lehtonen. That would be as close as the Caps would get,
though, falling to the Stars by a 5-4 margin.
Other stuff…
-- The second consecutive loss was the first time the Caps
lost consecutive games since losing to Toronto and Vancouver in the last game
of November and the first game of December.
-- Nicklas Backstrom had a goal and an assist to give him
his second straight multi-point game. It
was his 14th multi-point game of the season and third time he did it
in consecutive games.
-- How is this for a first period… outshoot the opponent, 8-7…
out-hit the opponent, 13-7... win 17 of 24 faceoffs (including 13 of the first
15). Dallas had a pretty good first
period. Oh, you say that was the Caps? Oh…
-- Speaking of faceoffs, Eric Fehr was a monster in the
circle. He won 15 of 16 draws. It made Backstrom’s 15-for-23 look almost
pitiful by comparison.
-- It won’t happen often, but Joel Ward led the team in
shots for the game (seven) and attempts (eight, tied with Alex Ovechkin).
-- Ovechkin’s goal (his 25th of the season) made
it 11 goals in his last 14 games. He is
two goals behind Dallas’ Tyler Seguin for the league lead. And that brings this to mind. Ovechkin is 25-16-41, plus-12, with five
game-winning goals. The New York Rangers’
Rick Nash is 26-15-41, plus-15, with four game-winning goals. A week ago, the New York Post’s Larry Brooks
was touting Nash as a Hart Trophy (MVP) winner.
Does that mean Ovechkin should be a finalist?
-- Andre Burakovsky
broke a six-game goalless streak with his tally in the second period. He had four shots on goal, a season (and
career) high in a single game. It was
only his second multi-shot contest in his last 14 games.
-- Speaking of four shots on goal, that was the total that Mike
Green had for the game. He did not find
the back of the net on any of them. It
continued a disturbing trend for Green.
He has one goal on 69 shots (1.4 percent) over his last 32 games.
-- When Brooks Orpik found himself on ice for the first
three Dallas goals, he had been on ice for eight consecutive goals by
opponents, dating back to the second period of the Caps’ 2-1 win over Colorado
last Monday.
-- Justin Peters allowed five goals on 26 shots in his first
appearance since November 29th and first start since November 15th. In his last five appearances Peters is 1-3-0
(one no-decision), 4.48, .836. Caps fans
might note that Philipp Grubauer returned to action for the Hershey Bears on
Saturday night after missing almost three weeks to injury, allowing four goals
on 25 shots in a 5-4 overtime win over the Albany Devils. One wonders if (when) he will get a seat on
the bench (or a start) with the Caps.
In the end…
What is particularly disappointing about the loss is that a win would have meant the Caps being tied with Pittsburgh in standings points in the Metropolitan Division and, had they won without benefit of trick shots, wins in regulation and overtime. However, the little things that had been creeping into the Caps’ game
over the last several outings came out against the Stars, most notably too many
defensive breakdowns that resulted in 3-on-2 or 2-on-1 situations in front of
their goaltender. In that respect, it
was not all on Justin Peters for Dallas scoring five goals. Nevertheless, one does not like to see a
comeback from three goals down or scoring four goals in a game go to waste,
especially by giving up two goals less than 20 seconds apart after tying the game, taking almost
all of the air out of the Caps’ rising balloon of momentum. It was only the second time this season that
the Caps scored four or more goals in regulation time and lost in regulation,
the other being a 6-5 loss to Arizona on November 2nd (Peters was in
net for that game as well).
That the Caps are 12-2-1 when scoring four or more goals
speaks to the unusual nature of this game.
But here is the thing. Look at
those three losses. Peters started two
of them (both regulation losses) and relieved Braden Holtby in one (a 6-5
shootout loss to San Jose on October 14th). In two of those games (San Jose and Dallas),
the Caps fell behind by 3-0 scores (Holtby allowed the three goals against San
Jose) before mounting furious comebacks.
On the one hand, it is hard to count the Caps out of games, even when
they fall behind by more than one goal.
On the other, they cannot afford to have Braden Holtby tearing off 20-25
consecutive game streaks because their backup goalie is getting lit up like a
Christmas tree. Right now, based on
Saturday’s result, this might be the biggest issue the Caps have.
6 comments:
Great summary as always. I know most folks read here and post on Japersrink. Unfortunately, for the last two weeks I have not been able to load the rink or ANY Sbnation site. Using Safari on a Mac. Does anyone have any suggestions? Must be something in my browser update/preferences that is blocking it somehow. Anyone have any suggestions?
I will pass that along to see if there is a remedy.
Much appreciated! Miss my daily hockey fix...
I've submitted this issue to the SBNation technical folks. I'll let you know if/when I receive a response.
SBNation asked that you contact them directly via this address:
SB Nation Support
support@sbnation.com
Many thanks!
Post a Comment