“Forward, as occasion offers. Never look round to see whether any shall note it... Be satisfied with success in even the smallest matter, and think that even such a result is no trifle.”
-- Marcus Aurelius
If you look at Joel Ward’s 2014-2015 season, it looks a lot like his 2013-2014 season in a lot of respects:
- Games played: 82 last year, 82 this year
- Shots on goal: 133 last year, 138 this year
- Time on ice per game: 16:04 last year, 16:51 this year
- Power play goals: 6 last year, 6 this year
- Power play points: 10 last year, 11 this year
- Game-winning goals: 4 last year, 4 this year
- Penalty minutes: 32 last year, 30 this year
There were, however, subtle changes that diverged in terms
of his performance and production. His
performance numbers – goals, assists, points, plus-minus – all dropped from
last season to this. Ward finished with
19 goals this season after posting 24 last year, 15 assists compared to 25, 34
points versus 49, and a plus-minus of minus-4 after last season’s plus-7.
The problem reflected itself in the ten-game segments. But even there, the results are odd. First there was the scoring portion of Ward’s
season. In his first two and last two
ten-game segments he was 14-7-21. In the
middle four segments he was 5-8-13. It
was similar to last season: 16-13-29 in his first two and last two segments,
8-12-20 in his middle four segments. For
a second year he had a goal-scoring drought in the middle of the season, except
that this season his performance paled in the same segments compared to last
season.
Then there was the plus-minus. Last year, Ward started slowly in that
maligned measure, going minus-3 in his first four ten-game segments before
finishing with a strong plus-10 in his last four segments. This season Ward struggled in this measure at
the beginning (minus-2 in the first two segments) and at the end (minus-5 in
the last two segments), and was a plus-3 in the middle.
Then there were the underlying numbers, which told a story
in reverse. Ward’s overall Corsi-for
percentages this season (49.9) were a bit higher than they were last season
(47.2), yet his PDO numbers were down (from 102.3 to 101.0). At 5-on-5 the differences were greater; a
50.1 Corsi-for percentage versus 47.4 percent last season, but a PDO that
dropped from 102.7 last season to 99.2 this season. Much of that can be attributed to his own
shooting efficiency, down from 18.0 percent overall last season to 13.8 this
season and from 14.7 percent at 5-on-5 last season to 9.5 percent last season
(numbers from war-on-ice.com). Put
another way, last year was something of an aberration, Ward having an
uncommonly good (or luck) shooting year.
Fearless’ Take: As it was, Ward still managed to compile his
second-best goal total over his career, and his 34 points tied his second-best
point total for his career. His shooting
percentage was well off his career best recorded last season, but his 13.8
finish tied Rick Nash, Jamie Benn, and Gustav Nyquist. He was also an example of the virtues of
secondary scoring. The Caps were 13-3-1
in the 17 games in which he recorded a goal, 22-7-1 in games in which he
recorded a point.
Cheerless’ Take: For the difficulties Ward had in those
middle four ten-game segments, it did not seem to have much effect on the
club’s fortunes. The Caps were 24-9-7 in
the middle four ten-game segments of the season (a 113-point pace over a full
season).
Odd Ward Fact: Joel
Ward had four two-point games this season.
It would not be surprising to say that the Caps won all four games, but
it is a bit odd that all four were on the road – at Calgary, at New Jersey, at
Pittsburgh, and at Montreal.
Game to Remember: December 6th versus New
Jersey. Washington was on a three-game
road trip and fresh off a win over the Carolina Hurricanes in the first game of
the trip when they headed to Newark to face the Devils in early December. The Caps split their first two decisions
against New Jersey and were only two points ahead of the Devils in the
standings. After exchanging first period
goals the Caps took a lead mid-way through the second period on a goal by Jay
Beagle. Three minutes later they added
to their lead on a power play goal by Evgeny Kuznetsov with assists by Brooks
Laich and Ward. For Ward, it was his 200th
point in the NHL. He added an assist on
an empty net goal by Laich.
Game to Forget: March
16th versus Buffalo. The Caps
had just defeated the Boston Bruins, 2-0, the night before when they headed to
Buffalo in mid-March on the first stop of a three-game road trip. The Sabres had been a bit difficult for the
Caps, having split two decisions before their March meeting.The teams exchanged
power play goals four minutes apart in the first period, Ward on ice for the
Sabre’s score and recording an assist on the Caps’ tally. The game went back and forth like that, and
Ward was generally on ice for much of it.
By the time the teams finished regulation he had been on ice for both
Capitals power play goals and all three Sabres goals. Kuznetsov got the only score in the Gimmick to
give the Caps a 4-3 win, but Ward finished minus-2 (tied for his worst of the
season) and skated only 12:45 of the 65 minutes of hockey – none in the last
6:10 of regulation or in the five minutes of overtime – his lowest ice time of
the season.
Postseason: 3-6-9, plus-1
Joel Ward tied with Alex Ovechkin for the team lead in points
in the postseason. The odd part of his
postseason was the relationship of his ice time to results. In the eight games in which he skated at
least 18:37, the Caps were 5-3, and all three losses came in overtime. In the other six games the Caps were 2-4. However, getting more than 20 minutes was not
a case of more of a good thing. All four
games in which Ward recorded more than 20 minutes of ice time came on the road,
and three of them were losses, all in overtime.
In the end…
In his four years in Washington, Joel Ward had been the
epitome of a “solid” contributor. Among
the dozen forwards who appeared in more than 100 games for the Caps over that
period, Ward is:
- 4th in goals (57)
- 5th in points (121)
- Tied for 1st in plus-minus (plus-22, with Eric Fehr)
- Tied for 4th in power play goals (13, with Marcus Johansson)
- Tied for 1st in shorthanded goals (3, with Troy Brouwer)
- 5th in shots on goal (402)
- 3rd in shooting percentage (14.2)
- 5th in total minutes (4,198)
His postseason performance has equally solid. Among 13 Caps forwards appearing in at least
a dozen playoff games over the past four seasons he is:
- 4th in goals (5)
- 3rd in points (18)
- Tied for 3rd in plus-minus (plus-3)
- Tied for 3rd in power play goals (1)
- 4th in shots on goal (59)
His 2014-2015 season was a bit of a letdown, if only because
his 2013-2014 season was a career year. On
its own, it was a year in which Ward continued to be a solid, if at times
unheralded. The question now is whether
the Caps think they can get: a) a similar level of performance from Ward under
terms of a new contract, now that he is to be an unrestricted free agent, and
b) a new contract deal that they can fit under a tight salary cap, given the
other contract issues they have to sort out.
Grade: B
Photo: Getty Images North America
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