The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
For the first time this season and the 208th time
in the respective histories of the teams, the Washington Capitals and
Philadelphia Flyers will meet on the ice, this inaugural edition of the
2016-2017 series to be played In the City of Brotherly Love on Wednesday night. Both teams will be coming off losses, the
Caps having their six-game winning streak snapped by the Montreal Canadiens,
2-1, on Saturday night, while the Flyers dropped a 2-1 trick shot decision to
the Nashville Predators, their second straight loss since putting together a
ten-game winning streak of their own, tied for third longest in club history.
The Flyers’ ten-game winning streak was largely fueled by forward
Jakub Voracek, who went 4-12-17, plus-6 during the streak and posted
consecutive four-point games (a 6-5 win over the Edmonton Oilers and a 4-2 win
over the Dallas Stars in what are the most recent home games for the
Flyers). The surge has lifted Voracek
into a tie for third place in the league points rankings (34), trailing only
Connor McDavid (40) and Vladimir Tarasenko (38). If there is an odd fact attached to Voracek’s
streak and his scoring in general, it is that despite the fact that he recorded
points in eight of the Flyers’ ten straight wins, the Flyers are just 12-5-2 in
the 19 games in which Voracek has recorded a point this season, 6-3-1 in his
multi-point games. In 25 career games
against the Caps, he is 11-7-18, plus-5.
Defenseman Shayne Gostisbehere’s sophomore season has not
been the uninterrupted progress of success his rookie season was. After finishing second to Artemi Panarin in
last season’s Calder Trophy voting for the league’s top rookie for a team
reaching the playoffs, he and the Flyers got off to a slow start this
season. For Gostisbehere is was not so
much his offense as his defense. In his
first 17 games he was 3-7-10, not far behind his points-per-game pace last
season. However, he was a minus-4 in
those 17 games, and he was inching deeper into head coach Dave Hakstol’s
doghouse. Finally, Hakstol banished
Gostisbehere to the press box for a game, a 5-2 win over the Winnipeg Jets on
November 17th. Whether his
defense has improved is an open question, given that he is 1-5-6, minus-2, in
15 games since his benching, and he missed a game in that stretch on December
11th against the Detroit Red Wings with a hand injury. Gostisbehere is 0-3-3, even, in three career
games against Washington.
It might be hard to believe that in this, the 50th
anniversary season of Flyers hockey, they have had just four goaltenders appear
in at least 200 games for the club.
Steve Mason became the fourth member of that club in his last
appearance, the 2-1 Gimmick loss to Nashville last Saturday (the others are Ron
Hextall (489), Bernie Parent (486), and Doug Favell (215)). And when you have been around that long,
weird things happen. Take Mason’s during
and after phases of the Flyers’ ten-game winning streak. Mason got the call eight times during that
streak and went 8-0-0, 2.33, .926. Very
good numbers, indeed, although not extraordinary, but for the wins. In the two games – both losses – he has
played since the streak, he allowed just three goals on 58 shots, a .948 save
percentage. In 16 career games against
the Caps, Mason Is 8-5-2, 2.71, .908, with two shutouts.
1. It was not as if
the Flyers’ special teams were lights out in their ten-game winning streak. They were good (20.0 percent power play, 85.7
percent penalty kill), but not extraordinary.
In fact, the power play underperformed their level outside the streak
(24.4 percent; 22.4 percent overall for the season), although the penalty kill
outperformed their season outside the streak (81.7 percent; 82.8 percent
overall for the season).
2. Winning and losing
often takes place on the margin in the NHL.
In the Flyers’ ten-game winning streak, six games were decided by one
goal, four of them in extra time. Two
other wins featured empty net goals, effectively leaving the Flyers with eight “one-goal-ish”
decisions in their ten wins during the streak.
3. As one might
expect, the Flyers rank high in one-goal games.
With 20 such decisions (11-5-4), they trail only the Chicago Blackhawks
and Carolina Hurricanes (21 apiece) in one-goal decisions so far this season.
4. Outshooting
opponents does not pay off well for the Flyers.
In 19 games in which they outshot opponents this season, they are just
9-8-2. When outshot, they are 10-3-2.
5. Philadelphia is a
middle-of-the-road possession team, ranking 14th in Corsi-for at
5-on-5 (50.82 percent) and 14th on home ice (51.05 percent; numbers from Corsica.hockey).
1. Do power play
opportunities matter for the Caps? Maybe…maybe
not. In 12 games in which they were
awarded four or more opportunities, they are 8-3-1, while in the 18 games in
which they had three or fewer chances, they are 11-5-2. Ditto for penalty killing. The Caps are 9-3-0 in games in which they
faced four or more shorthanded situations, 10-5-3 in those contests in which
they were shorthanded three or fewer times.
2. Scoring on the
power play is a different story. When
the Caps lost to the Montreal Canadiens, 2-1, despite scoring a power play
goal, it was just the second loss in regulation time this season when scoring
on the man advantage. The Caps are
12-2-1 in games in which they score at least one power play goal, 7-6-2 when
they do not.
3. That special play
success applies to penalty killing, too.
Washington is 11-3-1 when shutting out opponents on the power play,
8-5-2 when they do not. They are 10-0-0
when scoring a power play goal and shutting out their opponent on the man
advantage, but that should not be all that surprising.
4. One-goal games are
not so much a feature of Caps games. In
30 contests this season, they have 14 one-goal decisions. Only six teams have fewer, and four of those
teams have 13 such decisions. The Caps are
9-2-3 in one-goal decisions, two of the three extra time decisions coming in
the Gimmick.
5. Washington
continues to be a good possession team on the road, ranking fourth overall in
Corsi-for at fives away from Verizon Center (52.58 percent; numbers from
Corsica.hockey).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Philadelphia: Claude Giroux
“When the best player in the world comes up to you and tells
you, ‘I don’t know who you plan on starting tonight, but I want that first
shift.’ That says everything you need to know about Claude Giroux right there.”
Best player in the world? That’s a lot
to live up to, even if you are Sidney Crosby.
The thing is, that line was uttered by then-Flyers head coach Peter
Laviolette back in 2012, just after Giroux' Flyers disposed of Crosby’s Penguins in
the postseason. Since then, however,
Giroux has been a very good player, averaging 25-53-78 per 82 games, but he
does not have a 30-goal season, and only once did he top 75 points (for the
record, Crosby has two 30-goal seasons and three seasons with more than 80
points since then). Giroux does remain
one of the better players in the game, though.
While not in the class of Crosby or Connor McDavid, he does rank in the
top dozen point getters this season (30) and is on a pace to finish with 72
points this season. He was a key
ingredient in the Flyers’ ten-game winning streak, going 5-7-12, plus-10. In 29 career games against the Caps, Giroux
is 15-16-31, plus-1.
Washington: Lars
Eller
Shayne Gostisbehere has the nickname, “Ghost,” for the
Flyers, a play on his last name. Lars
Eller might have that nickname for the Caps for his being hard – at times
impossible – to see on the ice. His top
end numbers are not particularly impressive, even for a third-liner: 2-2-4,
minus-5, in 29 games. That minus-5 is
tied for worst on the club (with Justin Williams), and he is 18 games (and
counting) without a goal. His two goals
and four points in 29 games are far behind his career-low goals and scoring
pace (seven goals and 17 points in 77 games for Montreal in 2010-2011). However, his possession numbers are
outstanding. He leads all Caps with at
least 100 5-on-5 minutes in individual Corsi-for (58.14 percent), and among
forward lines with at least 20 5-on-5 minutes together, Eller is a member of
the top two combos (Eller, Williams, and Brett Connolly with a 65.62 percent
Corsi-for in 33 minutes; Eller, Connolly, and Daniel Winnik with a 64.71
percent Corsi-for in 26 minutes; numbers from Corsica.hockey). He is 1-4-5, minus-11, in 21 career games
against the Flyers.
In the end…
“Brotherly love” has hardly been a hallmark of this series,
especially in Philadelphia, where the Caps have a record of 34-60-6 with six
ties in the history of this series.
Worse, the Caps have lost five of their last six games in Philadelphia. An odd feature of this series in Philadelphia
since the Caps beat the Flyers, 7-0, back on November 1, 2013, a game in which
the teams combined for 164 penalty minutes and included a goalie-on-goalie fight, is that
the teams have combined for just 209 penalty minutes in six games since and only 86
in their last four. Not that they will
be exchanging holiday gifts at center ice in this game, but two teams with this
recent penalty history against one another and their league rankings (17th
and 18th in minor penalties taken) is an odd feature of this series and something to
watch for.
Capitals 3 – Flyers 2
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