The Caps did get the early lead in this one mid-way through
the first period. Lars Eller hounded Kevin
Fiala off the puck in theNashville end, and Jakub Vrana picked it up in the
right wing faceoff circle and fed Brett Connolly backing through the low slot. Connolly’s one-timer beat goalie Pekka Rinne,
and the Caps had a 1—0 lead 11:41 into the period.
That would be all the scoring until the late stages of the
second period when the Predators tied the game.
James Neal and Fiala played give-and-go in the neutral zone, and Fiala
returned the puck to Neal just as the pair was crossing the blue line into the
Capitals’ end. Neal, using Dmitry Orlov
as a high screen, wristed a puck that Braden Holtby misplayed, whiffing on a
glove save attempt, and the Predators tied the game at the 18:56 mark of the
second period.
The teams played a scoreless third period, leaving the
matter for extra time. In the five
minute overtime, Viktor Arvidsson took a Ryan Johansen pass at the red line and
circled into the Caps’ zone on a 2-on-1 with P.K. Subban. Arvidsson showed
pass, then wristed a shot past Holtby’s gove and just inside the far post at
the 1:05 mark to give the Predators a 2-1 win.
Other stuff…
-- Frankly, the Caps looked bored for most of this
game. They had the look of a team
playing a weeknight game late in a regular season. It was not a good look.
-- Second periods continue to flummox the Caps. It is not that the Caps have allowed a lot of
goals in the middle frame (only five teams have allowed fewer goals), but they
have allowed so many (61) relative to what they allow in the opening period
(none tonight, 31 for the season).
-- Tom Wilson had seven penalty minutes, putting him over
100 minutes (106) for the fourth time in his four-season career.
-- Jakub Vrana’s assist on Brett Connolly’s goal was his
first assist since December 13th, a span of 13 games without one.
-- Vrana did not have a shot attempt in the game, one of
three Caps who did not have one. Brooks
Orpik and Dmitry Orlov were the others.
-- The Caps held the Predators to one power play
opportunity, the fewest allowed since they held Edmonton without a power play
chance on February 24th. That
game against Edmonton was the only other time this season the Caps held an
opponent to one or fewer power play chances at Verizon Center.
-- Brett Connolly had an odd game. He had the Caps’ only goal on his only shot
attempt of the game, and he skated just 8:25, fewest minutes on the team.
-- The Caps had 23 shots on goal, and that was not a good
sign. It was the 16th time
this season that the Caps had fewer than 25 shots in a game, and they are now
9-5-2 in those contests, 6-3-1 on home ice.
-- Washington held Nashville to 24 shots for the game and
saw their record in games in which they hold an opponent to fewer than 25 shots
fall to 17-5-2.
-- Braden Holtby should have had his ninth shutout. The Neal goal was a save he makes 99 times
out of 100. As it was, it was the 24th
time this season that he held an opponent to one or fewer goals in regulation
time. It was his first loss in the
five-minute overtime this season.
In the end…
The Caps cannot be happy with this one. They looked to be playing at about 85 percent
for most of the evening with too many passes, too little urgency or pressure in
the offensive zone, and a predictable ineffective result on the score sheet. These things happen, but you expect them to
happen more in December or January than you do in March, when teams are
starting to focus on the postseason run and getting things in order. The top line of Nicklas Backstrom, Alex
Ovechkin, and T.J. Oshie got off to a particularly slow start and never seemed
to be a factor, although they did account for eight of the team’s 23 shots on
goal. It was not the sort of game one
might have expected of a team that might have been looking to get some revenge
for dropping one of their worst games of the season last month in
Nashville. There needs to be some
attitude adjustment before the Caps take the ice in Tampa on Saturday night
against the Lightning, or they can expect a similar fate.
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