“Yesterday is not ours to recover, but tomorrow is ours to win or
lose.”
-- Lyndon B. Johnson
Lyndon Johnson uttered those words in his Thanksgiving address to the
nation on November 29, 1963, one week after one of the worst days in American
history. Hockey, on the other hand is a game. But in those two extremes and
everywhere in between, in life’s events large and small, there is the idea that
it is only what lies ahead that anyone can affect by their actions.
Yesterday, for the Washington Capitals and their captain, Alex
Ovechkin, was another instance of six months of success and achievement undone
in two weeks’ time by a franchise that has confounded them since before many of
the Capitals who played this season were born.
Ovechkin’s season was different than many that preceded it, though. He
became just the third player in NHL history to reach the 30-goal mark in each
of his first 12 seasons in the league (Mike Gartner and Wayne Gretzky are the
others), but for the first time in his career he did not lead the team outright
in goals scored. His 33 goals this season tied him with T.J. Oshie for the club
lead.
This might be viewed as a good thing, since the Caps finished with a
more productive scoring offense in 2016-2017 (3.18 goals per game) than they
did in 2015-2016 (3.02), when Ovechkin recorded 50 goals (his seventh such
season). On the other hand, his shooting percentage fell significantly, from
12.6 percent last season (just above his career average of 12.4 percent going
into last season) to 10.5 percent this season. It was his lowest shooting
percentage for a season since 2010-2011, when he finished at 8.7 percent, the
lowest of his career, and a full season career-low of 32 goals.
Something else was absent in Ovechkin’s goal scoring in 2016-2017 – the
consistency. He scored many of those 33 goals in bunches… a four-game streak,
three in two games, five in four games (including a hat trick), four in six
games, three in two games, and so on. And that meant some lengthy (for him)
droughts… a four game streak without a goal in November, a seven-game streak to
end November and begin December, a four-game streak in January. And then there
was the ominous finish to his season in which he recorded just six goals in his
last 24 games, half of them in a hat trick performance against the Minnesota
Wild on March 28th.
All three of those goals against the Wild on March 28th were of the
power play variety, and it was not unusual. For the fifth consecutive season he
led the NHL outright or shared the lead in power play goals (17, tied with
Nikita Kucherov and Brayden Schenn). The flip side of that fact is that power
play goals accounted for a larger share of his goal total (51.5 percent) than
in any other year of his career.
Ovechkin’s possession numbers were not particularly noteworthy. His
individual 50.35 percent Corsi-for at 5-on-5 was seventh-best in his last ten
seasons (numbers from Corsica.hockey) and his lowest since the 2013-2014 season
(49.36 percent). And while he did enjoy an effective mating with Evgeny
Kuznetrsov and T.J. Oshie (56.29 percent Corsi-for, fifth-best of 14 forward
combinations skating at least 50 5-on-5 minutes), the nominal top line of
Ovechkin, Oshie, and Nicklas Backstrom was less efficient (50.25 percent,
ninth-best combination on the club), and his mating with Andre Burakovsky and
Kuznetsov was worst of those 14 combinations (43.24 percent, albeit in only 65
minutes together).
Fearless’ Take… If anything, Ovechkin’s scoring was better against
teams that reached the postseason (18-20-38 in 41 games) than it was against
teams failing to reach the playoffs (15-16-31 in 41 games). The goal-scoring
difference between the groups was, of course, the power play (10 versus teams
making the playoffs, seven against teams that didn’t). And, his scoring
mattered, although there was a hint of how secondary scoring is important. The
Caps were 21-6-0 in games in which Ovechkin scored a goal, 34-13-8 in games in
which he did not. It was in more general scoring in which his contributions
seemed to matter more. Washington was 37-9-1 in games in which Ovechkin
recorded a point, 18-10-7 in games in which he did not record a point.
Cheerless’ Take… Alex Ovechkin is a big hitter. Since he came into the
league, only three forwards have more credited hits than his 2,484 – Dustin
Brown (2,977), Cal Clutterbuck (2,580), and Chris Neil (2,568). And Ovechkin
has 138 more goals than those three players combined. That said, does it
matter? The Caps were 5-4-2 in games in which he was credited with five or more
hits this season, 9-1-0 in those games in which he was not credited with any.
Ovechkin also showed signs of not traveling well this season. Coming into this
season he recorded 263 of his career goals at home, 262 on the road. This
season, that split was 20-13 in favor of home cooking. His hat trick in
Minnesota was the only game out of his last 13 road contests in which he scored
a goal.
Odd Ovechkin Fact… Ovechkin had just one even strength goal in his last
32 games, only one in his last 19 home games. Put another way, he went almost
the entire second half of the home schedule with just one even strength goal.
Game to remember… January 11th vs. Pittsburgh
Alex Ovechkin has never been one to dawdle when on the brink of
milestones. Think of the run-up to his 500th career goal in the 2015-2016
season. He was at 496 goals when he faced the New York Islanders on January 7,
2016, and scored a goal. In his next contest, against the New York Rangers, he
scored a pair to get within one of his milestone. Then in the following game,
against the Ottawa Senators, he scored a goal in the second period to hit the 500
mark (he added another in that game for good measure).
As the calendar rolled over into 2017, Ovechkin was on a rush to hit
the 1,000-point mark in his career. Over a 16-game span from December 7th
through January 9th, he was 7-8-15 and did not go consecutive games without a
point. His goal and two assists against Montreal on January 9th got him to
within a point of 1,000. That set up some high drama with the Pittsburgh
Penguins coming to town for what would be a national telecast. That drama
lasted about as long as a commercial break. Just 35 seconds into the contest,
this happened…
He added a second period goal in the Caps’ 5-2 win over the Penguins.
Game to forget… March 6th vs. Dallas
Since he came into the league in 2005-2006, no player has recorded nine
or more shots on goal in a game more often than Alex Ovechkin. His total of 76
such games is 57 more than Eric Staal, second on that list (19). In fact, his
total is more than the next five players on that list.
One of those instances came late in the season against the Dallas Stars at
Verizon Center. It was as frustrating as frustrating gets. First, the Caps had
lost five straight games to the Stars on home ice dating back to 2010 (0-4-1),
the last four of those losses in regulation. Ovechkin was coming into the game
on a streak of six games without a goal, over which he had a combined 11 shots
on goal and two of those games without any. When Dallas took a pair of penalties
in the first period, it seemed Ovechkin and the Caps might break out on the
power play, but the Caps went 0-for-2, Ovechkin failing to find the net on any
of his three shots. It did not get better. Ovechkin went 0-for-2 in the second
period and 0-for-4 in third period to go 0-for-9 in the game that the Caps
lost, 4-2, their sixth straight loss at home to the Stars.
Postseason… 13 games, 5-3-8, minus-4, 57.29 CF% at 5-on-5
What a strange postseason Alex Ovechkin had. He scored goals in four of
his first seven games of the playoffs (six games against Toronto and Game 1
against Pittsburgh), and the Caps lost three of them. The Caps lost three of
the five games in which he recorded four or more shots on goal. They were 4-6
in the games in which he was credited with four or more hits. They were 2-3 in
games in which he blocked at least one shot. They were 1-2 in games he recorded
more than 20 minutes of ice time. The more, and more active, Ovechkin was on
the ice, the worse the club seemed to do, even if his possession numbers were
very good. One can call that coincidental, or one can think of it as not being
able to pull his teammates along. It is hard to lay all the Caps’ ills at his
feet; he did have five goals in 13 games (odd playoff fact…Ovechkin has had exactly
five goals in six of his last seven postseasons), and he did play much of the
postseason injured seriously enough to require “pain-numbing injections” to
play.
But that Game 7, the third time in the last four instances the Caps lost a
playoff series Game 7 on home ice, is going to be a disappointment that
lingers.
In the end…
When Alex Ovechkin finished the 2010-2011 season with 32 goals in 79
games, and then followed it up with 38 goals in 78 games the following season,
there were whispers that he might be in decline, that his hard style of play
was catching up with him. But he was just 26 years old then, too. No one was
whispering about his being in decline or being washed up when he scored 186
goals over the next four seasons (averaging 53.3 goals per 82 games played).
This year, at age 31, he had his fewest goals in a full season since
that 2010-2011 season, he had his fewest shots on goal (313) since that
2011-2012 season (303). His even strength goal scoring was down for the year
and almost non-existent in the last third of the season. But what seemed to
underlie his play over large stretches of the season was an almost subdued
effort, at least by his standards over his first 11 NHL seasons. In the
postseason, he performed well over stretches but rarely seemed to dominate.
Ovechkin will be 32 years old when the curtain rises on the next NHL
season. When you realize that since the 2005-2006 season, only one player of
age 32 or older had a 50-goal season (33-year old Jaromir Jagr with 54 goals
for the 2005-2006 New York Rangers), and only six players 32 or older have
40-plus goal seasons over that time, one wonders if we are starting to see the
new normal for Ovechkin as he heads into what might be late middle age as a
player. If it is true that “yesterday is not ours to recover, but tomorrow is
ours to win or lose,” one might start to wonder just how many tomorrows are
left for Ovechkin to win the prize that has eluded him.
Grade: C
Photo: Bruce Bennett/Getty Images North America
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