Dmitry Orlov
“I was taught that the way of progress was neither swift nor
easy.”
-- Marie Curie
How many defensemen over the past two years skated fewer
than 3,000 minutes and recorded more than 60 points? It is a short list, five in fact. A couple of names are surprising only because
of so few minutes played due to injury (John Carlson and Kris Letang), but
Shayne Gostisbehere and Justin Schultz are on that list, too, a couple of solid
offensive defensemen (numbers from hockey-reference.com). The fifth name on
that list is Dmitry Orlov, which might be surprising in two ways. First, it is an accomplishment, given that he
missed the entire 2014-2015 season (save for three games with the Hershey
Bears) to injury. Second, he did it as a
second or third pair defenseman who did not miss a single game over those two
seasons, the only player on that list to play in all 164 regular season games.
In addition to playing in all 82 games for the second time
in his five-year career with the Caps, Orlov set career highs in assists (27),
points (33), plus-minus (plus-30), hits (122), blocked shots (94), and he
recorded his first power play goal as a Cap.
His ten-game splits, though, had a bit of an up and down quality to
them. He was out of the gate a bit
slowly on offense in his first ten games, posting a pair of assists. Then, he took off, going 4-19-23, plus-19 in
his next 40 games. It put him in the top
dozen point getters among defensemen over that span and in the top six in
plus-minus. Only Dougie Hamilton in
among those with more points over that span did so averaging fewer minutes per
game (19:32) than Orlov (19:34).
Orlov cooled off after that, going 2-6-8, plus-9 over his
last three ten-game segments and not recording a power play point after going
1-5-6 on the power play over his first 50 games. Of course, part of that might be attributed
to Kevin Shattenkirk assuming a heavy power play load after being acquired by
the Caps from St. Louis for the home stretch of the season.
Something Orlov might have benefitted from was an up-tempo
style. It is worth noting that of the
four defensemen with whom he skated at least 50 minutes at 5-on-5 this season,
he was under 50 percent Corsi-for only when skating with Brooks Orpik, who is
as “stay at home” as stay at home defensemen get for the Caps. Orpik was also the only one of those four
defensemen whose Corsi was better apart from Orlov than with him (numbers from
stats.hockeyanalysis.com).
Fearless’ Take… Getting offensive contributions from the
Dmitry Orlov had their benefits this season.
The Caps were 5-0-0 in games in which he recorded a goal and 23-4-2 in
games in which he recorded a point. And
ice time had its charms as well.
Washington was 13-2-2 in games in which Orlov skated at least 21:30, but
just 4-5-0 in games in which he skated 17 or fewer minutes.
Cheerless’ Take... Goals might have been one thing, but
shots were another. Launching them in
volume was not much of an indicator of success.
The Caps were 7-4-3 in games in which Orlov recorded three or more shots
on goal. They were 13-3-1 in games in
which he did not record a shot on goal.
And being physical didn’t help.
The Caps were just 8-6-2 in games in which Orlov was credited with three
or more hits.
Odd Orlov Fact… Dmitry Orlov is one of five defensemen in
Caps history to skate in 82 or more games at least twice in his career. Karl Alzner (6), John Carlson (4), Calle
Johansson (3), and Matt Niskanen (2) are the others.
Game to Remember… January 23rd vs. Carolina
January 23rd was a homecoming of sorts for the
Caps, who were back at Verizon Center after a 2-0-1 road trip to three cities
that have not been kind to them over the years – Pittsburgh (the overtime
loss), St. Louis, and Dallas. Their home
contest against the Carolina Hurricanes did not provide the stiffest
competition, but it was their only home game before setting out on another
three-game road trip. It started as if
it was the “trap” game it could have been when Jordan Staal scored less than
five minutes into the contest on a power play.
Less than six minutes later, the Caps had their first power play of the
game. In the Carolina zone, Dmitry Orlov
pulled the puck from along the right wing wall back to the middle before giving
it up to Nate Schmidt at the right point.
Schmidt worked it down to Andre Burakovsky in the corner, and Burakovsky
sent it behind the net to Evgeny Kuznetsov in the opposite corner. Kuznetsov spied Orlov at the top of the left
wing circle and fed him for a one-timer that beat goalie Cam Ward cleanly on
the blocker side to make it 1-1, 11:49 into the game.
Justin Williams added a goal to put the Caps up, 2-1, at the
first intermission, and mid-way through the second period, Orlov struck again
to give the Caps more breathing room. Burakovsky started the play by darting
down the right wing wall with the puck, then reversing course. He found Brett Connolly at the opposite
faceoff circle, and Connolly laid off the puck to Orlov stepping into the
play. His one-timer beat a screened Ward
low on the right side, and it was 3-1.
The Caps would pour it on from there, taking a 6-1 decision. For Orlov, it was two goals on two shots (for
good measure, he added four blocked shots at the other end). It was his first and only two-goal game of
the season and his second career two-goal game, the other coming in a 5-4
overtime loss to the Philadelphia Flyers on March 2, 2014.
Game to Forget… December 1st vs. New York
Islanders
The Caps opened December at home after a poor effort in
Toronto against the Maple Leafs five days earlier, a 4-2 loss. The fog through which the Caps played that
game followed them back home against the Islanders. The teams played to a scoreless tie through
two periods, but early in the third, the Islanders struck. Casey Cizikas caught Orlov flat-footed at the
red line and pushed the puck ahead to Shane Prince, who broke in on goalie Braden
Holtby and beat him over his glove to give the Islanders the lead at the 3:15
mark.
On his next shift, Orlov had another good look at a goal in
the wrong net. Taking a pass from John
Carlson in the corner to Holtby’s left, he tried to thread a pass into the
middle to Justin Williams, but it was picked off by John Tavares. Holtby did his best to stymie the scrum that
ensued at the top of his crease, but Brock Nelson batted in a loose puck to
make it 2-0 off Orlov’s giveaway. Orlov
skated only two shifts after that in what would be a 3-0 loss.
Postseason: 13 games, 0-3-3, minus-1
Dmitry Orlov’s postseason started well enough. He had two assists in the first four games
against Toronto in the opening round and ten shots on goal, while averaging
more than 25 minutes per game. And then…almost
nothing. Over his last nine games of the
postseason he recorded just one assist and totaled 11 shots. It got worse with the passage of time, Orlov
skating fewer than 20 minutes in his last six games after not skating fewer
than 20 minutes in any of his first seven games. And, in one of the stranger profiles in
numbers, he did not record a blocked shot in five of his last six games after
being credited with 17 in his first seven games.
In the end…
Dmitry Orlov was the 20th defenseman selected in
the 2012 draft and lost a full season of his development to injury. Even with that, he is tenth among defensemen
in his draft class in games played (283), tenth in goals scored (20), ninth in
points (93), and second in plus-minus (plus-43). The 13 games he played in the postseason,
just his second trip to the playoffs, gives him just 24 career games in the
postseason. He is still very much a work
in progress, despite the fact that he will be 26 years old when the puck drops
on the 2017-2018 season. There are still
elements of his game that need work; he does, for example, remain susceptible
to the ghastly turnover that results in a scoring chance, but those instances
are fewer. He has shown glimpses of
being a very good offensive contributor with a shot from the blue line that has
to be respected. He can be a solid top-four
defenseman for the Capitals for years to come, even if his progress to that
role has been neither swift, nor easy.
Grade: B
Photo: Getty Images North America
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