“The man who has the will to undergo all labor may win to
any good.”
-- Martin Luther
The headline in the Washington Post story announcing the signing
of defenseman Taylor Chorney by the Washington Capitals back in July 2015 was, “Depth
defenseman Taylor Chorney signed to one-year deal.”
“Depth defenseman.”
It has the faint whiff of “not good enough to play regularly.” Perhaps true, but there is no sin in that,
either. Quite the contrary. No NHL team completes a season dressing only
six defensemen all year. Depth
defensemen are a necessary ingredient not just to ice a team but to be
successful, too. While perhaps not quite
skilled enough to play 70 or more games, he cannot be a liability when he does
get a sweater.
In two seasons with the Capitals, Taylor Chorney has filled
in when a defenseman was injured (he played 55 games in 2015-2016, much of that
total when Brooks Orpik missed 40 games with a cracked femur), and he filled in
for spot duty (18 games in 2016-2017, his longest stint of consecutive games
played being six). In the 73 games in
which he appeared for the Caps to date, the team was 53-13-7, while they were
58-24-9 when he was not in the lineup.
The 73 games for which he dressed as a Capital these past
two seasons are more than he dressed with three other clubs (Edmonton, St.
Louis, and Pittsburgh) over five seasons (68).
And although his numbers have been modest (2-9-11, plus-16), he has not
been a liability in a wins and losses sense.
Now, whether that is the product of an uncommonly deep and talented Caps
team on which he played the last two seasons, facing lesser competition,
getting shielded third line minutes, or sunspots, results matter, and putting
Taylor Chorney in the lineup has not been a drag on the Capitals’ results.
Odd Chorney Fact… Taylor Chorney has never scored an NHL
goal on the road. Sure, he has only
three goals in his career (all of them in wins, two of them game-winners), but
still. It is part of a weird split in
his home and road numbers, particularly his plus-minus. Over his career he is plus-7 in home games,
minus-23 in road games.
Bonus Odd Chorney Fact… Taylor Chorney has dressed for seven
postseason games as a Capital. The Caps
won only one of those games, a 3-1 win over Pittsburgh in Game 5 of the 2016
Eastern Conference semifinals. In fact,
his teams’ record with him in a postseason lineup is (you might want to sit
down for this) 2-10.
Fearless’ Take…
The Caps were 13-3-2 in the games Chorney played last
season, and the last two regulation losses came after Game 60, by which time
the Caps were already seven points clear of second place in the Eastern
Conference standings and five points clear of the second best record in the
league. And, following on that whole
results thing, Chorney was a “minus” player in only one of his 18 appearances
last season, going minus-1 in a 4-3 loss to Dallas on January 21st.
Cheerless’ Take…
Well, about last season.
The Caps did not lose a game in regulation when Chorney played less than
14 minutes (8-0-2), but they were just 5-3-0 when he did skate more than 14
minutes. Seems a little bit of Chorney
wasn’t bad, but you don’t want too big a helping. And, his possession numbers were off last
year, too. Sure, a smaller population of
games, but his shot attempts-for percentage (45.31) was lower than the previous
season (48.57) and was worst on the team for any of the eight defensemen
playing in more than ten games.
The Big Question… Is Taylor Chorney going to be a 55-game
player, or an 18-game player this season?
The answer to this question might rely more on what happens
with other players than it does on anything Taylor Chorney might do in training
camp. The possibility of injuries always
has to make “depth defensemen” ready to serve on a moment’s notice. But this year is a different one for the Caps
and, perhaps, Chorney in other respects.
With three defensemen gone from last year’s squad who might have had
top-four roles (Karl Alzner, Kevin Shattenkirk, and Nate Schmidt), the Caps
would seem to be opening up chances for youngsters to come forward – Madison Bowey
and Christian Djoos in particular. If
both of those rookies get sweaters to open the season, Chorney would be
relegated to a seventh-defenseman role once more. However, expecting two rookies to get regular
appearances might be a stretch (whether Bowey, Djoos, or surprises among those
such as Connor Hobbs, Lucas Johansen, or Jonas Siegenthaler, for example), and
even if they do, there might be those stretches when they falter a bit as they
continue along their respective development curves.
In the end…
Taylor Chorney would seem likely to fill a role somewhere in
between that which he had two years ago and the one he had last season. Inconsistency among rookies might replace
injuries that would result in him playing a higher number of games, but he
would still play the “spot starter” role he filled last season. In any case, he seems likely to be, at least
at the start of this season, something a bit more than a “depth defenseman,”
something of an insurance policy in the event things don’t work out as hoped
for with other players.
But Chorney can only keep himself ready for those situations
as opportunities that present themselves and work to ensure he can contribute
on short notice when such occurrences present themselves. It is out of that work that good can come out
of difficult situations.
Projection: 46 games, 1-5-6, plus-6
Photo: Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images North America
No comments:
Post a Comment