The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals, fresh off their stunning 3-2
overtime loss to the Arizona Coytoes on Friday night, get right back to it with
their first visit to Las Vegas, wrapping up their back-to-back set of games
before Christmas against the Golden Knights.
The Caps, who had a four-game winning streak snapped in the
loss to the Coyotes, are still no strangers to success, having won more than
100 games over the previous two seasons and Presidents Trophies in each as the
top team in the standings in the regular season. For the Golden Knights, though, everything is
new. Even their unprecedented run of
success to open their inaugural season.
Special Section...Odd Facts About the Vegas Golden Knights
Inaugural Season to Impress Your Friends:
- Vegas is on a pace to finish the season as the only one of 26 expansion teams in NHL history averaging more than one standings point per game, currently 1.39 points per game. The 1993-1994 Florida Panthers have the highest mark to date (.988 on a record of 33-34-17).
- The Washington Capitals set the record for inaugural season futility when they went 8-67-7 80 games of the 1974-1975 season. Vegas won its eighth game in its ninth game in franchise history.
- Through 33 games, the Golden Knights already have the 18th highest number of wins among 26 expansion teams since 1967. Beating the Caps would tie them with the 1992-1993 Tampa Bay Lightning for 17th place.
- Expansion teams are often populated by a large number of players from other places, but the Golden Knights have two rookies to dress among their skaters, and both are in the top-30 in points among rookies – Alex Tuch (15 points/T-16th) and Brendan Leipsic (10 points/T-26th).
- The Vegas Golden Knights are the fastest team to 20 wins in its inaugural season, and it is not close. They did it in their 31st game. Among teams in the expansion era, the 1967-1968 Philadelphia Flyers won their 20th game in Game 41 of their season. It was an especially sweet 20th win for the Golden Knights, who accomplished the feat at home against the Pittsburgh Penguins with former Penguin goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury getting the win.
In the here and now, Vegas comes into this game not having
played since beating the Tampa Bay Lightning at home, 4-3, on Tuesday. The win extended the Golden Knights’ streak
of games earning points to eight (7-0-1).
In that eight-game run they outscored opponents by a 27-19 margin, not
including Gimmick goals. And they have
spread those 27 goals around, 14 different skaters sharing in the good fortune.
Erik Haula and James Neal lead the club in goals scored in
that eight-game points streak with five apiece.
Neal is a player with whom a lot of hockey fans are familiar. Well-traveled goal scorer, among the dirtiest
players in the NHL.
Neal, who has five goals in the eight-game points streak,
leads the team overall with 17 goals. No
surprise there. With three more goals he
would hit the 20-goal mark for the tenth time in a ten-year career, the 31st
player in league history to reach 20 goals in each of his first ten seasons. If you don’t think that is a big deal,
consider that there are 44 players in NHL history (including Neal, for the
moment), who managed nine 20-goal seasons in their first ten NHL seasons. He also has a knack for scoring game-winning
goals, his 41 game-winners over his ten year career tied for 14th in
that span, with Sidney Crosby and Eric Staal.
He currently holds the Golden Knight record for consecutive games with a
goal to start a season (four), and he has those five goals in his last seven
games. As are many goal scorers, he can
be streaky, and he is on a streak. At
least he hasn’t been suspended by the league since 2013 (what was his third
suspension by the league), but he was fined $5,000 (the maximum at the time as
supplementary discipline without requiring a phone hearing) in March 2014 for a
cross-check to the head of Detroit’s Luke Glendening. Neal is 10-5-15, plus-6, in 18 career games
against the Capitals.
The casual fan might not have much familiarity with the work
of Erik Haula, but this season could cause some to take notice. Taken in the seventh-round (182nd
overall) by the Minnesota Wild in the 2009 draft, the native of Pori, Finland,
he is already pushing up against his career high in goals scored. He has 13 in just 29 games this year, within
shouting distance of the career-best 15 goals he had with the Wild last
season. Four of those 13 goals have been
game-winners, tying the career high he set last year, and his four power play
goals so far are twice as many as he had in his four seasons preceding this
one. Perhaps the goal scoring is a
product of more responsibility, or vice versa, but he is averaging more than 17
minutes a game, three and a half minutes more than he averaged last season. The odd part of his goal scoring is
venue. He has eight of his 13 goals in
16 road games and five of them in 13 games at T-Mobile Arena. He comes into this game with a seven-game
points streak (5-5-10, plus-3). Haula
has yet to record a point in six career games against the Caps and is minus-2.
For a club with as much success as the Golden Knights have
had so far, they have certainly gone through goaltenders. Five in all so far. It was not supposed to be this way. It was supposed to be Marc-Andre Fleury,
three-time Stanley Cup winner with the Pittsburgh Penguins, who would be the
early face of the franchise and provide an anchor in goal. It started that way when Fleury won his first
three decisions of the season, stopping 103 of 107 shots (a .963 save
percentage). Sure, two of those wins
came against the woeful Arizona Coyotes, but still, it was a fine start for a
new franchise. Then the Golden Knights
hosted the Detroit Red Wings on October 13th.
Mid-way through the second period in a 1-1 game, Detroit’s
Anthony Mantha got position on defenseman Luca Sbisa and cut to the net. As Mantha tried to get a shot off, Fleury
dove to poke the puck off Mantha’s stick.
At the same time, Sbisa nudged Mantha just enough to alter his path
across the top of the crease, and Mantha’s knee caught Fleury in the side of
the head. Fleury shook it off and
continued, but obviously something was off.
Fleury allowed five goals on the last 17 shots he saw in a 6-3 loss. It was the last game he played until December
12th, the victim of a concussion.
He has been sharp in his return, going 2-0-1, 1.95, .940. In fact, take out those five goals on 17
shots after getting whacked in the head against Detroit, and his save percentage
this season is .955. Small sample to be
sure, but he’s been what the Golden Knights have wanted when he has been
available. In 36 career games against
the Caps, Fleury is 20-12-2, 2.60, .913, with three shutouts.
1. Few teams spend
more time sitting out penalty minutes than the Golden Knights. Two in fact.
The 7:25 per game in penalty minutes charged to Vegas is bettered only
by the Arizona Coyotes (7:13) and the Carolina Hurricanes (6:22, through
Thursday’s games). No team has fewer
major penalties than the three taken by Vegas so far (tied with Carolina and
the Chicago Blackhawks).
2. Vegas has some odd
“leading/trailing” numbers. They have
led at the first intermission just 12 times in 33 games and at the second
intermission just 14 times. And their
records aren’t especially impressive, ranking tied for 18th in
winning percentage when leading after 20 minutes (.750/9-3-0) and tied for 17th
when leading after 40 minutes (.857/12-2-0).
But they are tied for the league lead in winning percentage when
trailing after 20 minutes (.444/4-3-2) and lead the league in winning
percentage when trailing games after 40 minutes (.400/4-5-1).
3. The Golden Knights
have also been impressive in one-goal games with the third-best winning
percentage in such games (.733/11-2-2).
4. Vegas can be
solved late in games. Only four teams
have allowed more third period goals than the Golden Knights (41) through
Thursday’s games: Edmonton (43), Minnesota (44), St. Louis (45), and Arizona
(49). Seems to be a Western Conference
thing.
5. If Vegas scores
first, good luck. They are 14-1-0 in
games when scoring first, the best winning percentage in the league (.933).
1. The overtime loss
to the Coyotes was the Caps’ first extra-time loss since dropping a 4-3
overtime decision to the Tampa Bay Lightning on October 9th. It was just their second extra-time loss of
the season, leaving them with a record of 6-2 in such games.
2. No team has had
less 5-on-3 power play ice time than the Caps this season – 20 seconds.
3. T.J. Oshie broke a
two-game streak without a point with his goal against the Coyotes on
Friday. He had not had consecutive games
without a point since November 2-4.
Since then, he is 5-9-13 in 15 games.
4. Evgeny Kuznetsov, who also scored a goal on Friday, is
even hotter. Since the last time he had
consecutive games without a point (October 29 – November 2), he is 9-14-23 in
23 games.
5. The 17 shots the
Caps recorded against the Coyotes on Friday was their season low. They had 19 shots on goal in two games, in a
4-3 win over the New York Islanders on November 2nd and in a 2-1 win
over the Edmonton Oilers on November 12th. It was the first time that the Caps were held
under 20 shots on goal in a road game.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Vegas: Nate Schmidt
It appears that Nate Schmidt, perhaps to the dismay of his
fans in Washington, has found a home in the desert. Taken in the expansion draft last summer, he
is one of two defensemen to appear in every game so far this season (Colin
Miller is the other), is second in points among defensemen with 15 (Miller has
19), and leads Vegas blueliners in ice time per game (22:36). He is already within a goal of his career
best (he had three last season with the Caps) and two points of his career high
(17 points last year). He has three
power play assists with Vegas after not recording a power play point in 200
games with Washington over four seasons.
But there is a catch. More Nate
ain’t great. Vegas is 4-5-1 in those
games in which he skated more than 23:30, 8-1-1 in games in which he logged
less than 21:30 in ice time. And there
is his shooting. He scored a goal in his
second game with the Golden Knights, and then went 29 games (and 37 shots)
without scoring one until he found the back of the net in a 5-2 win over the
Florida Panthers last Sunday (his first goal on home ice with Vegas). This will be Schmidt’s first career
appearance against his old club.
Washington: Andre Burakovsky
It has been a difficult first half of the season for Andre
Burakovsky. He got off to a slow start,
going 1-3-4, minus-2, in nine games before sustaining an injury that would keep
him out for 20 games. Since his return
he is 2-2-4, plus-1, in seven games, but he has yet to find a scoring rhythm. He has two mulit-point games among the 16 he
has played to date, but the flip side of that is that he has points in just
five games overall. It matters in that
the Caps are 4-0-1 in those games. He
has been a bit more productive in road games than he has been at home, going
3-3-6, plus-2, in nine games away from Capital One Arena. An odd feature of his record so far this year
is that in seven games in which he skate at least 14:15 in ice time, the Caps
are just 2-4-1. This will be his first
appearance against the Golden Knights, as it will be for all of the Caps.
In the end…
As the saying goes, “what happens in Vegas, stays in
Vegas.” If you are a visiting NHL team,
what you are striving for is to have what happens in Vegas be something to
build on and carry over the next stretch of a long NHL season, or at least into
the holiday break. And so that’s the
theme for this game.
Capitals 4 – Golden Knights 3
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