The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals will try to shake off one of their
less-inspired efforts of the season, a 6-3 loss in Philadelphia to the Flyers
on Sunday, when they return to Capital One Arena on Tuesday to face the Dallas
Stars. The Caps saw a four-game winning streak stopped in South Philly, but
they carry a five-game home winning streak into this contest against Dallas.
The Stars, long a nemesis of the Caps, have fallen on hard
times recently. Their loss in Winnipeg to the Jets on Sunday was their fifth
straight loss (0-3-2), and they have not won consecutive games since they put
together a five-game winning streak in early February. Since that streak, the
Stars are 5-8-4 and are a tie-break out of a playoff spot in the West (tied
with Los Angeles in points with 84, but the Kings have a game in hand as of
Monday morning).
Crippling the Stars over their 17-game slide has been an
inability to score goals. Their 34 goals and 2.00 goals-per-game scoring
offense ranks last in the league over that span. Tyler Seguin has more than a
quarter of the goal output over those 17 games (nine), and his 18 points
overall mean that his name has been included in the scoring of more than half
the Stars’ goals in this run. For Seguin, it is more of the same in what has
been a personally-fulfilling season, but one in which his success seems not to
have rubbed off on his teammates. He has already posted a career high 38 goals,
but his 31 assists are, for the moment, his lowest for a full season since his
rookie year in 2010-2011, when he had 11 assists in 74 games (he had 16 assists
in the abbreviated 48-game 2012-2013 season). On a team that has John Kingberg
(52 assists, tops among NHL defensemen), Jamie Benn (40), and Alexander Radulov
(38), Seguin’s set-up production might not be critical, but given the Stars’
offensive woes of late, and contributions would be helpful to their cause.
Seguin is 8-5-13, plus-3, in 20 career games against Washington.
Who is Remi Elie? Good question. If his name had come up as
a “Daily Double” answer on “Jeopardy!,” the correct question would be, “which
Dallas Star playing in the last 17 games is the only one that is a ‘plus’ on
the plus-minus ledger?” Elie is a former second-round draft pick, taken 40th
overall by the Stars in the 2013 entry draft. After spending two more seasons
in the Ontario Hockey League in Canadian junior, he graduated to the Texas
Stars of the AHL, where he went 15-30-45, minus-8, in 117 games over two
seasons. His second year in the AHL was split with time served with the parent club,
Elie getting 18 games of experience last season (1-6-7, plus-5). Elie has
appeared in more games this season than any other Stars rookie (65), and
despite averaging just over ten minutes per game, he does have 14 points,
almost as many as the other four rookies to dress for the Stars this season
combined (Gemel Smith, Dillon Heatherington, Julius Honka, and Jason Dickinson
have combined for 16 points). Elie is without a point and is minus-1 in two
career games against the Caps.
It seems like only yesterday that goalie Kari Lehtonen was
going his best trying to plug the dike against the Caps on behalf of his
Atlanta Thrashers. But Lehtonen is now in his ninth season with the Stars, and
he has climbed into second place in the all-time list of games played by Dallas
goaltenders, his 437 games played with Dallas trailing only Marty Turco (509).
His 213 career wins for the Stars is second only to Turco’s 262 wins, and his
.912 save percentage is best of any of the dozen Minnesota North Star/Dallas
Star goaltenders having appeared in at least 100 games for the franchise.
Lehtonen has taken a back seat to Ben Bishop this season, appearing in only 29
games so far to Bishop’s 53. Their statistics are comparable, Lehtonen with a
2.46 GAA and .913 save percentage, while Bishop is 2.49/.916. After stumbling
out of the gate this season with a pair of losses and giving up six goals on 32
shots in those two games, Lehtonen went 11-3-1, 1.94, .931, with one shutout
over 19 appearances. But since he pitched an 18-save shutout of the Los Angeles
Kings on February 22nd, Lehtonen is 1-5-2, 3.28, .889 in eight appearances. He
should get the nod in goal for this game owing to Bishop being sidelined for
two weeks or more with a lower body injury, but he might have gotten it anyway,
given his superior record against the Caps – 18-6-3, 2.61, .921, with two
shutouts – compared to that of Bishop against Washington (2-6-2, 3.46, .888).
1. Dallas’ inability
to score has not hampered their defense much. The 489 shots on goal allowed over
their 5-8-4 slide is the third-fewest total of shots on goal over that span.
However, that number should be considered in concert with the fact that Dallas
has been credited with the seventh-highest number of blocked shots (278) and
the fifth-highest number of hits (455), generally measures reflecting the other
team having the puck.
2. One thing Dallas
would like to correct is their tendency to wear a path to the penalty box. Ove
those 17 games, no team has been shorthanded more than the Stars (62 times,
tied with Boston, also over 17 games). Eight Stars have at least ten minutes in
penalties in that span, led by Antoine Roussel (29).
3. Dallas’ 24 even
strength goals over their last 17 games is the fewest in the league over that
period (St. Louis has 28 goals in 15 games).
4. What Dallas has
not had is offensive contributions from the defense lately. Stephen Johns has
the only goal scored by a Stars defenseman in the last 17 games, and John
Klingberg is the only defenseman with more than three points (0-7-7). That
Johns goal is the only one on 142 shots on goal by seven Dallas defensemen over
those 17 games.
5. If Dallas scores
on a power play, it will be either Tyler Seguin or Jamie Benn. Seguin (four)
and Benn (three) have seven of the Stars’ 10 power play goals over the 17
games.
1. Evgeny Kuznetsov
will be missed for as long as he is out, but he might be missed more at home.
He leads the Caps in points on home ice (42 in 36 games), is tied for the team
lead in assists (28, with John Carlson), and his 14 goals at Capital One Arena
rank second (Alex Ovechkin: 22). His four game-winning goals at COA lead the
club.
2. Whatever defensive
problems that the Caps have had this season, they appear not to have been a
product of home ice advantage. Only four teams have allowed fewer goals on home
ice this season than the Caps (87): Columbus (86), Colorado (86), Nashville
(86), and Minnesota (80).
3. The Caps do shoot
efficiently at home. Their 11.1 percent shooting on home ice is third best in
the league (Winnipeg is 12.1 percent, as is Colorado). The thing is, though,
the Caps have the third fewest shots on goal on home ice in the league, too
(1,077). Only Vancouver (1.057) and Detroit (1,018) have fewer.
4. Washington has one
shorthanded goal on home ice this season. Only Colorado has failed to record
one.
5. Jay Beagle is
third in the league in faceoff winning percentage among the 103 skaters taking
at least 300 draws (61.7). Only three of those faceoffs were on power plays
(1-for-3/33.3 percent). Only two players among those 103 skaters have taken
fewer power play draws: Kyle Brodziak (0-for-1) and Nate Thompson (2-for-2).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Dallas: Jason Spezza
In June 2001, Tom Brady had yet to win a Super Bowl. Bryce
Harper was eight years old, and no doubt had great hair. Michael Jordan had yet
to play his first game for the Washington Wizards. Tiger Woods had not yet been
introduced to Elin Nordegren. And Jason Spezza was taken second overall by the
Ottawa Senators in the NHL entry draft. Almost 17 years later, it is possible
that the end is in sight for Spezza. He has one year remaining on his current
contract with the Stars, which should allow him to reach a number of personal
milestones that he will not hit this season. He is within 17 games of 1,000 for
his career. He needs 13 points to reach 900. He could get the seven assists he
needs to jump into the top 100 in career assists in the NHL (he has 564; Steve
Larmer had 571).
But based on this season, one wonders just how much he has
left. Through 72 games, Spezza is 7-18-25, minus-13. The goals are fewer than
half his total last season (15 in 68 games)) and down precipitously from the 33
he had in 2015-2016. His 25 points are half what he had last year (50) and
barely a third of what he had two seasons ago (63). His average ice time
(13:04) is his lowest since his rookie season with the Senators in 2002-2003
(12:40 in just 33 games). His shooting percentage (5.4) is the worst of his
career. Time waits for no one, not even for great players. And Spezza had a
great run in mid-career, one of only eight players over the first six seasons
coming out of the 2004-2005 lockout to record at least 175 goals and at least
250 assists. The others read like a Who’s Who of NHL stars – Alex Ovechkin,
Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Jarome Iginla, Daniel Sedin, Martin St. Louis,
and Henrik Zetterberg. But he has slowed. Spezza has one point (an assist) in
his last 19 games. In 38 career games against the Caps, Spezza is 13-23-36,
minus-1.
Washington: Matt Niskanen
In ten NHL seasons before this one, defenseman Matt Niskanen
had not gone a full season without recording at least one power play point. He
does not have one this season. Part of the issue is his power play ice time. In
his first three seasons with the club he averaged more than a minute of power
play ice time per game with a high of 2:24 per game in 2015-2016. This season,
however, his power play time has been pared back to 33 seconds per game. He has
more hits credited on the power play in 32:33 of total man advantage ice time
(three) than he has shots on goal (two). The durability of John Carlson manning
the center point on the top unit (3:42 in power play ice time per game through
all 72 games) and the emergence of Dmitry Orlov in getting man advantage
minutes (1:08 per game in 72 games) has relegated Niskanen to an
under-understudy role. More so lately; Niskanen has a total of 3:28 in power
play ice time over his last ten games, and 2:39 of that came in last Friday’s
win over the New York Islanders, a game in which the Caps had eight power
plays. The flip side of that, though, is that his even strength scoring is as
good as or better than last year’s pace. Last season he was 4-25-29 at evens in
78 games, while through just 58 games this season he is 5-20-25. His production
this season has a certain home lopsidedness to it, going 5-13-18, plus-20 at
home and 0-8-8, plus-5 on the road. A former first round draft pick of the
Stars (28th overall in 2005), Niskanen is 0-5-5, minus-1, in 11 career games
against his old club.
In the end…
The game against Dallas kicks off a six-game stretch for the
Caps in which they will face five teams (they get the New York Rangers twice),
all of which are out of the playoff mix as of Monday morning. Only Dallas among
those teams is closer than nine points to a playoff berth (they are tied with
the Los Angeles Kings for the second wild card in the West, but the Kings own
the tie-breaker at the moment). It is a time that the Caps need to take
advantage of despite injuries to Evgeny Kuznetsov and Brooks Orpik.
Making hay while the sun shines on this part of the schedule
will likely determine the Capitals first round playoff seeding, since their
last four games – at Pittsburgh and St. Louis before wrapping up the regular
season hosting Nashville and New Jersey – turn a bit darker. Getting off to a
good start against a team that normally gives them fits, even at home (1-5-1 in
Washington since the 2004-2005 dark season, the last five games all losses in
regulation), would be welcome indeed.
Capitals 3 – Stars 2
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