“Nothing ever becomes real till it is experienced.”
-- John Keats
Chandler Stephenson took each rung of the developmental
ladder in its turn. Drafted by the
Washington Capitals in the third round in 2012 (one spot ahead of Philadelphia
Flyer defenseman Shayne Gostisbehere, it should be noted), Stephenson spent
another season with the Regina Pats in the Western Hockey League before getting
a taste of professional action with the Hershey Bears late in the 2012-2013
season. That was followed up by three
more seasons with the Bears with a couple of brief stints with the Caps in
2015-2016 (nine games) and in 2016-2017 (four games).
With the Caps having lost a number of forwards after the
2016-2017 season, there was room for advancement on the 2017-2018 roster, but
there would be competition for bottom-six spots, even with the departure of
Daniel Winnik after last season.
Stephenson was one name in the mix, competing with off-season acquisitions
Devante Smith-Pelly, Alex Chiasson, and Tyler Graovac; and prospects Travis
Boyd, Nathan Walker, and Liam O’Brien.
Smith-Pelly, Graovac, and Chiasson were among the forwards
starting on Opening Night. Stephenson
sat, and he would sit for the first nine games of the 2017-2018 season. It seemed as if his season would be a
combination of nacho duty, occasional games in the Caps’ lineup, and perhaps
another year with work put in with the Bears in Hershey. He was given a sweater in the Caps’ 10th
game of the season, in Vancouver against the Canucks. The Caps lost decisively that evening, 6-2,
but Stephenson scored a goal late in the contest, his first as a Capital. He would prove difficult, if not impossible
to dislodge from the lineup thereafter.
He dressed for 67 of the Caps’ last 73 games of the season and posted
very respectable numbers for a rookie playing a bottom six role (6-12-18). His plus-13 for the season tied for fifth
among all rookies.
Stephenson’s ten-game segments were consistent, if not
eye-popping. He had points in each of
the eight segments, assists in seven of them, and he was a “plus” player in six
of them. And, as happens often with
bottom six/secondary scorers, when he did contribute offensively, it was part
of a successful team effort. Washington
was 11-5-0 in the 16 games in which he recorded a point.
Fearless’ Take… One has the feeling that there is a goal
scorer in there somewhere with Stephenson.
Although it has not yet expressed itself in his pro career, he had 30
goals in 69 games in his last year in juniors.
But he did finish seventh among 83 rookies with at least 25 shots on
goal in shooting percentage (16.7 percent).
And his presence in the lineup at least coincided with success. The Caps were 41-21-5 with Stephenson in the
lineup, 8-5-2 when he was not.
Cheerless’ Take… Just like secondary scoring is important to
wins from time to time, too much ice time among bottom six forwards might be an
indicator of something else. The Caps
were 19-11-4 in games in which Stephenson skated 12 or more minutes, 22-10-1 in
games in which he skated less than 12 minutes.
And what was up with the shooting?
Washington was 8-1-0 in games in which he had two shots (he had none
with as many as three).
Odd Stephenson Fact… Chandler Stephenson was the only player
in the league to appear in more than 60 games (67) and record fewer than 40
shots on goal (36).
Game to Remember… January 31st vs. Philadelphia
The Caps were in mid-season doldrums when the Flyers came to
Washington to end the January schedule.
After winning the first three games of the new calendar year, the Caps
were 2-2-2 in their next six games, one of them a 2-1 overtime loss to the
Flyers at Capital One Arena ten days before this game on the same ice sheet.
The Flyers put the Caps in an early hole, Nolan Patrick scoring
the game’s first goal just 78 seconds into the game and extending the lead with
a goal by Travis Konecny at the 7:50 mark.
The Caps erased the deficit early in the second period, courtesy of
Chandler Stephenson. In the third
minute, John Carlson tried to hit Stephenson with a long pass from his own end
to the Flyer blue line, but the puck was too wide of Stephenson and rimmed
around the board to the opposite corner.
Lars Eller got to the puck first to wipe out an icing call and from the
Olympia Corner sent a puck to the front of the net. Goalie Michal Neuvirth stopped it, but he lost
sight of it at his skates. Stephenson
darted in and poked it though his pads to halve the deficit at the 2:14
mark. Less than a minute later, Madison
Bowey found Stephenson on a long lead pass for a breakaway, and Stephenson did
the rest, taking the puck just outside the Flyer blue line, skating in on
Neuvirth, and slipping the puck on a backhand between his pads to tie the game
at the 3:01 mark. The Caps went on to
score three more goals before the Flyers added one at the end in a 5-3 Caps
win. It was Stephenson’s first (and, to
date, only) multi-goal game with the Caps.
Game to Forget… February 22nd at Florida
When you see “7-11,” you normally associate it with a
convenience store and Slurpees. On
February 22nd, “7:11” was Chandler Stephenson’s ice time. He skated only 11 shifts (only two of them in
the second period), managing one shot attempt (a shot on goal) and one faceoff
(lost). Of that 7:11 in ice time, 1:56 of
it was skated on the penalty kill.
Stephenson was doing just that when he was a step late covering Vincent
Trocheck in the high slot when the latter redirected a Jonathan Huberdeau drive
past goalie Braden Holtby with 18.7 seconds left for the game-winning goal in a
3-2 Caps loss.
Postseason… In Chandler Stephenson’s first taste of
postseason action in the NHL, he appeared in all 24 games for the Caps and
contributed a pair of goals and five assists.
His seven points tied for the third most (with Evgeny Kuznetsov) by a
Caps rookie in the postseason, topped only by Jakub Vrana in this same
postseason (eight) and Richard Zednik (ten points in 1998). When he scored a shorthanded goal in the
Caps’ 6-3 win over the Columbus Blue Jackets in the series-clinching Game 6
win, he because the first Caps rookie to score a shorthanded goal in the
postseason. If there was an oddity in
his postseason it was that his first and last games of the playoffs were the
only ones in which he skated less than ten minutes (9:44 in Game 1, 9:52 in
Game 24). Another odd occurrence was his
only once recoding points in the 13 games in which he skated more than 15
minutes, recording a pair of assists in the Caps’ 4-3 overtime win against
Columbus in Game 5 of their opening round series, a game in which Stephenson
skated 20:38, his high in the playoffs.
In the end…
Chandler Stephenson made the most of his opportunities as a
rookie on a largely veteran team. And
when it came to the postseason, he added a spark and speed that the Caps have
lacked among their bottom six forwards in years past. He established himself as a likely bottom-six
fixture for years to come, especially with the departure of Jay Beagle to the
Vancouver Canucks in free agency. It was
all something that might not have been on anyone’s radar when the team convened
for training camp last September, but like John Keats said, “Nothing ever
becomes real till it is experienced.”
Photo: Bruce Bennett/Getty Images North America
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