The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
Wednesday night used to be “Rivalry Night” in the NHL, at
least in the world of NBC Sports, but is now just “Wednesday Night Hockey.” For this Wednesday, though, don’t believe it.
It’s Rivalry Night, alright. The
Washington Capitals host the Pittsburgh Penguins in a contest pitting teams
with identical records against one another in what will be the 54th
regular season meeting in the Alex Ovechkin/Sidney Crosby era.
The Caps will be looking to win consecutive games for the
first time this season and boost their regular season record against the Pens
in the Ovechkin/Crosby era to 24-21-9.
It has been a bit of a struggle on home ice for the Caps who, after
defeating the Edmonton Oilers by a 4-2 margin on Monday night, are 4-1-2 at
Capital One Arena. They face a bold
challenge from the Penguins, who are one of only three teams remaining that
have not lost a game in regulation time on the road (4-0-2, trailing Nashville
and Toronto, both at 6-0-0 after Monday’s games).
For more than a decade, the Penguins have been a
forward-dominated, center-centric team featuring the offensive contributions of
Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin, and those two have been the top goal scorers
and point producers over the last three-plus seasons. But over that same time, Phil Kessel has held
his own as a primary contributor on the offensive side of the ledger. In his three-plus seasons as a Penguin,
Kessel is third in goals (90), trailing only Crosby (115) and Malkin (109), and
third in points (237), trailing Crosby (277) and Malkin (248). Over that period, no other Penguin is within
50 goals or 70 points of Kessel.
Pittsburgh’s “Big Two” is as much a “Top Three.” Kessel has not let up this season, getting
off to a hot start. His 7-9-16, plus-2
start through 13 games, a shade ahead of last year’s start (4-9-13,
minus-1). Kessel is also among the most
durable players in the league. Coming
into this season he appeared in every scheduled regular season game for eight
straight seasons and has not missed a regular season game since October 31,
2009, when he was skating in his second season with the Toronto Maple
Leafs. Kessel is 11-21-32, minus-7, in
44 career games against the Capitals.
No one should be surprised that Kris Letang leads the
defensemen in scoring for the Pens (4-8-12, plus-6, in 12 games). Since his 2007-2008 rookie season he is tied
for seventh place in points per game by defensemen (0.65). The surprise so far is that Jamie Oleksiak is
tied with Letang for the team lead in goals by defensemen (four) and is second
in points (eight). Part of the surprise
is that he is more reminiscent of those massive defensemen who thrived in the
late 1990’s and early 2000’s, at 255 pounds being heavier than every defenseman
in the league except Winnipeg’s Dustin Byfuglien. The other is that he has not been a regular
fixture in any lineup since he made his debut with the Dallas Stars in
2012-2013. Last season, one he split
between Dallas and Pittsburgh (the Stars traded him in December 2017 for a
fourth-round draft pick), was the first in which he dressed for more than half
a season’s worth of regular season games (68).
In doing so he set a tied a career high in goals (five) and set a
personal best in points (17), both numbers he is within range of
surpassing. Oleksiak is 1-0-1, plus-1,
in six career games against Washington.
When Marc-Andre Fleury took his leave of Pittsburgh before
last season to tend goal for the Vegas Golden Knights, the plan was a seamless
transition to Matt Murray, who in his first two seasons was 41-12-5, 2.32,
.925, with five shutouts in the regular season and two Stanley Cups on his
resume. Well, you know what the poet Robert Burns said about plans.
Having been given the top goaltending responsibilities, Murray has been an
injury-plagued (lower body, concussion), disappointing performer in a season
and change (31-20-4, 3.07, .903, with two shutouts). He also had to deal with the passing of his
father, no doubt an influence on his performance. It has not been an easy time for Murray, who
is only in his fourth NHL season and is not yet 25 years old. He started this season giving mixed signals
that his troubles were behind him. He opened
the season with a 4-1-0 record in his first five appearances, but his goals
against average (3.37) and save percentage (.910) were not as impressive. It has only gotten worse. Murray is 0-3-1 in his last four decisions, while
his goals against average ballooned to 4.65, and his save percentage dropped to
.839 in those games. His 3.87 goals
against average overall ranks 38th of 42 goalies with at least 250
minutes of ice time, while his save percentage of .886 ranks 35th in
that group. Murray is 5-4-0, 3.93, .875
in nine career appearances against the Caps.
1. Letang and
Oleksiak have those four goals apiece.
The other six defensemen for the Pens have one goal among them (Jack
Johnson).
2. Despite the Penguins’
success on the road (4-0-2), they have struggled with possession numbers. Only once in six games was their shot
attempts-for at 5-on-5 over 50 percent (50.96 percent, a 53-51 edge, in a 6-5
overtime win over the Edmonton Oilers on October 23rd).
3. Pittsburgh allows
more shots on goal than one would expect a successful team to allow. Their 34.1 shots allowed per game is
fifth-most in the league, an average topped only by Detroit (34.6), the New
York Rangers (34.9), Anaheim Ducks (37.0), and Ottawa Senators (39.1). Early in the season as it is, none of those
teams are among the current playoff eligibles.
4. Only one team in
the league plays within the rules more effectively than the Penguins. Their 6:50 in penalty minutes per game is
lower than every team in the league except the Toronto Maple Leafs (6:30). The Pens are tied with the Leafs for the
fewest penalties taken (43) and fewest minor penalties taken (39).
5. Scoring first
matters to this team, at least so far.
Pittsburgh is 5-0-3 when scoring first, 1-4-0 when they do not.
1. How close have the
Caps played the Penguins in the Ovechkin/Crosby era? There is the 23-21-9 record. There is also the 166-164 margin in goals
scored and goals allowed, the 1624-1636 difference in shots on goal, the
742-737 difference in penalty minutes, the 1390-1372 margin in credited hits,
the 445-443 difference in charged giveaways, the 318-308 margin in credited
takeaways, the 10.2 to 10.0 shooting percentage, the 115-110 difference in even
strength goals scored. Yeah, these teams
are closely matched.
2. Evgeny Kuznetsov,
Nicklas Backstrom, and John Carlson have 36 assists among them. Of that total, 19 have come on power plays.
3. The Caps have had
pretty good starts this season. The good
news is that they have only trailed four times in 13 games at the first
intermission. The bad news… they are
0-2-2 in those games.
4. Ditto on the whole
scoring first thing. The Caps have one
loss when scoring first (5-1-0), one win when allowing the first goal (1-3-3).
5. Evgeny Kuznetsov
has six power play goals. His next one
ties a career high, set last season in 79 games.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Pittsburgh: Dominik Simon
For more than three decades, the Penguins have been a team
defined by its stars – Mario Lemieux, Jaromir Jagr, Sidney Crosby, Evgeni
Malkin. Their success, however, has been
more the product of the down-roster players making contributions, players like
Bob Errey, Troy Loney, and Phil Bourque in the Lemieux Stanley Cup years, and
players like Chris Kunitz, Matt Cullen, and Nick Bonino in the Crosby
Cup-winning years. Which brings us to
Dominik Simon. The 2015 fifth round
draft pick from the Czech Republic has had perhaps a more rapid rise to the
parent club than most fifth-round picks.
Simon spent two years with Wilkes-Barre/Scranton in the AHL (and five
games with the big club) before he got a longer look last year in Pittsburgh
(33 games). This year, he has been an
important contributor in the early going, a scoring line of 3-5-8 (fifth among
Penguin forwards in points), plus-5, in 13 games. He had a five-game points streak stopped in a
5-0 shutout at the hands of the Toronto Maple Leafs on Saturday and comes into
this game without a point in two straight contests. He has not gone three straight games without
a point so far this season. Simon has
one assist and is minus-2 in two career games against the Caps.
Washington: Brett Connolly
If Nicklas Backstrom is the Washington Capital who has flown
under the NHL radar for most of his career, Brett Connolly might be the Cap
skater who does so among his own fan base.
Since arriving in Washington in the 2016-2017 season, his 32 goals are
sixth-highest on the team, as are his 27 even strength goals. His 0.21 goals per game is fifth-highest among
current Capitals over that two-plus season span. If he records a point against the Pens, he
will become the sixth Capital to reach double digits (unless Lars Eller has two
before Connolly gets that point). He
started this season without a goal in his first six games, but he has two in
his last seven. That he has two goals in
13 games is not necessarily cause for alarm.
Connolly had two goals through the Caps’ first 13 games last season (actually,
two through his first 17 contests) and two through his first 13 games the
previous season (a streak that became two in 15). He had 15 goals in each of his two
seasons with the Caps coming into this year, so he would seem a decent bet to approach
that number this time around. Connolly
is 3-2-5, minus-1, in 18 career games against Pittsburgh.
In the end…
If there is a new wrinkle in this series, it is in how
different the games in Pittsburgh and Washington have played out recently. In the last four games in Pittsburgh, the
teams combined for 43 goals, the Pens holding a 23-20 edge. In Washington, the last four games were
played to a total of 27 goals, the Caps having an 18-7 edge. It argues for a more close-to-the-vest sort
of game on Wednesday, although in this context, that is a relative thing. The fault line on this game might rest on the
Capitals having a top notch scoring offense and power play, while the Pens have
allowed five or more goals in three of their last four contests.
Capitals 5 – Penguins 3
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