The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals continue their road trek on Thursday
night when they visit the Arizona Coyotes at Gila River Arena in Glendale,
Arizona. The Caps go into this contest
having lost their last two games, their first instance of consecutive losses
since they lost to the Columbus Blue Jackets and these Coyotes in Games 15 and
16 in November.
Since Arizona inflicted that second straight loss on the
Caps, a 4-1 win at Capital One Arena on Veterans Day, they are 5-4-1, but just
2-3-1 on home ice. The Coyotes have had
a tough time scoring over that ten-game stretch with only 23 goals scored. The silver lining there is that they have
spread the scoring around, 11 skaters sharing the 23 goals. Clayton Keller and Lawson Crouse share the
lead in that department with three goals apiece over the last ten games.
Keller, taken by the Coyotes with the seventh overall pick
in the 2016 entry draft, the young center is putting together a sophomore
season that looks a lot like his rookie season last year. With almost a third of the Coyotes’ schedule
complete, Keller has eight goals, just over a third of the way to his 23 goals
recorded last season.
The difference is in scoring at strength. Last season, Keller scored six goals on power
plays, while this season he has yet to hit the back of the net on a man
advantage. The odd part of it is that
Keller is averaging more ice time per game on power plays (3:43) than he did
last season (3:01). On the other hand,
he is averaging fewer shots per game on power plays so far this season (0.46
per game) than he did last year (0.77).
He does have seven power play assists, though, a number half way to the
14 he posted last season. Keller is
2-2-4, plus-3, in three career games against Washington.
Crouse is another youngster taken high in the draft, but one
following a different path than Keller.
Taken with the 11th overall pick in the 2015 entry draft by
the Florida Panthers, the left winger was traded barely a year later with Dave
Bolland to the Coyotes for a third round pick in the 2017 draft and a second
round pick in the 2018 draft. He dressed
for 72 games in 2016-2017, posting five goals and 12 points. He followed that up, however, with a season
of only 11 games with one goal, his only point recorded last season.
Crouse did record 15 goals and 32 points for the AHL Tucson
Roadrunners last year, perhaps a necessary developmental step. He started slowly this season with only two
goals in his first 15 games, but he does have those three in his last ten contests. Crouse has two games this season in which he logged
12 or more penalty minutes. Only Brad
Marchand and Antoine Roussel have more (three apiece). One of those instances happened to involve a
fracas with Roussel in a 4-1 win over Vancouver on October 25th,
earning a roughing and misconduct penalty, while Roussel was hit with a
double-roughing minor and a misconduct.
Crouse is 0-1-1, even, in two career games against the Caps.
Goaltending has been a revolving door since the Coyotes face
the Caps last month. Four goalies have
appeared in those games – Antti Raanta, Darcy Kuemper, Hunter Miska, and Adin
Hill. All but Miska started at least one
game in that stretch. Hill has started
each of the last three games for the Coyotes and has been quite efficient,
stopping 79 of 81 shots (.975 save percentage).
He has only five NHL games under his belt this season, all of them since November 25th,
and what a start he has had.
Hill’s first two appearances were in relief of Raanta. He stopped the only shot he faced in a 6-1
loss to the Calgary Flames, but after replacing Raanta after two periods with
the Coyotes down, 3-1, against the Minnesota Wild, he stopped all five third
period shots he faced while the Coyotes came back with three goals to give Hill
his first win of the season. He followed up that
appearance with a 29-save shutout of the Nashville Predators in Nashville,
giving him 35 saves on the first 35 shots he faced in 2018-2019. He extended his shutout streak to 41 shots
and 117:23 before allowing his first goal of the season, 1:26 into the second period of
the Coyotes’ 6-1 win over the St. Louis Blues last Saturday. In five appearances covering 215:46 of ice
time to date, Hill has stopped 85 of 87 shots.
“Hot” does not describe his start adequately. If he gets the call, it will be his first
appearance against the Caps.
1. No team kills
penalties like the Coyotes. Not only do
they have the league’s top penalty kill (90.0 percent), they have more
shorthanded goals scored (11, most in the league) than power play goals allowed
(eight, fewest in the league). Their
plus-3 goal differential makes Arizona the only team in the league with a positive
goal differential, shorthanded goals scored to power play goals allowed. The next best teams are the Vegas Golden
Knights and San Jose Sharks, each with a minus-8. Three times this season, Arizona scored two
shorthanded goals in a single game. The
rest of the league has a total of five such games, no team with more than one.
2. Arizona really
does spread the scoring around. Through
26 games, 19 skaters have at least one goal, but none with more than eight
(Keller). Nine skaters have game-winning
goals, Keller the only one with more than one (four). However, Michael Grabner has the only
overtime game-winner for the Coyotes. He
is out indefinitely with an eye injury.
3. Arizona is the
only team left in the league without a major penalty charged. Only two of their 104 penalties taken were
not minors (including bench minors); two misconducts on their ledger.
4. The Coyotes do a
good job of protecting the puck, or they get generous scoring. Only three teams have been charged with fewer
giveaways than Arizona (199) – Colorado (189), Minnesota (157), and St. Louis
(156). Not that they are especially
adept at takeaways; they have the fifth-fewest in the league (149).
5. Here is a strange
number that might reflect the degree to which Arizona takes their foot off the
pedal in games: 131. The Coyotes are
plus-131 in shot attempt differential when behind at 5-on-5 (fifth-best in the league), minus-131 in shot differential when ahead at fives (third-worst
in the league).
1. The Caps have
allowed nine goals in the third period of the last three games, and the trend
is worse – two goals allowed to the New Jersey Devils, three allowed to the
Anaheim Ducks, and four in their last contest against the Vegas Golden Knights.
2. Winning faceoffs
at even strength is not the Caps’ thing.
They rank next to last in even strength faceoffs won (612). Only the New York Islanders have fewer wins
(576).
3. No team in the
Eastern Conference has been shorthanded more often than the Capitals. They are tied with the Tampa Bay Lightning
with 101 shorthanded situations faced through Tuesday’s games. In the entire league, only Vancouver has
allowed more power play goals (28) than the Caps (24, tied with Ottawa).
4. Having lost their
last two games while taking a lead into the third period, the Caps are now tied
with Winnipeg for most losses in regulation when leading after two periods this
season (three). On the other hand, the
Caps have 12 wins when leading after two periods, fifth-most in the
league. The 15 leads they have taken
into the third periods of games is third-most in the league, behind only
Nashville (16) and Tampa Bay (17).
5. Seven defensemen
have dressed for ten or more games for the Caps this season. All of them have points, and five of them
have goals (Madison Bowey and Christian Djoos being the exceptions).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Arizona: Nick Schmaltz
Nick Schmaltz was a 20th-overall draft pick of
the Chicago Blackhawks in 2014. After
spending two years with the University of North Dakota after being drafted, he
moved up to his first professional assignment, splitting time between the
Rockford Ice Hogs in the AHL and the Blackhawks, for whom he played 61 games in
his 2016-2017 rookie season. Schmaltz
had decent numbers as a rookie (6-22-28, plus-10) and followed that up with an
even better sophomore season (21-31-52, plus-1, in 78 games). However, the Blackhawks stumbled out of the
gate this season, and Schmaltz was not contributing enough to arrest that
slide. Combine that with the Blackhawks’
propensity for trading former first round picks, and Schmaltz was a candidate for relocation.
Schmaltz was traded to the Coyotes for forwards Dylan Strome
and Brendan Perlini on November 25th. He seems to like his new home. After being held without a point in his debut
with the Coyotes on November 27th against Minnesota, he has points
in each of his last three games (2-3-5), two of those being multi-point games. His five points represent having a piece of
almost half the goals scored by Arizona in that span (11). In four games with the Coyotes, Schmaltz is
almost half way to the total points he had in 23 games with the Blackhawks this
season (11) before his trade to Arizona.
In four career games against Washington, he is 1-1-2, minus-1.
Washington: Madison Bowey
The evolution of an NHL defenseman might be slower than that
for any other position. While forwards
can have a considerable impact on outcomes early in their careers, defensemen
simply have too many things to develop – positioning, skating, stick
management, when to step up, when to sit back, spacing, -- and that is before
getting to the offensive end of the ice.
Madison Bowey has not yet made a lot of progress in the offensive end of
the ice, but he is learning the ways, skills, and techniques he needs in the
defensive end of the ice. While he does
get third pair minutes, averaging a bit more than 13 minutes per game, only
three times in 19 games has he finished as a “minus” player, and only once in a
loss. Bowey is still looking for that
first NHL after 70 games this year and last, but he has points in five of his
last 11 games after going without one in his first eight games this
season. He is also getting more shots to
the net, recording 12 shots on goal in those 11 games after posting just five
shots on goal in his first eight games this season. In two career games against Arizona, Bowey
has one assist.
In the end…
The trick to managing a schedule is to avoid the long losing
streaks. The Caps have lost consecutive
games in regulation for the third time this season. There has not yet been a three-game losing
streak of any kind. The Coyotes,
however, are an ornery bunch when playing the Caps. Washington has never won three straight games
against this franchise dating all the way back to January 1984, when they were
the original Winnipeg Jets. The Caps
have lost six of their last seven meetings in Arizona (1-4-2), including the
last three games played there (0-2-1). Washington
has not won a game in regulation in Arizona since a 6-1 win in January
2016. Caps fans remember that game for
something else that was “simply sensational”…
The Caps’ frustration, both over the last two games in which
they coughed up leads late and in their visits to Arizona, makes this contest
quite a chore for a club still dealing with absences of Brooks Orpik and T.J.
Oshie, and perhaps now without Tom Wilson, injured in Tuesday’s game against
the Vegas Golden Knights. Dig deep and
pull up a win.
Capitals 3 – Coyotes 2
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