The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
All good things come to an end, and on Monday night the
Washington Capitals’ longest home stand of the season does just that when they
host the Los Angeles Kings at Capital One Arena. The Caps will be trying to close out the home
stand with four wins in six games and points in five contests. On the other side, Los Angeles will be
wrapping up a six-game road trip in search of their own fourth win and fifth
game with at least one point earned.
It has been a difficult season for Los Angeles that started
poorly and just got worse. They opened
the season with a 2-7-1 record in their first ten game, didn’t win consecutive
games until Games 13 and 14 on the season, and are now within two regulation
losses (27) of the total that they had all of last season (29). That they are 12-7-2 over their last 21 games
seems to be of little consolation, the hold they dug for themselves to start
the season being just too deep. Despite
the improvement, the Kings are eight points out of a playoff spot and with six
teams to climb over with 27 games to play.
The Kings have a certain balance in their scoring, six
players having recorded at least ten goals.
The trouble here, though, is that none of them have as many as 20. Anze Kopitar leads the club with 17 goals. Almost half of those goals (eight) have come
in his last 13 games, and with 14 points in that span he has a hand in more
than a third of the total number of goals scored by Los Angeles (41). Now in his 13th season, Kopitar is
royalty in Kings’ franchise history. He
is in the club’s all-time top ten in regular season games played (976/fourth),
goals (307/fifth), assists (562/fifth), points (869/fifth), plus-minus (plus-92/third),
game-winning goals (47/tied for third), shots on goal (2,420/fifth). He is equally high-ranked in Kings postseason
history, ranking fifth in games played (79), sixth in goals (21), third in
assists (45), third in points (66), and first in plus-minus (plus-24). Last season was Kopitar’s most productive in
the NHL with 35 goals and 92 points, and he is unlikely to duplicate it this
season with 17 goals and 41 points in 54 games, even with his recent
surge. In 16 career games against
Washington, Kopitar is 9-6-15, plus-5.
Unsurprisingly, Drew Doughty leads the Los Angeles defense
in goals (five) and points (30) this season.
What is not characteristic is his minus-19 plus-minus rating, which is
at the moment the worst in his 11-year career (he was minus-17 as a rookie in
2008-2009). Like Kopitar among skaters
generally, Doughty is among the most highly ranked defensemen in team history
in a number of categories: regular season games played (825/first), goals
(107/second), assists (345/first), points (452/second), plus-minus
(plus-74/second), playoff games played (84/first), goals (16/first), assists
(35/first), and points (51/first).
Unlike Kopitar, though, Doughty’s offensive production has cooled of
late. He is 1-4-5, minus-5, in his last
12 games. It has not seemed to matter
much, though. Doughty has recorded
points in 26 games this season, but the club is just 13-11-2 in those
games. He is 1-4-5, plus-4, in 15 career
games against the Caps.
Over the five seasons preceding this one, no goaltender
appearing in at least 150 games had a lower goals against average than Jonathan
Quick (2.24). He will not come close to
that this season, his 2.99 goals against average to date (what would be his
worst over a full season in his career) ranking 27th of 35 goalies
appearing in at least 25 games. Add to
that his missing 17 games in two separate instances to a lower body injury and
knee surgery, and this has been a difficult year for the 12-year veteran. The all-time team leader in games played
(584), wins (304), goals against average (2.31; minimum: 100 games), save
percentage (.916; minimum: 100 games), and shutouts (51) has been up and down
of late. Over his last ten appearances
he is 5-3-2, but in those appearances he has had three with a save percentage
over .950 (including a 16-save shutout of the Edmonton Oilers on January 5th)
and four with a save percentage under .900.
Quick is 9-2-0, 2.23, .920 in 11 career appearances against the
Capitals.
1. The Kings struggle
to score on the road, their 2.10 goals per game being second-worst in the
league (Anaheim: 2.00).
2. No team has fewer
power play goals on the road this season than Los Angeles. The nine they have are tied with the Caps and
the Philadelphia Flyers.
3. Only three teams
in the league have allowed more shots on goal than the Kings (954): Ottawa
(961), Colorado (994), and Anaheim (1,041).
4. The Kings have not
won often this season, but they have spread the good cheer around when they
did. Twelve different players have
game-winning goals, led by Tyler Toffoli and Dustin Brown with three apiece.
5. Los Angeles does
have the grittership thing working though.
They are the only team in the league that is top-five on the road in
hits (678/fifth) and blocked shots (458/fifth).
1. Among Metropolitan
Division teams, Washington has had the most power play chances on home ice
(102), and they have the most efficient home power play (24.5 percent).
2. Among that same
group, the Caps have had the most shorthanded situations faced (101) and have
allowed the most power play goals on home ice (22).
3. No Metropolitan
Division team has fewer shorthanded goals scored this season than the Caps
(three).
4. The Caps lead the
Metro in blocked shots (868).
5. No team in the
Metro has taken more penalties than the Caps so far this season (222
penalties), and only the New York Rangers average more penalty minutes per game
(9:37) than the Caps (9:27).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Los Angeles: Ilya Kovalchuk
When last we saw Ilya Kovalchuk in the NHL before this
season, he was scoring 11 goals in 37 games for the New Jersey Devils in the
abbreviated 2012-2013 season. Well, he
has those 11 goals once more, this time in 45 games with the Kings. He is an experiment that did not go quite as
planned. After spending five years in
the KHL with SKA St. Petersburg, he returned to the NHL this season, signing a
three-year/$18,750,000 contract. He
started the season slowly, posting only five goals in his first 25 games before
going on the shelf for 10 games to recuperate from ankle surgery.
Since returning to the lineup, his goal-scoring pace has
picked up, six goals in 20 games, but still not what one might expect for a $6
million-plus per year player with his pedigree.
Worse, he just has not been a difference maker on a club with more holes
than one player, even a prodigious goal scorer, can fill. In the ten games in which he has goals, the
Kings are just 4-5-1. They seem to do
better when he is a helper, going 8-3-0 in games in which he has at least one
assist. Kovalchuk has a no-movement
clause for this season (and next) in his contract, and has not committed in public to a trade.
The Kings, who have four forwards with a cap hit of more than $5 million tied
up for next season, would seem to be interested in moving Kovalchuk off their
books, even if they have to eat salary to do it.
Washington: Lars Eller
When Lars Eller scored a goal in the Caps’ 5-4 overtime loss
on Saturday night, it broke a personal 13-game streak without a goal. Getting pucks into the net has been a
challenge for Eller this season. Even
with that goal on Saturday night, he has only seven goals in 54 games this
season after posting a career-high 18 goals in 81 games last season. He has only three goals in his last 34 games. What makes Eller’s goal scoring profile even
more strange is that the Caps have lost four of the six games in which he has
goals this season (2-2-2). They ar
8-2-3, though, when he has at least one assist.
The relationship of his ice time to the team’s success is a bit odd,
too. Washington is 6-2-1 in games in
which Eller skated less than 15 minutes.
There might be other indicators of an indirect sort in Eller’s
performance that are associated with success.
Seven times this season, Eller has won ten or more faceoffs. The Caps are 6-0-1 in those games. They are 5-0-1 when he was credited with two
or more blocked shots. In 11 career
games against the Kings, Eller is 3-1-4, minus-2.
In the end…
For the Caps, scoring first will be important here. Important to get the jump on a team in its
last game of a long road trip, important to get a lead on a team with little to
play for, important because no team in the league has lost more games in
regulation when allowing the first goal than the Kings (23). But just as important, the Caps need to deal
with their third-period issues. This
would be a good team against which to do that.
The Kings have the second-worst winning percentage in the league when
trailing after two periods (.043/1-21-1).
Get a lead, keep a lead. Against
Los Angeles, there really isn’t a reason to do otherwise.
Capitals 5 – Kings 2
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