“God is not on the side of the big battalions, but on the
side of those who shoot best.”
-- Voltaire
You might not know it, but Chandler Stephenson is a member
of a small class of Capitals. Last
season, his rookie year with the club, he became only the 13th
player in team history to record at least five goals and 15 points while
posting a plus-minus rating of plus-ten or better in his rookie season. He followed that up by appearing in the most
games by a rookie in a single postseason in team history (24) and being only
the sixth rookie in team history to record at least five points as a rookie in
the postseason (he went 2-5-7; Jakub Vrana would join that list as the seventh
member later in the postseason).
One might reasonably expect that Stephenson might build on
that rookie season to make larger contributions as a bottom-six forward,
especially with the departure of Jay Beagle in free agency. It did not come to pass. Stephenson recorded an assist in the Caps’
7-0 Opening Night win over Boston, but he was languishing with a 1-3-4,
minus-9, scoring line through his first 25 games.
Soon thereafter, his playing time started dropping, and his
appearances became more infrequent.
Stephenson would dress for each of the Caps’ first 30 games, averaging
13:14 in ice time. However, starting
with Game 31 through Game 62 on February 23rd, he dressed for only
25 games, and his ice time dropped to 11:20 per game while going 3-1-4, minus-2. That game on February 23rd was
significant in that it also represented the debut of Carl Hagelin with the
Caps, who the team obtained in trade two days before that game. Stephenson was out of the lineup for the next
eight games and dressed for only nine of the Caps’ last 20 regular season
games, going 0-1-1, minus-3, and averaging 10:34 in ice time per game.
Fearless’ Take… Chandler
Stephenson scored five goals this season.
In each of the five games he scored his goal on his only shot on
goal. Eight times in ten career games in
which he scored goals, he did it on his only shots. This includes his only career two-goal game,
those goals recorded on two shots in a 5-3 win over Philadelphia on January 31,
2018.
Cheerless’ Take… It certainly was
a step backward for Stephenson. After
going 6-12-18, plus-13, in 67 games in 2017-2018, he went 5-6-11, minus-13, in
64 games this season. But there was a
disturbing consistency, too. Of 683
forwards to dress for games in the NHL over the last two seasons, only 17 have
a worse on-ice shot attempt differential at 5-on-5 than Stephenson (minus-270).
Odd Stephenson Fact… Chandler
Stephenson is the 14th player in NHL history (16th occurrence) and the first player in
almost 40 years to appear in at least 60 games and log no penalty minutes.
The last player to do it was Butch Goring, who appeared in 78 games for the New
York Islanders in 1980-1981 without spending a single minute in the penalty
box.
Game to Remember… December 21st vs. Buffalo
Chandler Stephenson sat out two of three games before the
Caps hosted the Buffalo Sabres in the week before Christmas. He had gone without a point in five games
since posting his only two-point game of the season (1-1-2) in a 6-5 loss to
the Anaheim Ducks on December 2nd.
It was a sluggish start for both teams in this game, neither of which could find the
back of the net in the first period.
Buffalo got a chance to break the ice in the second period when Jonas
Siegenthaler was sent to the penalty box on a tripping penalty.
However, just seconds into the Sabres’ power play, Rasmus
Ristolainen tried to keep the puck in the offensive end but failed to control
it. Nic Dowd picked it up and flipped
the puck into open space in the neutral zone where Stephenson could track it
down. Collecting it behind the Buffalo
defense, he skated in alone on goalie Carter Hutton, and pulling it to his
forehand, he faked going blocker side and shot it back across his body over
Hutton’s glove to give the Caps a 1-0 lead 2:50 into the second period. It gave
the Caps a lead they would not turn over as they went on to beat the Sabres,
2-1, Stephenson finishing with the shorthanded goal, three shot attempts, a
hit, two takeaways, and a plus-1 while earning the game’s third star.
Game to Forget… October
4th at Pittsburgh
The Caps opened the season with a dominating performance
over the Boston Bruins, winning by a 7-0 margin. But that was merely the first half of a
back-to-back set of games to open the new season. The back half of the set would be played in
Pittsburgh against the Penguins, who the Caps defeated in overtime in their
last visit, clinching the Eastern Conference semifinal series last spring. As was the case in a number of recent
meetings in Pittsburgh, the game devolved into a shootout. The teams combined for five goals in the
first period, the Caps taking a 3-2 lead to the intermission. The Penguins came back to outscore the Caps,
3-1, in the second period to take a 5-4 lead to the second intermission. Pittsburgh added to their lead early in the
third period, but the Caps came back with two goals in 21 seconds by T.J. Oshie
mid-way through the period to tie the game.
The Penguins would come out on top, though, getting an overtime goal
from Kris Letang for the 7-6 win.
For Chandler Stephenson, it was a frustrating game. In the midst of all the Caps’ offense, he did
not record a single shot attempt, while at the other end he was on the ice for
three Penguin goals. He finished the
game what was for him a season-worst minus-3.
Postseason… It was
here where the difference between seasons for Stephenson were perhaps most
stark. He dressed for six of the seven
games against Carolina, but while he averaged more than 15 minutes per game in
24 games of the 2018 playoffs, he topped 12 minutes of playing time only once,
that coming in the Caps’ double-overtime loss to Carolina that eliminated
them. He averaged only 10:00 per game
and did not record a point.
Looking ahead… Chandler Stephenson just wrapped up the
second season of a two-year/$1.3 million contract and heads into the off-season
as an arbitration-eligible restricted free agent. He could be qualified at $715,000, and given
the lack of depth and contract status of prospect forwards,
he still might be a relatively inexpensive alternative to populate the bottom-six
forward group. But while two years is
little to go on when trying to predict future performance, he seems stuck for
the time being in a statistical sense.
Can he grow into a player who makes more frequent contributions, even
for a fourth liner? Does he resemble the
player who had a solid 2018 postseason, given his role, or the one who was
almost invisible in the 2019 playoffs?
In the end…
If there is such a thing as the “sophomore slump,” one could
argue that Chandler Stephenson was a victim of it. It was not that his regular season was a
significant regression from what was, technically, his rookie season. But given how he finished the season in the
playoffs, the window of opportunity for taking more responsibility, and the
expected (or hoped for) positive slope of a young player’s development, it was
not the result one might have hoped for.
There also was the inconsequential nature of it. The Caps were 2-3-0 in the games in which he
scored a goal, 5-4-1 in the games in which he recorded a point. The team’s record was almost identical when
he did not record a shot on goal (18-11-4) as in those in which he did record a
shot (18-10-3). They were 4-3-0 in the
seven games in which he logged at least 15 minutes. And, he was the only player in the league
over the last two seasons to appear in at least 60 games and record fewer than 40 shots on goal in each season.
Balancing that is that among 13 Caps forwards appearing in
at least half the team’s games, he was on ice for fewer goals against (39) than
all but four other forwards, and he did get regular turns in the penalty
killing rotation, fourth among forwards in average shorthanded ice time (1:46
per game). Still, it was more a season
of a step sideways than one being a step forward.
Grade: C
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