The Washington Capitals opened their regular season last
week on an up note, earning points in all three games against the defending
Stanley Cup champs, the team that employs their former coach, and the team that
ended their season last spring.
Record: 2-0-1
The Capitals entered the week down a top line forward
(Evgeny Kuznetsov on suspension), down a top pair defensemen (Michal Kempny to
injury), and breaking in a brand new goaltender who had not yet dressed for an
NHL game (Ilya Samsonov). Even with the
missing players, though, the Caps matched their first three game record of last
season (2-0-1) and did so with a pair of wins on the road. In fact, that 2-0-1 record matches their
three-game start for each of the previous three seasons. The blemish on the week’s record, the 3-2
overtime loss to the Carolina Hurricanes, was the first loss for the Caps in a
home opener since they dropped a 2-1 Gimmick decision to the Montreal Canadiens
to open the home portion of the 2014-2015 season.
Offense: 2.33/game (season: 2.33/22nd)
One might say that seven goals in three games is a meager
level of output. Consider that the Caps
opened the season against the top-ranked (New York Islanders), fifth-ranked
(St. Louis Blues), and eighth-ranked (Carolina Hurricanes) scoring defenses
from last season. The Islanders swapped
out their goaltender from that club (Robin Lehner), but Semyon Varlamov is a
fine goaltender in his own right.
As it was, the Caps filled the absence of center Evgeny
Kuznetsov with effective winger production.
Six of the seven goals for the week were scored by wingers, T.J. Oshie
and Jakub Vrana leading with two apiece (Alex Ovechkin and Garnet Hathaway had
the others). The Caps spread the point
production around with four players recording three points (Oshie, Vrana, Lars
Eller, and John Carlson).
As one might expect, Ovechkin led the club in shots on goal
(14), and Jakub Vrana was quite assertive in that role as well (nine). The surprise might have been Carl Hagelin
tying with Oshie and Nicklas Backstrom with eight shots on goal. Nic Dowd was the only Capital to finish the
week without recording a shot on net.
Defense: 2.00/game (season: 2.00/T-6th)
While the Caps faced three of the best scoring defenses in
the league from last season, the three opponents were not among the top scoring
offenses. St. Louis finished 15th
in scoring offense last season, Carolina finished 16th, and the New
York Islanders finished 22nd.
These are clubs the Caps should have had some success in defending, and
by and large they did. They held all
three opponents under 30 shots on goal, a bit more noteworthy for having gone
to overtime in two of the week’s games.
And, Carolina (28 shots against the Caps) led the league in shots on
goal per game last season (34.4).
The Caps also dominated in an area in which they struggled
last season. Their shot attempts-for at
5-on-5 percentage was well over 50 percent in each of the three games – 57.38
percent to open the week in St. Louis, 59.21 percent against the Islanders, and
53.13 percent against Carolina. Last season,
Carolina (54.81 percent/2nd) and St. Louis (51.50 percent/10th)
were top-ten teams in that statistical category.
If there was an odd part about the Caps’ defense for the
week, it was that four of the six goals scored by opponents came from defensemen. Jaccob Slavin and Jake Gardiner did it for
Carolina, Devon Toews did it for the Islanders, and Alex Pietrangelo scored one
for St. Louis. The Caps did a better job
of keeping big guns silent. Vladimir
Tarasenko and Jaden Schwartz were held without a point for St. Louis, Mathew
Barzal and Anders Lee went without a point for the Islanders, and Sebastian Aho
and Nino Niederreiter failed to record a point for Carolina.
Goaltending: 1.93 / .921 (season: 1.93/ .921)
Two goalies played, and the Caps got great play from one and
solid play from the other. The twist on
this is that the great and solid came from different goalies than one might
have expected. Braden Holtby was solid
in two starts for the Caps, stopping 20 of 22 shots in the 3-2 Opening Night
win in St. Louis and turning aside 25 of 28 shots against Carolina in the 3-2 overtime
loss on Saturday night.
For Holtby the start was encouraging. Last season he opened with a 25-save shutout
of Boston in the season opener, but then he allowed seven goals on 41 shots in
a 7-6 overtime loss to Pittsburgh in his second outing. The previous year, it was in his first game
that Holtby was shaky, allowing four goals on 32 shots in an extra time win
over the Ottawa Sentaors. Holtby has not
been a particularly effective October goaltender in the past. Before this season he had a good win-loss
record (25-16-3), but his goals against average (2.62) and save percentage
(.911) were not particularly impressive.
Ilya Samsonov was a different story. Before Friday night in New York, Samsonov had
a grand total of 37 regular season and five postseason games played in North
America as a professional, all with the Hershey Bears last season. Against the Islanders in his NHL debut, he
stopped eight of nine first period shots, and then he slammed the door,
stopping all 17 shots he faced over the final two periods. He was the first Capitals goalie to win in
his NHL debut start on the road since Michal Neuvirth stopped 31 of 32 shots in
a 5-1 win over the Tampa Bay Lightning on Valentine’s Day 2009, a game perhaps
better known as the one in which defenseman Mike Green set an NHL record for
consecutive games with a goal by a defenseman.
Power Play: 2-for-11/18.2 percent (season: 18.2 percent/17th)
Not a good week for the Capitals’ man advantage. Carolina and St. Louis both were top-ten
penalty killing teams last season (eighth and ninth, respectively), but going
1-for nine against them (0-for-6 against Carolina) was a tough one – or two –
take. Part of the problem could be
attributed to the absence of Evgeny Kuznetsov, who had 23 power play points for
the team last season (fourth).
The Caps just did not get shots to the net, particularly
against Carolina. For the week, the Caps
shot 2-for-14 with the man advantage (14.3 percent), but they did so over 20:14
of power play ice time, a poor shots-to-minutes result (0.69). Against Carolina, the Caps had seven shots on
six power plays in 11:26 of man advantage ice time.
The unflattering way to put the power play for the week was “messed
up.” IN the two games in which the Caps
did record a power play goal, against St. Louis and the Islanders, Alex
Ovechkin did not record a power play shot on goal. In being shut out by the Hurricanes on the
power play, he did have two shots, and they also got shots from John Carlson
(two) and Nicklas Backstrom (one), players one would want getting those
opportunities. The killer, though, might
have been in the overtime session against Carolina in which the Caps did get
two power play shots (Carlson and T.J. Oshie) but could not convert. As often seems to happen, that just made a
loss in the extra session seem inevitable.
Penalty Killing: 5-for-7/71.4 percent (season: 71.4 percent/T-19th)
The Caps were not an specially efficient penalty killing
team last season (78.9 percent/24th) and they started the new season
in the same rut. Thank heavens for small
population sizes (in this instance, seven shorthanded situations). And it was not as if they faced stout power
plays overall. True, St. Louis did
finish 10 in power play efficiency last season (21.1 percent), and they did get
a goal. But Carolina was a bottom half
team (17.8 percent/20th), and the Islanders were a bottom three team (14.5
percent/29th).
The Caps did not have a bad week in terms of limiting shots,
allowing 10 shots in 11:38 of shorthanded ice time. The silver lining for the penalty kill was in
the opportunities. Last season, the Caps
allowed the fifth-highest power play chances per game (3.18). To hold three
opponents to 2.33 chances per game, even with the four allowed to Carolina, is
something on which they might build.
Faceoffs: 92-for-176 / 52.3 percent (season: 52.3 percent/7th)
Washington had a good week in the circle, going over 50
percent in two of the three games and doing the same for the week in the
offensive and defensive ends. But
frankly, they should have, and in some respect it was an odd week. Last season, the Hurricanes and Islanders
were bottom third teams in faceoff efficiency (24th and 29th,
respectively). However, while the Caps
were a quite respectable 36-for 65 against Carolina (55.4 percent), they were
just 26-for-50 (52.0 percent) against the Islanders. Against last year’s sixth-ranked team in
faceoffs, the Blues, the Caps were 30-for-61 (49.2 percent), not a bad result
against a strong opponent on their ice.
The Caps were good in the ends, going 38-for-71 in the offensive
end (53.5 percent) and 32-for-57 in the defensive end (56.1 percent). Individually, four Caps took at least ten
draws for the week, and three of them finished over 50 percent – Nicklas Backstrom
(27-for-51/52.9 percent), Chandler Stephenson (24-for-43/55.8 percent), and
Lars Eller (24-for-40/60.0 percent).
Goals by Period:
Strong starts, weak finishes, with one exception. The Caps split six goals scored in regulation
equally between the first and second periods.
The saved their week early with an overtime goal in the opener. That was offset by three first period goals
scored by opponents (two by St. Louis, one by the Islanders), but it was the
third period/overtime that kept the Caps from a perfect week, Carolina scoring
a pair of third period goals and the goal in overtime that left the Caps with
their only blemish on the week.
Year-over-Year:
The record is the same over the first three games (2-0-1),
but other than that the opening to this season looks almost nothing like the
opening to last season. The Caps opened
last season lighting up the scoreboard like the National Christmas Tree, while
this year they opened in their first three games scoring barely a third of the
total (six) with which they opened last year (18). The power play stormed out
to a 50 percent rating last year, far better than 18.2 percent the Caps started
this season with. Grittership numbers
opened better last season – more hits, more blocked shots, more takeaways,
fewer giveaways. So far, shots allowed,
faceoff efficiency, and penalties look better in this year’s start.
In the end…
This was not the easiest of weeks with which to open the
schedule. The Stanley Cup champions on
banner-raising night, facing their former coach in their season/home opener,
and skating against the team that ended their season last year. Coming out of it with five points isn’t a bad
outcome, although failing to close things out against Carolina will leave a bad
after taste for the week.
It will not get easier for the Caps in Week 2, with a
different set of forces acting on them.
In this case, it will be playing two teams (the Dallas Stars home and
away, wrapped around a game in Nashville against the Predators) that have given
them fits over the years. But the Caps
will be welcoming back Evgeny Kuznetsov, and that could settle the team in the
offensive end a bit. They’ll need to be
firing on all cylinders, though, if they are to end Week 2 as successfully as
they did Week 1.
Three Stars:
- First Star: Ilya Samsonov (1-0-0, 1.00, .962 in NHL debut)
- Second Star: Jakub Vrana (2-1-3, plus-2, 9 shots on goal, overtime goal, game-winning goal)
- Third Star: T.J. Oshie (2-1-3, plus-2, 8 shots on goal, power play goal, 7 hits)
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