The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals return to the Capital One Arena ice sheet on Tuesday night to host the Ottawa Senators. On paper, this looks like a mismatch, the Caps on top of the league standings, and the Senators 14th in the 16-team Eastern Conference and losers of four in a row. But these kinds of games pose special challenges, even to talented teams like the Caps.
Then and Now…
The Capitals and Senators will meet for the 97th
time on Tuesday, the Caps holding a 50-36-5 (five ties) record against Ottawa,
29-13-2 (four ties) on home ice. Since
2005-2006, the Caps are 29-15-5 overall against the Senators and 18-4-2 on home
ice.
Active Leaders vs. Opponent…
Noteworthy Opponents…
It seems that teams have are having troubles often have
outliers on the positive side of things.
Sometimes it is a goal scorer, sometimes it is a goalie with a save
percentage that outperforms his records.
With the Ottawa Senators, it is a player with a noteworthy plus-minus
number. The Senators have dressed only
six skaters this season who carry a positive plus-minus rating into this game,
and six of them are plus-7 or worse. The
outlier is forward Jean-Gabriel Pageau, who is a plus-16 on a poor team. That is tied for 15th in the
league. The next best Senator in this
category, Dylan DeMelo, is tied for 91st at plus-7. Plus-minus has its limits as a statistic, but
outliers serve to illustrate that there are good overall performances are being
had from players, even on a team that struggles.
Not that Pageau lags in other statistical categories for the
Senators. He is second in goals (19),
second in points (30) and is a team best 19.2 percent shooting among players
dressing for at least five games. Those
19 goals have already tied the career high he set in 2015-2016, and his
59-point pace would leave far behind his career best to date, 43 points in that
2015-2016 season. Pageau also happens to
be second among Ottawa forwards in average shorthanded ice time (2:33 per
game), an illustration of his responsibilities on the defensive side of the
puck. The Senators depend heavily on his
contributions, the team posting a 3-13-3 record in the 19 games in which he
failed to record a point. What he has
yet to do in his career is record a point against the Caps. He is without on, and is a minus-9, in 16
career games against Washington.
Ottawa has already dressed 11 defensemen this season. Only two of them have dressed for all 42
games played by the Senators going into their game with the Caps. They are very different types of defensemen,
too. Thomas Chabot is the “offensive”
type, leading the Ottawa blueliners in assists (21), points (25), and shots on goal (113); and
serving as the triggerman on the Senators’ power play (seven points, all
assists). He is also the minutes eater
for the club, averaging 26:22 per game, almost four minutes more than any other
defenseman (Nikita Zaitsev: 22:31).
Nevertheless, he is lagging from the performance pace he set last year,
establishing career bests in goals (14), assists (41), and points (55) despite
skating for two more minutes per game than he did last season (24:17). His ice time reflects some of the frustration
the Senators have faced this season. A
struggling team often needs its offensive weapons to log higher ice times to
keep them in or help them come back in games.
However, in 23 games in which Chabot skated more than 26 minutes (most
in the league), the Senators are just 7-11-5.
On the other hand, they have not lost when he skated less than 22:30 in
a game this season (6-0-0). In four career
regular season games against the Caps, Chabot is 0-1-1, minus-4.
The other defenseman to dress for all 42 games this season
for Ottawa is Mark Borowiecki. He is not
a subtle player. Over the last six
seasons, including this one, no defenseman has amassed more penalty minutes
than Borowiecki (575) and is fifth overall.
That penalty minute total would be much higher had he not missed 59
games over the previous two seasons to a variety of injuries and two
suspensions. This season has been a bit
different for Borowiecki, though. He has
five goals already, a career high and matching the total he scored in 175 games
over the previous three seasons. He has
11 assists, another career high, as are his 16 points. If his game hasn’t mellowed, the improvements
on offense have come with a moderation in his play outside the rules. He has 54 penalty minutes in 42 games, the
1.29 penalty minutes per game being the second lowest for a full season in his
career (1.23 minutes per game in 52 games in 2017-2018). Borowiecki has dialed it down even more in
terms of games in which he has been penalized.
He logged penalty minutes in only 11 of 41 games to date, although the
Senators have not suffered much for it, relative to their performance overall. They are 5-6-0 in those 11 games Borowiecki
spent time in the box. Meanwhile, Ottawa
is 7-5-2 in the 14 games in which he recorded a point. Borowiecki is looking for his first career point
against the Caps, having played 12 games against them with a minus-4 rating.
1. Ottawa does not
have a power play goal from a defenseman this season.
2. The Senators’
special teams on the road are struggling mightily. Their 9.4 percent power play is 30th
of 31 teams, their 78.8 percent penalty kill ranks 15th, and their
88.2 special teams index value (sum of power play and penalty kill values) is
29th of 31 teams (Detroit is 79.2, and Buffalo is 86.3).
3. Scoring first does
not seem to matter to Ottawa, at least on the road. Not that it happens often. The Senators have scored the game’s first
goal on the road four times in 22 road games this season (fewest in the league)
and have one win to show for it (also fewest in the league).
4. In that same vein,
no team has fewer first period goals scored on the road than Ottawa. Their 11 goals are tied with Dallas for
fewest in the league, but the Stars have played three fewer road games.
5. Ottawa has allowed
the fourth-highest number of goals on the road this season (83), and they have
been consistent about it over the course of games – 28 in the first period, 27
in the second period, and 26 in the third period, with two more in overtime to
reach the total.
1. Only four teams
have allowed fewer third period goals on home ice than the Caps (17):
Pittsburgh (16), Carolina (14), Columbus (11), and St. Louis (9).
2. The Caps have
scored six goals at 6-on-5 this season on home ice, twice as many as the teams
with the second-most (Calgary and Tampa Bay).
3. Only Boston has
more wins on home ice this season when trailing after two periods (four) than
the Caps (three, tied with three other teams).
4. No team in the
Eastern Conference averages more penalty minutes per game on home ice than the
Caps (10:24); only Anaheim averages more overall (11:31).
5. Through 43 games, 19
different Capitals have hit a post or a crossbar at least once. All of last season the team had 20 players
hitting iron at least once. Jakub Vrana
leads the team with eight misses of the hitting pipe sort (all hit posts). Radko Gudas is the only one of 19 skaters
playing in at least 20 games so far (including the departed Chandler
Stephenson) not to have hit iron once.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Ottawa: Craig Anderson
Craig Anderson owns the top ranking of just about every
goaltending statistical category worth having in Senators franchise history –
games (421), wins (197), save percentage (.914, among goalies with at least 100
games played for the club), shutouts (28), and even points (11). But he has a couple not worth having, too – regulation
losses (161) and overtime losses (45).
And, of the seven goalies to have appeared in at least 100 games for the
franchise, his 2.82 goals against average is the highest in the group. He has seen just about everything in his ten
seasons with Ottawa. He has been a 30-win
goalie twice (33 wins in 2011-2012 and 31 wins in 2015-2016), and he has been a
30-loss goalie twice, including regulation and extra time losses (31 losses in
2017-2018 and 31 losses last season).
At age 38, he is on the home stretch of his career, and one
concession being made to that is a lighter workload. Part of that this season is his having missed
time to a lower body injury, but he still has started one fewer game (18) than
Anders Nilsson (19), who himself has had to deal with injury, absent from the
lineup with a concussion since mid-December.
Anderson has performed admirably in Nilsson’s absence, going 3-3-1 (one
no-decision), 2.83, .910 in eight appearances.
However, he has spun out recently, losing his last three decisions
(0-2-1) while stopping just 78 of 91 shots (.857 save percentage). If Anderson gets the call in this game, it
will be an odd departure of sorts. He
has logged only 66:49 in ice time on the road since Thanksgiving, none of it
since December 7th. That is
largely due to Ottawa having a home-heavy schedule since December 7th
(eight of 12 games), but it will be something to watch. Anderson is 11-8-2, 2.46, .918, with two
shutouts in 22 career appearances against the Caps.
Washington: Radko Gudas
Well, Caps fans, how do you like him now? Having arrived in Washington with something
of a “bad boy” reputation, Radko Gudas has been reliable and consistent, if not
entirely rid of his edgy ways. Yes, he
leads all Caps defensemen in penalty minutes (34), but he is one of four Caps
defensemen in double digits in points (13) and is on a pace to set a career
high in that category (25) that would eclipse the 23 points he recorded with
Philadelphia in 2016-2017. The Caps have
only lost twice in regulation in which he logged more than 18 minutes in ice
time (10-2-2).
His physicality within the rules has been a feature of wins,
the Caps going 18-4-2 in the 24 games in which he was credited with three or
more hits. They are 12-2-1 in games in
which he recorded two or more blocked shots.
And on those occasions in which he has not been engaged in the offensive
end, at least as measured in shots on goal, the Caps have still flourished,
going 7-1-2 in the ten games in which he did not record a shot on goal. He has picked up that offense of late, going
1-5-6, plus-6, over his last ten games.
Gudas is 1-6-7, plus-1, in 20 career games against Ottawa.
In the end…
A weeknight game against a weak team, following up on a
thrilling, historic come-from-behind win in overtime. Gee, what could go wrong? This is the very definition of a “trap” game,
the Caps coming off that big win against San Jose on Sunday to face a team that
is playing better than the prognosticators thought they might before the season
started. It is the sort of game that
tests a team’s discipline and maturity.
The Caps have displayed a considerable amount of the latter, something
to be expected from a veteran team. It
is the former – discipline – that has been the challenge. It is the lack of discipline – the penalties
taken, the wandering focus from time to time – that could allow the Senators a
path to victory. We like the Caps’
chances of blocking that path.
Capitals 5 – Senators 2
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