“I tell the kids, somebody's gotta win, somebody's gotta
lose. Just don't fight about it. Just try to get better.”
-- Yogi Berra
At what point does “prospect” become “marginal NHL player?” That’s hard to say, other than the usual “you know it when you see it.” It might not be that simple in the case of Travis Boyd. It is not as if Boyd came into professional hockey as a prime, prized prospect. He was drafted 177th overall (sixth round) by the Washington Capitals in 2011. He then spent four years in the University of Minnesota program. He spent two full seasons with the Hershey Bears in the AHL and most of a third before he got his first taste of NHL action – eight games in 2017-2018 (plus one in the postseason). He skated a career high 53 games in 2018-2019 (plus one in the playoffs) before falling back to 24 games this past season (and another four in the postseason).
But here is the thing.
In 85 career regular season games, roughly the equivalent of an NHL
season, he has eight goals and 31 points, and has a plus-17 rating. These are pretty solid numbers for a player
assuming a bottom six forward role. This
past season, one in which he went 3-7-10, plus-9, in 24 games, he finished with
a per-82-game average of 10-24-34, plus-31.
The eye-popping number, though, is this: 16. The Caps were 16-6-2 in the 24 games in which
Boyd played. They were 8-1-0 in the nine
games in which he recorded a point.
Fearless’ Take…
Whether a product of his skill, being merely a good-luck
charm, or sunspots, the Caps have been more successful with Boyd in the lineup
than without him. In his three years of
NHL experience, the Caps are 58-21-6 (.718 points percentage). Without him, they are 80-51-17 (.598). Over his career, the Caps are 23-4-1 when he
recorded a point, unbeaten when he posted a goal (8-0-0). If secondary scoring is a thing, and if it
matters (yes, and yes), Boyd has provided a measure of it in his limited
exposure to NHL competition.
Cheerless’ Take…
Hey, here is another eye-popping number, cuz: 13. The Caps were 3-4-1 in the eight games in
which Boyd skated more than 13 minutes, 13-2-1 in the 16 games he skated less
than 13 minutes. And a strange number:
1. The Caps had only one loss when he
recorded no shots on goal (6-1-0).
Odd Boyd Fact… Travis Boyd posted a total of 96 career
points at the University of Minnesota.
The same number of career points as Blake Wheeler of the Winnipeg Jets
(okay, Wheeler did it in 21 fewer games).
Game to Remember… November 1, 2019. Travis Boyd had one multi-point game in the
2019-2020 season, and the Buffalo Sabres were the victims. He posted both points in a four-goal first
period for the Caps. Jakub Vrana opened
the scoring just over six minutes into the game. Less than a minute later, the Caps found
themselves dashing into the Sabers’ zone on a four-on-one break. Brendan Leipsic carried the puck into the
offensive zone on the left side, where he then fed the puck across to Boyd
skating into the right wing circle. The
puck spent almost no time on his stick, fed back into the middle for Chandler
Stephenson, who deked goalie Linus Ullmark to his knees and lifted a backhand
into the top of the net. It would prove
to be the game-winning goal, but Boyd
was not finished. His second assist was
a thing of individual beauty. Taking a
pass at center ice in front of the players’ benches, Boyd skated down the right
wing. Upon gaining the zone, he stopped,
freezing a Sabre defender, and then skated down the wall. He carried the puck around the Sabres’ net,
and from the goal line extended, he fired a pass to Brendan Leipsic at the
bottom of the right wing circle. Leipsic
wasted no time snapping the puck into the back of the net, giving the Caps a
4-0 lead at the first intermission on their way to a 6-1 win.
Game to Forget… November 7, 2019. When the team wins, everybody wins. Still, when you are not participating much,
that winning feeling might not be as strong.
Boyd skated a team-low ten shifts and 7:24 in ice time, a personal
season low. He did not record a shot
attempt, and the only mark on his score sheet line was having taken one
faceoff, which he won. Nevertheless, the
Caps pulled out a 5-4 win 17 seconds into overtime on a Tom Wilson goal.
Postseason… Travis Boyd dressed for four postseason
games. He scored a goal in his first
appearance, the lone goal in a 3-1 loss to the Philadelphia Flyers in the round
robin phase. It was the only point he
posted in the four games he played.
Looking Ahead… Boyd is an arbitration-eligible restricted
free agent, coming off a two-year deal that paid him $800,000 a year. He would not command a high price tag upon
re-signing, but a flat salary cap heading into 2020-2021 makes every dollar
count. And, with Boyd turning 27 in
September, and having had spotty appearances over three seasons, it is an open
question whether the club will think he merits another investment. Boyd has been productive in limited
appearances in Washington, and he is the kind of depth player of value to a
team. However, one has to wonder if his
future lies elsewhere, where he can get more, and more regular playing time.
In the end…
Travis Boyd is one of those players who has performed well
at every stop but has difficulty breaking into that last top level. In 113 games in the USA Hockey National Team
Development Program, he was 23-39-62. In
four years with the University of Minnesota, he was 32-64-96 in 148 games. In 217 games with the Hershey Bears, he was
53-113-166. Not big time scoring
numbers, but evidence of punch. But
whether his skill set is not quite enough, or he is the victim of numbers at
forward with a strong Caps team, he has not been able to break through to claim
a regular spot in the lineup. As he
turns 27, where he should be entering the prime years of his career, is time
for the restricted free agent running out with this club? As the saying goes, time will tell.
Grade: B
Photo: Lachlan Cunningham/Getty Images North America
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