No game is a “throwaway” game in the National Hockey League, but sometimes you get a chance to thank guys for the unsung dirty work they put in, even when thanking them puts your team at a bit of a disadvantage in a game-winning situation.
Such was the case as the Boston Bruins defeated the Capitals in a Gimmick, 4-3, this afternoon. Coach Bruce Boudreau eschewed using the obvious trick shot candidates, such as Alex Ovechkin, Alexander Semin, or Nicklas Backstrom. Instead, Boudreau sent out Boyd Gordon and Matt Bradley to take the shots on Bruin goalie Tim “Thunder Blocker” Thomas (more on that nickname in a bit). Thomas stopped both attempts, while David Krejci and Miroslav Satan succeeded on their attempts to get the extra standings point for the visitors. All in all, it was nice to see Gordon and Bradley get the chance, whatever the result.
It was a rather chippy game, especially for one with so little meaning to either side. Boston had sixth place sewn up and no individual hardware to try and lay a claim on, while the Caps clinched the top spot in the league and had only numbers to play for – more goals for Alex Ovechkin, getting to 40 goals for Alexander Semin, getting to 20 goals for Mike Green, getting to 30 goals for Mike Knuble, getting Ovechkin three points to get him the Ross Trophy for the league’s top scorer. Only Semin succeeded, getting a goal 2:23 into the first period, a play that also provided his 300th career point.
Other than that, the entertainment was provided by Tim Thomas, who thought Jason Chimera could use the waffleboard treatment after Chimera was ridden into him by a Boston defender. OK, so Chimera didn’t look as if he was making an herculean effort to get out of the way (he would say later than he tried to hug Thomas to keep from knocking him over, no doubt having read the Brian Burke treatise on hugging, although that pertained to plays along the boards). Thomas got a few good whacks in and looked to come perilously close to meriting a match penalty under Rule 51.3.*
Other stuff…
-- The Caps might have lost the game, they might have scored “only” three goals, but they looked to have “played” a pretty good game. There were a lot of chances in close in which the puck seemed to take an active role in avoiding Caps’ sticks.
-- Boston got two goals by hitting an area about three inches square just under the crossbar and inside the post over goalie Semyon Varlamov’s glove. If shooters put pucks there, there really isn’t a lot a goalie can do about it. The butterfly dares shooters to take and make those shots, and Michael Ryder and Marco Sturm did just that. They deserve the credit, not Varlamov the blame.
-- In another respect it was just like any other game… Mike Green finished with 28:34 of ice time (almost eight minutes more than the next Caps defenseman), and Alex Ovechkin finished with 25:55 in ice time (more than two minutes more than the next forward).
-- Another round number… 50. As in “plus-50.” For Jeff Schultz, that’s the highest such number in the league since teammates Milan Hejduk and Joe Sakic each finished plus-52 in 2002-2003.
-- The crowd was in playoff voice today, something that has been a bit missing in recent games. Lot’s more red, too (perhaps a function of it being a weekend game and fewer people coming straight from work).
-- In one respect the Caps did not make the Bruins pay a high enough price. With Zdeno Chara held out of this game and Dennis Seidenberg hurt, the Bruins started three defensemen – Adam McQuaid, Andrew Bodnarchuk (or “odnarch,” if all you had to go by was what you could see on the back of his jersey), and Jeffrey Penner came into this game with a total of 23 games of combined NHL experience. In a game with more meaning, the Caps probably exploit that more effectively, but in a game with more meaning, Chara and his broken nose is out there.
-- Only McQuaid and Bodnarchuk did not record a shot on goal for the Bruins. Only Tom Poti and David Steckel failed to record a shot for the Caps. A whole lot o’ shootin’ going on out there.
-- When the Capitals were struggling mightily to get points in 2005, 2006, and 2007, the biggest problem they had was playing players in a spot a rung or two higher on the responsibility ladder than their skill suggested. Guys who should have been third liners (think “Brian Willsie”) were first line wingers. Third pair, or maybe seventh defensemen (think "Mathieu Biron") were getting top-four minutes. No more, and that is the subtle talent that the front office has had in adding pieces. Jason Chimera is the kind of player who adds speed and grit to a third line (in 2006 he would have been on the top line or perhaps the second line). Eric Belanger can play in a natural third line slot and even be a credible second liner in a pinch. He would have been a second line center by default in 2006. These two provide the kind of two-way contribution that allows the Caps to ice a very good fourth line in some combination of Matt Bradley, David Steckel, Boyd Gordon, and Scott Walker, a group that would have been getting third line (and perhaps second line in spots) minutes a few years ago.
In the end, the Caps did a lot of good… shattered the franchise points record, ditto the wins record. Fifteen losses in regulation is a franchise low for a season, and that includes the abbreviated 1994-1995 season that was only 48 games long). 313 goals ranks the team sixth in franchise history for scoring, the other five clubs ahead of them getting their totals in the go-go 1980’s and early 1990’s. Two 100-point scorers for the first time in history. Jose Theodore closed the season going 20-0-3, a franchise record for consecutive games unbeaten in regulation (if you’re wondering, Gerry Cheevers went 24-0-8 in 1971-1972… he won a Stanley Cup that year).
But all that is in the past tense now. The only thing that matters starts on Thursday.
It's once and always Stanley Cup Champion Washington Capitals hockey, all day, all night, all the time . . . or when I get around to it
Sunday, April 11, 2010
The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!! -- Caps vs. Bruins, April 11th
The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
It’s Game 82 of the regular season., and it ends as it begins, with a game against the Boston Bruins. The Caps and B’s meeting a noon affair to bring the curtain down on the regular season, and these are two clubs with literally nothing to play for but the final statistics. Boston will finish sixth in the Eastern Conference and will play Buffalo or New Jersey in the first round. The Caps clinched everything around Valentine’s Day and will get either the Rangers (if they win today) or the Canadiens (if they don’t). Seems like just yesterday these teams were locking up in Game 1. Game 82 makes for a twinge of sadness, a reminder that another season is going by and…
“You know, of course, that 82 is a ‘happy number.’”
Huh?
“82 is a ‘happy number’… it’s a math thing.”
I don’t understand, a “happy” number? As in “grin from ear to ear?”
“Let me explain… my name is Calvin Q. Lusse, professor of mathematics.”
A math prof named “Cal Q. Lusse?”
“Calvin… “
o-o-o-o-o-kay…
“Anyway, here is how it works… First, take any positive integer ‘p’. Then, break it down into digits. Next, square the digits and add those squares. You get a new number ‘n’. If n = 1, then ‘p’ is a happy number. If it’s not, then set p = n and repeat the steps. If the process repeats forever, then ‘p’ is not a happy number.”
You’re kidding, right.
“We don’t kid in the world of mathematics. Let me show you… 82. Eight squared is 64, and two squared is four. The sum of the two is 68. That’s not equal to 1, so we take the six and square it, then take the eight and square it. 36 plus 68 is 104. Do it again, and… ”
How long does this take?
“About as long as it takes to play 82 games…”
Well, we don’t have that long, seeing as how today’s game is a noon start. The Caps and the Bruins played just six days ago, and not much has changed since we looked at that game. Since the 3-2 overtime win for the Caps last Monday, both teams won the two games that followed in their respective schedules leading up to this season-ending matchup. The overall numbers for the teams for the season look like this...
The Caps, however, lead the season series, three games to none, outscoring the Bruins 11-4 in the process. The Caps have been led in scoring in this series by Nicklas Backstrom (1-6-7, plus-4), who had a three-point night (1-2-3) in the last meeting of these teams last Monday. Overall Backstrom is 4-11-15 in 11 career games against the Bruins. Backstrom will enter this game having recorded three points in each of his last three games (3-6-9) and is 7-14-21, plus-7 in his last 13 games.
Backstrom might have the points lead in the season series, but Brooks Laich leads the Caps with four goals, including two game-winners (one in overtime last Monday). It’s worth noting that the four goals Laich scored in the three games came from an average of 15 feet from the net, a reflection of his willingness to go into traffic to get goals. Seems he takes to heart his own quote, that "if you want money, go to the bank. If you want bread, go to the bakery. If you want goals, go to the net." He has nine goals in 19 career games against the Bruins.
It might strike the Caps fan odd that in a series with 11 goals for the Caps, none have been scored by a defenseman. More to the point, Mike Green does not have a point in this series so far, and only one defenseman still with the team has points. Tom Poti is 0-3-3, plus-7 in the three games of this series. Maybe it is some karmic thing, seeing as how Poti was born in Worcester, about 50 miles outside of Boston. Poti is 2-14-16 in 29 career games against the Bruins.
If Semyon Varlamov gets the start against the Bruins, as it seems likely he will, it will be his first appearance against the Bruins. In fact, it will be his first appearance against the Bruins organization. He did not face Providence during his stay in the AHL, either. Although he got off to a slow re-start after the Olympic break (1-2-1, 3.41, .874), he has been much better in his last four appearances (2-1-1, 2.06, .913). Fun fact… Varlamov is the only goaltender on a non-original six team to have recorded a shutout before his 21st birthday. According to the Caps’ media guide, only three others have done it (Harry Lumley for Detroit, and Patrick Roy and Carey Price, both of Montreal).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Boston: Milan Lucic
The big winger has had something of a disappointing year (9-10-19, minus-7 in 49 games), but might be hitting a hot streak just in time. He is 1-2-3 in his last three games, and the modest three-game points streak he has is his longest of the season. Perhaps just as important, Lucic hasn’t been on the minus-side of the ledger in his last 11 games. A big hitter – and he is that (third on the team, despite missing more than 30 games) – can’t be getting hits at the expense of seeing goals scored when he is on the ice. Some advice to the operations folks at Verizon Center… hide the chocolate. According to the Bruins media guide, eating chocolate before a game is his hockey ritual.
Washington: Mike Knuble
Knuble can get to 30 goals for the season with a two-goal game against the Bruins. It isn’t out of the question (unless he is held out of the lineup); he has goals in each of his last two games. He has six multi-goal games this season, but none since March 4th. He is 8-8-16 in 23 career games against Boston, including a pair of goals in three games this season.
Keys:
1. Keep the lights off. You can’t do worse against air than Boston has on its power play over the last month. They are 3-for-49 over their last 16 games and have failed to record a power play goal in 15 of those games. The Caps are 14-for-15 on the penalty kill over their last five games... probably no coincidence that they are 5-0-0 in those games.
2. tickticktickticktick… The Caps have played good “60 minutes” games against the Bruins, closing fact in all three games. In the first two they scored a total of five goals in the third period (to Boston’s one), and scored the winner in overtime in the other game. It will be especially hard to maintain focus for 60 minutes on a day like this, but if there is one team with less to play for than the Caps, it might be Boston. At least the Caps have the possibility of getting Alex Ovechkin a couple of league-leader finishes (points, goals).
3. Win. For what it’s worth, each of the last three Stanley Cup winners won their last regular season game. The last one not to win was Carolina, but Martin Gerber was in goal for that one (a 4-0 loss to Buffalo), and he didn’t make it through the first round as the Hurricanes’ netminder.
In the end, it’s hard what to make of this game. These teams could meet in the second round of the playoffs if the Bruins are the lowest seed to win in the first round. So you would have to reach a bit to think of this as a “statement” game. Boston remains a team finding it difficult to score and difficult to convert power plays (when they get them; they averaged barely three chances a game over their last 16 games). It’s hard to see the Bruins getting more than two, except by fluke. And it’s hard to see the Caps getting fewer than three, because it has happened only four times their 19 games since the Olympics. Sounds like how it will end up…
Caps 3 – Bruins 2
It’s Game 82 of the regular season., and it ends as it begins, with a game against the Boston Bruins. The Caps and B’s meeting a noon affair to bring the curtain down on the regular season, and these are two clubs with literally nothing to play for but the final statistics. Boston will finish sixth in the Eastern Conference and will play Buffalo or New Jersey in the first round. The Caps clinched everything around Valentine’s Day and will get either the Rangers (if they win today) or the Canadiens (if they don’t). Seems like just yesterday these teams were locking up in Game 1. Game 82 makes for a twinge of sadness, a reminder that another season is going by and…
“You know, of course, that 82 is a ‘happy number.’”
Huh?
“82 is a ‘happy number’… it’s a math thing.”
I don’t understand, a “happy” number? As in “grin from ear to ear?”
“Let me explain… my name is Calvin Q. Lusse, professor of mathematics.”
A math prof named “Cal Q. Lusse?”
“Calvin… “
o-o-o-o-o-kay…
“Anyway, here is how it works… First, take any positive integer ‘p’. Then, break it down into digits. Next, square the digits and add those squares. You get a new number ‘n’. If n = 1, then ‘p’ is a happy number. If it’s not, then set p = n and repeat the steps. If the process repeats forever, then ‘p’ is not a happy number.”
You’re kidding, right.
“We don’t kid in the world of mathematics. Let me show you… 82. Eight squared is 64, and two squared is four. The sum of the two is 68. That’s not equal to 1, so we take the six and square it, then take the eight and square it. 36 plus 68 is 104. Do it again, and… ”
How long does this take?
“About as long as it takes to play 82 games…”
Well, we don’t have that long, seeing as how today’s game is a noon start. The Caps and the Bruins played just six days ago, and not much has changed since we looked at that game. Since the 3-2 overtime win for the Caps last Monday, both teams won the two games that followed in their respective schedules leading up to this season-ending matchup. The overall numbers for the teams for the season look like this...
The Caps, however, lead the season series, three games to none, outscoring the Bruins 11-4 in the process. The Caps have been led in scoring in this series by Nicklas Backstrom (1-6-7, plus-4), who had a three-point night (1-2-3) in the last meeting of these teams last Monday. Overall Backstrom is 4-11-15 in 11 career games against the Bruins. Backstrom will enter this game having recorded three points in each of his last three games (3-6-9) and is 7-14-21, plus-7 in his last 13 games.
Backstrom might have the points lead in the season series, but Brooks Laich leads the Caps with four goals, including two game-winners (one in overtime last Monday). It’s worth noting that the four goals Laich scored in the three games came from an average of 15 feet from the net, a reflection of his willingness to go into traffic to get goals. Seems he takes to heart his own quote, that "if you want money, go to the bank. If you want bread, go to the bakery. If you want goals, go to the net." He has nine goals in 19 career games against the Bruins.
It might strike the Caps fan odd that in a series with 11 goals for the Caps, none have been scored by a defenseman. More to the point, Mike Green does not have a point in this series so far, and only one defenseman still with the team has points. Tom Poti is 0-3-3, plus-7 in the three games of this series. Maybe it is some karmic thing, seeing as how Poti was born in Worcester, about 50 miles outside of Boston. Poti is 2-14-16 in 29 career games against the Bruins.
If Semyon Varlamov gets the start against the Bruins, as it seems likely he will, it will be his first appearance against the Bruins. In fact, it will be his first appearance against the Bruins organization. He did not face Providence during his stay in the AHL, either. Although he got off to a slow re-start after the Olympic break (1-2-1, 3.41, .874), he has been much better in his last four appearances (2-1-1, 2.06, .913). Fun fact… Varlamov is the only goaltender on a non-original six team to have recorded a shutout before his 21st birthday. According to the Caps’ media guide, only three others have done it (Harry Lumley for Detroit, and Patrick Roy and Carey Price, both of Montreal).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Boston: Milan Lucic
The big winger has had something of a disappointing year (9-10-19, minus-7 in 49 games), but might be hitting a hot streak just in time. He is 1-2-3 in his last three games, and the modest three-game points streak he has is his longest of the season. Perhaps just as important, Lucic hasn’t been on the minus-side of the ledger in his last 11 games. A big hitter – and he is that (third on the team, despite missing more than 30 games) – can’t be getting hits at the expense of seeing goals scored when he is on the ice. Some advice to the operations folks at Verizon Center… hide the chocolate. According to the Bruins media guide, eating chocolate before a game is his hockey ritual.
Washington: Mike Knuble
Knuble can get to 30 goals for the season with a two-goal game against the Bruins. It isn’t out of the question (unless he is held out of the lineup); he has goals in each of his last two games. He has six multi-goal games this season, but none since March 4th. He is 8-8-16 in 23 career games against Boston, including a pair of goals in three games this season.
Keys:
1. Keep the lights off. You can’t do worse against air than Boston has on its power play over the last month. They are 3-for-49 over their last 16 games and have failed to record a power play goal in 15 of those games. The Caps are 14-for-15 on the penalty kill over their last five games... probably no coincidence that they are 5-0-0 in those games.
2. tickticktickticktick… The Caps have played good “60 minutes” games against the Bruins, closing fact in all three games. In the first two they scored a total of five goals in the third period (to Boston’s one), and scored the winner in overtime in the other game. It will be especially hard to maintain focus for 60 minutes on a day like this, but if there is one team with less to play for than the Caps, it might be Boston. At least the Caps have the possibility of getting Alex Ovechkin a couple of league-leader finishes (points, goals).
3. Win. For what it’s worth, each of the last three Stanley Cup winners won their last regular season game. The last one not to win was Carolina, but Martin Gerber was in goal for that one (a 4-0 loss to Buffalo), and he didn’t make it through the first round as the Hurricanes’ netminder.
In the end, it’s hard what to make of this game. These teams could meet in the second round of the playoffs if the Bruins are the lowest seed to win in the first round. So you would have to reach a bit to think of this as a “statement” game. Boston remains a team finding it difficult to score and difficult to convert power plays (when they get them; they averaged barely three chances a game over their last 16 games). It’s hard to see the Bruins getting more than two, except by fluke. And it’s hard to see the Caps getting fewer than three, because it has happened only four times their 19 games since the Olympics. Sounds like how it will end up…
Caps 3 – Bruins 2
Saturday, April 10, 2010
Friday, April 09, 2010
A TWO-point night: Caps 5 - Thrashers 2
Big night on F Street, it was. The Caps defeated the Atlanta Thrashers, 5-2 to sweep the season series between the clubs in a game that really was, as they say, “closer than the score indicates.” The Caps broke on top with a first period goal by Nicklas Backstrom, then gave the lead away mid-way through the second period on a freakish goal by Evgeni Artyukhin off the skate of Brendan Morrison, who was camped in the high slot 25 feet away from goal Jose Theodore as Artyukhin tried to send a pass across the ice from the half boards.
Then the Caps gave away another one less than two minutes later with some sloppy puck management on a power play, allowing Clarke MacArthur to intercept a pass and take off on a breakaway. MacArthur broke in on Theodore and put the puck in the only place available, high under the crossbar over Theodore’s glove on a backhand. It was so high under the crossbar that it looked as if it hit iron, but a replay confirmed that it hit the net before rebounding out. That ended the fun part of the evening for the Thrashers.
The Caps roared back with four goals, including the 49th and 50th (the game-tying and game-winning goals) by Alex Ovechkin, an insurance goal by Jason Chimera, and the other bookend goal for Nicklas Backstrom. It was a big night for big guns and for the club in general…
-- With the win the Caps reached the 120-point mark. In doing so, they are the first non-original six team in the NHL to accomplish the feat.
-- Ovechkin notched goals 49 and 50 to take the lead in the goal-scoring race and become only the third player in NHL history to hit the 50-goal mark in four of his first five seasons.
-- With an assist tacked onto his scoring line, Ovechkin took the lead in scoring from Henrik Sedin. Caps fans had better hope Sedin’s out of bullets, because Ovie might not be playing on Sunday. Bruce Boudreau suggested that might be the case in the post-game (apparently at Ovechkin’s request).
-- Backstrom, with two goals and an assist, hit the 100-point mark for the first time in his career. He and Ovechkin are the first pair of Capitals to reach the 100-point mark in the same season.
-- That's three straight three-point games for Backstrom (3-6-9, plus-7).
-- Ovechkin hit 50-goals, and Backstrom hit the 100-point mark on the same play. Hope they have a band saw in the locker room to halve the puck.
-- Alexander Semin recorded three assists, making the BOSS line of Ovechkin, Backstrom, and Semin 4-5-9, plus-11 for the night.
-- Jeff Schultz was a plus-4, making him plus-9 in his last two games, which is better than 777 other player in the league for the entire season.
-- But for the freak goal and the shortie, Jose Theodore had a better-than-solid game, stopping 29 of 31 shots. The guy is in a zone right now. You could count the number of juicy rebounds he left on your fist.
-- Even Boyd Gordon, who has fought chronic back problems all year it seems, looked quicker than he has at any point since opening night.
-- You could tell one team was tuning up for the playoffs, while the other team was tuning out. The Caps registered only nine hits on the night (Ovechkin had none of them). Atlanta had 16 hits, but a dozen of them must have come after the Caps had their fifth goal (not really, they were 4-7-5 by period).
-- Continuing on that line, there were only 22 turnovers recorded, 12 by the Caps, 10 by the Thrashers.
-- Ondrej Pavelec kept the Thrashers in the game, to a point. There were an awful lot of pucks bouncing around in his crease early that gave the impression that if the Caps kept firing, they would eventually break through. In fact, Pavelec stopped 33 of the first 35 shots he faced, but allowed goals on three of the last 12 shots he faced, all of them in a space of 3:16 in the third period.
-- Alex Ovechkin had two goals on three shots, but he failed to register a shot on goal in any of the five power plays the Caps had.
-- Meanwhile, Alexander Semin was teeing it up on the power play; he had six shots on goal in 6:40 of power play ice time. He has 11 shots on goal for the game and had four of the Caps’ total of seven takeaways. Think he likes playing with Ovechkin and Backstrom?
-- The Caps tied a franchise record with their 30th win at home this season, tying the mark set by the 1985-1986 club. They can take the record for themselves on Sunday against Boston (remember, it’s a NOON start, kids).
-- Speaking of 30, it was the 30th win for Jose Theodore, the fourth time in his career he has reached that mark.
-- Tyler Sloan was the only Cap not to record a shot attempt, but he also sat for the last 16:58 of the game.
In the end, the Thrashers gamely hung on for two periods, but the Caps depth of firepower did them in. And when the flood came, the Thrashers had nothing left in the tank to prevent it (as we happily puree our metaphors). The Caps play for a bit of history on Sunday (the home wins record), and that will make things at least a bit interesting, if they are having to do it with a spotty lineup. But hey, these guys have earned it. Screw NBC. An 82nd game at noon on a Sunday when you have a 21-point lead on the rest of the conference means squat compared to what comes next week.
Then the Caps gave away another one less than two minutes later with some sloppy puck management on a power play, allowing Clarke MacArthur to intercept a pass and take off on a breakaway. MacArthur broke in on Theodore and put the puck in the only place available, high under the crossbar over Theodore’s glove on a backhand. It was so high under the crossbar that it looked as if it hit iron, but a replay confirmed that it hit the net before rebounding out. That ended the fun part of the evening for the Thrashers.
The Caps roared back with four goals, including the 49th and 50th (the game-tying and game-winning goals) by Alex Ovechkin, an insurance goal by Jason Chimera, and the other bookend goal for Nicklas Backstrom. It was a big night for big guns and for the club in general…
-- With the win the Caps reached the 120-point mark. In doing so, they are the first non-original six team in the NHL to accomplish the feat.
-- Ovechkin notched goals 49 and 50 to take the lead in the goal-scoring race and become only the third player in NHL history to hit the 50-goal mark in four of his first five seasons.
-- With an assist tacked onto his scoring line, Ovechkin took the lead in scoring from Henrik Sedin. Caps fans had better hope Sedin’s out of bullets, because Ovie might not be playing on Sunday. Bruce Boudreau suggested that might be the case in the post-game (apparently at Ovechkin’s request).
-- Backstrom, with two goals and an assist, hit the 100-point mark for the first time in his career. He and Ovechkin are the first pair of Capitals to reach the 100-point mark in the same season.
-- That's three straight three-point games for Backstrom (3-6-9, plus-7).
-- Ovechkin hit 50-goals, and Backstrom hit the 100-point mark on the same play. Hope they have a band saw in the locker room to halve the puck.
-- Alexander Semin recorded three assists, making the BOSS line of Ovechkin, Backstrom, and Semin 4-5-9, plus-11 for the night.
-- Jeff Schultz was a plus-4, making him plus-9 in his last two games, which is better than 777 other player in the league for the entire season.
-- But for the freak goal and the shortie, Jose Theodore had a better-than-solid game, stopping 29 of 31 shots. The guy is in a zone right now. You could count the number of juicy rebounds he left on your fist.
-- Even Boyd Gordon, who has fought chronic back problems all year it seems, looked quicker than he has at any point since opening night.
-- You could tell one team was tuning up for the playoffs, while the other team was tuning out. The Caps registered only nine hits on the night (Ovechkin had none of them). Atlanta had 16 hits, but a dozen of them must have come after the Caps had their fifth goal (not really, they were 4-7-5 by period).
-- Continuing on that line, there were only 22 turnovers recorded, 12 by the Caps, 10 by the Thrashers.
-- Ondrej Pavelec kept the Thrashers in the game, to a point. There were an awful lot of pucks bouncing around in his crease early that gave the impression that if the Caps kept firing, they would eventually break through. In fact, Pavelec stopped 33 of the first 35 shots he faced, but allowed goals on three of the last 12 shots he faced, all of them in a space of 3:16 in the third period.
-- Alex Ovechkin had two goals on three shots, but he failed to register a shot on goal in any of the five power plays the Caps had.
-- Meanwhile, Alexander Semin was teeing it up on the power play; he had six shots on goal in 6:40 of power play ice time. He has 11 shots on goal for the game and had four of the Caps’ total of seven takeaways. Think he likes playing with Ovechkin and Backstrom?
-- The Caps tied a franchise record with their 30th win at home this season, tying the mark set by the 1985-1986 club. They can take the record for themselves on Sunday against Boston (remember, it’s a NOON start, kids).
-- Speaking of 30, it was the 30th win for Jose Theodore, the fourth time in his career he has reached that mark.
-- Tyler Sloan was the only Cap not to record a shot attempt, but he also sat for the last 16:58 of the game.
In the end, the Thrashers gamely hung on for two periods, but the Caps depth of firepower did them in. And when the flood came, the Thrashers had nothing left in the tank to prevent it (as we happily puree our metaphors). The Caps play for a bit of history on Sunday (the home wins record), and that will make things at least a bit interesting, if they are having to do it with a spotty lineup. But hey, these guys have earned it. Screw NBC. An 82nd game at noon on a Sunday when you have a 21-point lead on the rest of the conference means squat compared to what comes next week.
The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!! -- Caps vs. Thrashers, April 9th
The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
It’s Friday on Fun Street and the next to last game of the regular season…
“The penultimate game…”
Cheerless, you remembered. And Fearless, you’re here, too. And what’s with the get-up?
‘Well, we heard that the Caps was restin’ guys this week, and we came a’runnin’ to offer our services.”
And what services would those be?
“Cuz, do you not remember those halcyon days of yore and our winter afternoons on the frozen river?”
I remember watching a lot of falling down by you two.
“T’weren’t fallin’ down… it was goin’ in t’my ‘butterfly.’”
You weren’t even a goalie, you doofus. Besides, it was more of a “dung beetle.”
“Or a turtle.”
Yeah, he did spend a lot of time turtling whenever Mickey McGonigle dropped the gloves.
“It’s Michelle, and it was only the one time."
“You mean ‘one time each game, don’t you Cheerless?”
So you guys want to offer your services to Coach Boudreau? What makes you think you can skate with the big boys?
“Well, I’ve been known as quite the scorer in my day…”
“Cuz, you ain’t scored since the senior prom.”
“And I suppose you can do better?”
“Nope, I’m a goalie. I have a glove hand that’s legendary in six counties.”
“Glitter gloves don’t count, cuz.”
Will you guys knock it off?! There’s a hockey game to play, and I don’t think Coach Boudreau has any use for a couple of guys who couldn’t lace their skates without a manual.
“Maybe yer right, cuz… hey Fearless, maybe the Oilers are lookin’ for somebody… race ya to the truck…”
While those two see if they can crack the Edmonton lineup, the Caps and Thrashers end their season series tonight. We just did this a week ago, a 2-1 Capitals win that ended a three-game losing streak. Starting with that game, these teams have gone in entirely different directions. The Caps have won four in a row, clinching the Presidents’ Trophy and beating two teams they might see in the playoffs (Boston and Pittsburgh), while the Thrashers have lost three in a row and were eliminated from the Eastern Conference playoff race.
Not much has changed for these teams, trend-wise, since we looked at the matchup a week ago. The overall numbers haven’t changed much, either…
These teams have met five times this year, and the Caps have won them all by a combined score of 24-11. Fourteen different Caps have goals in the season series, 21 have points. Clearly, Atlanta has had issues stopping the Caps, the 2-1 result a week ago notwithstanding.
The Caps’ leading points scorer in this season series is hardly a surprise – Alex Ovechkin (3-4-7 in five games). What is perhaps more noteworthy is that a number of Caps have compiled their season’s best scoring against one team in games against the Thrashers, or the Caps have received scoring from unlikely places (some players who are, in fact, not with the team these days).
- Jeff Schultz has treated the Thrashers like a happy meal this year – 1-4-5, plus-10 in the five games, including his biggest night of the season, a three point night on October 22nd that included this gem for his first goal of the season…
- Keith Aucoin, how skating with Hershey, recorded two of his nine points against the Thrashers (tied for his highest mark against any team this year).
- Chris Clark, now of Columbus, recorded one of his four goals for the Caps against the Thrashers.
- Alexandre Giroux, in Hershey these days, potted his only goal in the NHL this season against Atlanta.
- Semyon Varlamov recorded his only assist of the season against Atlanta.
- Brooks Laich has more assists against Atlanta (five) than he has against any other club, except Florida (also five, in one more game played).
The Caps’ special teams have performed rather well against Atlanta, too. In five games, the power play is 5-for-21 (23.8 percent), but that includes an 0-for-7 in the first meeting of these teams this season. Five-for-14 since can be described as “dominating” in any book. The penalty killers are 16-for-19 in the five games (84.2 percent) and have not allowed a power play goal on nine tries over the last three games.
Here is perhaps the oddest fact of all in this season’s series. Jose Theodore has yet to make an appearance against Atlanta. Semyon Varlamov got three chances, winning them all (3-0-0, 2.67, .908), while Michal Neuvirth got the other two (2-0-0, 1.51, .964). Theodore appears likely to get his first chance to improve on his 13-5-0, 2.67, .905 career mark against the Thrashers tonight.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Atlanta: Maxim Afinogenov
The season is over for top scorer Nik Antropov, who is being given the last two games off after skating through a number of injuries this year. That leaves it up to Afinogenov, as the Thrashers’ remaining top scorer, to try to lead the Thrashers offense against a team that has treated their goaltenders like a pinball machine. He is 2-1-3, minus-5 in five games against the Caps this year.
Washington: Matt Bradley
It’s about earning playing time among those competing on the third and fourth lines. Bradley has a chance to put his best foot forward tonight against a team he has had a lot of success against this year. Bradley is 2-2-4, plus-3 in five games against Atlanta. He also has goals in two of his last four games.
Keys:
1. Get ‘em back, keep ‘em in. The Caps are either getting guys back into the lineup who were nursing injuries, or they are close to getting other guys back. The trick now is to keep them healthy. There isn’t anything more important than that in this game.
2. See Number 1
3. See Number 2
In the end, the Caps are tuning up, and the Thrashers might be tuning out. Atlanta could be expected to play for a measure of pride (no team wants to take the oh-fer for the entire season), and as a divisional opponent they might be expected to play with a certain edge. But that isn’t going to be nearly enough to stem the tide that will wash over them.
Caps 6 – Thrashers 2
It’s Friday on Fun Street and the next to last game of the regular season…
“The penultimate game…”
Cheerless, you remembered. And Fearless, you’re here, too. And what’s with the get-up?
‘Well, we heard that the Caps was restin’ guys this week, and we came a’runnin’ to offer our services.”
And what services would those be?
“Cuz, do you not remember those halcyon days of yore and our winter afternoons on the frozen river?”
I remember watching a lot of falling down by you two.
“T’weren’t fallin’ down… it was goin’ in t’my ‘butterfly.’”
You weren’t even a goalie, you doofus. Besides, it was more of a “dung beetle.”
“Or a turtle.”
Yeah, he did spend a lot of time turtling whenever Mickey McGonigle dropped the gloves.
“It’s Michelle, and it was only the one time."
“You mean ‘one time each game, don’t you Cheerless?”
So you guys want to offer your services to Coach Boudreau? What makes you think you can skate with the big boys?
“Well, I’ve been known as quite the scorer in my day…”
“Cuz, you ain’t scored since the senior prom.”
“And I suppose you can do better?”
“Nope, I’m a goalie. I have a glove hand that’s legendary in six counties.”
“Glitter gloves don’t count, cuz.”
Will you guys knock it off?! There’s a hockey game to play, and I don’t think Coach Boudreau has any use for a couple of guys who couldn’t lace their skates without a manual.
“Maybe yer right, cuz… hey Fearless, maybe the Oilers are lookin’ for somebody… race ya to the truck…”
While those two see if they can crack the Edmonton lineup, the Caps and Thrashers end their season series tonight. We just did this a week ago, a 2-1 Capitals win that ended a three-game losing streak. Starting with that game, these teams have gone in entirely different directions. The Caps have won four in a row, clinching the Presidents’ Trophy and beating two teams they might see in the playoffs (Boston and Pittsburgh), while the Thrashers have lost three in a row and were eliminated from the Eastern Conference playoff race.
Not much has changed for these teams, trend-wise, since we looked at the matchup a week ago. The overall numbers haven’t changed much, either…
These teams have met five times this year, and the Caps have won them all by a combined score of 24-11. Fourteen different Caps have goals in the season series, 21 have points. Clearly, Atlanta has had issues stopping the Caps, the 2-1 result a week ago notwithstanding.
The Caps’ leading points scorer in this season series is hardly a surprise – Alex Ovechkin (3-4-7 in five games). What is perhaps more noteworthy is that a number of Caps have compiled their season’s best scoring against one team in games against the Thrashers, or the Caps have received scoring from unlikely places (some players who are, in fact, not with the team these days).
- Jeff Schultz has treated the Thrashers like a happy meal this year – 1-4-5, plus-10 in the five games, including his biggest night of the season, a three point night on October 22nd that included this gem for his first goal of the season…
- Keith Aucoin, how skating with Hershey, recorded two of his nine points against the Thrashers (tied for his highest mark against any team this year).
- Chris Clark, now of Columbus, recorded one of his four goals for the Caps against the Thrashers.
- Alexandre Giroux, in Hershey these days, potted his only goal in the NHL this season against Atlanta.
- Semyon Varlamov recorded his only assist of the season against Atlanta.
- Brooks Laich has more assists against Atlanta (five) than he has against any other club, except Florida (also five, in one more game played).
The Caps’ special teams have performed rather well against Atlanta, too. In five games, the power play is 5-for-21 (23.8 percent), but that includes an 0-for-7 in the first meeting of these teams this season. Five-for-14 since can be described as “dominating” in any book. The penalty killers are 16-for-19 in the five games (84.2 percent) and have not allowed a power play goal on nine tries over the last three games.
Here is perhaps the oddest fact of all in this season’s series. Jose Theodore has yet to make an appearance against Atlanta. Semyon Varlamov got three chances, winning them all (3-0-0, 2.67, .908), while Michal Neuvirth got the other two (2-0-0, 1.51, .964). Theodore appears likely to get his first chance to improve on his 13-5-0, 2.67, .905 career mark against the Thrashers tonight.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Atlanta: Maxim Afinogenov
The season is over for top scorer Nik Antropov, who is being given the last two games off after skating through a number of injuries this year. That leaves it up to Afinogenov, as the Thrashers’ remaining top scorer, to try to lead the Thrashers offense against a team that has treated their goaltenders like a pinball machine. He is 2-1-3, minus-5 in five games against the Caps this year.
Washington: Matt Bradley
It’s about earning playing time among those competing on the third and fourth lines. Bradley has a chance to put his best foot forward tonight against a team he has had a lot of success against this year. Bradley is 2-2-4, plus-3 in five games against Atlanta. He also has goals in two of his last four games.
Keys:
1. Get ‘em back, keep ‘em in. The Caps are either getting guys back into the lineup who were nursing injuries, or they are close to getting other guys back. The trick now is to keep them healthy. There isn’t anything more important than that in this game.
2. See Number 1
3. See Number 2
In the end, the Caps are tuning up, and the Thrashers might be tuning out. Atlanta could be expected to play for a measure of pride (no team wants to take the oh-fer for the entire season), and as a divisional opponent they might be expected to play with a certain edge. But that isn’t going to be nearly enough to stem the tide that will wash over them.
Caps 6 – Thrashers 2
Thursday, April 08, 2010
Last Regular Season Game at Mellon Arena
Thank God...
Please tell us the wrecking ball has been ordered...
(source: ballparks.com)
Sittin' at the end of the bar
Some scribbles on an off day…
- True or false… The Caps have more players with ten or more goals than any other team in the league. Answer: False. Eleven teams have at least ten players with ten or more goals, and five of them have more than the ten that the Caps have. Buffalo leads with 12, followed by Chicago, Los Angeles, Pittsburgh, and St. Louis, each with 11. Five others are tied with the Caps at ten.
- But no team in the league has more 20-goal scorers than the Caps (seven), none with more 30-goal scorers (three), and none with more 40-goal scorers (one). The Caps could add to their 40-goal scorers if Alexander Semin gets one in the final two games. The 30-goal scorers could jump if Mike Knuble should get a pair in the last two contests, and the 20-goal scorers could increase if Mike Green gets one in the last two games.
- 15 different Caps have game-winning goals this year.
- Only the Detroit Red Wings (19) have fewer fighting majors than the Caps (20). And in case you’re wondering, four of the top ten teams in fighting majors are in the playoff mix, five of the second ten, and seven of the bottom ten.
- No team has more game misconduct penalties than the Caps (five, tied with St. Louis).
- No team is more disciplined than the Red Wings… 4th fewest minor penalties taken, fewest misconducts, fewest game misconducts (none), 11th in bench minors. The Ducks are the, well, odd ducks here… most major penalties (78), fewest bench minors (two).
- The Caps actually have a better team plus-minus on the road (plus-40) than they do at home (plus-30). Only four other teams can say that, only Boston has a greater difference (plus-11 on the road, minus-16 at home).
- In 80 games this year, the Blackhawks have been outshot in games only 12 times, by far the lowest in the league. Oddly enough, they are also the only team that has not had a single game in which they and their opponent had the same number of shots on goal.
- Boston has played more extra-time games this year than anyone (26). They are 13-13 in those games. Phoenix has 18 wins in extra-time, three more than second-place Chicago.
- Phoenix plays on the edge. They have more one-goal wins (28) than any other team and the best winning percentage in one-gaol games (.700). But Detroit is most likely to be involved in a one-goal decision (35 times), one more than Phoenix.
- You might think that the Caps, as the highest scoring offense in the league, would have the most blowouts. You might think that, and if you did you would be wrong. Chicago and Vancouver have 22 three-goal or more wins. The Caps are third with 21. Tampa Bay is most likely to be involved in a three-goal or more decision, having been in one 32 times (11-21). Pittsburgh is next with 31 (16-15).
- You might not be surprised to know that Nashville, Phoenix, and Florida are tied with being shut out the most times (eight). They aren’t offensive powerhouses. But there is a fourth team in that group… Detroit. Bet you didn’t have that one. The Caps have been shut out the fewest times – once (Ryan Miller of the Sabres turned the trick on December 9th).
- At the other end of the spectrum, you might ponder which team has the most shutouts. Phoenix?... no. Buffalo?... no. New Jersey?... no. It’s Chicago. Yes, that Chicago, the one whose goaltenders are thought of as playoff road kill. The thing is, though, seven of their 11 shutouts came before Christmas.
Drive safely.
Wednesday, April 07, 2010
There might be more than one way to skin a cat...
...but there are at least three ways to get to the top of the heap in NHL goal scoring. NHL.com has a nice article on the three contestants for the Richard Trophy -- Alex Ovechkin, Sidney Crosby, and Steven Stamkos. Perhaps most interesting are the graphics comparing the shots and locations on the ice from where the goals were scored. Take a gander here.
A TWO-point night: Caps 6 - Penguins 3
Keep telling yourself, “it doesn’t mean a thing”… “it doesn’t mean a thing”… “it doesn’t –“ aw, shoot, it was nice, anyway.
Nothing (in the regular season, at least) much beats taking the bully’s lunch and eating it in front of his face the way the Caps did last night in beating the Pittsburgh Penguins, 6-3, at Mellon Arena. What a send off… the last memory Penguins fans will have of a home game against the Caps at Mellon Arena (unless these teams meet in the post season) will be of trudging out of the arena, listening to the public address guy announcing, “Capitals goal scored by number eight, Alex Ovechkin, assist by Nicklas Backstrom. Alex Ovechkin, his 48th goal of the season, time of the goal, 19:59…”
And just in time, too. Caps fans were getting the vapors wondering when Ovechkin might break out of his slump (four goals in his previous 18 games). And he wasn’t the only one…
- Tomas Fleischmann, who had a single goal over a nine-game stretch, had one to give him two in his last three games.
- Mike Knuble had a goal to give him goals in consecutive games for the first time since the first two games of February.
- Matt Bradley had one to give him two in his last four games after going 25 games without one.
- Nicklas Backstrom had three helpers, giving him five in his last two games, which is more than he had in his last seven games combined. They also gave him a career best 67 assists.
Other stuff…
- With this win, the Caps won all the games in the season series against the Penguins for the first time in franchise history. They were 3-0-1 last year and 6-0-1 in 1984-1985. That’s as close as they came until last night.
- In the battle of the double nickels… Jeff Schultz: two assists, a hit, two blocked shots and a plus-5. Sergei Gonchar: an assist, a giveaway, minus-1.
- Crosby gets a goal and two assist, Ovechkin gets a couple of goals. Crosby finished even, Ovechkin plus-1 (the empty netter being the difference). Both had seven shot attempts. These guys pretty much cancel one another out. But here is the difference – Penguin wingers: two points (both assists); Caps wingers (not including Ovechkin): four goals, three assists.
- Still, that's 7-3-10, plus-8 in four games against the Pens this year for Ovechkin.
- Matt Bradley, Professor Clutch. Each of his last two goals was the game-winner.
- Odd in a game featuring 35 hits by the Penguins that Brooks Orpik should get just one.
- What to make of Marc-Andre Fleury… with his performance last night he is 1-3-2, 4.57, .861 over the last two seasons. He didn’t get the loss last night, because coach Dan Bylsma mercifully yanked him 6:42 into the second period after Fleury allowed goals on the first two shots of the period for Washington, and Brent Johnson was tagged with the fourth, and game-winning goal.
- Getting goals 21 seconds, and 1:48 after Penguin scores stopped whatever momentum the Penguins derived from scores that might have been turning points.
- At times, Semyon Varlamov was very sharp, keenly anticipating where plays were going. But the Crosby and second Jordan Leopold goal were saves you’d have to have in a closer game.
- Shaone Morrison had a tough game last night with a minus-2, one of them courtesy of his tipping Jordan Leopold’s shot through the legs of Varlamov. Morrisonn is now minus-5 in his last six games.
- Tomas Fleischmann… three for 13 on draws? He might have the makings of a center as far as playmaking goes, but he’s 42.8 percent in the circle this season. Why that’s… well, it’s still better than Evgeni Malkin (40.8), who did not dress for this one. If those two faced off against one another, would the linesman have to toss them both because neither could win the draw? I’m getting this mental image of two guys wrestling around and poking their sticks, and the puck just lying on the red dot.
- On the other end, give credit to Jay Beagle, just called up from Hershey. He won seven of ten draws, and two of three in the defensive zone.
- One power play, one shot, one conversion, four seconds. If you’re keeping score at home, that’s eight power play opportunities in four games against the Penguins this year (one in each of the last two games). The Penguins have had 19. And with all that, the Caps still have more power play goals than the Penguins in this season’s series (four to three).
- Can’t go without mentioning how sweet that pass was from Quintin Laing from the corner to Matt Bradley heading for the net. Just the way you would draw it up.
- The Penguins are a formidable team at home, and that makes the fact that the Caps played the last two-plus periods with only five defensemen noteworthy. John Erskine left in the first with a “lower body ailment,” which we’re guessing is different than a “lower body injury.” Groin flu?
In the end, it was a win. A nice win, even. You might even convince yourself that it was a “statement” win against a perennial tormentor. But the source of that torment is what is yet to come – the playoffs. If these teams do meet again, Bruce Boudreau is right…
Still, Caps fans will smile a little more broadly this morning.
Nothing (in the regular season, at least) much beats taking the bully’s lunch and eating it in front of his face the way the Caps did last night in beating the Pittsburgh Penguins, 6-3, at Mellon Arena. What a send off… the last memory Penguins fans will have of a home game against the Caps at Mellon Arena (unless these teams meet in the post season) will be of trudging out of the arena, listening to the public address guy announcing, “Capitals goal scored by number eight, Alex Ovechkin, assist by Nicklas Backstrom. Alex Ovechkin, his 48th goal of the season, time of the goal, 19:59…”
And just in time, too. Caps fans were getting the vapors wondering when Ovechkin might break out of his slump (four goals in his previous 18 games). And he wasn’t the only one…
- Tomas Fleischmann, who had a single goal over a nine-game stretch, had one to give him two in his last three games.
- Mike Knuble had a goal to give him goals in consecutive games for the first time since the first two games of February.
- Matt Bradley had one to give him two in his last four games after going 25 games without one.
- Nicklas Backstrom had three helpers, giving him five in his last two games, which is more than he had in his last seven games combined. They also gave him a career best 67 assists.
Other stuff…
- With this win, the Caps won all the games in the season series against the Penguins for the first time in franchise history. They were 3-0-1 last year and 6-0-1 in 1984-1985. That’s as close as they came until last night.
- In the battle of the double nickels… Jeff Schultz: two assists, a hit, two blocked shots and a plus-5. Sergei Gonchar: an assist, a giveaway, minus-1.
- Crosby gets a goal and two assist, Ovechkin gets a couple of goals. Crosby finished even, Ovechkin plus-1 (the empty netter being the difference). Both had seven shot attempts. These guys pretty much cancel one another out. But here is the difference – Penguin wingers: two points (both assists); Caps wingers (not including Ovechkin): four goals, three assists.
- Still, that's 7-3-10, plus-8 in four games against the Pens this year for Ovechkin.
- Matt Bradley, Professor Clutch. Each of his last two goals was the game-winner.
- Odd in a game featuring 35 hits by the Penguins that Brooks Orpik should get just one.
- What to make of Marc-Andre Fleury… with his performance last night he is 1-3-2, 4.57, .861 over the last two seasons. He didn’t get the loss last night, because coach Dan Bylsma mercifully yanked him 6:42 into the second period after Fleury allowed goals on the first two shots of the period for Washington, and Brent Johnson was tagged with the fourth, and game-winning goal.
- Getting goals 21 seconds, and 1:48 after Penguin scores stopped whatever momentum the Penguins derived from scores that might have been turning points.
- At times, Semyon Varlamov was very sharp, keenly anticipating where plays were going. But the Crosby and second Jordan Leopold goal were saves you’d have to have in a closer game.
- Shaone Morrison had a tough game last night with a minus-2, one of them courtesy of his tipping Jordan Leopold’s shot through the legs of Varlamov. Morrisonn is now minus-5 in his last six games.
- Tomas Fleischmann… three for 13 on draws? He might have the makings of a center as far as playmaking goes, but he’s 42.8 percent in the circle this season. Why that’s… well, it’s still better than Evgeni Malkin (40.8), who did not dress for this one. If those two faced off against one another, would the linesman have to toss them both because neither could win the draw? I’m getting this mental image of two guys wrestling around and poking their sticks, and the puck just lying on the red dot.
- On the other end, give credit to Jay Beagle, just called up from Hershey. He won seven of ten draws, and two of three in the defensive zone.
- One power play, one shot, one conversion, four seconds. If you’re keeping score at home, that’s eight power play opportunities in four games against the Penguins this year (one in each of the last two games). The Penguins have had 19. And with all that, the Caps still have more power play goals than the Penguins in this season’s series (four to three).
- Can’t go without mentioning how sweet that pass was from Quintin Laing from the corner to Matt Bradley heading for the net. Just the way you would draw it up.
- The Penguins are a formidable team at home, and that makes the fact that the Caps played the last two-plus periods with only five defensemen noteworthy. John Erskine left in the first with a “lower body ailment,” which we’re guessing is different than a “lower body injury.” Groin flu?
In the end, it was a win. A nice win, even. You might even convince yourself that it was a “statement” win against a perennial tormentor. But the source of that torment is what is yet to come – the playoffs. If these teams do meet again, Bruce Boudreau is right…
"I think playoffs is a whole new ballgame. Everything gets ramped up and you forget about past everythings. I don't know if it is going to affect them. They are champions; they are Stanley Cup champions. It's nice that we did it and I'm glad we did it; but I don't think it will mean a hill of beans if we see them in the playoffs."
Still, Caps fans will smile a little more broadly this morning.
Tuesday, April 06, 2010
Goat, The Horn Guy, and now... Jake
The Caps certainly have their collection of unique fans. One whose voice in full-throated cheer would drown out a 747 at takeoff... another whose sense of timing, chap-resistent lips, and leather lungs belt out horn calls at the right moments. Now, we have a dog that knows the proper role for a penguin... chew toy.
Like the video says... "Good Jake."
tip of prognostitorial cap to sickleandhammer over at Japers' Rink for this one.
Like the video says... "Good Jake."
tip of prognostitorial cap to sickleandhammer over at Japers' Rink for this one.
Pierre LeBrun on the "Second Half"
Over at ESPN, Pierre LeBrun compiled (ok, Elias Sports Brueau did, but Pierre used them) the second half records of all 30 teams. The gist of the argument is that having a good second half is a good thing for a deep playoff run. Well, gee... lookee here...
(click pic for larger image)
The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!! -- Caps vs. Penguins, April 6th
The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
And here we are at Game 41 on the road for the 2009-2010 season. And as fate would have it, the Caps will spend their last game on the road in Pittsburgh to take on the Penguins. The Caps will enter this game as the Presidents’ Trophy winner for the first time in their history. But the Presidents’ Trophy is but a stop on the road to a bigger prize – the Stanley Cup. How are these trophies different? Well, there is the history of the Stanley Cup and its travels, and then there is the history that might be added to that of the Presidents Cup after the Caps take possession of it…
The Stanley Cup… ended up on (not in) the Rideau Canal after it was drop-kicked into the canal by a member of the Ottawa Silver Seven in 1905. Thank heavens the Canal was frozen over, or it might have sunk without a trace.
The Presidents’ Trophy… ends up on a street vendor’s table on 7th Street after it was left outside after a party at Bar Louie; no one will buy it, thinking it was a knock off like the clothes, handbags, and other items vendors were hawking.
The Stanley Cup… held for ransom after it was stolen from a photographer’s home where the Montreal Wanderers left it in 1907. No one seemed interested in getting it back to its rightful place, and it wound up back at the photographer’s house, where the lady of the house used it as a flower pot until sanity was returned.
The Presidents’ Trophy… is pilfered from Kettler Capitals Iceplex by a Caps fan who then put up for sale on eBay to pay for 2010-2011 season tickets. The minimum bid was not reached.
The Stanley Cup… left on the side of the road after Montreal Canadiens players had a flat tire and removed the Cup from the trunk to get the spare. When they got to a victory party, and it was time to drink from the Cup, the players realized what happened and went to retrieve the Cup. It was right where they left it.
The Presidents’ Trophy… becomes the model for the new “Presidents’ Gulp” 96-ounce soft drink at DC 7-11’s.
The Stanley Cup… served as the vessel in which a mortgage was burned. In 1940, New York Rangers management thought it would be a neat idea to burn the paid-off mortgage on Madison Square Garden in the Cup.
The President’s Trophy… ends up on Capitol Hill where Republicans burn in health care reform bill it. The fire is still ablaze as the 2010-2011 season ends.
The Stanley Cup… ended up on a runway with an exotic dancer at the Forum Inn, just across from Northlands Coliseum, after the Edmonton Oilers won the Cup in 1987.
The Presidents’ Trophy… goes out for a night on the town with Marion Barry.
The Stanley Cup… at least twice ended up in the bottom of a swimming pool. First in 1991, when a teammate of Mario Lemieux took the Cup on a dive to the bottom of Lemieux’ swimming pool. Then in 1993, when a few members of the Canadiens (Montrealers really have this thing about the Cup, it seems) took it to the bottom of Patrick Roy’s pool.
The Presidents’ Trophy… ends up in the Blue Plains Wastewater Treatment Plant.
Well, speaking of wastewater, the Caps head to Pittsburgh to face the Penguins for the last time this season. The Penguins are not coming into this game on a hot streak – 3-2-2 in their last seven games, giving up as well as allowing 19 goals over that stretch. They have been decent, if not overpowering, on special teams, 5-for-26 on the power play (19.2 percent) and 23-for-26 (88.5 percent) on the penalty kill, although they have allowed a power play goal in each of their past three games. The overall numbers look like this…
The Caps won the first three games of the season series (two going to extra time), outscoring the Pens 14-10 (not including a shootout goal). The Caps outscored the Penguins 8-1 in the third period and overtime of those three games. Consider that the Penguins have lost only five games when leading after two periods this season (two of those in overtime, both against the Caps), and it speaks to a special talent the Caps have had against the Penguins that other teams have not shared – dominating the Penguins late.
Individually, the usual cast of characters will be reunited, but the key for these games might be (as it was in last year’s playoffs) down the roster. And that brings us to Tyler Kennedy, who is the Penguins’ answer to Matt Bradley. Both are crash-bang types of players. Both score modestly (9-13-22 for Bradley, 12-11-23 for Kennedy), although they seem to be clutch (Kennedy has four game-winners, as does Bradley). Kennedy has an assist in three games against the Caps this year and is 0-2-2 in nine career games against Washington.
Craig Adams will not be a stranger to Caps fans. He spent six-and-a-half seasons with the Carolina Hurricanes before heading off to Chicago, and then to Pittsburgh. He doesn’t bring much in the way of offense (no goals this year in 78 games, in fact he has never scored a regular season goal for Pittsburgh in 87 total contests), but he has won Stanley Cups in both Carolina and Pittsburgh. In 37 career games against the Caps he has a goal and three assists (an assist in three games this year), but he isn’t there for points. He is there to give the team a dozen hard minutes a night (he is third on the team in hits). He is the only player in the NHL to have been born in Brunei. We’ll pause as you look that up on Google Earth.
Caps fans might also remember defenseman Mark Eaton, although the memories might be of more recent vintage. Last year, Eaton scored the only four goals in his playoff career, the last two of them coming against the Caps in their seven game series. His next goal this year will tie a career high, but don’t be thinking of him as Pittsburgh’s answer to Mike Green – his career high in goals is four. He is not there for offense, either. You might think of him as roughly analogous to Jeff Schultz. He doesn’t have Schultz’ size, but he is a sturdily-enough built defender at 6’2’, 204. But despite that size he has a total of 22 hits on the season, last among defensemen on the team (20 games minimum) and 218th among 294 defensemen in the league. It does not make him an ineffective defender, any more than the lack of big hit numbers makes one of Schultz, as Eaton is a plus-4 on the season (not that plus-minus means anything, but we thought we would toss that out there).
Marc-Andre Fleury is the goaltender of record in the Penguins’ last 11 decisions, so we expect he will get the call tonight. In this 3-2-2 run on which the Penguins find themselves, Fleury has a GAA of 2.63 and a save percentage of .901. He lost to the Caps in both games in which he appeared, both in extra time. His numbers are not exemplary in those two games – 3.76, .879. Over the last two seasons, Fleury’s numbers against the Caps have been rather ghastly – 1-3-2, 4.38, .868. But that’s regular season. He had a GAA of 3.03 in last year’s playoff series against the Caps.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Pittsburgh: Evgeni Malkin
Malkin has not registered a goal against the Caps this season. That’s not to say he’s been ineffective, he has five assists in two games. And Malkin, who has slipped a notch overall from last year’s performance, might be rounding into playoff shape…sort of. Starting with a game against Vancouver on January 16th, Malkin is 12-17-29 in 22 games. That works out to a 45-70-115 pace over 82 games. But he is also a minus-12 over that span, minus-45 pace. Not sure what to make of this, except that what Malkin taketh, he at least seems to be around when it is given away.
Washington: Mike Green
Did you know that Mike Green has never scored a regular season goal against Pittsburgh? Fifteen career games, and he has seven assists, but no goals. Didn’t score on the Penguins in last year’s playoffs, either. Green’s game has matured a lot since last year, especially on the defensive side of the ice. Discussion of Green as a Norris Trophy candidate need not have the conjunction “but” included in the sentence. But (rats!) it would be nice to have him break the schneid against this team, just to send a bit of a message that there are other things to worry about than Alex Ovechkin.
Keys:
1. Big Three. The Caps have made the third period of games a miserable time for the Penguins this year. The fact is, it is not unrepresentative of the performance of these teams. The Caps have outscored the Pens, 106-75 in third periods this season, and the Caps trail only Vancouver in the number of wins secured when trailing at the second intermission this year. But don’t get a big head over that. The Penguins are tied with the Caps in wins when trailing after two. Play hard those last 20.
2. Don’t let refs get into your head. You, dear Caps fan, probably think that the Penguins lead the league in power play opportunities and get an even larger helping on man-advantages at home. Wrong and wrong. The Penguins and Caps, joined at the hip as they are, have precisely the same number of total power play opportunities this year (305), which is only good for a tie for sixth in the league. The Pens have 152 power play opportunities at home, the Caps have had that many on the road (neat how that works out). Pittsburgh even gets whistled for penalties at home (with 150 such times, that is tied for sixth most in the league). But in three games so far this year, the Penguins have enjoyed a 15-7 advantage in power plays. Play smart, boys.
3. You’re second, so you try harder. No, not a rental car ad, but the second line. Crosby and Ovechkin are at the points of their respective careers where their performances are largely standoffs in these affairs. It could very well be the second lines where this one is won and lost. Malkin has all those points recently, but is on the ice for a lot of goals, too. Alexander Semin has nine goals in 17 career games against the Pens (including one in three games this year). Whoever wins this battle of lines might tell the tale.
In the end, the Caps are playing to send a message, and the Penguins are playing for pride and seeding (tied with, but losing the tiebreaker with, New Jersey for the Atlantic Division lead). These games always have a playoff air these days, and this one, coming so close to the playoffs, will be no exception. Mellon Arena holds no particular advantage for the Penguins in this series recently, and the Caps will add to that misery.
Caps 4 – Penguins 3
And here we are at Game 41 on the road for the 2009-2010 season. And as fate would have it, the Caps will spend their last game on the road in Pittsburgh to take on the Penguins. The Caps will enter this game as the Presidents’ Trophy winner for the first time in their history. But the Presidents’ Trophy is but a stop on the road to a bigger prize – the Stanley Cup. How are these trophies different? Well, there is the history of the Stanley Cup and its travels, and then there is the history that might be added to that of the Presidents Cup after the Caps take possession of it…
The Stanley Cup… ended up on (not in) the Rideau Canal after it was drop-kicked into the canal by a member of the Ottawa Silver Seven in 1905. Thank heavens the Canal was frozen over, or it might have sunk without a trace.
The Presidents’ Trophy… ends up on a street vendor’s table on 7th Street after it was left outside after a party at Bar Louie; no one will buy it, thinking it was a knock off like the clothes, handbags, and other items vendors were hawking.
The Stanley Cup… held for ransom after it was stolen from a photographer’s home where the Montreal Wanderers left it in 1907. No one seemed interested in getting it back to its rightful place, and it wound up back at the photographer’s house, where the lady of the house used it as a flower pot until sanity was returned.
The Presidents’ Trophy… is pilfered from Kettler Capitals Iceplex by a Caps fan who then put up for sale on eBay to pay for 2010-2011 season tickets. The minimum bid was not reached.
The Stanley Cup… left on the side of the road after Montreal Canadiens players had a flat tire and removed the Cup from the trunk to get the spare. When they got to a victory party, and it was time to drink from the Cup, the players realized what happened and went to retrieve the Cup. It was right where they left it.
The Presidents’ Trophy… becomes the model for the new “Presidents’ Gulp” 96-ounce soft drink at DC 7-11’s.
The Stanley Cup… served as the vessel in which a mortgage was burned. In 1940, New York Rangers management thought it would be a neat idea to burn the paid-off mortgage on Madison Square Garden in the Cup.
The President’s Trophy… ends up on Capitol Hill where Republicans burn in health care reform bill it. The fire is still ablaze as the 2010-2011 season ends.
The Stanley Cup… ended up on a runway with an exotic dancer at the Forum Inn, just across from Northlands Coliseum, after the Edmonton Oilers won the Cup in 1987.
The Presidents’ Trophy… goes out for a night on the town with Marion Barry.
The Stanley Cup… at least twice ended up in the bottom of a swimming pool. First in 1991, when a teammate of Mario Lemieux took the Cup on a dive to the bottom of Lemieux’ swimming pool. Then in 1993, when a few members of the Canadiens (Montrealers really have this thing about the Cup, it seems) took it to the bottom of Patrick Roy’s pool.
The Presidents’ Trophy… ends up in the Blue Plains Wastewater Treatment Plant.
Well, speaking of wastewater, the Caps head to Pittsburgh to face the Penguins for the last time this season. The Penguins are not coming into this game on a hot streak – 3-2-2 in their last seven games, giving up as well as allowing 19 goals over that stretch. They have been decent, if not overpowering, on special teams, 5-for-26 on the power play (19.2 percent) and 23-for-26 (88.5 percent) on the penalty kill, although they have allowed a power play goal in each of their past three games. The overall numbers look like this…
The Caps won the first three games of the season series (two going to extra time), outscoring the Pens 14-10 (not including a shootout goal). The Caps outscored the Penguins 8-1 in the third period and overtime of those three games. Consider that the Penguins have lost only five games when leading after two periods this season (two of those in overtime, both against the Caps), and it speaks to a special talent the Caps have had against the Penguins that other teams have not shared – dominating the Penguins late.
Individually, the usual cast of characters will be reunited, but the key for these games might be (as it was in last year’s playoffs) down the roster. And that brings us to Tyler Kennedy, who is the Penguins’ answer to Matt Bradley. Both are crash-bang types of players. Both score modestly (9-13-22 for Bradley, 12-11-23 for Kennedy), although they seem to be clutch (Kennedy has four game-winners, as does Bradley). Kennedy has an assist in three games against the Caps this year and is 0-2-2 in nine career games against Washington.
Craig Adams will not be a stranger to Caps fans. He spent six-and-a-half seasons with the Carolina Hurricanes before heading off to Chicago, and then to Pittsburgh. He doesn’t bring much in the way of offense (no goals this year in 78 games, in fact he has never scored a regular season goal for Pittsburgh in 87 total contests), but he has won Stanley Cups in both Carolina and Pittsburgh. In 37 career games against the Caps he has a goal and three assists (an assist in three games this year), but he isn’t there for points. He is there to give the team a dozen hard minutes a night (he is third on the team in hits). He is the only player in the NHL to have been born in Brunei. We’ll pause as you look that up on Google Earth.
Caps fans might also remember defenseman Mark Eaton, although the memories might be of more recent vintage. Last year, Eaton scored the only four goals in his playoff career, the last two of them coming against the Caps in their seven game series. His next goal this year will tie a career high, but don’t be thinking of him as Pittsburgh’s answer to Mike Green – his career high in goals is four. He is not there for offense, either. You might think of him as roughly analogous to Jeff Schultz. He doesn’t have Schultz’ size, but he is a sturdily-enough built defender at 6’2’, 204. But despite that size he has a total of 22 hits on the season, last among defensemen on the team (20 games minimum) and 218th among 294 defensemen in the league. It does not make him an ineffective defender, any more than the lack of big hit numbers makes one of Schultz, as Eaton is a plus-4 on the season (not that plus-minus means anything, but we thought we would toss that out there).
Marc-Andre Fleury is the goaltender of record in the Penguins’ last 11 decisions, so we expect he will get the call tonight. In this 3-2-2 run on which the Penguins find themselves, Fleury has a GAA of 2.63 and a save percentage of .901. He lost to the Caps in both games in which he appeared, both in extra time. His numbers are not exemplary in those two games – 3.76, .879. Over the last two seasons, Fleury’s numbers against the Caps have been rather ghastly – 1-3-2, 4.38, .868. But that’s regular season. He had a GAA of 3.03 in last year’s playoff series against the Caps.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Pittsburgh: Evgeni Malkin
Malkin has not registered a goal against the Caps this season. That’s not to say he’s been ineffective, he has five assists in two games. And Malkin, who has slipped a notch overall from last year’s performance, might be rounding into playoff shape…sort of. Starting with a game against Vancouver on January 16th, Malkin is 12-17-29 in 22 games. That works out to a 45-70-115 pace over 82 games. But he is also a minus-12 over that span, minus-45 pace. Not sure what to make of this, except that what Malkin taketh, he at least seems to be around when it is given away.
Washington: Mike Green
Did you know that Mike Green has never scored a regular season goal against Pittsburgh? Fifteen career games, and he has seven assists, but no goals. Didn’t score on the Penguins in last year’s playoffs, either. Green’s game has matured a lot since last year, especially on the defensive side of the ice. Discussion of Green as a Norris Trophy candidate need not have the conjunction “but” included in the sentence. But (rats!) it would be nice to have him break the schneid against this team, just to send a bit of a message that there are other things to worry about than Alex Ovechkin.
Keys:
1. Big Three. The Caps have made the third period of games a miserable time for the Penguins this year. The fact is, it is not unrepresentative of the performance of these teams. The Caps have outscored the Pens, 106-75 in third periods this season, and the Caps trail only Vancouver in the number of wins secured when trailing at the second intermission this year. But don’t get a big head over that. The Penguins are tied with the Caps in wins when trailing after two. Play hard those last 20.
2. Don’t let refs get into your head. You, dear Caps fan, probably think that the Penguins lead the league in power play opportunities and get an even larger helping on man-advantages at home. Wrong and wrong. The Penguins and Caps, joined at the hip as they are, have precisely the same number of total power play opportunities this year (305), which is only good for a tie for sixth in the league. The Pens have 152 power play opportunities at home, the Caps have had that many on the road (neat how that works out). Pittsburgh even gets whistled for penalties at home (with 150 such times, that is tied for sixth most in the league). But in three games so far this year, the Penguins have enjoyed a 15-7 advantage in power plays. Play smart, boys.
3. You’re second, so you try harder. No, not a rental car ad, but the second line. Crosby and Ovechkin are at the points of their respective careers where their performances are largely standoffs in these affairs. It could very well be the second lines where this one is won and lost. Malkin has all those points recently, but is on the ice for a lot of goals, too. Alexander Semin has nine goals in 17 career games against the Pens (including one in three games this year). Whoever wins this battle of lines might tell the tale.
In the end, the Caps are playing to send a message, and the Penguins are playing for pride and seeding (tied with, but losing the tiebreaker with, New Jersey for the Atlantic Division lead). These games always have a playoff air these days, and this one, coming so close to the playoffs, will be no exception. Mellon Arena holds no particular advantage for the Penguins in this series recently, and the Caps will add to that misery.
Caps 4 – Penguins 3
A TWO-point night: Caps 3 - Bruins 2 (OT)
Another night, another extra-time game for the Caps.
Last night the Caps played their eighth extra-time game in their last 14 contests, defeating the Boston Bruins 44 seconds into the overtime session, 3-2. Brooks Laich was the hero, taking one for the team, as it were, for the game-winner.
The final play started after Dennis Wideman was whistled for high-sticking Tomas Fleischmann 24 seconds into the overtime. Although Boston won the ensuing faceoff in the defensive zone, they could not clear the puck. Alex Ovechkin stole the puck in the Boston zone, and the biscuit found its way to the stick of Nicklas Backstrom. Backstrom fed Alexander Semin on a pretty cross-ice feed for a one-timer that hit Laich “in the upper part of the thigh” (according to Corey Masisak’s recap), dropping at his feet. Laich’s quick hands stuffed the puck into the net faster than Bruin goalie Tuukka Rask could recover, and faster than his nervous system sent a signal to his brain that he was dangerously close to singing falsetto for some time to come.
It was an otherwise hard-fought game, the teams exchanging goals in the first, repeating the exchange in the second, then skating to a scoreless third before Laich’s heroics. The teams even split the 60 shots of the game evenly. The difference was a high-stick and a power play goal, the only man-advantage tally of the game.
Other stuff…
- Odd fact of the night… Boston defenseman Zdeno Chara was on the ice for all five goals, as was Boston center Patrice Bergeron.
- The Ross race tightened up some; Alex Ovechkin’s two points (both assists) inched him to within two points of Vancouver’s Henrik Sedin with three games to play.
- That the puck has edges is the reason Nicklas Backstrom has a 31st goal. The puck was rolling over the goal line after it snuck through Tuukka Rask’s pads, but was leaning on edge just over the line as Dennis Wideman (who really had a bad luck night) swept it out of the way.
- Speaking of Wideman, it is not often you would find a player in the heat of a playoff fight and just after losing a hard game ‘fessing up to the penalty that put him in the box as the winning goal was scored. But Wideman did just that in the post game… “It was high. It just [stinks] that it worked out that way and end ed up being a penalty they won the hockey game on after we played so well and worked so hard for the whole game.’’
- Nicklas Backstrom is one of the most underrated players in the NHL. How so? He gets a goal, two assists (including one on the game-winner), nine shot attempts, three hits, two takeaways, wins eight of 12 draws, and doesn’t get a star. Didn’t even get the hard hat (Laich got it).
- Jeff Schultz… almost 23 minutes, four blocked shots, plus-1. He was on the ice for a goal against, so Caps fans no doubt will be called for him to be waived, or drawn and quartered, or something.
- Any night that Tomas Fleischmann has more hits (three) than shots on goal (one), might be considered odd. But winning six of 18 draws wasn’t so much odd as abuse. Especially hard was losing six of seven in the offensive zone (all five against Patrice Bergeron, and yes, Bergeron is a superior faceoff man at 57 percent for the year). That has to improve.
- You could tell Mike Green was out. The defensemen had a total of seven shot attempts or about a good night’s worth for Green.
- It is going to be tough to knock Jose Theodore out of the number one spot. He had his war face on for this one, those bang-bang pad saves on Michael Ryder mid-way through the first period perhaps being the key sequence of the game. If the Bruins score there, maybe they start thinking a little better about themselves offensively.
- David Steckel had a night in the circle he’d like to forget. He lost ten of 13, including nine of ten in the defensive zone. He lost the draw (to Bergeron, who won 18 of 26) that led to the Bruins’ tying goal in the first period with less than two seconds left.
- Ovechkin is close, oh so close. Two posts, and a couple of other opportunities that just didn’t quite make it suggest he’s about to break out. Truth be told, we wouldn’t mind if that breakout came in Game 1 of the playoffs instead of Games 80, 81, and 82 of the regular season.
- And we’re not sure how it is that Bergeron managed to get inside of Shaone Morrison down the middle with Joe Corvo having moved off to play the puck carrier on Boston’s second goal. However it happened, Morrisonn could only wave his stick at Bergeron as he deked and scored.
- Mike Knuble came into the game having scored one goal in his previous 14 games. Getting one, and getting one ugly, might be just the thing to get Knuble going again. It sure woke up Kanoobie.
In the end, two points is two points. Again, it was not stylish, but just a lunch pail kind of win against a team the Caps might yet see in the first round of the playoffs.
Last night the Caps played their eighth extra-time game in their last 14 contests, defeating the Boston Bruins 44 seconds into the overtime session, 3-2. Brooks Laich was the hero, taking one for the team, as it were, for the game-winner.
The final play started after Dennis Wideman was whistled for high-sticking Tomas Fleischmann 24 seconds into the overtime. Although Boston won the ensuing faceoff in the defensive zone, they could not clear the puck. Alex Ovechkin stole the puck in the Boston zone, and the biscuit found its way to the stick of Nicklas Backstrom. Backstrom fed Alexander Semin on a pretty cross-ice feed for a one-timer that hit Laich “in the upper part of the thigh” (according to Corey Masisak’s recap), dropping at his feet. Laich’s quick hands stuffed the puck into the net faster than Bruin goalie Tuukka Rask could recover, and faster than his nervous system sent a signal to his brain that he was dangerously close to singing falsetto for some time to come.
It was an otherwise hard-fought game, the teams exchanging goals in the first, repeating the exchange in the second, then skating to a scoreless third before Laich’s heroics. The teams even split the 60 shots of the game evenly. The difference was a high-stick and a power play goal, the only man-advantage tally of the game.
Other stuff…
- Odd fact of the night… Boston defenseman Zdeno Chara was on the ice for all five goals, as was Boston center Patrice Bergeron.
- The Ross race tightened up some; Alex Ovechkin’s two points (both assists) inched him to within two points of Vancouver’s Henrik Sedin with three games to play.
- That the puck has edges is the reason Nicklas Backstrom has a 31st goal. The puck was rolling over the goal line after it snuck through Tuukka Rask’s pads, but was leaning on edge just over the line as Dennis Wideman (who really had a bad luck night) swept it out of the way.
- Speaking of Wideman, it is not often you would find a player in the heat of a playoff fight and just after losing a hard game ‘fessing up to the penalty that put him in the box as the winning goal was scored. But Wideman did just that in the post game… “It was high. It just [stinks] that it worked out that way and end ed up being a penalty they won the hockey game on after we played so well and worked so hard for the whole game.’’
- Nicklas Backstrom is one of the most underrated players in the NHL. How so? He gets a goal, two assists (including one on the game-winner), nine shot attempts, three hits, two takeaways, wins eight of 12 draws, and doesn’t get a star. Didn’t even get the hard hat (Laich got it).
- Jeff Schultz… almost 23 minutes, four blocked shots, plus-1. He was on the ice for a goal against, so Caps fans no doubt will be called for him to be waived, or drawn and quartered, or something.
- Any night that Tomas Fleischmann has more hits (three) than shots on goal (one), might be considered odd. But winning six of 18 draws wasn’t so much odd as abuse. Especially hard was losing six of seven in the offensive zone (all five against Patrice Bergeron, and yes, Bergeron is a superior faceoff man at 57 percent for the year). That has to improve.
- You could tell Mike Green was out. The defensemen had a total of seven shot attempts or about a good night’s worth for Green.
- It is going to be tough to knock Jose Theodore out of the number one spot. He had his war face on for this one, those bang-bang pad saves on Michael Ryder mid-way through the first period perhaps being the key sequence of the game. If the Bruins score there, maybe they start thinking a little better about themselves offensively.
- David Steckel had a night in the circle he’d like to forget. He lost ten of 13, including nine of ten in the defensive zone. He lost the draw (to Bergeron, who won 18 of 26) that led to the Bruins’ tying goal in the first period with less than two seconds left.
- Ovechkin is close, oh so close. Two posts, and a couple of other opportunities that just didn’t quite make it suggest he’s about to break out. Truth be told, we wouldn’t mind if that breakout came in Game 1 of the playoffs instead of Games 80, 81, and 82 of the regular season.
- And we’re not sure how it is that Bergeron managed to get inside of Shaone Morrison down the middle with Joe Corvo having moved off to play the puck carrier on Boston’s second goal. However it happened, Morrisonn could only wave his stick at Bergeron as he deked and scored.
- Mike Knuble came into the game having scored one goal in his previous 14 games. Getting one, and getting one ugly, might be just the thing to get Knuble going again. It sure woke up Kanoobie.
In the end, two points is two points. Again, it was not stylish, but just a lunch pail kind of win against a team the Caps might yet see in the first round of the playoffs.
Monday, April 05, 2010
Does anybody want this trophy?
The Richard Trophy, that is...
Sidney Crosby... three goals in his last 13 games
Alex Ovechkin... four goals in his last 17 games
Steven Stamkos... four goals in his last 12 games
Patrick Marleau... two goals in his last 12 games
Sidney Crosby... three goals in his last 13 games
Alex Ovechkin... four goals in his last 17 games
Steven Stamkos... four goals in his last 12 games
Patrick Marleau... two goals in his last 12 games
The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!! -- Caps vs. Bruins, April 5th
The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Caps are back home tonight to take on the Boston Bruins at Verizon Center. The Caps are your newly minted Presidents’ Trophy winner for the 2009-2010 season, the first time the club has achieved this honor. And in honor of the occasion, yours truly has assembled the greatest collection of Presidential timber since Thomas Jefferson dined alone…
…or something like that.
We have John Adams – lawyer, author, revolutionary, delegate to the First and Second Continental Congresses, ambassador, Vice President, and second President of the United States. Oh, and HBO film star. Mr. President, you have some special perspective on this historical moment in Caps history, I’m sure. What drives a person to such heights of achievement?
“A desire to be observed, considered, esteemed, praised, beloved, and admired by his fellows is one of the earliest as well as the keenest dispositions discovered in the heart of man.”
I see… and my notes indicate that you are something of a hockey fan, particularly the physical aspect of the game. You, I take it, are not a fan of the instigator rule…
“Arms in the hands of citizens may be used at individual discretion... in private self-defense.”
Ulysses S. Grant, you served as both General-in-Chief of the Union Army during the American Civil War, and you served two terms as Commander in Chief. I’m also told that you are a particular fan of the Caps and Coach Bruce Boudreau. You seem especially taken by Boudreau’s philosophy. I suppose because it mirrors your own…
“In every battle there comes a time when both sides consider themselves beaten, then he who continues the attack wins.”
And the Presidents Trophy represents the culmination of a long season of effort with its ups and downs. I guess it makes for a special kind of camaraderie, would you say, President Grant?
“The friend in my adversity I shall always cherish most. I can better trust those who helped to relieve the gloom of my dark hours than those who are so ready to enjoy with me the sunshine of my prosperity.”
Andrew Jackson – “Old Hickory.” No lack of toughness in your background. I’ll bet you have a bit of advice for those who would make the leap from the Presidents Trophy to the Stanley Cup…
“You must pay the price if you wish to secure the blessing.”
Dwight D. Eisenhower… general, war hero, university president, and President of the United States. You, as much as any American President, have experienced the sting of battle, but you have a different perspective when it comes to just how hard it is to win consistently in a fashion that earns a team this honor.
“Farming looks mighty easy when your plow is a pencil and you're a thousand miles from the corn field.”
Or if the plow is a blog, eh?…
Tonight the Caps take the ice as the Presidents’ Trophy winner, the top team in the NHL for the regular season. Yes, there is another season looming, but for the moment this is a pleasant place in which the club has never found itself. At the other end of the spectrum there are the Boston Bruins, a team that sits precariously among the top-eight in the East, tied with the Flyers for seventh, two points ahead of the ninth-place Rangers, and three ahead of the 10th-place Thrashers.
The Bruins are a club that has had a difficult time getting any traction lately. They have not won more than two games in a row since the Olympic break (9-8-1). It is hard to believe that a team could compile such a weak record with a goals-against-per-game of 2.06 over those last 18 games. But an offense that manages only a 2.36 goals-for average over that time isn’t one that is going to take advantage of the defense and goaltending it is getting. Here is how bad it is. Since the Olympic break the Bruins have allowed more than two goals in a game seven times. They lost all of them (0-6-1). Of their nine wins three have come via shutout, all three coming in their last four wins. Here is how the overall numbers shake out…
It puts a lot of pressure on Tuukka Rask, who appears to have wrested the number one goaltender job away from Tim Thomas. Not that being the Bruins’ top goalie is a breeze these days. Since the Olympic break, Rask has a 1.71 GAA and a .935 save percentage with two shutouts. For all that, he is 6-5-0 over that span of time. Rask will move up in weight class as far as an opponent’s offensive capabilities are concerned, and he has never faced the Caps.
In “best versus worst” offense, the comparisons are stark, and the table above doesn’t do it justice. Here are some comparisons…
- 50 point scorers: Caps 6 – Bruins 1 (Patrice Bergeron)
- 20-goal scorers: Caps 7 – Bruins 1 (Marco Sturm)
- Players with 10 or more power play goals: Caps 4 – Bruins 0
- Players with 15 or more even-strength goals: Caps 6 - Bruins 2
- Alex Ovechkin has more even-strength goals than the top two Bruins combined
- Both Ovechkin and Nicklas Backstrom have more power play points than the top two Bruins combined
- Marco Sturm’s 21 goals to lead the B’s would rank eighth on the Caps
- Bergeron’s 50 points as top point-getter would rank seventh on the Caps
The Bruins have had one player with a multi-goal game since the Olympic break (Miroslav Satan, against Toronto on Saturday). The Caps have had eight such performances since the break. So what is with the top Bruin goal scorers, anyway?...
Marco Sturm leads the club with 21 goals, but he has only three in 18 games since the Olympic break, none in his last dozen games. According to the Bruin media guide, Sturm once worked as a BMW car mechanic. Well, he had better tune up his scoring if the Bruins are going to hold on. In 25 career games against the Caps he is 7-8-15 (scoreless in two games this year).
Patrice Bergeron has had a pretty good run since the break (although with Boston, it's all relative). In 16 games since the break he has six goals (6-7-13). He has a goal in two games against the Caps this year and is 4-11-15 in 17 career games.
David Krejci is the closest thing the B's have had to an offensive force since the break. He is tied with Bergeron with six goals in the 18 games he has been in since the break (6-12-18). He has a goal in two games against the Caps this season; 2-2-4 in 10 career games.
Blake Wheeler came out of the break looking as if he might be a go-to guy for the Bruins down the stretch, getting four goals in five games from March 7th through March 15th. But being a go-to guy is a lot to ask of a 23-year old. Wheeler has gone dormant lately, going without a point in his last ten games. He doesn’t have a point against the Caps, either – this year or any other (0-0-0 in six career games).
It is not as if the Bruins aren’t firing on all cylinders, either. Having lost their biggest offensive threat – Marc Savard – to injury means that they have few cylinders on which to fire.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Boston: Zdeno Chara
Chara might be the hottest Bruin on offense (2-4-6 in his last seven games). But his role is going to be keeping the top line for the Caps in check, specifically applying himself like a 6’9” 260 pound fur stole about the shoulders of Alex Ovechkin. One would have to say that Chara’s results have been “uneven” – Ovechkin is 9-8-17 in 14 career games against the Bruins. Chara leads the club’s defensemen in ice time, but over the past four years there has been a cut in his ice time – from 27:57 in 2006-2007 to 25:13 this year. It is still a lot of ice time (12th in the league), but is he losing a step? That could spell trouble for the B’s in this game.
Washington: Alexander Semin
Quietly, perhaps, Semin has scored goals in goals in six of his last nine games (7-2-9). In 16 games since the break he is plus-6 and has been a “minus” player only twice. Consistency at both ends of the ice is something the Caps need going forward. It will be interesting to see whether he can continue this over the last four games of the season given that the Caps’ final place in the standings is secure.
Keys:
1. 0.94. That is the goals scored differential per game between these teams at 5-on-5.
2. Six. Boston has a reputation for being a fine defensive team, but this is the total goal differential between these teams over the entire season for goals allowed per game at 5-on-5. What’s more, it is the Caps who have allowed fewer goals (129 to 135). If the Caps can keep this a 5-on-5 game, they can compete defensively with the Bruins.
3. In case it isn’t clear… MAKE THE BRUINS PAY AT FIVE-ON-FIVE. That becomes especially important given that teams can't score against the Bruins' PK, and the Caps really shown any consistent ability to stop anyone's power play.
In the end, we’re getting to the end, and it will be hard to maintain focus this week. That is an especially hard thing to fight through when the opponent is still trying to hang onto a playoff spot. If there was one night we would be picking the other guys to win, this would be it.
But you know better…
Caps 3 – Bruins 2
The Caps are back home tonight to take on the Boston Bruins at Verizon Center. The Caps are your newly minted Presidents’ Trophy winner for the 2009-2010 season, the first time the club has achieved this honor. And in honor of the occasion, yours truly has assembled the greatest collection of Presidential timber since Thomas Jefferson dined alone…
…or something like that.
We have John Adams – lawyer, author, revolutionary, delegate to the First and Second Continental Congresses, ambassador, Vice President, and second President of the United States. Oh, and HBO film star. Mr. President, you have some special perspective on this historical moment in Caps history, I’m sure. What drives a person to such heights of achievement?
“A desire to be observed, considered, esteemed, praised, beloved, and admired by his fellows is one of the earliest as well as the keenest dispositions discovered in the heart of man.”
I see… and my notes indicate that you are something of a hockey fan, particularly the physical aspect of the game. You, I take it, are not a fan of the instigator rule…
“Arms in the hands of citizens may be used at individual discretion... in private self-defense.”
Ulysses S. Grant, you served as both General-in-Chief of the Union Army during the American Civil War, and you served two terms as Commander in Chief. I’m also told that you are a particular fan of the Caps and Coach Bruce Boudreau. You seem especially taken by Boudreau’s philosophy. I suppose because it mirrors your own…
“In every battle there comes a time when both sides consider themselves beaten, then he who continues the attack wins.”
And the Presidents Trophy represents the culmination of a long season of effort with its ups and downs. I guess it makes for a special kind of camaraderie, would you say, President Grant?
“The friend in my adversity I shall always cherish most. I can better trust those who helped to relieve the gloom of my dark hours than those who are so ready to enjoy with me the sunshine of my prosperity.”
Andrew Jackson – “Old Hickory.” No lack of toughness in your background. I’ll bet you have a bit of advice for those who would make the leap from the Presidents Trophy to the Stanley Cup…
“You must pay the price if you wish to secure the blessing.”
Dwight D. Eisenhower… general, war hero, university president, and President of the United States. You, as much as any American President, have experienced the sting of battle, but you have a different perspective when it comes to just how hard it is to win consistently in a fashion that earns a team this honor.
“Farming looks mighty easy when your plow is a pencil and you're a thousand miles from the corn field.”
Or if the plow is a blog, eh?…
Tonight the Caps take the ice as the Presidents’ Trophy winner, the top team in the NHL for the regular season. Yes, there is another season looming, but for the moment this is a pleasant place in which the club has never found itself. At the other end of the spectrum there are the Boston Bruins, a team that sits precariously among the top-eight in the East, tied with the Flyers for seventh, two points ahead of the ninth-place Rangers, and three ahead of the 10th-place Thrashers.
The Bruins are a club that has had a difficult time getting any traction lately. They have not won more than two games in a row since the Olympic break (9-8-1). It is hard to believe that a team could compile such a weak record with a goals-against-per-game of 2.06 over those last 18 games. But an offense that manages only a 2.36 goals-for average over that time isn’t one that is going to take advantage of the defense and goaltending it is getting. Here is how bad it is. Since the Olympic break the Bruins have allowed more than two goals in a game seven times. They lost all of them (0-6-1). Of their nine wins three have come via shutout, all three coming in their last four wins. Here is how the overall numbers shake out…
It puts a lot of pressure on Tuukka Rask, who appears to have wrested the number one goaltender job away from Tim Thomas. Not that being the Bruins’ top goalie is a breeze these days. Since the Olympic break, Rask has a 1.71 GAA and a .935 save percentage with two shutouts. For all that, he is 6-5-0 over that span of time. Rask will move up in weight class as far as an opponent’s offensive capabilities are concerned, and he has never faced the Caps.
In “best versus worst” offense, the comparisons are stark, and the table above doesn’t do it justice. Here are some comparisons…
- 50 point scorers: Caps 6 – Bruins 1 (Patrice Bergeron)
- 20-goal scorers: Caps 7 – Bruins 1 (Marco Sturm)
- Players with 10 or more power play goals: Caps 4 – Bruins 0
- Players with 15 or more even-strength goals: Caps 6 - Bruins 2
- Alex Ovechkin has more even-strength goals than the top two Bruins combined
- Both Ovechkin and Nicklas Backstrom have more power play points than the top two Bruins combined
- Marco Sturm’s 21 goals to lead the B’s would rank eighth on the Caps
- Bergeron’s 50 points as top point-getter would rank seventh on the Caps
The Bruins have had one player with a multi-goal game since the Olympic break (Miroslav Satan, against Toronto on Saturday). The Caps have had eight such performances since the break. So what is with the top Bruin goal scorers, anyway?...
Marco Sturm leads the club with 21 goals, but he has only three in 18 games since the Olympic break, none in his last dozen games. According to the Bruin media guide, Sturm once worked as a BMW car mechanic. Well, he had better tune up his scoring if the Bruins are going to hold on. In 25 career games against the Caps he is 7-8-15 (scoreless in two games this year).
Patrice Bergeron has had a pretty good run since the break (although with Boston, it's all relative). In 16 games since the break he has six goals (6-7-13). He has a goal in two games against the Caps this year and is 4-11-15 in 17 career games.
David Krejci is the closest thing the B's have had to an offensive force since the break. He is tied with Bergeron with six goals in the 18 games he has been in since the break (6-12-18). He has a goal in two games against the Caps this season; 2-2-4 in 10 career games.
Blake Wheeler came out of the break looking as if he might be a go-to guy for the Bruins down the stretch, getting four goals in five games from March 7th through March 15th. But being a go-to guy is a lot to ask of a 23-year old. Wheeler has gone dormant lately, going without a point in his last ten games. He doesn’t have a point against the Caps, either – this year or any other (0-0-0 in six career games).
It is not as if the Bruins aren’t firing on all cylinders, either. Having lost their biggest offensive threat – Marc Savard – to injury means that they have few cylinders on which to fire.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Boston: Zdeno Chara
Chara might be the hottest Bruin on offense (2-4-6 in his last seven games). But his role is going to be keeping the top line for the Caps in check, specifically applying himself like a 6’9” 260 pound fur stole about the shoulders of Alex Ovechkin. One would have to say that Chara’s results have been “uneven” – Ovechkin is 9-8-17 in 14 career games against the Bruins. Chara leads the club’s defensemen in ice time, but over the past four years there has been a cut in his ice time – from 27:57 in 2006-2007 to 25:13 this year. It is still a lot of ice time (12th in the league), but is he losing a step? That could spell trouble for the B’s in this game.
Washington: Alexander Semin
Quietly, perhaps, Semin has scored goals in goals in six of his last nine games (7-2-9). In 16 games since the break he is plus-6 and has been a “minus” player only twice. Consistency at both ends of the ice is something the Caps need going forward. It will be interesting to see whether he can continue this over the last four games of the season given that the Caps’ final place in the standings is secure.
Keys:
1. 0.94. That is the goals scored differential per game between these teams at 5-on-5.
2. Six. Boston has a reputation for being a fine defensive team, but this is the total goal differential between these teams over the entire season for goals allowed per game at 5-on-5. What’s more, it is the Caps who have allowed fewer goals (129 to 135). If the Caps can keep this a 5-on-5 game, they can compete defensively with the Bruins.
3. In case it isn’t clear… MAKE THE BRUINS PAY AT FIVE-ON-FIVE. That becomes especially important given that teams can't score against the Bruins' PK, and the Caps really shown any consistent ability to stop anyone's power play.
In the end, we’re getting to the end, and it will be hard to maintain focus this week. That is an especially hard thing to fight through when the opponent is still trying to hang onto a playoff spot. If there was one night we would be picking the other guys to win, this would be it.
But you know better…
Caps 3 – Bruins 2
Sunday, April 04, 2010
Your Presidents' Trophy Winner
Thirteen franchises have won a Presidents' Trophy in the NHL before this season. With the San Jose Sharks losing to the Colorado Avalanche in overtime tonight, 5-4, the Washington Capitals become the 14th franchise to win the Trophy.
Congratulations to the players, coaches, staff, and managers of the Capitals organization. It is a trophy well-earned.
Congratulations to the players, coaches, staff, and managers of the Capitals organization. It is a trophy well-earned.
A Face Made for Hockey
Anton Gustafsson dressed tonight for the Hershey Bears in his AHL debut. We must say, his official picture at the AHL web site makes no mistake -- this is a hockey player...
Gus just registered his first pro point in tonight's game between the Bears and the Syracuse Crunch oops, make that the Norfolk Admirals (an assist on a goal by fellow rookie Cody Eakin). Congratulations, Gus... hope it's the first of many.
Game 7
We are a month removed from the trading deadline, a day on which (according to TSN.ca) there were 31 trades involving 55 players and 35 draft picks. Teams move assets around in hopes of finding a spark, of finding the right mix for the home stretch, of finding that last piece of the puzzle. Other teams do so looking to the future – collecting draft picks or prospects in hopes that a year or two from now they will again be competitive, that they will be a contender.
The Washington Capitals made four trades on that day…
1. They acquired defenseman Joe Corvo from the Carolina Hurricanes for defenseman Brian Pothier, prospect forward Oskar Osala, and a second round draft pick in 2011.
2. They re-acquired defenseman Milan Jurcina from Columbus for a sixth round draft pick in 2010.
3. They acquired forward Eric Belanger from Minnesota for a second round draft pick in 2010.
4. They acquired Scott Walker from Carolina for a seventh round draft pick in 2010.
None of these deals could be considered a “blockbuster,” but they were subtle changes that might be considered part of a larger piece. And we cannot help thinking that what moves the Caps made this year, and especially at the trading deadline, along with deals made last summer were with one game in mind.
Game 7
Rewind back to last spring. The Caps had worked their way through a tough seven-game series with the New York Rangers. Then, they battled the Pittsburgh Penguins through the ups and downs (and the overtimes) of six games, split evenly between the teams. And that brought the teams to Game 7. We will not revisit that game in its result, but rather in its lineup. The lineup for the Caps.
The Caps could still boast Alex Ovechkin, Nicklas Backstrom, Mike Green, and Alexander Semin in the lineup for Game 7 of that series, but that is not where the series was being fought or decided. Through six games of that series, the top line for the Caps (Nicklas Backstrom, Alex Ovechkin, and Viktor Kozlov) had the advantage over the top line of the Penguins (Sidney Crosby, Chris Kunitz, and Bill Guerin) to a virtual standstill, 10-13-23, plus-10 to 8-12-20, plus-6.
The other three lines of forwards for the Caps press that advantage any further, though, going 8-16-24, minus-7. Meanwhile, the other three lines of Penguin forwards were checking in at 8-14-22, minus-10 through six games.
Game 7, though, was another matter. In the 6-2 series-deciding game, the Penguins did get a superior performance from its top line, outdueling the Caps, 3-2-5, plus 3 to 1-0-1, minus-1. But the Penguins also got contributions from the lower tiers of the forward lines, the other three lines going 2-5-7, plus-3 in that final game to the Caps’ comparable lines going 1-1-2, minus-5.
On defense, it was a bit of a reversal among the top pairs. Through six games the Caps’ top pair (Mike Green, Shaone Morrisonn) went 0-5-5, plus-minus-4. The Penguins’ top pair of Brooks Orpik and Sergei Gonchar (except for a brief spell by Kris Letang when Gonchar was injured, which is accounted for here) had an advantage, going 2-6-8, plus 1.
On the second and third pairs, though, the Penguins had a clear and distinct advantage in the series’ first six games, going 3-6-9, minus-4 to the Caps’ 1-3-4, plus-6.
In Game 7, the Penguins put both advantages to use, with their top pair outdoing the Caps’ (0-2-2, plus-1 to 0-0-0, minus-5) and the other two pairs going 1-0-1, plus-2 for the Penguins to 0-0-0, plus-1 for the Caps.
What Game 7 brought into clear relief was a stunning lack of depth for the Caps, in performance, certainly, but also perhaps with respect to skill. One could see how the Caps might not have been ready for prime time, given the performance down the lineup compared to that of Pittsburgh. It is this that Caps – a team that eschewed both the big free agent signing last summer and the splashy trade at this year’s deadline – appear to have addressed in their personnel moves since that disastrous Game 7. Compare the lineups of that Game 7 last spring against the Penguins against what might be a playoff lineup for the Caps…
At center the Caps replaced Sergei Fedorov (no goals, four assists in the Penguin series last spring) with Brendan Morrison, signed last summer as a free agent. Eric Belanger was obtained in trade last month to bolster the middle. Hopefully, what this does is keep the Caps from having to dress Jay Beagle (not a bad player, but not likely a player who will anchor any of the forward lines on a contender at this point in his career). It provides for playing David Steckel in a more suitable 12 minutes a game than the 16 he was getting in last spring’s playoffs.
At left wing the Caps have more options on the lower half of the forward lines. Jason Chimera (obtained in trade) brings more speed and durability than does Boyd Gordon, and both he and Scott Walker (also obtained in trade) supply more grit. Chimera also can fill in passably on the third line in the event (such as last night) Tomas Fleischmann moves up to the second line center spot.
On the right side, Mike Knuble is perhaps the biggest upgrade at any position that changed from last spring to now. Viktor Kozlov had two goals and two assists in the series against the Penguins last year but managed only one shot on goal in Game 7. And, he was not a net presence – it has never been his style. Knuble, on the other hand, is something of a Penguin killer (23 goals in 53 career games coming into the season) and can make goalies’ lives difficult with his ability to create traffic in front.
The more subtle difference might be Eric Fehr replacing Chris Clark on the right side. Injuries over two seasons sapped Clark of much of his effectiveness, and that was not more evident than in last season’s Penguin series when Clark collected a single point (a goal in Game 4). At this point in his career, Fehr is probably a more effective forechecking presence, and he is among the most efficient goal scorers in the league so far this season.
On defense, as much grief as Jeff Schultz took last year from Caps fans (especially after a dismal Game 1 against the Rangers in which he was injured), the Caps could hide his absence against the Rangers for the last six games of the first round series. The Rangers just did not have much in the way of offense. But against the Penguins, the cracks in the defense appeared and Schultz’ absence was missed. Part of the Penguins’ ability to bombard goalie Semyon Varlamov relentlessly was the Caps’ inability to move the puck smartly against the aggressive Penguin forecheck. Mike Green might not have been himself, but Milan Jurcina and either John Erskine or Tyler Sloan on the back line provided too juicy an opportunity for the Penguins to cause mischief in the Caps’ end. And the Caps received almost no offensive contribution from that trio – a goal (Jurcina) and an assist (Sloan) in seven games.
Then there is the matter of Mike Green. In last year’s series against the Penguins, Green was on the ice for 14 of the Penguins’ 26 goals in the series, including five times being on the ice for the last Penguin goal scored in a game. Green, who by Game 7 was rendered completely ineffective, was on the ice for the last four goals the Penguins scored in the 6-2 defeat in Game 7.
The Caps sought to remedy the defensive shortcomings with the addition of Joe Corvo at the trade deadline. Corvo has the capacity to spell Green, who before Corvo’s arrival logged a ton of ice time (almost 25 minutes) in the playoffs. It bears noting that Corvo averaged even more ice time in last year’s playoffs than did Green. If Corvo can make productive use of the extra minutes he might get that a Brian Pothier would not (especially on the power play), Green should be fresher the deeper he goes in a game, in a series, or through the playoff rounds.
The subtle part of this is the addition of Milan Jurcina in trade after having dealt him to Coiumbus earlier in the season. With Jeff Schultz sidelined last year, Jurcina and John Erskine took regular turns on the blue line. This year, in a playoff situation, Jurcina fills perhaps a more suitable role as a depth defenseman, as might John Erskine as Schultz returns. But the wild card here is John Carlson, whose rise has been rapid through the Caps’ system. Don’t forget, Carlson spent most of last year (73 games, regular season and playoffs) in juniors and the year before that was in the USHL. He did get a taste of pro hockey late last year, though, dressing for 16 playoff games with Hershey. And this year, he split his time between the Bears (48 games) and the Caps (20 games), apparently now with the parent club to stay.
Carlson, Jurcina, and Erskine looks a lot better in the 6-7-8 defense roles than a 5-6-7 of Jurcina, Erskine, and Sloan did as the season came to an end last spring.
Injuries late this season might have made General Manager George McPhee look prescient in obtaining Joe Corvo, Milan Jurcina, Scott Walker, and Eric Belanger at the trading deadline. But there are perhaps seven faces that could play in a Game 7 this spring that did not play in Game 7 for the Caps last year. Those seven players add depth, skill, and grit where it was lacking last year.
Last year the Caps learned a hard lesson that culminated with the Game 7 blowout. It wasn’t “Sidney Crosby vs. Alex Ovechkin” that decided the series; it was the lower tiers of the forward lines and defense that did. And the Penguins won that battle. One might look at what the Caps did over the past nine months and think that lessons learned the hard way in Game 7 against the Penguins last spring will be applied this spring should the same situation present itself.
The Washington Capitals made four trades on that day…
1. They acquired defenseman Joe Corvo from the Carolina Hurricanes for defenseman Brian Pothier, prospect forward Oskar Osala, and a second round draft pick in 2011.
2. They re-acquired defenseman Milan Jurcina from Columbus for a sixth round draft pick in 2010.
3. They acquired forward Eric Belanger from Minnesota for a second round draft pick in 2010.
4. They acquired Scott Walker from Carolina for a seventh round draft pick in 2010.
None of these deals could be considered a “blockbuster,” but they were subtle changes that might be considered part of a larger piece. And we cannot help thinking that what moves the Caps made this year, and especially at the trading deadline, along with deals made last summer were with one game in mind.
Game 7
Rewind back to last spring. The Caps had worked their way through a tough seven-game series with the New York Rangers. Then, they battled the Pittsburgh Penguins through the ups and downs (and the overtimes) of six games, split evenly between the teams. And that brought the teams to Game 7. We will not revisit that game in its result, but rather in its lineup. The lineup for the Caps.
The Caps could still boast Alex Ovechkin, Nicklas Backstrom, Mike Green, and Alexander Semin in the lineup for Game 7 of that series, but that is not where the series was being fought or decided. Through six games of that series, the top line for the Caps (Nicklas Backstrom, Alex Ovechkin, and Viktor Kozlov) had the advantage over the top line of the Penguins (Sidney Crosby, Chris Kunitz, and Bill Guerin) to a virtual standstill, 10-13-23, plus-10 to 8-12-20, plus-6.
The other three lines of forwards for the Caps press that advantage any further, though, going 8-16-24, minus-7. Meanwhile, the other three lines of Penguin forwards were checking in at 8-14-22, minus-10 through six games.
Game 7, though, was another matter. In the 6-2 series-deciding game, the Penguins did get a superior performance from its top line, outdueling the Caps, 3-2-5, plus 3 to 1-0-1, minus-1. But the Penguins also got contributions from the lower tiers of the forward lines, the other three lines going 2-5-7, plus-3 in that final game to the Caps’ comparable lines going 1-1-2, minus-5.
On defense, it was a bit of a reversal among the top pairs. Through six games the Caps’ top pair (Mike Green, Shaone Morrisonn) went 0-5-5, plus-minus-4. The Penguins’ top pair of Brooks Orpik and Sergei Gonchar (except for a brief spell by Kris Letang when Gonchar was injured, which is accounted for here) had an advantage, going 2-6-8, plus 1.
On the second and third pairs, though, the Penguins had a clear and distinct advantage in the series’ first six games, going 3-6-9, minus-4 to the Caps’ 1-3-4, plus-6.
In Game 7, the Penguins put both advantages to use, with their top pair outdoing the Caps’ (0-2-2, plus-1 to 0-0-0, minus-5) and the other two pairs going 1-0-1, plus-2 for the Penguins to 0-0-0, plus-1 for the Caps.
What Game 7 brought into clear relief was a stunning lack of depth for the Caps, in performance, certainly, but also perhaps with respect to skill. One could see how the Caps might not have been ready for prime time, given the performance down the lineup compared to that of Pittsburgh. It is this that Caps – a team that eschewed both the big free agent signing last summer and the splashy trade at this year’s deadline – appear to have addressed in their personnel moves since that disastrous Game 7. Compare the lineups of that Game 7 last spring against the Penguins against what might be a playoff lineup for the Caps…
At center the Caps replaced Sergei Fedorov (no goals, four assists in the Penguin series last spring) with Brendan Morrison, signed last summer as a free agent. Eric Belanger was obtained in trade last month to bolster the middle. Hopefully, what this does is keep the Caps from having to dress Jay Beagle (not a bad player, but not likely a player who will anchor any of the forward lines on a contender at this point in his career). It provides for playing David Steckel in a more suitable 12 minutes a game than the 16 he was getting in last spring’s playoffs.
At left wing the Caps have more options on the lower half of the forward lines. Jason Chimera (obtained in trade) brings more speed and durability than does Boyd Gordon, and both he and Scott Walker (also obtained in trade) supply more grit. Chimera also can fill in passably on the third line in the event (such as last night) Tomas Fleischmann moves up to the second line center spot.
On the right side, Mike Knuble is perhaps the biggest upgrade at any position that changed from last spring to now. Viktor Kozlov had two goals and two assists in the series against the Penguins last year but managed only one shot on goal in Game 7. And, he was not a net presence – it has never been his style. Knuble, on the other hand, is something of a Penguin killer (23 goals in 53 career games coming into the season) and can make goalies’ lives difficult with his ability to create traffic in front.
The more subtle difference might be Eric Fehr replacing Chris Clark on the right side. Injuries over two seasons sapped Clark of much of his effectiveness, and that was not more evident than in last season’s Penguin series when Clark collected a single point (a goal in Game 4). At this point in his career, Fehr is probably a more effective forechecking presence, and he is among the most efficient goal scorers in the league so far this season.
On defense, as much grief as Jeff Schultz took last year from Caps fans (especially after a dismal Game 1 against the Rangers in which he was injured), the Caps could hide his absence against the Rangers for the last six games of the first round series. The Rangers just did not have much in the way of offense. But against the Penguins, the cracks in the defense appeared and Schultz’ absence was missed. Part of the Penguins’ ability to bombard goalie Semyon Varlamov relentlessly was the Caps’ inability to move the puck smartly against the aggressive Penguin forecheck. Mike Green might not have been himself, but Milan Jurcina and either John Erskine or Tyler Sloan on the back line provided too juicy an opportunity for the Penguins to cause mischief in the Caps’ end. And the Caps received almost no offensive contribution from that trio – a goal (Jurcina) and an assist (Sloan) in seven games.
Then there is the matter of Mike Green. In last year’s series against the Penguins, Green was on the ice for 14 of the Penguins’ 26 goals in the series, including five times being on the ice for the last Penguin goal scored in a game. Green, who by Game 7 was rendered completely ineffective, was on the ice for the last four goals the Penguins scored in the 6-2 defeat in Game 7.
The Caps sought to remedy the defensive shortcomings with the addition of Joe Corvo at the trade deadline. Corvo has the capacity to spell Green, who before Corvo’s arrival logged a ton of ice time (almost 25 minutes) in the playoffs. It bears noting that Corvo averaged even more ice time in last year’s playoffs than did Green. If Corvo can make productive use of the extra minutes he might get that a Brian Pothier would not (especially on the power play), Green should be fresher the deeper he goes in a game, in a series, or through the playoff rounds.
The subtle part of this is the addition of Milan Jurcina in trade after having dealt him to Coiumbus earlier in the season. With Jeff Schultz sidelined last year, Jurcina and John Erskine took regular turns on the blue line. This year, in a playoff situation, Jurcina fills perhaps a more suitable role as a depth defenseman, as might John Erskine as Schultz returns. But the wild card here is John Carlson, whose rise has been rapid through the Caps’ system. Don’t forget, Carlson spent most of last year (73 games, regular season and playoffs) in juniors and the year before that was in the USHL. He did get a taste of pro hockey late last year, though, dressing for 16 playoff games with Hershey. And this year, he split his time between the Bears (48 games) and the Caps (20 games), apparently now with the parent club to stay.
Carlson, Jurcina, and Erskine looks a lot better in the 6-7-8 defense roles than a 5-6-7 of Jurcina, Erskine, and Sloan did as the season came to an end last spring.
Injuries late this season might have made General Manager George McPhee look prescient in obtaining Joe Corvo, Milan Jurcina, Scott Walker, and Eric Belanger at the trading deadline. But there are perhaps seven faces that could play in a Game 7 this spring that did not play in Game 7 for the Caps last year. Those seven players add depth, skill, and grit where it was lacking last year.
Last year the Caps learned a hard lesson that culminated with the Game 7 blowout. It wasn’t “Sidney Crosby vs. Alex Ovechkin” that decided the series; it was the lower tiers of the forward lines and defense that did. And the Penguins won that battle. One might look at what the Caps did over the past nine months and think that lessons learned the hard way in Game 7 against the Penguins last spring will be applied this spring should the same situation present itself.
Saturday, April 03, 2010
A TWO-point night: Caps 3 - Blue Jackets 2
Area 51.
Nope, not the alien airfield in the desert Southwest of the United States, but the undiscovered country into which the Caps skated tonight with a thrilling (certainly for this time of year) 3-2 win over the Columbus Blue Jackets in Columbus. It was the team's franchise-best 51st win of the season.
The Caps threatened to skate the home team right out of Nationwide Arena early, scoring three goals before the game was 14 minutes old. Tallies by Alexander Semin and Tomas Fleischmann on the Caps’ first four shots chased Mathieu Garon, who had been knocked woozy when he was upended in his crease by Jason Chimera on a play that could have been another goal. The play started when Chimera skated in on a break, but was upset by Anton Stralman, both players tumbling into Garon. After Fleischmann’s goal, coach Claude Noel sent in Steve Mason.
Mason, sitting after sustaining a shoulder injury against Detroit, yielded a goal on a slapper by Mike Green through a Brooks Laich screen, but otherwise slammed the door on any further scoring by the Caps, stopping 22 of 23 shots he faced.
It ended up being the Jose and Mike show over the last two periods. Green was described by coach Bruce Boudreau in his post-game press conference as “fabulous, just fabulous.” He wasn’t lying. It might have been Green’s best performance as a defenseman this season. He was on top of his skates, he was a force in his own end, and when the Blue Jackets seemed to get opportunities in the Caps’ zone, Green was there to snuff them out.
As for Theodore, he was the Dutch boy (ok, French-Canadian boy) with his finger in the dike all night. Too often, defensemen not named “Green” were backing off to give the Jackets all the room they might have wanted in the offensive zone, and the forwards certainly were not doing their part to fill the gaps. But Theodore was there to stop 34 of 36 shots in what was his best performance in perhaps a month, given the support he was getting in front of him.
Other stuff…
-- When Steve Mason is on, he is something to watch. A real economy of movement, and even as he is a big goalie, he makes himself bigger by being calm and in position. It wasn’t the Caps going into a shell in the last two periods, Mason had a whale of a game.
-- Alex Ovechkin (as Joe Beninati pointed out during the game) has never scored against Mason, nor has he scored against Mathieu Garon. Yet, he has four goals in six career games against the Jackets. Against whom has he scored, Joe B. asked? Three against Pascal Leclaire, including two in his first game as a Cap, and one against Fredrik Norrena, the game winner in a 4-3 overtime win in February 2008.
-- Green got his 19th and the game-winner on a slap shot 13:44 in, but the play was made when he made a great stop on an attempted clear by Fedor Tyutin on a Caps 5-on-3 power play.
-- Anyone wonder why the Caps traded for Milan Jurcina to come back to the Caps saw the reason tonight. The thought of Tyler Sloan as the “depth defenseman” is not confidence inspiring. He had a difficult time tonight.
-- The disallowed goal on Chimera was the right call, but for the wrong reason, in our opinion. The boys in Toronto apparently ruled that Mason had covered the puck, but the applicable rule there would seem to us to have been Rule 78.5 (ix): “Apparent goals shall be disallowed by the Referee and the appropriate announcement made by the Public Address Announcer for the following reasons… When a goalkeeper has been pushed into the net together with the puck after making a save.”
-- Only fourth time this season that Ovechkin’s “minus” equaled or surpassed his total shots on goal… minus-two and two shots.
-- Does Eric Belanger just know these guys better? 11-for-15 on draws.
-- Even though Mason had a whale of a game, we can’t be impressed when the two top shot producers for the Caps were both defensemen (Green, Joe Corvo).
-- And speaking of Green, he was the only Cap charged with a giveaway tonight. Nice to think about, and also not true.
-- The Caps were credited with no takeaways. Not nice to think about, and also not true.
-- Rick Nash used to be a tall, skinny guy who seemed to skate a little too much in the middle of the ice for a winger. No more. The guy is a beast. Six shots, two assists, and he showed a deft hand in passing the puck.
-- How rare is a “minus-2” performance for Alex Ovechkin? It was his first since December 28th and only his second this season.
-- Nine shots, one goal, six power plays… not too bad. But three shots and a goal against on those same power plays? Not good.
-- I get that it’s late in the season, and the Caps are trying to dial down the ice time for some guys (not, apparently, Ovechkin who got 23:50)… but a world where Sloan gets more ES ice time (15:42) than every defenseman not named “Schultz” (and only 17 seconds less than him) doesn’t seem right.
-- How often does David Steckel take the collar on faceoffs in his own zone? He was 0-for-5 tonight.
In the end, it was a win well-earned. Not flashy, not stylish, but a meat-and-potatoes kind of win. Get used to it. That’s the way a lot of them will have to come from now on.
Keyboard Certainties
“If the playoffs started today, the Flyers would travel to Washington to face the top-seeded Capitals - a guaranteed quick exit.”
-- Frank Seravalli, of the Philadelphia Daily News, in his recap this morning of the Flyers’ 1-0 loss to Montreal last night
“The Bruins will finish in the neighbourhood of 30 points behind last year's 116 and are missing 77 goals from the 2008-09 campaign. And, if they do make the playoffs, they are likely to be fed to the Capitals.”
-- Jim Hughson, CBC Sports, April 2nd
“…the Habs are still a 35-percent favorite to be the Capitals' (first-round sacrifice) finish eighth.”
-- Greg Wyshynski, “Puck Daddy,” April 1st
It’s nice and all to think that the Capitals are this hockey behemoth, this juggernaut that has a gold plated path to the Stanley Cup finals, but here is your fun thought for the day as the Caps close in on the Presidents Trophy…
Of the past nine Presidents Trophy winners, three won the Stanley Cup…
…and three were bounced in the first round.
That’s why they play the games.
-- Frank Seravalli, of the Philadelphia Daily News, in his recap this morning of the Flyers’ 1-0 loss to Montreal last night
“The Bruins will finish in the neighbourhood of 30 points behind last year's 116 and are missing 77 goals from the 2008-09 campaign. And, if they do make the playoffs, they are likely to be fed to the Capitals.”
-- Jim Hughson, CBC Sports, April 2nd
“…the Habs are still a 35-percent favorite to be the Capitals' (first-round sacrifice) finish eighth.”
-- Greg Wyshynski, “Puck Daddy,” April 1st
It’s nice and all to think that the Capitals are this hockey behemoth, this juggernaut that has a gold plated path to the Stanley Cup finals, but here is your fun thought for the day as the Caps close in on the Presidents Trophy…
Of the past nine Presidents Trophy winners, three won the Stanley Cup…
…and three were bounced in the first round.
That’s why they play the games.
The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!! -- Caps vs. Blue Jackets, April 3rd
The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
Tonight, the Caps go back on the road for their penultimate road contest of the season.
“Penultimate?”
Yeah, cuz, it means “next to last.”
“Then why don’t you just say, ‘next to last’?”
Just trying to throw some spice in here, Cheerless. The Caps are playing Columbus, you know…. Might be the most boring team in the league.
“Don’t mind him, he struggles with words like ‘cat’ and ‘dog.”
“I just don’t see what a ‘pen’ has to do with it… you guys use these new fangled keyboards for everything these days.”
No, it comes from the word “penult”… the next to last syllable of a word.
“Penult?”
Or “paene ultima,” from the Latin for “almost the last.”
“’Ultima?’... I think my last car was an ‘Ultima’… comes from the Latin for ‘ripped me off.’”
Guys?... We have a game tonight. Columbus?
“What’s that, cuz, Latin for ‘jiminy crickets, we suck?’”
Cheerless might be on to something there. Tonight’s foe, the Columbus Blue Jackets, started the season in fine fashion, going 12-6-2 in their first 20 games. But after knocking off Dallas, 4-1, to reach that record, the Jackets fell hard and fast out of the playoff picture. Since Game 20, Columbus has had, in order, losing streaks of five, three, nine, four, three, and five on their way to a 20-27-11 record. The overall numbers look like this...
Columbus has managed to stop the bleeding – far too late, of course – going 7-3-2 in their last 12 games since their last losing streak of consequence. In those 11 games they have outscored their opponents 40-34, and they scored four or more goals five times in the process. Not exactly “Hitchcockian,” but coach Ken Hitchcock – known for his tight checking, low scoring style of play – was relieved of duties on February 3rd in favor of Claude Noel.
One thing the Jackets have not had in this 12-game run is a potent power play. After lighting up Anaheim for three power play goals on six opportunities on March 9th, Columbus is 5-for-41 since (12.2 percent), although they do have goals with the man advantage in four of their last five games.
The penalty killers are 37-for-45 in this 7-3-2 run (82.2 percent). While respectable, they have allowed a power play goal in four of the last five games in which they had a shorthanded situation to kill off.
Rick Nash came out of the Olympic Games in a bit of a funk – his three-game streak without a point was his longest such streak of the year. But he might have been feeling the effects of a lower body injury that would then keep him out of the lineup for four games. Since returning to the lineup against Minnesota on March 19th, he is 5-3-8, plus-5 in eight games. Nash has played against the Caps seven times in his career and has seven goals to show for it. That number includes a 1-2-3 performance in a 5-4 overtime win against the Caps on November 1st.
What Rick Nash produces on the right wing, the Jackets hope for on the left from Kristian Huselius. And he certainly has been providing it of late. In has points in eight of his last ten games on his way to a 6-10-16, plus-7 scoring line. He has not been especially productive against the Caps, though. He was held without a point in the game on November 1st, and he is 5-4-9 in 20 career games against Washington.
It was R.J. Umberger who scored the overtime winner against the Caps last November, and he is coming into this game on a hot streak: 2-7-9 in his last nine games, with a point in eight of those games (6-6-12 in 15 career games against the Caps).
In goal, number one netminder Steve Mason jammed his shoulder while making a save in a 3-2 loss to Detroit on Thursday. If he cannot go (and Aaron Portzline at the Columbus Dispatch thinks it unlikely), then the goaltending duties will fall to Mathieu Garon, who is 3-0-1 in this latest 7-3-1 run for Columbus. He has a 2.23 goals against and .922 save percentage to go along with the win-loss record. He has had similar effectiveness against the Caps in his career: 2-1-1, 2.23 in five career appearances.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Columbus: Nathan Paetsch
Paetsch (a former Capitals draft pick) was the player coming over from Buffalo when Raffi Torres was sent to the Sabres (the Jackets also received a second round draft pick). With Kris Russell likely out of the lineup, Paetsch would appear to get a sweater. He has played in only eight of the 14 games Columbus has played since the trading deadline. In those games he has not yet registered a point and is minus-5 in an average of 10:25 in ice time. If he is on the ice, the Jackets might be especially vulnerable.
Washington: Jose Theodore
Since losing to Tampa Bay on January 12th, Theodore is 17-0-3 in 20 decisions. But in his last seven appearances he has a GAA of 3.27 and a save percentage of .899, including an early night against Calgary when he allowed three goals on ten shots in barely ten minutes of work. These are not necessarily the sort of numbers one would like to see from the number one goaltender heading into the playoffs. The high goals-allowed total actually goes back to early February. In 13 games played since February 4th, Theodore has allowed three or more goals ten times (four or more four times). Columbus is not an especially potent team on offense and is 22nd in first period goals. This sets up for Theodore as a night to get back in a groove.
Keys:
What keys? It comes down to this. Columbus is neither a “desperate team” looking for a playoff spot, nor can the play a “spoiler” role, seeing as how the Caps have clinched their division, the Eastern Conference, and can clinch the league title with three more points. And, the guy who got two goals in the last seven minutes of the first meeting of these teams (Raffi Torres) is in Buffalo. The only way the Caps lose this game is if: a) they get lost getting to the arena, or b) they just don’t show up figuratively.
Caps 4 – Blue Jackets 3
Tonight, the Caps go back on the road for their penultimate road contest of the season.
“Penultimate?”
Yeah, cuz, it means “next to last.”
“Then why don’t you just say, ‘next to last’?”
Just trying to throw some spice in here, Cheerless. The Caps are playing Columbus, you know…. Might be the most boring team in the league.
“Don’t mind him, he struggles with words like ‘cat’ and ‘dog.”
“I just don’t see what a ‘pen’ has to do with it… you guys use these new fangled keyboards for everything these days.”
No, it comes from the word “penult”… the next to last syllable of a word.
“Penult?”
Or “paene ultima,” from the Latin for “almost the last.”
“’Ultima?’... I think my last car was an ‘Ultima’… comes from the Latin for ‘ripped me off.’”
Guys?... We have a game tonight. Columbus?
“What’s that, cuz, Latin for ‘jiminy crickets, we suck?’”
Cheerless might be on to something there. Tonight’s foe, the Columbus Blue Jackets, started the season in fine fashion, going 12-6-2 in their first 20 games. But after knocking off Dallas, 4-1, to reach that record, the Jackets fell hard and fast out of the playoff picture. Since Game 20, Columbus has had, in order, losing streaks of five, three, nine, four, three, and five on their way to a 20-27-11 record. The overall numbers look like this...
Columbus has managed to stop the bleeding – far too late, of course – going 7-3-2 in their last 12 games since their last losing streak of consequence. In those 11 games they have outscored their opponents 40-34, and they scored four or more goals five times in the process. Not exactly “Hitchcockian,” but coach Ken Hitchcock – known for his tight checking, low scoring style of play – was relieved of duties on February 3rd in favor of Claude Noel.
One thing the Jackets have not had in this 12-game run is a potent power play. After lighting up Anaheim for three power play goals on six opportunities on March 9th, Columbus is 5-for-41 since (12.2 percent), although they do have goals with the man advantage in four of their last five games.
The penalty killers are 37-for-45 in this 7-3-2 run (82.2 percent). While respectable, they have allowed a power play goal in four of the last five games in which they had a shorthanded situation to kill off.
Rick Nash came out of the Olympic Games in a bit of a funk – his three-game streak without a point was his longest such streak of the year. But he might have been feeling the effects of a lower body injury that would then keep him out of the lineup for four games. Since returning to the lineup against Minnesota on March 19th, he is 5-3-8, plus-5 in eight games. Nash has played against the Caps seven times in his career and has seven goals to show for it. That number includes a 1-2-3 performance in a 5-4 overtime win against the Caps on November 1st.
What Rick Nash produces on the right wing, the Jackets hope for on the left from Kristian Huselius. And he certainly has been providing it of late. In has points in eight of his last ten games on his way to a 6-10-16, plus-7 scoring line. He has not been especially productive against the Caps, though. He was held without a point in the game on November 1st, and he is 5-4-9 in 20 career games against Washington.
It was R.J. Umberger who scored the overtime winner against the Caps last November, and he is coming into this game on a hot streak: 2-7-9 in his last nine games, with a point in eight of those games (6-6-12 in 15 career games against the Caps).
In goal, number one netminder Steve Mason jammed his shoulder while making a save in a 3-2 loss to Detroit on Thursday. If he cannot go (and Aaron Portzline at the Columbus Dispatch thinks it unlikely), then the goaltending duties will fall to Mathieu Garon, who is 3-0-1 in this latest 7-3-1 run for Columbus. He has a 2.23 goals against and .922 save percentage to go along with the win-loss record. He has had similar effectiveness against the Caps in his career: 2-1-1, 2.23 in five career appearances.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Columbus: Nathan Paetsch
Paetsch (a former Capitals draft pick) was the player coming over from Buffalo when Raffi Torres was sent to the Sabres (the Jackets also received a second round draft pick). With Kris Russell likely out of the lineup, Paetsch would appear to get a sweater. He has played in only eight of the 14 games Columbus has played since the trading deadline. In those games he has not yet registered a point and is minus-5 in an average of 10:25 in ice time. If he is on the ice, the Jackets might be especially vulnerable.
Washington: Jose Theodore
Since losing to Tampa Bay on January 12th, Theodore is 17-0-3 in 20 decisions. But in his last seven appearances he has a GAA of 3.27 and a save percentage of .899, including an early night against Calgary when he allowed three goals on ten shots in barely ten minutes of work. These are not necessarily the sort of numbers one would like to see from the number one goaltender heading into the playoffs. The high goals-allowed total actually goes back to early February. In 13 games played since February 4th, Theodore has allowed three or more goals ten times (four or more four times). Columbus is not an especially potent team on offense and is 22nd in first period goals. This sets up for Theodore as a night to get back in a groove.
Keys:
What keys? It comes down to this. Columbus is neither a “desperate team” looking for a playoff spot, nor can the play a “spoiler” role, seeing as how the Caps have clinched their division, the Eastern Conference, and can clinch the league title with three more points. And, the guy who got two goals in the last seven minutes of the first meeting of these teams (Raffi Torres) is in Buffalo. The only way the Caps lose this game is if: a) they get lost getting to the arena, or b) they just don’t show up figuratively.
Caps 4 – Blue Jackets 3
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