The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
Yes, Caps fans, we are back, despite our somnambulistic funk from 'od'-ing on turkey, stuffing, cranberries, and all the assorted treats of the holiday.
Speaking of turkey, the Caps finally had a game that wasn’t. The 4-3 overtime win over the Philadelphia Flyers yesterday was the first win in more than two weeks. One was starting to lose touch with just what such an occurrence felt like.
But now, as you work your way through leftovers, and you recover from a lack of sleep from awakening to a Black Friday, we bring you our humble prognostication for tonight’s tilt against the Carolina Hurricanes.
The Hurricanes have separated themselves from the rest of the Southeast pack with 29 points, compared to 23 for
The Hurricanes still lead the league in scoring, but their 29 goals over their last ten games has had them slip to 3.39 goals per game. Their 29 goals allowed over the last ten is consistent with their 2.87 goals allowed per game for the year, which puts them 17th in the league. Their power play has not been their problem. Scoring 13 goals in 51 chances over their last ten games (25.5 percent) leaves them second in the league overall for the year. Cory Stillman has four of those power play goals to give him the team lead with seven…those seven power play goals are more than any Capitals’ total number of goals except for Alex Ovechkin.
It is in even-strength situations that the Hurricanes have struggled. Having been outscored 27-16 in that situation over their last ten games, you might think that
Stillman is 7-7-14, -4 in his last ten games, but has no goals over his last five. Rod Brind’Amour is 5-5-10, -5 over his last ten. Eric Staal has five goals as well (and is a -4). Justin Williams…four goals and a -4. See a theme emerging here?
Cam Ward has had eight of the last ten starts for the Hurricanes (5-3-0), but might get the baseball cap tonight, as he was in net last night for
If Grahame gets the nod, he’s 1-1-0 for the Hurricanes in their last ten, and he has a similar record for his career against the Caps: 6-6-0, 2.64, .890. He was the losing netminder in the Caps’ 2-0 win in the home opener on October 6th.
For the Caps, it is a chance to do something they haven’t done since that home opener…win two in a row. Since beating
Tom Poti…mashed potatoes. Poti has only five hits for the year – worst on the club among defensemen (ok, Steve Eminger has only one, but is he even in town these days?). Having anything mashed, soft, and creamy is the last thing he would seem to need.
Alex Ovechkin…gravy. He’s got 57 missed shots for the year, more than double that of the next highest Cap. If he ladles the gravy, he’s as likely to plop it on the centerpiece as on his plate.
Chris Clark…chestnut stuffing. This guy’s so tough (ear, shoulder, mouth over the last season-plus), he might not have even peeled the chestnuts…he’ll just have ‘em skin-on, thanks.
Boyd Gordon and David Steckel….the candied sweet potatoes with marshmallows. You don’t want these guys fighting over the yams. Between them they’ve won 54.2 percent of their draws. If they’re going at the sweet potatoes against one another, you might end up with candied wallpaper with marshmallow accents.
Poti…whatever’s left on the table. He leads the team with 28.2 shifts a game. If you don’t stop him, he might go for that many helpings, and then where would you be?
Nicklas Backstrom…turkey. Hey, he now leads the team in game-winning goals (two). You can’t have him falling asleep in front of the TV with his belt-buckle undone…he needs to be out there.
But, the leftovers have been tasty so far, as the Caps are 1-0-0 in the post-Thanksgiving season. The Hurricanes are in a muddy stretch of water at the moment, and the key to this game is keeping the
Caps 4 – Hurricanes 2