The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
And now, things get interesting.
The Washington Capitals have won eight of their last 11 games and have
outscored their opponents by a 41-22 in doing so. Their power play is 11-for-34 over that span
(32.4 percent), while their penalty kill is 30-for-35 (85.7 percent). Those are the numbers of a playoff team, and
that is something that the Capitals have resembled more and more over these
past four weeks.
But that is the good news. Here
is the bad. Six of those wins have come
at the expense of Southeast Division teams, and the Southeast impresses no one
in the hockey firmament with their combined play this season. Another of the
wins came against a backup goaltender.
The one truly “quality” win in this run came last Tuesday when the Caps
came back from three goals down to force overtime and then beat the Boston
Bruins, 4-3.
It gets worse. There are 26 days
until the trading deadline on April 3.
Over that span of days the Caps will play 14 games. Eight of them will come in the form of four
back-to-back sets. Of those four back-to-backs,
none of them involve both games being played at Verizon Center, while two of
them – a double dip in Winnipeg on March 21/22 and games in Buffalo and
Philadelphia on March 30/31 – will be played with both games on the road.
The first of those four back-to-back sets start on Saturday when the
Capitals head to Long Island to face the New York Islanders. This is the first of three meetings between
the clubs this season. In the Islanders,
the Caps are facing a team that plays with no discernible pattern of sustained
success or failure lately. After
enduring a five game losing streak that ended in early February, the Islanders
are 6-4-2 over their last dozen games. Over
those 12 games the Islanders do not have a winning streak longer than two games
(they have three sets of consecutive wins) and have sustained only one losing
streak as long as three games (0-2-1 to close February).
Over this meandering back and forth dozen games the Islanders have been
outscored, 37-34. It is a team that can
put the puck in the net reasonably well (2.83 goals per game over their last 12
contests) and fish it out of their own (3.08 goal per game allowed over those
same 12 games). Special teams have been
an odd mix. The Islander power play is
8-for-40 over their last dozen games The
odd thing about it, though, is that twice over their last 12 games the Islanders
have had no power plays, and only one other occasion they had only one man
advantage. Then there are the goals –
three against the Devils, two against Montreal twice, pretty good teams
there.
The penalty kill is 35-for-46, a meager 76.1 percent over those 12
games. Worse, they have allowed goals in
nine of the 11 games in which they faced at least one shorthanded situation
(they did not face any in a 5-4 overtime loss to Toronto on February 28th). The Islanders have been all over the place on
special teams as they have in their wins and losses over the last three weeks. Here is how the teams compare in their
overall numbers:
1. The Islanders are slow
starters. Only four teams have scored
fewer first period goals than the 13 that the Islanders have in 24 games. But like a old diesel engine, once they get
warmed up… they lead the NHL in second period goals scored (29, tied with
Carolina and Anaheim), and only five teams (including the Caps) have more third
period goals than the 25 recorded by New York.
2. On the other side of the
ledger, the Islanders are worst in the league in allowing third period goals
(33), and only Florida has allowed more goals in overtime than New York (three).
3. The Islanders have an
excellent power play…on the road. No
team is more efficient with their power play on the road than the Islanders’
32.3 percent. It is not even close
(Boston is second at 26.7 percent).
Trouble is, the Islanders are the hosts for this game, and their home
power play is rather pedestrian – 16th-ranked at 18.3 percent. However, since the Islanders are third in the
league in home power plays awarded, they are still tied for seventh in power
play goals scored.
4. Only Florida has allowed more goals at 5-on-5 than the Isles, who
have allowed 56 in 29 games. That is why the Islanders are 26th in
5-on-5 ratio in goals scored to goals allowed.
5. The good news in goal scoring
is that New York has three players with ten or more goals scored (the Caps have
none). The bad news is that those three
players – John Tavares, Matt Moulson, and Michael Grabner – have 35 of the 69
scored so far by New York. Twenty other
skates split the other 34 goals, and none of them have more than five. This is not a team that gets much in terms of
secondary scoring.
1. The Capitals take a
three-game winning streak into this game, tying their longest of this
abbreviated season. The last time they
had a longer run was when they put together a four-game winning streak from
March 8th through March 13th last season. Their victim in game four? The Islanders.
2. As the Caps were about to
start this 8-3-0 run over their past 11 games they were struggling in many
statistical categories, but oh, have they improved… from 23rd to 8th
in scoring offense… from 29th to 16th in scoring defense…
from 27th to 15th in 5-on-5 play… from 13th to
3rd on the power play.
3. Where the Capitals have
continued to struggle is in killing penalties.
When they took the ice on February 9th against Florida in
what would be the first win in this 8-3-0 run, the Caps ranked 27th
in penalty killing (70.6 percent). While
their raw numbers have improved to 76.7 percent, they have actually dropped a
spot in the rankings, to 28th.
4. If the Islanders struggle in
the third period with those 33 goals allowed, the Caps shine. Washington ranks fifth in total third period
goals scored, and they have played at least two fewer games than each of the
four teams ahead of them.
5. Is it scoring, or is it a
passive approach? There is an
arbitrariness built in to more than a few statistics in hockey, hits among
them. The Caps, however, rank 27th
in hits recorded on the road.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder:
New York: Kyle Okposo
John Tavares had emerged as one of the best offensive players in the league. Matt Moulson just keeps putting up goals
quietly and efficiently. But what about
Kyle Okposo? After recording a career
high 24 goals last season, Islander fans might have been forgiven if they
thought of him as a potential 30-goal scorer (in an 82-game season, of
course). So far, though, Okposo has two
goals in 24 games, and but for a 1-2-3 game against Toronto on February 28th,
his season would truly be a disaster so far.
Among forwards having recorded at least one goal this season, Okposo
ranks 245th of 276 forwards in shooting percentage. He is 5-3-8, plus-2 in 12 career games
against the Capitals.
Washington: Alex Ovechkin
In a game like this, the Captain needs to lead by example, and that
means not skating as if it is a public skate at Kettler on a Sunday
morning. The Caps, despite their 7-1 win
on Thursday, are not a team that can just toss the sticks on the ice and
win. And as such, the Captain needs to
lead by effort. He certainly has had
success against this team with 19 goals in 26 career games. Since his hat trick against New Jersey on
February 23rd, Ovechkin has only one goal in five games, although he
does have five assists in those games.
Lighting the lamp on his own might be a necessary ingredient to a win
today.
Keys:
Focus. The Caps are coming off beating a quality opponent and then beating up a divisional rival. They might be feeling pretty good about themselves. And, there is the matter of that game tomorrow afternoon against the Rangers. This is a game with a potential to slip through the cracks.
2. Jump in. In the 7-1 win over Florida, the defense was
a combined 2-3-5, plus-8. The defense
that is likely to take the ice this afternoon has nine goals this season, not a
bad number, but it shows signs of being a bigger number with the increased
activity lately.
3. Even keel. Over their last eight games, the Islanders
are 4-2-2. The common thread in their
wins is that the Isles have had the pleasure of at least four power plays in
all of them. In the four losses they had
a total of six, and in two of them did not have any. Stay out of the box.
In the end, this is not such a bad game to have, barometer-wise. It would only be natural to go on the road
against an “inferior” opponent (considering the Caps take them on between
Boston and the Rangers) and have their attention wander. This game is a good one to watch to see if
the Caps have that singular purpose in grabbing the standings points they need
from these “inferior” teams to inch their way up the standings.
Capitals 4 – Islanders 2
"Record: 4th SE / 14th East"
ReplyDeleteAren't they actually 3rd in the SE and 12th in the East? Win today in regulation and they'll jump to 11th in the East, and 10th if Philly loses in regulation to Boston.