It was bound to happen sooner or later. The Washington Capitals began Week 8 with a
big win against a powerful opponent, a 4-1 win over the St. Louis Blues. However, by week’s end, the Caps lost ground in
the standings and no small measure of the good will that came with a 10-4-1
record over the previous five weeks.
Record: 1-2-1
After five weeks of winning records, the Capitals finished
with a losing week in Week 8. It was a
week that started with promise, a 4-1 win over the St. Louis Blues being among
their most impressive of the season both in performance and in the quality of
the competition. That set up a contest
for the Metropolitan Division lead against the Pittsburgh Penguins that carried
the usual baggage of “Crosby vs. Ovechkin” discussion. That contest was not much of one, the Penguins
controlling matters over most of the game and leaving Verizon Center with a 4-0
win. The Caps let about five minutes of
their next game against the Montreal Canadiens get away from them, and it was
enough for the Canadiens to run out to a 3-0 lead, after which they held on for
a 3-2 win. The Caps ended their week
with a game they “played” well but for which they were unrewarded, pummeling the Toronto
Maple Leafs’ net for 50 shots on goal and 101 shot attempts, but being defeated
in the trick shot competition, 2-1.
Offense: 1.75/game (season: 2.79 / rank:9th)
Until the St. Louis Blues arrived in Washington on Sunday to
take on the Capitals, only once in six road games had they allowed as many as
four goals in a game, and not once had they allowed as many as three goals in a
period. The Capitals did both, scoring
three goals in the first period and four for the game in a 4-1 win over the
Blues.
Not only would it be the high point of the week for the
offense, it would be the last game of the week in which someone other than Alex
Ovechkin would score a goal. The Caps
were shut out against Pittsburgh on Wednesday, and it was Ovechkin who scored
the three goals the Caps recorded in a 3-2 loss to Montreal and a 2-1 trick
shot loss to Toronto. Ovechkin finished
the week with five of the Capitals’ seven goals, the five goals also being the
high in points. Nicklas Backstrom
finished the week with three assists.
Defense: 2.25/game (season: 2.75 / rank:18th )
The Capitals have had their issues with shots allowed and
possession statistics in general this season.
The best that can be said of the shots on goal matter is that the week
was one of steady improvement, at least as far as volume was concerned. After allowing a week-high 47 shots to St.
Louis on Sunday, the Caps allowed progressively fewer shots, ending the week
with allowing Toronto 28 shots on Saturday. It was only the fourth time this
season Washington allowed an opponent fewer than 30 shots on goal.
The possession statistics were a bit more of a mixed result,
especially if one decomposes them. The
Caps started the week, if not on the good side of the possession numbers, at least
within shouting distance of them. They
Corsi-for percentage in 5-on-5 close situations was 47.6 percent against St.
Louis. By week’s end the Caps improved
to 48.4 percent against Montreal, then finished with their second best result
of the season, a 60.4 percent effort against Toronto (source: extraskater.com).
Then there was that game against Pittsburgh. Back on October 28th, the Caps
finished their game against Vancouver with their worst Corsi-for percentage in
5-on-5 close situations for the season – 35.6 percent. That was bad.
What happened against the Penguins was a result in search of an
adjective. The Caps finished with a
Corsi-for in those 5-on-5 close situations of only 14.3 percent (3 events for,
18 against). Their Fenwick-for
percentage was even worse. The Caps had
no Fenwick events (shots on goal, shots missed) in 5-on-5 close situations and
allowed 11. It was actually decent
defense (the 11 Fenwick events being among the top-five efforts of the year for
the Caps), but it hardly mattered.
Goaltending: 2.22 GAA / .938 save percentage (season: 2.66 /
.922 / 1 shutout)
The goaltending was generally solid. Saving almost 94 percent of 146 shots (36.5
per game) is about as much as a club can ask their goaltenders to do. Braden Holtby was 1-1-1 for the week with a
.948 save percentage for the week. He
continues to build a solid season after a slow start. In his last 15 appearances he has a save
percentage of .936.
Michal Neuvirth did not play badly as much as he had a
couple of unfortunate moments. In a
space of 4:47 against Montreal in the first period he allowed three goals on
seven shots. One shot – a deflection out
of the air by David Desharnais – was something he could not control. Another, a slam dunk by Daniel Briere on a
power play after a loose puck squirted from a clot of bodies in front, was one
of those random sequences that occurs from time to time. It was the first goal, on a rush by Travis
Moen, that Neuvirth played off the bottom of his catching glove, a misplay that
slipped past him and into the net, that started the Montreal flurry. It was a brief, but decisive slip in play
that put the Caps in a hole out of which they could not climb.
Power Play: 2-12 / 16.7 percent (season: 23.4 percent / rank:
3rd)
For a while the Caps sat in second place in both power play
and penalty killing. At the end of this past
week, the power play slipped for the second straight week. Over these last two weeks the Caps are 2-for-23
with the man advantage (8.7 percent).
The Caps had a respectable efficiency record over the first three games
of the week, recording two power play goals on 11 shots in 13:42 of power play
time. Against Toronto the Caps had a
shooting gallery – ten shots on goal in six minutes on three power plays. But they could not dent goalie James Reimer,
and it was decisive in the 2-1 shootout loss.
What might be most noteworthy here is that in the two games
Mike Green played this week he had only 1:32 in total power play ice time and
did not record a shot on goal. On the
other hand, John Carlson finished with 16:23 in power play ice time over four
games and recorded a team-high eight shots on goal of the 21 total.
It was not a good week for the Caps on the other side of
special teams. Washington allowed power
play goals in the first three games of the week, making it four straight and
seven of their last 11 games after going eight games in a row without allowing
one. Braden Holtby and Michal Neuvirth
were a combined 22-for-26 in tending goal against the power play (.846 save
percentage) – not especially good, but not awful, either. The 26 shots in 22:16 of power play time was something
that might have been controlled more and was just one more element in a
disappointing week for the penalty kill.
Even Strength Goals For/Against: 5-5 (season: 44-49; 5-on-5
GF/GA ratio: 0.93 / rank: 19th)
A few weeks ago you would have thought that if the Caps were
fighting teams to a draw at even strength, that the strength of their power
play would propel them to success. It
has not really worked out that way, at least for this week. This might be a product of the fact that the “break-even”
at even strength was anything but on a game-by-game basis. The Caps outscored the Blues by a 3-0 margin
at even strength and won. They lost the
even strength battle by a similar margin to Pittsburgh and lost. They lost it narrowly to Montreal (2-1) and
lost. They managed to go against form
against Toronto, winning the even strength contest, 1-0, but losing in the
freestyle competition.
Faceoffs: 132-266 / 49.6 percent (season: 48.7 percent /
rank: 20th)
The week was a bit misleading. Although the Caps lost the week overall, they
were very good in the ends. Over the
four games the Caps were 54-for-100 in the offensive end (54.0 percent) and
58-for-107 in the defensive zone (54.2 percent). It was better for the “offensive” centers in
the offensive zone. Nicklas Backstrom
and Mikhail Grabovski were a combined 33-for-56 in the offensive end (58.9
percent), while in the defensive end Backstrom and Brooks Laich were a combined
24-for-43 (55.8 percent).
Goals For/Against by Period:
The second period, a productive vein from which goals have
been mined this season, was empty this week.
The Caps managed only one goal for the week, that coming in the second
period of the 4-1 win over St. Louis (parenthetically, that would also be the
last goal for the week scored by anyone but Alex Ovechkin). The Caps managed only 14 total shots on goal
in the second period of the first three games of the week, no small reason why
there was so little production. The Caps
shelled Toronto for 17 shots in the second period of the last game of the week,
but could not find the back of the net.
The goals scored for were misleading. Four goals in the first period in four games
is not a bad outcome. However, when
three of them come in the first game of the week, another in the dying seconds
of the first period against Montreal, it did not make for a consistently
dominant first period, a problem the Caps have had for most of the season.
In the end…
The takeaway from this week is this number: 215:33. That is the ice time that has elapsed since any Capital other than Alex Ovechkin scored a goal. Needless to say, while it is nice that Ovechkin is racking up goals, the Caps are going nowhere if he is the only reliable offensive threat. That the Caps would have a losing week despite some overall fine play by their goaltenders – the .938 save percentage for the week – speaks to that idea. Had the Caps managed goals by anyone else, they might have ended the week 2-1-1 or perhaps even 3-1-0.
That the Caps squandered good weeks by Ovechkin and the
goaltenders makes this an especially disappointing week in a way that goes
beyond the mere loss to the arch-rival Penguins. The coming week will provide an opportunity to turn
that around – a game against struggling Ottawa, a rematch against Montreal at
Verizon Center, and a visit to Long Island to play the New York Islanders, a
team that will start this week having lost three in a row and eight of its last
ten contests. Ending the month on the
good note on which they started it would make for a happy Thanksgiving.
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