The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals open the home portion of their
season this evening as they host the Winnipeg Jets. The Jets will be coming to Washington fresh
off spending Inauguration Day in … what the… Cheerless, what gives with the
tuxedo?
“I was out last night celebrating.”
Celebrating?
“Yeah, I was at the Official I-blog-rual Ball.”
You mean, “Inaugural Ball?”
“No, I-BLOG-ural Ball…it was a chance for bloggers of all
stripes to get together to celebrate I-blog-uration Day. I’m surprised you didn’t get an invitation.”
Must have been lost in the mail. Meet any celebrity bloggers?
“Oh, yeah…that guy who writes ‘The Daily Kuz.’”
You mean Markos Moulitsas, who started “The Daily KOS?”
“No, the guy who started ‘The Daily Kuz’… he writes about
when Evgeny Kuznetsov might come over to join the Caps. Oh, and there was the ‘The Hullington Post.’”
Isn’t that the “The Huffington Post” and Arianna Huffington?
“No, Mister Wizard… ‘The Hullington Post’…"
OK, I got nothing here.
“It was started by this guy who posts some of the best
quotes from hockey legend Brett Hull.”
I’m guessing he doesn’t lack for material.
“Oh, and ‘Crooks and Liars’ tried to crash the party.”
You mean the…
“Yeah, the NHL owners…”
Well, the celebrations are over, the private jets are
whisking celebrities back from whence they came, the pols are getting back to
doing whatever it is they do, and it’s time for us to get back to the long hard
slog that is the NHL season. Here in
Game 2 the Caps will try to record their first win of the season at the expense
of the Winnipeg Jets. The Caps were
2-2-2 against the Jets last season, including a 1-0-2 record at home. Five of the six games in the 2011-2012 season
series were one-goal decisions, three of them requiring extra time to finish.
The Jets’ inaugural season in Winnipeg after spending 11
seasons as the Atlanta Thrashers was a rousing success off the ice. The Jets sold out all of their 15,004 seats
for each of their 41 home dates, and MTS Centre was widely hailed as one of the loudest arenas in which to play for visitors.
On the ice the Jets were a respectable 23-13-5 at home and
had the eighth-highest scoring offense on home ice. They had the second-best home power play
conversion rate (22.0 percent). Hockey
was a hit in Winnipeg.
The road? That was
another story. Only Tampa Bay and
Carolina had fewer wins on the road than the Jets in the Eastern
Conference. Only the Lightning had fewer
road standings points. They tied
Columbus for 28th in scoring defense, giving up 3.46 goals per
game. The power play that was so
effective at home dried up on the road, finishing tied with Phoenix for 28th
place at 12.7 percent. The penalty kill
was only marginally better away from MTS Centre, finishing 26th at
78.0 percent.
Individually the Jets reflected their team performance. At home they had five players with at least
ten goals, led by Andrew Ladd with 18 home markers. Seven players had at least 20 points, led by
Blake Wheeler with 40 in 41 games at MTS Centre. No Jet playing in at least half the club’s 41
home dates was a “minus” player. Only
Antti Miettinen was as low as “even.”
On the road there was not as large a drop-off among
individuals as one might expect, scoring-wise.
There were four players with at least ten goals, led by the 13 recorded
by Evander Kane. Five players had at
least 20 points, led by Dustin Byfuglien with 26. But those plus-minus numbers? There were 16 players in minus territory for
the season, including a minus-11 for Byfuglien in 31 road games.
And that brings us to the Jets’ defense and
goaltending. Ondrej Pavelec finished the
year with a rather pedestrian 29-28-9 win-loss record with a 2.91 goals-against
average and a .906 save percentage with four shutouts. Breaking his win-loss record down, Pavelec
was 19-12-4, 2.47, .917 with three shutouts at home, but on the road he was
10-16-5, 3.42, .895, with one shutout.
Part of the problem for him was shots faced. At home he faced a high volume of shots (29.8
per 60 minutes), but the volume he faced on the road was not possible to
translate into low goal totals (32.5 shots faced per 60 minutes). Even if he was a .920 save percentage goalie,
facing that volume of shots would have meant a 2.60 goals against average.
Last year the Jets were two entirely different teams
depending on the color of jersey they wore.
In the polar night blue and white playing at MTS Centre they were a
formidable team. In their road whites, definitely
less so. That would seem to be their
biggest challenge this year, to translate some of that home formula into wins
on the road. Here is the numbers breakdown for the two clubs...
1. Winnipeg was five games over .500 and a playoff-eligible team as late as Game 67 last season (32-27-8 on March 7th). A 5-8-2 finish killed their chances. It was a combination of having so few home games late (only six in their last 15 contests) and a poor record in them that helped do them in (2-3-1).
1. Winnipeg was five games over .500 and a playoff-eligible team as late as Game 67 last season (32-27-8 on March 7th). A 5-8-2 finish killed their chances. It was a combination of having so few home games late (only six in their last 15 contests) and a poor record in them that helped do them in (2-3-1).
2. Odd Winnipeg Stat…
no team had fewer giveaways in road games last season than the Jets. Now that might have been because they did not
have the puck long enough to do much giving away, but still.
3. Only two teams
allowed more third period goals than the 91 allowed by Winnipeg last season
(Columbus, NY Islanders), 21 more than the Caps allowed.
4. Beware Evander
Kane. Kane has eight goals in 15 career
games against the Caps, three in six games last season. In two games so far this season Kane has 19
shot attempts, eight shots on goal, and no goals. Pay attention, Caps.
5. Winnipeg had the
seventh highest number of shorthanded situations to kill off last season. In two game so far they have had only four
such situations with which to contend.
At the other end of the special teams scale the Jets scored on their
first power play chance of the new season but are empty on their last nine
power play opportunities, including one that carried into overtime in their 2-1
trick shot loss to Boston on Monday.
1. No doubt the Caps
will miss the 20 goals and 39 points Alexander Semin accumulated against the
Jets/Thrashers over his career, but there is still Alex Ovechkin. In 48 career games against Winnipeg/Atlanta
he is 34-35-69, plus-6, including 14-13-27 on the power play. He was 4-2-6, plus-2 in six games against the
Jets last season.
2. If Michal Neuvirth
gets the call against Winnipeg, he has success upon which to draw. He is 6-2-1, 2.74, .918 with one shutout in
ten career appearances against the Jets.
Braden Holtby? Not so much. He has one career appearance against the
Jets. Well, against the Atlanta
Thrashers, actually. On November 19,
2010, Holtby got the start against the Thrashers and allowed three goals on
five shots in nine minutes and change before being relieved by Neuvirth in what
would be a 5-0 loss.
3. In three home
games against the Jets last season the Caps scored a total of nine goals. Departed players Alexander Semin, Dennis
Wideman, Jeff Halpern, and Mike Knuble went 2-7-9 in those three games. It might help that Alex Ovechkin and Jason
Chimera will be on hand, having each scored three goals in those three games
last season.
4. It might be worth
noting on the other hand that only one returning Capital defenseman playing in
this game recorded a point in any of those three home games against the Jets
last season. John Carlson had an assist
on the first goal in a 4-3 win over Winnipeg on November 23rd. Dmitry Orlov also had one point over the
three games last season, but he will not dress for this contest.
5. The Caps allowed
seven power play opportunities to the Tampa Bay Lightning in Saturday’s season
opener. Only twice last season did the
Caps allow as many – eight opportunities for the Edmonton Oilers in a 2-1 loss
that ended their seven-game winning streak to open the season (they allowed two
power play goals), and seven for Montreal in a 3-0 shutout win. Both instances, like that against Tampa Bay,
came on the road.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Winnipeg: Olli Jokinen
Olli Jokinen has played in more the 1,100 games in the NHL,
only six of them in the playoffs (with Calgary in 2009). Winnipeg is hoping he can add to that total
this season, and not with another team as a trading deadline asset to be moved
(he joined the Jets last summer on a two-year/$9 million deal). At one point in his career he was a durable
player and a consistent point producer.
Over a six-season period from 2002-2003 through the 2008-2009 seasons he
averaged 81 games played a year and had an average scoring line of 34-38-72. Lately he has been just as durable, averaging
those same 81 games a year over the past three seasons. However, his scoring line is not what it was,
averaging 18-37-55 over those same three seasons. He did show improvement over those three seasons,
though, from 15 to 23 goals and from 50 to 61 points. If Winnipeg can get even last season’s
numbers out of Jokinen (Winnipeg had no center with 50 points last season),
they could be a playoff contender.
Washington: Nicklas Backstrom
If the Capitals are to do better this year than last, the
power play is going to have to improve.
If the power play is to improve, Nicklas Backstrom is going to have to
be a big part of it. And that is today’s
topic – Nicklas Backstrom’s power play performance. In 2008-2009 Backstrom was 14-28-42 on the
power play on his way to his only career 100-point season. He followed that up with 11-26-37 in
2009-2010, then 4-18-22 and 3-16-19. The
19 points last season came in only 42 games, so there was the hint of a rebound
there (a 6-31-37 pace over 82 games). In
the opener against Tampa Bay the Caps were 1-for-4 on the man advantage, but
that goal was scored by Joel Ward with Wojtek Wolski and Mike Ribeiro being the
other forwards on the ice. The Caps
managed seven power play shots on goal for the game, Backstrom getting none of
them. There looked to be a bit much of
the back-and-forth between Backstrom and Mike Green on the power play, leading
to some standing around. This is where
the learning curve under Adam Oates might be steepest and most in need of
ironing out quickly if the Caps are to contend for a playoff spot. And Backstrom will be a big part of that,
too.
Keys:
1. Score first, score
last, just make sure you don’t get passed.
Last season the Caps scored first in five of the six games against the
Jets and managed only a 2-2-1 record in those games. Part of the problem was that the Caps were
outscored in the third period of those games by a combined 4-3. The Caps need to do a better job closing
teams out, certainly better than what was the case on Saturday when they
allowed three goals to the Lightning to break what was a 3-3- tie after 40
minutes.
2. Primary
scoring. One game does not a season
make, but getting no points in the opener out of the top line of Alex Ovechkin,
Nicklas Backstrom, and Marcus Johansson is not a formula for reliable success. In fact, it was the first time in six seasons
playing together that neither Ovechkin nor Backstrom had a point in the team’s
season opener. The Jets are a team that
has not yet demonstrated an ability to defend well on the road (last night's effort notwithstanding). These are the top weapons for the Caps. They need to produce like it against this
opponent.
3. 20-40-60. The Jets are playing their third game in four
days and will be playing the back half of a road back-to-back. It would be nice to end the competitive
portion of the game early, but if that is not in the cards, the Caps have to
apply 60 minute pressure. Even if this
is Game 2 after a lengthy lockout (and lack of on-ice competition for a lot of
players), the Caps should be the far more rested and ready team after having
time off since Saturday.
In the end, the Caps cannot afford to lose games like this
in a 48-game schedule. The Jets are a
division rival, the Caps get them at home having to fly in from Boston the
night (or early morning) before, and the Caps have more talent at both ends of
the ice. The Jets played the Caps tough
last season, but that might have been as much a function of a close-to-the vest
style the Caps played under Dale Hunter than it was anything the Jets threw at
the Caps. Winnipeg is probably a
somewhat better team defensively than is Tampa Bay, but that should not prevent
the Caps from giving their fans something to cheer about tonight.
Capitals 5 – Jets 2