The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
If cold is your thing, you can take a trip to Blowhard Mountain in
Utah, where the annual average temperature is 34.8 degrees Fahrenheit. Need colder?
There is Embarrass, Minnesota, where the annual average temperature is
34.5 degrees. Still not cold
enough? Maybe Climax Mine, Colorado,
would be more to your liking – 30.6 degrees.
Aw, heck…just head to Winnipeg.
Among cities with populations over 600,000 (Winnipeg, pop.: 663,617) it
is the second coldest city on the planet.
And that is where the Washington Capitals are headed on the second and
last stop on their two-game road trip (or perhaps more accurately, their second
trip on the road this week).
The Winnipeg Jets will host the Caps with a tenuous hold on
eighth-place in the Eastern Conference standings. That is what winning five of their last six
games does. The sad part of that is that
on February 17th, just as the Jets were about to embark on that run
and just before the Caps took the ice against the New York Rangers, they were in
a flat-footed tie with the Caps with a record of 5-8-1. The Caps, starting with a loss to the Rangers
on that evening, are 2-3-0 in their last five games and remain in last place in
the East.
In this 5-1-0 run, the Jets have outscored their opponents by a 20-15
margin. They have not done it with
special teams, though, at least as far as the power play is concerned. Winnipeg is 1-for-17 (5.9 percent) with the
man advantage over these six games. The
other side of the special teams – the penalty kill – has fared much better,
going 16-for-19 (84.2 percent), and all three power play goals allowed came in
a single game. The Jets were 3-for-6 in
a 5-3 loss to Philadelphia last Saturday.
It has been the Evander and Andrew show over these six games. Evander Kane and Andrew Ladd have five goals
apiece, accounting for half the Jets’ production in this stretch. Olli Jokinen
and Blake Wheeler have three apiece, so there really is no mystery about who
needs attention paid to them.
Ondrej Pavelec has each of the decisions in this 5-1-0 run. He has a very respectable 2.35 goals against
average and a .922 save percentage to go along with that record. He has a decent, if unspectacular, record
against the Caps over his career.
Pavelec is 9-9-1 with a 2.66 goals against average and a .917 save
percentage with two shutouts.
Here is how the teams stand up against one another, numbers-wise:
1. Winnipeg has the worst penalty
kill in the league at 71.4 percent. But
they shelter that lack of efficiency by not taking themselves off the ice to
kill penalties. Only four teams have
committed fewer minor infractions than the Jets, and no team has faced fewer
shorthanded situations. They average
only 2.4 shorthanded situations per game at home this season.
2. By the same token, the Jets
don’t avail themselves often of power plays. Only three teams have had fewer
opportunities overall, and only Los Angeles and Boston have fewer opportunities
on home ice. The Jets have the lowest
frequency of home power plays at 3.33 per game.
3. The Jets are one of five
teams with an unblemished record when leading after one period (3-0-0). It is not so much the perfect record that
catches one’s eye, but the low frequency – three first intermission leads in 20
games.
4. Once upon a time, Eric
Tangradi was a tantalizing prospect in the Pittsburgh organization. Big (6’4, 221), with a scoring touch (62
goals over his last two seasons in Canadian juniors), he looked like the
proverbial diamond in the rough, a potentially productive power forward. Fast forward to February. He was a frequent scratch for the Penguins
and was traded to the Jets for a seventh round draft pick. In eight games for the Jets he has yet to
record a point.
5. Andrew Ladd likes home
cooking. His seven goals at MTS Centre
is more than twice as many as the next highest totals (Evander Kane, Blake
Wheeler, and Dustin Byfuglien with three apiece).
1. Only six teams have fewer
goals scored at 5-on-5 than the Caps.
2. Only Columbus has a worse
record than the Caps when being out-shot.
The Caps are 3-8-1 when teams out-shoot them.
3. The Caps have that glowing
27.3 percent conversion rate on power plays.
Pity they don’t get to display it more often. Only three teams have had fewer power play
opportunities.
4. The combination of the
frequency of shorthanded situations faced (79, tenth highest in the league) and
a weak penalty kill rate (76.0 percent, fourth worst) means that despite the efficient
power play the Caps are actually minus-1 on special teams, 18 goals scored on
the power play and 19 allowed (the Caps have allowed and scored a shorthanded
goal).
5. The Caps have had an especially
weak penalty kill on the road. Only
Carolina and Colorado have allowed more road power play goals so far.
The Peerless' Players to Ponder
Winnipeg: Olli Jokinen
Winnipeg: Olli Jokinen
Well, was Olli Jokinen worth it? Two years, $4.5 million a year. Five goals, seven points, and a
minus-10. Jokinen suffered a dry stretch
when he was without a point in the first nine games of February. But in the four games since, he has three
goals. Offense is his calling card, of
course, but that minus-10 is disturbing. He has been on ice for a third of the
total goals scored against the Jets so far this season and more than half the
even-strength goals (20 of 38). He is
16-17-33 in 55 career games against the Caps.
Oh yeah, and a minus-11.
Washington: Joel Ward
Alex Ovechkin does not lead the Caps in goals on the road. Mike Ribeiro does not. Joel Ward does, with four. Trouble is, every road goal Ward has was
scored in a loss. He had two in Tampa on
Opening Night in a 6-3 loss. He had one
in Toronto in a 3-2 loss. Then he had
one in Philadelphia on Wednesday in a 4-1 loss.
Now helpers? That is a different
story. He has four assists on the road,
and the Caps are 3-0-1 in those games.
Maybe ‘tis better to give than receive the assist. Ward is 1-1-2, minus-7 (!) in 11 career games
against the Jets.
Keys:
1. Be Special. The Caps and the Jets each have 38 5-on-5
goals. The Caps have 18 power play goals
to 10 for the Jets. Win the special
teams, win the game.
2. Don’t be Beat by Buff. Dustin Byfuglien is a load. Yeah, that, too. But he is a load at home. All three of his goals have been scored in
the friendly confines of MTS Centre, all of them on the power play (only three
defensemen have more power play goals).
It’s not as if you can miss him out there. Pay attention.
3. Don’t be Nicked by Nik. Nik Antropov has been a reliable 20-goal
scorer in the NHL (he averaged 21 per 82 games coming into this season). So far, though, he has one in 20 games. He has gone 14 games without one. He didn’t have so much as a shot on goal in
either of his last two games.
In the end…
The Caps were 1-2-0 in Winnipeg last year and had their trouble scoring
goals (only four goals in the three games).
And that is the Caps’ problem right now on the road. They have single goals scored in each of
their last two road games, a 2-1 loss to the New York Rangers and a 4-1 loss to
Philadelphia last Wednesday. In fact, if
one discounts road games played against Southeast Division teams, the Caps are
0-5-1 on the road and have been outscored 20-10. They have only seven even strength goals
scored in those six road games. They
have to do better… much better.
Capitals 3 – Jets 2