The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
We are LIVE from Motown, where the Washington Capitals will
descend on Joe Louis Arena hoping to make their abbreviated one-game road tr-…
…who are you?
“I’m the Spirit of Detroit."
The what?
Is that like the Spirit of Christmas Past?
“Yeah, in a manner of speaking.”
I’d have thought these days “The Spirit of Detroit” would be
hard to find.
“I’m right there, every day, sitting in front of the
Municipal Center.”
I mean, with the Tigers losing in the playoffs last month,
the Pistons missing the playoffs the last four years, the Lions not having won
a playoff game in more than 20 years, and the Red Wings not being what they
were…
“Hey, watch what you say about the Red Wings…”
Sorry, didn’t know that was a sensitive subject.
“That’s OK, I just get tired holding up this Sputnik in my
left hand here.”
I thought that was meant to symbolize God.
“Yeah, that’s what it says on the Web site…don’t believe it.”
And who is that supposed to be in your right hand?
“I dunno…they’re supposed to symbolize the spirit of family,
but if you ask me, they’re Lions fans throwing up their hands at blowing another
lead to Green Bay.”
So what are you doing down here at the Joe instead of at the
Municipal Center?
“Hey, you think I’m going to miss a chance to see Ovechkin?”
What the Capitals are going to see is a team that might not
be what they once were, after all. Don’t
get us wrong, this is a team that has a string of 22 straight appearances in
the post-season, a string that includes four Stanley Cup championships and two
other trips to the Cup finals.
But there are cracks in the edifice. Until last season the Red Wings put together
12 straight seasons in which they garnered at least 60 percent of the available
standings points. Until two seasons ago
they finished first or second in their division 19 straight years. However, two years ago the Red Wings finished
third in the Central Division (albeit with 102 points), and last year they
finished third in the division with a .583 points percentage.
There are teams – a lot of teams – that would give up their
concession revenue to have had the record the Red Wings have had over the last
couple of decades, even the ever-so-slight slip the last two seasons. But one can see what might be the end of an
era in the Motor City.
It is a team that is getting older. Of 26 skaters dressing for the Red Wings so
far this season, ten are past the age of 30, and the core of the club over much
of the last decade – Henrik Zetterberg, Pavel Datsuyk, Johan Franzon, Niklas
Kronwall, and Daniel Cleary is 32 or older.
And to that, the Red Wings added Daniel Alfredsson, a lock for the
Hockey Hall of Fame from his 17 years in Ottawa, but who is the oldest player
on this roster at age 40.
This is a team that built a reputation as being a team that
controlled the puck, but through 19 games this season is a middle-of-the-road
club in possession statistics (tied for 12th in Corsi For percentage
at 5-on-5 close situations, 12th in Fenwick For percentage in those
situations; source: extraskater.com).
More ominous is the fact that the Red Wings come into this
game having lost four games in a row (1-0-3).
By itself, that is not necessarily a big deal. But it is their second four-game losing streak
in the space of 11 games, the other (0-2-2) over the October 19-26 period. They had two losing streaks of four or more games
two seasons ago, but they didn’t experience their second one until game 72 of
the season.
Here is how the numbers stack up against one another for the
two clubs…
1. What makes the
current four-game losing streak unsettling for Red Wings fans might be the
level of competition. Three of the four
losses came to Winnipeg (twice) and Dallas, teams that sit in fifth and sixth
place in the Central Division, respectively.
Then there is the matter of Detroit having scored only nine goals in
those four games, allowing 13.
2. Last season, if
goaltender Jimmy Howard was not the Wings’ most valuable player, he was on a
short list. He had 21 wins (tied for
seventh in the league) in 42 games with a 2.13 goals against average (ninth) and a .923 save
percentage (tied for ninth). This season,
after winning his first two decisions, he is 3-5-5, 2.87, .908, although he
does have a shutout against San Jose in there for good measure. Howard has not won a game at home since
October 12th, a 5-2 win against Philadelphia. He is 1-1-0, 3.02, .878 in two career
appearances against the Capitals.
3. Detroit has had a
hard time closing teams out. The 19 third period goals allowed is the fourth
highest total in the league. Only three
teams have a lower winning percentage after leading at the second intermission,
although they have held leads nine times and are 6-1-2. Still, they are leaving points on the table
with third period play.
4. And here is
something of a bizarre statistic. In 11
one-goal decisions, the Red Wings have yet to lose one in regulation time. They are 6-0-5.
5. Detroit does not
beat themselves by straying outside the rule book. Only Chicago and New Jersey have fewer
penalty minutes per game than the Red Wings.
That goes hand in glove with the fact that the Blackhawks and the Devils
are the only two teams in the league with fewer fighting majors (two apiece)
than the Red Wings (three). And of the three
fights recorded by the Wings so far, one of the pugilists – Brendan Smith –
injured his shoulder against Edmonton on November 2nd and is on
injured reserve. Another – Jordin Tootoo
– has been assigned to Grand Rapids in the AHL after clearing waivers.
1. The “glass half
full” description of November, so far, is that the Caps have standings points
in six of seven games and are 5-1-1. The
“glass half empty” version is that the Caps have one road win in their last
five tries (1-3-1), the win being the 7-0 romp in Philadelphia on November 1st.
2. Washington is a
plus team only in the second period (31 goals scored, tops in the league, and
16 allowed). In the first they are
10-17, for and against, and in the third they are 15-21. Those 21 goals allowed
in the third period is the second most in the league to Edmonton (28).
3. Joel Ward is on a
three-game goal scoring streak. It is
the longest such streak for Ward since he had a three-game streak March 8-12,
2011 (two of the goals were game-winners) with Nashville.
4. Nicklas Backstrom
has been streaky in the early going.
October 19-24 he had a three-game points streak, followed by consecutive
games without a point. Then he had a
four game points streak, followed by a three-game streak without one that he
will take to the ice on Friday night.
Backstrom has not had a four-game streak without a point since November
12-19, 2011.
5. It’s a good thing
plus-minus has fallen out of favor as a benchmark statistic. Otherwise, we might be worried that only
Edmonton has more players at minus-10 or worse than the two the Caps have (Alex
Ovechkin and Brooks Laich, both minus-10).
By the way, Edmonton has six of the league’s 12 players at minus-10 or
worse.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Detroit: Johan Franzen
For six straight seasons through 2012-2013, Johan Franzen
was a reliable high-20’s/low-30’s goals per 82 games scorer. So far this season he has two in 14 games. He scored both in a 4-2 win at Colorado on
October 17th; he has not had a goal at home this season, and he does
not have an even strength goal. He has
one point in his last six games. He has
been battling an upper body injury, although it is not clear whether he is suffering from injury or illness. In five career games against the Caps he is
1-0-1, minus-6.
Washington: Steve Oleksy
Chesterfield is about 40 miles from Joe Louis Arena, but for
Steve Oleksy the journey from one to the other has been much longer. On Friday he makes his first appearance in
Detroit in his NHL career. He will do so
as the third leading point getter among Capitals defensemen, second in assists,
second in plus-minus, first in hits, and second lowest in on ice goals against
(10 games played minimum), all while getting a shade less than 16 minutes of
ice time a night. He does not yet have a
goal this season, and he does not have a point in his last four games. That is not what he is there for,
though. He is there to cause a ruckus
and keep the other guys from getting too comfortable in the offensive end. The trick for him will be not trying to do
too much in his first visit back home.
Keys:
1. 60 minutes. Detroit has allowed five third period goals
over their four-game winless streak. It
is part of a continuing problem for the Red Wings. While the Caps have allowed 21 goals in the
third period (second highest in the league), Detroit is right there with 19
allowed in 19 games (fourth).
2. Dat’s Right. Pavel Datsyuk is on quite a run. In his last 15 games he is 8-10-18, plus-8, and has points in five of his
last six games. On a team that stubbed
its toe over the last four games, he has been a source of consistent
offense. He is – or should be – the focus
of the Caps for this game. In 12 career games against the Caps he is 4-12-16,
plus-4
3. Respect, not
awe.. The Red Wings have the winged
wheel on the front of the jersey, the arched nameplates on the back, and an
octopus handing somewhere from the rafters.
But they have not been playing all that well of late, and it is a team
that should not be paid too much respect.
If they worry about who they are, the Caps will find themselves victims
of self-inflicted wound.
In the end…
The Caps have had uneven success in their infrequent visits
to Detroit. Since the 2004-2005 lockout
they are 1-2-0 against the Wings at The Joe.
But the Caps have put together a quiet stretch of success with their
5-1-1 record in November. The aim now is
to improve on their road record, which has not been marked by recent
success. This is one of only two road
games they will play before Thanksgiving, so the travel burdens should not be
difficult to bear. They catch the Wings
in a slump, making this a game they can – and probably should – win.
Capitals 3 – Red Wings 2