The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
On November 24, 2007, Bruce Boudreau stepped behind the bench as coach of the Washington Capitals for the first time at Verizon Center. When he steps behind the visitors’ bench on Monday night as head coach of the Anaheim Ducks, he will do so for the first time at Verizon Center as a coach for the opposition.
On November 24, 2007, Bruce Boudreau stepped behind the bench as coach of the Washington Capitals for the first time at Verizon Center. When he steps behind the visitors’ bench on Monday night as head coach of the Anaheim Ducks, he will do so for the first time at Verizon Center as a coach for the opposition.
The Anaheim Ducks visit the Caps on Monday in the season’s
last scheduled game before the Christmas break.
For those of you who have not been paying attention, the season had
gone, well, just ducky for the Ducks.
They come to Verizon Center with the league’s best record (26-7-5),
including wins in eight straight games as they face the Caps.
It is not even as if this whole streak thing is unusual for
the Ducks this season. Of their 26 wins,
20 of them are accounted for in three streaks – a seven-game streak after they
dropped their season opener, a five-game streak to open the month of November,
and the eight-game streak they are managing at the moment.
Here is another streak number to keep in mind… five. Anaheim has won five straight road
games. This will be the last of a
four-game road trip for the Ducks that took them from Detroit to New Jersey to
Long Island before heading to D.C.
Before that they won road games in Chicago and St. Louis. The Ducks are a team that lets road games
roll off them like water off a…ok, enough of that.
In their eight-game winning streak coming into this game,
Anaheim has outscored its opponents 30-16 and allowed opponents more than two
goals only once in those eight games.
Ryan Getzlaf has done the most damage in this streak with five goals and
six assists. With 19 goals this season, Getzlaf
has already surpassed his goal total for last season (15 in 44 games), his
having recorded a hat trick in Anaheim’s last game, a 5-3 win over the
Islanders on Saturday. In seven career games against Washington, he is 3-5-8,
minus-3.
Corey Perry leads the Ducks in goals in their eight-game streak
with six, giving him 22 for the season.
He, too, has surpassed his goal total for last season (15 in 44 games)
and is not far off a pace to match his career best in goals (50 in 2010-2011). He is on a pace for 47 goals. In seven career games against the Caps he is
3-7-10, minus-2.
Where Anaheim has not been special in their winning streak
is on special teams. They are 3-for-18
(16.7) on the power play but have been shut out on their last 13 power play
chances over six games coming into tonight’s game. On the penalty kill the Ducks are 17-for-21
in the eight-game winning streak (81.0 percent). What they have done lately in minimize
opponents’ opportunities, facing only nine shorthanded situations over their
last five games.
Here is how the teams compare overall…
1. Goaltending has
not been as stable as you might expect of a team with points in 32 of 38
games. Viktor Fasth got the call in the
season opener, laid an egg (six goals allowed on 29 shots) and made only five
appearances before sustaining a lower body injury, which he aggravated in pre-game
warmups on November 22nd. He
has not appeared since. Frederik Andersen
replaced Fasth and had played well, arguable the best Duck netminder this
season (9-1-0, 1.87, .932 in ten appearances).
He has two wins in the Ducks’ eight-game winning streak. Jonas Hiller leads the club in appearances
this season (24) and has a solid, if unspectacular record (15-4-4, 2.43, .914,
2 shutouts). Those numbers are
consistent with his career standard to date (2.51, .917 in 300 career games).
2. Anaheim simply
mauls clubs at 5-on-5. They have
outscored opponents by a 91-63 margin at fives.
Their 2.39 goals for per game at 5-on-5 is better than the total scoring
offense of six clubs.
3. Nail-biter or
blow-out, Anaheim can beat you either way.
The Ducks have the second-best record in the league in one goal games
(13-1-5, second fewest one-goal losses in regulation), and only three teams
have more wins by three or more goals than the ten the Ducks have.
4. No team has led games more often at the second
intermission than Anaheim. In 38 games
they carried a lead into the last 20 minutes 21 times, winning 18 times (18-1-2).
5. One wonders if
there is a course correction for the Ducks coming, at least based on their
possession numbers. Anaheim is a rather
mediocre team in that regard. In 5-on-5 close score situations the Ducks rank only 13th in Fenwick-for
percentage (51.2 percent), only 16th in Corsi-for percentage (50.1
percent).
1. Odd Capitals fact…
Since the 2004-2005 lockout, the Caps have not lost the last game before the
Christmas holiday in regulation time.
They earned points in each of the seven games (4-0-3).
2. Only Buffalo has
taken a lead into the locker room after 20 minutes fewer times (3) than the
Caps (7). Only four teams have had fewer
leads than the five the Caps have had after 20 minutes.
3. Twelve teams have
not lost a game in regulation when leading after 40 minutes this season. The Caps are one of them (Anaheim is not).
4. Nicklas Backstrom
has 48 assists in his last 50 games. If he has two in tonight’s game, he will
have his own “50-in-50.”
5. Oh, those possession numbers… 26th in Corsi-for percentage in 5-on-5 close
score situations (46.4 percent), 28th in Fenwick-for percentage
(45.8 percent).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Anaheim: Bruce Boudreau
Bruce Boudreau’s team has the look of the Capitals team he
led to the Presidents Trophy in 2010. It
is heavy on offense (third in the league, the Caps were first), less dominating
on defense (12th in scoring defense, the Caps were 16th),
a dominating 5-on-5 team (third in goals for/goals against ratio, the Caps were
first), a mediocre penalty kill (20th, the Caps were 25th),
an ability to come from behind (1st in winning percentage when
trailing first, the Caps were first as well).
The only significant difference, it seems, is that the Ducks’ power play
(23rd in the league) cannot compare with Boudreau’s power play squad
with the 2009-2010 Caps (first in the league). Still, Caps
fans will be looking at something very familiar when the Ducks take the ice
this evening.
Washington: Eric Fehr
Eric Fehr comes into this game with points in three of his
last four games and is quietly putting together a decent season for a skater
getting less than 15 minutes of ice time a game (his 82-game pace is
15-27-42). He spent a lot of time in the
doghouse of Bruce Boudreau when Boudreau was coach here, but he does seem to
have a knack for contributing in big games.
Both were on display for Fehr and Boudreau as far back as their days in
Hershey when Boudreau scratched Fehr for two games, then inserted him in the
lineup for a Game 7 against the Portland Pirates in the 2006 Calder Cup
semi-finals. Fehr scored the overtime
series-clinching goal, several of these Anaheim Ducks having been on the ice to
see it, including Dustin Penner, Corey Perry, and Ryan Getzlaf. Caps fans will also remember his two goals in
the 2011 Winter Classic in Pittsburgh and his two overtime, game-winning goals
against Boston last season. He seems to
show up in these games. And, he’s
due. Fehr has no points in four career
games against the Ducks.
Keys:
1. Shots. One thing Anaheim has done in their
eight-game streak is keep teams off their goaltenders. Only once did an opponent register more than
30 shots, and they have allowed only 24.9 shots per game in that streak. The Caps need to find a way to apply more
pressure.
2. Shots, Part
Deux. Anaheim has the best shooting percentage in the league in 5-on-5 close score situations (11.1 percent). Meanwhile, the Caps have the seventh highest
number of shots allowed in those situations.
That is a combustible mix. If the
Caps don’t find a way to minimize shots, their goalie is going to have to play
lights out.
3. Shots, Part
Trois. The Caps lead the league in
shooting percentage at 5-on-4 (19.4 percent), and Anaheim has the sixth worst
save percentage at 4-on-5 (.871). If the
Caps get power play opportunities, they are going to have to convert them.
In the end…
On paper, this game is not close. Anaheim is the 2009-2010 Caps, complete with
the coach. The Caps are…well, the Caps. But there are some cracks in the underlying
numbers that suggest avenues for the Caps to exploit, particularly on the power
play. If the Caps can net a couple of
man-advantage goals, this could be a game.
Capitals 4 – Ducks 3
Programming Note:
This will be our last post until next week. Cheerless, Fearless, and yours truly hope
all of you have a happy and safe holiday.