The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals take the ice on Friday night for the
middle game in their three-game road trip, a visit to Nationwide Arena in
Columbus, Ohio, to take on the Blue Jackets.
And folks, if you think Columbus is merely a hockey backwater, a place
where hockey fills the time between an Ohio State football season and an Ohio
State spring practice, are YOU wrong.
First, it is Columbus, not Cleveland and not Cincinnati,
that is the largest city in Ohio by population.
It also happens to be the home to the Chemical Abstracts Service that,
as anyone with a passing familiarity with chemistry knows, is the repository
for “Chemical Abstracts,” a periodical index of recently published scientific
documents.
Going hand in glove with that is the fact that Columbus is
home to the Batelle Memorial Institute, an applied science and technology
development non-profit company that is an important player in the
administration our nation’s national laboratories.
But perhaps most important of all, Wendy’s was founded in
Columbus. The next time you take a bite
of the mouth-watering Baconator, you can think of the city at the confluence of
the Scioto and Olentangy Rivers.
As for hockey, the Blue Jackets are the new kid on the
Metropolitan Division block, their first season in the Eastern Conference after
spending 12 seasons in the Central Division in the Western Conference. The Capitals have faced the Blue Jackets
twice this season, defeating Columbus in each instance – a 4-1 win in October
and a 4-3 overtime win in November, both games played at Verizon Center.
This will be Washington’s first visit to Columbus this
season. The Caps have done rather well
in central Ohio. After losing their
first-ever game against the Blue Jackets in Ohio, the Caps have won six of the
past seven meetings on Blue Jacket ice, the last one coming on New Year’s Eve,
2011, a 4-2 win, a game in which the Jackets went out to a 2-0 lead after two
periods but watched the Caps score four times in the third period – two of them
goals by Alex Ovechkin – to win, 4-2.
Columbus has been nothing if not streaky lately. Beginning at the start of December the
streaks have been: a two-game winning streak, a loss, another two-game winning
streak, a three-game losing streak, a three-game winning streak, a two-game
losing streak, a win and a loss, then a four-game winning streak coming into
this game.
The four-game winning streak on which Columbus finds itself
is its longest of the season and the Blue Jackets’ longest since a five-game
winning streak last April. Columbus has
found an offensive rhythm in this streak, scoring 15 goals over the four games
while allowing eight. The Blue Jackets
have had balance in scoring across the four games with Cam Atkinson, Boone
Jenner, and Mark Letestu recording three goals apiece. Meanwhile, James Wismiewski leads the club in
total points over the four-game winning streak (1-4-5).
It has made up for a lack of goal scoring from their leading
goal-scorer, Ryan Johansen. Before
recording a goal in Columbus’ 3-2 win over the Tampa Bay Lightning on Monday –
his 17th of the season -- Johansen had gone five games without a
goal and had one over his past eight games. He has not had much success in his
few appearances against the Caps, no points in three career games.
The Columbus net belongs to Sergei Bobrovsky once more. After missing 12 games to a groin injury,
Bobrovsky appeared in three of the four games in the recent Blue Jacket winning
streak. It is part of a longer five-game
personal winning streak in which he stopped 145 of 152 shots (a .954 save
percentage) and had a 1.45 goals against average. He has not been nearly as successful against
the Caps, carrying a 1-1-2, 3.63, .890 record against Washington into this
game.
Here is how the teams compare, numbers-wise…
1. Teams generally
find it hard to get started against the Blue Jackets. Columbus has allowed only
29 first period goals this season. Only
six teams have allowed fewer. But get
started, they do. Only three teams have
allowed more third period goals than the 52 allowed by the Blue Jackets. Third periods, in fact, are generally quite
active in Blue Jacket games. No team has
had more total goals scored, for and against, in the third period this season
than the 101 scored in Columbus’ games.
2. Only Edmonton (17)
has played in fewer one-goal games than has Columbus (18).
3. The Blue Jackets
see the power play infrequently at home.
With 73 power play opportunities at home this season, only five teams
have seen the man advantage less frequently.
4. If Columbus is
going to win, chances are they will do it with goaltending and defense. Of their 22 wins, 16 of them came in games in
which they allowed two or fewer goals, five of them by shutout.
5. As befits a sixth
place team, Columbus is not an especially effective possession team. The Blue Jackets are 16th in
Corsi-for percentage in 5-on-5 close score situations, 19th in
Fenwick-for percentage.
1. The Capitals have
a 5-6-2 record in one-goal games not decided in the shootout this season. They are 24th in points earned in such games
and 24th in winning percentage (wins/games played). They are in a really bad
neighborhood there. The teams below them in winning percentage are Columbus,
Winnipeg, Edmonton, the Islanders, Florida and Buffalo. Two of their five wins
came against those teams (CBJ, NYI), both in overtime.
2. The Caps have gone
four games without a power play goal, their longest streak of games without one
this season. That the Caps are 1-1-2 in
those four games, all of them decided by one goal and two of them in the
Gimmick, shows just how dependent the team is on that facet of the game.
3. If history in this
series is a guide, how the Caps do on offense will be where this game is
settled. In 11 wins in the series
between these clubs the Caps averaged 4.2 goals per game, both wins this year
accompanied by four-goal efforts. In the
five instances in which the Caps did not win (three losses, an overtime loss,
and a tie), the Caps averaged 1.4 goals and were shut out twice (both times by
current Philadelphia Flyer Steve Mason).
4. If you’re looking
for the canary in a coal mine in this game, keep an eye on Marcus
Johansson. He is 5-17-22 in 22 Caps wins
this season, 2-8-10 in 25 losses.
5. The Caps have a
nine-game streak worth noting for the fancystat file. Nine straight games with a Corsi-for
percentage over 50 percent in 5-on-5 close score situations. Until this streak their longest such streak for
the season was four games, November 30 – December 8. The Caps were 3-1-0 in
those games; they are 2-3-4 on this nine-game streak. Go figure.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Columbus: R.J. Umberger
The left-winger from Pittsburgh comes into this game without
a point in five straight games, his longest points drought of the season. His scoring is usually a factor in Columbus
wins; he is 8-8-16 in 22 Blue Jacket wins, just 2-4-7 in 24 losses. It should be no
surprise, then, that his being held without a point in two games against the
Caps (along with a minus-3) has accompanied two Blue Jacket losses to the
Caps. That was a bit unusual, since in
18 previous career games against the Caps he was 6-7-13.
Washington: Brooks Laich
Brooks Laich, trying to come back from a series of injuries
this season, has been all over the lineup.
Center, left wing, fourth line, third line… now he is the left wing on
the top line with Mikahil Grabovski and Alex Ovechkin. Or at least he has been for the past couple
of games. His goal against Pittsburgh
(shorthanded) was his first goal in eight games. What he is not getting, or what he is not
availing himself of, is shooting opportunities.
In a four season stretch (2008-2009 through 2011-2012) in which he
averaged 20 goals per season, he also averaged 2.48 shots on goal per
game. This season he is averaging 1.54
shots on goal per game. Over his last
eight games he has 11 shots on goal. He
has a goal and an assist in two games against Columbus this season.
Keys:
1. Shoot, shoot
again, shoot some more. Sergei Bobrovsky
is 2-7-2 in games in which he faces more than 30 shots this season. Eight times in those games he allowed three
or more goals, and he has an overall save percentage in those games of .909. Beware if the Caps are held under 20
shots. In both games in which he played
the entire game and faced fewer than 20 shots this season, Bobrovsky has
shutouts.
2. Seconds,
please. Really…please. Please get some scoring out of the second
line. People are starting to talk.
3. Line of
sight. The Caps goalie situation is, to
be kind, in flux. Let’s get down to
basics here. Let whoever it is that
takes the net tonight get some confidence.
Let him see those shots, keep the Blue Jackets to the outside.
In the end…
Who would think this would have been a “big game.” The Caps?
Against Columbus? In
January? But there it is. Columbus is only four points behind the Caps
with a game in hand. And, they are
coming in hot with that four-game winning streak. Columbus is the sort of team that is playing
in a fashion that should get the Caps’ attention (their 7-3-0 ten-game record
is only one point less than Pittsburgh’s 7-2-1 record, for example). The question is, will the Caps be paying
attention?
Capital 5 – Blue Jackets 3
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