The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
When the Washington Capitals host the Phoenix Coyotes tonight at Verizon Center, the Caps will be looking to rekindle their playoff hopes and end a three-game losing streak. For the Coyotes it will be the first of what will be a four-game road trip through the Eastern time zone, with stops in Tampa, Florida, and Boston yet to come. Phoenix has not been an especially productive road team. Going into Friday’s games they were 26th of 30 teams in points earned on the road.
When the Washington Capitals host the Phoenix Coyotes tonight at Verizon Center, the Caps will be looking to rekindle their playoff hopes and end a three-game losing streak. For the Coyotes it will be the first of what will be a four-game road trip through the Eastern time zone, with stops in Tampa, Florida, and Boston yet to come. Phoenix has not been an especially productive road team. Going into Friday’s games they were 26th of 30 teams in points earned on the road.
This will be the third and final eastern swing for the
Coyotes in the regular season. They completed their first trip, a four-game
journey, in October, going 3-1-0 with wins over the Detroit Red Wings,
Philadelphia Flyers, and Carolina Hurricanes after opening the trip with a loss
to the New York Islanders.
Phoenix’ second trip east was in mid-December and did not go
nearly as well. After dropping a decision to the Montreal Canadiens, the
Coyotes wrapped up their trip with three extra time decisions, losses to the
Toronto Maple Leafs and Buffalo Sabres wrapped around a win in Ottawa against
the Senators.
Of more recent vintage on their schedule, Phoenix stumbled
out of the gate to start the post-Olympics portion of the season, losing three
straight. Two of those losses came to powerhouses Colorado and St. Louis,
though, and the Coyotes come into Verizon Center looking as they have righted
themselves with wins in their last two games over Vancouver and Montreal.
Offense has been hard to come by for the Coyotes since the
break, Phoenix recording only 12 goals over the five games coming into this
weekend. Shane Doan has three of those
goals for the Coyotes and helpers on two others. For him, the Olympic break appears to have
been refreshing. He said as much as the
NHL was about to shut down for a couple of weeks. He had a six game streak without a point
heading into the pause in the NHL schedule.
Doan is 5-7-12 in 21 career games played against Washington.
Oliver Ekman-Larsson is not likely to be a player with whom
a lot of Caps fans are familiar, but he has been among the most productive
defensemen in the NHL this season. “OEL”
is 2-3-5 for the Coyotes in five games since the Olympic break, including the
game-winning goal in Phoenix’ 5-2 win over Montreal on Thursday. It is not just a short-run fling for
Ekman-Larsson, who is among the top-ten in goal scoring for defensemen in the
league (10) and top-20 in points (34).
He is 0-1-1 in two career games against the Capitals.
Mike Smith has had the lion’s share of the work in goal for
the Coyotes this season, appearing in 53 of 63 games this season and four of
five since the Olympic break. In those
four games he is 2-1-1, 1.97, .926, with a shutout over Vancouver last
Tuesday. It is part of a longer run of
fine performances for Smith, a 1.62 goals-against average and a .944 save
percentage with two shutouts over his last eight appearances. He is 4-3-1 in those eight appearances. He has had little success against the
Caps, though. In eight career appearances
he is 1-6-0, 4.66, .852.
1. There is a glass
half full, glass half empty quality to the Coyote offense lately. Over their past seven games Phoenix is
8-for-28 on the power play (28.6 percent), but they have only 15 goals overall. Only once in those seven games have the
Coyotes scored more than two goals, their 5-2 win over Montreal on Thursday.
2. In five of those
same seven games Phoenix allowed two or fewer goals five times, the only times
they allowed more coming in losses to Colorado and St. Louis, four goals to
each.
3. Phoenix is a
middle-of-the-road offensive team overall (2.71 G/Gm, 15th in
scoring offense), but where they have struggled all year is at the start of
games. Only six teams have fewer first period goals.
4. Keeping games
close is what Phoenix does, and they are reasonably successful doing it. Of their 63 games to date, 28 of them have
been decided by one-goal, and the Coyotes are 13-4-11 in those decisions. In games decided by more than one goal the
Coyotes are 16-19.
5. The Coyotes are
not an especially effective possession team.
They rank 17th in Corsi-for percentage in 5-on-5 close score
situations (49.4 percent) and 18th in Fenwick-for percentage (49.6
percent).
1. Until the Caps
were shut out by Boston on Thursday, the Caps had scored four or more goals in
four straight games and in five of six contests. Offense has not been all that much of a
problem for the team. In their last 13
games, including the shutout at the hands of Boston, the Caps scored four or more
goals eight times. But when they don’t…
they have been shut out twice in their last eight games.
2. The power play has
been an all or nothing affair lately. In
their last nine games the Caps have had multiple power play goal games four
times and been shut out on the power play five times.
3. For a while there,
it looked as if the Caps penalty killers were improving. In a three game stretch from February 4-8
they were a perfect 9-for-9 killing penalties.
Over their last five games, though, they are 12-for-17 (70.6 percent)
and were perhaps saved from allowing one to Boston on Thursday by not having to
endure any shorthanded situations.
4. The Caps are a “skill”
team, it is said. They play a more
wide-open style, many say. However, of
the 64 games played so far the Caps have 34 one-goal decisions. They are 16-8-10 in those decisions. When the games are less close? The Caps are 13-17 when the games are settled
by two or more goals.
5. 53.5, 45.8, 48.1,
33.3, 27.1. That is the progression of
Corsi-for percentages in 5-on-5 close score situations over the Caps’ last five
games. The Fenwick-for percentage isn’t
any better. Small wonder the Caps are
2-2-1 since the Olympic break and losers of their last three games. They don’t have the puck.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Phoenix: Keith Yandle
Four teams in the NHL have two defensemen with at least 34
points: Chicago, Montreal, St. Louis, and the Coyotes. Oliver Ekman-Larsson we spoke of above. The other is Keith Yandle. The Massachusetts native is known
primarily as an offensive defenseman. He has topped 30 points in each of the
last six seasons, including this one (7-34-41).
He is one of only four defensemen over those six seasons with a combined
total of at least 50 goals and at least 240 points (Yandle has 55 and 244). The others are Shea Weber, Dan Boyle, and the
Caps’ Mike Green. Lately it has been a
matter of helpers for Yandle. He has
just one goal over his last 24 games, but he has 13 assists over that same
span, including five in his last seven contests. He is 0-4-4 in five career games against
Washington.
Washington: Mike Green
Speaking of helpers, Mike Green has six in his last eight
games for the Caps. He also has three
multiple-point games in his last seven contests (3-5-8 overall). He remains one of the top defensemen in the
game on special teams (tied for 17th place in points), but one
wonders if there is, if not a changing of the guard, then more a sharing of
responsibilities from the blue line on the power play. John Carlson leads the Caps in average ice
time on the power play among defensemen (3:09 to 2:56 for Green) and has 13
power play points of his own. Except for
the 2:43 he averaged on the power play in 2011-2012 (perhaps due to equal parts
Dennis Wideman and Dale Hunter), his 2:56 in average power play ice time this
season is well over a minute less than the average ice time marks he had since
2007-2008. Green is 0-1-1 in four career
games against Phoenix.
Keys:
1. 5-on-5. Only eight
teams in the NHL have allowed fewer goals at 5-on-5 than the Coyotes. However, the Coyotes are something of a
crap-shoot in 5-on-5 close score situations.
They rank just 15th overall in goals allowed in such
situations and their 66 goals scored and 68 goals allowed ranks them 16th
in goals scored/allowed ratio. The Caps need to keep Phoenix under that 50 percent mark here.
2. Chin Up. The Caps have lost three in a row and have
looked progressively worse doing so. Worse, their body English suggests they
are starting to look beaten. Except for
a flurry against the Flyers (after the Flyers took a 4-0 lead), the Caps have
looked sluggish and indifferent. The
attitude has to change…quickly.
3. Theft in Plain
Sight. When was the last time a Caps
goalie stole a game? The answer to that
question – and the time you take to answer it – might be why Jaroslav Halak is
a Capital today and will get the start against Phoenix tonight. There will be games, especially in this rough
stretch on the schedule, in which a goalie is going to have to steal a win or
two (or three) in the face of a barrage of shots and relentless pressure. Phoenix is not among the top offenses that
the Caps will see this month, but they still could use a top-notch performance
from a goalie if goaltending is the difference in the decision.
In the end…
There really is not a lot left to say about urgency or
must-win games or the calendar. There
are games the Caps need to win, and there are games they have to win. Given what looms on the schedule – a home-and-home,
back-to-back set against Pittsburgh next week – this game is both for the
Caps. The Coyotes will be annoying in
their style, a diligent, “system” team.
It is not one against which the Caps have a lot of recent success,
alternating wins and losses over their five meetings. The Caps having lost their only decision to
Phoenix so far this season (a 4-3 Gimmick loss on November 9th), it
is the Caps’ turn.
Capitals 3 – Coyotes 2
No comments:
Post a Comment