It is said that the best defense is a good offense. No, the best defense is when an offense
doesn’t show up. That was the case for
the Washington Capitals last night, who left their offense at the hotel in
Boston, losing to the Bruins, 3-0, at TD Center.
In a rematch of last Saturday’s contest on the same rink,
the Caps could not replicate their start in that game, finding themselves
incapable of mounting any consistent pressure.
Boston, on the other hand, was pounding the Caps net and goalie Braden
Holtby with shots, and the pressure eventually yielded results in the second
period. With the Bruins skating with an
extra attacker on a delayed penalty call, Gregory Campbell redirected a Patrice
Bergeron one-timer past Holtby at the 3:05 mark from the top of the crease to
Holtby’s right.
Five minutes later Loui Eriksson scored from the same spot
of the ice when Carl Soderberg circled behind the Caps net and found Eriksson
camped out at the edge of the crease.
Eric Fehr could not tie up Eriksson, and the Boston forward roofed the
puck over Holtby’s blocker for a 2-0 lead.
That was more than enough, but the Bruins added an empty net
goal by Brad Marchand with 34 seconds left for the final margin, sending the
Caps home with their third straight loss.
Other stuff…
-- The Caps were outshot, 43-16, and out-attempted
67-32. The shot differential tied the
largest deficit suffered by the Caps this season. St. Louis out-shot the Caps, 47-20, in a 4-1
Caps win on November 17th.
-- The delayed penalty awaiting the Caps that was wiped out
by the Campbell goal was the only infraction called in the game. Neither team served a penalty.
-- The Caps are now 11-14-7 when failing to score at least
one power play goal.
-- The win was Tuukka Rask’s first career victory against
the Capitals. We was 0-3-3 in six career
decisions before last night.
-- Alex Ovechkin had one shot on goal for the game. That is a season low for him and is his
lowest shot total since he was held without a shot on goal against the Carolina
Hurricanes in a 4-0 loss on March 12th of last season. No Capital had more than two shots on goal; Troy Brouwer led in attempts with four. The top line of Dustin Penner, Nicklas Backstrom, and Alex Ovechkin (although there was a fair amount of scrambling going on) had a total of two shots on goal (Penner, Ovechkin) and five shot attempts (Ovechkin: 3, Penner: 2).
-- Time management apparently played a role in this game, it
being the second of a back-to-back (the Caps lost on Wednesday night in
Philadelphia). Only Jack Hillen (23:27)
and Mike Green (25:41) played more than 20 minutes of all the skaters dressing
for this game. Only Marcus Johansson
(18:43) skated more than 17 minutes among the forwards.
-- Scrambled eggs… The Caps started the game with a forward
line of Chris Brown, Eric Fehr, and Joel Ward.
Ninety seconds later the defensive pair taking the ice was Connor
Carrick and Cameron Schilling. Thirty
seconds after that the line to take the ice was Marcus Johansson, Dustin
Penner, and Troy Brouwer. The next line
was Ryan Stoa, Jay Beagle, and Joel Ward.
Less than three minutes into the game the Caps had Brown and Schiling skating
their first shift for the Caps this season, while for Stoa and Penner it was
for each their second game in a Caps uniform this season.
-- The 42 shots faced by Braden Holtby was the fifth time
this season he has seen at least 40 shots on goal. This total was exceeded twice – 47 shots in a
Gimmick 5-4 win over Winnipeg on October 22nd, and 47 shots in a 4-1
win over St. Louis on November 17th. Holtby is 2-3-0 in games this
season in which he faced 40 or more shots, the losses (in addition to last
night’s) coming against Pittsburgh and Ottawa.
In the end…
The Bruins did everything last night that they did not do
against the Caps last Saturday. They
played stifling defense, clogged the middle, won battles, didn’t take
penalties, and ground the Caps down. Not
that the Caps offered a lot of resistance.
Their second back-to-back in a week might have had something to do with
it, just as the addition of new faces might have caused moments of
discombobulation.
Whatever the reason, it is three losses in a row for the
Caps precisely when they can least afford an extended losing streak. It does not get easier. Washington will now play three games in four
nights, a home tilt against Phoenix on Saturday followed by a home-and-home
back-to-back against Pittsburgh on Monday and Tuesday.
You can now say this is it.
These next four days are the Caps’ season. Either they will find a way to incorporate
the new parts quickly and get more production and effort from the other
players, or they will, well, have nights like last night and see what is left
of their season melt away like last week’s snow, and just as rapidly.
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