-- Lewis Carroll
OK, here is a quiz. Who does not belong in this group? Jonas Brodin, Justin Schultz, Dougie Hamilton, Danny DeKeyser, and Steve Oleksy?
Give up? It’s a trick question. They all belong. All five
players are among the 10 defensemen in 2013-2014 who played in at least 61 games through their second season in the NHL and who in their first two
seasons in the NHL and had at least 19 points. What is more, the Washington
Capitals’ Oleksy has the best plus-minus of that group (plus-16) with the
exception of Dougie Hamilton (plus-26).
Oh, Steve Oleksy? You forgot who he is? He was seventh among
defensemen for the Capitals in games played (33), fifth in points (10), best in
plus/minus (plus-7), third in penalty minutes (53), second in shooting
percentage (7.4), and had one of five game-winning goals by defensemen for the
Caps in the 2013-2014 season.
Oleksy also did not play in any of the Capitals’ last 40
games after January 4th.
The Capitals were 16-12-5 in games played by Oleksy in
2013-2014 (a .561 standings points percentage), 22-18-9 in games Oleksy was
absent (.541 standings points percentage). We do not mean to suggest that
Oleksy was a difference maker, but on a team whose depth chart at right defense
looked like: John Carlson, Mike Green, Connor Carrick (with a sprinkling of
Patrick Wey and Tyson Strachan); it is hard to fathom how it was that Oleksy
was more or less banished for the last half of the season. It is made harder to
reconcile when one notes that at the time he was relieved of his place in the
lineup Oleksy was third among Caps defensemen in scoring (behind Green and
Carlson, and only five points behind Carlson), and he led the team in
plus-minus (plus-7).
Fearless’ Take… Steve Oleksy’s possession numbers were respectable, at least on this team. His Corsi-for and Fenwick-for percentages at 5-on-5 (46.6/46.9)
are in the neighborhood of Karl Alzner (47.0/47.4) and John Carlson
(46.9/46.7).
Cheerless’ Take… There seems to be a rambunctious streak in Steve Oleksy’s play that might have gotten him in deep with the coaches from time to time. He, John Erskine, and Tyson Strachan were the only defensemen for the Caps to have more penalty minutes than games played this season, and his penalties drawn to penalties taken differential was a minus-8, third worst on the team.
Odd Oleksy Fact… Despite that negative peanlties drawn to
penalties taken differential, Oleksy led all Washington defensemen in penalties drawn per game (0.30).
Game to Remember… December 8th versus New York Rangers.
Going into their game against the New York Rangers on December 8th, the
Capitals suffered shutouts by Ranger goalie Henrick Lundqvist in each of their
previous three meetings. Lundqvist would extend the shutout streak to 202:28
before Jason Chimera ended the drought 2:28 into the second period to give the
Caps a 1-0 lead. Steve Oleksy picked up the secondary assist on that goal when
he kept the puck in at the right point and fired it on net, Chimera finishing
the play by batting in a loose puck at Lundqvist’s side. Oleksy called his own
number just 25 seconds later, taking a feed from Jay Beagle and wristing a
floater through a screen and over Lundqvist’s left shoulder. It would be the
game-winning goal in the Caps’ 4-1 win over the Rangers, the first game-winning
goal of Oleksy’s NHL career.
Game to forget… January 4th versus
Minnesota. The Caps were in a slide when
they set off for the Twin Cities to face the Minnesota Wild. Losers of three
straight and five of their last six contests, the Caps were looking for their
first win of the new calendar year in Minnesota. It looked good early, Washington getting
goals 13 seconds apart in the first period to take a 2-0 lead. Then the roof fell in on them. The Wild scored three goals in a 5:22 span of
the second period to take a 3-2 lead. Mike
Green got the Caps back even at the 13:50 mark, but at 15:32 Mikhail Grabovski
took a delay of game penalty for shooting the puck over the glass. On the power play Keith Ballard sent the puck
to the net where it was deflected by Jason Zucker. The puck flipped up, fluttered, and dropped
behind goalie Braden Holtby. Steve
Oleksy was at the top of the crease cleaning out Nino Niederreiter but was
powerless to get into position to try to sweep the puck away. It would be the game-winning goal in a 5-3
Wild win. It would be Oleksy’s last game
of the season with the Caps.
In the end…
Somewhere deep in the bowels of the Capitals brain trust
(how’s that for generous use of anatomical imagery) it got in someone’s head
that there were better options available than Steve Oleksy on the third
defensive pair. Connor Carrick, who was
sent down to Hershey after playing in three games in October, was recalled and
dressed in Oleksy’s place in the Caps’ first game after that loss to
Minnesota. Carrick finished the season
playing in 31 more games with the big club while Oleksy was first a healthy
scratch for seven games with the Caps, then was placed on waivers (where he was
unclaimed) before being returned to Hershey to play 30 games with the Bears.
It made for something of an odd season for Oleksy in what was a very
unsettled season on the defense. Making
it even stranger is the unsettling feeling that even though the Caps seemed to
be better with Oleksy in the lineup than with many of the alternatives, there
wasn’t just a feeling that he fit a profile of what the Caps wanted at that
position. Oleksy might not have been an
answer to the defensive depth problems on the Caps if they were a contender,
but on this team? It is one of the
puzzles of the 2013-2014 season.
Grade: B-
Bruce Bennett/Getty Images North America
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