Calvin: “They say the world is a stage. But obviously the
play is unrehearsed and everybody is ad-libbing his lines.”
Hobbes: “Maybe that’s why it’s hard to tell if we’re living
in a tragedy or a farce.”
Calvin: “We need more special effects and dance numbers.”
It is a measure of just how bad the 2012-2013 season was for
the Washington Capitals’ Brooks Laich when you consider that the 2013-2014
season was a vast improvement on it.
Laich played in almost six times as many games (51 to 9), scored eight
times as many goals (8 to 1), had almost four times as many points (15 to 4),
and was one of three Caps to record a power play, an even strength, and a
shorthanded goal this season (Nicklas Backstrom and Joel Ward being the
others).
And yet… Laich missed 31 games to a chronic groin
injury. He posted his second consecutive
single-digit season in goals scored, the first time that happened since his
first two full seasons in the league (2005-2006, 2006-2007). He had less than half as much power play ice
time (1:20) as he did in his career-best goal scoring season (25) in 2009-2010
(2:57). His power play scoring (1-2-3)
was miniscule compared to that career-best season (12-9-21).
There was not much for Laich to like about his season (ok,
there was this).
Even when he was relatively healthy (“relatively” being the
operative word there, since he was never really “healthy” this season), he was
unproductive. In three full ten-game
segments he had no more than three points in any of them. He started the season poorly (3-2-5, minus-9
in his first two ten game segments) and ended it broken with only six games in
his last ten-game segment played (2-1-3, minus-6) before retiring for the last
14 games of the season to undergo surgery to correct his chronic groin problem.
Laich is expected at this point of his career to be a core
element to the Caps. After all, over a
five-year period, from 2007-2008 through 2011-2012 he missed a total of just
four regular season games, scored 101 goals, recorded 238 points, had 38 power
play goals, recorded at least one shorthanded goal in each season, all while
averaging more than 17 minutes a game.
This season he still averaged more than 17 minutes per game, but those
15 points were the same that Ville Leino had in Buffalo (ok, Leino’s were all
assists) in roughly as many games (Leino played in 58 games). For Brooks Laich, on the ice, at least, it
was not a season for the scrapbook.
Fearless’ Take… Laich might have been most productive when
he was at his nadir of the season, physically.
He was 3-3-6 in seven games before ending his season after skating just
12 minutes against Vancouver on March 14th.
Cheerless’ Take… Laich was hardly a difference maker this
season when he was in the lineup. The
Caps were 22-22-7 in games he played.
And here’s the thing. Yeah, he
missed a lot of games the last two seasons, but his 5-on-5 possession numbersthis season in 51 games look a lot like his numbers in 2011-2012, the last time
he played in 82 games. His Corsi-for
percentage this season was 48.0 percent; 47.1 percent in 2011-2012. His Fenwick-for percentages was 45.8 percent
this year; 47.5 percent in 2011-2012.
Shots-for percentage: 45.3 versus 48.3.
Goals-for percentage: 45.5 compared to 45.8. Maybe he is going to feel better after that
surgery, but is he going to be more productive?
Odd Laich Fact… Brooks Laich was a minus-7 for the season,
the entirety of that number earned in games against Western Conference
teams. He was “even” in 32 games against
Eastern Conference teams.
Game to Remember… February 27th versus
Florida. Through 44 games in the
2013-2014 season Brooks Laich was struggling along with a 5-4-9 scoring
line. He did not have a multi-point game
in any of those 44 contests, and he was just 1-1-2 in his previous 16
games. In the first game after the
Olympic break, though, Laich broke out.
It started with when Laich picked up an assist helping to dig out the
puck from the top of crease to give Troy
Brouwer a chance to slam it behind goalie Tim Thomas. Less than three minutes later the Panthers
turned the puck over at the Capitals’ blue line. Dmitry Orlov intercepted a pass and fed Alex
Ovechkin heading up the left wing. After
crossing the blue line and drawing the defense to his side of the ice, Ovechkin
fed Laich on the right side for a one-timer that beat a sprawling Thomas.
Florida climbed back into the game, though,
tying the contest at 4-4 just over nine minutes into the third period. That left things up to Laich and Ovechkin
once more. It started as the Caps’ second
goal did, with a Panther turnover, this time at their own blue line. Nicklas Backstrom picked up the puck and fed
it forward to Laich. It would be Laich
returning the favor to Ovechkin, laying the puck out for his one-timer at the 15:43
mark to give the Caps a 5-4 win. It was
Laich’s first multi-point game since going 1-1-2 in a 4-2 win over Florida on
April 5, 2012.
Game to Forget… January 19th versus New York
Rangers. When Brooks Laich took the ice
for the Caps in Madison Square Garden on a Sunday evening and before a national
television audience in January, it was the 600th time he did it in
the regular season for the Caps. He was
coming off a thoroughly forgettable 600th NHL game in Columbus two
nights earlier (he played one game for Ottawa in 2004) and was presented an
opportunity to shine on a larger stage. Things did not work out as Laich or the
Caps might have hoped. The Rangers
scored three times in the first 18 minutes and nipped the momentum of a first
minute goal in the second period by the Caps in the bud by scoring one of their own less
than two minutes later. For Laich it was
another thoroughly forgettable night – no shot attempts, no hits, no takeaways,
a minus-1, and he lost 10 of 14 draws in 15:38 of ice time.
In the end…
In seven seasons after the 2004-2005 lockout, everything was
methodical and predictable in the career of Brooks Laich. He would play a lot of games (averaging 79
games a season), become a reliable 20-goal scorer, fill in at forward position,
play in any situation. Then he became a “Flyer,”
and things got turned upside down. Ever since he has been struggling to overcome
injuries that sapped him of his production and durability. One might admire his grit to play through
those problems, but we are left with the hope that the surgery he had in the
spring will return him to the production he enjoyed before his dalliance with
being a Flyer that turned his career with the Caps into part tragedy, part
farce.
Grade: C
Quotes from the mind of Bill Watterson
Photo: Greg Fiume/Getty Images North America
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