“I'm always making a comeback but nobody ever tells me where
I've been.”
-- Billie Holiday
From 2007-2008 through 2009-2010 there was no more dangerous
offensive defenseman in the National Hockey League than the Washington
Capitals’ Mike Green. Over those three seasons he led all NHL defensemen in a
number of offensive categories, some by a wide margin:
- Total goals: 68 (Shea Weber was second with 45)
- Goals per game: 0.30 (Zdeno Chara: 0.18)
- Total points: 205 (Nicklas Lidstrom: 178)
- Points per game: 0.91 (Sergei Gonchar: 0.81)
- Even strength goals: 31 (Duncan Keith: 25)
- Power play goals: 36 (Mark Streit: 26)
- Game winning goals: 12 (Andy Greene: 11)
- Shots on goal: 682 (Chara: 665)
- Shots per game: 3.03 (Chara: 2.81)
- Shooting percentage: 10.0 percent (Andrei Markov: 8.6 percent)
It is amazing enough that Green led in so many categories
over those three years, but what is just as amazing is that there is no clear
“second best.” The second highest totals in that list are spread over eight
different defensemen. Green, for those three years, with a 68-137-205, plus-69
scoring line, was a dominant offensive force from the blue line.
Then came the injuries and the coaching changes. Over the
next three seasons Green played in only 116 of 212 games and had a total
scoring line of 23-34-57, plus-8. The injuries – upper body, concussion, ankle,
groin, concussion again – took away too many games. The parade of coaches –
Bruce Boudreau, Dale Hunter, and Adam Oates – made for too many changes in
style that was an especially important factor for a player who controlled a
great deal of play with breakouts and passing. He did, however, have a
productive year in Oates’ first year behind the Caps’ bench, going 12-14-26 in
35 games. His 0.74 points per game was sixth among all defensemen in the
league.
Last season Green made another tentative step back toward
something approaching his best years. In 70 games he went 9-29-38, his highest
point total since the 2009-2010 season (19-57-76 in 75 games). Even though his
points per game (0.54) slipped to 24th in the league, the 70 games played was
the most he played since that 2009-2010 season. As it is, since Mike Green’s
first big season in 2007-2008, he is the only defenseman in the league to
record 100 goals and 300 points.
Fearless’ Take…
As it is, through all the injuries Mike Green still led the
Caps’ defensemen in scoring in five of the last seven seasons and was second
once. He is one of only four defensemen in franchise history to score at least
100 goals with the club (103), and he has done so playing in at least 151 fewer
games than the other three. He should pass Calle Johansson (113) for third
place on the list this season. He is sixth on the franchise list in points by a
defenseman (315) and could pass Larry Murphy (344) for fifth place this season. Green is not only the dean of the defense at
this point in his career (longest in terms of service), he is the most among
the most accomplished in the history of the franchise.
One thing that might help with respect to Green’s
consistency. Get him a regular
partner. Over the last four seasons he
has spent the most 5-on-5 ice time with four different partners (in percentage
of ice time):
- 2010-2012: Jeff Schultz (60.2)
- 2012-2013: Roman Hamrlik (53.1)
- 2012-2013: Karl Alzner (77.9)
- 2013-2014: Dmitry Orlov (40.9)
With two new kids on the block and a new coach evaluating
everyone on a fresh canvas, Green might yet have a fifth most-frequent partner.
Cheerless’ Take…
OK, cuz, try this on. The Caps were 30-27-13 in the 70 games
in which Green played, 8-3-1 in the games he missed. You wonder if there isn’t
a changing of the guard going on here. John Carlson had more average ice time
overall (24:30 to 22:43), more average power play ice time (3:08 to 2:45), more
goals (10 to 9), and more power play goals (5 to 3). Carlson had 22 power play
points to Green’s 15. And, Green seemed to fade late. He was 8-27-35, minus-11
in his first 55 games, a 12-40-52 scoring pace over 82 games. In his last 15
games of the season he was 1-2-3, minus-5, a 5-11-16 scoring pace and a pace
for a minus-27 over 82 games.
The Big Question… Is Mike Green destined to remain a
Capital?
Mike Green is in his contract year, winding up a three-year
deal paying him $6,083,333 a year. With $20.0 million in salary cap space
committed to five defensemen in 2015-2016 it seems unlikely that the Caps would
be able, even if they were inclined, to accommodate an extension at that
salary, let alone a raise. Green’s injury history makes any such investment
quite risky as he approaches his 30th birthday (he will turn 30 on about
Opening Night of the 2015-2016 season).
If Green was to put up big numbers for the Caps this season,
it would complicate things even further. Bigger numbers, more suitors in free
agency, the potential for an even bigger payday. As it is, Green has the 11th
largest cap hit among defensemen in the league. His comparables by age (26-30)
and by caps hit ($5.5-6.5 million) would include:
- Brent Seabrook (29 years old/$5.8M cap hit)
- Brent Burns (29/$5.76M)
- Tobias Enstrom (29/$5.75M)
- Matt Niskanen (27/$5.75M)
- James Wisniewski (30/$5.5M)
- Matt Carle (30/$5.5M)
- Dan Girardi (30/$5.5M).
In terms of roster and cap management, the question might be
how Green gets slotted and for how long a term.
The Caps have three defensemen – Carlson, Orpik, and Niskanen – signed through
2017-2018. The Caps will presumably want
to sign Alzner, whose contract expires after the 2016-2017 season to grant him unrestricted
free agent status. Where does Mike Green
fit in this puzzle? Four-and-24 (to use
round numbers)? That would be about $25
million tied up in five defensemen, a substantial share of the salary cap. Corsi, Fenwick, and zone starts are not the
only numbers that will bear watching this season.
In the end…
Mike Green was part of that first “rebuild” draft class in
2004, the one that included Alex Ovechkin and Jeff Schultz. More than any home-grown
player since then, he has seen everything from a Calder Cup championship in
2006 as a prospect in Hershey to sharing time with some poor Caps teams in the
early years out of the 2004-2005 lockout to the team’s return to
competitiveness to a Presidents Trophy to the current unsettled state of
affairs with the club.
Over the last 15 seasons no defenseman for the Washington
Capitals has logged more total ice time than Mike Green, more than 11,000
minutes worth. It might be true that he will never fully return to those three
amazing seasons that made him the best offensive defenseman of the period.
Still, a return to health could provide the opportunity to make him a threat
once more. Whether he can put together another 1,500 or so minutes in 2014-2015
will go a long way to determining whether the Capitals can make a comeback to
the post-season, whether Green can make a comeback to a level of play approaching what
the Caps enjoyed a few years ago, and whether he can come back to the club past
this season.
Projection: 74 games, 14-38-52, plus-7
Photo: Elsa/Getty Images North America
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