The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals take their 3-0-2 record on the road
this week, their first stop being in Edmonton to take on the Oilers on
Wednesday night. These are teams on different ends of the success spectrum at
the moment. The Caps’ fast start is their best since starting the season 7-0-0
in 2011-2012 (Bruce Boudreau’s last season as Capitals head coach). The Oilers’
1-4-0 start looks an awful lot like their start last season (1-6-1 in their
first seven games), their start in 2012-2013 (4-4-3 in their first 11 games),
their start in 2011-2012 (2-2-2 in their first six games), their start in
2010-2011 (2-4-2 in their first eight games), and so on, and so on.
For Edmonton, winning has been an infrequent indulgence in
recent years. They have not reached the post-season since losing in the Stanley
Cup final to the Carolina Hurricanes in 2006. In their last five seasons and
five games into this one they have an aggregate record of 133-202-47. On an
82-game basis, that works out to 29-43-10. That is how, since 2007, a team gets
seven top-ten picks in the space of eight drafts, three in succession being
first overall draft picks (2010-2012).
This edition of the Oilers, even with the three first
overall draft picks – Taylor Hall, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, and Nail Yakupov – in
the lineup, has had trouble scoring goals. Hall accounts for four of the 14
goals scored by Edmonton in five games. Yakupov and Nugent-Hopkins have one
apiece; the other 19 skaters accounting for the other eight goals.
There are two faces that Caps fans will recognize. Matt
Hendricks and Boyd Gordon were faithful foot soldiers for the Caps and play
similar roles for the Oilers. Neither is expected to generate much offense,
their games being more of feisty grittiness (Hendricks) and responsible steadiness
(Gordon). One thing Caps fans might have expected is for Hendricks to employ
the “paralyzer” trick shot he used to such effectiveness in Washington with
similar results in Edmonton. The Oilers have participated in just one shootout
so far, Hendricks not being called upon to join in. He took only one turn in
the apres-hockey portion of the game in 33 games with the Oilers last season.
At the other end of the rink the results have been, well,
less than hoped for. Ben Scrivens and Viktor Fasth each have goals against
averaged north of 3.50 and save percentages south of .900. And, it is not as if
the defense in front of them has shined. Plus-minus has limited utility on an
individual basis, but when seven of eight defensemen are in “minus” territory
(Martin Marincin is “even” in two games), it says something unkind. They’re not
too good. And this is with a group that includes a free agent they sought (Mark
Fayne), a quasi-free agent (Nikita Nikitin, whose rights were traded to
Edmonton from Columbus for the right to negotiate a contract), and another of
those top-ten draft picks (Darnell Nurse). For Oiler fans who clung to the hope
of what so many high-end draft picks might bring, the last few years have been
bitter medicine. Here is how the teams compare in their numbers to date this
season:
-- One thing Edmonton has going for it is consistency. The
benefit here for Caps fans is that some of that consistency is not kind to the
Oilers. So far, Edmonton has a goal differential of minus-3 in the first period
of games, minus-3 in the second period, and minus-6 in the third period. They
have been outscored overall, 26-14, in six games.
-- The odd thing about that goal differential is that the
Oilers have recorded 179 shots on goal and have allowed 179 shots on goal. What
that means is that while the Oilers shooting percentage is fair to poor (7.8 percent),
their save percentage is ghastly (.864). That’s a team overall PDO of 942. Hard
to win games like that.
-- It’s bad enough to fall behind early in games often. It’s worse
when you can’t win on those rare occasions when you do get ahead early. In six
games the Oilers have scored first twice. They won neither game. They are one
of three teams who have scored first in at least one game (Arizona has yet to
do so) not to have won. Edmonton is 0-1-1, Philadelphia and Carolina both are
0-0-1. Geez, even Buffalo won the only game in which they scored first.
-- Only the Winnipeg Jets have fewer power play
opportunities per game in the early going 2.80 per game) than the Oilers (2.83
per game). You might think that allowing only 3.50 power play chances a game
(tied for 11th fewest) would help, but there is that 76.2 percent penalty
killing to deal with.
-- Edmonton is still trying to settle on a lineup that
works. They have dressed 22 skaters in six games. Only Boston (24) and the New
York Rangers (23) have dressed more.
-- What a difference a year makes in terms of starts for the
Capitals. Last year the Caps were 1-4-0 in their first five games and had to
come back from three goals down to win in a shootout for their lone win. They
were outscored, 20-12, and had a penalty kill of just 78.9 percent. Through
five games this season the Caps are 3-0-2, outscored their opponents by an 18-9
margin, and have a penalty kill of 90.0 percent.
-- Starting well has been a theme for the Caps. They scored
the first goal in four of their first five games and took a lead into the first
intermission three times (tied once). The Caps are the last team in the Eastern
Conference without a loss in regulation time and one of only three in the
league going into Tuesday’s games (Nashville and Chicago are the others).
-- Seventeen of the 20 skaters to dress for the Caps have
points through five games. Defenseman Nate Schmidt is the only player to have
appeared in more than two of those games without recording a point (but he is a
plus-3, tied for second on the team).
-- Of 23 goalies thus far appearing in four or more games
(going into Thursday’s games), Braden Holtby is one of five with a
goals-against average under 2.00 (1.85) and a save percentage above .930
(.932). Jimmy Howard (1.72/.934), Pekka Rinne (1.22/.948), Jonathan Quick
(1.86/.951) and Frederik Andersen (1.38/.950) are the others.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Edmonton: Taylor Hall
It seems like a long time ago that Taylor Hall was drafted
first overall by the Edmonton Oilers. It was only just in 2010 that it took
place, though. Four years since his selection, his skill is not in question. He
is third in his draft class in goals (96, one behind both Tyler Seguin and Jeff
Skinner), first in total points (231, 18 more than Seguin and 46 more than
Skinner). He was the first of three consecutive number one overall draft picks
for the Oilers (Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Nail Yakupov being those next in line)
and one of six straight top ten draft picks (and counting). By virtue of being
the longest tenured in this chain (Marcus Paajaarvi, drafted 10th overall in
2009, is no longer with the Oilers), Hall is almost by default the go-to guy
for ensuring success. He has not disappointed early. His four goals and six
points lead the team, but unfortunately he has not led it very far, either
early this season or over his four previous seasons with the club. At 22 (he
will turn 23 in early November) the clock is not yet ticking on his career, but
he is one of a collection of very skilled young forwards who have been unable
to translate that skill into wins on the ice. He has faced the Caps only twice
with a scoring line of 1-0-1, minus-3).
Washington: Jason Chimera
It’s back home for Jason Chimera, a native of Edmonton, who
happened to be drafted by his hometown team in 1997 (5th round/121st overall).
He played in four seasons with the Oilers, appearing in 130 games before he was
traded to the Phoenix Coyotes in June 2004 in one of the busiest, if least
consequential deals in recent history (Chimera and a third round pick for a
second and a third round pick in 2004; of the three draft picks moved, only one
yielded a player who appeared in an NHL game: Liam Reddox). Of more recent
relevance, Chimera, with one goal in five games, is getting off to roughly the
same start he had last season (one goal in his first nine games), and the start
he had in 2012-2013 (one goal in his first 40 games), and the start he had in
2010-2011 (three goals in his first 35 games). He is not the fastest of
starters. Part of it is shooting; he has only nine shots on goal in five games.
It’s early, of course, which means this is not a cause for worry, but it would
be nice to see him breakout against the hometown team. In 20 career games
against the Oilers, Chimera is 3-7-10, plus-4.
In the end…
Going west is always an issue, it seems, for the Capitals.
Last spring’s successful California trip is the exception. The Caps are 2-8-0
in their last ten trips to Edmonton, although they have won two of their last
three contests at Rexall Place. The Oilers won their first game of the season
on Monday, a 3-2 win over highly-regarded Tampa Bay, so they cannot be
overlooked as the feckless group that went 0-4-1 in their first five games and
that was outscored, 24-11.
Ben Scrivens has been sharp in goal in his last two outings,
allowing only three goals on 53 shots (.943 save percentage) while splitting
two decisions. What he has not had is much experience against the Caps, and not
very effective experience, either. In two career appearances against Washington
he allowed seven goals on 63 shots (.889 save percentage) in 119 minutes, splitting
his two decisions. For the Caps, who going into Thursday’s games have the third
best scoring offense in the league, it will be a matter of reminding Scrivens
and the Oilers that their defense has been often as bleak as their winters. The
Caps have not scored more than four goals in Edmonton since taking a 6-5
decision on October 23, 1991. We’re thinking it’s about time.
Capitals 5 – Oilers 2
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