The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
This week it is “Westward, ho!” for the Washington Capitals
as they head to the Golden State for three games. First up is a visit to San Jose, where the
Caps hope to build on the one-in-a-row winning streak against the Sharks at the
SAP Center at San Jose.
The idea of “one-in-a-row” is hardly insignificant for the
Caps, who before beating the Sharks in a 3-2 trick shot decision last March had
gone winless in 12 straight games dating back to December 1995 (11 losses and
one tie). The arena had as many names
(three: San Jose Arena, Compaq Center, HP Pavilion) as the Caps did in San Jose, all-time, before the win last March. As it
is, the Caps have not won a game in the hockey portion of the contest
(regulation or overtime) in San Jose since October 30, 1993, when Keith Jones, Mike Ridley,
Peter Bondra, and Craig Berube scored goals, and Rick Tabaracci stopped 25 of
27 shots in a 4-2 win, the last of five straight wins overall for the Caps to open
their franchise series against San Jose. Since then, the Caps are 5-20-2
against the Sharks, with one tie. The
Caps have been little more than surfboarders on the Great Barrier Reef as great
white sharks feast on them.
February 2015 has not been kind to the Sharks, however. After wrapping up January with a three-game
winning streak to push them to a season-high ten games over .500, the Sharks
are 1-3-1 in February, exhibiting a leaky defense (17 goals allowed) in the
process. That leaky defense ends with
Antti Niemi in goal, who is 1-2-1, 2.96, .907, over those five games.
Those are not particularly bad numbers, but neither are they good. He has allowed four or more goals in three of
those four contests, all losses.
Niemi has been one of those goaltenders who is perfectly
capable of doing his job well, if not at an elite level. For example, since the 2009-2010 season, when
Niemi played in 39 games in his first full season with the NHL (with Chicago),
35 goaltenders have appeared in at least 150 games (Niemi has appeared in
317). In that group, Niemi ranks tenth
in goals-against average (2.37), but he ranks smack in the middle – 17th – in
save percentage (.916). That he should
rank third in wins (180, behind only Henrik Lundqvist with 192 and Marc-Andre
Fleury with 202) speaks to a certain amount of good fortune in having played for
teams that surrounded him with talent, as was the case in that 2009-2010 season
when he and the Blackhawks won a Stanley Cup.
Not that this has hurt his history against the Caps. Niemi has not lost to the Caps in regulation
time in seven career appearances (5-0-2, 2.19, .922, 1 shutout).
At the other end, Joe Pavelski leads the Sharks in scoring
for February, both in goals and total points (3-2-5). A guy who suffers something of a “west coast
curse” when it comes to getting credit, Pavelski has become a very reliable
goal scorer. He has 116 goals over his
last four seasons spanning 267 games, a 36-goal pace per 82 games. And, he is durable, not having missed a game
in those four seasons. His 15 power play
goals is tied for the league lead (with Alex Ovechkin), and his 22 power play
points is tied for fifth in the league.
He is 6-4-10, plus-4, in ten career games against the Caps.
Brent Burns is the only defenseman to have played in all 55
games for the Sharks this season. He
leads the blue line in scoring in February (1-3-4) and is tied for third
overall in league scoring by defensemen (12-28-40). He has been alternating games with and
without points over his last eight contests, so if the pattern holds it will be
good news for Caps fans. He is 2-4-6,
even, in nine career games against Washington.
Here is how the teams compare overall…
1. San Jose has won
486 games over the last ten-plus seasons.
Their per-82 game season record over that span is 48-24-10. Only the Detroit Red Wings have won more
games (494). And here is the odd
thing. For all the ink spent on
documenting the Sharks’ woes in the post season, only Boston (60) and Detroit
(70) have won more playoff games over that span of time (58, tied with
Pittsburgh).
2. Games involving
the Sharks tend to be a bit one-sided.
San Jose has only 24 one-goal decisions in 55 games (tied for
ninth-fewest in the league). Their
record in such games is not especially successful (11-6-7, 20th in winning
percentage). They are somewhat better in
games decided by more than one goal (17-14).
3. Don’t bet on
shutout for either team. San Jose is tied for the sixth fewest number of times
shut out this season (twice), the same as the Caps, and have not been blanked
since dropping a 2-0 decision to Calgary on November 26th.
4. San Jose is not
the most effective team at 5-on-5. Their
0.93 ratio of goals scored to goals allowed is 24th in the league, and that
would appear to be a product of what is happening at the defensive end of the
ice. Only six teams have allowed more
than the 106 5-on-5 goals allowed by the Sharks.
5. The Sharks make up
for a certain 5-on-5 defensive deficiency by avoiding shorthanded situations,
especially at home. Only four teams have been shorthanded fewer times than the
Sharks this season (71 in 28 home games).
1. The 71 shorthanded
opportunities faced by the Sharks at home this season has a nice symmetry with
the Caps’ power play opportunities on the road – 71 in 27 games, fourth-fewest
in the league.
2. Only Dallas has
more second period goals scored (71) than the Caps (59, tied with Toronto).
Only five teams have allowed fewer second period goals than the Caps (35).
3. The Caps have
three losses in extra time when leading after two periods. Only Edmont (4), Winnipeg (5), and New Jersey
(6) have more. Only Colorado (9) has
more losses in extra time when trailing first than the Caps (6).
4. Your weird
shootout fact. The Caps have taken the
fourth highest number of shots in the shootout on the road so far this season
(20). They all came in one game, that
against the Florida Panthers in a 2-1 loss on December 16th.
5. Washington is one
of three teams to have two defensemen with more than 30 points (Joh Carlson:
36; Mike Green: 32). Calgary (Mark
Giordano and T.J. Brodie) and Nashville (Roman Josi and Shea Weber) are the
others.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
San Jose: Joe Thornton
Sometimes it just seems Joe Thornton has been forgotten when
it comes to discussions about elite players, especially since the 2005-2006
lockout. However, only Jaromir Jagr has
more assists (1,068) among active players than Thornton (886), and only Jagr
has more points (1,784) than Thornton (1,239).
Thornton is 13th among active players in goals scored (353). Although he is in his fifth straight season
averaging less than one point per game, he is still in the top-20 in points per game over those four-plus seasons overall (0.90/game; 19th, minimum 200 games). He does not seem to be slowing down much at
age 35. He comes into this game 4-19-23
in his last 22 games. In 38 career games
against the Capitals, Thornton is 12-26-38, plus-9, and he has been effective
on the power play (6-10-16 in those 38 games).
Washington: Joel Ward
Back on December 9th, Joel Ward recorded an assist against
the Tampa Bay Lightning in a 5-3 win. It
marked consecutive games with points for Ward and a 9-7-16, plus-2 start to his
season over 27 games. Since then, Ward
is 2-3-5, minus-1 over his last 27 games.
Getting Ward to contribute some more in the offensive end would go a
long way toward clinching a playoff sport for the Caps and perhaps finishing at
or near the top of the Metropolitan Division.
He does have four of his 11 goals against Pacific Division opponents,
though, three of them on the power play (three of those four goals came over
two games against Calgary, so Cheerless advised me not to make too much of
that, even as good as Calgary has been this year). It isn’t really for lack of shooting that the
goals have not been coming. He had nine
goals on 48 shots (18.8 percent) in his first 26 games, and he has two goals on
54 shots (3.7 percent) in his last 27 games.
One would like to think that the pendulum swings both ways, but one
would also like to see that pendulum swinging to the other side pretty soon for
Ward. He is 5-2-7, minus-3, in 16 career
games against San Jose.
In the end…
California has not been kind to the Caps over the last 20 years,
but the games are on the schedule, so you have to play them. And it’s not like any of the California teams
have an aura of invincibility about them.
The Caps have already beaten both the Los Angeles Kings and the Anaheim
Ducks this season (in the last eight days, although both games were at home),
and the Sharks have been beatable of late, losing their last three games on
home ice (to Edmonton, Carolina, and Calgary…go figure). Washington broke the jinx in SAP Center at
San Jose last year; now it’s time to take care of the streak in regulation
time.
Washington will need more offense than they have been able
to generate lately (12 goals in their last six games), which means more
contributions from players like Joel Ward, Brooks Laich (no goals in his last
15 games), Jason Chimera (two goals in his last 21 games), and even a Matt
Niskanen (no even strength goals this season).
As the Caps approach the last third of the season, getting everyone
rowing in the same direction is going to be important. Wednesday night would be a good time to
start.
Capitals 4 – Sharks 3
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