The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
Basking in the limelight of a shutout of the defending
Stanley Cup champion Los Angeles Kings on Tuesday night is over for the Washington Capitals as
they had to Ottawa to face the Senators at Canadian Tire Centre.
The Caps are looking to break a five-game road losing streak
(0-3-2), all of the losses being of the one-goal variety. Meanwhile, the Senators, who have been
bouncing between a game under and a game over .500 for more than two months,
try once more to get one-game over .500 when they host the Caps.
While the Caps have been having their recent struggles on
the road, Ottawa is alternating wins and losses at home (3-3-0), serving as a
reflection of their lowly standing after 49 games (sixth in the Atlantic
Division, 11th in the Eastern Conference with a 20-20-9 record. And, while the Caps’ road games of late
feature one-goal decisions, games have been settled in emphatic fashion in the
Canadian capital. Three of the games
were decided by three or more goals (a 2-1-0 record).
Ottawa outscored their opponents 22-19 in their six home
games so far this calendar year. Eleven
players share in the 22 goals, led by Erik Karlsson and Mika Zibanejad with
four apiece. Karlsson has been a
reasonably consistent scorer this season, recording points in 29 of his 49
games and ranking sixth overall in points among defensemen this season
(12-23-35). He has five points in his
last five contests overall (4-1-5), but what jumps out about his game recently
is his propensity to take penalties.
After recording only ten penalty minutes over his first 36 games,
Karlsson has 20 penalty minutes in his last 13 games and has taken at least one
penalty in eight of those 13 games. In
16 career games against the Caps, Karlsson is 2-12-14, plus-1).
Zibandjad has not been nearly as consistent this season as
Karlsson, but he does seem to be warming up of late. He started the season with only three points
(2-1-3) in his first 15 games befor peeling off 14 points in his next 15
contests (7-7-14). Of late, Zibanejad is
4-4-8 in his last nine games and had a four-game points streak stopped in his
last contest, a 2-1 loss to the New Jersey Devils. He is 2-1-3 in eight career meetings with the
Capitals.
Craig Anderson is the second-winningest goaltender in
Senators franchise history (94, 52 wins behind Patrick Lalime). His .921 save percentage is best in franchise
history (minimum: 50 games), his goals-against average of 2.57 is fourth, and
his 15 shutouts is second in Ottawa franchise history. He had been humming along, not allowing more
than three goals in 13 consecutive appearances, then he decided to play “Top Chef” and accidentally cut his right hand. He is out indefinitely.
That would appear to leave the goaltending duties up to
Robin Lehner. Since Anderson’s
adventures in the kitchen, Lehner has three appearances over which he is 1-2-0,
2.69, .916. Respectable numbers under
the circumstances and consistent with his career numbers (80 games, 28-33-12,
2.89, .914, 2 shutouts), but not great. Lehner
allowed two goals each of his last two appearances, which is quite an
improvement over his season before that.
After going 3-0-1 in his first four decisions and working to a 2.10
goals against average and .939 save percentage, he went into a prolonged
funk. Over his next 13 appearances he
was 3-8-1 (one no-decision), 3.69, .885.
Perhaps having been thrust into the number one role for the time being
will improve Lehner’s focus, but his season to date is uneven. Washington is the only team in the league he
has never faced.
Here is how the teams’ numbers compare overall:
1. Ottawa certainly
is a middle of the road team… 2.74 goals per game scored, 2.74 goals per game
allowed, 91 goals scored at 5-on-5, 91 goals allowed at 5-on-5, 29 power play
goals scored on 173 chances, 30 power play goals allowed on 176 chances. Ottawa plays as “even” as a team can almost
50 games into their season.
2. Underneath, Ottawa
has more success in blowout decisions (7-4 in decisions of three or more goals)
than they do in any other scenario (13-16-9).
3. The Senators have
the worst winning percentage in the league when scoring the game’s first goal
(.393/11-10-7) and the league’s second-worst winning percentage when leading at
the first intermission (.533/8-5-2), but they have the ninth-best winning
percentage when trailing first (.429/9-10-2) and the second-best winning
percentage when trailing after 20 minutes (.500/6-5-1). Go figure.
4. Ottawa struggles
with that whole “rules” thing. They have
the fifth-highest average penalty minutes per game in the league, the
seventh-highest number of minor penalties taken, and the fifth-highest number
of shorthanded situations faced. The
Caps’ power play might be drooling at the prospects.
5. Ottawa also
struggles in possession. Starting at the
top, the Senators have allowed the fifth-highest number of shots on goal per
game. Their Corsi-for percentage at
5-on-5 is certainly respectable (49.6, 19th in the league), but they
are relying too much on goaltending, given their shots differential, to keep
things close (minus-4 goal differential at 5-on-5, .926 save percentage at
5-on-5, numbers from war-on-ice.com).
1. Eighteen different Capitals have had multi-point games
this season, led by Alex Ovechkin and Nicklas Backstrom who have done it 17
times, apiece. Last season, 19 Caps had
multi-point games with Ovechkin and Backstrom accomplishing the feat 21 times
apiece. Since Backstrom came into the league in 2007-2008, he has the sixth highest number of multi-point games (151, tied with Joe Thornton). Curiously enough, the leader in multi-point games since Backstrom came into the league is Ovechkin (193).
2. Despite having
played the tenth-most number of road games this season, Washington has the
sixth-fewest number of power play opportunities.
3. Only Winnipeg
(849) and the New York Islanders (771) have been credited with more hits on the
road than have the Caps (745).
4. The Caps have the
third best net goal plus-minus on the road this season (plus-11), behind only
the New York Rangers (plus-12) and the Nashville Predators (plus-17).
5. Although he’s not
here any longer, it might interest you to know that Liam O’Brien is still the
forward with the most games played (13) without being on ice for a goal scored
against.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Ottawa: Mike Hoffman
If one were asked which Senator led the team in goals and
plus-minus, Mike Hoffman might not be the first name that comes to mind. Hoffman is that player, though (17 goals
plus-18). He has had quite a first full
season in the NHL. It is not a product of
a hot start (1-1-2 in his first eight games), and it is not a product of
scoring in bunches. He has been
consistent in his contributions over his last 38 games (goals in 13 of them,
points in 21). And here is an odd fact
about him. That plus-18, which is tied
for ninth among all forwards in the NHL, is a product of what happens in the
defensive end. Of 280 forwards having
played in at least 40 games so far, only 34 have been on ice for fewer goals
against than Hoffman (21 goals). If he
is out there, and the Caps score, write it down. This will be only his second career game
against the Caps, and he will be looking for his first point against them.
Washington: John Carlson
John Carlson might be regarded by some as “The Other Carlson
(Karlsson)” in this game, but so far this season his numbers compare favorably
with the former (2012) Norris Trophy winner.
Each has 35 points this season (Carlson: 5-30-35; Karlsson:
12-23-35). Karlsson has more power play
points (16 to 7), but Carlson has more even strength points (28 to 19). Karlsson averages more ice time (27:02 to
23:16), but Carlson skates more shifts per game (28.7 to 27.2). Karlsson gets more power play ice time (4:41
to 1:26), but Carlson gets more shorthanded ice time (3:09 to 0:38). “Other” is not an adjective one should use to
describe John Carlson these days. He is
4-4-8 in 17 career games against the Senators.
In the end…
The Capitals just dispatched an opponent – the Los Angeles
Kings – against which they had lost their previous seven games. Now they take on an opponent who has been
just as troublesome. Before beating the
Senators by a 2-1 margin on December 22nd, the Caps had lost seven straight
games to Ottawa (0-6-1). What has
characterized all of the last eight games against Ottawa is the Caps’ inability
to score. They have a total of 12 goals
in those eight games and recorded more than two only once, a 6-4 loss to Ottawa
in November 2013.
The Caps will have advantages in this game. They are coming off arguably their most
complete effort of the season against a stout (if struggling) opponent, they
are a decent road team (tied for third in road wins in the Metropolitan
Division), and they are facing a goaltender who has no live book on the
Caps. On the other hand, there is the “trap”
element to consider. This is the first
of a back-to-back set of games, and tomorrow’s game is against the Anaheim
Ducks, a team tied for the most wins in the league and coached by former Caps’
bench boss Bruce Boudreau. Peeking ahead
is a concern here. Nevertheless, the
Caps might finally break the spell the Ottawa Senators have over them as far as
scoring goes.
Capitals 5 – Senators 2
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