The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals enter the post-trading deadline home stretch of the season on Tuesday night when they visit the Columbus Blue Jackets at Nationwide Arena. The Caps will be looking to build on their 4-0 win over the Toronto Maple Leafs on Sunday, while the Blue Jackets will be checking another game off the calendar of what has become something of a lost season.
The Washington Capitals enter the post-trading deadline home stretch of the season on Tuesday night when they visit the Columbus Blue Jackets at Nationwide Arena. The Caps will be looking to build on their 4-0 win over the Toronto Maple Leafs on Sunday, while the Blue Jackets will be checking another game off the calendar of what has become something of a lost season.
The Caps have lost three straight games against Metropolitan
Division opponents, but have a 2-1-1 record against the Blue Jackets this season. This contest will wrap up the season series
between the two teams.
Columbus (26-32-4) comes into the game in free fall, having
lost six in a row (0-5-1), scoring just 11 goals over those six games while
allowing 22. It is a far cry from last
season at this time, when the Blue Jackets were 32-25-5 after 62 games and tied
for third in the Metropolitan Division with the New York Rangers.
The Blue Jackets might have equaled that mark of last season
had they won instead of lost those last six games. Scoring has been an issue. The 11 goals have been spread among nine players,
Nick Foligno and Marko Dano the only Blue Jackets with two goals in the
six-game losing streak. Foligno, one of
two Blue Jackets named to the 2015 All Star Game roster, has had a rather
consistent season. His 24 goals in 60
games leads the team, and he has six in 16 games since the All Star break. He is 4-3-7 in four games against the Caps
this season and is 6-10-16 in 22 career games against Washington.
Dano was a 27th overall pick of the Blue Jackets
in the 2013 entry draft who has split time between Columbus and the Springfield
Falcons of the AHL. With Springfield he
was 10-8-18 in 37 games. He has spent
two separate stints with the parent club this season and is 3-3-6 in 16 games
overall. He has not yet faced the
Capitals in his brief career to date.
Columbus was active in the run up to and on trade deadline
day, moving defensemen James Wisniewski and Jordan Leopold, injured forward
Nathan Horton, and a third round draft pick in separate deals for Rene Bourque,
William Karlsson, David Clarkson, Justin Falk, and a pair of draft picks. Clarkson will be looking for a new start
after a two disappointing seasons in his hometown of Toronto. In 118 games with the Maple Leafs over those
two seasons he had just 15 goals, only one of them in his last 25 games with
Toronto. He will be trying to regain the
scoring touch that allowed him to record 45 goals in 128 games over his last
two seasons in New Jersey before signing a seven-year, $36.75 million deal with
Toronto. Clarkson has yet to light the
lamp in two games with his new club. He
is 5-3-8 in 27 career games against the Capitals.
Here is how the teams stack up against each other overall:
1. Columbus has a
fairly efficient power play at home this season (21.9 percent/8th in
the league), but they do not get to unleash it as often as they might
like. Only six teams have had fewer
power plays on home ice than the Blue Jackets (96).
2. On the other hand,
Columbus probably spends too much time on the other side of the special team
divide on home ice. Only five teams have
been shorthanded at home more often than Columbus (104).
3. The Blue Jackets
tend not to finish games well. The 70
goals they have allowed in the third period this season is the fourth-highest
total in the league. Perhaps it
contributes to their 27th-ranked 1-25-1 record when trailing after
two periods. No team has earned points
in fewer games when trailing after 40 minutes (tied with Buffalo with two such
games).
4. Columbus has the
third-highest average penalty minutes per game (11.6) in the league, surpassed
only by Winnipeg (14.0) and Pittsburgh (14.3).
5. As one might
expect for a struggling team, Columbus is having a rough time of it in their
possession numbers. They rank 26th
overall in Corsi-for percentage at 5-on-5 (46.7) and 25th in
Fenwick-for percentage (46.8). The Blue
Jackets are worse in close score situations – 27th in Corsi-for
percentage (45.5) and 27th in Fenwick-for percentage (45.7; all numbers from war-on-ice.com).
1. Last season the
Caps took nine bench minor penalties, a small indicator of a lack of attention
to details. This season they have only
four bench minors. Only four teams have
fewer (Columbus, San Jose, Nashville, and Edmonton).
2. Three 5-on-3 power
play goals might not sound like a lot, but that number for the Caps ranks
fourth in the league, behind only Pittsburgh, Colorado, and the New York
Islanders. They have allowed only one
such goal; only five teams have allowed fewer (Nashville, Boston, Ottawa, San
Jose, and Arizona).
3. The Caps lead the
league in road hits, and not by a small margin.
Their 983 hits away from Verizon Center is 29 more than the Winnipeg
Jets (954).
4. The Caps are ten
points ahead of their 2013-2014 pace after 64 games. Last season they were 29-25-10 at the 64-game
mark; this season they are 34-20-10.
5. The Caps rank 11th
overall in Corsi-for percentage at 5-on-5 in road games (49.7), 11th
in Fenwick-for percentage (49.6). In
close score situations they rank 12th in Corsi-for percentage (49.4)
and ninth in Fenwick-for percentage (49.7; all numbers from war-on-ice.com).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Columbus: Sergei Bobrovsky
The Columbus Blue Jackets lead the NHL in man-games lost to
injury (392 as of February 28th).
None of the missed games have been more important to the Blue Jackets’
fortunes this season than the 17 missed by Sergei Bobrovsky since he suffered a
groin injury against the Winnipeg Jets on January 21st. Columbus was struggling even with Bobrovsky
in the lineup, but in his absence the Blue Jackets have gone 6-10-1 and have
sunk to 13th in the Eastern Conference while allowing 53 goals in
those 17 games. Bobrovsky had been having
a very uneven season leading up to his injury, having allowed one or fewer
goals eight times in 33 appearances, but allowing four or more ten times. He could return against the Caps, against
whom he is 4-1-3, 3.06, .908 in nine career appearances.
Washington: Curtis Glencross
Washington needed a scoring line winger; they traded a pair
of draft picks to Calgary for Curtis Glencross.
Are those two facts related? As
the saying goes, “time will tell.” What
we do know is that Glencross has been a reasonably reliable 20 goals-per-year
sort of player (he averages 22 goals per 82 games over almost 500 NHL
games). He has done so as an efficient
sort of shooter, bringing a career 14.5 percent shooting rate to Washington
over his career. Since his first full
season in 2007-2008 he ranks 20th among forwards in shooting
percentage (minimum: 250 games played).
While his percentage slipped this season (10.3 percent through 53
games), it is something that argues for his being tested on a scoring line for
his new club. He is 6-6-12, minus-3, in
23 career games against Columbus.
In the end…
Winning in Columbus has been a challenge for the Caps. They split two games at Nationwide Arena this
season, winning a 5-4 overtime decision on December 18th and losing,
4-3, on January 27th.
Washington has not won in regulation in Ohio since they took a 4-2
decision on New Year’s Eve 2011. They are
3-4-1 in their last eight games in Columbus.
The Blue Jackets are a team in rapid decline this season, though. In their six-game losing streak, five of the
losses have been by more than one goal. Even
the potential return of Sergei Bobrovsky in goal is unlikely to turn things
around for a club that is looking toward next season. This is another case, as was Toronto on
Sunday, of a team that the Caps need to deal with expeditiously and move on.
Capitals 4 – Blue Jackets 1
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