Week 23 was not kind to the Washington Capitals. It extended a disconcerting trend, one of
alternating good and bad weeks. Since
Week 18, the Caps have alternated winning and losing weeks, Week 23 being the
second winless week in the last three.
It is not the sort of trend one would want to see as the season heads
into it final weeks.
Record: 0-2-0
Week 23 was the second week in the last three that the Caps
failed to secure a win. They are 11-9-0
since setting off on this on-again/off-again alternating weeks of good and bad
trip over the last six weeks. The Caps
have not beaten a playoff-eligible team since they took down the New York
Islanders in a Gimmick on February 21st. They have not beaten a playoff-eligible in
regulation or overtime since they beat Winnipeg, 5-1, on February 19th. You could say that the Caps haven’t played
very many playoff-eligible teams since that win over the Islanders – three teams
in nine games. True, but the Caps are
0-3-0 in those games and 3-6-0 overall in those nine games. Week 23 just added to the slump.
Offense: 1.50/game
(season: 2.90/game; rank: 7th)
It was a poor week at the offensive end of the ice for the
Caps, especially for the guys who have been here a while. Evgeny Kuznetsov led the team in scoring for
the short week, going 1-2-3 in the two games.
Curtis Glencross had one of the other two goals, while Andre Burakovsky
added an assist. That’s two rookies and the new guy from Calgary doing their
part. After that, Alex Ovechkin had a
goal but had his four-game goal scoring streak stopped against the Dallas Stars
to close the week. Joel Ward had a goal,
but otherwise the third line was not heard from. Troy Brouwer had an assists, and that was it
from the second line. It was not a good
week for the guys on offense.
Defense: 3.50/game (season: 2.44/game; rank: 7th)
One of the things that has become common to playing playoff-eligible
teams is the Caps being out-shot. When
the Rangers out-shot the Caps by a 31-29 margin on Wednesday, it was the fourth
straight game that Washington was out-shot by a playoff-eligible team. And, the two games in Week 23 in which the
Caps were outshot overall, It made it four games in five overall in which the
Caps were out-shot and six in seven in which they allowed 30 or more
shots. The only interruption in either
of those streaks was the Caps out-shooting the woeful Buffalo Sabres, 45-17, on
March 7th.
Illness and injury threw the Caps’ defensive pairs into
turmoil, forcing the team to mix up the first pair (with Brooks Orpik out) and
the third pair (with Mike Green out) for the game against the Rangers to start
the week. Green returned for the game
against the Stars, but there were still after-shocks. As it was, John Carlson, who was paired with
Nate Schmidt in place of Orpik at even strength and with Tim Gleason on the penalty kill, ended up being on ice for five of the seven
goals scored against the Caps in Week 23.
Possession was an odd thing, not all that surprising in a
week of light work where variations can be magnified in small populations of
games. The Caps had a 53.1 percent
Corsi-for at 5-on-5 overall, a product of out-attempting the Rangers, 52-34, at
5-on-5 in the game to open the week. In
close score situations, that Corsi-for number was a lot different: 38.6
percent. What accounts for the
difference? The Caps out-attempted the
Rangers, 31-7, at 5-on-5 overall in the third period of their 3-1 loss, which
does not show up in the “close score”
number.
Goaltending: 3.56 / .887 (season: 2.38 / .917 / 7 shutouts)
The news this week in this category boils down to a single
number: 33:54. That was the ice time
logged by Braden Holtby against the Dallas Stars before he was relieved by
Justin Peters, having allowed four goals on 22 shots in the Caps’ 4-1
loss. It was the first game that Braden
Holtby was pulled early after starting the game since he was relieved after
giving up three goals on seven shots in 9:34 of work in a 6-5 loss to the San
Jose Sharks on October 14th. He had gone
55 consecutive starts without being relieved (he relieved Justin Peters for a
period in a 6-2 loss to Toronto last November 29th).
Holtby has been slipping lately. Since winning three in a row and allowing
just four goals on 85 shots in mid-February, he is 3-6-0, 2.63, .913, with one
shutout (two of the wins came against the imploding Maple Leafs and the ghastly
Sabres). If it is a slump, that is one
thing. Slumps have two phases – a downward
one and then an upward one when one emerges from it. If it is his workload showing, that might be
a different matter.
Justin Peters got mop-up duty against the Stars, his first
work in almost a month. He stopped all
nine shots he faced in almost 24 minutes of work, the third straight appearance
in which he stopped at least 90 percent of the shots he faced (.915 save percentage
overall) after having a string of five straight appearances in which he failed
to meet that 90 percent standard.
Power Play: 1-for-6 / 16.7 percent (season: 24.6 percent;
rank: 2nd)
The Caps came into the week on a power play tear, going
6-for-10 over their previous six games dating back to the third period of their
4-3 loss to Pittsburgh on February 25th. The Caps made it 7-for-11 when they scored on
their first power play of Week 23 in the 3-1 loss to the Rangers. That would do it for the week on the man
advantage, though.
The Caps wrapped up the week shooting blanks on their last
five power plays. Overall they finished
with one goal on six power plays, converting that single goal on ten shots in
10:25 of power play ice time. The
efficiency for the week, and the week itself, might have been less
disappointing if not for a single one of those shots. On a 5-on-3 power play against the Rangers,
with New York holding a 2-1 lead, Nicklas Backstrom took a nifty
through-the-top-of-the-crease feed from Joel Ward and had an open short side at
which to shoot. His wrister was gloved
down by Ranger goalie Cam Talbot, and the threat passed, the Caps’ best chance
to make it a game.
Penalty Killing: 6-for-9 / 66.7 percent (season: 81.0
percent; rank: 16th)
It started well enough for the Caps killing penalties in
Week 23. They we perfect in three
shorthanded situations against the Rangers.
It fell apart against the Dallas Stars.
The Stars scored on their first power play, scored on the front half of
a double minor penalty to Joel Ward, then scored on what was their fourth power play 14 minutes into the second
period, taking a 4-1 lead and ending the competitive portion of the game.
Part of the problem against the Stars was luck (the first
power play goal was a deflection off Curtis Glencross’ skate), poor positioning
(Tyler Seguin could have written an opera with the time he had to set up to
take a slap shot from the left wing circle), and fate (the Stars scored on a
2-on-1 rush after Eric Fehr shot wide on a good shorthanded scoring chance).
As it was, the Caps allowed three goals on 13 shots in 15:37
in shorthanded ice time. It was not as
much an inefficient week (shots per minute of shorthanded ice time) as
ineffectiveness that might have been a product of unfamiliarity. John Carlson and Tim Gleason were a pair
victimized twice by Dallas extra-man goals.
Even Strength Goals for/Goals Against: 2-4 / minus-2
(season, 5-on-5 goals for/goals against ratio: 1.08; rank: 13th)
It was not the what, but the when. Four even strength goals allowed is not an
awful week, but allowing three of them to the Rangers in the first game of the
week, while getting none of their own, sank the Caps in the first game in the
week. And, allowing just one was not
enough in the second game of the week when the penalty kill was being shredded.
At the other end, Curtis Glencross and Evgeny Kuznetsov
scored the only even-strength goals for the Caps in Week 23. Kuznetsov’s was technically an even strength
goal, although it was scored with the Caps’ net empty for a sixth attacker late
in the 4-2 loss to Dallas. It was hardly
a surprising result, give that the Caps were out-shot by a 35-19 margin in the first
and second periods of the two games for the week (only one even strength shot
from Alex Ovechkin in the first two periods of the two games). That kind of anemic production at evens did
as much as anything to ruin the week for Washington.
Faceoffs:73-130 / 56.2 percent (season: 51.6% / rank: 9th)
Well, there was one good thing about the week, and it was
largely wasted. The Caps dominated
faceoffs in all three zones. It was
largely due to Eric Fehr, who had a monster week in the circle, if a meek one
(no points) in the two games this week.
Fehr was 22-for-29 overall (75.9 percent) and was well over 50 percent
in each of the three zones – 70.0 percent in the offensive zone, 66.7 percent
in the defensive zone, and 90.0 percent in the neutral zone.
Nicklas Backstrom had what for him was an off week. He managed only 16 wins in 37 faceoffs,
coming out on the losing end in each of the three zones (44.4/42.9/42.9 in the
offensive, defensive, and neutral zones, respectively).
Goals by Period:
The Caps took it in the teeth in the first and second
periods of games for the week. They took
a 2-1 deficit to the locker room at the first intermission of both games. The Caps being a team that entered the week
with a 2-9-4 record when trailing after one period, that was not a good sign in
either game.
The Caps could not make up for it in the third period,
recording only a late extra-attacker goal in the 4-2 loss to Dallas. It was another example of a thin week on
offense for the Caps.
In the end…
Do you remember those B-movie adventure flicks when some
poor unsuspecting soul would wander into a pool of quicksand and be slowly,
inexorably sucked into its pit?
The Caps have that look at the moment (minus the shrieking). They are not awful, but they are slowly slipping in the standings, making things a lot more suspenseful than fans would like.
The Caps have that look at the moment (minus the shrieking). They are not awful, but they are slowly slipping in the standings, making things a lot more suspenseful than fans would like.
The schedule to close the season does the Caps no favors,
either. Six of the Caps’ last 13 games
are at home, and the schedule is sprinkled with teams that are currently playoff
eligible or closing on the Caps for that position: Boston twice, the New York
Rangers twice, Minnesota, Winnipeg, Nashville, Montreal, Detroit, and
Ottawa. If the Caps continue as there
are, there is still time for them to sink under the quicksand.
Three Stars:
- First Star: Evgeny Kuznetsov (1-2-3, even, nine shots on goal, 11 shot attempts, five hits)
- Second Star: Alex Ovechkin (1-1-2, seven shots on goal, 21 shot attempts, ten hits)
- Third Star: Justin Peters (9-for-9/1.000 save percentage in 23:56)
The stars were a bit dimmer this week…
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