“In rivers, the water that you touch is the last of what has passed and the first of that which comes; so with present time.”
-- Leonardo da Vinci
When the 2014-2015 season dawned, Washington Capitals
forward Evgeny Kuznetsov was in the conversation of who might be among the Calder Trophy finalists as NHL rookie of the year come the spring.
Oddly enough, the focus of this attention was having little
of it, deflecting the very notion of it…
“Of course only once in your career do you have a chance to win it. But you have to realize that the Calder Trophy should be given to someone who is 18 years old, someone who is playing professionally for the first time. This is not my first year playing professionally. Again, if I am given the chance… As long as we keep winning as a team, it won’t be just me, but Andre Burakovsky will also have a chance to win it. As long as the team is winning, all individual trophies will come naturally.”
And frankly, he did not exactly give supporters a lot of
ammunition to support his candidacy early in the season. He recorded three assists in his first four
games of the season, but he scored just one goal of his own in his first 20
contests, after which he was 1-5-6, plus-2, and was riding a nine-game streak
without a point. He had as many penalty
minutes as points, and not particularly many of either.
His pace picked up over his next 13 games, but a 3-5-8,
plus-3, scoring line was not going to make anyone forget Nashville’s Filip Forsberg
or Calgary’s Johnny Gaudreau, who at the time seemed to be measuring one
another for a dash to the Calder at year’s end.
Then he fell into another dry spell, going 11 games with just one assist
to his credit.
It was part of a season marked by streaks for Kuznetsov, but
he ended it with a flourish, going 5-8-13, plus-5, in his last 17 games. Despite averaging a little over 13 minutes of
ice time per game, 26th overall among rookies appearing in at least half of
their teams’ respective games, Kuznetsov finished:
- Tied for 11th in goals (11)
- 8th in assists (26)
- 9th in points (37)
- 13th in plus-minus (plus-10)
- Tied for 6th in power play goals (4)
- Tied for 3rd in power play points (13)
- 9th in shots on goal (127)
- Tied for 11th in takeaways (32)
- 1st in shootout goals scored (5)
- 2nd in shootout attempts converted (55.6 percent, minimum: 5 attempts)
- Tied for 9th in points/60 minutes (2.08)
- 6th in primary assists (17)
Fearless’ Take:
Kuznetsov and Trotz had something of a feeling-out period. The player was spoon-fed ice time, logging
fewer than ten minutes in seven of his first 20 games of the season. Ice time turned out to matter for Kuznetsov,
who did not record a point in any game in which he skated less than ten
minutes. However, in 21 games in which
he skated more than 15 minutes he was 5-12-17, plus-9. That would appear to be a reflection of
deployment – skating fourth line minutes versus second line minutes (and second
power play unit minutes).
Cheerless’ Take: Four (twice), seven, nine (twice). Those were the game-streaks Kuznetsov had
this season of four games or longer. In
all, he didn’t record a point in 48 of his 80 games (Compare that to 34 games in
80 for Johnny Gaudreau and 37 in 82 for Filip Forsberg, to cite two other
rookies of note).
Odd Kuznetsov Fact:
The team was streaky with respect to Kuznetsov, too, especially late in
the campaign. Over the last 17 games in
which Kuznetsov scored a point, from January 28th through the end of the
season, the Caps won four in a row, lost five in a row, then won seven of their
last eight contests.
Game to Remember: November 28th versus New York
Islanders. Over his first 20 games,
Evgeny Kuznetsov averaged a shade over 11 minutes a game, only three times
getting the call for more than 15 minutes in a contest. And, he was without a point in nine straight
games going into the Caps’ November 28th matchup against the Islanders at
Verizon Center with just two modest three-game point streaks on his resume to
date.
His season might have turned around mid-way through the
first period. Manning the Nicklas
Backstrom position along the right wing wall with the second power play unit,
Kuznetsov kept the puck on a string, just out of reach of Islander defenders,
first up, then down the wall. As he was
inching his way back down the wall, he backhanded a pass under the stick of the
Isles’ Frans Nielsen and into the wheelhouse of Matt Niskanen, who one-timed a
shot that was redirected by Andre Burakovsky past goalie Chad Johnson to give
the Caps a 1-0 lead. Then, with the Caps
holding a one-goal lead in the third period, it was Kuznetsov’s turn to finish
a play. It was only fair, since he
started it by intercepting an attempt to clear the zone by the Islanders.
Kuznetsov fed Troy Brouwer, whose shot was blocked Travis Hamonic. Kuznetsov ran the puck down in the corner to
Johnson’s right, circled out, then faked a shot that Hamomic went down to
block. Kuznetsov curled the puck around
him to give him a better shooting angle and wristed the puck over Johnson’s
right shoulder inside the near post to give the Caps some breathing room in
what would be a 5-2 win.
Game to Forget: October 9th versus Montreal. It was Opening
Night on F Street, and after the previous spring in which Kuznetsov had three
goals and nine points in 17 games to wrap up the season, folks might have been
looking for him to get off to a good start in his first full season with the
Capitals. It would have been nice, but
then again, he would have had to have been on the ice for that to happen. Kuznetsov skated five first period shifts for
3:59 in ice time, and that would end up being the bulk of his ice time for the
evening. He skated a total of five
shifts over the last two periods of regulation and one shift in overtime
totaling 11 shifts in all and just 6:36 in ice time. Then, in the second round of the trick shot
phase, he shot wide on goalie Dustin Tokarski as the Habs went on to win the
shootout in five rounds and the game, 2-1.
It would be Kuznetsov’s lowest ice time total for a game this season.
Postseason: 5-2-7, plus 4, one game-winning/series-clinching
goal, 42 shots on goal
If there was one Capital who outperformed his regular season
in the postseason, it was Kuznetsov. He
tied Alex Ovechkin for the team lead in goals (5), was tied for fourth in
points (7), was tied for second in plus-minus (plus-4), and tied for the team
lead in multi-point games (2). It was
his goal that propelled the Caps past the New York Islanders and into the
second round:
As it is, here we are in the Stanley Cup finals, and
Kuznetsov still leads all rookie skaters in the playoffs in shots on goal (42),
goals (5), and plus-minus (plus-4).
In the end…
Kuznetsov will get his wish.
Someone else will win the Calder Trophy this season as the league’s top
rookie. That does not do much to
diminish Kuznetsov’s performance, of which it might be said that he was better
late than he was early in the season, and he might have been the Caps’ best
player in the postseason (or at least on a very short list). He is a much better player now than he was in
October, and there is every reason to expect that the player he is now will
pale in comparison to the one he will become next season and beyond.
Grade: A-
Photo: Bruce Bennett/Getty Images North America
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