The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals take the ice for the last game
before Christmas when they visit the Carolina Hurricanes on Monday night. The Caps, fresh off two thrilling comeback
victories, will be looking to head into the five-day holiday break on an up
note by extending their winning streak to six games.
Offense has not been a problem for the Caps over the last
week, having scored 18 goals in their last four games. This will test their stamina, though, insofar
as it will be their fifth game over an eight day period.
The Hurricanes have been more or less treading water since
Thanksgiving, posting a record of 5-5-1 in 11 games since Turkey Day. Offense has not been a problem for the
Hurricanes in that stretch. They average
3.00 goals per game in those 11 contests, and their power play went 10-for-34
(29.4 percent). Defense, on the other
hand, gave it all back and then some. In
those last 11 games the Hurricanes have allowed an average of 3.36 goals per
game, and their penalty kill is just 23-for-30 (76.7 percent).
It would be hard to find a player hotter than Jeff Skinner
at the moment. In the 11 games played by
Carolina since Thanksgiving, Skinner is 9-2-11, plus-1, and has a pair of hat
tricks, one against the Anaheim Ducks on December 11th and another
against the Philadelphia Flyers on December 15th. Skinner, who despite being in his sixth NHL
season is still only 23 years old, is looking to rebound from a disappointing
2014-2015 season in which he had only 18 goals in 77 games. He has 14 in 33 games to lead Carolina. Skinner is 9-11-20, even, in 26 career games
against the Caps. Oh, and one tantrum…
Victor Rask had a nice rookie season for the Hurricanes in 2014-2015,
going 11-22-33 in 80 games. He is on a
pace to improve upon that this season.
Rask is 9-14-23 in 33 games so far this season, including a 3-7-10 run
in 11 games since Thanksgiving, second best on the club in total scoring. Rask’s improvement this season has come in
his shooting efficiency, which stands at 12.7 percent at the moment, well above
the 6.4 percent shooting with which he finished last year. He has also shown himself to be a reliable
power play contributor, second on the club with 11 power play points. He has a pair of assists in five career games
against Washington.
When both of your goalies are on the wrong side of .900 in
save percentage, your team is going to struggle. It is not as if Cam Ward and Eddie Lack are
facing a ton of shots, either. Carolina
has given up the fewest shots per game in the league (26.2), but there are there are Ward
(.899) and Lack (.876) struggling in net. Carolina is the
only team in the league having two goaltenders with more than 500 minutes of
ice time and save percentages under .900.
Among 47 goalies playing at least 500 minutes this season, Ward and Lack
rank 41st and 46th in save percentage, respectively. Ward is 16-14-4, 2.64, .917, with four
shutouts in 35 career appearances against the Caps, while Lack has one career
appearance against the Caps, allowing four goals on 21 shots in a 4-3 loss to
the Caps on March 14, 2014, while he was tending goal for the Vancouver
Canucks.
Here is how the teams compare overall:
1. Carolina certainly
has spread its scoring around lately.
Over their last 11 games, 21 different player share in the points,
including goalie Eddie Lack, who has a pair of assists. There are 16 different skaters recording
goals over the same span.
2. The Hurricanes don’t
do that whole “scoring first” thing very well.
They have scored first only 14 times; only six teams have done so fewer
times. Their winning percentage of .571
in those games (8-2-4) is third-worst in the league, ahead of only the Calgary
Flames (.556) and the Vancouver Canucks (.467).
3. While the
Hurricanes have a decent offense, they have difficulty getting
started in games (as evidenced by that “scoring first” thing). Their 17 goals scored in the first period is
third-fewest in the league, ahead of only the Buffalo Sabres and the
Philadelphia Flyers (14 apiece).
4. No team has been
cited fewer times for infractions of the rules than the Hurricanes. Carolina leads the league in fewest penalties
overall (98), fewest penalty minutes (216), and fewest penalty minutes per game
(6:32).
5. Carolina is a very
good possession team. They rank fifth
overall in Corsi-for at 5-on-5 (53.1), sixth in score-adjusted Corsi (52.4),
and seventh in close score situations (52.1; numbers from war-on-ice.com).
1. The Caps’ 7-3 win
over the New York Rangers on Sunday night was the third time in four games they
scored four or more goals and the 14th time this season that they
did so. The 14 games with four or more
goals ranks third in the league behind Dallas (17) and the Rangers (15). The Caps (14-0-0), Montreal Canadiens
(12-0-0), and the New York Islanders (11-0-0)are the only clubs with ten or
more games scoring four or more goals and a perfect record in doing so.
2. Washington took a
roundabout way in doing it, but they won their 17th game of the
season when scoring first when they beat the Rangers on Sunday night. The 17 wins ranks second in the league to the
Chicago Blackhawks, who have 18 wins when scoring first. The Caps’ .944 winning percentage (17-1-0) in
such games leads the league.
3. Washington has
five players with ten or more goals – Alex Ovechkin (17), T.J. Oshie (13),
Evgeny Kuznetsov (10), Nicklas Backstrom (10), and Justin Williams (10). No other team has as many.
4. The Caps have
three players with 20 or more assists – Backstrom (21), Kuznetsov (20), and
John Carlson (20). Only the Dallas Stars
and Ottawa Senators have as many.
5. The Caps’
possession struggles continue. The
Rangers out-attempted the Caps, 51-36, on Sunday night (41.4 percent
Corsi-for). The Caps are below 45
percent in four of their last five games and below 40 percent in two of them (numbers from war-on-ice.com).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Carolina: Jordan Staal
The next assist Jordan Staal records will be his 200th
in the NHL. He has been on a roll of
late to get himself into position to reach that milestone. Staal is 4-4-8 over his last 12 games and has
points in four of his last five contests.
It is quite an improvement over the 3-3-6 scoring line he posted over
his first 21 games this season. He still
has some work to do to get to the half-point per game player he was for the
Hurricanes in his first three seasons after arriving in Carolina from
Pittsburgh (95 points in 176 games).
Staal’s scoring this season has had the flavor of empty calories,
though. In 11 games in which he
registered a point, the Hurricanes are 7-3-1, a winning percentage ahead of
their overall pace, but not particularly impressive otherwise. Staal is 7-3-10, minus-5, in 34 career games
against Washington.
Washington: T.J.
Oshie
T.J. Oshie is hot as a pistol at the moment. Over his last four games he is 5-3-8 and is
shooting 62.5 percent (five goals on eight shots). He has settled in quite nicely as the
top-line right wing. There is an odd
statistic that attaches to Oshie, too.
Hits… he is third on the team in credited hits with 61, behind only Alex
Ovechkin (93) and Tom Wilson (91). With
the departure of Troy Brouwer and the injury to Brooks Orpik, the Caps are not
credited with hits with the frequency they might have otherwise, but it is
still an interesting number, given that Oshie is not the biggest player out
there (5’11”/189 pounds). Oshie is
2-5-7, even, in nine career games against Carolina.
In the end…
They say that only winning matters, and on one level that is
true. But winning as a habit is a
product of playing well, and the Caps have not done so as well as the five game
winning streak they bring into this game suggests. Carolina has the capacity, given their
ability to minimize shots and do well in possession numbers, to frustrate the
Caps in this last game before the holiday.
The Caps just have not been a very good possession team now for more
than a month. At some point one would expect
this to catch up with them, and that puts a premium on getting back to basics
and pinning teams in their own end of the ice.
If they can do that against the Hurricanes, the home team’s goaltending
issues come into play, and this could be a nice present to take into the
holiday break.
Capitals 4 – Hurricanes 2
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