The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
When last we saw the Washington Capitals and the
Philadelphia Flyers, the home team was celebrating a 3-2 overtime win over the
Capitals on a power play goal by Jakub Voracek.
The Capitals get to return the favor on Wednesday night before a
national television audience at Verizon Center as the Flyers make their first
visit of the season to 7th Street.
Philadelphia comes into this game on what for them, at least
this season, is a tear. The Flyers have
won three of their last four games, all at home, the fifth time this season
that the Flyers have won three of four games (they do not have a four-game
winning streak). The good fortune could
not have come at a better time. Before
their recent push, the Flyers lost five in a row (0-4-1) and were in danger of
dropping out of playoff consideration altogether.
As it is, Philadelphia is hanging by a thread to playoff
relevance. As they head to Washington,
the Flyers are 11 points behind the New York Rangers for fourth place in the
Metropolitan Division, and they are 11 points behind the Boston Bruins for
the second wild card spot. If 97 points
is what it takes to get a playoff spot (Boston’s current pace), the Flyers will
need 56 points in their last 39 games, a 118-point pace over an 82-game
season. It’s not impossible, but it
would not be the way to bet.
Even the Flyers’ recent three wins in four games has a bit
of a mirage quality to it. They defeated
Ottawa in a Gimmick, beat Washington on an overtime power play, then lost to
precisely the team they had to beat – Boston, by a 3-1 margin – before putting
together what might be their best performance of the season, a 7-3 win over the
Atlantic Division-leading Tampa Bay Lightning.
The win over Tampa Bay just made the strange run stranger in
that head coach Craig Berube started Rob Zepp in goal in what was just Zepp’s
second NHL appearance. Zepp, a former
fourth-round draft pick of the Carolina Hurricanes, has won both of his NHL
appearances without the benefit of saving as many as 90 percent of the shots he
faced in either game.
Until the Flyers lit up the Lightning for seven goals they
were having trouble lightning the lamp.
In five games leading up to that goal-fest, the Flyers managed to score
a total of eight goals, three of them against the Capitals. As it is, 15 goals in six games to start
2015, almost half of them in one game, is neither especially productive nor
efficient.
Three players – R.J. Umberger, Chris Vandevelde, and Voracek
– lead the team in 2015 scoring with two goals apiece. Voracek is the league’s leading scorer
(17-35-52), so his production hardly seems surprising. However, Umberger and Vandevelde have
combined for just 10 goals in 76 man-games between them.
Those on whom the Flyers depend more for goal scoring have
been largely absent in the new year.
Wayne Simmonds has 16 goals this season but only one in his last nine
contests. Claude Giroux has 14 goals for
the year, but he has only one in five games in the new year. Michael Raffl has 11 goals in 35 games
overall but only one in his last nine games, that coming in the barrage against
Tampa Bay on Monday.
Here is how the teams compare overall:
1. Slow starts are
rather common for the Flyers. Only 16
times in 43 games have they scored first, and their 11-4-3 is the 14th-best
winning percentage (.688) in the league.
It gets worse when they trail first.
Only three teams have more losses overall than the Flyers (17 losses in
regulation, four in extra time) when trailing first – Edmonton (23 losses) and
Buffalo (24). This is not the sort of
company a team with playoff aspiration wants to keep.
2. No team has
allowed more power play goals on the road than Philadelphia (25), and they have
the second worst penalty kill rate in the league on the road (68.0
percent). Only Buffalo (67.6 percent) is
worse.
3. Penalty killing is
killing the team in another respect. On
a period-by-period basis, the Flyers are not doing badly overall in goal
differential: minus-3 in the first period of games, minus-1 in the second
period, and minus-4 in the third period.
They also have scored more 5-on-5 goals (75) than they have allowed
(74). But while they have the third
highest number of power play goals scored overall (34), they have allowed more
than any other team (38).
4. Philadelphia is
one of two teams (Toronto is the other) with three players among the top dozen
in power play goals scored: Wayne Simmonds (tied for third with nine), Claude
Giroux (tied for sixth with eight), and Jakub Voracek (tied for 12th
with seven).
5. If it comes to a
Gimmick, Flyer goaltenders have the third worst save percentage in the league
(.583/14-for-24) and the sixth-worst shooting percentage (20.8/5-for-24)
1. The Caps have
displayed a consistency at a high-level on defense in at least one
respect. They are in the top-ten in
fewest goals allowed by each period: 29 goals against in the first period
(sixth-fewest) in the league), 36 goals in the second period (tenth), and 33 goals
in the third period (tied for eighth).
Unfortunately, only three teams (Edmonton, Colorado, and Dallas, all
with six) have allowed more goals in overtime than the Caps (5).
2. Washington has the
second-best winning percentage in the league in games decided by three or more
goals (.778/7-2). It seems it is harder
to blow out a Barry Trotz-coached team.
3. On the other hand,
only three teams (Calgary, Ottawa, and Tampa Bay) have been shut out fewer times
than the Caps, who have been blanked only once this season, that on November 14
by the Devils, 1-0.
4. John Carlson is
top-five among defensemen in assists (T-2nd/26), points (T-4th/31), and
plus-minus (T-6th/+15); and he has done it while ranking only 35th among defensemen
in average ice time per game (23:20).
5. Only St. Louis’
Vladimir Tarasenko (7) and Ottawa’s Mike Hoffman (6) have scored a game’s first
goal more times than has Alex Ovechkin (5).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Philadelphia: Ray Emery
With Steve Mason expected to miss two weeks to a lower body
injury, the question for the Flyers is who can they turn to in goal? Ray Emery did not do very well in relief of
Mason when he was injured against Boston – three goals allowed on 13 shots in a
3-1 loss – and he was left on the bench in favor of Rob Zepp against Tampa Bay
because head coach Craig Berube “liked his energy.” Emery has struggled quite a bit this
season. His 7-7-1 win-loss record might
be charitable given his 3.21 goals against average and his .889 save
percentage. It gets worse. After going 4-0-1, 2.44, .924 in his first
five appearances this season, Emery is 3-7-0, 3.57, .869 in his last 11
appearances. If Mason is out two weeks,
and Zepp’s energy has a shelf life, then Emery is going to have to be a wall in
goal, or the Flyers’ season will be over by the end of the month.
Washington: Matt Niskanen
In the end...
The Caps have not been flashy in their recent 13-1-4 run, and that style would suit them well in their rematch against the Flyers. Philadelphia comes into this game perhaps not playing quite as well as their recent 3-1-0 record would suggest, and there are the usual goaltending issues with injury sprinkled in.
This game could serve as a nice springboard for the Caps before they head to the road to meet Nashville and Dallas. On the other hand, it is a team good enough to bite the Caps in the backside (again) if they are taken lightly. Guess which way we think this goes...
Capitals 4 - Flyers 1