We’ve said this before, but there are 20 games you are going
to win, no matter what. There are 20
games you are going to lose, no matter what.
It’s what you do with the rest of them that make a season a success or a
failure. The Washington Capitals never
got to the third of those scenarios against the San Jose Sharks on Tuesday
night. This was a loser from the start.
It started with Alex Ovechkin being a no-go at game time for
personal reasons. With Ovechkin and
Nicklas Backstrom on the bench, it was like a Lethal Weapon movie without Mel
Gibson and Danny Glover. There is only
so far Joe Pesci is going to carry the story line.
It didn’t get any better with the drop of the puck. The Caps looked like they had too much
Columbus Day celebration hangover in the first period. Jay Beagle took a penalty less than five
minutes in, which the Caps killed successfully.
They were not so fortunate when Brooks Orpik took a tripping call in
the 11th minute. Joe Thornton
converted the power play, redirecting a Bent Burns shot, to give the Sharks
first blood.
The Caps escaped the first period with no further damage,
but the Sharks added to their lead twice in the second, courtesy of Mike Brown
and Tomas Hertl. That was all the Sharks would need, but they managed a pair of empty net goals in the last two minutes for the final margin.
Other Stuff…
-- The Caps were out-attempted in the first period,
37-13. That set the tone and emptied
whatever was in the Caps’ tank.
-- Dmitry Orlov almost had his first goal in 590 days. Almost, but for a coach’s challenge that
waved off the score. The officials found
that Jay Beagle, whose foot was not in the crease, who did not deny goalie
Martin Jones position, and did not prevent Jones from using his blocker to try
to fend off the shot, somehow prevented the goalie from “doing his job,” in the
words of referee Tim Peel. Can we just
say, it you touch the goalie, it’s an automatic “no goal?” At least it would be a consistent
standard. What we’re going to get is a
hodge-podge of calls that will vary from game-to-game, if not within a game.
-- The Caps allowed two empty net goals. This ties them with the Boston Bruins for
most empty net goals allowed this season (2).
-- If your two top shot makers are Jason Chimera (6) and
Brooks Laich (5), chances are there is not going to be a lot of offense
generated.
-- Score effects… the Caps had 59 shot attempts over the
last two periods to the Sharks’ 22.
-- John Carlson had 11 shot attempts. The defense had 27 shot attempts overall.
-- The shutout was Martin Jones’ second in three games. He has stopped 77 of 78 shots in three games
to date (.987 save percentage).
-- Jay Beagle was the only Capital to go over 50 percent on
faceoffs in this contest (11-for-16/68.8 percent).
-- Here is an unsettling fact… the Caps have now allowed
power play goals in six consecutive games in which they faced at least one
shorthanded situation, going back to last season (they did not have a
shorthanded situation in their game against the Boston Bruins last April 8th).
-- What was telling about the call on the ice that preceded
the disallowed goal is that when Orlov scored, goaltender Martin Jones never
even looked at the referee to argue he was interfered with. A lot of goalies would be in a referee’s face
arguing interference in that instance…if they had been interfered with.
In the end…
The Caps were never in this one. Oh sure, you could say “if Orlov’s goal had
counted,” but really? San Jose was
sharper from the outset, more focused for longer stretches of time, applied
pressure more consistently, and kept the Caps from getting any follow up
shots. They played a superb road game.
Meanwhile, the Caps had a top line of Evgeny Kuznetsov, T.J.
Oshie, and Andre Burakovsky to start the game.
By the third period, Burakovsky was not seeing as much ice time (he
skated only five shifts and had just 4:16 in ice time in the last frame). They started with Brooks Laich on the second
line with Justin Williams and Marcus Johansson.
Obviously, there were lineup issues with the Caps’ two top scorers on the
shelf.
But, this is life in the NHL. Stuff happens.
Backstrom might be a few days away from a return, and the duration of Ovechkin’s
absence is an unknown at the moment. The
best one can say is that the absences provide opportunities for others to step
up and, if they can’t be productive, at least they can gain some experience in
more responsible roles that will help the club down the line. That is about as much as one can take away
from a game such as this.