The Washington Capitals took to the road for Week 2. Last season, whether on the road (22-13-6) or
at home (23-13-5), it made little difference whether home cooking was on the
menu. This week posed some special
challenges for the Caps, though, as the schedule took them to western Canada,
where wins have been hard to come by over the years. So how did it work out? Rather well.
Record: 3-0-0
The Capitals finished the week with the second best record
in the Eastern Conference and best in the Metropolitan Division. That is what a 3-0-0 week will do. As in Week 1, there was an issue with their
opponents’ strength of schedule. The
Calgary Flames, Vancouver Canucks, and Edmonton Oilers finished the week with a
combined 8-9-3 record in games not played against Washington. On the other hand, the Caps have had a
history of difficulty in that part of the world. Since the 2005-2006 lockout, the Caps had not
recorded a perfect trip to western Canada.
In fact, Washington had not finished a western Canada tour above .500 on
any of their five previous trips since the 2004-2005 lockout, going 4-8-1
overall (the Caps had two two-game trips over this span of time).
Offense: 5.33/game
(season: /game 4.14; rank: 1st)
The 16 goals in three games in Week 2 are better than any
three-game total of goals the Capitals had last season. It is, in fact, the most goals scored in any
three game span by the Caps in the regular season (not including shootout
goals) since going 3-0-0 over the October 30 – November 5, 2010 period. The Caps scored 16 goals in three games in
beating the Calgary Flames (7-2), Toronto Maple Leafs (5-4 in a shootout), and
Boston Bruins (5-3). It was the first time
they did it on a road trip since January 9-13, 2010, when they scored 16 goals in
beating the Atlanta Thrashers (8-1), lost to the Tampa Bay Lightning (4-7), and
beat the Florida Panthers (5-4 in a shootout).
Defense: 2.67/game (season: 2.57/game; rank: T-15th)
The goals against numbers are not impressive for Week 4, but
the underlying numbers are. The Caps
finished all three games at 50 percent of better and the week as a whole with
Corsi-for and Fenwick-for percentages north of 50 percent. They dominated the Calgary Flames, posting
overall 59.1 Corsi-for and 61.5 Fenwick-for, and recording 65.1 and 64.9,
respectively, in close score situations.
The odd game of the week was the finale against the Edmonton
Oilers. Overall, the Caps were 50.0
percent in both Corsi-for and Fenwick-for overall, but they were dominant in
close score situations, going 62.0 and 57.1, respectively. The performance enabled the Caps to finish
the week sixth overall in Corsi-for percentage for the season (52.9) and sixth in Corsi-for in close score situations (55.1; all numbers from war-on-ice.com)
Goaltending: 2.68 / .881 (season: 2.32 / .904)
It was not a great week, but it was not altogether bad,
either. The overall numbers,
particularly the save percentage numbers, were weak, but that is caught up in
the shot suppression at which the Caps were pretty good in Week 2 (67 total
shots allowed in three games). Braden
Holtby got the nod for the first two games of the week and went 2-0-0, 2.00,
.909. He faced only 44 shots in two
games, but his performance in stopping those shots divided into a so-so
performance over the first two periods of games (.897 save percentage) and a
much better third period performance (.933 save percentage).
Philipp Grubauer got his first call of the season to close
Week 2, and he had results similar to Holtby.
He was touched for four goals on 18 shots over the first 40 minutes of
the Caps’ contest with the Edmonton Oilers (.778 save percentage), but he
stopped all five shots in the third period of the Caps’ 7-4 win.
Power Play: 2-for-9 / 22.2 percent (season: 31.8 percent;
rank: 2nd)
The Caps got off to a rough start on the power play in Week
2, in part with a problem that they had to deal with last season – few opportunities. The Caps drew a blank on five power play
chances in the first two games of the week.
Against Calgary and Vancouver, Washington was 0-for-5 shooting in 8:25
of total power play time. They turned
things around against Edmonton, twice scoring on their only shot of a power
play, going 2-for-4 in opportunities and shooting 2-for-4 in 5:07 of power play
time. As it was it salvaged what ended
up being a good, not great week on the man advantage, going 2-for-9 in opportunities
and shooting 2-for-9 in 13:32 of total ice time (0.66 shots per minute).
Penalty Killing: 9-for-11 / 81.8 percent (season: 83.3
percent; rank: 15th)
It would have been a week in which the old saying, “the best
penalty kill is not having to kill penalties,” had some merit if the week ended on
Thursday. The Caps faced only five
shorthanded situations in the first two games of the week, stopping both of
Calgary’s opportunities and killing off two of three Vancouver power plays. The Caps held the Flames and Canucks to four
power play shots on goal in 9:03 of power play ice time, a rather impressive
result.
The problem the Capitals faced on the penalty kill in their
last game of the week, against the Edmonton Oilers, was having to kill so many
power plays. Edmonton was awarded six
power plays on Friday night, including a brief (eight-second) 5-on-3 advantage. What the Caps managed to do, even here, was
keep Edmonton pucks from getting to the net.
Washington allowed only four shots in 9:50 of Oiler power play ice time. For the week, the Caps allowed two goals on
eight shots in 18:53 of power play ice time (0.42 shots per minute).
Even Strength 5-on-5 Goals for/Goals Against: 14-6 / plus-8
(season, 5-on-5 goals for percentage: 64.5%; rank: 4th)
The Capitals dominated the five-on-five results for the
week, and it was a case of being more dominant over the course of games. They outscored their three opponents by a 4-3
margin in the first periods of games (57.1 percent for), by a 6-2 margin in the
second periods (75.0 percent for), and by a 4-1 margin in the third period
(80.0 percent for).
Washington spread their even strength scoring around in Week
2. Nine different players recorded
goals, and 14 different players recorded points at even strength. The Caps were led here by Evgeny Kuznetsov,
who went 2-6-8 at even strength for the week.
The Caps’ shooting percentage was superb, going 14-for-77 over the three
games (18.2 percent).
Faceoffs: 82-for-172 /47.7 percent (season: 49.3% / rank: 20th)
Overall, it was not a good week in the circle for the Caps,
but there are the aggregate numbers (47.7 percent wins for the week), and there
is the fact that Washington was over 50 percent in two of the three games. The problem was getting schooled in the
faceoff arts in Vancouver, where the Caps managed only 16 wins in 46 draws
(34.8 percent).
The Caps had similar results by zone. They finished at 50 percent or worse in each
of the three zones for the week, but largely the product of poor performances
in each zone in the middle game of the week against the Canucks. If there was a bright spot here, it was the
performance of Jay Beagle. He finished
the week winning 22 of 34 draws (64.7 percent), leaving him at the top of the
league rankings among players taking at least 30 draws (63.7 percent).
Goals by Period:
The Caps could be said to have applied consistent pressure over
the course of games in Week 2. While
that would be true, what set Week 2 apart was the Caps’ performance in the second
period of the last game of the week.
Coming off a game the previous night in Vancouver, the Capitals took a
3-2 lead into the first intermission, then allowed a game-tying goal in the
first minute of the second period against the Edmonton Oilers. Washington scored three goals in a span of
5:32 to create separation from the Oilers on their way to the 7-4 win that
closed the week. The other noteworthy
fact in scoring by period for the week was at the other end – one goal allowed
in three third periods of games, that coming late in the Caps’ win over the
Oilers.
In the end…
Three wins, outscoring opponents by a 16-8 margin, doing it
all on the road in what has been, for the Caps, a particularly hostile
environment over the years. You would
have to say, “well done.” No week is
perfect (ok, unless you are the Montreal Canadiens these days), but this is
just about as good as it gets for a road trip.
The offensive balance was particularly striking. Nine players had three or more points (that
is, at least a point per game) for the week.
Nine different players recorded goals.
Washington had 12 different multi-point games from eight different
players.
The Caps are now off until they host the Pittsburgh Penguins
on Wednesday night in a national television game. On the one hand, they have earned a couple of
days off before getting back on the rink for practice on Monday. On the other, one would like to see the Caps
sustain the momentum they generated from Week 2. It is a long season, though. Let’s just savor the moment.
Three Stars:
- First Star: Evgeny Kuznetsov (3-6-9, plus-5, first career hat trick, first career five-point game, tied for fourth in league scoring)
- Second Star: Alex Ovechkin (2-3-5, plus-3, broke 29-game streak without recording multi-assist game, tied for eighth in goals)
- Third Star: John Carlson (0-5-5, plus-2, tied for first among NHL defensemen in scoring, tied for first in power play points)