The Washington Capitals return to the ice on Saturday night
when they host the Toronto Maple Leafs at Verizon Center. The Caps will be looking to move into double
digits in wins and four in their last five games when they take on the Leafs. Meanwhile, Toronto will be looking to break a
four game winless streak on the road.
At home, the Caps have done it with a stifling defense. In their five wins on Verizon Center ice so
far, they held opponents to a single goal four times. In fact, those four games holding opponents
to one goal have come in their last four games at home.
Meanwhile, the Leafs cannot seem to find the back of the net
on the road. In compiling a 1-4-1 record
on the road so far, Toronto is averaging only 2.00 goals per game. And if not for Leo Komaraov, who has four of
their dozen goals, the Leafs would be in a deeper hole. Komarov has been something of a road warrior
for the Leafs. Four of his five goals
for the season have come away from Air Canada Centre. It establishes something of a career trend
for the three-year veteran. Of his 17 career
goals, 11 have come on the road. None of
those goals – home or road – have come at the Capitals’ expense. He has two assists in six career games
against Washington.
There are five players in the NHL with eight assists but without a goal so far this season.
Defenseman Dion Phaneuf is one of them going into Friday night’s schedule of
games. In fact, Phaneuf will come into
this game without a goal in his last 33 games dating back to last season. He has not scored a goal on the road in
almost 11 months, last recording one at Carolina in a 4-1 loss to the
Hurricanes on December 18, 2014.
Phaneuf, who was once an up-and-coming two-way defender with a physical
edge, has seen his offensive production go into decline in recent years. After scoring 10 goals in 48 games in
2011-2012 (0.19 per game), he was down to nine goals in 70 games last season
(0.04 per game), and he is looking for his first tally this season. In 18 career games against Washington,
Phaneuf is 1-6-7, minus-8.
In goal for the Leafs, it’s pick your poison. They have not settled on a number one
netminder, largely because neither Jonathan Bernier nor James Reimer have
played like one. Bernier has more
appearances (seven) than Reimer (six), but Reimer has a better goals against
average (2.82 to 3.02) and a better save percentage (.908 to .899). He also has both Toronto wins. Reimer’s performance to date has not varied
much from his career numbers to date (2.90 GAA, .913 save percentage). He is 2-4-1, 2.87, .920 in seven career
appearances against the Caps.
Of Bernier, more was expected. A former 11th overall draft pick
by the Los Angeles Kings, he put up fine numbers in his first season in Toronto
after being traded to the Leafs in June 2013.
He was 26-19-7 in that first year with Toronto with a 2.68 goals against
average and a .923 save percentage, tied for fifth in the league among goalies
appearing in at least 40 games. Last
season, though, his numbers sank to 2.87/.912, and they have only gone further
south to start this season. After stopping
34 of 35 shots in dropping a 2-1 Gimmick decision to the Buffalo Sabres on
October 21st, arguably his best effort of the season, he is 0-3-3,
3.76, .869 in his last three appearance.
Bernier is 3-2-0, 2.62, .909 in five career appearances against
Washington, but he will not be dressing for this game. Bernier is on injured reserve with a lower body injury.
Here is how the two teams compare overall:
1. Five teams have a
negative goal differential of 1.00 goals per game or more going into Friday’s
games. Toronto is one of them (-1.00). The others are Philadelphia (-1.15), Anaheim
(-1.17), Columbus (-1.21), and Calgary (-1.71).
2. No team has had
fewer occurrences of scoring first in a game than the Maple Leafs. They have scored the first goal of a game
only twice, one in a 4-1 win over the Dallas Stars last Monday. It might be worth noting that the buzz didn’t
last long. They allowed the game-tying
goal less than a minute later. The other
came in a 2-1 trick shot loss to the Buffalo Sabres on October 21st. Toronto also has the fewest instances of
leads taken into the first intermission (one, tied with Philadelphia). That was also in the 2-1 freestyle loss to
the Sabres.
3. The Maple Leafs are
one of two teams to have two defensemen with eight or more points. Dion Phaneuf and Morgan Rielly are the
point-getters for the Leafs. The other
club is Montreal, with P.K. Subban and Andrei Markov.
4. If there is one
thing this game is likely not to feature, it is a lot of power plays. Pending the results of
Toronto’s game against Detroit on Friday night, they are tied for 27th in the league in power play opportunities. They team they are tied with – Washington.
Toronto’s game against Detroit on Friday night, they are tied for 27th in the league in power play opportunities. They team they are tied with – Washington.
5. Mike Babcock teams
in Detroit were possession monsters.
Never in ten seasons with the Red Wings did they finish a season below
51.4 percent in Corsi-for percentage at 5-on-5.
Never did they finish a season below 51.9 percent in score-adjusted
Corsi-for percentage. Babcock has made
inroads in communicating that perspective to his new team. Toronto ranks tenth overall in Corsi-for
percentage at 5-on-5 (51.3) and eighth in close-score situations (52.4; numbers from war-on-ice.com).
1. Only the New York
Rangers (7) have fewer first period power plays this season than the Caps (8,
tied with Toronto). And, for a team with
a power play north of 22 percent (22.9 to be exact), they don’t have many power
play goals. Only 12 teams have fewer man
advantage goals than the Caps (8). No
team in the league has as high a percentage of conversion and so few goals to show
for it.
2. More on special
teams. The first period differential in
special teams ice time (10:21 on the power play and 31:24 killing penalties for
a differential of -21:03) is not only the worst in the league, it is more than
twice as bad as the 29th place team – Toronto (10:20). Maybe it is a product of power play
efficiency, of dispatching power plays with a goal early in the man advantage,
or maybe it is a product of an efficient penalty kill, milking it for the full
two minutes at a time. Still, that is a
substantial difference from the rest of the league.
3. The Caps are
second in the league in third period goals scored (17). They are tied with Montreal and Columbus for
the most non-empty net goals scored in the third period (15).
4. Thinking of
beating Braden Holtby at home? Bring a
lunch and a tool box; it will be long hard work. Holtby has allowed a single goal on Verizon
Center ice in four of his last five games, two goals in the other, and he has
an overall record of 5-2-0, 1.74, .934 at home this season.
5. The Caps have five
players with Corsi-for percentages at 5-on-5 at 60.0 percent or better for the
season: Nicklas Backstrom (61.8), Brooks Laich (61.2), Nate Schmidt (61.0),
Justin Williams (60.8), and Dmitry Orlov (60.0; numbers from war-on-ice.com)).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Toronto: Morgan Rielly
In his first two seasons in the NHL, Morgan Rielly was consistent
in his points per game from the blue line.
In his rookie season he averaged 0.37 points per game, and last year he
averaged 0.36 points per game. This
season he is off to a fast start with eight points in 12 games (0.67 points per
game), although that is fueled by a three-point game (1-2-3) against Dallas last
Monday. As it is, Rielly is 3-3-6 in his
last six games. However, Toronto being
Toronto, those points also come with a minus-1 mark over those games
overall. With an overall scoring line of
3-5-8, minus-3, he has the misfortune of being one of two defensemen in the
league with at least eight points and a minus-3 or worse (Minnesota’s Ryan
Suter – 2-9-11, minus-3 – is the other).
Rielly is 1-1-2, even, in six career games against the Caps.
Washington: Justin Williams
Justin Williams is the picture of quiet efficiency these
days. He has points in his last four
games (1-3-4), becoming the fourth Capital to reach double digits in points
with his assist in the 4-1 win over the Boston Bruins on Thursday. He is 2-6-8 over his last eight games. Only three times in 12 games this season has
he been on the minus-side of the plus-minus ledger. Not coincidentally, those were in the Caps’
three losses this season. His Corsi-for
percentage at 5-on-5 is a superb 60.5 (although he ranks just fourth on the
club). And, his presence seems to rub
off on others. Wilson has skated more
than 15 5-on-5 minutes with ten teammates so far this season. In every single instance, the teammate has an
equal or better Corsi-for percentage at 5-on-5 with Williams than apart from
him (numbers from stats.hockeyanalysis.com).
He is 8-10-18, plus-8, in 32 career games against Toronto.
In the end…
Mike Babcock is a fine coach, and he might turn the Maple
Leafs into a fine team. But at the
moment, “fine team” would not be an apt description of the Maple Leafs. Going into Friday’s game against Detroit,
they lost seven of eight games, and four of their last five losses were by
multi-goal margins. They have yet to
defeat a team on the road this season that has won a game (they beat the Blue
Jackets in Columbus when the Jackets were 0-4-0).
The only way the Caps can lose this game is if the Caps “lose”
this game. Toronto does not have the
depth or the skill at either end of the ice, and they do not have enough
goaltending to keep the Caps from settling this game early, competition-wise. If there is a danger for the Caps here, it is
in the time they spend early in games killing penalties. Toronto was 3-for-8 on the power play in two
games heading into their Friday game against the Red Wings. For the Caps, they will get either a goalie coming off a game the previous night (Reimer) or perhaps one who has yet to appear in an NHL game. Antoine Bibeau was called up from the Toronto Marlies because Jonathan Bernier was placed on injured reserve with a lower-body injury. Bibeau was 5-1-0, 2.17, .908 with the AHL club. It makes for a difficult situation for the Maple Leafs that the Caps would do well to take advantage of from the drop of the puck. Pound on them early, and it will be a quick
night.
Capitals 5 – Maple Leafs 2