The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals kick off the 2016 portion of their
season on Saturday night when they visit Columbus, Ohio, to face the Blue
Jackets. This will be the second meeting
between these Metropolitan Division rivals this season, the Caps winning the
first meeting by a 2-1 margin on October 30th in Washington.
The Caps are looking to start 2016 on a positive note, but
just as important, they are looking to start another winning streak. The Caps had their nine-game winning streak
stopped in Carolina on Thursday evening, the Hurricanes giving the Caps their
first loss in three weeks, 4-2.
The Blue Jackets, on the other hand, are a struggling hockey
club. Columbus relieved Todd Richards of
his head coaching duties on October 21st after an 0-7-0 start, but
the club has not done much better under John Tortorella as Richards’
replacement. Columbus is 14-15-3 under
Tortorella, but their record has been deteriorating over the last five weeks. In their
last 15 games they have three losing streaks of three or more games, and their
December was gruesome. The Blue Jackets
finished the month with a 4-7-3 record, and they come into this game as losers
in three of their last four games.
Offense has not been altogether bad over the last
month. The Blue Jackets averaged 2.64
goals over 14 games. Defense and
goaltending was another matter. Columbus
gave up an average of 3.29 goals per game in December, causing their overall
scoring defense to drop to 28th in the league (3.13 goals per
game).
Scott Hartnell is one of those rare combinations of coarse
sandpaper and fine skill. He leads team
in goals (15), points (28), and total penalty minutes (71). He had a fine December for the Blue Jackets,
leading the team with six goals in 14 games and tying for the team lead in
points (12). With 15 goals on the season
he is on a pace to finish with his fifth straight 20-goal season (not including
the abbreviated 2012-2013 season). Hartnell
is 13-12-25, plus-7, in 38 career games against Waahington.
Nick Foligno shrugged off a slow start to the 2015-2016
season and put together a very good December.
After beginning the campaign with one goal (on 1-for-62 shooting (1.6
percent)) and nine assists in 25 games, Foligno recorded four goals in December
and tied Hartnell for the team lead in points with 12. He is coming into the contest with the Caps
having recorded points in his last five games (1-6-7). Foligno is 6-11-17, plus-6, in 24 career
games against the Caps.
On the blue line, it is a case of youth being served. David Savard (0-13-13) and Ryan Murray
(3-10-13) lead the defensemen in points, although Savard has a minus-13 to go
with his 13 points. They came to their
positions from very different starting points, but having taken similar paths. Murray was the highly thought of prospect who
was drafted second overall by the Blue Jackets in the 2012 entry draft. He spent another year in Canadian juniors,
then joined the Blue Jackets in the 2013-2014 season. Savard, on the other hand, was a fourth-round
(94th overall) pick by Columbus in the 2009 entry draft. He spent another year in Canadian juniors,
then a season in the AHL. He split time
with the Blue Jackets and the AHL in 2011-2012 before sticking with the club
for good in 2013-2014. Savard just
turned 25 this season, and Murray turned 22 just before the season
started. Neither has much experience
against the Caps, Murray with a pair of assists in five career games, and
Savard with a pair of goals in nine career contests against Washington.
Here is how the teams compare overall:
1. There is an odd
coincidence about the Blue Jackets’ performance in December. They were outscored in goals by a 46-37
margin (not including shootout winners), and they faced 48 shorthanded
situations to 39 power plays on special teams.
2. Goaltending has
been an uneven proposition for Columbus so far this season. Number one netminder Sergei Bobrovsky has
decent numbers (2.52 goals against average, .916 save percentage), but he has
not been able to reach the level of performance of his 2012-2013 Vezina Trophy
season when he was 21-11-6, 2.00, .932, with four shutouts. Compounding the problem is that he suffered a
groin injury in early December that has kept him out of the lineup for ten
games. He could return against
Washington on Saturday.
3. Only three teams
have a worse winning percentage when leading at the first intermission than the
Blue Jackets. Toronto (.600), Arizona
(.563), and Carolina (.556) are below Columbus (.643) in the rankings. Not that it seems to matter much. Columbus has taken a lead into the first
intermission only 14 times in 39 games.
4. Scoring on the
power play has been an issue for the Blue Jackets. Only Winnipeg (8), Calgary (7), and
Philadelphia (7) have fewer power play goals scored on home ice than Columbus
(9), and they have the sixth-wort power play percentage on home ice (15.3).
5. Columbus is not a
strong possession team. The rank 25th
in Corsi-for overall (47.4 percent), 24th in score-adjusted Corsi
(47.2 percent), and 24th in close score Corsi (47.0). The numbers were slightly worse in December (47.1/46.9/46.7; numbers from war-on-ice.com).
1. The Capitals
finished December with an 11-2-1 record for the month. They fell just short of their best December
ever (12-2-2 in 1984-1985).
2. The Caps had an
interesting month on special teams.
Their special teams index of 111.9 (power play plus penalty killing
percentages) was superb in December.
However, only three times in 14 games were the Caps awarded more power
play opportunities than their opponents.
Nine times it was the opponent who enjoyed more power play
opportunities.
3. Penalty killing on
the road has been a bright spot for the Caps.
They are tied for the third-best penalty kill in the league (86.2
percent), and only Anaheim (7) and Pittsburgh (7) have allowed fewer power play
goals on the road than the Caps.
4. The Caps have been
a dominant third period team this season.
Their plus-17 goal differential in the third period is second overall
(Dallas: plus-20).
5. While the Caps
dominated play on the scoreboard, and in wins and losses, they were frankly
poor in possession numbers for December.
Their overall, score-adjusted, and close score Corsi percentages of
46.5/48.6/46.9 percent for the month (numbers from war-on-ice.com) suggest either an improvement is in order,
or a correction in scoring and win-loss results is coming.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Columbus: Ryan Johansen
When the player who is arguably your most important
offensive weapon goes an entire month without a goal, chances are that your
team will not fare very well. Ryan
Johansen did not record a goal in December, and yes, the Blue Jackets did not
fare well. Johansen did have seven assists
in 13 games in December (three in his last four games), but he was a healthy
scratch in a 7-5 loss to the Arizona Coyotes on December 17th, and
he did not record a shot on goal in either of his last two games. He still has a respectable 25 points in 36
games overall, but he is on a pace to finish with his lowest points per game
(0.69) since his sophomore season in 2012-2013, owing to goal production that
is on a pace to be roughly half (14) of what he had last season (26 in 82
games). Johansen is 4-4-8, minus-1, in
11 career games against the Capitals.
Washington: Brooks Laich
Brooks Laich played 82 games in calendar year 2015. It was not one for the scrapbook. He finished 5-13-18, minus-7, and shot to a
5.0 percentage (five goals on 100 shots).
It looks a lot like his production over the last four seasons overall
(an 82-game average of 9-14-22, minus-6, 3.7 percent). He is getting the fewest minutes of his
career in Washington (10:45 per game).
His assist in the Caps’ 4-2 loss to the Carolina Hurricanes was his
first point in 13 games. He is without a
goal since recording the game-winner in a 4-1 win over the Boston Bruins on
November 5th, a streak of 25 games without a goal and counting. He has good possession numbers, fourth in
Corsi-for percentage among forwards appearing in at least ten games for the
Caps (52.6), but if the Caps are to get past their injury issues without undue
damage to their win-loss record, it seems reasonable that Laich’s performance
numbers – goals, assists, and points – will have to improve some as well. He is 3-5-8, minus-2, in 15 career games
against Columbus.
In the end…
The Capitals are 8-0-0 in games following losses this
season, outscoring opponents by a 28-12 margin (not including shootout winners)
with a power play performing at 25.0 percent in those games, and it is one
scenario in which the Caps have enjoyed an advantage in special team
opportunities (28 power plays versus 18 shorthanded situations). It is evidence of avoiding the too-high highs
and the too-low lows, of taking care of business on a night to night
basis. That has been a recurring theme,
but on the other hand, any loss in the context of the Capitals poor possession numbers
over the last six weeks can have one thinking about whether any loss is the
start of an alignment of record to underlying numbers. Better than the Caps correct those underlying
numbers than test fate with persistently poor possession numbers.
Capitals 3 – Blue Jackets 2
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