The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
Having dispatched their closest pursuers in the Metropolitan
Division on Sunday night, the Washington Capitals pivot to take on the
division's worst team on Tuesday evening.
The Caps spotted the New York Rangers a goal, then came back to win,
5-2, to start Week 15 of the NHL season.
They now head to Columbus to face the Blue Jackets in a Buckeye
Blockbuster.
Well, perhaps not a “blockbuster,” the noise of the cannon
at Nationwide Arena notwithstanding.
Since the Blue Jackets beat the Caps, 5-4, in a Gimmick on January 7th,
Columbus is 2-3-1. While those wins have
come in their last two games, ending a four game losing streak, those wins also came
at the expense of the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Colorado Avalanche, teams
that find themselves outside the playoff mix.
Colorado has struggled to score in this recent half-dozen
game run. The Blue Jackets recorded only
13 goals over those games , giving up 19 in the process. Brandon Dubinsky has almost a third of that
total, scoring three goals (3-1-4) in his last five games after enduring a
seven-game streak without one. While
Dubinsky has been scoring more often of late, what he has really been rolling
up is penalty minutes. Over his last 17
contests Dubinsky has 29 penalty minutes, a total that includes each of his
three fighting majors this season.
Dubinsky, a hard-nosed sort of player dating back to his days with the
New York Rangers, leads the team in credited hits (114), and he leads the club
in faceoff winning percentage (51.7). In
27 career games against Washington, Dubinsky is 5-12-17, plus-6.
Two other Blue Jackets have more than one goal over their
past half-dozen games. Cam Atkinson has
a pair of scores, both coming in losses, a 4-2 loss to Minnesota on January 5th
and a 4-3 overtime loss to Carolina on January 9th. The odd part about his recent performance is
that his two goals came in the four losses, over which he was a minus-4. He is without a point in his last two games
while going plus-2. Atkinson has both of
the Blue Jackets’ shorthanded goals this season, one of them coming in that
loss to Carolina on what was his only shot on goal of that contest. He is 6-4-10, plus-5, in 11 career games
against Washington.
Alexander Wennberg has a pair of goals in his last
half-dozen games as well. One of them
was the game-winner in Columbus’ 3-1 win over Toronto last Wednesday, breaking
the Blue Jacket’s four-game losing streak.
It was the first game-winning goal of his career in what was his 101st
NHL game. Wennberg has been reasonably
hot lately. Over his last 19 games he is
4-11-15, this coming after he recorded a single goal (his only point) in his
first 15 games of the season. Wennberg
has two assists in five career games against the Caps.
Goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky was activated off the injured
reserve list on Friday after spending more than a month on the shelf, the
result of his suffering a groin injury on December 8th against the
Los Angeles Kings. With Bobrovsky
unavailable, Columbus resorted to goaltending by committee. It has not been successful. While Bobrovsky’s numbers do not overwhelm
(11-12-6, 2.52, .916, with one shutout), the trio of Joonas Korpisalo, Curtis McElhinney,
and Anton Forsberg are 6-13-3, 3.17, .898.
With Bobrovsky activated, Anton Forsberg (the winning goalie in the Blue
Jackets’ 5-4 trick shot win against the Caps on January 2nd) was
re-assigned to the Lake Erie Monsters of the AHL.
Here is how the teams
compare overall:
1. Columbus nicked
the Caps for a pair of power play goals on three chances in that 5-4 freestyle
win earlier this month. They have two
power play goals in 19 chances (10.5 percent) over six games since then.
2. Columbus’ penalty
kill is decent enough at 81.5 percent for the season (12th in the
league). But they are shooting
themselves in the foot lately giving opponents so many opportunities. Since December 21st, the Blue
Jackets have faced 51 shorthanded situations in 11 games, allowing 10 goals
(80.4 percent). Four times over that
span the Blue Jackets faced six or more shorthanded situations.
3. Allowing the first
goal has been a gri predictor of outcomes for Columbus. The Blue Jackets rank last in the league in
winning percentage when allowing the game’s first goal (.115/3-20-3).
4. It is not as if
the Blue Jackets end games well, either.
The 57 goals allowed in the third periods of games this season is most
in the league, as is the 48 goals allowed in the second periods of games (tied
with Edmonton and Anaheim).
5. There are 13 teams
with negative possession numbers on home ice.
Columbus is one of them, ranking 19th in Corsi-for overall at
5-on-5 (49.4 percent). Their score-adjusted
value is worse (47.7/21st).
While their close score Corsi-for is over 50 percent (50.4), they still
rank just 20th in that category (numbers from war-on-ice.com).
1. Justin Williams’
hat trick against the Rangers on Sunday night was the 37th in the
league this season and the Caps’ second.
Evgeny Kuznetsov has the other one, in a 7-4 win over the Edmonton
Oilers on October 23rd.
2. Evgeny Kuznetsov
had a three-assist game against the Rangers, his second game of three or more
assists this season. He joined Nicklas
Backstrom and Jason Chimera with two such games this season. John Carlson also has a three-assist game.
3. Only the Dallas
Stars (97) have more goals scored at 5-on-5 this season than Washington (94). Only Tampa Bay (63), Philadelphia (63), and
Los Angeles (62) have allowed fewer goals at 5-on-5 than the Caps (64).
4. Good things happen
when Justin Williams records a point.
The Caps are 21-1-0 when he gets a mark on his line of the score sheet.
5. The Caps were over
50 percent Corsi-for at 5-on-5 in their 4-1 loss to Buffalo last week. That puts them in position to finish with
Corsi-for over 50 percent in consecutive road games for the first time since
they did it on October 31/November 3 against the Florida Panthers (a 2-1 win) and
the New York Rangers (a 5-2 loss; numbers from war-on-ice.com).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Columbus: Seth Jones
Sometimes, you have to trade value to get value. That seemed to be the rationale behind the
trade executed between Columbus and Nashville when the Blue Jackets sent
forward Ryan Johansen to the Predators for defenseman Seth Jones. It was the kind of trade you do not see much
in the NHL these days, a couple of under-25 stars in waiting, each of them a
fourth-overall draft pick (Johansen in 2010, Jones in 2013). Jones, who is still just 21 years old, is in
his fourth NHL season and now has more than 200 games on his resume. The big change for Jones, in addition to
discarding those hideous yellow jerseys, is the ice time he is getting. In the five games he has dressed so far for
the Blue Jackets he is averaging 24 minutes a game. Of the seven top ice time game logs he has
this season, five are with Columbus.
Part of that is the fact that three of the games in which he has played
went to extra time, but he is still getting a steady, heavy load of
minutes. He is 1-1-2, plus-1, in three
career games against the Caps.
Washington: Marcus Johansson
No team in the NHL has more wins than do the Washington
Capitals, and no Capital has more game-winning goals than Marcus
Johansson. His six game-winning goals in
42 games so far this season equals his total for his previous four seasons
combined, covering 276 games. Since
December 1st he has been on a roll.
In 22 games since then he is 9-10-19, plus-6, and he is on an overall
pace to finish with his first 50-point season.
Drafted as a center, he seems to have found a comfort level in that
position on the Caps’ third line, where he has points in five of six games
(4-2-6). He is even improved on
faceoffs. Last year he rarely took
draws, just 26 in 82 games. This season he
has nearly tripled that number (67) and has won roughly half of them (34 for a
50.7 winning percentage). In 13 career
games against Columbus, Johansson is 4-6-10, plus-3
In the end…
If Columbus does not have the Caps’ full and undivided
attention, they should. Washington has a
2-1 win and a 5-4 trick shot loss in two games against the Blue Jackets this
season. It is not as if the Caps have dominated
this season series to date. There is a
bit of uncertainty about who the Caps will start in goal, what with Braden Holtby
having to leave Sunday’s game early suffering from dehydration (it is not thought to be serious),
but this is a team that has been able to set aside those sorts of issues over
the last month. The Caps have alternated
wins and losses over their last five games in Columbus, and if that pattern
holds, they will win this game. As if we
needed a reason to pick the Caps.
Capitals 3 – Blue Jackets 1
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