The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals returned to winning ways on Tuesday
night when they defeated the Los Angeles Kings, 3-1, at Verizon Center. The Caps get a chance to start another
winning streak on Thursday evening when they visit Brooklyn to take on the New
York Islanders in the third of four meetings between the clubs this season.
The Caps have had success against the Islanders so far this
season, winning the first two meetings, the first by a 4-1 margin in New York
on January 7th and the second by a 3-2 margin on February 4th in
Washington. Power plays have contributed
no goals to the series so far, but both teams come into this contest with their
power plays making recent contributions.
The Caps are 3-for-16 over their last four games, their going 0-for-5
against the Kings ending a three-game streak featuring power play goals. The Islanders are on fire on their man
advantage, riding a six-game streak with goals on the power play (7-for-22/31.8
percent).
Penalty killing for the clubs has been iffy for the Caps in
recent games. They have allowed at least
one power play goal in nine of their last 13 games (41-for-51 /80.4
percent). Meanwhile, the Islanders are
39-for-43 (90.7 percent) over their last 15 games.
Nicklas Backstrom lead the Caps in points in the two games
against the Islanders to date (1-3-4), part of a first line with T.J. Oshie and
Alex Ovechkin that has four of the team’s seven goals in the series (Ovechkin
has two, Oshie one). The likely third line
of Jason Chimera, Marcus Johansson, and Tom Wilson has chipped in a goal
(Chimera) and a pair of assists as the other multi-point line in the
series. The Caps have three points from
defensemen in the two games, Nate Schmidt recording the only goal among the
blueliners.
With just three goals in the two games played between the
teams so far, there is not a lot of scoring to go around for the
Islanders. Mikhail Grabovski is the only
Islander with more than one point, recording a goal and an assist. Josh Bailey and Brock Nelson have the other
goals.
In goal, Braden Holtby has had all the minutes for the
Capitals, Jaroslav Halak getting all the minutes (except for empty net time)
for the Isles. Holtby has had the
advantage so far, posting a 1.50 goals against and a .951 save percentage to
3.04 and .900 for Halak.
Scoring first has not mattered thus far in the series. The Caps drew first blood in their 4-1 win in
January, but it was the Islanders getting the first score in the February
matchup. Leading at the second
intermission mattered in both games, though, with the Caps carrying a lead into
the third period in both games before going on to win.
Here is how the teams compare overall:
1. The Islanders
bring a 4-2-0 record into this game since losing to the Caps on February
4th. They have been doing it largely
with offense, recording 23 goals in those six games, 22 in their last five
contests. They have allowed 17 goals on
their 4-2-0 run.
2. John Tavares leads
the team in goals (four) and points (11) over the six-game span. He has inched up to 24th in the league in
scoring, which might not sound like a lot, but he is just three points out of
15th place.
3. The goaltending
duties have been split down the middle by Jaroslav Halak and Thomas Greiss over
the last six games, each with three decisions, Greiss a perfect 3-0-0, Halak
1-2-0. Greiss has had the far better
time of it in the numbers, posting a 1.29 goals against average in his three
games to 5.32 for Halak, and recording a .952 save percentage to Halak’s .833.
4. No team has
allowed fewer power play goals at home than the Islander. Their total of nine is tied with Montreal and
Carolina. They have the league’s best
home penalty kill at 89.3 percent.
5. The Islanders are 51.6 percent Corsi-for at 5-on-5 in
their recent 4-2-0 run. It surpasses
their 50.9 percent mark for the season (14th). As a home team the Islanders rank 12th
in the league (52.4 percent; numbers from war-on-ice.com).
1. The Caps are 5-1-0
since defeating the Islanders back on February 4th, but the record does not
reflect how close the games were. Five
of the seven games were decided by one goal (one in a Gimmick), and the other
two feature empty net goals by the Caps in the last minute of play for two-goal
wins.
2. The Capitals are tied for the league lead in wins by
three or more goals this season, but they haven’t had one in almost a month,
since defeating the Columbus Blue Jackets, 6-3, on January 19th.
3. If Alex Ovechkin
records a point in this game it would give the Caps three players with 50 or
more points, a league best. As it is,
they, the Dallas Stars (Jamie Benn, Tyler Seguin), and the Chicago Blackhawks
(Patrick Kane, Artemi Panarin) are the only teams with two 50-point players.
4. The Caps rank
first overall on the power play (23.7 percent), but they are 21st in total
power play opportunities this season (173).
5. The Caps are an underwater team in possession on the road
this season, ranking 15th in Corsi-for at 5-on-5 (48.9 percent), but
they do better in suppressing shot attempts.
As a road team they rank 10th with 54.1 shot attempts per 60
minutes (numbers from war-on-ice.com).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
New York: Kyle Okposo
At the end of this season, Kyle Okposo will be an
unrestricted free agent. At an annual
average value of $2.8 million on his current deal, he would be in line for a
substantial raise. A 27-year old
averaging 22 goals per 82 games over his nine year career and not yet 28 years
old (he will be 28 in April) will be in demand.
At the moment he is on a run that has him with points in eight of his
last 12 games (5-8-13), including a hat trick in the Islanders’ 8-1 win over the Edmonton Oilers on February
7th. And, his scoring goals
matters to the islanders. They are
10-1-0 in the 11 games over which he registered his 15 goals of the
season. Okposo is 7-8-15, plus-3, in 23
career games against Washington.
Washington: John Carlson
John Carlson struggled with his offense from the blue line
in the games immediately following Christmas.
He went without a point in six consecutive games and in the midst of
that missed 12 games to a lower body injury.
However, he is slowly working himself back to a productive role. He has points in three of his last four
games. He is still a top-ten defenseman
in points per game, sitting in 10th place with 0.70 points per game
(minimum: 30 games). What he has been,
though, is a very inconsistent possession player on a game-to-game basis. Variability across games is to be expected,
but Carlson’s swings have been considerable.
Over his last 20 games, for example, he has been under 40 percent
Corsi-for at 5-on-5 seven times, above 60 percent four times, while his
aggregate is 46.7 percent. As the Caps
head into their final third of the regular season, more balance in Carlson’s
game seems something to shoot for. He is
2-8-10, minus-4, in 20 career games against the Islanders.
In the end…
When the Caps beat the Islanders on January 7th,
4-1, it was the first time since March 2013 that the Caps did not go to
overtime on Islander ice (they were 2-2 in four extra time games). It is something of a sign as to what
directions these teams have pursued since the Caps beat the Islanders in a
seven game playoff series last spring.
The Caps have the best record in the league, while New York is in third
place in the Metropolitan Division, just four points ahead of the sixth-place
Carolina Hurricanes (the Isles do have two games in hand). That does not render them neutered by any
means. They have enough firepower in
John Tavares, Brock Nelson, Kyle Okposo, and others to make things difficult
for the Caps. They could win this game,
but it would not be the way to bet.
Capitals 4 – Islanders 2
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