“Twice and thrice over, as they say, good is it to repeat
and review what is good.”
-- Plato
Karl Alzner might not be the best defenseman in the National
Hockey League. He might not be the best
at his position on the team for which he plays, the Washington Capitals. But there might not be a more dependable,
reliable, consistent defenseman in the league than the eight-year veteran from
Burnaby, British Columbia.
Alzner has already passed the 500-games played mark in his
career, the tenth defenseman in Capitals history to hit that mark. He has not missed a game in the NHL since he
was assigned to the Hershey Bears on Valentine’s Day 2010, and he skated with
the Bears for the remainder of that regular season. Since dressing for Opening Night of the
2010-2011 season he has appeared in 458 consecutive games, and counting.
What is particularly noteworthy about the season Alzner just
completed – bordering on the bizarre, actually – is that his 2015-2016 season
is a virtual replica of his 2014-2015 season:
- 2014-2015: 82 games, 5-16-21, plus-14
- 2015-2016: 82 games, 4-17-21, plus-14
Alzner’s second straight 21-point season made him the 14th defenseman in Capitals history to hit the 100-point mark (he finished the
season with 104 career points).
When Alzner wasn’t replicating his 2014-2015 numbers, he was improving on
them. He set career best marks in
assists (17), total minutes played (1,753), average minutes per game (21:23),
hits (135), and blocked shots (207).
About those hits and blocked shots. First, hits are a somewhat arbitrary
statistic, but then again, Karl Alzner is not generally considered a physical
defenseman. Nevertheless, his 135 hits
was the ninth highest total for a Capitals defenseman in a season since the
2004-2005 lockout. Those 207 blocked
shots was third in the league overall and is the most by a Capital in the
post-2004-2005 lockout era.
Alzner is not expected to make his biggest contributions in
the offensive end, but what he contributed was welcome. The Caps did not lose any of the four games
in which he scored a goal, and they were 14-3-3 in games in which he recorded a
point. It was more his ability to
consume minutes that mattered. The Caps
lost just three games in regulation when he logged 22 or more minutes of ice
time, going 21-3-7.
Fearless’ Take… Karl Alzner had only 20 “minus” games all
season and only two of them worse than minus-1.
Only once all season did he have as many as three minus games in a row,
and those came in Games 77-79, when the Caps had long since settled where they
would finish in the standings. One thing
that he might not get enough credit for is not taking himself off the ice. He was charged withjust 13 minor penalties
this season (26 total penalty minutes), and only once did he take more than one
minor penalty in a game (February 7th against Philadelphia). Alzner has never recorded as many as 30 penalty
minutes in a season. He is something of
a technician on the ice with playing position and angles, but it extends to his
adhering to the rulebook, too.
Cheerless’ Take… Alzner has one of those odd patterns with
his possession numbers…up-down-up-down-up-down…
Since he came into the league in the 2008-2009 season, he has not failed
to alternate up years and down years in Corsi-for at 5-on-5. This season was a “down year,” his 49.5
dropping from 51.0 last season. And this
was his third straight year being a minus player in Corsi-for/Relative at fives
(minus-2.3; numbers from war-on-ice.com). That might be because he
generally draws tougher defensive assignments, but it still isn’t territory you
like seeing.
Odd Alzner Fact… Karl Alzner and Keith Yandle are the only
defensemen in the NHL to have appeared in every game of the last six
seasons. Yandle has 460 to 458 for
Alzner due to a trade in March 2015 that allowed him to appear in 84 games that
season instead of the league maximum 82.
Game to Remember… February 7th versus Philadelphia
It is difficult to select between games against the
Philadelphia Flyers less than two weeks apart – the one in which he set the
Caps’ record for consecutive games played (423, since eclipsed by himself) or
the one in which he recorded his 100th NHL point. Well, we took the one in the game the Caps
won, the 100th-point game. The thing of
it is, Alzner reached that milestone in perhaps the most “Alznery” way possible. Take a look at the video clip…
That’s Matt Niskanen going end to end to score a highlight
reel goal – the game-winning goal, as it turned out, in a 3-2 Caps win – but
nowhere to be seen is Karl Alzner, who earned the primary assist. Oh, but he was the first one to greet
Niskanen in celebration after the goal.
It was one of two assists that Alzner had in the game, his only
multi-point game of the season. Earlier
in the game he assisted on Alex Ovechkin’s 30th goal of the season, playing a
role in Ovechkin’s hitting that mark for the 11th straight season.
Game to Forget… February 24th versus Montreal
When the Montreal Canadiens came to visit Washington in late
February, the Caps were doing quite well.
They had won four in a row and nine of their previous ten games. They had a five-game winning streak on home
ice.
That came apart in a little under 33 minutes, during which
Montreal sprinted out to a 4-1 lead. The
last goal – what would be the game-winner in a 4-3 Habs win – came when Alex
Galchenyuk and Lars Eller got loose on a 2-on-1 break with just Matt Niskanen
back for the Caps (Karl Alzner having been caught up ice). Galchenyuk finished the play to give the
visitors that 4-1 lead. For Alzner, he
was on ice for two of the Canadiens’ goals (the other a power play goal by
Brendan Gallagher in the first period), finishing a minus-1 with no shot
attempts and just two hits as marks on his score sheet in just 16:42 of ice
time, his lowest amount of the season.
Postseason: 12 games, 0-2-2, plus-3, 51.3 percent Corsi-for
at 5-on-5, minus-0.9 CF%/Relative
The history of the Washington Capitals is strewn with
disappointments and their second cousin, “what-if’s.” As time goes by, perhaps no “what if”
question will loom larger in franchise history than “what if Karl Alzner wasn’t
so badly injured that he had to sit out the last 44 minutes of regulation and
overtime of the Caps’ season-ending playoff loss to the Pittsburgh
Penguins?” The man who played in every
regular season and playoff game played by the Caps over six seasons, the best
shutdown defensemen the club has, was in the locker room when Nick Bonino
scored the series clinching goal in overtime with his partner Matt Niskanen on
the ice with his replacement, Taylor Chorney.
Alzner, who had been a warrior, playing through the injury
for some time, taking maintenance days so he could dress for games, just could not go any more. To that point, Alzner had a solid postseason in the way he
would. He did not post many points (two),
but going into that Game 6 against the Penguins he was a plus-4 and was on ice
for only five goals against in the 11 games leading up to the unfortunate
finale. In 12 games overall he was not
on ice for a power play goal against.
In the end…
Karl Alzner is a player who, in a cruel sort of way, is a
reflection of the franchise and its four decades of frustration. He is an earnest, solid player whose virtues
are best appreciated over the long arc of the season. He is consistent, reliable, and dependable. And then, with the possibility of a deep
playoff run this season still possible, it was an assault on the very thing
that was perhaps his most noteworthy attribute – his durability – that ended
his, and arguably the Caps’ season.
You wonder how it is that one team can find so many
different, and particularly cruel ways to come up short in the spring. In Alzner’s case it was nothing of his doing,
just a matter of circumstance. It does
nothing to take away from another in a series of seasons in which Alzner has
displayed modest improvements in his game while demonstrating a thinking man’s
approach to the game that makes him one of the most effective defenders the
franchise has known over the last two decades.
Grade: A-
Photo: Elsa/Getty Images North America
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