The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals return home on Sunday after a brief
trip to upstate New York, hosting the Vancouver Canucks at 5:00 pm at Verizon
Center. It will be the Caps' first
contest against a Western Conference club since they beat the St. Louis Blues,
4-3, back on November 23rd.
It will also be the second and final meeting of the season between the
clubs, the Caps winning the first meeting, 5-2, in Vancouver on October 29th.
Washington comes into this game looking to extend a
three-game winning streak to four, which would make it the longest winning
streak of the season since the Caps peeled off five straight wins form October
29th through November 5th, a streak that started with
that win in Vancouver. On the other
hand, the Canucks have struggled ever since they opened the season with a
four-game winning streak. Since that big
open, Vancouver is 8-13-2, and they are wobbling back and forth lately, largely
alternating wins and losses over their last 14 games (8-5-1).
The Canucks have struggled to score goals (26th
in the league in scoring offense), reflected in the fact that they have yet to
have a player reach the ten-goal mark, one of ten teams without one to date.
Daniel Sedin and Bo Horvat lead the team with eight goals apiece. Daniel Sedin, the goal-scoring left wing half
of the Brothers Sedin, is closing in on a personal milestone. Although he has 363 career goals, 134 more
than his twin brother Henrik, he needs just three assists to reach the
600-assist mark. When he reaches that
mark, he will be just the second player in Canuck history to reach 600 assists,
brother Henrik having already passed that mark (758). Sedin comes into this game with goals in two
of his last three games and points in four of his last five contests
(2-3-5). In 17 career games against the
Caps, Daniel Sedin is 7-6-13, plus-3.
While Daniel Sedin is skating in his 16th NHL
season, Bo Horvat is in the midst of just his third season in the league. The former ninth-overall draft pick (2013) is
still looking for his breakout year, but his eight goals this season is half
way to his career best 16 goals set last season in 82 games, and he is on a
pace to finish with 24 goals. One area
in which Horvat’s numbers have improved immensely is in his plus-minus
figures. Last season, Horvat finished
897th of 898 skater having dressed for at least one game with a
minus-30 (Mikkel Boedker was minus-33 with two teams). This season, he is just minus-1 through 27
games and hasn’t had a “minus” game in three weeks (minus-1 in a 4-3 overtime
loss to the Chicago Blackhawks on November 19th). In the eight games since in which he played,
Horvat is 2-4-6, plus-3, although he will come into this game on a four-game
streak without a point, pending Vancouver’s game against the Florida Panthers
on Saturday night. Horvat is 1-2-3,
minus-2, in four career games against the Caps, his goal coming in the Canucks’
5-2 loss to the Caps last October.
Vancouver has gone through nine defensemen so far this
season, only three of them appearing in all 27 games through Friday. One of the three is Ben Hutton, who happens
to lead the blueliners in goals scored (three) and is tied for the lead among defensemen
in points (seven, with Luca Sbisa).
Those three goals are a career high for the second-year defenseman (he
had one last season), but his seven points lag behind the pace he set in his
rookie season (25 points in 75 games).
His offense has perked up a bit lately, though. After going 1-1-2, minus-9, in his first 17
games, Hutton is 2-3-5, minus-2, in his last 10 contests. He is without a point and is minus-2 in three
career games against Washington.
1. Of the eight
Vancouver wins in their last 14 games, four of them have come in extra time,
two of them in the Gimmick.
2. Of the nine
defenseman the Canucks have employed this season, all of them have at least one
point. Even Alex Biega, with just two
games played so far, has an assist.
3. No team has fewer
wins when scoring first in games than the Canucks. Their five wins are tied with Carolina and
Colorado going into Saturday’s games.
Worse, Vancouver has scored first only eight times in 27 games. Only the Avalanche have done so fewer times
(seven in 25 games).
4. The Canucks are
very much a Jekyll and Hyde team. On the
one hand, they have a total of 80 minor penalties this season, third-fewest in
the league (tied with Carolina). On the
other hand, they have 13 fighting majors, third-most in the league.
5. Vancouver is not a bad possession team, but neither are
they a good one. Their 49.29 percent
Corsi-for at 5-on-5 ranks 19th in the league. They rank 21st in Corsi-for on the
road (47.52 percent; numbers from Corsica.hockey).
1. Going into Saturday’s
games, the Caps had 35 standings points, one of six teams in the East with that
many or more. The misfortune of the Caps
was to be in the Metropolitan Division, which had five of those six teams.
2. Only the Carolina
Hurricanes and New York Rangers have fewer fighting majors (two apiece) than
the Caps (three, tied with four other teams).
3. If faceoff volumes
are an indicator of game flow, the Caps don’t suffer many stoppage that result
in faceoffs. Only five teams have taken
fewer draws than the Caps so far this season.
4. The three-goal win
by the Caps over Buffalo on Friday night was the first time the Caps won by
three or more goals since beating Pittsburgh, 7-1, on November 16th. Of the Caps’ six wins since that game, four
of them have been by one-goal (two in overtime).
5. Adjusted for score
and venue, the Caps have the second-best Corsi-for at 5-on-5 in the league
(53.44 percent), trailing only the Boston Bruins (54.56 percent; numbers from
Corsica.hockey).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Vancouver: Canuck
Goaltenders
On Thursday, Ryan Miller took himself out of the game
against the Tampa Bay Lightning due to what was reported as an ankle
injury. It left his availability for the
weekend games in Florida and in Washington in doubt. With back-to-back games on the weekend
schedule, the Canucks recalled Thatcher Demko from the Utica Comets of the AHL
in the eventuality that Jacob Markstrom could not play both sides of the
back-to-back set of weekend contests. Markstrom
played only six minutes in the 5-1 win over the Lighting, but appearances in
three games in four days, especially when the back-to-backs are on the road
with starting times only 22 hours apart appears to be a stretch (Markstrom got
the start against Florida on Saturday night).
Then there is the fact that Markstrom is just 3-2-1, 3.35, .882, in his
last seven appearances.
Demko is an interesting case. He is in his first professional season after a
fine career with Boston College. In
three seasons at the collegiate level he won 62 games and in his last season
posted a 1.88 goals against average with a .935 save percentage. In 14 games with the Utica Comets he was
7-5-1, 2.59, .909. Perhaps having the
parent club’s situation on his mind, he allowed four goals on 28 shots in a 4-3
loss to the Binghamton Senators on Friday night.
Washington: Alex Ovechkin
Surely you remember Alex Ovechkin. Seven-time 50-goal scorer, six-time Maurice
Richard winner, the greatest goal scorer of this generation. At the moment, though, Ovechkin is tied for
11th in the league in goals scored (12), one of those players being
teammate Marcus Johansson. And, he has
gone seven games without a goal, his longest streak since he went eight games
without a goal in Games 30-37 of the 2010-2011 season (perhaps not
coincidentally, the season in which he scored the fewest goals in his career
-32). His shot frequency is a bit off in
this streak his 24 shots working out to an average of 3.43 per game, and only
once – in Friday’s game against Buffalo – did he have more than four shots on
goal after having more than four shots on goal in eight of his first 19 games. His power play goal scoring has dropped off
considerably, too, with just four power play goals for the season (tied for 17th)
and only two in 16 games since November 5th. Ovechkin is 6-2-8, minus-5, in 13 career
games against the Canucks.
In the end…
Three straight wins is a good thing, but two of those wins
came in overtime, and the third was one-goal game 14 minutes into the third
period. It has been almost a month since
the Caps had a truly dominating performance that left do room for doubt in the
third period, that being the 7-1 win over the Penguins on November 16th. Since that lopsided win, the Caps are 6-3-1
in ten games, but they are doing it with defense and goaltending. The 2.4 goals per game the Caps are scoring
are being supported by a 2.1 goals per game scoring defense. If the Caps can cobble together more, and
more consistent offense, they could go on a nice run. However, ten games at this scoring pace is a
good chunk of the season, too. The Caps
can raise that scoring number, but to expect it to happen might not be a well-founded
thought at the moment. Perhaps facing a
team with an unsettled goaltending situation will provide a remedy.
Capitals 5 – Canucks 2
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