The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
On Friday night, for the third time in a space of seven games and 15 days, the Washington Capitals and Buffalo Sabres will face one another. The difference in this third meeting is that it will take place in Buffalo at MarineMidlandHSBCFirstNiagaraKeyBank Center. The Capitals won the first two meetings at Verizon Center, 3-1 on November 25th and 4-2 in overtime last Monday.
On Friday night, for the third time in a space of seven games and 15 days, the Washington Capitals and Buffalo Sabres will face one another. The difference in this third meeting is that it will take place in Buffalo at MarineMidlandHSBCFirstNiagaraKeyBank Center. The Capitals won the first two meetings at Verizon Center, 3-1 on November 25th and 4-2 in overtime last Monday.
There is little to report since the last time these teams
were about to face one another.
Both clubs played one game since that meeting, and both teams eked out 4-3
overtime victories at home. Washington beat the Boston Bruins on a Nicklas Backstrom strike in the extra period,
and the Sabres knocked off the Edmonton Oilers on Rasmus Ristolainen’s first
goal of the season.
While there hasn’t been much movement in the standings by
either of these teams over the past four days, there are a few random facts we
can offer up.
-- Buffalo lacks for scoring (30th in the league
in scoring offense), but they have more goal scorers this season (15) than the
Caps (14).
-- Rasmus Ristolainen finally got his first goal after going
25 games without one, and with 16 points on the season he has almost as many
points as the rest of the Sabres’ defensemen combined (17, spread among four
defensemen).
-- Capital defensemen have not scored many goals, but Sabre
defensemen have fewer goals on their record this season. Ristolainen’s goal was only the second goal
by a Buffalo defenseman this season.
Cody Franson has the other one.
-- The Sabres allowed the Oilers a pair of power play goals
in their 4-3 overtime win. That makes
five games in six that the Sabres have allowed at least one power play goal,
and they are just 11-for-19 killing penalties over that span (57.9 percent).
-- Buffalo does not do a very good job in the trade off of
taking and drawing minor penalties.
Their differential of minor penalties taken and drawn per 60 minutes
ranks 25th in the league (minus-0.15)
-- When the Caps beat Boston on Wednesday night, it was their
15th win in their 25th game this season. It is just the fifth time in team history
that the Caps reached the 15 win mark in 25 or fewer games. The seasons at the 25-game mark:
- 2016-2017: 15-7-3
- 2015-2016: 18-5-2
- 2010-2011: 17-6-2
- 1991-1992: 18-7-0
- 1985-1986: 15-7-3
While four of this year's wins (and three of last year's at
the 25-game mark) came in extra time, with different rules than the
pre-2004-2005 lockout era, it is still an accomplishment worth noting.
-- The four goals the Caps scored against Boston was as many
as they had in their previous three games combined, and it was the first time
in six games that they scored more than three goals, dating back to their 4-3
win over St. Louis on November 23rd.
-- After 25 games last season the Caps allowed 55 goals.
This year, through 25 games, that number is 56 goals. The bigger difference in
is goals scored, where the Caps have scored just 65 goals through 25 games to
date compared to 78 through 25 games last season, a drop of more than half a
goal per game.
-- Only six teams have failed to win in the trick shot phase
of the game, the Caps being one of them having lost both of their appearances
so far. Then again, only the New York
Rangers and Colorado Avalanche have appeared in fewer freestyle competitions
(one apiece).
-- There are 169 forward combos that have skated at least 50
minutes together at 5-on-5. Of that
group, the Capitals combo with the most minutes together is the Daniel
Wionnik/Jay Beagle/Tom Wilson trio that has 69.5 5-o-5 minutes together,
ranking 103rd.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Buffalo: Evander Kane
Evander Kane has had an odd last four seasons. And that is not “odd” in a good or charming
way. In 2012-2013 with the Winnipeg Jets
he appeared in every game (the only time he has appeared in every game in his
eight-year career), and went 17-16-33, a respectable 29-27-56 pace per 82
games. Since then, however, his
durability and production have been in decline: 19-22-41 in 69 games in
2013-2014, 10-12-22 in 37 games in 2014-2015, and 20-15-35 in 65 games last
season, his first with the Sabres. This
season, Kane is just 3-4-7 in 15 games, having missed 11 games to a cracked
rib. His injury issues over the years
make it a bit less remarkable that the former fourth-overall draft pick (2009) has
only one 30-goal season on his resume (with Winnipeg in 2011-2012). He might be getting on a run, though. Kane has points in four of his last five
games (3-2-5) and is seven straight games an even or plus player. In 26 career games against the Caps, Kane is
11-6-17, minus-3.
Washington: John Carlson
John Carlson’s goal scoring over the course of his seven
seasons preceding this one have not quite been a straight line of improvement,
but it has been close. His goals per
game over those years look like this:
- 2009-10: 0.05
- 2010-11: 0.09
- 2011-12: 0.11
- 2012-13: 0.13
- 2013-14: 0.12
- 2014-15: 0.15
- 2015-16: 0.14
So far this season he has a nice round number: 0.00. He has not lacked for shooting the puck,
though. He is on a pace to finish the
season with 200 shots on goal, which would be his second highest career season
total (208 in 82 games in 2013-2014). It
is part of a long dry spell for Carlson, who has just two goals on 107 shots
(1.9 shooting percentage) over his last 51 games. He does have ten assists, which ranks in the
top-20 among defensemen going into Thursday’s games, and his four power play
assists ranks in the top-25. There is
just that odd hole in his record so far this season with respect to goals
scored. Carlson is 0-4-4, minus-3 in 20
career games against the Sabres.
In the end…
All of a sudden, the Caps are in position to record their
first three-game winning streak since they cobbled together a five-game streak
in Games 7-11 back in late October and early November. And, although they are fourth in the
Metropolitan Division, they are just two points out of first place with a game
in hand on the Pittsburgh Penguins and two games in hand on the New York
Rangers, both with 35 points. They are
right in the middle of the mix of a division that is the only one in the NHL to
date with six teams having earned 30 or more standings points. And, with Buffalo, Vancouver, the New York
Islanders, and Carolina coming up on the schedule, it is a chance to stash away
some more standings points as the 2016 portion of the season winds down. As streaky as the Caps have been, though, it
will be interesting to see just how the Caps make use of the schedule they have
coming up.
Capitals 4 – Sabres 2
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