The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals wrap up their three-game home stand
on Tuesday night when the San Jose Sharks come to town. The Caps will be looking to extend their
season-best five-game winning streak and improve their home record to 5-1-0.
The Sharks come to town looking something like a team with a
Stanley Cup finals hangover. San Jose,
losers to the Pittsburgh Penguins in last spring’s six-game Cup final, won
three of their first four games of the 2016-2017 season, but they are 3-5-0 in
their last eight games and bring a three-game losing streak into this contest.
Scoring defense has not been the problem for the Sharks, who
have allowed more than three goals in a game only twice in 12 games. Their scoring offense, however, has been inconsistent,
failing to record more than three goals in a game 10 times in 12 contests while
being shut out twice.
The odd thing about San Jose’s scoring offense is that the
usual suspects are being heard from. Joe
Pavelski, Brent Burn, and Tomas Hertl are tied for the team lead in goals (four
apiece), while Pavelski and Jose Thornton are tied for the team lead in assists
(eight).
It is the down-roster players who are coming up a bit short
in the early going. For example, Patrick
Marleau, the all-time franchise leader in goals scored (by an almost 2-to-1
margin – 484 to 270 – over Pavelski) has three goals in 12 games (a 21-goal
pace), and he has just one assist for four points. It has been a case or either not getting
opportunities or not taking advantage of those he has had. After recording 12 shots on goal in his first
three games, he has a total of 18 in his last nine games, halving his
shots-per-game rate from 4.0 to 2.0.
Marleau, who had seven 30-plus goal seasons over a nine year span ending
with the 2013-2014 season, did drop off in the two subsequent seasons (19 and
25 goals, both in seasons with 82 games played.
He is 9-12-21, plus-4 in 25 career games against the Caps.
Another player having a slow start of sorts is Logan
Couture. Through 12 games he is 2-4-6,
minus-5, but his problem is recent production.
Since going 2-3-5, even, in his first five games, he is 0-1-1, minus-5,
in his last seven contests. Couture
missed 23 games with a fractured fibula last season and another seven with a
lower body injury that limited him to 52 games.
In that sense one might wonder if there are any lingering physical
issues, but there is also this. Since he
averaged 0.44 goals per game in the abbreviated 2012-2013 season, his goals per
game has dropped in each year since to where he is averaging 0.17 goals per
game at the moment. Couture is 2-5-7,
even, in nine career games against Washington.
The defense is something of a lopsided affair when it comes
to scoring. Brent Burns is picking up where
he left off last season, standing at 4-7-11, minus-2, after 12 games. The other five defensemen to dress for the
Sharks so far this season have a combined one goal (Marc-Edouard Vlasic, an
overtime game-winner in a 2-1 win over Anaheim on October 25th)) and ten
points. The Sharks defense, as a group
last season, accounted for 47 goals (27 by Burns), and four defensemen finished
with at least 20 points. They appear to
have some catching up to do.
And that brings us to goaltending and Martin Jones. Last season, his first as an NHL number one
goalie after two years in a substitute role with the Los Angeles Kings, he was
37-23-4, 2.27, .918, with six shutouts.
He finished seventh in the Vezina Trophy voting as the league’s top
goaltender. He stumbled out of the
2016-2017 gate, though. With a 5-6-0,
2.56, .900 record so far, he is 19th in the league on goals against average and
tied for 27th in save percentage among the 38 goalies with at least 250 minutes
in goal. He has been successful in
limited exposure to the Caps though, going 2-0-0, 1.00, .964 with one shutout
in two appearances against Washington.
1. Only the Winnipeg
Jets and Minnesota Wild have fewer power play goals scored on the road (one
apiece) than the Sharks (2-for-19/10.5 percent).
2. Getting to the
first intermission with a lead matters to the Sharks. In five of their six wins thus far, San Jose
led at the first intermission.
3. Three times so far
this season, San Jose last games by at least a three-goal margin. Only four teams have more losses by three-or
more goals. Twice in those situations,
the Sharks were shut out (3-0 to Detroit on October 22nd and 5-0 to the
Penguins last Saturday).
4. This could be an
interesting test of strength. The Caps
are adept at winning the shots on goal battle with opponents, but so are the
Sharks. They have out-shot opponents ten
times in 12 games so far, but they are just 5-5-0 in those games.
5. Despite a so-so
record, San Jose remains one of the best possession teams in the league. Their 53.80 Corsi-for at five-on-five ranks
third in the league, behind Los Angeles and St. Louis. They are even better on the road with a 55.08
Corsi-for percentage (ranked third; numbers from Corsica.hockey).
1. The Caps have 13
players with goals of 19 skaters to have dressed. Zach Sanford, looking for his first NHL goal,
is the only forward yet to turn on the red light.
2. Balance is good,
but I might not have though that through 11 games, Nicklas Backstrom, Justin
Williams, and Evgeny Kuznetsov would each have the same number of goals as Jay
Beagle (one), and Beagle’s is the only game-winner.
3. The Caps remain
the least penalized team in the league in terms of total penalties charged (37)
and minor penalties called (343, tied with Carolina). Their two fighting majors is what drops them
to second in penalty minutes per games (7:16; the New York Rangers have 6:00
per game).
4. Hits are an
arbitrary statistic…they are in the eye of the beholder. But the Caps have the third-fewest credited
hits in the league (201), more than only Carolina (199) and Minnesota
(169). Tom Wilson (25), Alex Ovechkin
(24), and Brooks Orpik (24) account for 36.3 percent of the total.
5. From the
what-belongs-in-this-group-and-what-doesn’t file. Three players having appeared in ten or more
games so far this season have averaged 0.60 goals per game and as least 1.00
points per game. Artem Anisimov, Jeff
Skinner, and Alex Ovechkin. Which one is
likely to go deepest in to the season above those thresholds?
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
San Jose: Joel Ward
In his first season with the San Jose Sharks after leaving
Washington as a free agent, Joel Ward had a fine season. He recorded his second career 20-goal season
(21) and his second career 40-plus point season (43). The odd part of that season was that he
finished minus-15. Only two players (Chris
Tierney and Patrick Marleau) finished worse in that statistic. This year, the sluggish plus-minus number
remains for Ward (minus-7, worst among forwards), but now his scoring is down
considerably. Ward scored a goal in the
Sharks’ 3-2 win over the Columbus Blue Jackets in Game 2 of the season, but
that is Ward’s only point of the campaign so far. He is without a goal on 13 shots in ten games
and is minus-7 in those games. He has
not yet seen his ice time suffer for it; in fact it is up a coupld of minutes
in his last two games, just two of three games this season when he logged more
than 16 minutes. In six career games
against Washington, Ward is 0-1-1, plus-3.
Washington: Jay Beagle
When you are not a big goal scorer, you have to earn your
keep doing other things, and often that means doing the little things well and
attending to detail. Beagle’s specialty
of sorts is taking faceoffs. Since he
came into the league (briefly) in the 2008-2009 season, Beagle is sixth among
active players in faceoff winning percentage (55.8 percent; minimum: 2,500
draws). Which is not to say he can’t be
sa clutch player in the offensive end.
Of his 32 career goals, seven are game-winners (including his only one
this season). That makes 21.7 percent of
his career goals of the game-winning variety, the same percentage as more
celebrated talents such as Boston’;s David Krejci and Los Angeles’ Jeff Carter. And, in the 30 games in which he has scored a
goal in his career, the Caps have a record of 24-1-5. In seven career games against San Jose,
Beagle is 2-1-3, plus-1, all of his scoring coming in a 5-4 overtime win in San
Jose on February 11, 2015 in which, coincidentally, Joel Ward scored the
game-winning goal (Beagle assisted on the play).
In the end…
This might not be the same San Jose Sharks team that went to
the Stanley Cup finals last spring, but it is still a dangerous squad. A team with as much talent as it has – Joe
Pavelski, Joe Thornton, Brent Burns, etc. – can make an opponent’s life
miserable on any given night. Their
problem has been getting any consistent secondary scoring. Given their top-notch possession numbers, one
would think it would be just a matter of time until their production (scoring)
caught up to their productivity (possession numbers). But the Caps are a skilled team with fine
possession numbers of their own. Even if
this represents a bit of a jump in weight class for the Caps in terms of
opponent, it is a test the Caps can pass to sweep their home stand.
Capitals 3 – Sharks 2