The Washington Capitals swept three games in Week 24, each
of the games presenting their own challenges.
In winning the week, the Caps returned to a pattern that was missing in
recent weeks. They won for a second
straight week, the first time they put together consecutive winning weeks since
Weeks 17 and 18. Let’s look at how they
did it.
Record: 3-0-0
Three home games, three wins. In accomplishing that feat, the Caps set a
franchise record for home wins in a season.
When they beat the Arizona Coyotes, 4-1, on Saturday night, it was their
31st home win of the season.
That snapped a tie with the 1985-1986 and 2009-2010 clubs that had 30
home wins apiece. It also happened to be
their seventh perfect week of the season.
It was by no means an easy week to navigate. Their first opponent for the week – the
Calgary Flames – came to Verizon Center with a 12-1-0 record in the 13 games
leading up to that contest. The Columbus
Blue Jackets were the team nipping at the Caps’ heels in the standings for
weeks, a team that had a franchise record 47 wins and 100 points when they
arrived in Washington. The Arizona
Coyotes were the club with nothing at stake and nothing to lose. This Caps team finished the week as the
fifth-winningest team in club history, their 49th win to end the
week breaking a tie with the 2010-2011 Caps (48-23-11) and the 1983-1984 Caps
(48-27-5). The two points they earned
against the Blue Jackets in the middle
game of the week broke their tie with the 1999-2000 team that finished with 102
points.
Offense: 3.00/game (season: 3.19 /game; rank: 2nd)
Even slipping a bit relative to their season average, the
Caps finished the week with only the Pittsburgh Penguins averaging more goals
per game than Washington. They did it in
different ways. Against Calgary, the
Caps beat a goaltender – Brian Elliott – who won 11 straight decisions and had
not lost a game in regulation time in more than a month. In beating Sergei Bobrovsky and the Columbus
Blue Jackets, it came down to T.J. Oshie reprising his role as trick shot
artist extraordinaire from his Sochi Olympics days. Then, the Caps overcame their frustration in
dominating the Arizona Coyotes in shot attempts, but finding themselves unable
to solve goalie Mike Smith but once until late in the Saturday game.
Individually, seven players shared the nine goals, Alex
Ovechkin and Daniel Winnik each getting a pair.
For Ovechkin, the two goals allowed him to finish the week with 30 goals
for the 12th consecutive season, one of three players (Mike Gartner
and Wayne Gretzky being the others) to start their careers with 12 consecutive
seasons with at least 30 goals. For
Winnik, it was the second time this season and third as a Capital that he had a
two-goal game (his first of the game being the game-winner), that coming
against the Coyotes to end the week. He
scored his goals three minutes apart late in the third period, the shortest
amount of time to score two goals in any of the six games he did it in his
career.
Twelve different players recorded points with Nicklas
Backstrom (1-3-4) and Kevin Shattenkirk (0-4-4) leading the way. Brooks Orpik had an assist to break an
eight-game streak without a point. T.J.
Oshie’s goal against Calgary in the first game of the week made it 30 on the
season, the first time in his career he reached the 30-goal mark. Among players appearing in 30 or more games
this season, Oshie is seventh in goals per game (0.49). Jay Beagle had an assist in the third win of
the week, against the Coyotes. In 82
career games in which Beagle recorded a point for the Caps, the team’s record
is 67-8-7, and they are 31-2-5 in the 38 games he recorded a point on home ice.
Defense: 1.33/game (season: 2.14 /game; rank: 1st)
The Caps faced the good, the bad, and the “meh” in terms of opponents’
offenses for the week. Calgary is a
middle of the road team (ended the week 16th in scoring offense),
Columbus is a very good offensive team (fifth), while Arizona is challenged in
the offensive end (27th).
Still, holding three opponents to a total of four goals speaks to good
defense from the net out. The skaters
limited chances for opponents, finishing the week by allowing just 51.52 shot
attempts per 60 5-on-5 minutes, fewer than their fifth-ranked figure for the
season (53.24; numbers from Corsica.hockey).
It was a case of the Caps taking advantage of
possession-challenged teams, Calgary ranking 19th at week’s end in
Corsi-for at 5-on-5 on the road, Columbus ranking 21st, and Arizona
ranking last in Corsi-for on the road.
For the week, the Caps won the 5-on-5 battle with a 59.60 Corsi-for
percentage at fives and a shots for share of 59.15 percent (numbers from Corsica.hockey), largely by limiting
opponents’ opportunities to generate any offense.
Goaltending: 1.30 / .956 (season: 2.03 / .926 / 11 shutouts)
Braden Holtby got all the minutes in Week 24, and he was
more than up to the task. He stopped 86
of 90 shots over the three games and by the end of the week was second among
all goalies in wins (39, Sergei Bobrovsky has 40), third in goals against
average (2.01, behind Jimmy Howard and Bobrovsky), seventh in save percentage
(.927), and first in shutouts (eight).
By period, he was excellent in the first periods of games
(25-for-26/.962), sublime in the second period (23-for-23/1.000), and very good
in the third (35-for-38/.921). He also
stopped all three shots he saw in overtime against Columbus and denied the Blue
Jackets on all three shot attempts he faced in the Gimmick. When he beat Columbus in the middle game of
the week, it extended an amazing streak.
He has not lost in regulation to an Eastern Conference team in the 2017
portion of the season, not since dropping a 4-3 decision to the New York
Islanders on December 27th.
Since then, Holtby is 17-0-2, 1.63, .939, with four shutouts against
Eastern Conference teams.
Power Play: 3-for-10 / 30.0 percent (season: 21.8 percent; rank: 7th)
It was a good, solid week on the power play for the
Caps. The were 2-for-3 against the
Calgary Flames, the first time the Caps recorded two power play goals in a game
in six weeks, since doing it in a 5-0 win over the Carolina Hurricanes on
February 7th. When they went
1-for-4 against Arizona to end the week, it was the first time since Week 18
that they had a week of 30 percent or better on the power play.
The Caps certainly felt the presence of Kevin Shattenkirk on
the man advantage. He did not have a
goal, but he did have four shots on goal and had the primary assist on both
power play goals against Calgary. Alex
Ovechkin led the Caps in shots on goal on the power play for the week (six) and
scored a pair of goals. T.J. Oshie was the player shooting in a bit of bad
luck, getting four shots on goal without anything to show for it. He did have a power play assist for the week,
though, getting the secondary helper on Nicklas Backstrom’s power play goal (on
his only power play shot on goal for the week) against Calgary.
Penalty Killing: 7-for-7 / 100.0 percent (season: 84.2
percent; rank: 7th)
Few chances, no goals.
That’s the way you draw it up. When
the Caps allowed the Flames a single power play chance, it was the third
straight game that Washington limited an opponent to a single power play
chance. As it was, the seven shorthanded
situations faced were the fewest faced by the Caps in 19 weeks with three or
more games played this season. It was
the second time in four weeks and the fifth time this season that the Caps
killed all the shorthanded situations they faced in a week. It was also an efficient penalty kill,
allowing only ten shots on goal in 14:00 of shorthanded ice time. It was a particularly efficient penalty kill
against Columbus, who managed a single shot on goal in four power play minutes.
Faceoffs: 81-173 / 46.8 percent (season: 50.0 percent; rank:
13th)
It was not a good week in the faceoff circle for the
Caps. They were below 50 percent in all
three games and under 50 percent in both the offensive and defensive zones for
the week. It was not as if they were
facing the best of the best in that particular skill, either. None of the three teams they faced outranked
them in the team faceoff rankings.
Individually, it was a good week for Jay Beagle, who
outperformed his already highly-ranked faceoff winning percentage, winning 61.8
percent of his draws to finish the week ranked seventh among 145 skaters taking
at least 250 draws this season (57.1 percent).
Evgeny Kuznetsov took the most draws this week (42) but won only 13 (31.0
percent). He finished the week ranked
135th among that same group of 145 skatrers with 43.2 percent. T.J. Oshie was the other Caps taking more
than ten draws finishing over 50 percent (7-for-143/53.8 percent), while Lars
Eller finished under 50 percent in that group for the Caps (16-for-34/47.2
percent).
Goals by Period:
The week had a certain common quality about it. Slow starts and busy finishes. Only three goals were scored in first periods
for the week (two by the Caps, against Calgary and Arizona), while the Caps and
their opponents combined for eight of the 13 total goals for the week in the
third period, the Caps holding a 5-3 edge.
The Caps did maintain a positive goal differential in each period for
the week. It allowed the Caps to finish
the week with the best goal differential in first periods this season (plus-41
to plus-32 for Columbus) and finish in a tie with Pittsburgh for the best goal
differential in third periods (plus-32).
Washington finished the week as one of four teams with positive goal differentials
in all three regulation periods and overtime (Columbus, the New York Rangers,
and the Edmonton Oilers are the others).
In the end…
It was a good week.
Any week with three wins in three tries qualifies. The Caps had superior possession numbers, but
their offense did not track cleanly with that level of dominance, especially
given they held a slim 5-4 edge in 5-on-5 goals despite a Corsi-for north of 55
percent. But looking at the particulars,
there were those dominant underlying numbers at 5-on-5, there were the good
special teams results, there was the excellent goaltending from Braden Holtby,
there was the find secondary scoring from the likes of Daniel Winnik, and there
was the record-setting home win on Saturday.
There was not a lot not to like for Week 24.
The three game sweep at home for the week was an especially
welcome result, given that the Caps now embark on a five-game road trip over
eight days, taking them through three time zones. It might be just the sort of change in
routine that the Caps need to keep their focus fresh as they head into the last
few games of the regular season.
Three Stars of the Week:
- First Star: Braden Holtby (3-0-0, 1.30, .956)
- Second Star: Kevin Shattenkirk (0-4-4, plus-3, 12 shots, 20 shot attempts, four hits, four blocked shots, 20:35 ice time per game)
- Third Star: Nicklas Backstrom (1-3-4, even, 1-2-3 on power plays, one game-winning goal)
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