The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
On Thursday evening, the Washington Capitals will open their
second-round series in the 2017 postseason by hosting the Pittsburgh
Penguins. In the postseason history of
the Capitals, they have faced no team more often than the Penguins. In 244 postseason games in franchise history,
the Capitals and the Penguins faced off 55 times (tied with the New York
Rangers).
It is a history dominated by the Penguins, who have won
eight of nine series against the Caps and have a game record of 34-21. Adding insult to injury, in each of the
Penguins’ four Stanley Cup seasons, they defeated the Caps on their way to the
championship, twice emerging victorious in a seven-game series, both times on
Washington ice. This is the historical
baggage that the franchise carries into their second-round series against the
Pens.
History makes for interesting discussion, not to mention a
fair amount of trolling, if you are the club on the winning side of the
divide. But it goes only so far. As far as this season goes, it was an
interesting four games between the clubs…
Four Snowflakes…Each One Different
The Caps had little problem finding the back of the Penguin
net in the season series, averaging 5.25 goals per game over the four
games. They didn’t even have that much
of a problem keeping the Penguins off the board, except for a bizarre 11-minute
stretch of the second period of the contest between the teams on January 16th
in which the Penguins scored six goals on ten shots in what would be an 8-7
overtime win to end the season series.
That barrage pushed to the background the fact that over the rest of the
series, the Caps held the Penguins to seven goals on 125 shots (a .939 save
percentage).
It was one of two extra time wins the Pens posted in the
season series, the other coming on Opening Night, when the Pens celebrated
their Stanley Cup banner-raising with a 3-2 Gimmick win over Washington. In between, the Caps turned the Penguins into
sea lion chow with 5-2 and 7-1 wins at Verizon Center.
While each of the team won their games on home ice and lost
on the road, the progress over the course of the season suggested the ice
tilting in the Pens’ direction.
Washington out-shot the Penguins and out-attempted them at 5-on-5 in the
first two games, which the teams split. The
Pens won those possession number comparisons in the last two games of the
season series, also split by the teams.
The Caps were more efficient on offense over the course of
the series, putting a larger share of their shot attempts on goal and scoring
goals on a larger share of their shots on goal.
Balance/Imbalance
The Caps scored 21 goals in the four games. In doing so, they had remarkable balance,
albeit among a small (or perhaps smaller than expected) group of players. Six skaters combined for 19 of the 21 goals,
led (again, perhaps unexpectedly) by Nicklas Backstrom with four. Five other skaters – Justin Williams, Lars
Eller (another surprise), T.J. Oshie, Alex Ovechkin, and Andre Burakovsky –
each had three in the season series.
Brett Connolly and Dmitry Orlov rounded out the goal-scoring, Orlov
being the only defender to record a goal in the season series for the Caps.
The setting up of goals did not exhibit quite the same
balance for the Caps, and it had a substantively different mix of players. Backstrom and Oshie led in assists with eight
and seven, respectively. The assist
totals drop off from there, defensemen Matt Niskanen and John Carlson with four
and three, respectively. Marcus
Johansson also had three. The result was
a scoring profile that was weighted to the top line. Backstrom (12), Oshie (10), and Ovechkin (5,
tied with Burakovsky) leading in points in the season series.
On the other side, Pittsburgh finished the season with 13
goals in the four games, but more than a third of that total was recorded by
Evgeni Malkin, who had five. No other
Penguin had more than two (Conor Sheary and Patric Hornqvist). On the helper side, Justin Schultz led the
club with six assists and tied Malkin for the team lead in points. To the extent he could be contained, Sidney
had five points (1-4-5) in three games, missing the Opening Night contest won
by the Penguins, 3-2, in a Gimmick.
The Caps might have had a single goal from its defensemen in
the season series, but Dmitry Orlov’s goal was still one more than the entire
squad of nine defensemen to dress for the Penguins in the season series. In addition to Schultz’ six assists from the
blue line, Pittsburgh got helpers from Trevor Daley (3), Olli Maatta, and Kris
Letang.
So…who are the obvious and the
not-so obvious key skaters
for Washington?
Last year, the Caps got precious little in their series
against the Penguins from Evgeny Kuznetsov, despite finishing tenth in the
league in scoring. It is part of a
longer scoring drought Kuznetsov has had in the postseason, going 2-3-5, minus-5,
over his last 19 postseason games. He
has not had much success against Pittsburgh over his career. In 21 regular season and playoff games
against the Penguins, Kuznetsov is 2-6-8, minus-5. Kuznetsov started the 2016-2017 season
slowly, going just 3-16-19, plus-5, in his first 36 games. But starting with a four-point performance
against the Toronto Maple Leafs in a 6-5 overtime win on January 3rd
(1-3-4), Kuznetsov went 16-24-40, plus-13, in his last 46 games and was in the
top 20 in overall scoring over that period. If he can approximate that level of
performance and reverse his sparse production against the Penguins, the Caps
will be formidable.
The not-so-obvious, if still obvious player is Kevin
Shattenkirk. He is, quite literally, the
“X-factor” for the Caps in this series.
He did not have a particularly productive series against the Toronto Maple
Leafs at the offensive end of the ice (no goals, three assists, all on the
power play). However, he is 2-2-4,
plus-1, in nine career regular season games against the Penguins. That career scoring line includes an assist
this season, but it also includes a no-point, minus-4 performance in a 4-1
Penguin win over the St. Louis Blues on February 4th. What he has not done is face the Penguins
this season as a Capital, having joined the Caps on February 27th
via trade, after the season series against the Penguins had been completed. Shattenkirk adds an offensive dimension to
the Caps blue line – an ability to score goals – that was not present from the
Caps this season against the Penguins. His presence has to be
accounted for and could open up things among the forwards.
And for the Penguins?
It would be borderline cliché to put Sidney Crosby’s name in
the “obvious” category, but it fits. In
last spring’s series against the Caps, Crosby was held to a pair of assists in
six games and was a minus-3. He had just
one power play point in the series. This
from a player who, in his other 123 career postseason games, is 51-91-142,
plus-12. And that includes a 2-5-7
scoring line in the Penguins’ opening round win over the Columbus Blue
Jackets. No Penguin has more career
goals or points against the Caps in the postseason than Crosby, who is 8-7-15,
plus-1, in 13 career playoff games against Washington. Crosby does have a knack of rising to the
occasion, but it is as often as not a performance that comes in the context of
what are generally strong and deep teams (the Penguin Stanley Cup-winning
teams, Team Canada). In this series,
even if the Penguins get some of their injured back, they will be a somewhat
depleted bunch. Crosby’s production is
not a luxury in this series. The
Penguins have to have it. If he is more
the player he was when he faced the Caps in 2009, when he was 8-5-13, plus-4,
in seven games, the Penguins could advance.
If he is held to a pair of assists, or something close to it, as he was
last spring, it is hard to see how Pittsburgh moves on.
The not so obvious choice is Justin Schultz. In the absence of the injured Kris Letang, the Penguins
have a considerable dropoff in terms of threats that can keep defenses from
cheating up on Penguin forwards.
Schultz, who led the Penguins’ defense in ice time per game in the
opening round series against Columbus, did not have an even-strength point in
that series (he had three power play assists, the only power play points among
Penguin defensemen). Schultz does not
get mentioned often among the best offensive defensemen in the league, but he
was one of just nine defensemen to record at least 50 points this season
(12-39-51), and his plus-27 was sixth-best among league defensemen. He is going to have to more closely
approximate that level of production in this series than his career postseason line
of 0-7-7, plus-1, in 20 playoff games.
What about the goaltending?
The opening round series against the Toronto Maple Leafs was
a tale of two series for Braden Holtby.
In the first four games he was 2-2-0, 3.02, .907.
But in the last two games, after
an off-day fine tuning session with coach Mitch Korn that might end up being a key moment
in this postseason,
he stopped 61 of 63 shots, allowed just one goal in each game, and was the wall
he has been for the Caps over the last two seasons.
Holtby is as money a postseason performer as
there has been at the position since he became the Caps number one
netminder.
In the modern era (post-1967
expansion), Holtby has the best goals against average (1.93) and save
percentage (.937) of any goaltender appearing in at least 20 postseason
games.
But here is your odd Holtby
stat.
If the Caps should find themselves
in the position of closing out the Penguins, it is a scenario that has been
cruel to Holtby.
In 14 games in which he
tended goal in a game in which the Caps could end a series, he has a record of
4-10.
But that comes with a 1.94 goals
against average and a .931 save percentage with a shutout thrown in.
With Matt Murray
an iffy proposition for this series,
the nets would appear to belong to Marc-Andre Fleury for the foreseeable
future.
And if it seems odd to think of
Fleury as an unknown, consider that he has appeared in just a dozen postseason
games over the last three seasons (only two in last year’s Stanley Cup run),
over which he is 5-6 (one no decision), 2.40, .926; and he has not faced the
Caps in the postseason since 2009.
He
was 4-1 against the Blue Jackets in the first round with a 2.51 goals against
average, but his .933 save percentage was solid.
What he has not been over most of his
postseason career is a game-changer on the road.
He is 27-23 in 51 road playoff games, but his
2.88 goals against average and .902 save percentage could be a problem against
what was the most successful team on home ice during the regular season.
Frustration Redux?
Last spring, the Caps held Evgeni Malkin and Sidney Crosby
largely in check, only to have the line of Carl Hagelin, Nick Bonino, and Phil
Kessel – the “HBK Line” – account for seven of the 16 goals the Penguins
scored against the Caps, two of those goals being game winners, including the
series-clinching overtime goal in Game 6 by Nick Bonino. That group has had a harder time of it so far
this post season, combining for three goals, but two of those were scored by
Kessel on power plays. The question is,
can Jake Guentzel and Bryan Rust be the “who are these guys” guys for the
Penguins this time around? Guentzel (5)
and Rust (4) combined for nine of the 21 goals scored by the Pens in the first
round against Columbus. The Caps can’t
have another set of heretofore unsung players being heroes in this series.
Rediscovering the magic?
The trio of players that comprised the third line for the
Caps for much of the season – Andre Burakovsky, Lars Eller, and Brett Connolly –
combined for 39 goals this season, a respectable output considering they did
not start the season together. However,
after March 1st, this trio combined for just five goals, and in the
first playoff round against Toronto did not record a goal. One of the most important factors in last
spring’s loss to Pittsburgh in the second round was the lack of production
among the bottom six forwards, especially given the production the Penguins got
from theirs. If this group can recapture
the magic they had at midseason, it will make for a steep hill for the Penguins
to climb to reach the conference finals.
In the end…
Some might say the Caps took the Toronto Maple Leafs
lightly, or that they were nervous about their exalted status as a pre-playoff
favorite to go deep into the tournament.
Whatever one thinks of those interpretations, the Caps advanced, and the
team they take into the second round seems constructed for the singular purpose
of pushing past the Penguins. Pittsburgh
brings a wealth of postseason experience and the confidence having won the Cup
provides, but they are thin on defense, they are lacking a certain level of
production from players who provided it in last year’s Cup run, and there is
perhaps just the faintest sense of uncertainty over how Marc-Andre Fleury will
fare in goal against a team with more weapons than the Columbus Blue Jackets
brought to bear in the first round.
On the other hand, Alex Ovechkin did not have a particularly
dominating series against Toronto, and his production is needed in this round. Strangely, given the strength at forward both
teams bring to the contest, it could come down to which defensive squad has the
better series, both in moving the puck out of their own end and in contributing
offense at the other end. The absence of
Kris Letang will be keenly felt in both areas, and Washington will take
advantage of it.
Capitals in six