“Consistency is the foundation of virtue.”
-- Francis Bacon
If consistency can be spectacular, Lars Eller is a spectacular
player. Consider his scoring lines over
the last six seasons coming into the 2016-2017 season:
If Caps fans there thinking “WYSIWYG” with Eller ("what you see is what
you get"), the first half of the season might have left those same fans asking “WTF?” Eller had the best individual shot attempt
share of any forward on the club appearing in more than a dozen games (57.81
percent; numbers from NHL.com). Among
those 13 forwards he had the seventh highest average ice time, just over 14
minutes per game. But Eller was stuck at
three goals and seven points, and his minus-1 rating was tied for worst in the
group. In those first 40 games, of which
Eller appeared in 39, his game was a case of “efficiency” without “effectiveness,”
at least as far as his offensive numbers were concerned.
Then…there was an empty net goal.
Game 41 against the Pittsburgh Penguins (Eller’s 40th of the
season) was dominated by Alex Ovechkin reaching the 1,000 point mark for his
career with a goal 35 seconds into the contest.
Later, the Caps took a 4-2 lead into the final minute of play, and one
of the oddest goals you will ever see was authored by Eller…
Off a stick, off a helmet, and into an empty net. And with that, Eller started off on a run
over his next two ten-game splits in which he was 7-7-14, plus-16. He tied for the league lead in plus-minus
over that period. In fact, it was a
teammate with which he was tied (Brett Connolly), and the other member of that
third line – Andre Burakovsky – was third over that period with a plus-13. Eller and his cohorts combined for 20 goals over
those 20 games (it might have been more, but Burakovsky missed five games in
that period), almost a quarter of the 86 goals the Caps scored over those 20
games in posting a 15-3-2 record. It
was, arguably, Eller’s, his line’s, and the Caps’ best stretch of hockey of the
season.
It was a brief moment in the sunshine for Eller, who spent his last two
ten-game splits as he did his first four, with one notable exception. As he did in those first four ten-game
splits, he struggled to put up points, going 2-2-4, the fewest points among the
12 forwards playing in at least ten games in that finishing run. But he also struggled in his possession
numbers, his 50.71 shot attempt percentage last among that same group of 12 forwards.
Fearless’ Take… Secondary scoring matters. Folks keep pounding on this point, but Eller’s
numbers reflect that. The Caps were
8-1-2 in games in which he had a goal, 17-2-3 in games in which he had a
point. Eller was another one of those Caps
who performed consistently at home or on the road, going 6-5-11, plus-8, in 41
games at Verizon Center and 6-8-14, plus-7, in 40 games on the road. He and T.J. Oshie were the only Capitals this
season to record at least one even strength, power play, and shorthanded point.
Cheerless’ Take… Eller had a couple of other odd splits. In 23 games against the other seven teams in
the East reaching the postseason, he was 5-5-10, plus-10. That is an 18-18-36, plus-36 pace per 82
games. Against the West, it was an
entirely different matter. In 16 games
against the eight teams making the playoffs, Eller was 0-3-3, minus-1, an
0-15-15, minus-5 pace.
Odd Eller Fact… 2016-2017 was the first season since his rookie year
that he did not record a shootout attempt.
Coming into this season (and ending it), Eller was 6-for-17 (35.3
percent, tied for 88th among 242 players recording at least ten
shots since 2010-2011) with three game-deciding goals in his career in the trick
shot competition.
Game to remember… February 22nd vs. Philadelphia
Sometimes, the statistics don’t matter.
That might have been the case for Lars Eller on a night back in
February, a “Wednesday Night Rivalry” game against the Philadelphia Flyers
broadcast nationally. The Caps were wrapping
up a three-game road trip on which they lost their first two games, in Detroit
(in a Gimmick) and at Madison Square Garden against the Rangers. For the Caps, it was a good night, their
short losing streak coming to an end in a 4-1 win at Wells Fargo Center. For Eller, it was a quiet night. He was on the ice for a power play goal by
Evgeny Kuznetsov, but otherwise he managed just two shots on goal and lost
seven of 11 draws with no points in 14 minutes of ice time. However, it was Eller’s 500th NHL
game, and for the highest-drafted player ever born and trained in Denmark when
he was taken 13th overall by the St. Louis Blues in 2007 (Mikkel
Boedker was taken eighth-overall the following season), it was still a night to
remember.
Game to forget… March 28th vs. Minnesota
And sometimes the statistics don’t matter in an entirely different
way. When the Caps took to the road to
head to Minnesota in late March, they were carrying with them a four-game
winning streak. Lars Eller was lugging a
lot more baggage – a 12-game streak without a point. Getting on the road seemed as if it might be
just the tonic to break that streak.
Fortunately for the Caps, they broke out to an early lead, took it into
the third period, then posted a goal to make it 4-2 with less than eight
minutes left in the contest. The Wild
scored a pair of goals in the last five minutes to tie the game and threatened
to snatch victory from the Caps’ hands.
However, T.J. Oshie scored less than two minutes into overtime to give
the Caps the win. For Eller, it was a
thoroughly forgettable game. He was on
the ice for all four Wild goals, took a delay of game penalty, and skated just
10 even strength minutes without a point.
It was the sort of game to forget, put behind you, and move on to the
next one (which, apparently, he did, since he scored a goal in Colorado in the
next contest to break a 21-game streak without one).
Postseason: 13 games, 0-5-5, minus-2, 59.56 CF% at 5-on-5
Lars Eller scored a goal against the Ottawa Senators in Game 1 of
Montreal’s playoff series against the Senators in 2015. Since then, he went 12 straight games without
a postseason goal coming into this postseason with the Caps. Then, he went and more than doubled that
unfortunate streak by going without a goal in the 13 games in which he played.
It wasn’t for lack of trying; Eller did record 22 shots on goal in 13 games, a
respectable total for a player getting 14 minutes a game. And Eller did have excellent possession
numbers in the postseason – 59.56 percent Corsi-for at 5-on-5, fourth-best on
the team (numbers from Corsica.hockey). But
that pesky biscuit just wouldn’t go in the net, a malady that afflicted the
bottom six forwards throughout the postseason.
In the end…
Lars Eller completed his regular season with a scoring line of 12-13-25,
almost identical to that five-year average with which he entered the season
13-15-28, and he appeared in 81 of 82 games, consistent with the durability he
displayed over the previous five years.
In that sense, in the overall scheme of things, it was an “Eller-like”
season. Unfortunately, the same can be
said for his postseason. Except for a
fine 2014 postseason with Montreal (5-8-13 in 17 games), he has not been an
especially noteworthy performer in the spring (1-4-5 in 20 games in three other
playoff years). Going 0-5-5 for the Caps
this spring did nothing to improve his grading for the season. Like too many Caps, especially among the
bottom six, he just didn’t demonstrate a mastery of the subject in the final
exam. If he could have extended his
consistency into the postseason, he could have earned the virtue of a higher
grade.
Grade: C+
Photo: Getty Images North America
Photo: Getty Images North America
No comments:
Post a Comment