Nate Schmidt
“True happiness is... to enjoy the present, without anxious
dependence upon the future.”
-- Lucius Annaeus Seneca
There are few players who seem to have more fun being a
hockey player than Nate Schmidt. As it
was once eloquently, if graphically put (on "The Tonight Show," of all places), he was “most likely to puke rainbows
when he opens his mouth.”
That attitude should not obscure the fact that Schmidt had a
career year in 2016-2017 with the Caps, despite missing 22 games. He scored a career high three goals, tied a career
high with 14 assists, recorded a career high 17 points, was a career-best
plus-22, and posted a career-high 5.0 shooting percentage.
More than any player, though, his ice time suffered with the
acquisition of Kevin Shattenkirk at the trading deadline. Starting with Shattenkirk’s first game with
the Caps on February 28th, Schmidt was in the lineup only seven
times in the last 21 games of the season.
Even with the limited duty, Schmidt managed to finish the season with a
measure of consistency, recording points in each of his eight ten-game segments
and failing to get an assist only in his seventh such segment. He was an even or better player in each of
his last seven segments and was plus-6 in his last four games of the season.
What Schmidt had was an odd home-road split. The Caps were 22-6-1 in home games in which
he dressed (10-1-1 in home games he missed), while they were 17-9-5 in road
games he played (6-3-1 in road games he missed).
Schmidt’s possession numbers had an odd quality to
them. His individual Corsi-for at 5-on-5
was a respectable 53.5 percent (numbers from stats.hockeyanalysis.com), but it
dissolved to a point when comparing him among teammates. He had a good possession chemistry with
Brooks Orpik, with whom he spent most of his 5-on-5 ice time. Together, they had a 56.3 percent Corsi-for
at fives, but when apart, both dropped by more than seven points. It turned out that Schmidt was worse with
every other defenseman with whom he was paired than he was when apart from
them.
Fearless’ Take… The Caps were 13-0-1 in games in which Nate
Schmidt recorded a point. The Caps were
“only” 17-6-1 in games Schmidt recorded a point prior to this season.
Cheerless’ Take… Yeah, it’s nice that the Caps did well when
he had a point, but more Nate was not necessarily better. The Caps were 12-10-1 in games in which he
skated more than 16 minutes, 6-1-1 when he skated fewer than 13 minutes.
Odd Schmidt Fact… No player for the Caps had more games of
plus-3 or better in 2016-2017 than Nate Schmidt. He had six such games. In fact, no defenseman has had more such games
in a season for the Caps since Sylvain Cote in 1993-1994 (eight games).
Game to Remember… January 5th vs. Columbus
When the Columbus Blue Jackets came to Washington for a
January 5th contest, they were riding a 16-game winning streak, the
second-longest in NHL history, and were looking to tie the 1992-1993 Pittsburgh
Penguins for the longest winning streak in league history. It was the Caps who came out strong to start
the game, though, getting goals from Daniel Winnik (with an assist from
Schmidt) and John Carlson in the first period to take a 2-0 lead. Any thoughts the Blue Jackets had of changing
the momentum were put to rest seven minutes into the second period when Schmidt
took a feed from Alex Ovechkin and fired a shot on goalie Sergei Bobrovsky that
was stopped. He followed up his own
shot, though, and his second chance shot got through Bobrovsky to make it a 3-0
lead. It was the dagger in the heart of
the Blue Jackets’ winning streak and for Schmidt one of three two-point games
in his season.
Game to Forget… February 19th vs. New York
Rangers
The Caps lost their first game of their season series
against the New York Rangers in October at Verizon Center and didn’t get a
chance to even the series until February, when they visited Madison Square
Garden. It was a goalies sort of contest
from the start. Philipp Grubauer got the
start and stopped 18 of 19 shots in the first period, while Henrik Lundqvist
was his usual stingy self against the Caps.
Alex Ovechkin did manage to solve Lundqvist for a power play goal in the
second period, leaving the teams tied going into the third. One slip could be the difference in this
game. Unfortunately for Schmidt and the
Caps, it came with less than nine minutes left off a faceoff in the Caps’ end
to the right of Grubauer. Jay Beagle won
the draw from Mika Zibanejad, but Chris Kreider got inside position on Schmidt
and beat him to the puck. Kreider found
Mats Zuccarello in the slot for a shot that slipped between Grubauer’s pads for
the game-winning goal. Schmidt skated
one more shift after that and finished with two shot attempts (both blocked), a
hit, and a takeaway in 14 minutes and change for the afternoon…and that minus-1.
Postseason: 11 games, 1-3-4, plus-6
When one considers that this was Schmidt’s second career postseason
and the performance of his cohorts, he did pretty well. He tied for second in points among Caps defensemen
(1-3-4) despite missing two games in the opening round against Toronto. He was a team-best plus-6 among all Capital
skaters, and he was the only defenseman for the Caps to finish in plus
territory in the second round against Pittsburgh (plus-1). What might be the odd part of his postseason
was that it was an image in negative from his regular season in terms of ice
time and team success. The Caps were 5-2
in games in which he skated more than 16:30, 1-3 in games in which he skated
less. It might be worth noting that his
two lowest ice times were in Games 6 and 7 against the Penguins (11:20 and
13:10, respectively).
In the end…
Nate Schmidt is still climbing that developmental ladder
that took him from being an undrafted graduate of the program at the University
of Minnesota to signing with the Caps as a free agent to parts of two seasons
with the Hershey Bears to all or part of four seasons with the Caps. He still has only 200 games of regular season
and 21 postseason games of experience.
But the next rung on that developmental ladder might be in steel gray
and gold instead of red, white, and blue.
Schmidt might be property of the Vegas Golden Knights by the time you
read this sentence, his name being prominently mentioned as a potential
selection by the Golden Knights in the expansion draft. It would be unfortunate, given that the Caps
are thin on defense with the likely departures of Karl Alzner and Kevin
Shattenkirk to free agency and the untested (at the NHL level) quality of
defensemen in Hershey such as Madison Bowey or Christian Djoos. But however anxious Caps fans might be about
Schnidt’s future, he’s been a lot of fun to watch.
Grade: B+
Photo: Rob Carr/Getty Images North America
No comments:
Post a Comment