It's quarter to three,
There's no one in the place 'cept you and me
So set 'em' up Joe
I got a little story I think you oughtta know
We're drinking my friend
To the end of a brief episode
So make it one for my baby
And one more for the road…
-- Johnny Mercer
It wasn’t supposed to happen this way.
Justin Williams was supposed to come to Washington, with a little encouragement,
skate with Alex Ovechkin and the rest of the Capitals, work his postseason
magic, beat back the Game 7 demons that have haunted this franchise, and hold
aloft the Stanley Cup at a celebration on Pennsylvania Avenue on a sunny day in
mid-June with thousands of long-suffering Caps fans cheering wildly.
That was the plan in July 2015 when Williams signed a two-year/$6.5
million contract. At 34 years of age, it
might have been his last best shot at a Stanley Cup. For the Caps, he was a solid veteran who
could provide the depth they lacked at right wing in 2014-2015. And he did not disappoint in the 2015-2016
regular season, scoring 22 goals for his new club. He had not scored more in a
season since he had 33 in 2006-2007 for the Carolina Hurricanes. But the playoffs were another story. He did have three goals in 12 games, but his
minus-3 was the first time he finished a postseason as a “minus” player since
his first appearance in the playoffs, in 2002 with the Philadelphia
Flyers. It was another second round exit
for the Caps, a case of the Caps Curse overcoming the Winning Ways of Williams.
The sameness of the 2015-2016 season among the seasons that preceded it
in Caps history gave the 2016-2017 season a heightened sense of urgency. It would be the second year of what was
identified by Caps General Manager Brian MacLellan in February 2016 as a
two-year window to win the Stanley Cup.
Part of the reasoning was that Williams would be in the second and final year
of his contract with the Caps, and with salary cap and age issues looming did
not appear to be a strong candidate for another deal with the club.
For Williams, 2016-2017 was something of a roller coaster. He got off to a sluggish start, posting just
one goal and one assist in each of his first two ten-game splits. Part of the problem was a shooting issue,
specifically volume. In those first 20
games he did not record a goal in a game in which he had fewer than four
shots. Unfortunately, in 16 of those
first 20 games he had fewer than four shots on goal.
Things picked up in a big way for Williams over his next three ten-game
splits, recording 15 goals on 63 shots, three of the goals of the game-winning
variety. That the Caps went 20-6-4 in
those 30 games was probably not a coincidence.
Williams couldn’t sustain that pace, though, and slipped in his next two
ten-game splits, going 2-7-9 in 19 games before coming on at the end with a
productive 5-5-10 scoring line in his last split (11 games played).
Fearless’ Take… All in all, Williams had a more productive second
season, goal scoring. He was up a pair
of goals, to 24, despite recording 34 fewer shots on goal (a 20.4 percent drop). As one would expect, getting the next-level
scoring from a player like Williams matters.
Washington was 19-1-2 in the 22 games in which he recorded a goal. He was especially hard on the Metropolitan
Division. In 30 games against teams in
the Met, Williams had 12 goals. In 50
games against the rest of the league, he had 12 goals.
Cheerless’ Take… What’s that thing about the dealer hitting on 16 or
lower in blackjack? Something like that
went on with Williams and his ice time.
The Caps were 45-18-8 when he skated less than 17 minutes, 9-6-1 when he
skated more than 17 minutes.
Odd Williams Fact… shots on goal didn’t matter for Williams insofar as losses
were concerned. The Caps lost nine games
in regulation in games he recorded more than one shot on goal, and they lost
nine games in regulation when he recorded one or no shots on goal. It was four extra time losses when he
recorded two or more shots, four extra time losses when he recorded one or no
shots. The difference was in the wins –
32 when Williams recorded more than two shots on goal, 22 when he didn’t.
Game to remember… April 8th vs. Boston
By the time the Caps reached Game 81 of their schedule, they clinched
their second consecutive Presidents Trophy and were trying to stay sharp for
the postseason. It was the last game of
their road schedule, and they were looking to extend their road winning streak
to three games and six wins in their last seven road contests. The Caps broke on top less than five minutes
into the game when Williams and Marcus Johansson broke into the Bruins’ zone
and played a give and go, Williams returning the puck to Johansson with a soft
saucer pass that Johansson converted into a backhand shot past goalie Anton
Khudobin’s left pad. The teams exchanged
goals less than a minute apart in the second period. Before the period ended, though, the Caps got
some insurance from Williams. With less
than a minute left in the period, the Caps won a faceoff in the Bruins’
end. Marcus Johansson nudged the loose
puck to Williams, who fed it through the referee’s legs to Nate Schmidt at the
left point. Schmidt fired a slap-pass to
Evgeny Kuznetsov backing into the right wing circle. As he was doing so, he one-timed a pass to
Williams who in turn one-timed a shot past Khudobin to finish a nice
tic-tac-toe play with 49.3 seconds left in the period. It was Williams’ 100th point as a
Capital in what would be his last regular season game of the campaign.
Game to forget… November 12th vs. Carolina
Playing the back half of a back-to-back set of road games, the first of
which was a 3-2 win in Chicago over the Blackhawks, the Caps were facing an old
foe and for Williams a former team.
Things started well enough for the Caps as Evgeny Kuznetsov scored 12
minutes into the game. It went south, so
to speak, in a hurry after that.
Carolina scored 35 seconds after the Kuznetsov goal and again less than
five minutes later, Williams on ice for both Hurricane tallies. It didn’t stop until the Hurricanes scored an
empty net goal with 3:50 left in the third period on their way to a 5-1
win. For his night, Williams had just
one shot attempt (missed) and won the only faceoff he took. There were no other marks on his score sheet
but for the minus-2, and his 9:38 in ice time was a season low.
Postseason: 13 games, 3-6-9, even
Let’s face it. Justin Williams
was signed for a number of things, but one stood out, his record in Games 7 of
the postseason. He arrived in Washington
with seven goals and seven assists in seven career Games 7, all of them
wins. In 2016 the Caps did not appear in
a Game 7, but if they were to make a deep run in the 2017 postseason, one had
to think the Caps would face a Game 7 at some point. It did not come in the first round against
the Toronto Maple Leafs, against whom Williams was a fine 3-3-6, plus-2, in six
games. In the second round, though, he
scoring pace slowed against the Pittsburgh Penguins. He had three assists in the first four games,
but the Caps fell behind, three games to one.
Washington scratched out wins in Games 5 and 6, but Williams did not
record a point in either of them. It set
up the ultimate irresistible force meets immovable object scenario – Williams’
record in Games 7 versus the Caps’ record in Games 7. We know how that ended. Williams skated 19:51, the most ice time he
logged in the series, but he – along with the rest of the team –did not record
a point in the 2-0 loss, and the Caps Curse of Games 7 lived on at the expense
of one of the legendary Game 7 records of an individual player in NHL history.
In the end…
In his two years in Washington, Justin Williams did just about
everything one might have hoped for when he was signed. He provided veteran leadership, he produced
on the power play, he was a reliably productive goal scorer. Everything…except that one thing. Winning a Game 7. One has the feeling at this point that if the
Caps can’t win a Game 7 with the most successful Game 7 player in the modern
history of the sport, it just isn’t going to happen. As for Williams, it was two years of almost
helping the Caps to a deeper postseason run, but with his contract expiring, it
seems a betting certainty that his stay in Washington is over, even if he wants to stay.
If he does move on, his two years have been very entertaining, and he was an
example to players of not getting too low with the lows or too high with the
highs…well, except for the hair thing, which seems to have been passed on to
the younger set...
It was a story that didn’t seem to last quite long enough or have as
happy an ending as we might have hoped.
Grade: B-
Photos:
Bruce Bennett/Getty Images North America
Toni L. Sandys/The Washington Post
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