The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals wrap up their five-game home stand
on Friday night when the New York Rangers visit Capital One Arena. It will be a contest of two teams on
fire. Washington will take a 7-2-0
record in their last nine games into the contest, while the Rangers will be
sporting a record of 6-1-0 in their last seven contests and 12-3-0 in their
last 15 games.
The Rangers were stuck in a deep hole on October 28th
when they dropped a 5-4 decision to the Montreal Canadiens. At 3-7-2 they were tied with the Buffalo
Sabres with the fourth-worst record in the league. They were leaking goals, having allowed, with
the Canadiens, the fourth-highest number of goals in the league (42). Their penalty killing was poor (77.7
percent/25th), and they were an iffy possession team (48.61 percent
shot attempts-for at 5-on-5/22nd).
In 15 games since, the Rangers are no better a possession
team (47.20 percent/26th), but they have allowed just 38 goals, tied
with Tampa Bay for second-fewest in that span.
Is it goaltending? Perhaps. Henrik Lundqvist started the season looking
as if at age 35, the back side of his career might be in sight. In that early rut in which the Rangers found
themselves, he was 2-4-2, 3.12, .900, with one shutout. Since then, however, Lundqvist is 11-2-0,
2.36, .927, with one shutout, more “Lundqvistian” numbers. He is doing this despite a heavier workload
in shots faced, seeing 31.16 shots per 60 minutes in his sluggish opening and
32.34 shots per 60 minutes on his hot run of late. In 36 career games against the Caps,
Lundqvist is 21-11-4, 2.61, .909, with four shutouts.
After making 14 straight appearances, Lundqvist was unable
to go against the Pittsburgh Penguins on Tuesday due to the flu, leaving thing
to Ondrej Pavelec, who presumably would get the call if Lundqvist is still
under the weather. Now with his third
team in an 11-year career (two franchises, since he was with the Atlanta
Thrashers when they moved to Winnipeg to become the Jets), Pavelec’s career arc
has been descending into that of a backup for more than a few seasons now. He appeared in a career high 68 games in
2011-2012 with the Jets and led the league with 44 appearances in the next,
abbreviated 2012-2013 campaign. His
appearances diminished thereafter, from 57 in 82 games in 2013-2014 to 50 the
following season, then 33 in 2015-2016 (he missed 33 games to a knee injury) to
eight last season (another 24 games missed to injuries).
Pavelec has never been an especially efficient goaltender at this level, posting a save percentage over .915 just once in 11 seasons (.920 with the Jets in 2014-2015). He has just one season with a goals against average under 2.70, that in the same 2014-2015 season when he finished with a 2.28 GAA. He is not having a particularly noteworthy season as Lundqvist’s backup, going 2-4-0, 3.45, .899 in seven appearances. He is 10-15-2, 2.89, .907, with three shutouts in 29 career appearances against the Caps.
Pavelec has never been an especially efficient goaltender at this level, posting a save percentage over .915 just once in 11 seasons (.920 with the Jets in 2014-2015). He has just one season with a goals against average under 2.70, that in the same 2014-2015 season when he finished with a 2.28 GAA. He is not having a particularly noteworthy season as Lundqvist’s backup, going 2-4-0, 3.45, .899 in seven appearances. He is 10-15-2, 2.89, .907, with three shutouts in 29 career appearances against the Caps.
The Rangers have really spread things around, scoring-wise,
on their 12-3-0 run, nine different players with points in double digits. Mats Zuccarello leads the club with 14 points
in that stretch (3-11-14). He is looking
to have a bounceback year after seeing his goal total drop from 26 in 81 games
in 2015-2016 to 15 in 80 games last season, even if his points fell just two,
from 61 to 59. Zuccarello’s problem last
year was efficiency. He recorded more
shots on goal last season than in the one before (189 to 166) but saw his
shooting percentage cut almost in half, from 15.7 percent to 7.9 percent. He has been streaky on the road this season,
recording a four-point game in the Rangers’ road opener this season, in Toronto
(an 8-5 loss to the Maple Leafs) and a two-point game against the Penguins on
Tuesday, but he is also without a point in five of nine road games
overall. Zuccarello is 1-8-9, even, in
18 career games against Washington.
1. The Rangers have
outscored opponents by a 56-38 margin in their 12-3-0 run. Seven of their 12 wins were by multi-goal
margins, and they are 4-0-0 in extra-time games in that streak.
2. No team has played
fewer games on the road this season than the Rangers, going 4-5-0 in nine games
away from Madison Square Garden. Four
teams have 12 road games on their record.
3. The road has not
been kind to the Rangers in terms of possession numbers. They rank 301th of 31 teams in shot
attempts-for at 5-on-5 (45.75 percent), ahead of only the Anaheim Ducks (43.49
percent; numbers from NHL.com).
4. The Rangers have
four players with five or more goals in their 12-3-0 run. By way of comparison, the Caps have only five
players with five or more goals overall for the season (although they do have
five players with four).
5. Remember when the
Rangers were a bunch of shot-blocking freaks?
Well now, not so much. They rank
21st in blocked shots this season (393). In the other grittership category, they rank
19th in credited hits. The
low rankings might be good if they were masters of possession, but as we have
seen, they are not (47.78 percent overall in shot attempts-for at fives, home
and road).
1. Alex Ovechkin has
not gone consecutive home games without a point over his last 11 contests at
Capital One Arena (6-6-12, plus-1), and he has points in his last three home
games (3-4-7, plus-1).
2. When Nicklas
Backstrom scored a goal the other night, it broke a 21-game streak without a
goal. With four goals, he is still tied
for sixth on the club (with Lars Eller, Devante Smith-Pelly, Tom Wilson, and
Alex Chiasson).
3. When Tom Wilson
recorded a four-point game against Chicago on Wednesday night, it was his first
multi-point result since Game 10 (2-0-2 in a 3-2 win over the Boston Bruins on
November 4th), and it was as many points as he recorded in his
previous nine games. He has four goals
this season on 34 shots, a career best (to date) 11.8 shooting percentage.
4. That 6-2 win over Chicago on Wednesday evened
the Caps’ record at 7-7 in games decided by three or more goals. Their 14 decisions in such games is second-most
in the league, trailing only the 17 such decisions the Winnipeg Jets have
(11-6).
5. Only two teams have more blocked shots on
home ice than the Caps (245). The Rangers
have 260, and the Montreal Canadiens have 293.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
New York: Michael Grabner
In the Rangers’ 12-3-0 run since
late October, Michael Grabner has ten goals to lead the club. It largely negates a sluggish start in which
he recorded just one goal in his first ten games of the season and puts him on
a pace that could mean a career high before the season is done. That career high was set back in 2010-2011
with the New York Islanders, his first full season in the NHL after playing 20
games with the Vancouver Canucks the previous year. That 34-goal total was a hard thing for
Grabner to live up to, as his goal totals sank like a stone in the five years
thereafter, settling at nine goals in his only season with the Toronto Maple
Leafs in 2015-2016. He rebounded last
season in his first year with the Rangers, finishing with 27 goals in 76
games. He is currently on a pace to
finish with 39 goals. What he has not
yet done this season though, is make much of a dent on the road. Only one of his 13 goals have been scored
away from Madison Square Garden. Grabner
is 2-3-5, minus-1, in 23 career games against the Caps.
Washington: Alex Chiasson
It will no doubt seem odd to Capitals fans, but Alex
Chiasson is averaging more power play ice time per game this season (1:03) than
is Jakub Vrana (1:01). After all, this
is a player who does not have a power play goal in his last 173 games, not
since he potted one as a member of the Ottawa Senators in a 3-2 loss to the
Carolina Hurricanes back on November 7, 2015.
He does not have a power play point this season for the Caps, despite
getting, if not top minutes, than substantial time on the man advantage. He does, however, provide two attributes that
at least suggest he get some time on the power play. He is a big body that can screen goaltenders
(6’4”/208), and he is a right-handed shot, a plus playing in the middle on a
1-3-1 power play that the Caps feature.
What he does get is more ice time killing penalties, ranking second
among Caps forwards with 2:16 per game in shorthanded ice time, trailing only
Jay Beagle (2:50). It is some note than
more than a quarter of his ice time per game (3:19 of 12:41) is spent on special
teams. He is the only forward on the
club who can make that claim. In eight
career games against the Rangers, Chiasson is 1-4-5, plus-3.
In the end…
The Caps are firing on all cylinders at the moment, their 14
goals over their last three games representing the first time this season that
the Caps scored four or more goals in three consecutive games. And they have spread things around, too, with
eight different players sharing in the goal scoring, 16 different players
recording points. It will be a challenge
against the recently hot Rangers, though.
Let’s just see if the Rangers are all that on the road, where they have
just two wins in regulation this season.
Okay, so they happen to be in their last two road games. Still…
Capitals 4 – Rangers 2
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