The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals take a break from their Metropolitan
Division-loaded schedule on Sunday afternoon when they host the Vegas Golden
Knights at Capital One Arena. The
contest is the only one for the Caps in a five-game stretch in which they face
an opponent outside their own division.
This game will end the season series for these clubs, unless
of course they meet in the Stanley Cup final.
The Golden Knights won the first meeting, jumping out to a 3-0 lead
before the game was 15 minutes old and holding off the Caps to skate off with
that margin at game’s end.
Vegas is coming to town to play their fourth game of a
six-game road trip, their longest since a six-game trip in late October and
early November. If you are looking back
to that trip for some inkling of what might happen here, the Golden Knights
lost five of six games on that trip (1-4-1).
They have already done better on this trip, winning two of their first
three games, although they did lose on Friday night to the Minnesota Wild, 5-2.
Vegas has a team of well-known goal scorers. OK, James Neal might be the only one. But if one were to ask, “which Golden Knight
leads the team in goals scored on the road,” how many names would you go
through before settling on Erik Haula?
Yes, that Erik Haula, the seventh-round draft pick of the Minnesota Wild
in 2009 out of Shattuck St. Mary’s (you know, the team that Penguin played
on). Of his career-high 19 goals so far
this season, he has 12 on the road, including one in each of the first three
games of this current road trip. Haula
has been a rather consistent performer over his career on a home-vs.-road
basis. He is 32-34-66 in 158 career home
games with Minnesota and Vegas, and he is 30-32-62 in 155 career road
games. None of those goals, however,
home or road, have come at the expense of the Caps. Haula is 0-0-0, minus-2, in seven career
games against Washington.
Defenseman Nate Schmidt has as many goals on the road this
season (three), and almost as many assists (12) and points (15) on the road as
he compiled in a full season overall as a member of the Washington Capitals
(3-14-17 last season). The odd statistic
is one that might be (at least what Caps fans might hope) is the canary in the
coal mine. Schmidt is plus-12 at home
this season, but he is minus-1 on the road.
If you adhere to the Alex Ovechkin “Pool Party Theory” of why the Golden
Knights are so successful at home, then Schmidt’s difference in home and road
plus-minus might make a little more sense.
Still, Schmidt and his ever-smiling face are having a fine year. He is tied for second among the team’s
defensemen in goals (four, trailing Colin Miller’s seven), second in assists
(18, trailing Miller’s 21), and second in points (22, trailing Miller’s
28). He is one of three Vegas defensemen
with a plus-minus in double digits (plus-11, trailing Deryk Engelland’s plus-14
and Brayden McNabb’s plus-13), and he is the only Vegas defenseman averaging
more than 20 minutes per game in ice time (22:29). He and Miller are the only Golden Knight
defensemen to appear in all 51 games this season. He did not record a point in the teams’
earlier meeting this season, his only career appearance against the Caps.
Malcolm Subban got the call and allowed five goals to the
Wild in Vegas’ 5-2 loss in Minnesota on Friday night, meaning that the Caps are
likely to see an old friend and antagonist on Sunday. If Marc-Andre Fleury gets the call on Sunday,
it will be his 38th career regular season game against the Caps,
passing Henrik Lundqvist and tying him with Roberto Luongo for second place
among active goalies in games against the Caps (Cam Ward has faced the Caps 41
times). Only Ward among active goalies
has faced the Caps more often in Washington (21 times) than Fleury (Sunday
would be his 20th appearance against the Caps in DC).
In his first year in Las Vegas after 13 years in Pittsburgh, Fleury might be having a career year, at least numbers-wise. His 1.79 goals against average is half a goal per game better than his next best (2.29 in 2015-2016) and ranks second among 38 goalies with at least 1,000 minutes of ice time. His .942 save percentage is more than 20 points over his next best (.921 in 2015-2016) and is currently second in that same group of goalies this season. And, despite missing 25 games to a concussion earlier this season, he has not allowed more than three goals in a game in almost four months, not since he gve up six to the Detroit Red Wings, not coincidentally, the game in which he likely sustained that concussion. Since returning to the lineup he is 11-3-2, 1.61, .946, with two shutouts, and only three times in those 16 games did he allow as many as three goals. By the way, that game against the Red Wings is the only one among 20 games Fluery has played this season in which his game save percentage was under .900. He is 21-12-2 (two no-decisions), 2.53, .915, with four shutouts in his career against the Caps.
In his first year in Las Vegas after 13 years in Pittsburgh, Fleury might be having a career year, at least numbers-wise. His 1.79 goals against average is half a goal per game better than his next best (2.29 in 2015-2016) and ranks second among 38 goalies with at least 1,000 minutes of ice time. His .942 save percentage is more than 20 points over his next best (.921 in 2015-2016) and is currently second in that same group of goalies this season. And, despite missing 25 games to a concussion earlier this season, he has not allowed more than three goals in a game in almost four months, not since he gve up six to the Detroit Red Wings, not coincidentally, the game in which he likely sustained that concussion. Since returning to the lineup he is 11-3-2, 1.61, .946, with two shutouts, and only three times in those 16 games did he allow as many as three goals. By the way, that game against the Red Wings is the only one among 20 games Fluery has played this season in which his game save percentage was under .900. He is 21-12-2 (two no-decisions), 2.53, .915, with four shutouts in his career against the Caps.
1. No Western
Conference team has played fewer games against the Metropolitan Division than
Vegas (nine, tied with the Winnipeg Jets through Friday night). Still, no Western Conference team has fewer
standings points earned against the Metro than Vegas (11), except for the Edmonton
Oilers (10 in 12 games).
2. Vegas had the best
record in the league when trailing after one period (6-5-3/.428). They also have the best record in the league
when trailing after two periods (5-7-1/.385).
3. If Vegas scores
first, book it. They have the best
record in the league when scoring first, losing just once in 23 games when they
did so (22-1-0).
4. Vegas has out-shot
opponents 33 times in 51 games, and they have the most wins in the league when doing
so (24 wins).
5. The Golden Knights
like open ice. No team has more goals at
3-on-3 than Vegas (seven).
1. The Caps have 18
players in double digits in points so far this season. They had 19 all of last year. If they get a 19th, it is almost surely
going to be Brooks Orpik, who has eight points (all assists).
2. The Caps have 15
different players with game-winning goals so far. They had 17 all of last
season.
3. Winning games when
trailing after one period is a relatively rare occurrence in the NHL – no team
has a winning record when doing so – but the Caps do it more often than
most. They have the third-best record in
the league when trailing after 20 minutes (5-9-0/.357).
4. When the Caps lost
to the Penguins, 7-4, on Friday night, it was their ninth loss by three or more
goals this season. They had eight such
games all of last season.
5. Washington has
lost only four times this season when out-shooting the opposition, tied for
fewest losses in the league (with Nashville).
Then again, the Caps have out-shot opponents only 16 times in 51
games. Only the Anaheim Ducks have fewer
such games (15).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Vegas: Jonathan Marchessault
With 20 letters, Jonathan Marchessault might have the
longest name in the league (it used to be longer: Jonathan Audy-Marchessault,
but he dropped the “Audy” in 2013). But
he has demonstrated himself to be an adept offensive player who perhaps does
not get the credit he deserves. It
started in junior. In four years with
the Quebec Remparts in the QMJHL, he raised his goal-scoring from 10 to 18 to
30, and finally to 40 in his last season.
League general managers were unimpressed. He was not drafted. He signed a pro contract with the Connecticut
Whale in the AHL, where he played for a season (24 goals in 76 games) before
signing as a free agent by the Columbus Blue Jackets in July 2012.
He played only two games for the Blue Jackets before he was
traded in March 2014 to the Tampa Bay Lightning. He did play 47 games over two seasons in
Tampa before moving across the Peninsula to the Florida Panthers as a free agent
in July 2016. There, he exploded for 30
goals in 75 games, more than tripling his NHL total to date (eight in 49 games
over three seasons). Despite the leading
the Panthers in goal-scoring and being just 26 years old, the Panthers left him
exposed in the expansion draft, where he was taken by Vegas. Here is a guy who has performed for the most
part very well in terms of putting up numbers, all the way back to junior, but
he just has not seemed to inspire the confidence of his front office managers
quite enough to make a long term investment in him, at least until he got to
Nevada. Washington sports fans might
look at him as hockey’s equivalent to Kirk Cousins. Marchessault is 0-3-3 even, in seven career
games against the Caps.
Washington: Brett Connolly
Last season, Brett Connolly found his goal scoring touch,
posting a career high of 15 goals in 66 games in his first season with the
Capitals. Apparently, it was no
fluke. In just 42 games so far this
season he is on the verge of matching, if not surpassing that total with 13
goals to date. His profile looks a bit
different this year with nine even strength and four power play goals on his
ledger after recording 14 of his 15 goals last season at even strength. He has been in an odd sort of pattern
lately. Ove his last dozen games he has
not gone more than two without a goal.
Seeing as how he is without a goal in his last two contests, he could be
due for one against the Golden Knights.
And, given his efficiency, it is not a stretch to think he could add to
his goal total. Among players appearing
in at least 20 games this season, Connolly leads the league in shooting
percentage (28.3 percent). It is
something that has characterized his play with the Caps over two seasons,
posting a 22.0 percent shooting mark in 108 games. What Connolly did not do in the teams’ first
meeting in December was record a shot on goal.
He, like the rest of the Caps, will be looking for his first career
point against the Golden Knights.
In the end…
In the teams’ first meeting in December, the Caps started
slowly, and it did them in. Down 3-0
before the game was 15 minutes old, the Caps were never really in it. Given their slow starts in each of their last
two games, falling behind by a pair of goals in each in the first period, it is
something to be addressed. Even if Vegas
isn’t quite the team on the road that they are at home, speed doesn’t know time
zones, and if the Caps let the Golden Knights dictate pace early, they could
find themselves on the short end of the score early in the contest once
more. It is not a position from which
teams emerge successfully too often in this league. Punch these guys in the nose with an early
goal or two of their own early on, and let’s see how they deal with it.
Capitals 4 – Golden Knights 2
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