The Washington Capitals started the month of March with a
one-point lead in the Metropolitan Division, and that is how they ended
it. Still, how they ended March in Week
26 was part success and part missed opportunity. For while they can still clinch the Metropolitan Division on Sunday against a bitter rival with a win in regulation,
they could find themselves going into the last week of the regular season in jeopardy
of dropping from the top perch of the division.
Record: 2-1-0
It was a week of meeting desperate Metropolitan Division clubs,
a home-and-home set of games against the New York Rangers and a game on home
ice against the Carolina Hurricanes, both clubs on the brink of elimination
from the postseason as the week began.
The Caps put the Rangers on the brink with their 4-2 win at Madison
Square Garden, and then the idle Rangers were officially taken from the list of
playoff eligible when the New Jersey Devils beat the Hurricanes, 4-3, on
Tuesday night. The Caps completed the
home-and-home sweep with a come-from-behind, overtime 3-2 win on Wednesday
night, leaving the Hurricanes, hanging onto the possibility of a playoff spot
by a thread.
That thread was strong enough to keep the Caps from widening
their division lead over the Pittsburgh Penguins to seven points, Carolina
winning comfortably at Capital One Arena, 4-1, on Friday night. When the Penguins beat Montreal, 5-2, on
Saturday night, it narrowed the Caps’ lead to three points (the Caps with a
game in hand) and gave the Penguins a chance to narrow the gap to the slimmest
of margins – one point – when they meet on Sunday evening. Still, the 2-1-0 week was the third winning
week in succession for the Caps, and the team is just one standings point away
from posting its 11th 100-point season in club history.
Offense: 2.67 /game (season: 3.09 /game, rank: 10th)
It was not a particularly prolific week for the Caps, made
worse by the fact that they scored half of their goals in the first 17 minutes
of Week 26. A pair of even strength
goals, a shorthanded goal, and a power play goal chased Rangers starting
goaltender Alexandar Georgiev and welcomed relief goalie Ondrej Pavelec in the
first period of the Caps’ 4-2 win over the Rangers to open the week.
It made for a light week in which the noteworthy element was
not so much who scored as who did not.
Players without a point over the three games included: Jakub Vrana (in
two games), Tom Wilson, Brett Connolly (in two games), and Dimtry Orlov,
players on whom the Caps depend for secondary scoring.
At the other end, the centers – specifically, Evgeny
Kuznetsov and Nicklas Backstrom – led the way.
Kuznetsov had the only two-goal week for the Caps, going 2-2-4 overall,
while Backstrom had a four-assist week to tie Kuznetsov for the points
lead. Alex Ovechkin had a goal, and his
shots on goal (15) led the team. The
problem was not so much Ovechkin having 15 shots in three games as the rest of
the club being relatively quiet. John
Carlson did have nine shots on goal from the blue line, but after that there
was the drop off to Lars Eller with seven and several players with six. In all, 20 of the 21 skaters for the week
recorded shots on goal (Connolly was the only one not to do so), just that
there was not a lot of volume among them.
Defense: 2.67 / game (season: 2.92 /game, rank: 16th)
Shots on goal against remain a thing with this club. They allowed 30 or more in all three games in
Week 26, but somehow, they seem to make it work, to a point. When they allowed Carolina 30 shots on goal,
it was the 50th time this season that the Caps allowed 30 or more
shots in a game. While it sounds like a
lot, it ranks as the 15th-highest total in the league. The important point, though, is that the Caps
are 30-16-4 in those games. Only five
teams have more wins this season when allowing 30 or more shots on goal, and
all of those teams have had more games with 30 or more shots allowed.
The difficulty in Week 26 was the unevenness in the shots
allowed by period. In each game played
during the week, the Caps allowed more than 15 shots in one of the regulation
periods. On the other side, there were five of nine periods in which the Caps
allowed fewer than ten shots, three of them with seven or fewer shots on goal
allowed.
Still, it made for a tough week in the shot attempts-for
percentage at 5-on-5. The Caps finished
the week with the seventh-worst shots allowed-for percentage at fives (47.55),
seventh worst when ahead (39.77), eighth-worst when tied, and ninth-worst when
in close situations. Only when behind
were the Caps in a good position with these numbers, ranking seventh-best
(62.96). The down side of that, though,
is that pesky word, “behind.”
Goaltending: 2.34 / .927 (season: 2.76 / .913 / 3 shutouts)
Week 26 was, on balance, a pretty good week. That is not to say that the embers of the
fires of goalie controversy have been extinguished entirely. Philipp Grubauer had a good outing against
the Rangers to open the week, but he sustained a lower-body injury and was held
out for the last two games.
Braden Holtby got the call in the two home games to finish
the week, and it was a mixed bag. He was
superb in the second of the home-and-home series against the Rangers, stopping
17 of 18 shots he faced in the first period on his way to a 35-save, 3-2
overtime win. That performance also
featured an excellent 13-for-14 (.929 save percentage facing the New York power
play). He got off to a good start in the
last game of the week, stopping all eight Carolina shots he faced in the first
period. But the Hurricanes came out
firing in the second period, and after stopping the first eight shots he faced,
Holtby finally yielded a goal. He would
allow three goals on the last 13 shots he faced in the 4-1 loss.
The goaltending situation was not any clearer at the end of
Week 26 than it was at the beginning.
Holtby has not returned to form and has a recent injury that might or
might not be completely healed (hockey teams and players are notoriously
close-mouthed about injuries). Grubauer
has not had enough steady work to be convincing as a go-to goalie in the postseason,
and he has to deal with a recent injury.
This is the position one wants the least turmoil and uncertainty with as
the playoffs get underway, but it seems that the Capitals will not have this
situation as the regular season comes to an end.
Power Play: 1-for-8 / 12.5 percent (season: 22.6 percent,
rank: 7th)
It was not a good week with the man advantage. And here is just how bad it was. The Caps scored a power play goal on their
first power play shot on goal of the week (Alex Ovechkin) 57 seconds into their
first power play of the week. After
that, they had no power play goals on 12 shots in 12:51 of power play ice time
over seven power plays.
Ovechkin and T.J. Oshie were the only Capitals to record
power play shots in more than one game, Ovechkin going 1-for-3 against the
Rangers in the first game, and then missing on one shot in each of the last two
games of the week (he had the Caps’ only power play shot on goal against the
Hurricanes). Oshie was 0-for-1 and
0-for-2 in the two games against the Rangers.
This was the tenth time among the 19 weeks in which the Caps
had three or more games that they had fewer than ten power play chances and the
sixth time in the last eight such weeks.
This is a lingering problem.
Despite having among the most efficient power plays in the league –
seventh-ranked at week’s end – it does not get enough deployment. The Caps have the seventh-fewest power play
opportunities in the league this season.
Penalty Killing: 9-for-10/ 90.0 percent (season: 80.2
percent, rank: 17th)
The penalty killers saved the week for special teams,
killing off nine of ten shorthanded situations and chipping in a shorthanded
goal by Evgeny Kuznetsov against the
Rangers in the 4-2 win to open the week.
There was the matter of shots, though.
Specifically, the number of shots allowed on home ice to the Ranger
power play in the middle game of the week.
Nine different Rangers combined for 14 shots on goal.
That middle game was the blemish on what was otherwise a
very efficient week. Even with those 14
shots on goal allowed in 9:43 of shorthanded ice time, the Caps finished the
week killing nine of ten penalties, allowing only 18 shots on goal in all over
19:43 of shorthanded ice time. They
finished with a flourish, if it could be said in the context of a loss, holding
the Hurricanes to a single power play and no shots on goal on that man
advantage.
Faceoffs: 82-for-168 / 48.8 percent (season: 50.5 percent,
rank: 13th)
The Caps were all over the circle for a week in which they
finished just two faceoff wins under 50 percent. There was the balance in between the ends
overall, the Caps taking 58 faceoffs in both the offensive and defensive
ends. There the similarity ended,
though. It was not a good week in the
offensive end, where the Caps went 26-for-58 (44.8 percent). All of it, however, might be a product of the
strange week T.J. Oshie had. All seven
of the faceoffs he took were in the offensive end, and he lost all of
them. He had a devil of a time with a
Ranger, losing all five draws he took against Kevin Hayes in the two games
against the New Yorkers.
Then there was the odd outcome in the defensive end. Jay Beagle, who normally shines in that area,
finished under 50 percent (albeit by a thin 11-for-23 margin), while Evgeny
Kuznetsov, who struggles from time to time in this area of the games, was
4-for-7. That Kuznetsov would finish the
week with the best faceoff winning percentage among the four Caps with at least
ten draws taken and the only one of the four over 50 percent (20-for-37/54.1
percent) might have been the strangest result of all.
Goals by Period:
If balance is something you look for in goals scored over
the course of a game, look elsewhere this week.
The Caps had a rough week in this regard. Those four goals scored in the first period
against the Rangers followed by three in the next eight regulation periods (an
additional one in overtime) made for a weak week for balance, the Caps managing
only one second period and one third period goal in Week 26.
The flip side of that was, well, flipped. Washington allowed only one first period goal
for the week, but gave up three in the second period and four in the
third. The results extended a recent,
and perhaps disturbing trend. Getting
out to leads at the first intermission is important to this team, the Caps being
one of three teams in the league without a regulation loss after 20 minutes
(Vancouver and St. Louis being the others), and their .963 winning percentage
(26-0-1) being tops in the league. That
makes a 5-1/plus-4 goal differential for the week a welcome outcome, giving the
Caps a plus-6 first period goal differential overall. However, those third periods might have a way
of coming back to bite them. They were
minus-3 for the week in third period goal differential, making them a minus-5
overall for the season. There are five
teams in the Eastern Conference with worse third period goal differentials, and
it is a poor neighborhood: Buffalo (minus-6), Ottawa (minus-19), Detroit
(minus-13), Columbus (minus-6), and Montreal (minus-26). When you look at teams like Pittsburgh
(plus-30) or Boston (plus-38), one might be concerned.
In the end…
If you are only as good as your last game, than the Caps
were not as good as they could have been.
A 2-1-0 record is welcome, but a win over Carolina on home ice to make
it 3-0-0 was something Caps fans could have reasonably expected. The loss makes their path to a division title
and a first-round series against the first wild-card team that much more
difficult. Beating Carolina would have made the regular season end game much simpler for the Caps. As it is now, if the Caps should lose to the
Pens in regulation, they would need four points in their last three games to
win the division outright without having to rely on tiebreakers (the first at
season’s end being regulation/overtime wins, both teams with 43 before their
game on Sunday night), assuming the Pens win out against Columbus and Ottawa.
And it would not be easy to get those four points. After Pittsburgh, the Caps head to St. Louis
to face the Blues on Monday night in the last road game of the regular
season. They follow that up with home
games against the Nashville Predators and New Jersey Devils, the former with
the best record in the league on Sunday morning and the latter trying to fend
off the Florida Panthers for a playoff spot.
Who said it was going to be easy?
Three Stars:
- First Star: Evgeny Kuznetsov (2-2-4, plus-1, 1 SHG, 1 OT/GWG. 6 shots on goal, 8 shot attempts, 54.1 faceoff percentage)
- Second Star: Nicklas Backstrom (0-4-4, plus-2, six shots on goal, 11 shot attempts)
- Third Star: Alex Ovechkin (1-1-2, even, 15 shots on goal, 31 shot attempts, 3 hits, became third player in NHL history with nine seasons with 45 or more goals, joining Mike Bossy and Wayne Gretzky)
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