The annual rite of October for the Washington Capitals, the
trip to western Canada, is in the books.
Week 4 was a successful one on balance, but not without its fits and
starts. A lot like the Caps’ season so
far.
Record: 2-1-0
Washington came into Week 4 not having won consecutive games
this season. They ended it in the same
condition, beginning and ending the week with wins in Vancouver and Calgary
against the Canucks and the Flames with a loss to the Edmonton Oilers in the
middle. It was an improvement over last
season’s trip west, where the Caps went 1-2-0.
Over the past six seasons that featured the October trip to western
Canada, the Caps are now 10-8-0 against these three teams. Throw in a couple of visits to Winnipeg as
part of the trip (2013 and 2016), both of which resulted in Caps wins, and
Washington is 12-8-0 in western Canada over the last six seasons.
Offense: 3.00/game (season: 3.80/game, rank: 2nd)
The offense came down a notch in Week 4, but averaging more
than four goals a game isn’t a sustainable scoring rate in today’s NHL. Still, the nine goals the Caps did score were
spread around liberally. Seven different
skaters hit the back of the net, Alex Ovechkin and T.J. Oshie each scoring a
pair. There were 12 skaters recording
points for the week, Ovechkin leading the club with five.
The point spread for the week left the Caps with five
players in double digits for the season in points (Evgeny Kuznetsov (15),
Ovechkin (14), John Carlson (14), Nicklas Backstrom (13), and Oshie (10). Only the Toronto Maple Leafs have that many
through four weeks. Carlson finished the
week tied with Toronto’s Morgan Rielly in points by defensemen (14) and tied
with Dallas’ John Klingberg in goals by defensemen (five).
Defense: 3.00/game (season: 3.60/game, rank: T-23rd)
The Caps did a decent job of suppressing shots in Week 4,
holding the trio of opponents to 86 shots on goal, only 71 of those at even
strength. It is part of a broader
encouraging sign in this area. With the
Caps holding the three opponents of Week 4 to 32 or fewer shots (Edmonton
recorded that number), the Caps have allowed more than 35 shots only twice this
season through ten games. Only five
teams have had fewer games with more than 35 shots allowed than the Caps.
The Caps dressed 19 skaters in Week 4, and 14 of them were
even or better in shot attempts-for on ice for the week. Only Devante Smith-Pelly finished lower than
minus-6 (minus-13). Smith-Pelly and Nic
Dowd were the only two Caps to finish in minus territory in tied situations
(minus-1 and minus-2, respectively.
Overall, the Caps’ 55.56 shot attempts-for percentage was seventh-best
in the league for the week.
Goaltending: 2.62 / .906 (season: 3.45 / .886 / 1 SO)
The goaltending struggled over the first three weeks of the
season, but there were signs in Week 4 that things are improving. Braden Holtby got the call in the first two
games of the week and allowed five goals on 55 shots (.909 save
percentage). Not a great week by any
means, especially by his standards, but coming into this week he had a .881
save percentage and was pulled after 20 minutes in his last appearance before
this week in a 6-5 Gimmick loss to the Florida Panthers. Holtby’s even strength save percentage (.956)
was superb, eighth best among goalies who appeared in two or more games in Week
4. He still has work to do, his season
even strength save percentage of .913 ranking in the lower half of the league,
but Week 4 got him pointed in the right direction.
Pheonix Copley got the other start in Week 4 and recorded
his first NHL win in the Caps’ 4-3 trick shot win in Calgary over the
Flames. It was Copley’s second straight trip
to the freestyle competition, and he turned things around smartly. After allowing three goals on four tries
against the Panthers in the 6-5 Gimmick loss, Copley turned away three of four
attempts by Calgary in garnering his first NHL win. Going the maximum isn’t a bad way to get one’s
first win.
Power Play: 3-for-9 / 33.3
percent (season: 37.1 percent, rank: 1st)
It says something about the Caps’ power play that it could
score once in every three tries for a week and drop in efficiency. That was the week for the Caps, going 3-for-9
but retaining their hold on the top spot in the league’s power play
rankings. The number one unit of
Ovechkin, Backstrom, Kuznetsov, Carlson, and Oshie all put points on the board,
Ovechkin being the lone player with a hand in all three power play goals (one
goal, two assists).
Washington recorded power play goals in two of the three
games for the week. That brings the
total to power play goals in seven of ten games through four weeks. And so far, it matters. The Caps are 5-1-1 in games in which they
recorded at least one power play goal, 0-2-1 in the three games in which they
were shut out on the man advantage, one of those defeats being the loss to
Edmonton in the middle game of the week.
Penalty Killing: 8-for-11 / 72.7 percent (season: 72.5 percent, rank: 26th)
The Caps failed in three tries coming into this week to
reach 80.0 percent for the week in penalty killing. They ended Week 4 looking for that first 80
percent week. The alarming thing about
it is that after shutting out the Boston Bruins and the Vegas Golden Knights in
the first three games of the season, the Caps have allowed at least one power
play goal in seven straight games. That
they are 3-3-1 in those seven games is not likely to be mere coincidence.
The Caps ran into a pair of teams – Edmonton and Calgary –
with efficient power plays on home ice (they ranked eighth and ninth,
respectively, in home ice power play at the end of Week 4), but Vancouver didn’t
have a power play goal on home ice until they scored against the Caps.
Faceoffs: 86-for-173 / 49.7% percent (season: 47.0 percent, rank: 28th)
It was an up and down week in the circle for the Caps. Oddly enough (or a demonstration of the
limited effect faceoffs have), the Caps won the two games in which they were
under 50 percent and lost the game in which they topped 50 percent.
The Caps were as erratic in the ends for the week, but with
a different distribution, finishing over 50 percent against Edmonton and
Calgary in the offensive end, but under 50 percent against Vancouver to start
the week. In the defensive end it was
over 50 percent against Vancouver and Edmonton, and under 50 percent against
Calgary.
On an individual level, it was the third and fourth line
centers leading the way. Lars Eller
(51.4 percent) and Nic Dowd (57.7 percent) had good weeks, while Nicklas
Backstrom (46.8 percent) and Evgeny Kuznetsov (44.2 percent) had off
weeks. Kuznetsov’s number was a product
of a weak week in the neutral zone (20.0 percent). He was at or over 50 percent in the ends – 50
percent in the offensive zone and 64.3 percent in the defensive zone.
Goals by Period:
It was more or less an even week for the Caps on a period by
period basis. They held opponents to a
draw in the first period, three goals apiece, while flipping a four goal/two
goal result in the second and third periods with their opponents’ two goal/four goal results for the second and
third periods. What they did not do was
score in the first period against Edmonton, while the Oilers did post one. Getting off on the wrong foot was something
from which the Caps could not recover in what was a lackluster effort overall.
As it is, the Caps finished the week tied for fourth in
first period goals scored (12) and tied for second in second period goals
scored (16). That they close poorly –
tied for 21st in third period goals scored (nine) – is a matter to
address. On the other side of the
ledger, the Caps have work to do in the first period, tied for fifth-most goals
allowed (12). There is a certain
consistency there, but not of a good sort, the Caps allowing another 11 goals
in the second periods of games and 12 goals in the third periods of games.
Year over Year:
The Caps are ahead of last season’s wins and points pace,
and they are scoring at a more frequent pace.
What is telling in the early going is a 39-shot swing in shot
differential, from minus-37 through ten games last season to plus-2 so far this
season. The offensive improvement is
largely a product of a scorching power play that is more than 50 percent more
efficient this year so far than last.
Unfortunately, that improvement in efficiency has not extended to the penalty
kill, which is roughly as inefficient this season as it was at the same point
last year. The possession numbers are
roughly unchanged on a year-to-year basis.
The “grittership” numbers are generally better, this year over last, but
that giveaway number reflects the inconsistent start the Caps have had.
In the end…
A 2-1-0 record out of the western provinces trip has to be
considered a successful result. However,
how they got there is no cause for complacency.
There was an iffy effort in Edmonton followed up by a game in which the
Caps gave up a third-period lead late in regulation before pulling out the win
in the Gimmick. The Caps will have some
time to address those things that need addressing, since they do not take the
ice again until Thursday in Montreal in what will be a light week of game
workload.
Three Stars:
- First Star: Alex Ovechkin (2-3-5, minus-1, 1 GWG, 24 shot attempts, 12 SOG, 1-2-3 on power play)
- Second Star: John Carlson (1-3-4, minus-2, 2 power play assists, 24:51 average ice time)
- Third Star: Pheonix Copley (33 saves on 36 shots, first NHL win)
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