The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals wrap up the 2018 portion of the
season on Monday afternoon when they host the Nashville Predators in an
afternoon tilt at Capital One Arena. The
Caps will end the year taking a four-game winning streak into this contest,
part of a 16-3-0 run since November 16th that propelled them to the
top spot in the Metropolitan Division.
Meanwhile, the Predators have fallen on hard times lately,
having lost six straight games (0-5-1) overall.
A lack of scoring has been the obvious problem, Nashville recording only
10 goals in those six games. It is part
of a longer scoring drought that has seen the Predators put up only 25 goals in
their last 12 games and not scoring more than three goals in regulation over
that span.
During this 12-game scoring drought, Nick Bonino leads the
club with four goals. Caps fans will
remember Bonino as the player who ended their 2015-2016 season while with the
Pittsburgh Penguins. It was his goal at
the 6:32 mark of overtime in Game 6 of the second round of the playoffs that
sent the Caps home for the summer and helped the Penguins toward the first of
two consecutive Stanley Cups. Bonino is
now with his fourth NHL team, signed as a free agent by Nashville in July
2017. Although he is more of a
grinder/secondary scorer, he did post 22 goals with the Anaheim Ducks in
2013-2014. His goal scoring has not been
especially supportive of Predators success this season, Nashville having a
modest 3-4-0 record in games in which he recorded a goal this season. Bonino is 4-3-7, minus-8, in 17 career games
against the Capitals.
Roman Josi might be the best defenseman in the league that
no one seems to talk about. However,
since the 2013-2014 season he has more goals (75) than Victor Hedman (70) or
Kris Letang (60) among defensemen, more assists (211) than Drew Doughty (204)
or Alex Pietrangelo (192), and more points (286) than all but three defensemen
over that span (Erik Karlsson: 385; Brent Burns: 316; and Hedman: 298). Only four defensemen have logged more minutes
in that span (Karlsson, Doughty, Ryan Suter, and Oliver Ekman-Larsson). He is second on the all-time list of Predator
defensemen in goals scored (85), trailing only Shea Weber (166), and he trails
only Weber in career points by a Nashville defenseman (320 to 443). He is the only Predator in double digits in
points over the last dozen games (2-8-10).
In 11 career games against the Caps, Josi is 5-5-10, plus-2.
Pekka Rinne will soon become the 48th goaltender
in NHL history to appear in 600 career games.
He has dressed for all 595 of his career games with the Predators, and
his 325 wins ranks him 25th all-time in the NHL. His season number so far (14-10-1, 2.23,
.922, 2 shutouts) are consistent with his career numbers (2.37/.919), but he
has been playing through some rough spots lately. He is 0-5-0 (one no-decision) over his last
six appearances with a goals against average of 3.32 and a save percentage of
.894. He has had a particularly
difficult time on the road, where he has not won a game since November 7th. Since then, Rinne is 0-5-1 (two no-decisions),
2.97, .908. Rinne is 4-1-0, 2.40, .915
in five career appearances against Washington.
1. Nashville has had
two very different seasons on the road.
They went 8-0-0 in their first eight road games, but they are 0-8-2 in
their last ten road contests.
2. The Predators are
the only team in the league without a win on the road since November 12th,
when they started their current road losing streak.
3. In that span of
ten road losses, Nashville is 29th in the league in goals scored (20)
and tied for 19th in goals allowed (37).
4. The Predators’
power play ranks 29th over those ten road losses (8.6 percent) and
17th in penalty killing (80.0 percent).
5. Perhaps the
strangest fact of Nashville’s 0-8-2 record in their last ten away games is that
they rank sixth in shot attempts-for percentage at 5-on-5 (52.34).
1. The Caps’ 16-3-0
record since November 16th is the league’s second best in that span
(Tampa Bay is 17-2-1).
2. Over that same
span, the Caps are tied for sixth in goals scored (73, with Pittsburgh) and
have allowed the fewest number of goals (45).
3. Only Tampa Bay and
Toronto have scored more even strength goals (72 and 66, respectively) than the
Caps (61) during Washington’s 16-3-0 run.
4. Since November 16th,
only the Calgary Flames have more empty net goals (seven) than the Caps (six).
5. Despite that lofty
record since November 15th, the Caps rank only 22nd over
that span in shot attempts-for percentage at 5-on-5 (48.62).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Nashville: Ryan Johansen
Since November 12th, when Nashville started their
0-8-2 run on the road, 735 skaters have dressed in the NHL. Only one of them – Evgeni Malkin – has a
worse plus-minus (minus-12) on the road than Nashville’s Ryan Johansen
(minus-11). Say what you will about
plus-minus, but that is not a good number.
It really has been an odd set of circumstances for Johansen, who is
1-7-8 in those ten road games and has points in six of them. From a broader perspective, though, it is
consistent with his career profile, which definitely tilts toward higher
performance in home games. He has 207
points in 277 career home games, but only 166 in 274 road games. He is a career plus-25 on home ice, but only
minus-17 in career road games. The fact
that stands out about Johansen over this 0-8-2 run is that he was on ice for 18
of 37 goals against. Things happen when
he is out there, not all for the good recently.
Johansen is 5-11-16, plus-2, in 18 career games against Washington.
Washington: John Carlson
When John Carlson snapped a shot the length of the ice into
an empty net to secure a 3-1 win over the Carolina Hurricanes last week, it broke
a 26-game streak without a goal. The
flip side of that streak without a goal is that Carlson recorded 22 assists
over those 26 games and was a plus-16.
Only two defensemen had more assists in that span (Brent Burns and Mark
Giordano with 23 apiece), and despite going without a goal Carlson was tied seventh
in points among defensemen in that stretch of games. His plus-16 was seventh among blueliners in
that stretch. More important, the Caps
were 11-2-0 in games win which Carlson recorded a point over those 26 games. Carlson will go into this game as one of two
defensemen in the league who have averaged more than a point per game this
season. His 1.03 points per game trails
only Toronto’s Morgan Rielly (1.13). Carlson
is 0-8-8, minus-5, in 12 career games against Nashville.
In the end…
The Capitals held the top spot in the Metropolitan
Division on January 1st, and regardless of the outcome of this game,
they will hold it as the clock strikes midnight on 2018 with their first
Stanley Cup won in-between. It is the
year Caps fans might not want to end.
But end it will, and with a win the Caps will reach the 50-win mark for
the calendar year (50-23-7). It will be
a challenge, despite the Predators missing some key pieces. Filip Forsberg is on injured reserve with an
upper-body injury, and Kyle Turris is day-to-day with an upper-body
injury. P.K. Subban just returned to the
Predator lineup last Thursday after being out of the lineup for more than a
month with an upper-body injury. Still,
Nashville is like that dormant volcano that can erupt at any time. Caps fans will be hoping that does not happen
until the new year begins.
Capitals 3 – Predators 2
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