The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals return home for their first game at
Capital One Arena in nine days when they host the Tampa Bay Lightning on
Tuesday night. The Caps are fresh off a
2-1-1 road trip that enabled them to return home on top of the Metropolitan Division,
albeit by the thinnest of margins, a one-point lead over the Pittsburgh
Penguins.
Tampa Bay arrives in Washington as losers in three of their
last four games, part of a lengthy streak of mediocrity. Since January 11th, the Lightning
are 8-8-0 in 16 games. Over that span,
Nikita Kucherov leads the team in points (17), allowing him to maintain a
seven-point lead over Evgeni Malkin in the race for the Ross Trophy as the
league’s leading point producer. The
flip side of that is that Kucherov is a minus-5 over the same 16-game span,
second worst on the team (Tyler Johnson is minus-7). He has done a large share of his production
in this 16-game stretch on the power play (2-5-7), and two of his four goals
over this segment are game winners. You
could say that as Kucherov goes, this season, so go the Lightning. Only twice in 28 games in which he scored a
goal this season did the Lightning lose in regulation (24-2-2), and Tampa Bay
is 33-10-2 in games in which he has a point.
Kucherov is 7-5-12, even, in 13 career games against Washington.
Despite missing five games in late January to a lower body
injury, Victor Hedman leads the defense in scoring over this 16-game run, going
2-7-9 in 11 games. It is part of a
season overall in which Hedman is sixth in total scoring among defensemen
(8-34-42). His plus-24 for the season ranks second among league defensemen and
is, so far at least, his best career plus-minus. His scoring total is not on a pace to provide
another career best, but it would be hard for a defenseman these days to
surpass the 72 points he recorded last season, which was good for second-best
in the league (Brent Burns has 76 points for San Jose). He has become a real anchor for the Lightning
defense, his minutes per game increasing over each of the last five seasons
(22:26/22:41/23:04/24:30/25:38). Hedman
is 2-11-13, minus-6, in 32 career games against the Caps.
Andrei Vasilevskiy leads the league’s goaltenders in wins
(34), is fifth in goals against average (2.34; minimum: 1500 minutes), is third
in save percentage (.927) and has seven shutouts to lead the league. Only once this season has he lost consecutive
decisions in regulation time, dropping three in a row from January 11-20
against Calgary, Vegas, and Minnesota.
What is especially noteworthy about his record this season is his
effectiveness on the road. He has a 2.16
goals against average on the road, compared to 2.51 at home; and his .937 save
percentage is 20 points better than his .917 on home ice. Six of his seven shutouts have come on the
road this season. Oddly enough, his
record does not match his performance, going a more modest 15-8-1 on the road,
compared to 19-4-1 on home ice.
Vasilevskiy is 1-4-0, 3.58, .892 in five career games against the
Capitals.
1. For a team with a
record as good as the Lightning, they perform relatively poorly when enjoying
early success in games. Only three teams
have more losses in regulation time this season than the Lightning (four):
Chicago (six), Arizona (five), and the New York Rangers (five).
2. If attention to
detail means anything, the Lightning might want to work on faceoffs. They are 29th of 31 teams in
faceoff winning percentage (47.6). Only
New Jersey (47.1) and Colorado (43.8) are worse.
3. Tamps wins close,
and they win big. The Lightning have the
third-best record in the league in one-goal games (14-5-3), and they have the
second-best record in decisions by three or more goals (18-7).
4. The Lightning lead
the league in goals scored at 4-on-4 (six). They have also allowed six 4-on-4 goals,
second-most in the league (Colorado has eight).
5. You would think a
team with the Lightning’s record would have better possession numbers, but
their 51.54 percent shot attempts-for is just 11th in the
league. They are effective in close
situations, though, ranking fourth (52.72 percent).
1. The Caps are 3-2-0
this season in their first home game following a multi-game road trip.
2. Washington is
11-4-2 against Atlantic Division teams this season, largely a product of
special teams – a 26.9 percent power play and an 86.4 percent penalty kill.
3. Washington is one
of seven teams this season without a goal scored with a 5-on-3 advantage.
4. The Caps lead the
league in winning percentage when leading games at the first intermission
(19-0-1/.950).
5. Only four teams
have a worse shot attempts-for percentage in tied games than the Caps (46.19).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Tampa Bay: Yanni Gourde
Fans would not be surprised to find that Nikita Kucherov and
Steven Stamkos lead the Tampa Bay Lightning in goals with 31 and 24,
respectively. Finding Yanni Gourde next
in line with 22 would qualify as a surprise.
An undrafted free agent signed by the Lightning in March 2014, he spent
four seasons in in the AHL, scoring 80 goals in 298 games, before getting his
shot with the big club. He has taken
advantage of the opportunity, tied for second in his rookie class in goal
scoring, tied with Chicago’s Alex DeBrincat and trailing only Vancouver’s Brock
Boeser (27). His recent history suggests
a tendency to score goals in bunches.
All of his goals in the 2018 portion of the schedule have been recorded
in consecutive games – three goals in two games in early January, goals in each
of three straight games in late January, another three-game goal streak in
early February, and goals in consecutive games on February 12th and
13th. The odd thing is,
though, the Lightning have lost three of the last four games in which he
recorded a goal. In four career games
against the Caps he has yet to record a point.
Washington: Michal Kempny
The Washington Capitals pulled the trigger on a trade on
Monday, sending a third-round draft pick to the Chicago Blackhawks for
defenseman Michal Kempny. It was not the
blockbuster a lot of fans hope for at this time of year, his acquisition seeming
to address the need to shore up the third defensive pair. His experience in the NHL is modest, 81 games
over two seasons with the Blackhawks, but the 27-year old has extensive international experience.
He did not get a lot of work with the Blackhawks this season, appearing in only
31 games and logging more than 20 minutes only once. The odd thing about his ice time is that the
Blackhawks were 11-7-0 in 18 games in which he logged more than 15 minutes,
3-7-3 in games in which he skated less than 15 minutes. Kempny is without a point in two career games
against the Lightning.
In the end…
This is a measuring stick game. If a Stanley Cup run goes through Pittsburgh
for the Caps, Tampa Bay might be on the itinerary as well, and now is as good a
time as any to see just how this team stacks up against a club that has been at
or near the top of the league standings all season. The Capitals had the look of a team lacking
motivation over the last month or so.
Tampa Bay should provide sufficient motivation.
Capitals 3 – Lightning 2