-- Frederick Douglass
If the NHL had an “effort-per-pound” statistic in the NHL,
T.J. Oshie might be among the league leaders.
He is absolutely fearless in playing above his size (5’11”/195) in going
to the hard areas of the ice and trying to impose his physical will on
opponents. It is a hard way to make a
living. That he missed only 24 games in
his three seasons as a Washington Capital says something about his toughness,
but 22 of those games came in the last two seasons, eight of them in 2017-2018.
The physical wear and tear as a result of his style of play
might have contributed to a fall-off in goal production from a career high 33
in 2016-2017. His 18 goals in 74 games
this season were Oshie’s fewest in three years as a Capital and the lowest goal
total posted in a full season since he had 12 in 49 games of the 2010-2011
season with the St. Louis Blues.
And it matters. Oshie
scored goals in 14 games this season, and the Caps were 11-1-2 in those
games. Points were weaker as an
indicator of success, although the Caps did go 22-9-4 in the 35 games in which
he recorded a point.
But back to the grittership.
Oshie tied Alex Ovechkin for third among the club’s forwards in
hits-per-game (1.7). His 124 credited
hits made it four times in ten seasons in which he was credited with at least
100 hits. He tied Tom Wilson for third
among that group in blocked shots-per-game (0.7). His total of 54 blocked shots made five
seasons in ten in which he had at least 50.
And though he is nominally a right winger, he took 211 draws for the
Caps (fifth on the team) and won 47.9 of them.
There were numbers that might have raised some concerns
about Oshie and whether he might be feeling some effects of his style of
play. He posted six goals in his first
eight games this season.and ten in his first 21 games. However, he followed up that start with just
two goals in his next 42 games, perhaps affected by the apparent concussion he
suffered against the San Jose Sharks on December 4th.
Then there was the Gimmick.
Oshie is one of the most effective practitioners of the dark arts of the
trick shot phase of the game. In his
nine-year career before this season, no player among the 135 taking at least 25
shots in the freestyle phase had a better shooting percentage than Oshie (54.9
percent on 39-for-71 shooting). It made
his 1-for-4 performance this season a bit out of place.
Fearless’ Take… T.J. Oshie is counted on to be a goal-scorer
for this club. His injury-influenced
18-goal total might have been a bit disappointing, coming off his 33-goal
season a year previously, but Oshie contributes in many ways. For instance, he belongs to a select, if odd
club this season. Only five players in
the league were credited with at least 100 hits, took at least 100 faceoffs,
recorded at least 50 takeaways, and had at least 50 blocked shots. Oshie was one of them (Blake Coleman, Gabriel
Landeskog, Vincent Trocheck, and Jamie Benn were the others).
Cheerless’ Take… T.J. Oshie’s season had a strange quality
to it if you think of him as being a rambunctious player (like the big word,
cuz?). In 21 games, Oshie had three or
more shot on goal, but the Caps were just 11-6-4 in those games. In 17 games he had three or more credited
hits, but the Caps were just 7-8-2 in those games. Washington was just 5-7-2 in 14 games in
which he had two or more blocked shots.
Frisky Oshie was not necessarily Effective Oshie. And, the Caps were just 7-6-2 in games in
which Oshie skated more than 20 minutes; they were 6-2-0 in games in which he
skated less than 16 minutes.
Odd Oshie Fact… Oshie wears number 77 on his jersey. He has 77 goals as a Capital, and he has 77 assists
with the club in his three seasons.
Game to Remember… Usually, it would be a regular season game
we would describe here, but this image with his father after the Stanley Cup
clinching game -- well, it’s what kids play for…
Game to Forget… December 4th vs. San Jose
Thirteen shifts, 10 minutes and change in ice time, one shot
attempt (blocked), one hit, one takeaway.
And then there was this…
…he sat out the last 23:26 of the game and was out of the
lineup for the six games that followed.
It was his lowest ice time of the season, one of 15 games without a shot
on goal, one of only five games in which he did not take a faceoff. The Caps won the game, 4-1, but Oshie might
not remember much of it. Nor might he
want to. Not for anything negative in
his performance; it was just one of those nights when things go bad just before
they get worse.
Postseason… The rap on Oshie when he was with the St. Louis
Blues was that his postseason production was lacking. In 30 playoff games over five seasons, he
went just 5-4-9, minus-12. This has not
been a problem with the Caps. In 49
postseason games with Washington, he is 18-25-43, plus-9. And, he has improved his numbers in each of
his three postseasons with the Caps, culminating in a 8-13-21, plus-5, scoring
line this spring. His six power play
goals not only led the league in the postseason (tied with Alex Ovechkin and
Steven Stamkos), it eclipsed his total of five power play goals in 55 playoff
games before this season.
Oshie had two game-winning goals, each of which came in
pivotal games in their respective series.
He had the game-winner in a 4-1 Game 4 win in Columbus against the Blue
Jackets to send that series back to Washington tied and with the Caps regaining
a home-ice advantage after dropping Games 1 and 2 at home. He also had a game-winner in the 3-0 win in
Washington in Game 6 against the Lightning to force a seventh game in Tampa.
Both game-winners came on power plays.
Oshie was especially lethal on home ice in the postseason,
recording six of his eight goals at Capital One Arena and recording points in
eight of the 11 games played on that ice sheet.
But the one very odd statistic that jumps off the page is that the Caps
were 7-1 in games in which Oshie recorded one or no shots on goal.
In the end…
T.J. Oshie has had rather consistent numbers in St. Louis
and Washington in the regular season – 310 points in 444 games with the Blues
and 154 points in 222 games with the Caps.
But when Oshie signed an eight-year/$46 million deal with the Caps that
started in the 2017-2018 season it was with bigger contributions in mind, and
we don’t mean three-point games in January.
He delivered. Third
on the team in goals in the postseason, fourth in assists, fourth in points,
tied for the top spot in power play goals, fourth in power play points, fourth
in shots on goal, fifth in hits, sixth in blocked shots, second in takeaways, Oshie
was all over the score sheets and the statistical tables.
That Oshie plays the game with such brio at his rather
average size for an NHLer makes the game a struggle at times. He has never appeared in more than 80 games
in a season (he appeared in 80 games twice in ten seasons) and more at least 75
games only four times. But those
setbacks have not kept him from contributing when he is on the ice, and he
finally found his postseason spark this year.
With the struggle did come progress.