The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
Bye-Bye “Bye Week.”
The Washington Capitals return to the ice on Friday night with no interest
in picking up where they left off, aiming to end a seven-game losing
streak (0-5-2) when they host the
Calgary Flames at Capital One Arena.
It will be a tall order, even on home ice, to defeat the
Flames. Calgary has the second-best
record in the league (33-13-5/71 points) just five points behind the
league-leading Tampa Bay Lightning. They
also have the best road record among Western Conference teams (16-9-0/32
points). More recently, the Flames are
among the hottest clubs in the league overall, going 11-1-2 in their last 14
games, the best record in the league since Christmas.
Johnny Gaudreau leads the club in goals (13) and overall
scoring (25 points) since Christmas.
Those 13 goals top the league in that span, while his 25 points rank
second to Chicago’s Patrick Kane.
Gaudreau has already posted 29 goals this season in 51 games, one off
his career high (30 in 79 games in 2015-2016).
He also seems a good bet, with 73 points in 51 games, to top his best
season points-wise, 84 points in 80 games last season. It is already a career year for Gaudreau in
other respects – even strength goals (24, tying his total in 2015-2016),
game-winning goals (six, tying he total from 2015-2016), shooting percentage
(17.8 percent so far this season), ice time (20:22 per game) and plus-minus
(plus-20). Going into Thursday’s games,
only Tampa Bay’s Nikita Kucherov had more multi-point games this season (24)
than Gaudreau (22, tied with Colorado’s Nathan MacKinnon and Mikko
Rantanen). He has had 17 multi-point
games in his last 31 contests. In nine
career games against the Capitals, Gaudreau is 1-8-9, plus-1.
Since the 2013-2014 season, four defensemen have recorded at
least 80 goals and at least 275 points.
Brent Burns, Erik Karlsson, Dustin Byfuglien, and Calgary’s Mark
Giordano are the foursome. Giordano
might be the least known (not to mention appreciated) of the group. This might be Giordano’s best season of his
career. His 11 goals does trail his
career high of 21 substantially, but his 41 assists in 49 games is already a
career best, and his 52 points are four short of the career high of 56 he
posted in 2015-2016. His plus-29 leads all skaters going into Thursday’s games,
and his 1.06 points per game lead all league defensemen. Giordano leads all defensemen in three-point
games this season with seven, three more than his closest competitors. And when Giordano posts points, which is
often, it matters. Calgary is 21-5-3 in
the 29 games in which he recorded a point, 11-7-2 in the 20 games in which he
did not. Giordano is 3-6-9, plus-2, in
13 career games against the Caps.
Calgary has been successful largely through filling the
opponent’s net with pucks. At the other
end, goaltending has been an issue. David
Rittich is sixth in the league in save percentage (2.47) among 46 goalies with
at least 1,000 minutes played and tenth in save percentage in that group
(.918). Those numbers have slipped since
Christmas, though. But his is an odd
profile. In ten starts since Christmas,
Rittich had a goals against average of 2.77, almost a third of a goal per game
higher than his season mark, and his .909 save percentage of .909 in that span
is nine points lower than his season mark.
Nevertheless, he is 8-0-2 in those ten appearances. Rittich has not lost a game in regulation
since dropping a 2-0 decision to the Dallas Stars on December 18th.
Mike Smith has even worse numbers, not that they have been
very good this season. Overall, he ranks
35th of 46 goalies with 1,000 minutes in goals against average
(3.04), and his save percentage of .888 is next to last in that group. Since Christmas, though, Smith’s goals
against average (3.26) has slipped, while his save percentage (.888) has shown
no improvement. Still, he is 3-1-0 in
that span.
1. Going into
Thursday’s games, no team has scored more goals since Christmas than Calgary
(63, tied with San Jose). Their shooting
percentage also leads the league in that span (14.6).
2. Over that same
period, no team has fewer credited hits than the Flames (186, 15 fewer than the
Toronto Maple Leafs).
3. The Flames can be
loose with the puck. Their 244 giveaways
is most in the league since Christmas.
Then again, so is their 167 takeaways.
Scoring quirks? Or Turnover-palooza
in Calgary games?
4. What Calgary has
not been is an especially dominant team in shot attempts. Since Christmas, their 49.64 percent in shot-attempts
for at 5-on-5 ranks 17th in the league, although they are more
impressive when behind (56.80 percent.sixth).
So, don’t sleep on this team with a lead.
5. The Flames have
not done a good job coloring within the lines. Since Christmas, their 139 penalty minutes
rank third in the league (tops among Western Conference teams), and they are
the only club in that time to have been charged with a match penalty (Sam
Bennett).
1. The Caps are 8-7-2
in their last 17 home games since a 2-1 loss to Columbus on November 9th. Among Eastern Conference teams, only Detroit
(7-8-3) and Ottawa (7-7-2) have worse records over that span on home ice.
2. In those 17 home
games, the Caps have scored 51 goals and allowed 51 goals.
3. Over those same 17
home games, only three teams have fewer shots on goal on home ice than the Caps
(505): New York Rangers (482), Los Angeles (481), and Ottawa (478).
4. No team has
suffered more shorthanded instances on home ice than the Caps in their 17-game
run. Their 60 shorthanded situations faced are two more than the
Colorado Avalanche over that span.
5. The Caps have
eight goals scored in their last four home games. They lost all of them, including the one game
in which they scored six of those eight goals, a 7-6 overtime loss to San Jose
in their most recent home game (January 22nd).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Calgary: James Neal
In his first ten seasons in the NHL, James Neal never posted
fewer than 21 goals, and he recorded that total on only 40 games with
Pittsburgh in 2012-2013. He was among
the better goal scorers over that decade, his 263 goals ranking 15th
in that ten-year span. But, he was
expendable, having dressed for four different franchises over those ten years—Dallas,
Pittsburgh, Nashville, and Vegas. After
spending one season with the Golden Knights in last year’s inaugural season, he
signed a five-year/$28.75 million contract as a free agent with the Flames. It has not worked out well. He started cold (three goals in his first 14
games) and slipped into the deep freeze thereafter (two goals in his last 35
games). With five goals in 49 games he
will struggle to reach double digits in goals if he does not pick up his
pace. His ice time has slowly been pared
back as a result. He averaged 15:55 in
ice time per game over his first ten games, dropping to 15:10 in his next ten,
15:07 in his third ten-game segment, 15:23 in his next ten, and 14:14 in his
last nine contests going into Friday’s game in Washington. And ice time seems to be an indicator of
success. Calgary is 12-8-3 in the 23
games in which Neal skated at least 15:50, 21-4-1 in the 26 games in which he
skated less than 15:50. Neal is 10-5-15,
plus-4, in 21 career games against Washington.
Washington: Chandler
Stephenson
Chandler Stephenson has yet to establish much of a footprint
as an offensive player with the Caps. In
two full seasons with the club he has recorded 64 shots on goal in 113 games. No player having appeared in at least 100
games over the last two seasons have fewer shots on goal (by way of comparison,
even Brooks Orpik has 72 shots on goal in 103 games). However, Stephenson does have 11 goals on
those 64 shots for a respectable 17.2 shooting percentage. It is not shooting that matters for
Stephenson at this career juncture. This
season the Caps are 13-8-3 in the 24 games in which he recorded at least one
shot on goal, 13-6-3 in the 22 games in which he did not. Ice time matters, though, perhaps as an
indirect indicator (the Caps perhaps able to roll lines in leading
situations). Washington is 8-3-0 when
Stephenson skated more than 14 minutes, 14-9-4 when skating between 10 and 14
minutes, and 4-2-2 when skating under ten minutes. Stephenson is looking for his first point
against Calgary, going 0-0-0, even, in four career games against the Flames.
In the end…
Calgary is a team that can make an opponent pay dearly for
making defensive errors, but on the other hand, it is also a very top-heavy
scoring team. Of their 190 goals, 101
come from four players, all topping 20 goals (Johnny Gaudreau (29), Sean
Monahan (27), Matthew Tkachuk (24), and Elias Lindholm (21)). It is more balance than the Caps have,
though, considering that Alex Ovechkin’s 37 goals represents 22.0 percent of
the team’s total, and his 57 points means he has a hand in more than a third of
the team’s 168 goals (33.9 percent). Can
the Caps slow down the Flames’ “Big Four” and get some goal scoring support
of their own from other players (given Ovechkin's absence for this gaem)? This is the fault
line upon which this game could be decided.
Capitals 4 – Flames 3