The Washington Capitals dropped their fourth straight game
on Friday night, a 2-0 loss to the New York Islanders in former head coach Barry
Trotz’s first return to Capital One Arena as head coach of the Islanders. It was the sort of game that will not lure new
fans to hockey, a largely grind-it-out, zone-to-zone affair that wore down the
beleaguered Caps and left them looking up from a standings position they have
not occupied in quite a while.
First Period
The first period resembled a chess match between players
using the same strategy. Hardly
surprising given the principals behind the respective benches, but it made for
the sort of hockey that only hockey x’s and o’s geeks could love. There were few scoring chances, and fewer of
a truly dangerous variety as the clubs jockeyed for position and
possession.
- New York led in shot attempts, 19-15, and shots on goal,
11-7, but it was not a dominating period for either team.
- Jakub Vrana led the Caps in shots (two) and shot attempts
(three).
Second Period
Neither team could find the back of the net in the second
period, making it the first time this season that the Caps went to the second
intermission in a scoreless game.
- The Caps had a
25-22 advantage in shot attempts in the second period and a 9-8 advantage in
shots on goal.
- New York won 20 of
32 faceoffs through two periods (62.5 percent).
- Andre Burakovsky
took a team low seven shifts through 40 minutes.
Third Period
The Islanders scored two goals less than three minutes
apart, Josh Bailey redirecting a Mathew Barzal drive and Cal Clutterbuck
finishing off a 2-on-0 break with a snap shot past goalie Braden Holtby. And that, as they say, was all she wrote.
Other stuff…
- The Caps were 7-1-0
when recording fewer than 25 shots on goal going into this game. They finished with 19 shots on goal.
- The 19 shots on
goal was the first time this season they recorded fewer than 20 shots in a
game.
- The 19 shots on
goal was the first time that the Caps finished a home game with fewer than 20
shots on goal since they had 17 in a 4-2 win over the Columbus Blue Jackets
last February 9th.
- The 19 shots on
goal was the first time the Caps had fewer than 20 shots on goal in a home game
and lost since they finished with 14 shots on goal in a 3-1 loss to the
Philadelphia Flyers on February 8, 2015.
- The Caps had only
ten shot attempts in the third period of this game. Given that the Islanders were playing in the second-half of a back-to-back set of games (they are now 7-0-0 in such games this season) and their fifth game in seven nights, that's equal parts bizarre and inexcusable.
- The four-game
losing streak (0-3-1) is the Caps’ first this season, their first since Games
65-68 in March 2017.
- The shutout was the
first one the Caps suffered on home ice this season and the first suffered on
home ice since dropping a 2-0 decision to the Toronto Maple Leafs on October
17, 2017.
- The shutout left
the Caps with 16 goals in their last eight home games (3-3-2).
- Odd that Michal
Kempny, the team leader in plus-minus, was minus-2. It was only his third game this season at
minus-2, but it was his third game in his last ten at minus-2. He is “even” during that span.
- This was only the
fourth game this season in which the Caps allowed an opponent 25 or fewer shots
on home ice (the Islanders finished with 25 shots). It was the Caps third loss in those games
(1-2-1).
Other stuff…
The Caps now find themselves in third place in the
Metropolitan Division, behind the Columbus Blue Jackets and the surging
first-place Islanders. They are only
five points ahead of the Buffalo Sabres, who are in ninth place in the Eastern
Conference. That is an uncomfortable
place to be for the defending Stanley Cup champions, and waiting for the
All-Star Game break to get their second wind might not cut it.
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