The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
Twelve days and 5,000 miles to get to… Buffalo. Not exactly the pot o’ gold at the end of the
rainbow, but upstate New York is where the Washington Capitals’ season-long six
game road trip will end on Saturday afternoon.
The Caps will be trying to earn their fourth win on the trip and their
third consecutive game overall for the first time in a month.
Buffalo is coming off a road trip of their own, dropping all
three games to extend their losing streak to four games overall (0-3-1). Winning consecutive games has become a
challenge for the Sabres, who have not done so since Games 31-32 in
December. Since then, when they reached
their high-water record for the season at 19-9-4, the Sabres are 9-15-4,
fifth-worst record in the league over that span.
Unsurprisingly, the Buffalo problem is at both ends of the
ice, being a bottom-ten club in goals scored over that span (72/sixth-fewest)
and goals allowed (93/tied for tenth-most, with Pittsburgh). On the offensive side of the ledger, the
Sabres are continuing to get top notch goal scoring from Jeff Skinner who, with
36 goals this season to date, is within one goal of his career-best – 37 with
Carolina in 2016-2017. In this 28-game
slide, Skinner has 14 goals, most on the club.
The trouble is, however, that Skinner has the worst plus-minus on the
club in that span among forwards (minus-16), and only Anaheim’s Ryan Getzlaf
among all league forwards has a worse plus-minus over that span (minus-27). It is a reflection of the broader issues the
Sabres have had over the last two months, Skinner having gone plus-19 in his
first 32 games as the Sabres were getting off to that hot start.
That Skinner should find himself on the brink of setting a
career high in goals is surprising in one respect. He started the season without a goal in his
first six home games. However, he
followed that up with goals in his next six home games (a total of eight) and
has 20 goals in his last 24 games on home ice.
Skinner is 12-13-25, minus-3, in 39 career games against Washington.
Buffalo has had 11 defensemen dress this season, but only
two have dressed for all of them. Call
them Ras 1 and Ras 2. Rasmus Dahlin is
the phenom, the number one overall pick of the 2018 draft that will be the
cornerstone of the franchise and the anchor of the defense for years to
come. But for now, it is Rasmus
Ristolainen who leads all Sabre defensemen in ice time (24:58 per game), points
(36), power play points (12, tied with Dahlin), game-winning goals (two, tied
with Dahlin), shots on goal (148, and hits (180). Despite this being only his sixth season with
the Sabres, Ristolainen is one of 13 defensemen in team history to appear in
400 or more games (406). He is 13th
among that group in goals scored (36), ninth in assists (151), ninth in points
(187), tied for ninth in game-winning goals (six), hits (904/third since the
statistic was recorded in 1997-1998), second in blocked shots (668), fifth in
takeaways (94).
Ristolainen has also been part of a run of struggles in
Buffalo, too. He is one of 12 defensemen
in Sabre history to have at least five seasons in their first six with a
plus-minus of minus-10 or worse. His
career minus-125 is worst in team history among defensemen, and his minus-23
for the season is tied for third-worst among all league defensemen. In 13 career games against the Caps,
Ristolainen is 0-6-6, minus-5.
In the two-month team slump, the goaltending has not been
awful, but not quite mediocre, either.
That was not supposed to be the case when Buffalo signed Carter Hutton
away from the St. Louis Blues last summer on a three-year/$8.25 million
contract. Hutton was coming off a career
year, posting a record of 17-7-3, 2.09, .931, with three shutouts, his goals
against average and save percentage being best in the league among goalies
logging at least 1,000 minutes. Over the
Sabres’ last 28 games, Hutton has started 14 of them, posting a 2-9-3, 3.19,
.899 record. On a broader scale, the
biggest issue with his season to date would seem to be his home and road
records. On the road, he has struggled,
going 5-11-2, 3.11, .899. On the other
hand, he is 10-6-2, 2.48, .922 at home.
That home save percentage ranks 11th among 37 goalies with at
least 750 minutes on home ice, while the save percentage ranks sixth. Those numbers have slipped some
recently. In the 28-game slump over the
last two months, Hutton has appeared in six games on home ice, going 1-4-1,
2.82, .911. He is 2-3-2, 3.35, .880 in eight
career appearances against the Caps.
1. Buffalo is feast
or famine on home ice. Over their last nine
games at KeyBank Center, they have allowed opponents five or more goals four
times, and they have held them to a single goal three times.
2. The Sabres,
despite their recent difficulties, remain one of the better teams overall on
home ice. Their 17-9-4 overall record is
sixth-best in the Eastern Conference and compares favorably with the Caps, for
instance, who are 17-9-5 (fifth-best).
3. Buffalo has done a
fine job avoiding shorthanded situations at home. The Sabres have 74 shorthanded situations
faced on home ice this season, third-fewest in the league (Columbus: 72;
Toronto: 68). As a result, their 11
power play goals allowed is tied for fewest allowed on home ice (with Vegas,
San Jose, and Tampa Bay).
4. This is not a team
that produces a lot in the gritty arts.
Buffalo is 30th in hits on home ice (495), last in blocked
shots (352), and tied for 29th in takeaways (164). One might say that those numbers are a
possession effect, but the Sabres are a middle of the road team in shot
attempts-for percentage at 5-on-5 (49.44/20th).
5. This game will be
the 1,900th game that the Sabres have played on home ice in
franchise history. They are 1021-606-75,
with 197 ties at home.
1. The Caps will be
trying to earn their 18th road win of the season. If they do so, they will have more wins on
the road than they do at home (17). Through
Thursday’s games, six teams in the league had more road than home wins: Toronto,
Columbus, St. Louis, Minnesota, Colorado, and Arizona.
2. Washington has the
third-worst differential in shot attempts-for at 5-on-5 (minus-240) when
leading, ahead of only Ottawa (minus-316) and the New York Islanders
(minus-328), an indicator of their easing up off the gas when leading in games.
3. After a ghastly
three-game stretch on the road in which the Caps allowed 21 goals, they have
allowed only 12 goals in five road games since then.
4. The Caps care not
about intimidation on an opponent’s ice sheet.
They have scored four or more goals 15 times on the road this season,
third highest in the league, trailing only Tampa Bay and Toronto (18 times
apiece).
5. Despite a 17-11-2
record on the road, the Caps are the only team among the top ten in standing
points earned on the road with a negative goal differential (minus-4 on 98
goals for, 102 against).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Buffalo: Zach Bogosian
Rasmus Dahlin gets more attention, and Rasmus Ristolainen is
the workhorse, but the Buffalo defenseman most familiar to Caps fans might be
Zach Bogosian. Since he came into the
league in 2008-2009, only eight defensemen in the league have faced the Caps
more often than Bogosian, who has done so 32 times. This season, he is enjoying a comparatively
injury-free season for the first time in quite a while. Durability has been an issue with Bogosian
over much of his 11-year career. With 53
games played so far this season, he is on a pace to top 60 games played for
only the third time in the last six years and only the second time in four
years in Buffalo. His presence in the
lineup matters, too. In 11 games in
which he logged at least 24 minutes, the Sabres are 7-2-2, while they are just
5-8-0 in games in which he skated less than 20 minutes. In those 32 career games against the Caps,
Bogosian is 3-7-10, minus-8.
Washington: Carl Hagelin
Capitals fans are likely to get their first look at Carl
Hagelin in a Caps’ sweater on Saturday.
Perhaps the change in wardrobe will do him good, at least in the
offensive end. He did not post a goal
over his last 11 games with the Kings and is just 1-2-3, minus-3, in 17 games
of the 2019 portion of the schedule. His
trade to Washington was his second in barely three months, having been traded
to Los Angeles from Pittsburgh for Tanner Pearson last November. It has been a frustrating season for Hagelin
who, in addition to the moves, missed 20 games with a sprained knee ligament in
December and January. That has held him
to 38 games played overall and would appear to ensure that this will be his
least productive offensive season. With
two goals and eight points in those 38 games, it would require quite a push
even to equal the 6-16-22 season he had in 61 games with Pittsburgh in
2016-2017. That season set off an odd
change in Hagelin’s offensive profile.
Over his first five NHL seasons, he was a respectable, if not a
remarkable 9.4 percent shooter in 346 games.
Starting with that 2016-2017 season, however, Hagelin is shooting only
5.0 percent in 180 games over three seasons as he joins the Caps. He is 7-3-10, plus-10, in 21 career games
against Buffalo.
In the end…
Going 3-3 on a road trip is not the worst outcome, given the
length of the trip. However, how a team
gets there matters. If the Caps get
there by losing to the Sabres, a struggling team at the moment, it would be a
disappointment. But this is a difficult
venue for the Caps, who have split their last four decisions in Buffalo (2-2-0)
and are 11-10-2 there since the dark 2004-2005 season. The Sabres have suffered what young teams
with talent often seem to do. They could
not sustain a good start into the grind of the winter months. This is, after all, a team that has dressed
ten skaters younger than 25 this season.
And, it is not as if one part of their game has collapsed. It has been more a case of their sagging at
both ends of the ice. That spells
trouble for the rest of the season, suggesting that this club is not yet mature
enough to grind out wins over the long haul.
It is a situation a veteran team such as the Caps needs to take
advantage of to make this a truly successful road trip.
Capitals 4 – Sabres 2
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