“Vision is the art of seeing what is invisible to others.”
-- Jonathan Swift
There are “passers,” and there are “playmakers.” The former have little impact on the game,
the latter are the difference between success and failure. Nicklas Backstrom is, of course, a sublime
passer, capable of threading pucks through defenders to a teammate no one saw
or saucering a pass over a defender’s stick onto the blade of a teammate’s
stick on a 2-on-1 for an easy goal. But
Backstrom is among the best playmakers of his generation. He ranks fourth among active players in
career assists, and of the 19 other players among the top 20 active players in
assists, 17 of them came into the league before Backstrom did in the 2007-2008
season. Only Sidney Crosby among active
players has averaged more assists per game (0.817) than Backstrom (0.717). He and Crosby are the only active players to
have recorded at least 20 goals and at least 50 assists six times since
Backstrom came into the league.
The 2018-2019 season was Backstrom’s sixth 20-goal/50-assist
season (22-52-74) and his fourth such season in a row. It was another season in an uncommon string
of consistent seasons. Over the last six
seasons his goal output ranged from 18 to 23 goals, while his assist total
ranged from 50 to 63.
That is the good news.
The bad news, such as it is, was that much of Backstrom’s production was
front-loaded on the regular season’s schedule.
He was 10-28-38, plus-15, over his first three ten-game segments
covering 30 games. He was 12-24-36, minus-13, over his last five segments
covering 51 games.
Fearless’ Take… But for Alex Ovechkin, the case could be
made that Nicklas Backstrom is the greatest skater in Caps history. His all-time franchise rankings would appear
to bear that out. Start with games
played. He finished the season with 895
career regular season games played, passing Dale Hunter for fifth place
all-time and first among centers. He
finished the season with 231 goals, passing Mike Ridley for fourth place on the
franchise list and first among centers.
He added to his top ranked all-time assist total, his 642 career assists
ranking, as noted above, fourth among active players. He passed Peter Bondra for second in points
in franchise history (873). His plus-120
is the best plus-minus ranking in team history.
Ovechkin is the only player within 100 of him (217) in career power play
assists (284), and while he is in second place in career power play points
(356) to Ovechkin (464), it is still 100 more career power play points than
Peter Bondra in third place (256). He
even won 700 faceoffs this season, the fourth time he has won that many. Only Adam Oates has more such seasons for the
Caps (five).
Cheerless’ Take… Backstrom has a weird set of games that
made up almost half his season. After he
had a hat tirck/four-point night against New Jersey on November 30th
and followed that up with a goal against Anaheim in his next game, there was a
35-game stretch in which he had three goals, only one of those at even strength
(although he did have 20 assists, 15 at even strength). And the flip side of his all-time franchise
ranking profile is how much the team depends on him to perform at that
level. Washington was 13-15-3 in the 31
games in which Backstrom did not record a point this season.
Odd Backstrom Fact… Backstrom tied a career high with five
game-winning goals. Three of those game-winners
came on power plays. Conversely, his 25 power play points was his second-lowest
for a season in which he played more than 50 games (he had 22 power play points
in 77 games in 2010-2011).
Game to Remember… November
30th vs. New Jersey
Over his first 23 games, Nicklas Backstrom had a typical “Backstrom”
level of performance – six goals, 19 assists, three of the goals and nine of the
assists coming on power plays. He had
six multi-point games in that start.
When he recorded a three-point game in a 5-3 win on November 26th
over the New York Islanders in Brooklyn in his 24th game of the
season, it was not surprising that all three points came on assists. What would be surprising was what he followed
that up with.
Returning home against the New Jersey Devils on November 30th,
Backstrom opened the scoring on his second shift of the game, 3:51 into the
contest, redirecting a centering feed from Alex Ovechkin through the legs of
defenseman Sami Vatanen and over the right pad of goalie Keith Kinkaid. The teams exchanged shorthanded goals in the
second period, but Backstrom got on the score sheet once more, serving up an
assist on an Andre Burakovsky goal that put the Caps up, 3-1, less than six
minutes into the third period. Five
minutes later, Backstrom dialed his own number, taking the puck off the right
wing wall, circling into the faceoff circle, and snapping a shot from the dot
past Kinkaid to give him what would be his first multi-goal game of the
season. He was not done, though. After Nico Hischier and Marcus Johansson
scored to make it a one-goal game, and Alex Ovechkin provided some breathing
room with an empty net goal with 90 seconds left, Backstrom closed the scoring
with an empty netter of his own with 22.1 seconds left to complete the hat
trick. It was his second career regular
season hat trick (he has a postseason hat trick), his first since he recorded
one in a 4-2 win over the Tampa Bay Lightning on December 13, 2014. It was his second four-point night of the
season, the 22nd of his career, second on the team’s all-time list
(Alex Ovechkin: 26).
Game to Forget… February 23rd at Buffalo
It would be almost cliché to say games in Buffalo are not
generally thought of as memorable, but Backstrom’s visit there on February 23rd
was certainly one to forget. Coming, as
it did, as the last game of a six game road trip, the team’s longest of the
season, it was even more forgettable. He
was on the ice for the Sabres’ first goal, just 3:40 into the game. He was on the ice for the last goal, an empty
netter in the last minute. In between,
he was on the ice for two of three Sabres’ goals, a total of four goals for
which he was on-ice for the game in a 5-2 loss. He
also took a third period penalty for good measure. He did all this in just 16:23 of ice time,
his second-lowest ice time of the season.
Postseason… Nicklas Backstrom’s postseason was, well,
odd. On one level, he was beastly,
leading the team in goals (five) and second in points (nine) in the seven-game
series against Carolina. He had 14 hits,
fifth among forwards, and he won 52.7 percent of his faceoffs. On the other hand, he was on ice for 11 of
the 21 goals scored by the Hurricanes and was a team-worst minus-4, a minus-5
in the three road games in Carolina, minus-3 in what could have been a
series-clinching game in Raleigh that the Caps lost, 5-2. That road performance was especially striking
when contrasted with his results on home ice.
In four games at Capital One Arena, Backstrom was 5-3-8, plus-1, with 13
shots on goal. In three games in Carolina,
he was 0-0-0, minus-5, with only five shots on goal. He still managed to top the 100-point mark in
his postseason career, the second Capital to do so in team history, his 106
points in the postseason trailing only Ovechkin (126).
Looking ahead…
Nicklas Backstrom has the sort of game that should age
well. He does not depend on
straight-line speed, stick-handling, or power as much as he does vision, a deft
passing touch, and guile. He just
completed his sixth straight 70-point season, one of only three players in the
league to have six straight (Sidney Crosby, Tyler Seguin). He is entering the last year on his current
contract, and normally that would serve as motivation for a player who could find
himself highly sought after as an unrestricted free agent. It is difficult to think of Backstrom in
another jersey, particularly when the player says, “[Washington is] all I know…
It’s crazy, but at the same time, it’s a great feeling. I couldn’t ask for
anything better from the fans or the city of Washington.”
In that respect, it is as much with expectation as hope that Backstrom and the
club agree on an extension that keeps him here into the next decade, a player
in whom one can have confidence that he will continue to be a durable, 70-point or
more player.
In the end…
At the highest level of examination, Nicklas Backstrom had a
typical year, most notably averaging at or near a point per game over the
course of the season. However, drilling
down it was a somewhat odd year. His
scoring consistency was not displayed as much on a game-to-game basis, as
reflected in his ten-game segments, and his home-road split in the playoffs was
not all that different than that in the regular season, just more
pronounced. And, while it was a typical
Backstrom year in the final results, it was also, by his standards, rather
middle of the road. While he had his
third highest career goal total (22, tied with his 2009-2009 season), his 52
assists were his seventh-highest in 12 seasons, his 74 points being sixth-most
in his career, and his plus-2 rating his third worst. His power play numbers were similarly
unextraordinary by his standards, especially his assist total, the 18 power
play assists being tied for third fewest in his career.
Nevertheless, that standard set by Backstrom is a high one
indeed. He in on a very short list of
the best playmakers in the league over the last decade. It is that which sets him apart as a special
player, his on-ice vision being essential to his and the team’s success. And it is the vision of Backstrom creating
something from nothing – at least nothing the average player might see – that has
been a pleasant vision for Caps fans for more than a decade.
Grade: B+
Grade: B+
I thought he was great all season.
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