“It's not just a question of conquering a summit previously
unknown, but of tracing, step by step, a new pathway to it.”
-- Gustav Mahler
There have been 180 defensemen to dress for at least one
game as a defenseman for the Washington Capitals. John Carlson might be a member of the
all-time Caps team at the position.
Certainly his numbers are “top-six” in many qualities. For instance, in the “time flies” category,
only Calle Johansson and Rod Langway have played more games at the position
(983 and 726, respectively) than has Carlson (688). Among other categories, Carlson ranks as
follows:
- Goals: 6th (90)
- Assists: 3rd (313)
- Points: 5th (403)
- Plus-Minus: 4th (plus-80)
- Even Strength Goals: 3rd (64)
- Power Play Goals: T-7th (25, with Sylvain Cote)
- Power Play Assists: 4th (126)
- Power Play Points: 7th (151)
- Game Winning Goals: 4th (18)
- Minutes (since 1997-1998): 1st (15,991)
- Time on Ice per Game (since 1997-1998): 4th (23:15)
Carlson has been a remarkably durable player, his six
seasons with 80 or more games played tied for most among franchise defensemen (with Karl
Alzner). Only four defensemen in team history have had more seasons with ten or more goals than Carlson. Only Scott Stevens and Sergei Gonchar have had more seasons with 30 or more
power play points (three seasons apiece) than Carlson (two).
Last season, Carlson hit the 70-point mark for the first
time in his career. It was a season in which
he started hot (5-30-35, plus-18, in his first 30 games), but the ice time he
logged in that hot start (more than 25 minutes per game) made the pace
difficult to sustain. He went 1-7-8,
plus-2 in his next 16 games while still averaging more than 25 minutes per
game. Carlson did not suffer any lengthy
cold slumps, finishing up the season 7-20-27, plus-1, in his last 34
games.
Odd Carlson Fact…
Last season, six defensemen appeared in 80 or more games and
skated at least 20 minutes in all of them.
John Carlson would have been a seventh but for a game in mid-January in
which he skated 18:35. With more than 12
minutes remaining in a game against the Nashville Predators and Carlson having
skated 18:35 to that point, he was hit with a game misconduct penalty. Had he skated two more shifts, he almost
certainly would have hit the 20 minute mark and would have finished the season
80-for-80 in 20-minute games.
Bonus Odd Carlson Fact…
High shot volumes by Carlson had the appearance of forcing
the issue. In 22 games in which he
recorded four or more shots on goal, the Caps were 10-8-4. At the other end of the spectrum, Washington
was 8-3-1 in the 12 games in which he did not record a shot on goal, but he did
have nine assists over those games.
Fearless’ Take…
John Carlson and San Jose’s Brent Burns are the only
defensemen in the league to record at least 65 point in each of the last two
seasons. Over those two seasons Carlson
is tied for sixth in total goals by a defenseman (28), second in assists (110),
second in points (138), first in power play points (65), and ninth in average
ice time (24:55 per game). Still, over
the past two seasons he has failed to earn a Norris Trophy finalist spot in
either season, those spots going to Victor Hedman (twice, wining in 2017-2018),
Drew Doughty, P.K. Subban, Mark Giordano (winning last season), and Burns. Carlson finished fifth in the voting in
2017-2018 and fourth last season.
Cheerless’ Take…
Scoring goals and success had little to do with one another
as far as Carlson was concerned. In the
12 games in which he recorded at least one goal, Washington was just 6-4-2;
they were 2-1-0 when he recorded a power play goal. And those big ice time totals were an
indicator of a sort Caps fans might not like much. Washington was just 6-3-6 in the 15 games in
which Carlson logged 27 or more minutes (Only one of those extra time losses
came in a Gimmick).
Potential Milestones:
- 700 career NHl games (688; he needs 12)
- 100 career goals (90; he needs 10)
- Top-five in career goals by a defenseman in franchise history (90; he needs eight to tie Scott Stevens (98))
- Top-five in all time power play points by a Capitals defenseman (151; he needs 12 to tie Mike Green (163))
- Second place all time in games played by a Capitals defenseman (688; he needs 38 to tie Rod Langway for second place (726))
- First in all time assists by a defenseman in Capitals history (313; he needs 48 to tie Calle Johansson (361))
- First in all time points by a defenseman in Capitals history (403; he needs 71 to tie Johansson (474))
- Second place in all time plus-minus by a Caps defenseman (plus-80; he needs plus-10 to tie Stevens (plus-90))
- Second place in career game winning goals by a Capitals defenseman (18; he needs two to tie Mike Green (20))
- Top-ten all time in career assists by a Capital (313; he needs 16 to tie Mike Ridley (329))
- Top-ten all time in career points by a Capital (403; he needs 28 to tie Dennis Maruk (431))
- Top-ten all time in power play points by a Capital (151; he needs 31 to tie Scott Stevens (182))
The Big Question… Is John Carlson an “elite” defenseman, or
is he merely a “numbers” guy?
We have been here before.
In 2008-2009, Mike Green led the league in points by a defenseman with
73. He led the league the following year
with 76 points. It was the first time
that a defenseman had consecutive seasons with at least 70 points since Nicklas
Lidstrom did it with the Detroit Red Wings in 1999-2000 (20-53-73) and
2000-2001 (21-58-79). Only Brent Burns
has accomplished the feat since (in 2015-2016 and 2016-2017). Nevertheless, Green, who had more than 30
points (149) more than his closest pursuer over those two seasons (Dan Boyle
with 115), did not win a Norris Trophy as the league’s top defenseman. He finished second in both seasons, to Zdeno
Chara in 2008-2009 and to Duncan Keith in 2009-2010.
At least Green was a finalist in those two seasons. John Carlson led all NHL defensemen in points
in 2017-2018 (68, one more than Brent Burns) and finished fourth in points in
2018-2019 (70), but he finished fifth in Norris Trophy voting in 2017-2018 and
fourth last season. Carlson has not been
a defenseman that has merely padded stats with points in bunches. Over the past two seasons, only Brent Burns
has points in more games (100) among defensemen than Carlson (97). No defenseman has points in more wins than
Carlson (67).
The flip side of this is that Carlson has been on ice for a
considerable number of goals against.
Part of this is, of course, a product of the ice time he gets, almost 25
minutes per game over the past two seasons combined. Still, only seven defenseman over the last
two seasons have been on ice for more goals than Carlson, whose 220 goals
against on ice were 45.3 percent of all goals scored against the Caps. Drew Doughty (on ice for 218 goals against)
and Brent Burns (199) – two well-thought of defensemen – are in that
neighborhood, too, but the job title is “defense”man, too.
Carlson has established himself as an “elite” offensive
defenseman, but whatever “it” is that players have to get the attention of
Norris Trophy voters, Carlson doesn’t have or has yet to have acquired “it.” He also fights something of a herd mentality
among voters for an assortment of NHL individual awards, were once named a
finalist, there seems to be a tendency to appear for some years after that,
almost out of a sense of momentum as much as performance.
In the end…
Although he has yet to pierce the wall of Norris Trophy
finalist consideration, it is not as if John Carlson is not accomplished at his
craft and not without having earned recognition. He was a member of the All-NHL Rookie Team
first team in 2010-2011(with P.K. Subban), was selected to participate in the
2019 NHL All-Star Game, and was named to the second team of the 2018-2019 NHL
All-Star team with Victor Hedman.
Carlson will not turn 30 years old until January, and with
his being under contract with the Caps through the 2025-2026 season, he is
likely to assemble a body of work in Washington in which he ranks at the top of
every meaningful statistical category in franchise history at his position. Fans revel in the accomplishments of Alex
Ovechkin, and they respect and appreciate the consistent excellence of Nicklas
Backstrom. They also might remember the
excitement that Mike “Game Over” Green provided from the blue line. But John Carlson can take his place comfortably
as one of the important elements that the Caps needed to win a Stanley Cup in
2018 and will need again in 2020. Caps
fans hope he can retrace his steps to individual accomplishment and team
success once more, whether or not that accomplishment is appreciated by those
who vote on the league’s individual awards.
Projection: 80 games, 13-60-73, plus-20
Photo: Getty Images North America
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