The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The curtain comes down on the 2019 portion of the season,
and the Caps wrap up the first half of their regular season schedule when they
host the New York Islanders on New Year’s Eve in a matinee matchup at Capital
One Arena. The Caps will be looking to
extend their home winning streak to four games, one short of their season high,
while the Islanders try to extend their own run of success on the road (4-1-0
in their last five road games).
Then and Now…
This will be the 220th meeting of these teams in the
all-time series. Washington has a 110-90-6
(13 ties) record against the Isles, 56-39-3 (11 ties) at home. Since 2005-2006, the Caps are 33-18-6 against
the Islanders overall, 16-9-3 in Washington.
Active Leaders vs. Opponent…
Noteworthy Opponents…
The Islanders are not a young team by today’s NHL standards. At the start of the season they were the
third-oldest, by average age, in the league, the average age of the roster
being almost a year and a half older than the league average.
That makes Martin Barzal, the second youngest Islander to dress for at least
five games this season (Anthony Beauvillier is 13 days younger) a critical part
of the team’s present and future.
Barzal, who leads the team in goals in December (six), is already in his
fourth season with the team at age 22.
The Calder Trophy winner as top rookie in his first full season
(2017-2018) is on a pace to establish a career high in goals. With 16 goals in 37 games he is on a pace to
finish with 35, which would be well clear of the 22 he posted in his
Calder-winning rookie season. The odd
part about his scoring line, though, is the lack of assists. He had 17 in 37 games, putting him on a pace
for 38 helpers, which would be a career low for Barzal.
If anything, he has picked his goal scoring a bit in recent
games. Over his last 14 contests he has
seven goals (a 41-goal pace), but that comes with a 22.6 percent shooting percentage. As a foundational component of the Islander
attack, his contributions matter. New
York is 18-3-2 in the 23 games in which he recorded at least one point, 6-7-1 in
the 14 games in which he was held off the score sheet. Odd Barzal Fact… While he is not a prolific
shooter (his 80 shots on goal rank fourth on the team this season), he is a
consistent one. Barzal has posted at
least one shot on goal in 34 of 37 games overall, and only once – November 25th
against Anaheim – did he fail to record a shot on goal in a road game. Barzal is 1-4-5, minus-5, in 10 career games
against the Caps.
Jordan Eberle sits square in the middle of the age range of
the Islanders at age 29. Unfortunately
for the Isles, he does not occupy a similar position in the stat sheets so far
this season, at least insofar as goal scoring is concerned. After posting a total of 44 goals and 96
points in his first two seasons with the club after coming over from Edmonton
in a trade for Ryan Strome in June 2017, Eberle has three goals in 27 games so
far this season and has missed ten games to a lower body injury, his longest
absence to injury since missing 13 games to a shoulder injury in
2015-2016. His season started slowly
with no goals in his first 14 games.
Then, after potting a pair of goals against Detroit in a 4-1 win to open
December, he has only one goal in his last 12 games, although he is setting up
others with nine assists in that span.
Eberle occupies an odd and obscure place in Capitals history. He was taken 22nd overall in the 2008
Entry Draft by the Edmonton Oilers. The
Capitals passed on him with the pick immediately preceding that one, opting
instead for Anton Gustafsson, who would become the second of three skaters
taken in the first round that year not to appear in an NHL game (Kyle Beach,
taken 11th overall by Chicago; and Daultan Leveille, taken 29th
overall by Atlanta, were the others).
Eberle is second in his draft class in goals scored (212, to Steven
Stamkos’ 407) and third in points (495, to 801 for Stamkos and 591 for Erik
Karlsson). Eberle is 1-5-6, minus-9, in 18 career games against Washington.
At some point, one would think the Islanders are going to
have to decide which of their goaltenders will be their number one
netminder. So far, though, that choice
seems to have been pushed to the back burner.
The Isles have divided the starts almost down the middle so far, Semyon
Varlamov getting 19 starts and Thomas Greiss getting 18 starts. Varlamov’s numbers are slightly better, but
not so much so that he has put distance between himself and Greiss in the race
for number one. His goals against
average is better (2.40 to 2.58), but his save percentage (.920) is almost
indistinguishable from Greiss’ (.919).
Varlamov has the only shutout posted by an Islander goalie this season,
a 1-0 win over Buffalo on November 2nd. What Varlamov has not done is lose, at least
not often in regulation. He has only
three losses in regulation in 19 decisions (13-3-3), while Greiss had seven
regulation losses in 18 decisions (11-7-0).
If you are looking for the hot goalie, it is not
Greiss. After going 9-1-0 (one no
decision), 2.07, .934 in his first 11 appearances, he is 2-6-0, 3.49, .896 in
his last eight appearances. He is 3-3-1,
2.15, .927, with one shutout in seven career games against the Capitals. On the other hand, Varlamov is 6-0-1 (four
no-decisions), 2.07, .930 in his last 11 appearances. He is 3-5-1, 2.45, .932 in nine career
appearances against Washington.
1. Only the Caps have
a better points percentage in road games this season (.750) than the Islanders
(.639) among Eastern Conference teams.
2. The Isles
certainly haven’t done it on the road with offense. They have 45 goals in 18 road contests to
date, fifth-fewest goal total on the road in the league. On the other hand, New York’s 2.44 goals
allowed per game is fewest on the road in the league this season.
3. The Islanders have
scored only ten first period goals on the road this season. Only Florida has scored fewer (nine, in two
fewer games). At the other end, no team
has allowed fewer third period goals on the road than the Isles (12, tied with
Colorado).
4. New York protects leads effectively on the road. They are 4-0-0 when leading at the first
intermission of road games, 7-0-0 when leading after two periods, the only team
in the league with perfect records when leading at either intermission on the
road.
5. The Islanders have
yet to lose a game on the road this season by one goal in regulation, one of
four teams not to do so (New Jersey, St. Louis, and San Jose are the others).
1. The Caps’ last
three losses to the Islanders in Washington have been by shutout – 3-0 in
December 2016, 2-0 last January, and 3-0 last April.
2. Washington has the
second-best penalty killing rate in the league on home ice (88.0 percent,
trailing only San Jose with 91.1 percent).
3. Winning in the NHL
when falling behind is tough, but the Caps are better than most in doing
so. The Caps and Boston are the only
teams in the league ranking in the top-five in winning percentage when trailing
after one period and trailing after two periods on home ice.
4. Washington is one
of five teams that has not yet lost a game in regulation when scoring first on
home ice with a record of 6-0-3 (Toronto, St. Louis, Buffalo, and Dallas are
the others). No team has more wins when
trailing first on home ice than the Caps (five, tied with Toronto, Calgary,
Pittsburgh, and the Islanders).
5. The Caps have the
second highest penalties taken per 60 minutes on home ice in the league (4.30),
trailing only Ottawa (4.33).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
New York: Johnny Boychuk
If it seems that Johnny Boychuk has been in the league since
before helmets were mandatory, it only seems that way. If you need a frame of reference as to where
his NHL career got its start, he was drafted by Colorado in the second round of
the 2008 Entry Draft, 61st overall and two spots ahead of where the
Caps selected Tomas Fleischmann, who last played in the NHL in 2015-2016. Boychuk is in his 13th NHL season
and will dress for his 700th NHL game as soon as Saturday in Toronto
(he has 697 games played). Later this
season he is likely to become the 16th defenseman in Islanders
history to dress for 400 games (he has 376 games played with New York).
Boychuk has never been a big offensive producer; he has only
one season with more than 25 points, that coming in his first year with the
Islanders in 2014-2015 (9-26-35). But he
has logged hard minutes, evidenced by the fact that in 12 seasons preceding
this one he dressed for more than 70 games only four times. In six seasons with the Islanders, Boychuk
has missed 71 of 447 games, more than 15 percent of the schedule.
This season, Boychuk has missed only one game to date, but
his minutes are down, perhaps a concession to the fact that he is the oldest
defenseman on the roster by more than seven years at 35 years old (Nick Leddy
is 28). Odd Boychuk Fact… The Islanders
have perfect records on the rare occasions when Boychuk did not record a
credited hit (3-0-0) or a blocked shot (4-0-0).
He is 3-5-8, plus-2, in 34 career games against the Caps.
Washington: Jonas Siegenthaler
The development of defensemen is sometimes one requiring
patience, but Jonas Siegenthaler is giving some signs that he might be a bigger
offensive contributor than one might have projected. As a rookie last season, he posted four
points (all assists) in 26 games. He
opened this season with two assists in his first 17 games before recording his
first NHL goal (against Vegas) in his 18th contest. Less than three weeks later, he had his first
multi-point game in the NHL, recording a pair of assists in a win over the
Florida Panthers. He went his next nine
games without a point, but he is 1-2-3, plus-3, over his last five games
heading into the contest with the Islanders.
If there is an odd feature about his game, it is in the
difference between his home and road profiles this season. He is more active in road games than home
games to date. In 22 road games he has
skated 454 shifts, 100 more than he has recorded in 18 home games (354), and he
is averaging more than 17 minutes per game on the road (17:13) compared to
15:57 per game on home ice. He has been
slightly more productive offensively on home ice, but not significantly so,
going 1-4-5, plus-4, in 18 home games and 1-2-3, plus-5, in 22 road
contests. His goal on home ice is his
only game-winner to date, coming in the Caps’ 5-2 win over Vegas on November 9th. With another multi-point game, Siegenthaler
would become the fifth Capital defenseman to hit double digits in points this
season, matching the number they had last season. In three career games against the Islanders
he does not have a point and has a minus-1 rating.
In the end…
With a win in regulation, the Caps would carry a ten-point
division lead over the second-place Islanders into the new year. How big would that be? If the Caps were to win only half of the
remaining points on their schedule (41 in 41 games), they would finish with 102
points. The Islanders would need 51
points in their last 44 games to tie the Caps.
That would not be a pace far off the 51 points in 38 games they would
finish with in the 2019 portion of the schedule. A 28th win in 41 games would be
the second highest win total for the Caps at the 41-game mark in team history, trailing
only the 2015-2016 team that had 31 wins after 41 games. We doubt the team thinks about such things,
but it that would not diminish the accomplishment for this year’s club, and it
would be especially welcome at the expense of a division rival.
Capitals 4 – Islanders 2
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