As the 2010’s come to a close, many will look at All-Decade
this, and All-Decade that. Far be it
from us to tarnish this great tradition.
With that in mind, we take a look back at some All-Decade thoughts on
the Washington Capitals. Of course, your
opinion might differ, so think of these as conversation starters (all
statistics are through December 12th).
Team of the decade (regular season…we know what the All-Decade
playoff team was):
2015-2016 (56-18-8, 120 points)
The 2015-2016 Capitals squad had the most wins, the fewest
losses in regulation, were second in both scoring offense and scoring defense,
ranked top-five in both power play (fifth) and penalty kill (second), and they
had the third-best combined 5-on-5 shooting and save percentage in the
league. The 56 wins tied for ninth-most
all-time in the league and is the third-highest total since the 2004-2005 dark
season (Detroit had 58 wins in 2005-2006; Tampa Bay had 62 wins last
season). Individually, the Caps had six
players with at least 20 goals, seven with at least 40 points, while 18
different skaters recorded at least one game-winning goal. Braden Holtby tied a league record in wins by
a goaltender with 48, while finishing eighth in save percentage and sixth in
goals against average among 34 goalies with at least 2,000 minutes played. Holtby won the Vezina Trophy as top goalie,
was named to the first team NHL All-Star squad and finished fourth in Hart
Trophy voting for most valuable player.
Alex Ovechkin won the Richard Trophy for top goal scorer, finished sixth
in Hart Trophy voting, and was named to the second team of the NHL All-Star
squad at left wing.
Honorable Mention:
- 2016-2017 (55-19-8, 118 points). Led league in standings points for second consecutive year, top scoring defense in the league, best combined shooting and save percentages at 5-on-5, five 20-plus goal scorers, six players with 40-plus points. Holtby finished second in Vezina Trophy voting, was named to second team on NHL All-Star squad.
- 2019-2020 (23-5-5, 51 points). The calendar requires that the 2019-2020 team be considered. While it is on pace to post decade highs in wins (57), points (127), and scoring offense (3.55 goals per game), the season is incomplete. However, Alex Ovechkin is on a pace for a 52-goal season, John Carlson is on a pace for 112 points and a plus-47, and Braden Holtby is on a pace for his fourth career 40-win season.
Performance of the decade (regular season):
Alex Ovechkin, 2012-2013.
Ovechkin was the only player to top 30 goals in the abbreviated season (32
goals in 48 games, tied for third in points, and led the league by a wide
margin in power play goals (16, to ten for Steven Stamkos). He was named an NHL all-star at two positions
(first team at left wing, second team at right wing), won the Richard and Hart
Trophies. Since 2010-2011 through this
season, there were six instances of an NHL player playing in at least 40 games
and averaging at least 0.65 goals per game.
Ovechkin had three of them, the only player to do it more than once. This was his top season (0.67).
Honorable Mention:
- Braden Holtby, 2016-2017. It was hard which of Holtby’s best seasons, 2015-2016 or 2016-2017, to consider. However, in 2016-2017 his goals against average was better 2.07 to 2.20), his save percentage was better (.925 to .922), and he posted a league-high nine shutouts. The only thing he did not do was win the Vezina Trophy; he finished second to Sergei Bobrovsky.
- Alex Ovechkin, 2018-2019. He posted his eighth 50-goal season (51) and had 89 points, his highest season total since 2009-2010 (109). He won the Richard Trophy for the eighth time and was named to the first team of the NHL All-Star squad for the first time since 2014-2015 and climbed seven spots in the all-time career goal scoring list, finishing the season with 658 goals (14th place).
Performance of the decade (postseason):
Alex Ovechkin, 2017-2018.
Ovechkin led all players in the post season with 15 goals and finished
second in points (27). His six power
play goals led the playoffs. He was
named the Conn Smythe Trophy winner as most valuable player in the postseason.
Honorable Mention:
- Evgeny Kuznetsov, 2017-2018. Kuznetsov led all players in assists (20), points (32), plus-minus (plus-12), and was tied for second in power play points (12). He finished as the Conn Smythe Trophy runner-up.
- Braden Holtby, 2014-2015. Of 109 goalies to log at least 500 minutes in a postseason since 2005-2006, Holtby’s performance in the 2015 postseason is the sixth best in goals against average (1.71) and third-best in save percentage (.944). Both of those marks led the 2015 postseason.
Moment/Game Performance of the decade (regular season):
Alex Ovechkin’s 1,000th point (January 11, 2017). Ovechkin reached many milestones in the
decade – 500 goals, 600 goals, most career points by an NHL player born in
Russia among them. None, though, would
seem to match his reaching the career 1,000 point, given the circumstances and
the opponent. The Capitals went into a
mid-January game hosting the arch-rival Pittsburgh Penguins tied with the Pens
and the New York Rangers in second place in the Metropolitan Division, three
points behind the Columbus Blue Jackets.
Ovechkin entered the game with 999 career points. It took him 35 seconds to record his 1,000th
point:
He scored another goal later in the contest, and the Caps
beat the Penguins, 5-2.
Honorable Mention:
- Nicklas Backstrom, five-point performance on November 16, 2016. The Caps opened the season with a shootout loss in Pittsburgh to the Penguins. The teams met for the first time during the season in Washington in mid-November. Both teams were trying to stay within range of the Metropolitan Division leading New York Rangers, the Penguins four points back in second place and the Caps six points out of the lead in fourth place. T.J. Oshie opened the scoring with a shorthanded goal in the eighth minute of the game, but then Backstrom went to work. He posted a goal and an assist less than three minutes apart late in the first period to give the Caps a 3-0 lead at the first intermission. He assisted on a Dmitry Orlov goal in the second to extend the lead and helped the Caps put things away with an assist on a Justin Williams power play goal early in the third period to make it 5-0. After the teams exchanged goals, Backstrom closed the scoring with just over three minutes left on a goal to give the Caps their final 7-1 margin. Backstrom finished 2-3-5, plus-3, and he won 18 of 27 draws in 17:49 of ice time. It was the 42nd five-point game in team history and the first time it was accomplished by a Capital at home against Pittsburgh.
- Tomas Vokoun, 42 save shutout vs. FLA on February 7, 2012). Tomas Vokoun makes a surprise visit here, but this instance was historic in franchise history. The Caps were struggling when the Florida Panthers visited Washington in early-February, going 6-6-2 over a 14-game span. But the odd part about that stretch was that the Caps pitched three shutouts in their six wins, two by Vokoun and one by Michal Neuvirth. Against the Panthers, Mathieu Perreault scored just 13 seconds into the game, and it would be the only goal Vokoun would need to post his third shutout in ten appearances covering four weeks. He stopped ten first period shots, 17 in the second period, and 15 in the third for a total of 42 in the Caps’ 4-0 win. Only three times in team history did a Caps goaltender pitch a shutout facing more shots on goal – Brent Johnson faced 46 shots on goal in a 1-0 win over Ottawa in April 1, 2006; Mike Palmateer stopped all 44 shots he faced in a 6-0 win over Philadelphia on December 21, 1980; and Dave Parro stopped all 44 shots he faced in a 4-0 win over Hartford on November 14, 1981.
Rookie of the Decade:
Evgeny Kuznetsov, 2014-2015 (11-26-37, plus-10, 4 PPG/13 PPP). The Caps have had some fine rookie
performances over the years – Ryan Walter going 28-28-56 in 69 games in
1978-1979, Bobby Carpenter and Chris Valentine each topping the 30-goal mark as
rookies (32 and 30, respectively) in 1981-1982, and of course, Alex Ovechkin
going 52-54-106 in his 2005-2006 rookie season.
However, since Nicklas Backstrom went 14-55-69 in his rookie year in
2007-2008, no Capital rookie posted ten or more goals with 30 or more points
until 2014-2015. In that season, Evgeny
Kuznetsov, still technically a “rookie” since he played in only 17 games the
previous season, recorded 11 goals and 37 points along with a plus-8 rating,
making him only the third rookie in team history to achieve the rookie triple
of at least ten goals, at least 35 points, and at least a plus-10 rating. Backstrom did it in 2007-2008 (14-55-69,
plus-13), and Rolf Edberg did it in 1978-1979 (14-27-41, plus-2).
Honorable Mention:
- John Carlson, 2010-2011 (7-30-37, plus-21, 3 GWG, 22:39 avg ice time). This might be the toughest call of all the decade categories. John Carlson is another of those “technical” rookies who played some games in the previous season, but he is the only rookie defenseman in team history, as the term is defined by the NHL, to dress for all 82 games of a regular season (Gord Lane played all 80 games as a rookie in the 1976-1977 season). He is one of only three rookie defensemen in Caps history to post at least five goals and at least 30 points in his rookie season (Robert Picard was 10-27-37 in 1977-1978, and Greg Theberge was 5-32-37 in 1981-1982). Carlson is the only one to post that double and a positive plus-minus rating (plus-21).
- Braden Holtby, 2010-2011 (10-2-2, 1.79, .934, 2 shutouts)/Michal Neuvirth, 2010-2011 (27-12-4, 2.45, .914, 4 shutouts). It is hard to distinguish between Holtby and Neuvirth, even though the noteworthy numbers they bring to the debate are in different categories. Neuvirth is the all-time franchise leader in wins for a goalie in his rookie season, and the 27 he posted in 2010-2011 was third among all rookie goalies that season. He also tied Corey Crawford for most shutouts by a rookie goaltender in that season (four). As for Holtby, in the same season he led all rookie goaltenders appearing in ten or more games in goals against average (1.79) and save percentage (.934). He also had two shutouts among his 14 appearances, one of seven rookies to post more than one shutout in that season.
Draft of the Decade:
It is hard to rank drafts given the unique characteristics
of the category. It often takes years
before a draft might bear fruit (this diminishes the effects of more recent
drafts), and players might produce for a club that did not draft them as a
result of trade, waiver, release/resigning, etc. (raising the question of
whether returns in trade of drafted players should be considered). So, rather than rank them, we will just note
three drafts of consequence.
2012. Caps fans
remember this draft for the player who did not dress for the Caps (cough –
Forsberg – cough). But no draft produced
more man-games played by skaters for the Caps than did the 2012 draft
(803). Ten skaters were selected, five
of whom dressed for the Caps at some point in their respective careers. The leader is Tom Wilson, who through
Thursday dressed for 487 games. Wilson
is the prize of this draft, posting 68 of the 87 goals scored by this draft
class for the Caps, 97 of the 141 assists, 165 of the 228 points, and 974 of
the 1,027 penalty minutes. Of course,
this draft also has the one that got away, Filip Forsberg having played all 419
of his NHL regular season games for the Nashville Predators after being taken
11th overall in this draft by the Caps. The others in this draft to play for the Caps
include: Chandler Stephenson (14-19-33, plus-2, in 168 games), Connor Carrick
(1-5-6, minus-11, in 37 games), Riley Barber (0-0-0, even, in three games with
Washington), and Christian Djoos (4-20-24, plus-22, in 108 games with the
Capitals).
2010. Where the 2012
draft was a study in “quantity,” the 2010 draft is one of “quality.” Specifically, this was the “Evgeny Kuznetsov”
draft. Although this draft has more
goals than the 2012 draft (114 to 87), more assists (259 to 141), and more
points (373 to 228), Kuznetsov has almost the entire output (113-255-368). Two other players among the five taken by the
Caps in this draft played for the team – Stanislav Galiev (1-3-4, plus-3, in 26
games) and goaltender Philipp Grubauer (43-31-11, 2.29, .923 in 101 games).
2014. Picking a third
draft was not simple. There was the 2013
draft, the “Andre Burakovsky” draft, but of the six players taken in that
draft, four dressed for the Caps, and three of them (Burakovsky, Madison Bowey,
and Zach Sanford) skate for other teams, leaving Tyler Lewington as the lone
survivor of that draft with the Caps.
There was the 2015 draft, which is still a “futures” draft, Ilya
Samsonov and Jonas Siegenthaler the only players among the four taken to reach
the NHL but still in the early stages of the NHL phase of their development. That leaves the 2014 draft, which is the
“Jakub Vrana” draft. Vrana is one of
three players from that draft to have dressed for the Caps, but he dominates
the numbers – 209 of 222 man-games played, 55 of the 56 goals, 53 of the 55
assists, and 108 of the 111 points. Of
the other two players to dress for the Caps from that draft – Nathan Walker and
Shane Gersich – only Gersich is still with the organization.
All-Decade Team:
So, there you have it.
It’s been quite a decade.
Seeing Semin sneak in riding the bench was a pleasant sight. For all the frustration that surrounded him I always enjoyed watching him play, waiting for the magic that at times could upstage the Great 8... and usually being disappointed. Also completely forgot about Thomas Vokun. Thanks Peerless!
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