The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals wrap up their season-long five-game
road trip on Tuesday night with their only visit to Toronto this season to take on the Maple
Leafs. Washington will look to improve
on an already successful 3-0-1 record on the road trip, while the Maple Leafs
try to take advantage of a home respite between road games in Montreal and
Philadelphia.
Then and Now…
This will be the 149th meeting in the all-time series between
the teams. Washington has a 75-57-6
record (with 10 ties) in the series to date, 28-34-4 (six ties) in games played
in Toronto. Since 2005-2006, the Caps
have dominated, going 31-15-4 in 50 games overall, 12-9-3 in 24 games in
Toronto. Washington won their last visit
to Toronto, a 3-2 win last February 21st, Tom Wilson providing the
game-winning goal while shorthanded in the third period of that contest.
Active Leaders vs. Opponent…
Caps vs. Maple Leafs:
Goals: Ovechkin (39)
Assists: Backstrom (33)
Points: Ovechkin (69)
Plus-minus: Backstrom (plus-17)
Penalty minutes: Wilson (35)
Power play goals: Ovechkin (15)
Power play points: Ovechkin (29)
Shorthanded goals: Wilson (1)
Game-winning goals: Ovechkin (5)
Overtime goals: Ovechkin (1)
Shots on goal: Ovechkin (231)
Goaltender wins: Holtby (9)
Goals against average: Holtby (2.38)
Save percentage: Holtby (.925)
Shutouts: Holtby (1)
Maple Leafs vs. Caps:
Goals: Marner, Matthews (3)
Assists: Rielly (10)
Points: Rielly (10)
Plus-minus: Dermott (plus-4)
Penalty minutes: Rielly (8)
Power play goals: Marner, Matthews (1)
Power play points: Marner, Rielly (3)
Shorthanded goals: Kapanen (1)
Game-winning goals: Matthews (1)
Overtime goals: none
Shots on goal: Rielly (43)
Goaltender wins: Andersen (4)
Goals against average: Andersen (3.25)
Save percentage: Andersen (.904)
Shutouts: Andersen (1)
Noteworthy Opponents…
Mitch Marner came into the NHL the same season as Auston
Matthews. Folks remember that Matthews
scored four goals in the first game he played in the NHL. They might remember that his 120 goals since
coming into the league are third-most, trailing only Alex Ovechkin (142) and
Nikita Kucherov (123) through Sunday’s games.
What they, and perhaps a fair number of Toronto Maple Leaf fans, might
not remember is that Mitch Marner has more points (239 to 218), more power play
points (75 to 57), has more credited hits than the sturdier built Matthews (108
to 70) and has missed only five games in his three-plus seasons in the NHL (all
in his rookie season) compared to 34 for Matthews.
Not that Marner is a heretofore unknown player whose rise
has been unexpected. He was, after all,
the fourth overall pick in the 2015 Entry Draft (the “Connor McDavid/Jack
Eichel” draft), and his 239 career points to date trail only McDavid (392) and
Eichel (275). He has 64 multi-point
games in his career, tied for 16th most since he came into the
league in 2016-2017, and those games mattered to the Leafs, who went 55-6-3 in
those games (by way of comparison, Toronto is 39-11-10 in the 60 multi-point
games Matthews recorded). Toronto has
won all four multi-point games Marner has so far this season, but it seems he has to
perform at this level for the Leafs to be successful. Toronto is just 2-5-2 in the nine games in
which Marner had one or no points.
Marner is 3-3-6, minus-1, in ten career games against the Caps.
Defenseman Jake Muzzin has something no Maple Leaf has
enjoyed in more than half a century, a Stanley Cup. He won the Cup with the Los Angeles Kings in
2013-2014, in what was his second of eight seasons with the Kings. Muzzin was traded from the Kings to Toronto
in January 2019 for Carl Grundstrom, Sean Durzi and a first round pick in the
2019 Entry Draft. Muzzin, who did not
exhibit a particularly noteworthy offensive touch as a defenseman in Los
Angeles, posted five goals and 16 points in 30 games with the Leafs to close
last season. He has continued the better
than half-point per game pace this season with three goals and nine points in
13 games to date. Odd Muzzin fact… in
each of the three seasons preceding this one he finished 11th in
Norris Trophy voting. He is tied for the
team lead among defensemen in goals (three, with Morgan Rielly) and is second
in points (nine) and average ice time (23:11).
Muzzin is 1-4-5, even, in 12 career games against Washington.
When the Leafs visited Washington on October 16th,
Michael Hutchinson got the call in goal, dropping the 4-3 decision. It is part of a lost opening to the season
for Hutchinson, who is 0-3-1 (one no decision) in five appearances with a 4.26
goals against average and .885 save percentage.
On the other hand, Frederik Andersen is hot after a so-so start. After opening the season with a 2-2-0, 3.75,
.876 record in four appearances, he is 4-0-1, 2.35, .924 in his last five
appearances. He has done it facing a ton
of shots (43 saves on 46 shots in a 4-3 win over Boston on October 19th),
and he has done it with light work (16 saves on 17 shots in a 4-1 win over San
Jose last Friday). Odd Andersen fact… in
201 appearances with the Leafs, not one has been in relief; he started each and
every one of those 201 appearances.
Earlier this season, Andersen became the 13th goalie in team
history to appear in 200 games, and he stands sixth in Leafs history in goalie
wins (113). Among the 21 goalies to
appear in at least 100 games for the team, his save percentage (.917) trails
only Jacques Plante (.925) and Johnny Bower (.922). Andersen is 5-2-1, 2.82, .913, with two shutouts
in his career against the Caps.
1. No defenseman for
the Leafs has a power play goal this season.
The eight defensemen to have dressed have a total of five points (all
assists), four of them by Morgan Rielly.
2. Toronto has
dressed 14 forwards this season. All of
them have recorded at least one point; three of them have ten or more: Mitch
Marner (15), Auston Matthews (13) and Ilya Mikheyev (10).
3. Shots on goal, for
and against, are a big thing in games involving the Leafs. Toronto and Vegas are the only teams in the league
having taken and allowed at least 425 shots on goal (Toronto: 425 taken/426
allowed; Vegas: 459/425).
4. Only Ottawa has
spent more time at home shorthanded (51:27 in seven games) than have the Leafs
(44:44 in eight games).
5. Toronto has 26
penalties taken on home ice this season, all of them minor penalties.
1. Washington has been
charged with 30 penalties on the road so far this season, all of them minors.
2. The Caps lead the
league in power play goals scored on the road (eight), lead the league in empty
net goals in road games (three), and are tied in shorthanded goals in away
games (three, with Vegas).
3. Washington leads
all teams in shots blocked in road games (133) and are second in credited hits
(170, trailing only Anaheim with 191).
4. The Caps have
spent more time shorthanded on the road (53:22) than any other team in the
league.
5. Washington is
under 50 percent in shot attempts-for percentage at 5-on-5 in each of their
last six road games (44.13 overall).
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Toronto: Ilya Mikheyev
Of the 24 rookies in the league having dressed for ten or
more games, none are older than Toronto winger Ilya Mikheyev, who turned 25 on
October 10th. The Russian native made
his way through his country’s development program, eventually ending up with
Avangard Omsk in the KHL in 2014-2015, where he played for five seasons. After recording 23 goals and 45 points in 62
games with Avangard last season and helping his team reach the Gagarin Cup
final, he signed a one-year deal with the Maple Leafs last May paying him
$925,000 this season. Mikheyev is off to
a fast start in his rookie class, tied for the lead in points through Sunday’s
games (ten, with Colorado’s Cale Makar and Buffalo’s Victor Olofsson), while
his four goals trail only Olofsson (six).
His plus-8 leads all rookies, as do his shots on goal (32), and his
15:55 in ice time per game is second among rookie forwards (Olofsson: 17:26). One of those goals came in Toronto’s 4-3 loss
to the Caps in the teams’ meeting earlier this season, the only time he has
faced Washington.
Washington: Nicklas Backstrom
Players, even those with the pedigree of Nicklas Backstrom,
have slumps from time to time, and Backstrom might be in the midst of one. After going without a point in the season
opener in St. Louis, Backstrom went 2-6-8 over his next eight games, the point
per game pace being roughly equivalent with his career pace (0.97 points per
game). However, on the four games of the
five-game road trip, Backstrom has a lone assist and is minus-1 while averaging
19:25 in ice time per game. His 2-7-9,
minus-4 start through 13 games is a considerable departure from his start last
season (3-13-16, plus-4 through 13 games), although he did hit a rough patch
the previous year when, after going 3-9-12, plus-1 over his first eight games,
he went seven straight games without a point and was minus-2, and would suffer a
21-game stretch without a goal from Games 7 through 27. Nevertheless, Backstrom finished last season
with 74 points and had 71 in the season before that. Odd Backstrom fact… the Caps have won all
five games in which he skated less than 20 minutes so far (four of them were on
the road, the other was against Toronto in Washington). In 40 career games against the Maple Leafs,
Backstrom is 9-33-42, plus-17.
In the end…
This game pits two of the top six scoring offenses against
one another. It also pits two of the ten
worst scoring defenses against one another.
Signs point to a high-scoring affair, although there are the two goalies
playing well, Braden Holtby with a .918 save percentage over his last four
games and Frederik Andersen with a .924 save percentage in his last five
games. This being played in Toronto,
where the Maple Leafs have been held under three goals only once in eight
games, and the Caps having scored five goals in four of their last six road
games, we think “high scoring,” even with Toronto captain John Tavares nursing
a fractured finger, will win out.
Capitals 5 – Maple Leafs 4