The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals embark on the first leg of a
three-game road trip on Saturday night when they visit the Tampa Bay Lightning
at Amalie Arena. The Caps shook off a
5-2 loss to the Columbus Blue Jackets on Monday with a 3-2 win over the Boston
Bruins on Wednesday for their seventh win in eight games. The Lightning might finally be waking up from
their long slumber to start the season.
After dropping four of six games (2-3-1), they have won two in a row,
both by one-goal margins, a 2-1 win on the road against the Florida Panthers on
Tuesday and a 3-2 win over Boston on home ice on Thursday.
Then and Now…
The Caps and Lightning will meet for the 130th
time in the regular season on Saturday.
Washington has an 80-33-10 (six ties) record against the Bolts, 36-21-5
(two ties) in Tampa. Since 2005-2006,
the Caps are 44-17-10 against Tampa Bay, 18-12-5 on the road.
Active Leaders vs. Opponent…
Noteworthy Opponents…
Fans expect Steven Stamkos to lead the Lightning in
goals. He does (13). They expect Nikita Kucherov to lead the team
in points. He does (33). But if there is an underrated player on the
club, it might be Alex Killorn. If one
word describes him in his eight years with the Lightning, it might be “consistent.” In six full seasons with the club coming into
this season, he posted goals in a range of 14 (in 2015-2016 to 19 (in
2016-2017) and points in a range of 36 (in 2016-2017) to 47 (in 2017-2018). He
has missed only two games in the last four seasons coming into this one. He was a plus-22 in each of the last two
seasons before this one. He had 45
penalty minutes in each of the last two seasons before this one. With Killorn, one knows what one gets.
This season, however, Killorn might have found another
level. In 28 games to date (he missed two games to a lower body injury at the
end of November), he has nine goals and 24 points, putting him on a pace for 25
goals and 69 points, both of which would shatter previous career highs (19
goals in 2016-2017 and 47 points in 2017-2018).
Part of his success is due to his production on the power play, where
his four goals have already tied a career best (four in 2016-2017). Killorn has been on fire of late. After going 2-4-6, plus-3, in his first 13
games, he is 7-11-18, plus-4, in his last 15 games, including a four-point game
(1-3-4) in a 7-1 win over San Jose last Saturday. Killorn is 8-1-9, minus-5, in 22 career games
against the Caps.
The Lightning have a veteran defensive group. Of the eight defensemen to dress this season,
six are age 29 or older. At the other
end, as the youngest defenseman in the group, is Mikhail Sergachev. The 21-year old, former ninth overall draft
pick (2016, by Montreal) is in his third season with the Lightning after
spending four games of the 2016-2017 season with Montreal and then being traded
to Tampa Bay with a conditional second round pick in the 2018 Entry Draft for
Jonathan Drouin and a conditional sixth round pick in the 2018 Entry Draft. Sergachev had a fine first season with the
Lightning, going 9-31-40, plus-11, in 79 games in 2017-2018. His nine goals tied for second among rookie defensemen
(with Thomas Chabot), trailing only the New York Islanders’ Ryan Pulock
(10). His 31 assists trailed on New
Jersey’s Will Butcher (39) among rookie defensemen, and he and Butcher were the
only rookie defensemen to post 40 or more points, Sergachev with 40 and Butcher
with 44. He slipped a bit last season,
posting six goals and 32 points in 75 games.
This season, Sergachev is back to averaging just over a half-point
per game (4-12-16 in 30 games). He arrived
at those totals to date in a roundabout way.
He had six points (all assists) in his first five games, but then he
went 0-3-3 in his next 13 games. He got
hot again, going 4-3-7 over the following eight games, but he is now without a
point in his last four contests and managed only two shots on goal over those
four games. Watch his ice time. In 12 games in which he skated less than 18
minutes, the Lightning are 9-1-2, while they are 7-10-1 in the 18 games he
skated more than 18 minutes. Sergachev
is 1-2-3, even, in seven career games against the Capitals.
He led the league in goalie wins in 2017-2018 (44). He did so again last season (39). Both years, he was a Vezina Trophy finalist,
winning the prize last season while also being named as the goalie on the
league’s first team all-star squad.
However, there are lingering doubts about Andrei Vasilevskiy being in
that elite group of NHL netminders, and that is a product of an iffy postseason
record (15-15, 2.83, .912). If anything,
that playoff record has deteriorated over time.
In his first 22 postseason appearances, Vasilevskiy was 12-7, 2.51,
.923. In his last 11 appearances, he is 3-8,
3.41, .890, and he has lost his last six decisions. Until that record changes, there will be
those lingering doubts about whether Vasilevskiy is in that top echelon of NHL
goaltenders.
In that regard, perhaps his start to the 2019-2020 season
will take some of the heat off, if only because he is off the pace he set over
the previous two seasons. His 2.78 goals
against average in 22 games would, if he finished the season there, be his
worst in six years in the NHL. His .910
save percentage is within rounding error of his worst season (2015-2016, when
he appeared in only 24 games). He does
not yet have a shutout this season after posting a total of 14 over the
previous two seasons. Vasilevskiy has
already lost eight games in regulation this season. He did not suffer his eighth loss in
regulation last year until March 7th and had only ten all year. And, streakiness has crept into his
game. Starting on November 1st, he had a
four-game stretch with an aggregate save percentage of .875. He followed that up with a three-game stretch
with a .941 save percentage. Then, it
was four games with a .876 save percentage.
And now, he goes into the game against the Caps with a three-game streak
with a .958 save percentage. Vasilevskiy
is 4-5-1, 3.66, .899 in ten career appearances against Washington.
1. Only three teams
have fewer standings points earned on home ice than the Lightning (17) through
Thursday’s games – Ottawa (16), New Jersey (13), and Detroit (11). The Lightning already have six losses in
regulation in 15 games on home ice; last season they had a total of seven in 41
home games.
2. No team in the
league has more power play goals scored on home ice than Tampa Bay (21), and
they have the league’s best home power play (36.2 percent). On the other hand, their 37 even strength
goals on home ice are ranked in a tie for 19th place with New Jersey
and the New York Rangers.
3. Only Buffalo and
St. Louis have fewer blocked shots on home ice (156 apiece) than the Lightning
(165).
4. The Lightning have
the best ratio on home ice of takeaways to giveaways (1.42:1 on 122 takeaways
and 86 giveaways).
5. Tampa Bay has a
positive shot attempts differential at 5-on-5 on home ice in almost all
situations: when ahead (plus-19), when behind (plus-101), in close situations
(plus-9). Not when tied, though. Their minus-29 is fourth-worst in the league
in those situations.
1. Washington leads
the league in goals scored on the road (61) and scoring average (3.58 per
game).
2. The Caps lead all
Eastern Conference teams in power play goals scored on the road (14, three more
than Carolina). Their power play is also
best among Eastern Conference teams on the road (27.5 percent).
3. Washington has
spent more time on the road than any other Eastern Conference team in killing
penalties (108:57).
4. No team has been
charged with more giveaways on the road so far than the Caps (179).
5. John Carlson has
27 points on the road this season. By
itself, this would rank fifth in total points among defensemen through Thursday’s
games.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Tampa Bay: Kevin Shattenkirk
From February 19, 2011 until February 27, 2017 a span of
time that encompassed defenseman Kevin Shattenkirk’s tenure with the St. Louis
Blues, Shattenkirk was 11th in total goals scored by defensemen
(59), ninth in assists (199), ninth in points (258), tied for fourth in power
play goals (32), second in power play points (129), ninth in personal shot
attempts differential at 5-on-5 (plus-958).
He was even second among defensemen in Gimmick goals scored
(eight). Little wonder he was considered
the prize among players available at the 2017 trading deadline.
And then he came to the Caps. It did not go well. His regular season numbers were good enough
(2-12-14, plus-4, in 19 games), but he was 1-5-6, minus-4, in 13 games in the
postseason, and there weren’t many tears shed when he signed in the ensuing offseason
as a free agent with the New York Rangers.
Starting with his stay with the Caps through last season, he played in
138 regular season games with Washington and the Rangers, went 9-56-65,
minus-25. The goal total was tied for 93rd
among defensemen over that span, the assists were tied for 40th, the
points were tied for 60th. He
had four power play goals (tied for 44th) and 26 power play points
(tied for 30th). There didn’t
seem to be many tears shed in Manhattan when he signed with the Lightning as a
free agent last July.
He has rehabilitated his image, to a point, with the
Lightning. Through 30 games he has five
goals, almost his total in 119 games with the Rangers (seven), and his 22
points put him on a 60-point pace that would eclipse his total of 51 with the Rangers. Part of the solution might be in a simplified
role. He is getting a lot less power
play ice time (1:38 per game) than he had in any of his previous nine seasons
(almost a full minute less than he had with the Rangers last season (2:26) that
was his previous low average). On the
other hand, he is getting more even strength ice time (17:09 per game) than he
had in either Washington or New York. In
18 career games against the Caps, Shattenkirk is 1-6-7, minus-2.
Washington: Nicklas Backstrom
There are some players of whom it could be said, “he could
fall out of bed on his 50th birthday and put up points.” Nicklas Backstrom did not fall out of bed, and
he is not yet near his 50th birthday, but he did miss eight games
with an upper body injury before returning to the lineup against Columbus last
Monday. Backstrom had a goal and an
assist in that game, and then he followed it up with an assist against Boston
on Wednesday to give him points in five straight games, a streak interrupted by
that injury absence. He has averaged a
point per game over his last dozen games (3-9-12). Scoring at a point per game pace is not new
for Backstrom. Among the 103 Capitals to
dress for at least 200 games with the club, he is fourth in points per game
(0.97), trailing only Mike Gartner (1.04), Alex Ovechkin (1.11), and Dennis
Maruk (1.26).
Backstrom is closing on other personal milestones. With two more assists he will become the
first player in team history with 700 career assists with the club. Six more points, and he will become the
second player with 900 points (Ovechkin has 1,244). He is already the all-time leader in
plus-minus, but with a plus-2 in this game would hit the plus-120 mark for his
career. With six power play points he
would pass both Brothers Sedin, Daniel and Henrik, on the all-time ranking in
power play point among players born in Sweden with 370 power play points.
The odd part of Backstrom’s performance this season is not
the points, though. It is the absence of
them. The Caps are 6-1-3 in games in
which he went without a point, 11-3-1 in the games in which he had one or more
points. Backstrom is 13-47-60, plus-9,
in 50 career games against the Lightning.
Those 60 points against the Lightning are the most he has against any
NHL team in his career. Since he came
into the league in 2007-2008, only Ovechkin among all other players has more
points against Tampa Bay (72).
In the end…
The Capitals have had good luck recently in Tampa, earning
points in eight of their last ten visits (6-2-2), outscoring the Lightning, 36-32. Over those ten games, the Caps have power
play goals in nine of them (12-for-31 overall, 38.7 percent) while allowing
only five power play goals to the Lightning in 28 chances (17.9 percent). It is on that which the result might turn,
the Caps ability to make the Lightning pay for playing outside the rules.
Capitals 4 – Lightning 3