The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!
The Washington Capitals head back on the road for a short visit to Ottawa where they will face the Senators on Thursday night. The Caps will try to shake off a lackluster performance in a 5-4 loss to the Nashville Predators on Wednesday, while the Senators will be looking to win their third game in four tries and extend their points streak to equal a season-high four games.
The Washington Capitals head back on the road for a short visit to Ottawa where they will face the Senators on Thursday night. The Caps will try to shake off a lackluster performance in a 5-4 loss to the Nashville Predators on Wednesday, while the Senators will be looking to win their third game in four tries and extend their points streak to equal a season-high four games.
Then and Now…
The Caps and the Senators will meet for the 98th
time in the regular season on Friday.
Washington has a 51-36-5 (five ties) in the overall matchup and a
21-23-3 (one tie) record in Ottawa.
Since 2005-2006, the Caps are 30-15-5 against the Senators, 11-11-3 on
the road. This is the second of three
games between the teams this season. The
Caps won the first meeting, 6-1, in Washington on January 7th.
Active Leaders vs. Opponent…
Noteworthy Opponents…
It has taken a while, but forward Anthony Duclair seems to
have found a comfortable place in Ottawa.
The six year veteran is in his first full season with the Senators after
being traded by the Columbus Blue Jackets with a second round pick in the 2020 Entry
Draft and second round pick in the 2021 Entry Draft for Ryan Dzingel and a
seventh round pick in the 2019 Entry Draft.
The Senators are Duclair’s fifth stop in the NHL after skating for the
New York Rangers, Arizona, Chicago, and Columbus.
After posting eight goals in 21 games to wrap up the
2018-2019 season in Ottawa, Duclair kept the momentum going this season with 21
goals in 49 games going into Friday’s contest with Washington. Duclair has shown
flashes of this goal scoring ability in the past, posting 20 in 81 games with
Arizona in 2015-2016 and 19 in a 2019-2019 season split between Columbus and
Ottawa. What he lacked in the past was
consistency, and what he has done now, in his tenure with the Senators, is look
for his shot. Until arriving in Ottawa,
Duclair never averaged more than 1.74 shots per game with any of the other four
teams for whom he played. But with the
Senators, he is averaging 2.63 shots per game, and the increased volume has not
diminished his efficiency. He is
shooting 15.8 percent with Ottawa, the best of his career over any of his five
stops.
Duclair has been more efficient and effective scoring goals
at home with 13 of his 21 goals scored in Ottawa and his 17.6 percent shooting
rate more than six point higher than his road shooting percentage (11.4). He has been in a goal scoring slump recently,
carrying a 12-game streak without one into Friday’s game. Duclair is 3-1-4, minus-5, in ten career
games against the Capitals.
Last season, Thomas Chabot was a top-ten goal scorer among defensemen
(14/tied for eighth) and points (55/tenth).
For the first time in his brief career, he received votes for the Norris
Trophy (he finished 18th). This
season, he does not rank in the top-50 in goals (four/tied for 61st)
and does not rank in the top-25 in points (28/tied for 21st). His minus-19 is already far and away the
worst of his career (he was minus-12 in each of the previous two seasons). His shooting percentage has fallen off a
cliff – 3.0 percent this year compared to 7.6 percent last season and 9.6
percent in 2017-2018 with the Senators.
This might be the price one pays in the development of a young
defenseman (Chabot turned 23 on January 30th and is in his fourth
NHL season), and he does remain the leading point producer on the blue line,
but having him return to the growth path his production displayed over his
first three seasons will be an important ingredient to whatever success the
Senators have going forward.
Chabot has been more productive on home ice of late in an
encouraging sign for the Senators. In
his last 15 home games he is 3-7-10 and has points in four of his last eight
games. He is 0-1-1, minus-7, in five
career games against Washington.
Some players accomplish big things over long careers and
compile a long list of honors. Some toil
in a series of situations that are difficult, but they exhibit the attributes
of skill and professionalism that make for a long and respectable career. Goalie Craig Anderson is such a player. In a 17-year career dating back to 2002-2003,
Anderson has appeared in 637 games for four teams. Ten of those seasons have been spent in
Ottawa, where Anderson ranks first in games played (424) and wins (198), ranks
ninth in goals against average (2.83; minimum: 50 games), ranks tied for second
in save percentage (.914; minimum: 50 games), and ranks second in shutouts
(28).
Anderson’s numbers have deteriorated over the last three
seasons, mirroring the Senators’ fortunes overall. In 131 games over those three seasons he is
47-64-11, 3.38, .900, with four shutouts.
Only three goalies in that span have more losses in regulation (Carey
Price: 67; Jimmy Howard: 68; and Jonathan Quick: 69), and only five of 78
goalies over the period have a worse goals against average. It has not been easy for Anderson or the
Senators.
If he gets the call in this game, Anderson comes in with a
1-4-1, 4.26, .876 record over his last half dozen games, although that win came
in his last outing, a 28-save effort in a 5-2 win over Buffalo on Tuesday. Anderson is 11-9-2, 2.61, .915, with two
shutouts in 23 career games against the Caps.
1. Ottawa has the
third best net penalty kill at home this season (after accounting for
shorthanded goals scored) – 91.0 percent.
2. The Senators allow
the most shots on goal on home ice this season (34.0 per game).
3. Ottawa has
actually allowed fewer goals on home ice at 5-on-5 this season (47 in 25 games)
than have the Caps (48 in 25 games).
4. Only Arizona and
Vancouver have allowed fewer first period goals on home ice (14 each) than have
the Senators (15, tied with Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, and the New York
Islanders).
5. Ottawa has taken
more penalties on home ice (102) than all but two teams (Boston: 108, and
Anaheim: 103).
1. Only three teams
have taken more penalties on the road than the Capitals (115): New Jersey
(118), San Jose (119), and the New York Rangers (123). Their 104 minor penalties rank second (New
Jersey: 106).
2. The Caps have
scored 95 goals in 26 road games this season.
Only Toronto has more (99 in 26 road games).
3. The Caps lead the
league in third period goals scored in road games (39).
4. Washington is
8-0-0 when leading on the road after one period, one of five teams with perfect
records (Pittsburgh, Colorado, Chicago, and the New York Islanders).
5. The Caps could do
a better job of protecting the puck on the road. Their 9.77 giveaways per 60 minutes is worst
in the league in road games.
The Peerless’ Players to Ponder
Ottawa: Brady Tkachuk
The apple does not fall far from the tree on the Tkachuk
property. Keith Tkachuk spent 18 years
in the NHL scoring 538 goals and amassing 2,219 penalty minutes. He is one of three players in NHL history to
finish with more than 500 goals and more than 2,000 penalty minutes (Brendan
Shanahan and Pat Verbeek are the others).
He has two sons playing in the NHL.
Matthew in his fourth season with the Calgary Flames and has already
compiled 87 career goals and 269 penalty minutes in 275 games. Brady is in his second season with the Ottawa
Senators and already has 37 goals and 135 penalty minutes in 121 games.
Brady had an excellent rookie season for the Sens last year,
finishing second in his rookie class in goals (22) and points (45), and third
in power play points (10) in 71 games.
He also happened to finish second in penalty minutes (75). He is slightly off that scoring pace through
50 games so far this season on a per game basis (15-14-29 in 50 games), but he
does rank third on the team in goals scored and is tied for fourth in
points.
On home ice, Tkachuk has been a bit of a head scratcher. He leads the team in shots on goal on home ice
(79), but he has only six goals to show for it (7.6 percent), tied for sixth on
the team. He goes into this game with
only two goals in his last 12 games overall and only one in his last eight
games on home ice. Tkachuk is 0-2-2,
minus-2, in four career games against the Capitals.
Washington: Ilya Samsonov
There is little doubt that after Wednesday night’s 5-4 loss
to the Nashville Predators, that another log will be added to the fire of “goaltender
controversy” in Washington. Braden
Holtby has been inconsistent over the last seven weeks (4-8-0, 3.72, .868 in 13
appearances), while Ilya Samsonov just keeps rolling along in his rookie
season. Over the same span of days over
which Holtby has struggled, Samsonov is 8-0-0 (one no decision), 1.62, .941,
with one shutout. He has not lost a
decision in more than two months (November 15th in a 5-2 loss to
Montreal).
It does not seem to be a function of work volume that
explains Samsonov’s success. He has
faced 27.4 shots per 60 minutes in that 8-0-0 run, while Holtby has faced 28.1
shots over the same period on the calendar.
It has not been a function of saves by strength, Samsonov holding a
large edge in save percentage at even strength over this seven-week stretch (.959
to .881 for Holtby) and when the Caps are shorthanded (.895 to .833 for
Holtby). The oddest difference of all
might be in save percentage when the Caps are on a power play. Chances for opponents in such situations
often come on breakaways or odd-man rushes, which makes Samsonov’s .800 save
percentage in this period not unusual (eight saves on ten shots). But Holtby has stopped only nine of 13 shots
in that span (.692). Further, Samsonov
has been consistently stingier. Over
this seven-week stretch, he did not allow more than three goals in any of his
nine appearances. On the other hand,
Holtby allowed more than three goals seven times in 13 appearances.
One might have the thought that Holtby is in a slump, and
Samsonov is on a streak. But at some
point, seven weeks turns into a “who do we count on” situation, and the Caps
might be coming to that point with their goaltenders. Samsonov has faced the Senators once so far,
stopping 26 of 27 shots in a 6-1 win on January 7th in Washington.
In the end…
If the Caps need any more motivation to perform well against
a team they might otherwise overlook, it is that they looked so thoroughly
discombobulated, especially in the defensive end, against Nashville on
Wednesday night. Doing it in front of a
national television audience did nothing for pride, either. An angry Caps team can be a dangerous team,
but only if that anger is turned into focus on a mission to play responsibly. Fail that, and Ottawa is a good enough team
at home to make things uncomfortable for the visitors.
Capitals 5 – Senators 2
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