T.J. Oshie
“Enthusiasm is the mother of effort, and without it nothing
great was ever achieved.”
-- Ralph Waldo Emerson
“Fearless” is a difficult adjective to apply to someone
inside the rink by someone outside of it who merely writes about hockey, but it
does seem an appropriate term to describe the style of play employed by
Washington Capitals forward T.J. Oshie.
He is a skill player with a grinder’s ethic, a physical player who
seems, at least figuratively, to punch above his weight constantly.
The 2019-2020 season was no exception. Oshie would have undoubtedly finished the
season with the seventh 50-point season of his career and fourth in five years
as a Capital (he finished with 49 points in 69 games). He finished with 26 goals, the fourth time in
five seasons in Washington he posted 25 or more goals. He finished with ten power play goals, one
short of his career high (11, set with the Caps in 2015-2016). Oshie had four game-winning goals, one short
of his career high (five, set once with the Caps and once with the St. Louis
Blues). His 19.5 shooting percentage was
the second-best of his career (23.1 with the Caps in 2016-2017). And, he did it playing in all 69 games. Even though it was a shortened season, it was
the first time in his career he dressed for every regular season game.
Even within the confines of the 2019-2020 season there was a
consistency in his effort and production.
He never dipped below five points in any ten-game segment, and in four
of the seven segments he posted eight or nine points. Where he produced in bunches was in power
play scoring. Seven of Oshie’s ten power
play goals this season were recorded in the first (four PPG) and sixth (three
PPG) ten-game segments.
Fearless’ Take…
Think of T.J. Oshie as a “primary secondary” scorer, or a
“secondary primary” scorer, the sort who, as a top-six forward, is expected to
contribute but whose contributions matter nonetheless. Washington was 15-5-2 in the 22 games in
which he recorded a goal, 28-6-2 in the 36 games in which he recorded a
point. But his orneriness was not a
liability. The Caps were 16-7-4 in the
27 games in which he was credited with at least two hits. He even posted his second-best career season
on faceoffs, splitting 238 draws down the middle (119 wins, 119 losses/50.0
percent).
Cheerless’ Take…
In some respects T.J. Oshie had his best year as a Capital,
but you wonder how much longer he is going to be able to produce at this
level. There were 43 players in the NHL
with 25 or more goals this season, and only four of them were older than Oshie
(Alex Ovechkin, Zach Parise, Patrice Bergeron, and Evgeni Malkin). One could argue that Oshie plays a grittier
game than all of them (even Ovechkin), and despite his playing in every game
this season, he missed 37 regular season games over the previous four seasons
with the Caps.
Odd Oshie Fact… An example of T.J. Oshie’s combination of
skill and grit. In his five years with
Capitals, Oshie is one of four players in the league to have scored at least
125 goals (128), posted at least 250 points (257), been charged with at least
150 penalty minutes (163), and been credited with at least 500 hits (576). The others are: Jamie Benn, Alex Ovechkin,
and Joe Pavelski.
Odd Oshie Fact II… For all his willingness to engage
physically, Oshie plays well within the limits of the rule book. He had only 26 minutes in penalties this
season, and more than half of those (14) came in a 13-game stretch from October
22nd though November 18th. And within that stretch, almost half (six
minutes) came in a 5-2 win over the Anaheim Ducks on November 18th.
Odd Oshie Fact III… The Caps did not lose a game in
regulation in which Oshie skated less than 16 minutes (8-0-1).
Game to Remember… December 11, 2019. When the Washington Capitals hosted the
Boston Bruins in early December, it was a meeting ogf the top two teams in the
league, the Caps sporting a league-best 22-5-5 record, and the Bruins three
points behind them in the standings with a 20-5-6 record. Boston took a 1-0 lead to the first
intermission on a David Pastrnak goal, but the Caps came back on the strength
of a pair of Oshie goals less than four minutes apart early in the second
period. The first came on a Caps power
play, the scoring sequence starting when Bruin defenseman Zdeno Chara tried to
flick the puck out of the defensive zone with a one-handed swipe, but John
Carlson kept it in at the blue line. Carlson
spied Oshie, who the Bruins’ defense completely lost floating to the top of the
crease. Oshie collected the pass, spun,
and chipped a shot over goalie Jaroslav Halak’s left shoulder. The shot hit the crossbar and dropped to the
ice, the referee waving his arms to signal no goal, but as he was doing so,
Oshie jumped on the loose puck behind Halak and batted it home, tying the game 3:35 into the period.
Oshie’s second goal was worthy of the personal highlight reel. From along the wall in the defensive zone,
Jakub Vrana fed Evgeny Kuznetsov with a pass that Kuznetsov settled at his own
blue line. He then fed the puck ahead to
Oshie in stride at the center red line.
Pushing two Bruin defenders back with his advance, Oshie stickhandled
the puck through and around defenseman Connor Clifton, broke in on Halak, and
backhanded the puck over Halak’s blocker as he was being hooked with a delayed
penalty being signaled.
Boston tied the game in the third period, but the Caps won in the end, 3-2, on
a John Carlson goal. Oshie finished with two goals on two shots (one of four
two-goal games for the season), a takeaway, a blocked shot, and 2-for-4 on
faceoffs.
Game to Forget… December 28, 2019. The last road game of the 2019 portion of the
schedule might not be the worst game the Caps played this season, but they
could see it from PNC Arena in Raleigh.
Almost without exception, it was a bad night for the visitors. For T.J. Oshie it was especially unpleasant. He was on ice for four of the six goals the
Hurricanes scored and came up empty on four shots of his own. He
posted his only minus-4 rating of the regular season. It was the exclamation point on a woeful
stretch in which he went 1-0-1, minus-7, over a six-game span, perhaps his
worst span of games of all the regular season.
Postseason…
But for a brief flurry over consecutive games in which he
recorded three goals – one in the final round robin game against Boston and two
in Game 1 of the first round series against the New York Islanders – Oshie had
a quiet postseason. In the other six
games, he did not record a point and was minus-7 (he posted another minus-4 in
Game 2 against the Isles). While he
managed nine shots on goal in three round robin games, he had only nine in five
games against the New Yorkers.
Looking Ahead…
T.J. Oshie just completed year three of an eight-year/$46
million contract that extends through the 2024-2025 season. While the last years of that contract look to
be a bit uncomfortable (Oshie would be 38 years old when it expires), the
complicating feature is whether he will be an unprotected player when the
expansion draft is held to fill out the roster of the expansion Seattle Kraken
next June. It is possible, if not probable, that the upcoming season will be Oshie’s last as a Capital.
In the end…
If Alex Ovechkin’s game is the expression of joy, T.J.
Oshie’s is the expression of determination.
Rare is the player who seems to bring the singularity of purpose to make
a difference with each shift that Oshie brings.
In his own way, he is not slowing down any more than is Ovechkin. He
fought through a season last year in which he missed 13 games to injury to play
every game this season and continue the high level of production he has posted
since coming to Washington. There are,
however, issues with Oshie – two, to be specific. Can he sustain his health and production next
season, and will that season mark the end of one of the more interesting and
successful careers in Caps history?
Grade: A-
Photo: Ethan Miller/Getty Images North America
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