Minggu, 17 Maret 2013

Capitals vs. Bruins Recap: Boston Beats Washington In Saturday Matinee

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[GameCenter - Ice Tracker - Game Summary - Event Summary - Shot Summary - Faceoff Summary - Play-by-Play - Home TOI - Visitor TOI - Head-to-Head - Fenwick/Corsi - Fenwick Timeline]

Any hope of another comeback by the Capitals against the Bruins were put to rest by Boston's early third period goal. Washington was outperformed in the offensive zone by the Bruins forwards and there wasn't much goaltender Michal Neuvirth could do to keep the puck out of his net.

An affair that turned violent, the Capitals showed a level of compete that earned smiles from those watching at home despite the three goal deficit. Although the Bruins earned two points in regulation and the Capitals will travel home without, there should be something positive to take away from Washington's unwillingness to go down quietly in Boston.

Ten more notes on the game:

  • Milan Lucic was a thorn in the side of the Capitals from the get go, the power forward earning the primary assist on both first period goals. Equally as good in the power forward role today was winger Nathan Horton, finishing off a Gordie Howe Hat Trick before the game’s second intermission (1G 2A). The hard nosed and talented player looked very good against the Capitals today, every part of the player he was before a concussion sidelined him in the 2011 Stanley Cup Playoffs.
  • Nathan Horton’s eighth goal of the season late in the first period was the result of a nice pass from Milan Lucic behind the net. It was Capitals forward Troy Brouwer who turned the puck over below his own goal line, a backhanded pass intended for the defense that was intercepted by Lucic before Horton fired the puck behind Neuvirth. Similarly, defenseman Jack Hillen had a turnover forced from his stick below the goal line before the game’s second goal, David Krejci’s late in the first. Giving the puck away two hundred feet from the opposition’s net is not a way to win hockey games, especially those played in Boston. Their forward corps are too large and too skilled.
  • Marcus Johansson would score his second goal of the year (first since February 5th) despite not putting a shot towards the net. While looking to pass to Joel Ward Johansson’s puck was slapped aside by Krejci, off of Johnny Boychuk’s skate and into the net behind Anton Khudobin. Let’s hope the play will get Johansson’s puck luck going.
  • Neuvirth wasn’t sharp enough against the Bruins considering the offensive support he was given, posting a .895 SP on 38 shots. Although Neuvirth made several strong saves (one early on Daniel Paille in particular) his team’s deficit was too great eighteen minutes into the game.
  • Anton Khudobin got his first career start against the Capitals on Saturday, and the three year NHL veteran got his first win against Washington. The twenty six year old led the way for Boston with a .970 SP on 33 shots, his control of the puck and clock keeping the Capitals from stringing together good scoring chances. Khudobin saw the puck well and kept his crease tidy alongside his defenseman.
  • The hard hitting contest would come to a head at the end of the second period, fireworks starting in the second’s final minute. Both Brad Marchand / Mike Ribeiro and Horton / Matt Hendricks would square off in the final minute, both bouts evenly matched. Any momentum gained by Washington was quickly negated by Rich Peverley’s fourth of the year less than three minutes into the final frame. Mike Ribeiro’s decision to fight caught many off guard, the pivot having never dropped the mitts in his NHL career. Ribeiro and Marchand exchanged rights before Ribeiro’s sweater came over his head, and the Capitals bench responded enthusiastically to their leading scorer’s mettle. When the lightest guy on the roster steps up against the Bruins, positive momentum is almost always guaranteed.
  • Hendricks is one of the toughest guys in the NHL. After a quick (but fierce) tussle with Horton the Washington winger was courted by Shawn Thornton and Adam McQuiad at the same time. Quickly deciding to spar with the latter another energetic fight ended with Hendricks’ right knuckles cut open. The game already out of reach, one can get a good sense of the pride that #26 wears underneath his equipment.
  • The Capitals did a good job of keeping Bruins leading scorer Brad Marchand off the scoresheet and largely ineffective across the ice. While Marchand is usually easiest to identify on the ice, his second period fight aside, you would have been hard pressed to remember his impact on the outcome of this game.
  • Jason Chimera led Washington with six shots on net against Khudobin. Although Chimera didn’t register any points in his eighteen minutes of ice his offensive fortitude should be praised. The puck is never going in unless someone directs it on goal, and Chimera was doing that at a better rate than any other player on the ice Saturday afternoon. While he may be stuck without a goal on the season, one has to think it’s only a matter of time.
  • Steve Oleksy again skated the most minutes for Adam Oates, his twenty four minutes of ice two more than next highest Washington skater John Carlson. The Capitals' Coaching Staff is feeding Oleksy minutes and the late bloomer is eating up all the available ice time. Although skating to a -2 ranking on Saturday the defenseman's presence was noticeable all around Washington's own end and after whistles.

The Capitals can't afford to fall behind to talented teams too often, because like Boston showed, the best ones learn from their mistakes. The Bruins will make one more trip to Verizon Center on the last day of the regular season. Washington will play again tomorrow, against the Buffalo Sabres, and have a chance to get themselves into the contest with a quick goal.

Game highlights:

Sunday Caps Clips: Loston; Sabres @ Caps Game Day

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Your savory breakfast links:

  • Recaps and other assorted musings on yesterday's loss from us, Vogs, NHL.com, WaPo (gamer, blog), WashTimes (gamer), CSNW (gamer, Joe B.), Peerless, DSP, RtR and RMNB.
    • In which Matt Hendricks takes on the Boston Goo-ins and we learn that Shawn Thornton's teammates call him ... Thorty? [HockeyFights, Puck Daddy, WaPo, WashTimes, RMNB, CSNW (and again),
    • Oh hai there Captain Ahab. Nice of you to stop by to stick yet another harpoon in your whale. [Eye on Hockey]
    • Can't quite place it, but we're pretty sure we've seen this guy somewhere before. [WashTimes, Dump 'n' Chase]
  • Previews of tonight's duel for not-quite-DFL from Vogs, NHL.com and Peerless, and be sure to check out the other side of the match-up from our SB Nation pals over at Die By The Blade.
  • The Hershey Bears squad had a bunch of new faces in the lineup yesterday versus Bridgeport as Garrett Mitchell scored the only goal of the game ... in overtime. [Patriot-News (and again, plus video), SHoE]
  • Calling all lefties! Prime job opportunity available. [Capitals Outsider]
  • Congrats are in order for the Caps' ECHL affiliate Reading Royals, whose victory on Friday at Elmira punched their ticket to the Kelly Cup playoffs. [Reading Eagle]
    • If you start driving right now you can get to the Sovereign Center in plenty of time to enjoy the Royals' "Skills Challenge and Carnival." [Reading Royals]
  • Kids these days - here's a quick swing around Capitals Prospectville:
    • Evgeny Kuznetsov scored an empty netter to bring the score to 4-0 over Avangard Omsk as Traktor Chelyabinsk clinched their Eastern Conference semifinal and now advance to the conference finals against one of Ak Bars Kazan or Salavat Yulaev Ufa.
    • Filip Forsberg had one assist in Leksand IF's 5-2 loss to Orebro. From teh GoogleSvensk: "[The second goal was scored by] Michael Raffi who after a fine pass from [Forsberg] will alone between two OHK-rights activists." [Leksands IF]
    • The Miami (Ohio) RedHawks and the Michigan State Spartans split their first two games in the CCHA quarterfinals. Riley Barber went scoreless in the loss and had two assists in the win. The teams will play tonight to determine which team advances to the semifinal/championship round. [CCHA]
    • The results of the 2012-13 OHL Western Conference Coaches' Poll are in - and for the second straight year, Tom Wilson stands as the numero uno Body Checker. [OHL]
    • Jaynen Rissling got the night off as the Calgary Hitmen dropped their final regular season game to the Kootenay Ice. The Hitmen will face off with the Swift Current Broncos at the Saddledome on Thursday to start the first round of the WHL playoffs. [Hitmen]
    • Patrick Wey had one assisit and a plus-4 rating in two games as the Boston College Eagles swept the Catamounts of Vermont in the first round of the Hockey East playoffs. [Hockey East]
  • Congratulations to Dale Hunter on the occasion of his 500th victory behind the London Knights' bench. [@GoLondonKnights]
  • Finally, happy 17th of March to Dick Patrick, Patrick McNeill, Patrick Koudys, Patrick Wey, Patrik Augusta, Patrick Boileau, Pat Elynuik, Patrice Lefebvre, Craig Patrick, Pat Peake, Pat Ribble and Pat Riggin.

Capitals vs. Bruins: Game 27 of 48

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Washington drops a matinee in the Hub


Next Game

Washington Capitals
@ Boston Bruins

Saturday, Mar 16, 2013, 1:00 PM EDT
TD Garden

Saturday Caps Clips: Trouble Bruin
  • Previews of today's matinee with the bruisin' Bruins from Vogs, NHL.com, WashTimes, AP and Peerless, and be sure to check in with our SB Nation pals over at Stanley Cup of Chowder for more from the other side of today's match-up.

Complete Coverage >


Today's probable netminders:


GP MIN W L O GA GAA SA SV SV% SO
Michal Neuvirth
9 482 2 4 0 23 2.86 229 206 .900 0
Tuukka Rask
19 1160 14 2 3 37 1.91 525 488 .930 2

Keep up with the latest Caps-related Tweets right here:

Look for updates in this story stream throughout the afternoon, including today's lines, new open threads for each period, and more.

And of course... have at it, people.

Today's Lines: Volpatti Debuts Alongside Ovechkin; Hillen Returns

Per Stephen Whyno, Adam Oates has shifted his line combinations, selecting winger Aaron Volpatti to skate on the left side opposite of Alex Ovechkin on the first line and slotting Jack Hillen into the Capitals defense pairings. Hillen returns to the Capitals lineup after suffering an upper body injury on opening night. Michal Neuvirth will start his second straight game in goal for the Capitals. So expect the lines and defensive pairings to look like this:

Aaron Volpatti - Nicklas Backstrom - Alex Ovechkin

Eric Fehr - Marcus Johansson - Troy Brouwer

Jason Chimera - Mike Ribeiro - Joel Ward

Matt Hendricks - Jay Beagle - Joey Crabb

Jeff Schultz - John Carlson

Karl Alzner - Steven Oleksy

Tom Poti - Jack Hillen

That leaves John Erskine, Mike Green, Tomas Kundratek and Brooks Laich all out with injuries, and Mathieu Perreault and Wojtek Wolski out healthy (and Cameron Schilling returned to Hershey).

Sabtu, 16 Maret 2013

Saturday Caps Clips: Trouble Bruin

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Your savory breakfast links:

  • Previews of today's matinee with the bruisin' Bruins from Vogs, NHL.com, WashTimes, AP and Peerless, and be sure to check in with our SB Nation pals over at Stanley Cup of Chowder for more from the other side of today's match-up.
  • Notes and assorted whatnot from yesterday's practice:
    • After arriving in Boston, the boys took to the ice at a slightly different venue than usual - Agganis Arena, home of the Boston University Terriers (and former stomping ground of Tom Poti). [Caps OT(and again), @VogsCaps, CSNW, and for more on the Poti/BU connex, College Hockey, Inc.]
    • The Caps have tried a number of different options alongside Alex Ovechkin on the top line. The latest headed into today's game? Aaron Volpatti. That is not a typo. [WaPo, WashTimes]
    • As injuries continue to decimate the Caps' defense, Steven Oleksy continues to step to the forefront, stepping up to fill the void in just his second week as an NHLer. [WaPo, WashTimes]
  • Adam Oates and Ovechkin continue to build their relationship, one based on trust and mutual respect. [WaPo]
  • A few leftover thoughts and notes from Thursday's big win, including more on Ovechkin's huge milestone goal. [CapsOT, CSNW, WaPo, WashTimes, NHL.com, THW, NewsObserver, Shutdown Line, Canes Country]
  • This weekend kicks off the roughest stretch of the schedule (...wait, that was the easier part??) for the Caps, as they play six of their next seven - and seven of their next eleven - away from Verizon Center. [Dump 'n Chase]
  • What does the future hold for ol' Michal Neuvirth? [RtR]
  • Down on the farm:
    • It's a big weekend across the organization, as the seventh-place Bears host Adirondack and Bridgeport before playing 11 of their final 14 on the road. [PennLive]
    • The newest member of the squad, Chay Genoway, joined his team for practice yesterday, providing what was likely a very welcome body on the blue line. [PennLive]
    • The Bears are within reach of a pretty impressive attendance mark, as they inch closer to an average of 10,000 fans per game. [PennLive (and again)
  • Chuck Gormley takes your questions (and answers them, too!) [CSNW]
  • At the midway point of the season, a former Caps' coach is in the Jack Adams conversation and a current Caps' GM is seen as being on the hot seat. [SI.com]
  • Check out this beautiful game-winning goal by Filip Forsberg and dream of the day he'll be doing that in a pretty red Caps jersey. [RMNB]
  • And finally, happy 42nd birthday to David Harlock, happy 53rd to Roger Crozier, happy 31st to Louis Robitaille and happy 35th to Brian Willsie.

Jumat, 15 Maret 2013

The Noon Number: 9

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The Noon Number: 9 - Number of players in NHL history who have tallied at least 349 goals and 352 assists over their first eight seasons in the League, eight of whom are in the Hall of Fame. Here's the list, chronologically, with totals through eight seasons:

Player GP G A P
Guy Lafleur 603 355 461 816
Mike Bossy 609 474 454 928
Wayne Gretzky 632 543 977 1520
Michel Goulet 607 366 364 730
Jari Kurri 600 397 451 848
Dale Hawerchuk 634 353 495 848
Mario Lemieux 517 408 606 1014
Luc Robitaille 640 392 411 803
Alex Ovechkin 579 349 352 701

Jesus, Wayne.

Of further note, per Elias:

Alex Ovechkin's score-tying power play goal early in the third period of the Capitals' game at Carolina was the 700th point of his NHL career (349 goals, 351 assists). Ovechkin reached the 700-point mark in his 579th game, the fastest that any NHL player has done so since October 2003, when Peter Forsberg hit that milestone in his 549th game. Only two active players other than Ovechkin needed fewer than 600 games to accumulate 700 career points: Teemu Selanne (541) and Jaromir Jagr (557).

Source on today's Number: HockeyReference.com

Capitals vs. Hurricanes: Game 26 of 48

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A third period comeback gives Washington a rare road win


Next Game

Washington Capitals
@ Carolina Hurricanes

Thursday, Mar 14, 2013, 7:00 PM EDT
PNC Arena

Thursday Caps Clips: Caps @ Canes Game Day
  • Previews of the windy rematch with the 'Canes from Vogs, NHL.com, AP, WaPo, WashTimes and Peerless, and be sure to check out our SB Nation partners over at Canes Country for more from the other side of tonight's match-up.
The Noon Number: 124:08

Complete Coverage >


Tonight's probable netminders:


GP MIN W L O GA GAA SA SV SV% SO
Michal Neuvirth 8 422 1 4 1 21 2.98 191 170 .890 0
Dan Ellis 8 392 4 2 0 17 2.60 216 199 .921 1

Keep up with the latest Caps-related Tweets right here:

Look for updates in this story stream throughout the evening, including tonight's lines, new open threads for each period, and more.

And of course... have at it, people.

Recap: Caps 3, Hurricanes 2

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[GameCenter - Ice Tracker - Game Summary - Event Summary - Shot Summary - Faceoff Summary - Play-by-Play - Home TOI - Visitor TOI - Head-to-Head - Fenwick/Corsi - Fenwick Timeline]

When the Hurricanes took a 2-0 lead early in the first, there’s a chance that the Caps started to think "oh, no, not again"... because admit it, that’s what all of us were thinking, too.

But if they did, they didn’t let that thought linger for very long. And somewhere around the halfway mark of the first period, they started to take the game to the Hurricanes, getting goals from sources both likely and unlikely, picking up a milestone for the captain, and making sure that Carolina wouldn't embarrass them a second time.

Ten more notes on the game:

  • Thanks to yet another sluggish start (sound familiar?) the Caps found themselves in a two-goal hole just over eight minutes in. It took less than two minutes for Carolina to break the shutout, as Alexander Semin somehow ended up wide open in the slot...and as the Caps (and Caps fans) well know by now, the last person you want left wide open in the slot is Semin.
  • Already down by two, it went from bad to worse very quickly when Jeff Skinner got tangled up with Tomas Kundratek behind the net and landed on the defenseman’s leg. Kundratek would leave the game, adding yet another name to the growing list of injured defensemen and leaving the Caps with five guys on the blue line for the rest of the night. Wonder if FedEx can overnight a defenseman.
  • The Caps haven’t scored a goal in Raleigh in a year and a half... so of course the first one they get would be a Joey Crabb-from-Aaron Volpatti goal, right? We all saw that coming? Um, sure. But seriously, nice work along the boards by Volpatti to chip the puck in; better work to find Crabb driving to the front of the net and cut the Carolina lead in half.
  • The loss of Kundratek didn’t just impact the pairings, causing Karl Alzner and John Carlson to bounce around like ping pong balls - it also meant that someone needed to make up for the lost ice time. That job, surprisingly enough, initially fell to Steven Oleksy, who racked up close to twenty minutes through the first two periods alone. No offense to Steve, but thankfully the time eventually got spread around a little more, with Carlson finishing just twenty seconds shy of Oleksy in ice time by the end of the game.
  • Just over a minute into the third period, it was a whole new ballgame as the Caps put together some beautiful passing on the power play (with a little luck and a little help from a Dan Ellis pokecheck gone awry), got the puck to the captain, and just like that it was all tied up at two. And oh by the way, that goal also marked the 700th career point for Alex Ovechkin. Congrats, captain!
  • How great was Eric Fehr tonight? Excellent chances, good speed, strength and hands... if there is a bright spot to this season, it’s unquestionably Fehr’s elevated play.
  • We understand that referees are human, the game is fast, mistakes are made and a guy falling in an awkward way usually means bad things... but after watching several replays of the "boarding" call on Crabb, you really have to wonder just what game the refs were watching. Luckily the Caps killed it off (and even drew a penalty) so no harm, no foul, but still.
  • This wasn’t the first time, and likely won’t be the last, but this was really two games in one as the Caps were thoroughly dominated through the opening ten minutes and then suddenly shifted gears. At times they dominated; at others just matched the division leaders shift for shift, but they battled back and showed great resiliency when they had all the excuses in the world not to.
  • Has there been an uglier goal than the one Mike Ribeiro would eventually be credited with scoring late in the third? It started with a breakaway by - who else? - Alex Ovechkin, who seemed to lose control of the puck at the last minute. His shot skittered along the goal line, between the skates of a flailing Dan Ellis, before Ribeiro arrived to make sure the puck crossed the line. And we mean just crossed the line. Close call on that one, but if the goal review gods (they totally exist) were going to smile down on the Caps, this was a good time for them to do so.
  • ...and then it was breath-holding time again, because if the Caps have any shot whatsoever at stumbling into a playoff spot, they can’t hand out points to a team they’re trying to chase. With their goalie pulled Carolina piled on the shots, but Michal Neuvirth stood tall, even as a late-game penalty on Nicklas Backstrom made it more interesting. Because boring is boring, guys.

Full credit to the Caps for finally finding a little energy, some goal-scoring ability, some timely goaltending and a win when they desperately needed it.

The hill may still be too tall to climb at this point in the season... but folding eight minutes in and ceding a win to the Hurricanes would have been disastrous. And no one wants to call the season just yet.

Game highlights:

Tonight's Lines: Ovechkin, Backstrom Reunited; Poti Returns; Perreault, Wolski Sit

Per Stephen Whyno, Adam Oates has shuffled his lines (see below), and Mathieu Perreault and Wojtek Wolski will be back up in the press box tonight with Joey Crabb and Aaron Volpatti drawing back in, while Tom Poti appears to be good to go, sending Cameron Schilling upstairs. So expect the lines and defensive pairings in front of Michal Neuvirth (making his first start in over a month) to look like this:

Matt Hendricks – Nicklas Backstrom – Alex Ovechkin

Eric Fehr – Marcus Johansson – Troy Brouwer

Jason Chimera – Mike Ribeiro – Joel Ward

Aaron Volpatti – Jay Beagle – Joey Crabb

Karl Alzner – Tomas Kundratek

Jeff Schultz - John Carlson

Tom Poti – Steve Oleksy

That leaves John Erskine, Mike Green, Brooks Laich and Jack Hillen all out with injuries, and Perreault, Wolski and Schilling out healthy.

Friday Caps Clips: Rebound in Raleigh

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Your savory breakfast links:

  • Recaps and other assorted musings on last night's win from us, Monumental video (Oates, Ovechkin, players), Vogs, NHL.com, WaPo, WashTimes (gamer, blog), CSNW (AP, Joe B.), PHT, Frankovic, Peerless, Sick Unbelievable, DSP, RtR and RMNB, and for the view from the other side, the Canes and Canes Country.
    • For the second time in the past week, the Caps found themselves playing with five defensemen for most of the night after losing Tomas Kundratek to a leg injury early on, the prognosis on which doesn't sound good. [WaPo, WashTimes]
    • Congrats to The Captain on point number 700 (and 701). Here's to the next 700. [Capitals Voice, RMNB, DC Pro Sports Report, @tom_wilso]
    • Quick! To Twitter! [RMNB]
    • Nicklas Backstrom haz teh fancy ice shoez. [Capitals Outsider]
  • Notes and assorted whatnot from yesterday's morning skate and pre-game goings-on. [Monumental video (Two-Man Advantage, Oates, Brouwer, Hendricks, Chimera), Dump n' Chase, WaPo, WashTimes, CSNW]
  • Realignmaniat! Meet the new division, same as the old division. [Capitals, Monumental video (Leonsis, Caps players), Puck Daddy (and again), WaPo (and again), WashTimes (and again), CSNW (and again), Backhand Shelf]
  • Mike Ribeiro is drawing rave reviews for his... leadership and maturity? How about that. [NHL.com]
  • On the importance of Brooks Laich. [Capitals Outsider]
  • Braden Holtby has been... not the Caps biggest problem. So there's that. [Backhand Shelf]
  • The Caps made a couple of depth moves yesterday, sending Kevin Marshall to Toronto for forward Nicolas Deschamps... [Capitals, Patriot-News Hockey Prospectus, PPP (and again)]
  • ... and trading a pick to Minny for defenseman Chay Genoway. [Capitals, Patrtiot-News, CSNW, DCEx, SHoE]
  • More from up the road in Hershey. [Patriot-News]
  • Filip Forsberg does things. [Hockeysverige (video)]
  • Finally, happy 32nd birthday to Tyler Sloan, happy 30th to David Steckel, happy 34th to J.F. Fortin, and happy 60th to Blair Stewart.

Capital Ideas: Week 8

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Johansson's concussion, Ovechkin's milestone, lineup decisions, injured defensemen and more in this week's edition of Capital Ideas - debate, discuss, enjoy!

  1. Concussions are tricky animals, tough to detect even when the player is forthcoming (let alone when he tries to "fight through it") and requiring an over-abundance of caution. Case in point: Marcus Johansson. We all remember him laughing off his collision with Alex Ovechkin at training camp and going on to play the first nine games of the season. When he started missing games, Adam Oates said it was unrelated and Johansson was a bit tight-lipped about it after starting to skate again. Then comes word it was indeed a concussion sidelining him, that perhaps he'd sustained it when he and his captain had knocked noggins and that he'd even hidden how he was feeling.

    Could the team have handled it all differently? Maybe. But players have to do their part, and that means being honest with themselves and their team's medical staff - using their brains when it comes to protecting their brains.
  2. The next two weeks will likely be filled with debate over whether the Caps should hang on to Mike Ribeiro and attempt to re-sign him over the summer (or sooner), or try to move him and his expiring contract out at the trade deadline for some kind of return. A potential red flag is his recent run of unsportsmanlike penalties for basically mouthing off to the referees. Based on salary and age, he'd be looked upon as a leader in the room - and to be fair, does seem to be cultivating a good reputation as just that - but is he really someone the Caps want in that kind of role going forward, particularly as they try and change the culture of the team? Perhaps, perhaps not.
  3. Another potential consideration is Ribeiro's contract, which includes a limited no-trade clause that allows him to provide a list of ten teams to which he won't accept a trade. The question is, when does he have to do so? A certain date each year? At the team's request (i.e. maybe now)? That could have a huge impact on where - or even if - he's traded.
  4. We all know that Sidney Crosby is having a great start to the season, with 47 points in 28 games to lead the League. That hot run by Sid certainly makes you sentimental for 2009-10, though, when Ovechkin had at least 47 points over a 28-game stretch 23 times (obviously with a lot of overlap, but still), 22 of which took place during the 09-10 campaign, the most recent stretch ending on March 20, 2010. He never had fewer than 18 goals over that stretch, and topped out at 54 points twice (22G, 32A).
  5. Those heady days of red-hot offensive production may be gone, but the greatness remains - in flashes, maybe, but it's there, and was on full display last night when he finally picked up career point #700. What made it extra special was that he did so exactly when the team needed him to, scoring the huge game-tying goal against Carolina - and it was especially nice to see that goal (and an all-around strong game) from Ovechkin after getting beaten up in the press a bit over the last few days, wasn't it?
  6. "Overheard" on Twitter bonus - a few current and future teammates gave the big man a shout-out for his milestone:
  7. There's no question that the Caps are lacking in forward depth at the moment, especially with Brooks Laich still on the shelf, but it is rather puzzling that Adam Oates continues to choose Joey Crabb and Aaron Volpatti over Wojtek Wolski and Mathieu Perreault. Neither Crabb nor Volpatti is logging big minutes, neither one is getting power play or penalty kill minutes, and neither is putting up much in the way of offense (well... until last night, of course). So why give grinders a sweater when you've got a couple of offensively-minded guys in street clothes? 'Tis a puzzlement.
  8. After last night's win, the Caps are now 11-2-0 when scoring three or more goals, 0-11-1 when scoring two or fewer. Not surprising that more goals equals more wins, but two things stick out there. First of all, how evenly split is this season between wins and losses? The up and down is enough to make you sick. And secondly, while it's great that the Caps tend to win when scoring at least three goals, they need to figure out how to win the 1-0 or 2-1 games as well... looking at you, too, Braden and Michal.
  9. The NHL presented it, the NHLPA voted on it, and yesterday the Board of Governors approved it, making it official: realignment is a go, effective at the start of the 2013-14 season. With the new divisional layout, the Caps will return to their roots a bit, joining up with old Patrick Division foes (essentially the current Atlantic Division) along with Carolina and Columbus. Those former rivals are still some of the best and most intense match-ups for the Caps - and their fans - so it should be an entertaining shift. If the Caps don't improve over the summer, however, it might be a painful one at first, too... especially if the invading hordes from Pittsburgh, Philly and New York show up en masse as they're prone to do.
  10. Since the Southeast Division was born, the Caps' division rivals have combined for two Stanley Cups and a record of 1758-1867-257-404 - a .487 points percentage. Over that same span, the Caps' new division rivals have a record of 3469-2998-411-605, a .531 points percentage, and four Stanley Cups (although Carolina's Cup is included in both). In other words... we'll miss you, Southeast Division.
  11. It's been a rough season for the Caps' blueline, and it just got rougher last night, as Tomas Kundratek left the game with a leg injury and is awaiting an MRI to determine the extent of the injury. Here's hoping that it's not that bad, because the Hershey well is starting to run a little dry. Heal up quickly, Dmitry Orlov.
  12. Speaking of Hershey defensemen, the wheel o' blueliners continued to spin earlier this week as Cameron Schilling got the call and made his NHL debut on Tuesday. Say what you will about the organizational depth at defense (or lack thereof) but the guys who have stepped in - Kundratek, Oleksy and now Schilling - have hardly looked out of place and in fact have been some of the team's more solid performers night to night.
  13. Coming into last night's game, the Hurricanes were 8-0-1 when scoring first and 11-0-0 when leading after two periods. You're welcome, Carolina!
  14. "Overheard" on Twitter, Part 1 - Some of the boys enjoy a night out in Raleigh:
  15. "Overheard" on Twitter, Part 2 - John Carlson pokes a little fun at his pint-sized buddy:

Kamis, 14 Maret 2013

Thursday Caps Clips: Caps @ Canes Game Day

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Your savory breakfast links:

  • Previews of the windy rematch with the 'Canes from Vogs, NHL.com, AP, WaPo, WashTimes and Peerless, and be sure to check out our SB Nation partners over at Canes Country for more from the other side of tonight's match-up.
  • A few leftover thoughts from Round 1 of this home-and-home mini-series. [WaPo, WashTimes, Canes Country]
  • Notes and assorted whatnot from yesterday out at Kettler:
    • Over a month removed from his last start, Michal Neuvirth will step between the pipes for the Caps tonight... [WaPo, WashTimes]
    • ...while at the other end of the rink, Dan Ellis and Justin Peters find themselves unexpectedly in the spotlight after Cam Ward's injury. [WashTimes, NewsObserver]
    • Many people thought that Adam Oates should reunite Alex Ovechkin and Nicklas Backstrom. Adam Oates apparently agrees. [WaPo, CSNW]
  • The Caps are a wounded animal (sort of literally), and the Hurricanes are trying to go in for the kill. Vicious brutes. [WaPo]
  • "Searching for answers" and "I don't know what it is"... ah, two things you love hearing from a team wallowing at the bottom of the standings, right? [CSNW, NBCW]
  • All Ovechkin, all the time:
    • Craig Simpson thinks that Alex Ovechkin is "toxic" and should be bought out. Ovi-bashing: the meme that never dies. [RMNB]
    • Where did all the fun go, Ovi? Is not party now? [SBN]
    • Regardless of paycheck, Oates is insistent that everyone - including Ovechkin - is held accountable for his performance. [CSNW]
    • Is Kirk Muller the evil genius who finally solved Alex Ovechkin? ...eh. Maybe, maybe not. [Puck Daddy]
    • Ovi and his bride-to-be are still working on their wedding plans, including setting a date. Gee, there might be some free time coming up in May... [AP]
  • Brooks Laich checks in with the Junkies... [106.7 the Fan]
  • ...while the radio voice of the Caps, John Walton, does a radio hit of his own on Baltimore's WNST.[WNST.net]
  • The Washington Capitals: the M.C. Escher drawing of hockey teams. [Caps Outsider]
  • Alas, it appears as though the playoffs may just be a pipe dream for this year's Caps. [THW]
  • Steven Oleksy's had a pretty eventful first week with the team, including his first drop o' the gloves. [Rinkside Update, OFB]
  • Looking ahead to what next year could hold for the Caps' blue line. [BrooksLaichYear]
  • Congrats to Riley Barber, who was named to the CCHA All-Conference First Team yesterday. Barber led all players in scoring - as a freshman - with 36 points in 34 games. [CCHA]
  • Pretty cool story about former Caps' coach Bruce Boudreau inspiring a bunch of non-skating teachers to take up hockey. Wonder how "colorful" his speech was. [OC Register]
  • What's even more fun than watching the Caps and Pens next week? Doing so at a bar with an intermission trivia contest hosted by CSN's Michael Jenkins. Trust us. [CSNW]
  • Finally, happy 33rd birthday to Joe Motzko.

On Jason Chimera's Plummeted Production

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Jason Chimera has seen a lot of professional ice. Nearly seven hundred NHL games worth, in fact. He’s seen a lot of wayward elbows, a lot of high sticks. He’s tasted plenty of puck, and his fair share of knuckles to boot.

He’s got the visage to prove it. A crooked nose hangs above a pair of thin, oft-smiling lips. Scars crisscross his chin and cheeks like an early version of Gerry Cheevers’ iconic goalie mask, though these are usually covered by a few days worth of light-colored stubble.

He’s been called Chippy, Chimmy, Chimmer, and Chimdog. He’s played on awful teams and he’s played on very good teams. He’s even played on an awful team and a very good team in the same season. Jason Chimera possesses a rare set of skills. Players in the NHL are usually classified— and perhaps too generally— by their on-ice style. Skaters termed playmakers are expected to pass to those called snipers, who ought to be firing it on net. Grinders are supposed to eat tough minutes, win board battles, and score the occasional dirty goal.

Chimera doesn’t entirely fit any of these labels. He doesn’t possess the hands, offensive vision, or creativity to be a forty-assist guy or a thirty-goal scorer. But the thirty-three-year-old forward’s calling card is his blazing speed, and it puts him outside the mold of players who tend to be lumped into the grouping of a conventional grinder.

In Washington, Chimera has made a name for himself by producing quietly and consistently, usually giving an offensive spark to the bottom lines while the bigger guns kept the gears turning up top, but doing spot duty in the top-six. A highly moveable piece in an ever-changing puzzle. You can never have enough of those.

But Chimera’s production has suddenly plummeted, and seemingly without explanation.

Last season, despite facing the challenge of transitioning between two coaches with starkly contrasting philosophies, Chimera enjoyed the finest career of his professional career, notching career highs in goals (20), points (39), and shots on goal (205).

This season he’s being outscored by such offensive worldbeaters as John Erskine, Tomas Kundratek, Steven Oleksy, Matt Hendricks, Joey Crabb, Jay Beagle and Karl Alzner. The only players on the team who share Chimera’s dubious distinction of zero goals are Jeff Schultz and Tom Poti, who have, um, lower offensive expectations. League-wide only Ryane Clowe has fired more shots on goal (55) than Chimera (51) without denting the twine.

So what could be the cause of such a dropoff? Because surely the sheer descent from career bests to utter futility in a single offseason must have some explanation, right?

surely the sheer descent from career bests to utter futility in a single offseason must have some explanation, right?

Conventional thought would lead us to believe that Chimera is struggling to produce because he is failing to possess the puck as well as he did last year. Indeed, his relative Corsi rating, which measures possession, is considerably lower than last year (down to -3.0 from 4.6). Though this is notable, the difference is not vast enough to account for the severity of Chimera’s nosedive.

One might then think that Chimera is not getting the same quality of chances as he did last year, but in actuality the average distance of his even-strength shots on goal are virtually the same.

A third explanation for Chimera’s inability to score would be that he is skating with players who do not give him the best chance to do so. But Chimera has spent almost half of his ice time with Joel Ward, who is one of the team’s best possession forwards and point-producers besides. Chimera’s second most common skate-mate? One Mike Ribeiro, he of 28 points, 19 of which have been achieved by dishing the puck, in 25 games. So it’s pretty clear the people around Chimera aren’t the problem.

So maybe the toughness of the competition he’s going up against is the problem? Well, last year Chimera was thriving in tough minutes, and with more starts outside the offensive zone than within. Jason is actually being assigned to lesser competition this year, and is being defeated by them, as evidenced by the chart below.

Washingtonmar9-607x419_medium

[Visualization courtesy of Rob Vollman]

So finally we come to the great leveler: luck. Chimera’s on-ice shooting percentage, which takes the shooting percentages of him and his teammates while he’s on the ice, was 7.8% during his 20-goal campaign. This year it’s down to 6.25%, a drop, but again that’s not a big enough difference to explain Chimera’s drop-off, let alone the goose egg.

If we’re to stay outside the realm of rampant speculation and "eye tests," it’s difficult to pinpoint a reason for Chimera’s decline - perhaps the answer is "all of the above." And the best we can offer as a fix is a simple one - keep shooting the puck and the points will come.

Or perhaps Chimera could use a change of scenery, cliché as that idea is. With the trade deadline looming, the speedy winger may garner some interest, especially if his luck turns around a bit; he doesn’t command much money, and amidst this awful season, George McPhee could hardly ask for much in return. Chimera has been effective in the post-season since coming to Washington, and his penchant for performing well in the tighter ice of the playoffs is likely to attract some suitors.

In many ways, Jason Chimera's 2013 has been every bit as unlikely as his 2011-12, if not more so. And for the time being, he and the Caps have no choice but to ride it out, because what goes up must come down... and what's gone down, usually pops back up. Eventually.

Rabu, 13 Maret 2013

Capitals vs. Hurricanes Recap: Peters Shuts Out Caps as Playoff Hopes Dim Further

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[GameCenter - Ice Tracker - Game Summary - Event Summary - Shot Summary - Faceoff Summary - Play-by-Play - Home TOI - Visitor TOI - Fenwick/Corsi - Fenwick Timeline]

The first game of the second-half of a season - even a truncated season such as this one - is never going to be a "must-win" game in anything close to a literal sense of the word. But it sure can be a "hey, you guys really might want to win this one and most of the rest of 'em if you want to keep alive any post-season aspirations" game... even though that's not nearly as succinct or dramatic. And Tuesday night's game at Verizon Center was certainly one of those games.

Washington entered the night trailing visiting - and first place - Carolina by eight points in the Southeast Division with 120 minutes (or more) of hockey to be played between the two teams over a span of 51 hours or so this week, a span that would likely go a long way towards determining the Caps' regular-season fate. Win two games in regulation and they'd be four points back with 22 to play; lose both and the deficit would be an almost-certainly insurmountable ten or more.

But any athlete practiced in the art of the cliché knows that you can't be thinking that far ahead, instead focusing on winning the next period, the next shift, the next battle on the boards, and so on. On Tuesday night, the Caps fell behind early and couldn't recover, dropping a 4-0 decision as they continue to watch their post-season chances continue to fade.

Ten more notes on the game:

  • Marcus Johansson was elevated to the top line with Mike Ribeiro and Alex Ovechkin during Sunday's loss to the Rangers and stayed up there for this one. It's a curious trio in that the three had pretty brutal puck-possession numbers entering the game (though, as we noted earlier today, that's obviously not the Holy Grail for Adam Oates when it comes to cobbling together his lineup). But Oates's hunch paid off immediately and Johansson got two tremendous scoring chances early... neither of which he could convert (including a slam-dunk on a Ribeiro feed). The chances, you like. The results, not so much.
  • Just under four minutes into the first, the Caps had a defensive zone face-off against Carolina's top line. Oates sent out Nicklas Backstrom's line, and why not? Backstrom was an unreal 14-for-14 on Sunday against the Rangers and won five of seven draws from Eric Staal when these teams last played a couple of weeks back. But the best-laid plans of mice and men oft go astray, and this one did - Staal won the draw clean, Alexander Semin sent a shot high and wide (shocking, I know) and then a pinching Joe Corvo threw a puck towards the net from near the goal line that somehow deflected up high off Braden Holtby and in. It was a bad goal and a bad start, two things this Caps team could ill-afford on this night.
  • The Caps had a chance to level the score on the power play mid-way through the period, but failed to get anything going with the extra man, which has become surprisingly common of late, as the once-torrid special teams unit was just 3-for-20 over the last half-dozen games coming into the game. Regression is a... well, you know. And so is having Mike Green on the shelf.
  • The period would end with the Caps trailing by just that one goal, which wasn't too bad... until you realize that the Canes were a perfect five-for-five when leading after the first period this season.
  • Carolina tilted the ice a bit more in the second period and were rewarded with a pair of Riley Nash goals, the second of which came after Jeff Schultz (and his superhuman reach) were out-touched on a would-be icing call by Patrick Dwyer, who fed Nash in front for the score. After two, the Caps trailed 3-0, were being out-shot at even-strength by a 25-16 margin, and were trailing in overall shot attempts 53-34. Oh, and Ovechkin was still looking for his first shot on goal of the game... and he'd never find it.
  • Much has been made of the Caps' decimated blueline - one that, on this night, included Steve Oleksy and Cameron Schilling (making his NHL debut) in the third pair, and had a grand total of just 873 regular season games of service in the NHL (392 belonging to Jeff Schultz) and 553 in the AHL. But perhaps nothing hammers home how beat up the group is as the realization that Oleksy, who was playing his fifth NHL game was the old man of the group (at 27). Little NHL experience, little life experience... that's a tough way to go in this League.
  • Oates reunited Backstrom and Ovechkin in the third period to try to find a spark, but there was none there. Still, perhaps it's time to give the duo another extended look together - with the season hanging on by a thread, maybe it's time to sink or swim with your franchise pair skating together.
  • Oleksy fired up the crowd a bit when he fed Drayson Bowman his lunch in a third-period fight, so there's that... which ain't much.
  • Carolina added a shorthanded empty-netter. Welp.
  • The Caps failed to get a single puck past Justin Peters - the 'Canes third-string goalie and now have scored just three goals in the last three games after scoring 14 in the previous three. Part of that is bad puck luck, but a lot of it is bad hockey - the Caps have been brutally out-shot in two of the last three games and haven't out-shot an opponent in the last seven, outshot 242-176 over that span.

The song remains the same - the margin for error shrinks, the odds get longer and so on. But really, focusing on the Caps' playoff chances loses sight of the forest for the trees - that this simply isn't a good hockey team right now., and that face isn't being covered up by good fortune and mediocre opponents the way it was for an eleven-game stretch leading up to last weekend.

Game highlights:

Capitals-Hurricanes: Post-Game Quote Sheet

Via the team:

Washington Capitals head coach Adam Oates on the chemistry being off...

"I don't necessarily feel that way. I know the guys might be searching for answers for you guys after a game too and I understand that. If I thought a team was outplaying us drastically then I would say yeah, but I don't feel that way."

Washington Capitals head coach Adam Oates on what the team can improve on for Thursday's game...

"There are certain things we're going to want to do the same. Control the puck, obviously our execution can be better all the time...If I had said one thing to the guys after the first it was that we still turned it over a lot. We outplayed them, they didn't get a chance until the four-minute mark, but we still shot ourselves in the foot a few times where we could actually help ourselves even more."

Washington Capitals forward Matt Hendricks on the play of the team tonight...

"We had a lot of good scoring chances. Ovie [Alex Ovechkin] and Marcus [Johansson] and Ribs [Mike Ribero] came out and we had a lot of good movement in the beginning. We had some more in the second; [Troy] Brouwer got a shorthanded breakaway. We just couldn't find the net tonight."

Washington Capitals forward Eric Fehr on the play of Carolina...

"Their goalie played really well in the first period. We had some grade A opportunities and we didn't score. Same thing in the second, Brouwsey [Troy Brouwer] had a breakaway and a nice chance in front. [Their goalie] stones us, and we can't win the game."

Washington Capitals forward Eric Fehr on the road ahead...

"We were on a pretty good roll there and then we lose three in a row and we feel like we are right back to where we were. We've just go to work that much harder to get back in the division, and obviously it starts in two days against the same team. We've just got to find a way to score a goal early on them. They are a different team when they are coming from behind, and we couldn't expose that today."

Carolina Hurricanes head coach Kirk Muller on taking advantage of a banged-up Caps blue-line...

"We emphasized that we wanted to get pucks behind their [defense] tonight and go to work and play hard in their zone. I think our guys were smart with their puck placement tonight. I thought overall a strong game on the account of our goalie tonight."

Carolina Hurricanes head coach Kirk Muller on being able to maybe build some distance between them and the Caps...

"You can't take anything for granted. That was one of our strongest 60 minute performances this year and in a big game, that's great. We've done a really good job staying focused."

Carolina Hurricanes goalie Justin Peters on his effort tonight and the team in front of him ...

"It's a lot of fun just to get an opportunity to play in this league and every time I get an opportunity, I want to try and take advantage of it. We played an awesome game tonight as a team right from the drop of the puck, right to the last buzzer. That was a total group effort tonight and a huge confidence booster for us."

Carolina Hurricanes goalie Justin Peters on possibly being able to put the Caps away after Thursday...

"Obviously, you want to try and create space there [in the division] and we were focused on tonight, coming in here and trying to do that. We have to regroup now and try and have the same mindset coming into Thursday, trying to create space between us."

Carolina Hurricanes forward Riley Nash on how important these two games are for the division...

"We knew these two games were going to be pretty big games for us. Anytime you play a division rival, you want to put some distance between them. We go into every game hoping for two points, and working for two points, and that's our goal."

Carolina Hurricanes forward Riley Nash on goalie Justin Peters...

"He was unbelievable. He's had three, I think, really good starts for us now. Ever since [Cam] Ward went down, we really needed that."

Wednesday Caps Clips: Oh No Corvo

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Your savory breakfast links:

  • Recaps and other assorted musings on last night's loss from us (with quotes, and look for Clyde's pics later this morning), Vogs, Monumental video (Oates, players), NHL.com, AP, SportsXchange, WaPo (gamer, blog), WashTimes (gamer, blog), CSNW (gamer, blog, Joe B.), DCEx, Sick Unbelievable, Peerless, RMNB, DSP, Capitals Outsider and RtR, and with the view from The Triangle, our SB Nation partners over at Canes Country.
    • That loss was not fun - but admit it, the worst part was that the eventual game-winner was this "beauty" by Joe Corvo from Alexander Semin and Eric Staal. Blech. [Caps365, SBN]
    • The Caps took plenty of lumps in this one, but at least a few were given back by Steven Oleksy in this vicious beatdown of Drayson Bowman. [Caps Basketball, RMNB]
  • Alex Ovechkin has taken plenty of criticism lately - some deserved, some not so much - and his coach has had enough of it. [Bog, CSNW, WaPo, WashTimes, SLAM]
  • Besides, it's not just on Ovi's shoulders... there's plenty of blame to go around for the Caps' struggles. [WaPo (Wise)]
  • It's a big week for the Caps, as these games are, for all intents and purposes, playoff games. Hey, and we didn't think we'd get to see any this year! [NHL.com, CBS Sports]
  • Checking in on the walking wounded:
    • Brooks Laich took a self-proclaimed "huge step" by skating with the team yesterday morning and seemed rejuvenated by it. He's still a ways away, though... [WaPo, NBCW, CSNW, WashTimes (and again)]
    • ...as is Mike Green, who is still dealing with that groin injury we've been hearing so much about. [WaPo, WashTimes, CSNW]
  • With Green out, John Erskine being placed on the IR and Tom Poti developing another mysterious upper-body ailment, it was time to spin the wheel o' defensemen. Cameron Schilling, come on down! ...er, up. Down? [Caps, Dump 'n Chase, WashTimes, WaPo, THW, DSP]
  • Naturally the call-up of Schilling (not to mention Oleksy) coincides with what is going to be a pretty critical weekend for the Bears, as they continue to battle for a playoff spot. Sorry, guys. [PennLive]
  • Finally, happy 51st birthday to Grant Martin and happy 44th to Kevin "Killer" Kaminski.

Selasa, 12 Maret 2013

Wolski, Perreault and a Look Into Adam Oates's Thought Process

Wolski_scored

After going eleven games without a goal and ten without a point in a stretch that spanned nearly all of February, Wojtek Wolski was healthy-scratched for the Capitals' first game of March, an afternoon tilt in Winnipeg. When Troy Brouwer was too sick to play against Boston three nights later, Wolski drew back into the lineup and, as fate would have it, scored the game-tying goal late in the third period. Said Adam Oates post-game, "I'm obviously happy for him, but I thought he played a better hockey game. He did the things that we ask. The goal - that's obviously big for us and big for him. But we don't talk production. We talk play."

And so Wolski was back in the lineup again two nights later and notched a goal and a pair of assists in the Caps' romp over the Panthers, and his season seemed back on track... if it had ever really been off-track. As we noted between the Winnipeg scratch and the Boston game, "Wolski has had unfavorable zone starts, a solidly positive Corsi, the highest SFON/60 of any Caps forward... and unsustainably lousy puck luck. Keep playing this guy - the points will come." Sure enough, they did.

Then a funny thing happened after the team laid a collective egg on Long Island last Saturday - Wolski found himself back in the press box on Sunday, and he found another perhaps unlikely teammate up there alongside him in Mathieu Perreault. Oates was asked about these lineup decisions after that afternoon's loss to the Rangers, and the head coach responded, "Play. Play and the team we're playing. A lot of factors are involved."

Oates owes the questioner and the public no more than that, but one wonders what he saw in the play of the two that earned them the afternoon off. After all, the two forwards are among the team's top three in Corsi (a proxy for puck possession); Perreault leads all Caps forwards in assists- and points-per-sixty-minutes at five-on-five; Wolski leads the team in shots-for-per-sixty at fives (and is tops in shots-against among guys who have been here all year). And while Perreault has had great puck luck and Wolski hasn't, one-game-focused arguments based on either regression would seem rather silly. Perreault has taken too many penalties lately... but also has drawn a bunch. Heck, Perreault has even turned himself into a 54%-effective face-off man so far this season, 60% in the offensive zone. So if the scratches were about "play," it's hard to see how, unless there were specifics in that Islanders debacle that stood out to the coaching staff.

More: Capitals Ups and Downs: Week 8 Player Usage Chart: Caps Forwards Mathieu Perreault Shows That Crashing The Net Isn't Just For Big Guys

How about "the team we're playing"? The last time the Caps faced the Rangers, Perreault had the Caps' second-worst Corsi among forwards, and Wolski was almost as bad. Then again, the team was outshot 29-19 at even-strength. Perhaps something about the specific individual match-ups made Oates wary of throwing the two to the New York wolves again, but nine times out of ten a 17-plus-game sample is going to tell you more than one game can (and you'd certainly hope that Perreault's one point in seven career games against New York was treated as largely irrelevant).

In short, these are two guys who have helped the offense all year - with their play, if not always their production - watching in street clothes while Joey Crabb and Aaron Volpatti dressed, Matt Hendricks skated on the top line... and the Caps dropped a somewhat uninspired 4-1 decision. Whatever it is that Crabb and Volpatti bring to the lineup that Perreault and Wolski don't - some form of physicality that may or may not actually help a team win - it didn't seem to impact the final result (though, to be sure, the Caps had bigger problems on this day).

It's easy to second-guess a coach's decision in a loss. And, truth be told, decisions like the ones we're discussing here may seem a bit like picking out pillows for the deck chairs on the Titanic. But benching guys who are seeing 53% or so of all shots when they're on the ice heading towards the opposing net in favor of guys who are around 44% seems an odd play from afar. Adam Oates talks "play, not production" and takes into account "a lot of factors" when deciding upon his lineup; it'd be nice to know more about those factors, because puck possession, as commonly understood by statistically-inclined onlookers, doesn't appear to weigh too heavily among them.

George McPhee's Far-Reaching $1.2 Million

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[Ed. Note: We're very excited to introduce the newest members of the Japers' Rink crew, Kevin Klein and Geoff Thompson from Sick, Unbelievable. Here's Kevin's first post... enjoy!]

I envy not the man who is called General Manager.

Every decision scrutinized and called into question by an arsenal of most accomplished couch GMs. Every personnel move - trades, signings, promotions or demotions - weighed for years in the eyes of the public, anything less than a championship inevitably bottle-necking to a single conclusion: failure.

A GM's body of work, on a micro level, is comprised of single transactions, which then make up the fabric of the teams he champions, like tesserae in a completed mosaic.

George McPhee, the artist of said mosaic, was faced with a notable decision to make this past offseason: re-sign Alexander Semin, or allow the high-scoring, seven-year Capital to plunge into the depths of free agency. McPhee opted for the latter, and we can only speculate as to what it would have taken to keep Semin here, as he ultimately inked a one-year deal with Carolina at a pricetag that gobbled up roughly 10% of their total cap space.

The nature of large groups of people (the fanbase of a professional hockey team, for instance) is that the majority identifies surface issues while allowing emotion or nostalgia to cloud judgment, without seeing further pertinent information that lay beyond view. To present an image, like deciding to eat the cake that's been in Tupperware in the fridge for a week without first lifting up the lid to see if it's gone moldy.

In this particular instance, under the Tupperware lid was Semin's massive salary and a gaping hole at second line center that the money in question could (and did) go towards filling.

Many came to grips with Semin's departure quickly - you didn't have to lift that lid up too far to establish that he probably wouldn't be in Washington this year - but McPhee's relatively minimal efforts to replace the talented winger stirred the pot of discontent. Eric Fehr and Wojtek Wolski - with careers pocked by injury, inconsistency, and an inability to meet expectations - could hardly fill the void created by the departure of a 40-goal scorer. Or could they?

Okay, no. But that doesn't mean they couldn't far exceed expectations. McPhee signed both wingers to one year, $600,000 contracts, making Fehr and Wolski the poster boys for what seemed to be the GMGM's offseason mantra: low risk, high reward.

It's worked. Fehr and Wolski have far outperformed their paygrade. Besides Fehr and Wolski, there are 44 players listed on CapGeek's NHL payrolls with salaries at $600,000 or less. 18 of these players have played in less than 5 games this season, and thus have not been included in the below table, which shows the total point production and Relative Corsi rating of each player.

It's worked. Fehr and Wolski have outperformed their paygrade.

That there are only 27 players in the league- less than one per team- that have played more than 5 games while making 600k or less is testament enough to the brand of hockey expected from them. This is plenty evident in the data forthcoming.

Relative Corsi is a quantification of how many shots are fired for as compared to shots fired against when a certain player is on the ice, as compared to when he is not on the ice. It's a good way to gauge a player's performance while sidestepping much of the luck and randomness prevalent in scoring. [All data was captured at end of games on Thursday, March 7, 2013. Subtle variance from this date is to be expected.]

Player

Total Points

Average Time on Ice/Game

Relative Corsi

John Scott (BUF)

0

3:57

-3.5

Kevin Porter (BUF)

0

15:22

-26.0

Eric Boulton (NYI)

0

4:58

-21.3

Pierre-Cedric Labrie (TBL)

0

6:42

-23.1

Brandon Bollig (CHI)

0

5:43

10.0

Patrick Bordeleau (COL)

1

5:14

2.2

Ryan Reaves (STL)

1

7:09

3.3

Aaron Volpatti (VAN/WSH)

1

7:00

-8.4

Dave Dziurzynski (OTT)

2

12:26

-3.7

Dustin Jeffrey (PIT)

2

10:54

9.7

Joe Vitale (PIT)

2

9:41

-21.6

Steve Begin (CGY)

2

7:36

0.7

Bobby Butler (NSH)

2

10:15

-1.9

Drayson Bowman (CAR)

3

11:48

-7.0

Mark Olver (COL)

3

9:25

-5.2

Cory Emmerton (DET)

3

10:31

-20.5

Rich Clune (NSH)

3

8:05

-0.2

Zac Rinaldo (PHI)

4

7:57

-13.7

Aaron Palushaj (COL)

4

12:19

-6.5

Jordan Nolan (LAK)

4

8:15

18.1

Ryan Garbutt (DAL)

5

9:22

-3.2

Stephen Gionta (NJ)

7

13:36

-15.9

Tom Pyatt (TB)

10

16:52

-13.9

Andrew Shaw (CHI)

10

15:10

3.7

Bryan Bickell (CHI)

12

12:21

0.6

The cumulative statistics yield the following averages:

Points

Average Time on Ice/Game

Relative Corsi

League Average

3.24

9:41

-5.9

Let's see how Fehr and Wolski compare.

Capitals Player

Total Points

Average Time on Ice/Game

Relative Corsi

Eric Fehr

12

12:04

18.9

Wojtek Wolski

8

14:57

6.5

Eric Fehr has been particularly effective, putting up points at nearly four times the rate of other players at his paygrade. His Relative Corsi rating is almost exactly proportional, showing what Caps fans already know: he's playing well even when the puck isn't going in.

Though Wolski's numbers are not as impressive- and he's had a few highly visible blunders that have contributed to a (probably undeserved) notion that he's played poorly- these numbers show that he is exceeding expectations. That is, if salary can be considered a dictator of expectation...and when you're only making 600k, what other indicator could there really be?

More: Wolski, Perreault and a Look Into Adam Oates's Thought Process Capital Ups and Downs: Week 8

But it's possible that Fehr and Wolski are actually even higher above their class than these numbers indicate. The Chicago Blackhawks have started the season hotter than any other team in NHL history. 10, 11, even 12 games with points would have been one thing- but at 24 games in a row with a point, they are an absolute outlier...like Lebron James in high school degree of outlier, and their $600k and below skaters have not escaped the effects. They are listed below.

Brandon Bollig

0

10.0

Andrew Shaw

10

3.7

Bryan Bickell

12

0.6

As seen here, each player is dramatically above the average in either points or Relative Corsi. When their numbers are plucked from the equation, the league average looks more like this:

Points

Relative Corsi

League Average minus Blackhawks

2.36

-6.7

Here again are Fehr and Wolski's numbers, for easy comparison:

Points

Relative Corsi

Eric Fehr

12

18.9

Wojtek Wolski

8

6.5

George McPhee has essentially turned the yearly money that Alex Semin would have commanded into three contracts, all set to expire this year: Wolski and Fehr ($1.2 million combined), and Mike Ribeiro ($5 million). One of these players is playing well, and certainly exceeding expectations. Another of these players is playing very well, tied for most points at his paygrade and handedly outplaying the individual he is tied with as measured by Corsi. The third is presently among the league's elite in point accumulation. Not a bad haul, huh?

Granted, Fehr and Wolski both play above average minutes compared to their modestly moneyed fellows. As reasonably skilled offensively-minded forwards their strengths lay in different places than a Zac Rinaldo, or a Joe Vitale, but their ice time isn't so inflated that it discredits their superior play. In fact, as tweeted by Mike Vogel last week, Eric Fehr is doing more with his ice time than any other player of comparable production in the league.

If Fehr and Wolski continue driving play, it's unlikely McPhee lets them drift back out to free agency. That's the beauty of an inexpensive and short-term contract. Even with unexpected production from the player, the cost of the contract currently being played under sets a precedent for the next one, due to the short turnaround.

Point is, if McPhee believes that Fehr and Wolski's success is sustainable, he can likely get them back for very cheap (and with a number of concerns needing address- most notably a certain shutdown defenseman and a certain top 10 point getter in the league- a saved penny is a very good thing). Such are the fruits of two seeds planted by McPhee last offseason, in very ninja-like manner.

Senin, 11 Maret 2013

Monday Caps Clips: Weekend is Weak End to First Half

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Your savory breakfast links:

  • Get caught up on all of the Clips you missed while you were out enjoying the weather this weekend right here.
  • Recaps and other assorted musings on yesterday's loss from us (with quotes, and look for Clyde's Shots later on), Monumental video (Oates, players), Vogs, NHL.com, WaPo (gamer, blog), Wash Times (gamer, blog), CSNW (gamer, blog, Joe B.), Frankovic, Peerless, Sick Unbelievable, DSP, OFB and RMNB.
    • Silver lining, Part I: Marcus Johansson's return to the lineup and play. [WashTimes, CSNW]
    • Silver lining, Part II: Steven Oleksy is "living the dream" (while the rest of us would probably use another word to describe the season so far). [RMNB, Capitals Outsider]
    • Angry Braden Holtby was angry. [RMNB]
    • Pre-game, Alex Ovechkin talked about needing to get a bit more R-E-S-P-E-C-T from the guys wearing the stripes. How'd that work out for you, Ovi? [Monumental (video), WaPo, WashTimes, CSNW, and for more pre-game chatter, check out Monumental video (Oates, Hendricks)]
  • Reflections on a lost weekend... [WaPo, Sick Unbelievable]
  • ... an up-and-down week... [Peerless]
  • ... and a largely lost half-season. [RMNB]
  • If you're looking ahead to the draft, here's some of what you might be looking ahead to in the years that follow it. [dcsportsdork]
  • It wasn't such a hot weekend down (up) in Hershey, either. [Patriot-News, SHoE, Inside Hockey]
  • Finally, happy 46th birthday to Bill Houlder.

Today's Lines: Johansson, Volpatti In; Perreault, Erskine, Wolski Out

Per Mike Vogel, it looks as if Marcus Johansson will make his return to the lineup today, as will Aaron Volpatti and Tom Poti, with Mathieu Perreault, John Erskine and Wojtek Wolski apparently set to miss this afternoon's game. So expect the lines and defensive pairings in front of Braden Holtby to look like this:

Matt Hendricks -- Mike Ribeiro - Alex Ovechkin

Eric Fehr - Nicklas Backstrom - Troy Brouwer

Jason Chimera - Marcus Johansson - Joel Ward

Aaron Volpatti - Jay Beagle - Joey Crabb

Karl Alzner - Tomas Kundratek

Tom Poti - John Carlson

Jeff Schultz - Steve Oleksy

That leaves Erskine, Mike Green, Brooks Laich and Jack Hillen out with injuries, and Perreault and Wolski unsolved mysteries at present. Of further note, Michal Neuvirth is back to backing-up after being too ill to do so yesterday.

(Note: this post initially listed Erskine as in.)

Capitals vs. Rangers Recap: Caps Can't Build on Strong Start, Fall to Rangers, 4-1

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[GameCenter - Ice Tracker - Game Summary - Event Summary - Shot Summary - Faceoff Summary - Play-by-Play - Home TOI - Visitor TOI - Fenwick Timeline]

In a shortened season, every event takes on more importance, relatively, than it would be during a normal campaign. Every streak, every injury, every win or loss, every period, every face-off... all of it amplified, especially for a team that dug itself a grave-sized hole over the first quarter or so of the season, as the Washington Capitals did.

And so Saturday's loss on Long Island felt like another nail in the Caps' coffin, a dramatic downturn in their chances of making the post-season, from nearly a coin-flip to once again long odds. Of course, it felt that way because that's the reality of the situation in which these Caps now find themselves. But there will be losses along the way even if the Caps do make an improbable run to the playoffs, it's just critically important that these individual losses don't become losing streaks, and that each one is answered with at least a couple of wins.

To that end, the Caps had played three consecutive three game spans in which they'd won two-of-three entering Thursday night's game against Florida, which they won handily and followed up with that ugly loss yesterday, making Sunday's game against the Rangers the "rubber match" of the current three-game stretch. Win (especially against the 8th-place Rangers) and things are still relatively on-track; lose and the already miniscule margin for error becomes even smaller.

On Sunday afternoon, the Caps made the hard road ahead even harder, dropping a 4-1 decision to New York.

Ten more notes on the game:

  • Just over two minutes into the game Marcus Johansson (playing in his first game since February 7) won a battle along the boards to keep possession in the Rangers' zone, and Jason Chimera fed Steve Oleksy for a shot from the point that would elude Martin Biron in the New York net (thanks, in part, to Joel Ward's presence in front). It was Oleksy's first NHL goal, Johansson's first assist of the season and Chimera's second point in the last month. That trifecta had to pay handsomely.
  • Nearly ten minutes later, Alex Ovechkin looked to be lining up Derek Stepan for a neutral zone hit reminiscent of his famous hit on Jaromir Jagr at the 2010 Olympics. Stepan moved the puck and Ovechkin was left with two decent options - hit Stepan and risk an interference penalty (or, quite possibly, something worse) or peel off and hustle to get back into the play defensively. Instead, he chose Option #3 - peel off in the opposite direction of the puck and the play and not hustle to get back defensively. Stepan got the puck back, drove wide, and ended up banking the puck off Braden Holtby and in from below the goal line. It was a terrible goal for Holtby to allow, and even if Ovechkin's play in the neutral zone was far from the proximate cause of the goal, it was another another questionable neutral zone play by the Caps "lead-by-example" captain, something that's become a bit of a theme lately.
  • Midway through the second period, and soon after successfully killing a penalty, the Rangers drew two penalties on the same play, both on Ovechkin... and in differing degrees of legitimacy, to put it politely. But on the delayed penalty before the first of the two could be called, Brian Boyle scored his first goal of the year on what was essentially a fade away shot from above the face-off circle. That's another one that Holtby probably should have had.
  • On the ensuing power-play - for the Ovechkin penalty that will go on his record - Rick Nash beat Holtby and chased him from the game (and for the second time in his last five outings). If the Caps were going to make a comeback in this one, it would be Michal Neuvirth backstopping them to it.
  • Late in the second period, Matt Hendricks drew a penalty to put the Caps on their second power play of the afternoon, and Ward drew another to put the Caps up two men for 31 seconds. And while the Caps had a couple of terrific chances on that 5-on-3, they couldn't beat Biron and the stanza ended with the Caps trailing by two to a team that was 65-0-3 when leading after two periods over the last three seasons.
  • With New York predictably going into a shell for the last twenty minutes, chances both ways were minimal and the result, unsurprisingly, was no scoring... until Brad Richards potted one with 1:12 left with the Caps hoping to pull their goalie for a sixth attacker. Ballgame.
  • Back to Neuvirth, one of the silver linings to come from this one was that he got some game action and looked good, stopping ten of the 11 shots he faced. With the most-compressed part of the schedule still ahead, the Caps will need at least two goalies playing and playing well if they're to have any chance at a playoff spot... and even if they're not heading to the playoffs, they'll likely want some time to see what pending-free-agent Neuvirth's got the rest of the way.
  • Nicklas Backstrom won all 14 of the faceoffs he took today, which is... something.
  • The Caps certainly missed Mathieu Perreault's creativity and his and Wojtek Wolski's puck possession. And John Erskine's snarl. And Mike Green 's offense, especially on the power play. And Brooks Laich, and Dmitry Orlov...
  • One of these days, Joey Crabb may show why he gets a sweater every night, but that day hasn't come yet and didn't come today.

The Caps' inability to pick up even a point this weekend against the Empire State's two teams hurts (and hopefully you made better use of these two beautiful days than they did). And with a home-and-home series against the Southeast Division-leading Hurricanes looming, the Caps' playoff hopes could be all but extinguished by the end of the week. But until they are, wins will continue to provide hope and losses will continue to provide pain... and more than it would in a normal year.

Game highlights:

Capitals-Rangers Post-Game Quotes

Via the team:

Washington Capitals head coach Adam Oates on the struggles of the Capitals penalty kill...

"I think some of it is we're tired. Some of our guys are tired and you make bad reads. You get a little caught out of position, you can't clear it, you don't win faceoffs; you need another save every once in a while. It's a little bit of everything."

Washington Capitals head coach Adam Oates on the Capitals' first half of the season...

"Average. I think we can do a lot better. I think we've seen signs of what we can be if we do it right. And obviously we've got to figure out ways to improve."

Washington Capitals defenseman Steven Oleksy on the significance of not making mistakes...

"Especially in a short season like this, every two points is huge. You can kind of consider them four-point games. We're playing playoff hockey right now. We have to bear down and find a way to get those two points."

Washington Capitals defenseman Steven Oleksy on the excitement of his first goal...

"I don't score a lot of goals, so every one is nice. To get that one out of the way helps a lot, but at the end of the day we were looking for two points and we were unable to get that."

Washington Capitals forward Eric Fehr on evaluating the season at the half-way mark...

"Well, obviously, a terrible start, and we've been getting better ever since. This weekend is a bit of a step back but I think you can still see our game where we're playing a lot better third periods. We didn't play a sixty-minute effort this weekend, but we had spurts where we were real good."

Washington Capitals captain Alex Ovechkin on the performance of the Washington Capitals this past weekend...

"Tough losses, but we'll refresh our minds, forget these losses, look at the video before the game, and get ready for Carolina."

New York Rangers head coach John Tortorella on the play of Brian Boyle...

"He [Brian Boyle] played better today. Obviously scores a big goal for us. Brought some pucks to the net, which I think is a big part of his game. He played better today."

New York Rangers head coach John Tortorella on the play of Martin Biron...

"He [Martin Biron] was big on the 5-on-3. Especially there, key part of the game, made some big saves. He really does settle a team down. He helps us get out of our end zone because he moves the puck so well. So, we get him in a game, he wins us the game, plus it gives Hank [Henrik Lundqvist] a day off, plus a full day off tomorrow. Really happy how it played out here."

New York Rangers center Brain Boyle on the play of himself today...

"I tried to start a new season basically. I tried to put myself in positions to do the things that I can do well. I tried to keep it simple."

New York Rangers center Brian Boyle on his play moving forward...

"I've got to be consistent now. We've got a good team here. We've got a lot of guys that can play and we've got some depth. But I want to be part of it and I think, if I am going the way I should, we are a better team. That's my focus and that's what I am going to do."

New York Rangers goalie Martin Biron on getting the start today...

"I think after those first 5 minutes or so, we really got going, which gave me a chance to settle in."

New York Rangers goalie Martin Biron on the play of Brian Boyle today...

"He's a good guy. He really works hard. Obviously he puts a lot of pressure on himself to try to contribute to every aspect of the game, It could be defensively, face-off, killing penalties and scoring goals is a big part of it. We see what he can do with putting the puck in the net."

Capital Ups and Downs: Week 8

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Your weekly look at individual Washington Capitals' ups and downs:

Goalies Trend Notes
Philipp Grubauer http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/569564/hershey-kiss.png With Neuvirth ailing again, Grubauer was back in DC for a second go-round, enjoying the view of Thursday's lopsided win from the bench before making his first NHL start against the Islanders over the weekend. Unfortunately for him, that appearance coincided with a third-period meltdown by the team in front of him and his forty (!) saves on forty-five shots weren't enough to earn his first win before heading back to the Bears. Solid work once again, though.
Michal Neuvirth http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217757/dash.png Neuvirth returned to action on Sunday against the Rangers, coming in to relieve Braden Holtby after the Caps fell behind 3-1 in the second period. Nothing like being shoved into action mid-game, particularly after being on the sidelines for over a month (and being sick for most of the last two weeks) - but if it had any effect on Neuvirth, he certainly didn't show it as he turned aside ten of the eleven shots he faced and didn't look bad doing so.
Braden Holtby http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217757/dash.png He's had some great games of late, but this week was a bit of a rollercoaster for Holtby. After giving up three goals early to the Bruins (including at least one that you'd usually expect him to stop) he shut the door and allowed his team to claw back in to - and eventually win - the game. A few key saves early in the first and second periods set the stage for the Caps' lopsided win over the Panthers. But he wasn't great against New York yesterday, and the Rangers' first goal in particular was one that just can't go in. If anyone can rebound it's Holtby, and we expect him to do just that... but not the best of weeks for him.
Defensemen
Karl Alzner http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217757/dash.png Was on for five goals-for (including two in each of the wins) but was also on for four goals-against (two in each of the losses), three of which were at even-strength. He did manage to pick up his first assist of the year against the Islanders, however, so there's that.
John Carlson http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217757/dash.png Picked up his fourth goal of the season (and added an assist) in Thursday's rout of the Panthers, then threw in another assist in the Islanders game - while skating close to thirty minutes on an injury-shortened blue line. He's already about a third of the way to his assist and point-totals for each of the last two seasons and almost halfway to his career-best of nine goals... but he's got to work on the other side of his game, as he was nicked for at least a goal-against in three of the four games this week, including three of the Islanders' five.
John Erskine http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/538577/ow.png Dropped the gloves with big Shawn Thornton on Tuesday after the Bruins took a 2-0 lead, conceivably to kickstart his team (although that attempt to shift momentum was only effective if it was time-release, because the Bruins made it a 3-0 lead shortly after). He then proceeded to do what he's been doing best, oddly enough - he scored a goal, opening the floodgates against the Panthers with a shot almost from center ice. Unfortunately he made it just two shifts into the Islanders game before leaving with an upper body injury, and is day-to-day.
Mike Green http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/538577/ow.png Has been skating intermittently since reaggravating his groin injury but doesn't appear to be on any sort of schedule for return... which is less than great.
Jack Hillen http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/538577/ow.png ...who?
Tomas Kundratek http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217733/up.png Was burned for a combined three goals-against by the New York teams this weekend... but anyone who scores his first NHL goal - and adds an assist on the overtime game-winner - gets an up arrow from us. Congratulations, Tomas!
Steven Oleksy http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217733/up.png Speaking of congratulations, many many congrats to the newest Cap, who had himself quite a debut week. In the last seven days he got signed to a three-year deal by the Caps, made his NHL debut against the Bruins, picked up his first NHL point and scored his first NHL goal. The twenty-seven-year-old rookie finished the week with four points, eleven hits, twelve blocked shots and a plus-three rating. Yeah... that'll do.
Dmitry Orlov http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/569564/hershey-kiss.png After sitting out with an injury since early December, Orlov made his return to action on Saturday with the Bears and picked up an assist in his second game back. With Green still out and Erskine ailing, could Orlov be on his way back to the NHL sooner than later?
Tom Poti http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217757/dash.png His five-game streak without being on for a goal-against ended with Dougie Hamilton's power play marker on Tuesday, but he did balance it out by being on for a couple of goals-for... before taking a seat for the next two games. Erskine's injury got him back into the lineup on Sunday, where he finished even for the day and saw his ice time diminish as the game went on. Have to think that a healthy Orlov knocks him out of the lineup. Or a healthy Green. Dare to dream.
Jeff Schultz http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217737/down.png Sat out the Bruins game, got back into the lineup against Florida and somehow managed to be on for as many goals-against - one - as goals-for in a 7-1 win. The following game was even more eventful, as his high-sticking double minor was the opening for Tavares and friends to turn a one-goal game into a two-goal game.
Forwards
Nicklas Backstrom http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217733/up.png Picked up three assists in the comeback victory over the Bruins, including a heads-up pass to Eric Fehr to set up the winner in overtime, then added an assist against Florida and a goal against the Islanders to round out a five-point week. Sunday was his only pointless game of the week, but he balanced that out by winning all fourteen of the faceoffs he took against the Rangers. As strange as it sounds, moving Eric Fehr up to his wing seems to have given him a bit of a spark.
Jay Beagle http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217757/dash.png In a week where twenty-seven goals were scored - either for or against the Caps - Jay Beagle was on the ice for a grand total of one, the Bruins' power play goal on Tuesday. Obviously that translates to no points for Jay, but that's about the only negative thing to report (as usual) for the big dog, whose work ethic can't be argued with.
Troy Brouwer http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217757/dash.png Whatever disease is running through the Caps' lineup also ran through Brouwer on Tuesday, keeping him out of action against the Bruins. He was back in time for the scoring party on Thursday, however, picking up two assists and adding a third for the week against the Islanders. No goals this week, though, and with both Ribeiro and Ovechkin scoring, his goal-scoring lead is now a goal-scoring tie... you gonna take that lying down, Troy? Reclaim your crown!
Jason Chimera http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217757/dash.png It's almost amazing how snakebitten Chimera has been this year, as time and time again he finds himself in a position to score and just can't finish. This isn't just regression - this is falling off a cliff, and the frustration is starting to show. He did pick up an assist against the Rangers, though, so... yay?
Joey Crabb http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217737/down.png It's not that he's necessarily been a liability for the Caps so far - hard to be when you're getting under ten minutes a night (or under five, as was the case on Tuesday). He just doesn't seem to have much of a purpose right now while others serve time in the press box.
Eric Fehr http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217733/up.png If Eric Fehr has scored a prettier goal than the one that finished off the Bruins this week, I don't remember it - a diving, top-shelf shot fired while splitting two defensemen that not only topped off a three-point night but also completed the Caps' comeback. Another goal against the Panthers gave him six on the season, three times as many goals as he had in fourteen more games last year. What a difference two healthy shoulders (and some good ice time) can make - Fehr might be rounding into what the Caps thought he would be when they drafted him a decade ago.
Matt Hendricks http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217757/dash.png Picked up an assist on Thursday and did some good work (relatively speaking) filling in on the top line... but with the team trailing by two he lost his spot alongside Ovechkin and Ribeiro mid-game against the Rangers. Temporary or permanent? We'll see.
Marcus Johansson http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217757/dash.png After missing the last twelve games with a concussion, Johansson made his return to the lineup on Sunday and all things considered didn't look too bad, even earning a spot on the top line late in the game. The assist he got against the Rangers wasn't just his first point since February 5 - it was also his first assist of the season. Here's hoping it's the first of many...
Brooks Laich http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/538577/ow.png No Laich, no like.
Alex Ovechkin http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217737/down.png An assist against the Bruins and a three-point night against Florida brought him tantalizingly close to 700 for his career... but sadly that's where the good news ends. On Tuesday it was his hook that led to Marchand's penalty shot, his penalty in the first that led to the Bruins' power play goal and his late-game penalty with the score tied that led to the rest of us losing years off our life. Some questionable neutral-zone play on Sunday created a 3-on-2 that led to a Ranger goal, and for the cherry on the sundae, later in the game he took two penalties on just one play - which the Rangers proceeded to eat up, scoring on the delayed call and then the ensuing power play. Undisciplined play is a killer, and Ovechkin had an extremely (and somewhat uncharacteristically) undisciplined week.
Mathieu Perreault http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217733/up.png Scored two goals (including a highlight reel, albeit meaningless, one against the Panthers) and didn't take a single penalty. So it was totally unsurprising that he would be the healthy scratch with the return of Marcus Johansson... right?
Mike Ribeiro http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217757/dash.png Kicked off the comeback against the Bruins with a goal, then added a goal and two assists in the 7-1 party Thursday night to bring his season total up to nine goals and twenty-eight points - good enough for 10th in the League. As good as that was, though, we can't give him an up arrow as long as he insists on yapping to the refs about every call. In a season of so much good for Ribeiro, that's been the one blemish and it cost the Caps in New York.
Joel Ward http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217757/dash.png Just a single assist for Ward this week, but he wasn't on for a single even strength goal-against and continues to be solid at both ends of the ice. He might not be producing as much offensively as he did at the beginning of the year, but he's making it hard on the other team's defense pretty much every shift and that's nothing to sneeze at.
Aaron Volpatti http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217757/dash.png Skated less than four minutes against the Bruins, was scratched for the next two games, and returned to the lineup Sunday for a whopping 6:23 of ice time against the Rangers. The Caps may be short on top-six forwards but you'd have to think they could use Perreault and Wolski over Crabb and Volpatti any day.
Wojtek Wolski http://assets.sbnation.com/assets/217733/up.png Last week we wrote the following: "Keep playing this guy - the points will come". Proving that we're psychic, they did indeed come - and picked a great time to arrive, too, as Wolski got the game-tying goal against the Bruins on Tuesday, then got the eventual game-winner against the Panthers two nights later. It really was only a matter of time before he broke through... so it would've been nice if he could have tried to keep the good times rolling on Sunday instead of serving another stint in the press box. But hey, last time he sat out he came back with goals in two straight games, so...