Wednesday, February 18, 2009

A TWO-point night: Caps 4 - Canadiens 3 (OT/SO)


Today’s arithmetic lesson…

2 points ugly = 2 points pretty

It wasn’t pretty, to be sure, but in the end a couple of Gimmick goals (one ugly, one pretty) were enough for the Caps to come from behind and earn a 4-3 win over the Montreal Canadiens. Let’s go to the ugly first…

Penalty killing… giving up three goals on four Montreal power plays. This game isn’t really close at even strength. Montreal simple didn’t threaten much. But they needed only 1:04 of combined man advantage on three of those power plays to get three goals. And even the penalties were of the ugly sort – three hooks and a whopper of a delay of game when Mike Green let fly from the Zamboni corner and nearly hit Craig Laughlin in the head in the TV booth. OK, not quite that far, but you could see Craig from where it landed.

Then there was the bad…Hey, refs?...if the microphone isn’t working, turn it the hell off! You guys were static of the sort that was having air traffic controllers at Reagan National airport shouting, “KNOCK IT THE HELL OFF! WE’RE LANDING PLANES HERE!!”

And the weird…Uh, somebody want to explain how it was that the forward who led Montreal in ice time was… drum roll, please… Tom Kostopoulos? Kostopoulos is a hard working sort of cuss, but in the end, you’re doing us a favor there, Guy.

Of course, there was the good…Nicklas Backstrom has a really good set of hands. The give and go he worked with Sergei Fedorov was a thing of beauty to watch. Feeding the puck down to Fedorov, then strolling toward the net as if he was out to get the morning paper. Fedorov laid the puck right back on Backstrom’s tape, and Backstrom flicked it into the net with the sort of calm that wouldn’t ripple a pond if he fell in. That wasn’t the end of it. Backstrom also netted a Gimmick.

But then, there was the sublime…You’re charging like a wolverine on crack after the puck, racing a Montreal defenseman to see which one of you will get there first. Of course, you do, but instead of taking a hit or sweeping it away, you have the presence of mind to spin and backhand the puck off the side boards, where it ricocheted behind the defenseman you were just in a race with. Then, you peel out like a Lamborghini, chasing down the puck where another defenseman is desperately trying to poke the puck away, or ride you off the play, or seek help from a local deity. Instead, he pokes your skates and knocks you off balance. You go skidding on your side toward the opposing goal, but before you go careening into low earth orbit, you cue-shot the puck past the goalie’s pad and inside the near post for a goal that would be talked about for ages, but for an even better goal you scored three years ago.

Another day in the life of Alex Ovechkin…





You want other stuff?...

The final tally will show that the Canadiens won the faceoffs, 31-27. Seeing as how they won 11 of the first 14, the Caps didn’t finish that badly.

The Caps had more misfires (37: 23 blocked, 14 missed) than Montreal had shots on goal (33).

This will hardly surprise you, but the Caps had a total of 4:12 in power play time. Ovechkin and Mike Green were out there for every second of it.

Think the Canadiens didn’t miss Alex Kovalev? Well, the Kovalev that actually shows up to play, anyway. He’s their leading Gimmick producer (good on three of six tries this year).

The Swedes (Backstrom and Nylander) were a combined eight up and 18 down in faceoffs.

Those three Montreal power play goals? They came on a total of four power play shots.

Think Carey "Pant Load" Price (look closely...he has the biggest pants this side of Rosie O'Donnell) is going to need a new mask? He was hit twice with Ovechkin shots, once stopping play because of equipment malfunction.

Bruce Boudreau rode his work horses. Five players played more than 23 minutes – Tom Poti, Ovechkin, Backstrom, Alexander Semin, and Mike Green.

It seemed as if this was the opposite of a heavyweight fight. You know, the one where the opponents come out a feel each other out for a couple of rounds before trading haymakers? Not this game. There were 20 hits in the first period, evenly divided between the teams. There were only 19 over the remaining 45 minutes (including overtime).

A couple of the TV-feed descriptions of the play…

“What a power play…this is sickening” (as the Caps were playing keep away in front of Carey Price and getting opportunities in high-value shooting zones)

“That’s insanity” (a description of the Ovechkin goal)

Despite the commentary from the TV guys on the Canadian feed, this wasn’t all that pretty a game by the Caps. They did not play badly; in fact, they seemed this close to finishing plays several times. But this is a Montreal team that can’t score these days, and that was with Alex Kovalev. With Kovalev sitting at home, Montreal getting three goals has to look disappointing, especially when all of them came on the power play.

But in the end, it’s two points, and that’s what pays off in this league. Nice job, boys.

Uh...what's up with this?



We don't claim to be current with the latest off-ice activities of members of the Washington Capitals, but we do find it interesting...no, disturbing... that the same face appears in both pictures, one with a well-known Capital, the other as a host on...

...wait for it...

Penguins TV.

How many laws of the universe were broken here? Or maybe we just haven't been keeping up with the hockey gossip pages as much as we should.

Man Down


If you look closely over there on the right, we have a compilation of our fellow wizards. If you look really closely, you will note that one of them is -- horrors! -- a Penguin blogger.

"The Sweater Ted" (the original name of the blog) is what we think of as "A Penguin Blog with a Brain." Unfortunately, the author of that blog -- "Hooks Orpik" -- is on IR with a "lower body injury."

Get well, soon, Hooks...I still owe you an explanation as to why Alex Ovechkin, and not Evgeni Malkin, deserves the Hart Trophy.


Quote o' the day


"A shell won't fall in the same crater twice."

-- Pavel Datsyuk


Datsyuk was responding to a question posed by Dmitry Chesnokov as to whether he could accept Sean Avery as a teammate. Datsyuk noted that Avery had already played in Detroit once upon and time, and, well...

Somehow, Datsyuk captured the perfect image.


The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!! -- Caps vs. Canadiens, February 18th

The Peerless Prognosticator is ON THE AIR!!!

It’s Homecoming at Verizon Center as the Caps return home from a spin around the East coast. Winning five of six possible points from the Rangers, Lightning, and Panthers on the road was just the sort of road trip the team needed, and now the Caps have an opportunity to add to their conference-best home record against the Montreal Canadiens, who the Caps haven’t seen since a Saturday night in early January.

“It was a dark and stormy night; the snow fell in clumps, except at occasional intervals, when it was checked by a violent gust of wind which swept up the streets (for it is in Montreal that our scene lies), rattling along the top of Bell Centre, and fiercely agitating the scanty flame of the street lights that struggled against the darkness.”

Well, we don’t know if it was stormy, but we’re betting it was dark, and made even darker for the Caps by a 5-4 Canadiens win…

“A small assortment of astonishingly fast Montreal skaters raced each other lustily to the respective ends of the distinct ends of the ice as the gates flew open to release a torrent of churned up snow comprised of angry yapping bullets of ice shards that nipped at Brent Johnson’s mask, causing him to reflect once again (as snow splattered his mask as he fought his way to find the puck) that the annual Running of the Pomeranians in Liechtenstein was a stupid idea.”

Is this really necessary?

“The corpse of the beaten Caps exuded the irresistible aroma of a piquant, ancho chili glaze enticingly enhanced with a hint of fresh cilantro as it stretched along the ice, coyly garnished by a garland of variegated radicchio and caramelized onions, and impishly drizzled with glistening rivulets of vintage balsamic vinegar and roasted garlic oil; yes, as they surveyed the players slumped on the ice of the cozy, but nearly empty, arena, a quick inventory of their senses told Joe Beninati and Craig Laughlin that this was, in all likelihood, a really noxious effort.”

Well, it wasn’t the best game they played this year, but let’s get on with this one, shall we?

Through all that literary gumbo, you might remember that the Caps lost to the Canadiens, 5-4, the last time these teams met, costing Bruce Boudreau a trip to the All-Star Game as an assistant coach. Apparently, the hockey gods were not amused by the four-goal third period that snatched the opportunity from the Capitals’ bench boss. Since then, Montreal is 5-11-0 and hanging on for a playoff spot (five points ahead of ninth-place Carolina) more than they are fighting for seeding. The overall numbers paint an interesting picture…




But while it is bad enough for the Canadiens that they trail the Caps in every category above, save for penalty killing, they have had some rather grim results over the last month since the win over Washington:

-- The Canadiens have been outscored 63-39 in 16 games (3.94 - 2.44 per game).

-- Five of their 11 losses have been by at least three goals.

-- They have allowed more than three goals eight times in 16 games.

-- They have been held to two or fewer goals ten times.

And then there is this. “The team has no need of his services the way he’s currently playing. He’s tired and he isn’t playing with any emotion.” Who is “he?” Alex Kovalev. Who is the author of the statement? Canadiens General Manager Bob Gainey, telling reporters that Kovalev would not make the trip with the team to Washington and Pittsburgh.

This is a team in more than a bit of trouble.

Why is Kovalev statying home? Well, since that 5-4 win over Washington, he is 2-5-7, -11. And, for a guy who had 17 power play goals last year, he’s had one in this 16-game run. That’s called playing yourself off the team.

Montreal is a team that is a glass half empty or half full, depending on your perspective. On the one hand, they do have 17 players with at least ten points, nine with at least 20. On the other hand, their leading scorer is defenseman Andrei Markov (7-35-42), and their second leading scorer – Robert Lang (18-21-39) -- is out for the season with an Achilles tendon injury.

On the one hand, Andrei Kostitsyn has 20 goals and is 3-3-6 against the Caps. On the other, his brother Sergei has been reassigned to Hamilton. Despite being among the top ten in scoring for the Canadiens, Sergei hasn’t had a goal since netting the game-winner against the Caps on January 10th.

OK, so Lang’s out, Kovalev is sitting, and both Kostitsyn’s have been accounted for. No other Canadien has more than 11 goals – the one with 11 being Tomas Plekanec, and he’s had only two since getting one against the Caps on January 10th and four in his last 31 games.

Then there is Matt D’Agostini, something of a darling of the press when last these teams met. Well, he’s actually been about as close to a go-to guy as this team has had the last five weeks. He is 4-3-7 in the last 16 games. But he’s also a minus-6, so he hasn’t been immune to the general malaise that has settled over the team.

The Canadiens got the ball rolling on trade wars, 2009 edition, by dealing for defenseman Mathieu Schneider (Atlanta getting a second round pick in 2009 and a third rounder in 2010). For Schneider, it completes the circle, his having played for seven seasons in Montreal after being drafted by the Canadiens in the third round of the 1987 draft. Here is how long ago that is… The players the Canadiens drafted ahead of Schneider by Montreal were Andrew Cassels, John LeClair, and Eric Desjardins. Seen any of them lately?

In goal for Montreal, it will be…well, who knows? Neither Carey Price nor Jaroslav Halak have extraordinary numbers. Price is 18-11-5, 2.72, .906 for the year, which isn't bad. He’s appeared in 11 games in the 2009 portion of the schedule, though, and has pretty much been a side dish of suck. Since returning from an ankle injury on January 20th, he has been 2-7-0, 3.84, .864 in the 2009 portion of the schedule.

Jaroslav Halak hasn’t been significantly better. Since getting the win in the 5-4 win over the Caps on January 10th, he is 3-4-0, 3.80, .889. Based solely on their respective records against the Caps, Halak would get this start, but at the moment it hardly seems to matter. They could have Vincent Price or Salma Hayek in goal.


The Peerless’ Players to Ponder

Montreal: Saku Koivu

The captain called a players’-only meeting after the Canadiens lost, 6-2, to Calgary last week. It didn’t seem to take. Montreal lost two of their next three. He didn’t play against the Caps on January 10th, as he was out with a foot injury. Since returning he is 3-5-8, -5 in 12 games. He’s had mixed success against Washington in 38 career games, going 7-20-27, -8. Given the problems the Canadiens are having, any reversal of fortune might be expected to begin with the captain.


Washington: Alexander Semin

Semin has had quite a bit of success against Montreal. In 11 career games, he is 8-4-12. He has a pair of goals and an assist in two games against the Canadiens this year. And, while folks have been spending time focusing on the aerobatics of Mike Green, Alex Ovechkin, and even Eric Fehr lately, Semin has quietly registered a point in 13 of his last 14 games (7-9-16, +6). He’s been held off the scoresheet only three times since November 1st (28 games).

Bob Gainey sent a message to the Canadiens by sitting Kovalev and sending Kostitsyn down. Now it's time for the Caps to send a message -- Not here, not tonight. No win for you.

“The bone-chilling scream of Canadiens fans split the frigid winter’s night in two, the first half being before the scream when it was fairly brisk and calm and pleasant for those who hadn't heard the scream at all, but not calm or brisk or even very nice for those who did hear the scream, discounting the little period of time during the actual scream itself when your ears might have been hearing it but your brain wasn't reacting yet to let you know.”

What-EVER!

Caps 4 – Montreal 3

With apologies to all of the Bulmer-Lytton Fiction Contest winners from which we borrowed.