Friday, February 29, 2008

The Quest For Sixty Comes Up Short

At least that's what the numbers say is likely to happen - Alex Ovechkin's "historical ride to sixty" will run out of gas somewhere in the high-50s.

As you know, heading into tonight's game against the Devils (against whom Alex has not yet scored this year and holds a career 0.27 goals per game average), Number Eight has 48 goals in 64 games on the season, meaning that in order to reach that magic number of sixty, he'll need to score a dozen goals in 18 games. Certainly not impossible - he has 13 goals in his last 18 games even with his current six-game goal-less drought, and obviously he's on a .75 goal-per-game pace for the season, which would net him 13 the rest of the way.

But Alex's numbers on this season and for his career suggest that he'll probably fall short of sixty. Here's the breakdown, based on career and 2007-08 average goals per game in different splits:
  • Career against the opponents left on the schedule, totaled: 10.36
  • 2007-08 against the opponents left on the schedule (2007-08 average against Western Conf. used for Western Conf. opponents left on the schedule), totaled: 9.81
  • Career home/road applied to remaining home/road games, totaled: 11.58
  • 2007-08 home/road applied to remaining home/road games, totaled: 13.5
  • Career day/night applied to remaining day/night games, totaled: 11.34
  • 2007-08 day/night applied to remaining day/night games, totaled: 11.89
  • Career day-by-day applied to remaining schedule, totaled: 11.20
  • 2007-08 day-by-day applied to remaining schedule, totaled: 11.98
  • Career month-by-month applied to remaining schedule, totaled: 9.97
So what - if any - of the above numbers "matter"?

Well, he's got some tough opponents (for him, at least) left on the schedule, including three games against Zdeno Chara (who has always given him fits) and the Bruins - against whom he has just three goals in nine career games. And his late season numbers in his first two NHL seasons have dropped off big time - February, April and March have been his three worst months, goal-per-game-wise so far (though, to be sure, the Caps' deadline activities the last two years have something to do with that).

Bottom line: these numbers don't mean a whole hell of a lot other than to indicate what we already knew - scoring sixty goals this year is going to be tough, but doable for Ovechkin. Sorta like making the playoffs. And more likely than not, the two will go hand-in-hand - Alex is averaging exactly a goal-a-game in Caps wins this year, and only 0.54 in Caps losses.

Today's Front Page, Part II

...newspapers from around the hockey world, sponsored by The Front Page, ArlingtonI wasn't planning on running a second TFP today, but this one - passed along by local SovSport writer Dmitry Chesnokov (also the photographer) - was too good to pass up. Dmitry translates the headline as "[Russians] took over Washington."

Today's Front Page

...newspapers from around the hockey world, sponsored by The Front Page, Arlington

Friday Open Thread

It's time to look into your Cristobal and make some predictions for this huge hockey weekend. How many points will the Caps grab of the four available? What do you expect from the three new guys? Will Alex Ovechkin bust out of his goal-scoring slump? Will Olie Kolzig continue to say the right things to the media while at the same time whining through a surrogate?

It's your thread, use it wisely... or use it like you usually do.

Oh, and don't forget tonight's fundraiser at Clyde's. Don't pretend you've got something better to do.

Thursday, February 28, 2008

The New Guys And Their Numbers


Now that the three new Caps have settled on their jersey numbers (you're gonna stick with 38, right, Cris?), here's a quick rundown of all the 24's, 38's and 91's to ever don a Caps sweater:

24
Larry Fullan (1974-75)
Paul Nicholson (1974-76)
Brian Kinsella (1975-76)
Larry Bolonchuk (1975-76)
Ron Jones (1975-76)
Brian Stapleton (1975-76)
Alex Forsyth (1976-77)
Tom Rowe (1976-77)
Robert Picard (1977-80)
Bob Kelly (1980-82)
Tom Rowe (1981-82)
Howard Walker (1981-82)
Eric Calder (1982-83)
Bryan Erickson (1983-85)
Daryl Evans (1985-86)
Jeff Greenlaw (1986-88, 1991-92)
Mark Tinordi (1995-99)
Rob Zettler (1999-02)
Brian Willsie (2003-06)
Kris Beech (2006-07)
Matt Cooke (2008-??)

38
Yves Beaudoin (1986-87)
Dennis Smith (1989-90)
Alain Cote (1990)
Bob Babcock (1990)
Reggie Savage (1991)
Brian Curran (1993-94)
Nolan Baumgartner (1995-96, 1998-00)
Jan Bulis (2000-01),
Todd Rohloff (2001-04)
Jakub Klepis (2005-07)
Cristobal Huet (2008-??)

91
Sergei Fedorov (2008-??)

That Time Of The Month

Like a cop posting up at a speedtrap on the 30th of the month (well, not this month, but you know what I mean), Alex Ovechkin makes sure to fill his quota before the calendar turns. Case in point - AO has totalled 12 goals and three assists in the four last games of the month so far this season. Here's the quartet:
Averaging a hat trick per game in these monthly ultimates, that's exactly what Ovie will need on Friday - February 29 - against New Jersey in order to tie October as his least-productive month, goal-wise, with eight. Having not scored in six games, he stands a dozen shy of sixty with only 18 games to play. Can he do it? A typical month-ending performance sure would help to that end.

Thursday Roundup

With no game to recap or preview, today we reached out to bloggers from Montreal, C'Bus and Vancouver to get their takes on the three trades the Caps made on Tuesday (and if any Atlanta bloggers want to chime in on the Giroux-for-Motzko deal, feel free to do so in the comments... on another blog).

Here's what the other side thought of the Caps' trio of trades (both pics by KB from yesterday afternoon at Kettler, btw):

Trade #1: Cristobal Huet for a 2009 second round pick
Cristobal Huet is a fine person, a fine netminder and a fine team player. Unloading him for a late 2nd rounder in 2009 on the brink of possibly the team's best run since they won the Cup in 1993 makes no sense to me. Carey Price will one day be a great goaltender, so will Jaroslav Halak. Putting the season, the playoffs and your team's success on the shoulder of two goaltenders that haven't even combined for 50 NHL games let alone 0 playoff games is foolish and risky.

Huet will help a struggling Washington climb to win the division, and I hope Cristo all the best; he was a personal favourite and certainly well liked by the fans, the media and his teammates. The message he left on the locker room whiteboard was heartbreaking.

Only time will tell if Bob Gainey made the right move, but as it stands, he did not.

[But wait, there's more!]

The message Huet left? Nobody knows word for word, but Chris Higgins and Saku Koivu were both sad when interviewed about it, Higgins said he wished them the best of luck and that he was honoured to have been their teammates, something along those lines.

Price said he lost a big brother, and Koivu said he lost a friend.

This move was a headscratcher and I am growing tired of Gainey as a GM. He never made any great moves, in fact, what he's probably done more than anything is disappoint us. This year he didn't disappoint, he let us down...he's lucky we have Trever Timmins doing a fantastic job as a head scout, otherwise, he'd be out of a job by now.

I don't hate Gainey for yesterday, but I am not the first to pop up and defend his bonehead moves (such as the Ribeiro trade, and even worse now, the Huet trade).

George McPhee flat out stole Huet and now I'm confident you guys will have a menacing team heading into the playoffs. - Bleu, Blanc et Rouge via The Faceoff Circle

If Bob Gainey was in a high stakes poker game, then he certainly likes to take risks!! Gainey's trade of Cristobal Huet to the Washington Capitals for a 2009 second round pick on trade deadline day wasn't a complete shock but I must admit that getting a 2009 2nd rounder (Anaheim's pick to boot!!) was a disappointment. Needless to say, Gainey is taking a huge risk by trading his veteran goaltender and appointing Carey Price as the #1 netminder with the Eastern Conference wide open for a Stanley Cup berth.

I believe Price has shown he can handle pressure situations with a WJC and Calder Cup championships on his CV. He has accomplished more at the tender age of 20 years old than Huet has in his 10 year hockey career. Can Price handle the pressure cooker of Montreal and win a playoff series or dare I say the Stanley Cup? I certainly think he has the pedigree to do well but time will tell. Gainey will take the heat if Price or Halak (another very good goalie in the Habs system) can't carry the load down the stretch.

Cristobal Huet has struggled in his last four games and the stats don't lie (1-3, 4.50 GAA, Sv% of.859 in last 4 GP) with Gainey stating that the organization would not re-sign him at the end of the season.

I believe Gainey had no choice but to trade Cristobal Huet to get something in return and allow Carey Price to start his promising career with the Montreal Canadiens........Gambler Bob is certainly hoping to cash in his poker chips with Price's success and a long playoffs run!!!! - All Habs
Trade #2: Sergei Fedorov for Theo Ruth:
I believe the Jackets were a better team with Fedorov in the lineup, but it was more an intangible thing than anything else. Perhaps he survived more on his legacy than his current actions. However you slice it, though, paying that much money for a marginally interested guy who’d missed 15 games due to injury this year, and has produced 28 only points in 49 games was a cement block of a contract. Now… it’s gone.... Good move for the Jackets to get something (however unproven at this point) for what would have been nothing in less than two months. - End of the Bench

I think it was a good move for both of the teams, the Caps gained a veteran center who can make plays. The man has three Stanley Cup rings, he may be aging but, I think he has what it takes to help the Caps make the push; whether it's his veteran experience and voice in the locker room or if it's him winning some faceoffs for ya. The Blue Jackets gained a stay at home blue liner prospect, whom I'm sure will be good in the future. (He's close to home at Notre Dame so I plan on going to see the kid play). - Bethany's Hockey Rants
Trade #3: Matt Cooke for Matt Pettinger:

I don't think the trade is particularly important for either team. The Canucks got rid of a player they did not intend to re-sign and picked up a player with some upside on a reasonable contract for next year.

Cooke had been with the Canucks for a decade so most fans are a little sad to see him go. He's an "energy" player which means that now he plays for somebody else he's a dirty cheapshot artist. He first came to the Canucks during a particularly dark time. This made him a fan favourite from the start. Watching Cooke run around trying to decapitate people was a guilty pleasure during the Messier era.

On the other hand, I have an emotional connection to Matt Pettinger, too. Matt moved to Victoria as a young teenager and because he is close in age to one of my sons I watched him play minor hockey on Vancouver Island. I've been following his career ever since, so I'm delighted to see him get a chance in Vancouver. I love his speed and I look forward to seeing how well he does.

I don't expect either Matt will make a huge difference on their new team but if Cooke had to go, I'm glad Pettinger came back. - Tom Benjamin's NHL Weblog

From an on-ice perspective, it was hard to react too much as I don't know too much about Pettinger. From what I've read so far, this is probably a lateral move for us.

You guys will love Cooke. Other teams will hate you, but I think you'll love the style he brings. He's a pest and he hits everything in sight.

Off the ice, I think Washington fans will quickly warm up to him. Simply, he's a community guy. He's very well-know outside the rink and spends a lot of time at Canucks Place and various other charities. - Canucks Hockey Blog

[Cooke]'ll make an equal amount of big hits and borderline legal hits.
He'll raise his elbows quicker before he'll drop the gloves.
He'll get clutch goals at key times and no goals in twenty games.
Once upon a time he filled in for Bertuzzi, but this year he was fighting for ice time with Isbister.
If someone touches Ovechkin, you'll see Cooke be Cooke.
If you see a poor hooking call with time winding down in the third, you'll see Cooke being Cooke.
You'll love him and you'll hate him, but the bottom line is he gives it his all on the ice and can change a game with his style of play.
And Vancouver will miss him because, good or bad, you'd rather have a guy like Cooke on your side then play against him. Any day.

...and I can only hope this Pettinger guy can help fill that hole now.
I'm not holding my breath :) - The Yankee Canuck
Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:

Did somebody say Ice Girls?!... Another take on the Huet deal.... Here's a tidy run-down of all of Tuesday's deals.... Even an Edmonton journo has to admit that the Caps were winners on Tuesday.... When 22nd is an upgrade.... Memo to Ted Montgomery: You're kind of a dick.... A goal and three helpers for JGod.... Finally, one year ago today was the day after Deadline Day and we recapped another Caps loss and two years ago today we welcomed back the NHL and looked into the ugly world of Laybergerism, err, "borrowing" from bloggers.

Daily Awards
  • Hart: Steve Bernier (2G, A, +3, 4 SOG in first game as a Sabre)
  • Ross: Toni Lydman (4 points)
  • Norris: Toni Lydman (4A, +3, 2 SOG)
  • Vezina: Patrick Lalime (32-save 1-0 shutout win)
  • Richard: Steve Bernier, Mats Sundin, Jason Arnott, David Vyborny (2G each)
  • Calder: Mason Raymond (G)
  • Aiken: Chris Mason (L, 5 goals allowed on 19 shots against in 34:50 of work)

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Today's Front Page

...newspapers from around the hockey world, sponsored by The Front Page, Arlington
Washington Post
It's no secret that Trade Deadline Day is big news around the hockey world - front page news in many markets, including ours. Well, in one of the papers, at least.

Don't see it? Lemme blow it up for you.

See? Right there above the picture of Malkin, Crosby and Gonchar.

Anyway, the point of this post is two-fold - to take a look at the front page of a couple of the papers from the towns from which the newest Caps were acquired and, more importantly, to introduce a new Rink feature - Today's Front Page - which will be a frequent glance at some of the more interesting front pages from around the hockey world, thanks to the wickedly awesome Newseum website. Think of it as our homage to a dying medium.

Our first stop is Quebec, where La Presse (no relation) and Le Solei feature Cristobal Huet on their front pages (Huet's quote in the former translates roughly to "I would have liked to have finished the job" - and I didn't even have to Babel Fish that one):

La Presse/Le Soleil
Next stop, Columbus, where Sergei Fedorov's departure was at the very top of the Columbus Dispatch's front page, right above a header that included both a marijuana and a fart pun (wait, they mean real dutch ovens, don't they?):

Columbus Dispatch
Finally, we head north and west to Vancity where they're happy to welcome home Matt Pettinger (Times Colonist), but he's neither a proven goal-scorer (The Province), nor is he an upgrade over Matt Cooke (The Vancouver Sun). Oh, and Avril Lavigne is "art":

The Times Colonist/The Province/The Vancouver Sun

Sergei Fedorov: The Statutory Early Years

Late yesterday, someone asked me whether I'd use the Sergei Fedorov trade as an excuse to post pictures of Anna Kournikova on The Rink.

"Absolutely not," I responded, "And the mere suggestion that I might stoop to something so transparent and gratuitous truly offends my delicate sensibilities, thank you very little."

A day later, however, I am willing to cast my own puritanical morals aside and bring the following pics to you, my eight readers, because I know you want 'em - my one condition being that Fedorov be in all the pics so at least the post maintained some shred of hockey relevance. And while you're ogling, I will avert my eyes (other than to note that Liz Hurley is sitting in front of Anna in that first pic... damn). Oh, and if you don't much care for pics with dudes in 'em, there's always Google image search (the SafeSearch feature of which can be turned off, from what I'm told).

Wednesday Open Thread

There was a lot to Laich like in last night's 4-1 win over Minnesota, but how about Matt Bradley sticking up for David Steckel sticking up for Chris Bourque as the moment of the night? The Wild's Aaron Voros is just lucky the Caps didn't take it one more step up the ass-kicking chain of command to The Donald.

Photo: AP

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Tuesday Night Open Thread

While you were busy hitting your browser's "refresh" button every three seconds since this morning and "working," you might have forgotten that the Caps have a game tonight.

And while none of the new guys will be in the lineup, neither will Viktor Kozlov (flu). Chris Bourque has been called up from Hershey, but with just 19 games remaining on the schedule and every single point absolutely critical, tonight's game will be a challenge for the Caps who will be without now three top-six forwards (Kozlov, Nylander and Fedorov), a pair of top checkers (Clark and Cooke) and their number one goalie (Huet). On the plus side, only the loss of Kozlov is a change from Sunday. On the minus side, the Caps lost Sunday. And Saturday. And last Wednesday.

Help is on the way... hopefully it's not too little, too late.

Sergei Fedorov: The Marketing Side

While we're all hopeful for what Sergei Fedorov will do for the Caps on the ice, don't forget that he has been one of the League's most marketable players for more than a decade. Here are some highlights (note a special cameo in the first clip), and don't be surprised if the team tries to get his name out there as much as possible and soon (I'm willing to bet that Fedorov has better name recognition in this town than all but two guys on the current Caps team):






Cooke And The Caps

A little yappin' from the newest Cap, Matt Cooke:

Trade Deadline Open Thread

Make sure to check the comments for the latest updates
Breaking: Caps Get Huet
Breaking: Caps Get Fedorov
Breaking: Caps Get Cooke for Pettinger

Like last year, I wanted to throw open a thread for you guys to discuss any and everything trade deadline-related, so here it is.

For all the latest news, I recommend Kukla's Korner, Spector's Hockey and TSN.ca (and if you've got other go-to's, let us know in the comments).

Is that graphic rehashed? You bet it is!

And while we all expect the Caps to stand pat (despite a history of doing otherwise), here are the Caps' picks, by round, in the 2008 Entry Draft, FYI:

1st – WSH
2nd – WSH
2nd – FROM SJ
2nd – FROM PHI
3rd – WSH*
4th – FROM LA
5th – WSH
6th – WSH
7th – WSH

* The Caps will owe either a third or a fourth round pick to Boston as compensation for last year's Milan Jurcina trade, depending on Jurcina's games played and total ice time, and since Juice ain't going to average 20 minutes per game (one of the triggers), it's going to be a fourth round pick that the Caps lose (but I assume they can't trade their third, as it is possible, technically, that it will be Boston's).

So enjoy Deadline Day, and here's hoping the Thrashers, Bolts, Cats and 'Canes all get ripped off.

Note: I will be adding a Tuesday morning post, but this will stay at the top of the page, so be sure to check out the morning Roundup after 6:30 AM or so.

Caps Get Cooke For Pettinger

Per TSN, the Caps have sent Matt Pettinger home to Vancouver for winger Matt Cooke.

Cooke has seven goals, nine assists on the season. Per his scouting report, Cooke "can easily get opponents off their game," is "a fairly quick skater [who] defends his own end effectively and is an oustanding penalty-killer," but "despite his dedication, he doesn't have the size or skill to be a major scorer," "can ill-afford to take any shifts off," and "is somewhat injury-prone."

For all of his defensive responsibility, however, Cooke had Vancouver's fourth-worst plus/minus at minus-four before being traded.

Like Fedorov and Huet, Cooke is an unrestricted free agent at the end of this season.

What They're Saying:
"Cooke is a gritty winger whose bang and crash style made him popular with Canucks fans, but with younger and affordable Canucks now stepping up and filling that role he wasn’t expected to be re-signed by Vancouver." - Spector

"The Capitals are determined to make the playoffs. Cooke is an agitator in the mold of Sean Avery or Jarkko Ruutu. He should bring an edge to Washington's game. - Empty Netters

Fedorov To The Caps For Ruth

The Caps have acquired center Sergei Fedorov from Columbus (a move we sorta foresaw back in June) for prospect Teddy Ruth (ranked as the Caps' 14th-best prospect by Hockey's Future).

Fedorov - no stranger Caps fans (or players) - has nine goals and 19 assists in 50 games so far this season and hasn't topped 44 points in any season since the lockout, but is an upgrade at second-line center over a converted right wing or a pair of fourth line pivots.

I'm not thrilled with moving Ruth in this deal, but when you've got a surplus of prospects, guys like this become somewhat expendable, I suppose.

What They're Saying:
"His versatility could make him useful in a defensive role for the Capitals and some might expect him to center fellow Russian Alexander Ovechkin's line, but it’s expected he’ll be plugged into Washington’s second line.

Fedorov might also be able to fill a leadership role for the relatively young Capitals as they battle down the stretch for a playoff berth." - Spector

"Even though he doesn't quite have the wheels he used to, Fedorov brings three Cup rings to Washington. And he can mentor Alexander Ovechkin. Fifteen years ago, Fedorov was what Ovechkin is now." - Empty Netters

Caps Get Huet For A Second Round Pick

The Caps have acquired Cristobal Huet from Montreal for a 2nd round pick in the 2008 2009 draft (which pick? Not sure) (and the pick is the one the Caps got from Anaheim for Brian Sutherby earlier in the year - so the Caps turned Suts into Huet).

The 32-year-old Huet has never had a save percentage below .907 or a GAA above 2.81 in any full NHL season and is 21-12-6 with a 2.55 GAA and .916 save percentage this season. While he may not be "the answer," he is if the question is "can you name a French goalie who's better than either Olie Kolzig and Brent Johnson?" And hell, Huet may not even have to change his pads.

From his scouting report, Huet "Has a wealth of International (including Olympic) experience, so he rarely gets rattled by pressure situations," and "is an extremely sound positional 'keeper," but "is physically limited in terms of lateral mobility and overall agility," and "must make better in-game adjustments."

Huet is an unrestricted free agent after this season and, interestingly, played for Bruce Boudreau in Manchester of the AHL back in 2002-03.

What They're Saying:
"I'm shocked. I don't think they got enough for Huet... The Montreal Canadiens have had succeess going with rookie goaltender in the past... But I'm surprised the market was so small for Huet." - Keith Jones, TSN.ca"

"For Washington, Huet's a major upgrade. If Kolzig had a .916 save percentage at this point, the Capitals would have allowed 35 fewer goals with their starter between the pipes, which would improve the team to a 2.49 goals against average (10th best in the league)." - Mirtle

"For giving up so little for an established starting goaltender, the Capitals appear the big winners in this one." - Spector

"[I]t shows Washington hasn't given up on the division -- but has given up on Olaf Kolzig, who apparently can't play in consecutive games anymore. I'd jump at the chance to get Huet for a second-round pick. The guy can play. I would have thought Montreal could have gotten more." - Lord Stanley's Blog

"In Washington, Huet will provide more stability in goal, where Olaf Kolzig is in his third-straight season posting a goals against average over 3.00, and his .888 save percentage is his lowest mark since 1995-1996.

That being the case, Huet will most likely improve Washington's goaltending, giving them a chance to reach the playoffs and the cost of a draft pick isn't that significant for that kind of acquisition." - Scott Cullen, TSN.ca

Tuesday Roundup/Gamenight: Wild @ Caps

[AP Preview - WashingtonCaps.com Preview]

The Caps and tonight's opponents, the Minnesota Wild, really aren't all that different. Both teams are in second place in their Division. Each team has a Ni(c)klas Backstrom, a blueliner named Schultz and one of the League's most talented goal scorers. Um... both teams play in the NHL.... neither has won a Cup...

The fact of the matter is that the Caps and Wild actually are about as different as two teams can be in today's NHL. The Caps are an up tempo, run-and-gun squad while Jacques Lemaire's Wild play a trapping style and wait for their opponents to make mistakes. And unlike the Caps, who have lost four of the last five games in which they had a lead at any point, the Wild take a lead and go and hide with it - Minny has the League's best winning percentage when scoring first and is 25-0-1 when leading after two periods.

Think that first goal is going to be big tonight?

Minnesota comes into tonight's game having lost three straight and scoring only three times along the way, but with dynamic offensive players like Marian Gaborik, Pavol Demitra, Brian Rolston and Pierre-Marc Bouchard (assuming they don't trade him for an even more dynamic - and familiar - offensive player during the day) and a good power play, they can drop four or five in a hurry on an unsuspecting team that isn't prepared.

The Caps and Wild have played six times since Minny's latest NHL club entered the League in 2000, and the Wild have won five times, including a 3-2 shootout win last season. But only once has a game between the two teams been decided by more than a single goal, and only twice have more than three goals been scored in any one game in the series. To top it off, Minnesota is one of just four teams in the NHL against whom Alex Ovechkin does not yet have a goal (one assist in one game) and the Caps are one of only two teams against whom Gaborik has never lit the lamp (one single assist in six career games). How 'bout that? Oh, and in case you're wondering, Donald Brashear and Wild uberthug Derek Boogaard have fought once in the past, but with the Boogie Man on the IR, the two won't be renewing acquaintances tonight.

So expect another low-scoring affair and let's hope that the Caps' have the better of the Backstroms and the better of the bounces tonight - they'll probably need both in order to win.

Why The Wild Will Win:
"The Minnesota Wild will defeat the Washington Capitals because they have greater scoring depth and play a defensive system that is perfect to counter attack an offensively aggressive Capitals squad. Not to mention, the Wild currently have much more to lose and know they cannot afford to drop non-Conference games in another ultra-tight Western Conference." - The State of Hockey News
Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:

Time change for the March 9 Pens game.... Insert Sidney Crosby joke here.... One year ago today it was Trade Deadline Day Eve, but the Caps got into the act early, trading Richard Zednik and Lawrence Nycholat, which we discussed, as well as the previous day's Caps/Devils game, and two years ago today we had the opportunity to gloat and use one of our favorite pictures. Good times.

Daily Awards
  • Hart: Darcy Tucker (2G, A, +1, 4 SOG, 3 hits, 5 BkS)
  • Ross: Matt Stajan, Darcy Tucker (3 points each)
  • Norris: Jaroslav Spacek (2A, +3)
  • Vezina: Vesa Toskala (31-save shutout win)
  • Richard: Darcy Tucker (2G)
  • Calder: Clarke MacArthur (G, 3 SOG, +3)
  • Aiken: Ray Emery (L, 5 goals allowed on 21 shots against in two periods of work)

Monday, February 25, 2008

Deadline Day In D.C. For The Count

Word from the Caps media crew is that NHL commissioner "Count" Gary Bettman "will be in attendance at Tuesday’s nationally televised Washington Capitals game against the Minnesota Wild at Verizon Center." Someone be sure to ask him about this video:

Brash Bashes Both Brookbank Brothers

Hat tip to hockeyfights.com for pointing out that Donald Brashear fought not one but both Brookbank boys this weekend, as he beat down the Hurricanes' Wade on Saturday evening and the Devils' Sheldon on Sunday afternoon (follow the links for videos).

Perhaps Wade should have warned Shelly to "look out for the overhand left."

Update: For more on the fights, head over to FanHouse.

Monday Roundup

Rather than recap a couple of tough weekend losses - one more gut-wrenching than the other - I thought I'd use this space today to promote a good cause, namely a fundraiser for the Wilson High hockey team.

The long and the short of it is that Wilson is D.C.'s only public high school with a varsity hockey team and following the loss of their coach last winter to pneumonia, the program is on the verge of being dissolved (more details can be found over at OFB).

In an effort to help out a little bit, a group of bloggers (led by OFB) is hosting a fundraiser this coming Friday night at Clyde's of Gallery Place. For $10 a head, you can help out a great cause AND have a good shot at some great prizes (including items signed by Caps and Hershey Bears players).

So come on out for a good time, a good cause and maybe, just maybe, a Caps win.

Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:

Happy 22nd Birthday to Jeff Schultz.... Don't go over to Mirtle's site and vote on who should win Coach of the Year (he blamed me for Alex Ovechkin running away with the Hart in his last poll).... "Major bonus points" for Caps fans.... Finally, one year ago today we recapped a Caps/Devils game (how 'bout that?), noted a silly trade rumor from a silly rumor-monger, and looked at the market values of Dainius Zubrus and blueliners.

Daily Awards
  • Hart: Teemu Selanne (3G, 2A, +3, 2 SOG)
  • Ross: Teemu Selanne (5 points)
  • Norris: Marek Malik (G, A, +2, 2 SOG)
  • Vezina: Ilya Bryzgalov (35-save shutout win)
  • Richard: Teemu Selanne (3G)
  • Calder: Jonathan Toews (3A, 2 SOG)
  • Aiken: Patrick Lalime (L, 5 goals allowed on 25 shots against in 48:38 of work)

Saturday, February 23, 2008

Saturday Roundup/Gameday Gamenight Gamelateafternoonearlyevening: Caps @ 'Canes

[AP Preview - WashingtonCaps.com Preview]

In the wake of Wednesday night's kick-in-the-yambag loss to the Isles, Brooks Laich noted that this Caps team is lacking a killer instinct - they're not putting teams away when given the opportunity to do so.

Laich is right, of course, but the result on most nights (Wednesday being an obvious exception) hasn't been disastrous - one goal wins are worth two points just as four goal wins are - and the Caps are still 18-7-2 when scoring first, 13-3-2 when leading after one period and 18-0-2 when leading after two.

Killer instinct comes with experience - that whole "learning how to win" thing, and while it would be nice as a fan (and nicer still as a player or coach) to be able to relax for the last ten minutes of a third period, the ability to close out opponents more convincingly will come.

More troubling, at present, is the Caps' inability to win - or show up for - big games.

Four times this month, the Caps have played an intradivisional game in which they were within three points of first place in the Southeast Division and their opponent was within two points of them in the standings. The results? A 2-0 loss to Atlanta, a 2-1 loss to Carolina, a 3-2 loss to Atlanta and a 4-2 loss to Florida.

The "good" news is that tonight's opponent, Carolina, is four points ahead of the Caps (with three more games played), so perhaps the boys from D.C. can play a little looser. After all, the "Choking Dogs" label is one part of Caps tradition that this team would no doubt rather do without.

Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:

ESPN might want to rename its "Friday Face Off" segment "Long-Winded Answers to Stupid Questions."... Maxime Ouellet update: acquired yesterday by ECHL Trenton, he gave up seven goals on 28 shots against in his ECHL debut. See ya never, Max!... Finally, one year ago today we looked at the Caps' record with and without a certain rugged blueliner (and enjoyed some musings from the Big Apple), looked at the sellers market for mediocre wingers, tried to figure out why a couple of Caps weren't playing and proposed a trade (that would have been suh-weet), and two years ago today we read some gloom and doom and had a chuckle about the state of Team USA hockey.

Daily Awards
  • Hart: Miikka Kiprusoff (38-save shutout win)
  • Ross: Jere Lehtinen, Jussi Jokinen, Brenden Morrow (2 points each)
  • Norris: Derek Morris (Game-tying goal at 19:57 of the third period, 2 SOG, 3 BkS)
  • Vezina: Miikka Kiprusoff (38-save shutout win)
  • Richard: Jere Lehtinen (2G)
  • Calder: Peter Mueller (A on the Morris goal)
  • Aiken: Mathieu Garon (L, 3 goals allowed on 28 shots against in 39:58 of work)

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Romovechkin?

The Madden Curse. The Sports Illustrated Cover Jinx. The Curse of the Bambino. The Tiki Curse (no, not that Tiki, but the Vincent Price version). All examples of supposed supernatural forces negatively affecting athletic performance.

This past December, thanks to Dallas quarterback Tony Romo's very public canoodling with Jessica Simpson, football fans added another hex to the list - The Girlfriend Curse. Simpson's pink presence at a late season game was seen by some as the reason the Cowboy QB had the worst outing of his career in a 10-6 home loss to the woeful Philadelphia Eagles.

Now the question is raised locally - do Caps fans have reason to fear a Girlfriend Curse of their own?

The other day, the Alex Ovetjkin blog shared a Sovetsky Sport interview with Capitals superstar Alex Ovechkin's new girlfriend Katja, which FanHouse followed up with the darling picture below (and others), and video evidence of which Agent Steinz brought us.


Awww.

But since Katja first arrived in D.C. - February 7, according to the interview - Alex's on-ice game has cooled off as his off-ice life has heated up. Four times in six games since the two met in person Ovechkin has been held off the scoresheet (after having been held pointless in four of his previous 22 games) and he has had a minus rating in each of those whitewashes (after having been on the wrong side of zero in that stat only four times since December 15). As a result of his first three-game scoreless drought of the season, AO has been caught and passed in the NHL scoring race by Evgeni Malkin and the Hart Trophy front-runner's Caps have won just twice in the six games after having won 10 of their prior 14 games.

One of sport's all-time wise men, Burgess Meredith's Mickey Goldmill, famously warned his prized pupil to quit chasing tail, as "[w]omen weaken legs." Casey Stengel, another of athletics' great thinkers, took a slightly different point of view when he noted that "[b]eing with a woman all night never hurt no professional [athlete]. It's staying up all night looking for a woman that does him in" - and scientists seem to agree.

So while Ovechkin's new-found love and this little bump in the road in his otherwise phenomenal season may have curiously coincidental timing, and given the wisdom of the The Old Professor and actual science, I'm not ready to attribute the latter to the former - there is no Girlfriend Curse plaguing Number Eight (after all, Ovie has already proven impervious to such superstitious triflings). But if we see Katja sporting one of these with her man's name and number at some point in the near future, I may be forced to reconsider and side with ol' Mick.

A Historical Ride To Sixty

Thanks to Paul and the Caps for passing along this spot, currently running on Vs. (with which, incidentally, Islanders Outsider via our friends at Islanders Army rightfully has issues):

Thursday Open Thread

Photo: AP
Maybe this one's on me for jinxing it - the Caps led after two but lost.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Wednesday Roundup/Gamenight: Isles @ Caps

[AP Preview - WashingtonCaps.com Preview]

When the New York Islanders take to the ice tonight at Verizon Center, they'll do so with a patchwork blueline and a group of forwards that's just slightly more established. Take a gander at their current injury report:
Shawn Bates (C): Hip surgery, remainder of the regular season - IR
Chris Campoli (D): Shoulder surgery, remainder of the regular season - IR
Blake Comeau (C/W): Head injury, day-to-day
Bruno Gervais (D): Oblique, day-to-day
Mike Sillinger (C): Hip injury, late February - IR
Chris Simon (LW): Suspended
Jon Sim (LW/RW): Right knee injury, remainder of the regular season - IR
Andy Sutton (D): Leg injury, 4-to-6 weeks
Brendan Witt (D): Knee injury, sidelined indefinitely - IR
On that list are four of the Isles' top six defensemen in terms of ice time, their top faceoff man and third-leading goal scorer (Sillinger) and Cap-killer extraordinaire Jon Sim (11 of his 52 career goals have come against Washington). These are big injuries, especially for a team that wins (when they win) on defense - no team has scored fewer goals on the season than the 'Ders.

And yet, just when the Isles look dead in the water, they rattle off a few wins to keep hope alive. Case and point, they come to town riding a four-game win streak which comes right on the heels of an 0-6-1 stretch in which they scored just 11 goals. On the plus side, they haven't won five straight since 2003.

Ted Nolan deserves every ounce of the praise he gets for squeezing a winning record out of these guys because, quite frankly, the Islanders are awful. They don't score, don't have a terribly good team GAA, are bad with the extra man and worse five-on-five, and are led in scoring by a guy with a minus-20 rating (and bad taste in pop tarts) who has fewer points than Alex Ovechkin has goals. In fact, the Isle's top three goal scorers combined have one more goal than Ovie. Their top six scorers - each of whom has a minus rating - are a combined minus-63. Michael Nylander's 37 points would be good enough for second on the Isles in scoring. I could go on, but won't.

But for all that suck - and there's plenty - they have one more point in the standings than the Caps, which is the real kick in the yambag.

I've said it before and I'll say it again - if you're gonna make the playoffs, you've gotta beat the teams you've gotta beat. This certainly is one of those teams, and one with whom the Caps shouldn't have a whole hell of a lot of trouble. For a Caps team that hasn't won a game by more than a single goal in more than a month, it's time to cash in two points in a convincing manner.

Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:

Mike Green love at CBSSports.com.... Happy 51st Birthday, Glen Hanlon.... Finally, one year ago today we looked at what "fair value" for Dainius Zubrus would be and previewed the Caps and Habs (which included my incredibly prescient take on the state of the franchise in Montreal - "the Habs are destined to be mediocre for the foreseeable future").

Daily Awards
  • Hart: Jarome Iginla (2G, A, +2, 7 SOG, 2 hits)
  • Ross: Jaromir Jagr (4 points)
  • Norris: Dion Phaneuf (2G, including the game-winner, +3, fight, 5 SOG, 2 hits)
  • Vezina: Tim Thomas (43 saves on 45 shots against in shootout win)
  • Richard: Jarome Iginla, Dion Phaneuf, Michael Ryder, Ryan Malone, Alexei Kovalev, Brendan Shanahan (2G each)
  • Calder: Sam Gagner (G, A)
  • Aiken: Carey Price (3 goals allowed on 11 shots against in just 13:56 of work)

I Know What You're Saying, But...

"Don't leave our games early." - Olie Kolzig on his team's resilience

I'd add "unless it's at the end of the second period" to the quote. In only one Caps game this season has the team which was behind at the second intermission gone on to lose the game - the Caps are 18-0-1 when leading after two and 0-22-2 when trailing heading into the third.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Thanks For Gifting Carolina A Point, B's!

The pitiful details...

Tuesday Roundup

So, umm... Brian Pothier's done, right?

I mean, he's not coming back - ever - is he?

Pothier has missed the last 19 games with a concussion (or post-concussion syndrome) and apparently hasn't even been seen around K-Plex in a month or more after getting crushed by Boston's Milan Lucic on January 3rd (the hit is at around the one minute mark of this clip).

If this was Potsy's first concussion, there'd be reason for concern and the expectation that he'd return at some point. But this isn't his first concussion. Or his second. In fact, it's (at least) his fifth as an NHLer (and who knows how many more he might have had before arriving in the show or that have gone undiagnosed). A quick rundown of the five:
  1. March 22, 2002 (season-ending, missed 10 games)
  2. December 13, 2003 (missed 10 games)
  3. December 28, 2005 (missed no games, but they called it a concussion, so we're calling it a concussion)
  4. January 18, 2007 (missed 10 games)
  5. January 3, 2008 (missed 19 games... and counting)
Five concussions, three in the last 26 months (and even if we don't count that curious December, 2005 noggin knock, it's two significant concussions in the last year). When is enough enough? That's up to the individual player, of course, but given that he's at least five-eighths of the way to Eric Lindros's reported concussion total, there's got to be a good chance that if Potsy's mind isn't made up already (and it probably should be), the doctors (and/or Jesus) will be recommending that the 30-year-old blueliner hang up the skates... before it's too late.

On the "cold, hard reality" side of things, Pothier has 2 years and $5 million left on his current contract and the Caps will continue to make a go of things, for the time being as they have for a month-and-a-half: without one of their top four defenseman. Potsy is one of three blueliners on the squad to be averaging more than a minute of ice time on both special teams units, is the team's second highest points-per-game rearguard on the season and leads the defensemen in plus-minus.

The team has gone 14-6-2 without Pothier in the lineup, which isn't necessarily remarkable in and of itself - he had been benched earlier in the season for poor play - but combining his absence with Tom Poti's recent and potentially lingering injury leaves a couple of gaping holes on the blueline that aren't easily filled and start to look a little bigger than the sum of their parts.

Which brings us back to Pothier's future. If he is to retire, the Caps would have both a need on the blueline (as if they don't already) and the internal cap space to satisfy it. Which, with just a week to go before the trade deadline, makes the status of Brian Pothier's career among the more important questions that we'd like to see answered.

Elsewhere 'Round the Rinks:

One game, 2,473 goals. What is "Gary Bettman's dream," Alex?... Did the Caps almost trade Chris Clark for Nik Antropov last summer?... Here's a better idea - don't like two-minute penalties in OT? Don't commit 'em.

Daily Awards
  • Hart: Radim Vrbata (G, 2A, +2, 4 SOG)
  • Ross: Pavel Datsyuk, Radim Vrbata (3 points each)
  • Norris: Ed Jovanovski (Game-winning goal, A, 3 SOG, 2 hits)
  • Vezina: Mikael Tellqvist (34-save shutout win)
  • Richard: Henrik Zetterberg (2G)
  • Calder: Daniel Carcillo (G, +1, fight, 2 SOG, 2 hits)
  • Aiken: John Grahame (L, 5 goals allowed on 26 shots against)

Monday, February 18, 2008

How Much Green For Green?

What better way to honor today's national holiday than with a discussion about dead presidents (and lots of 'em)?

With a pair of Alexes signed, sealed and delivering, a portion of the off-ice attention of Caps fans has turned to the task of re-signing the team's other Restricted Free Agents, namely Mike Green, Shaone Morrisonn, Boyd Gordon, Eric Fehr and Brooks Laich. Most of those guys should be relatively easy to lock up, but one - Green - may present something of a challenge in that it's difficult to determine precisely how much "potential" is worth.

Drafted 29th overall in 2004, Green is having a breakout season in his contract year of 2007-08 (coincidence? Probably). He leads all NHL blueliners in goals (15) and overtime tallies (3), is 12th in points (37), second in game-winning goals (3), fourth in power play goals (7) and fifth in shots on goal (152) - all this after racking up three goals, 12 assists and a minus-18 rating in his first 92 NHL games.

Green - who is 25 days younger than Alex Ovechkin - has really come into his own under head coach Bruce Boudreau, to the tune of 12 goals and 30 points in 39 games in a whopping 26:40 of ice time per game, an average that would rank him 4th in the League in TOI/G if it were his average on the season.

So what's Green worth?

Let's look at a couple of recent deals signed by young blueliners. Dion Phaneuf signed a 6-year/$39m ($6.5m per year) deal earlier in the month. Fedor Tyutin signed a 4-year/$11.375m ($2.8m per year) deal yesterday. You don't need to be Al Morganti to know that Green's deal will fall somewhere in between those two, so let's dig deeper.

Ryan Whitney inked for 6 years at $4m per year as an RFA last summer. Now we're getting somewhere. Whitney, the fifth overall pick in 2002, signed his deal after his second full NHL season, one in which he played 81 games, was sixth among blueliners in scoring with 14 goals and 45 helpers and posted a plus-nine rating. This followed a 68 game, 6 goal/32 assist, minus-seven campaign. In other words, Whitney had 149 games, 20 goals and 77 assists (and a playoff appearance) under his belt before signing his deal. Green, if he continues his "Boudreau pace" through the end of the season, he'll have around 174 games, 24 goals and 44 assists on his resume.

But contracts aren't rewards for what a player has done, they're predictions of what a player will do, and the sky seems to be the limit on what Green might be capable of. Just for fun, here's a quick look at blueliners who have led the League in goals since the beginning of this decade, and how many they had:
  • 1999-00: Nicklas Lidstrom (20)
  • 2000-01: Brian Leetch (21)
  • 2001-02: Sergei Gonchar (26 - damn)
  • 2002-03: Sergei Gonchar, Nicklas Lidstrom, Andy Delmore (18)
  • 2003-04: Wade Redden, Pavel Kubina (17)
  • 2005-06: Mathieu Schneider (21)
  • 2007-08: Sheldon Souray (26)
Not a bad list of blueline bombers, and regardless of what you might think of this crew's abilities in their own zone, one thing is for sure - these guys have gotten paid (with the exception of the undrafted and inconsistent Delmore). Of course, they have gotten paid through unrestricted free agency or the threat thereof, something Mike Green doesn't have on his side.

Which brings us back to Whitney as a benchmark. He has the better pedigree than Green (5th overall vs. 29th, 3rd defenseman taken in his draft vs. 8th), but that doesn't mean much after a player's entry level contract expires. He will have had the more impressive pre-contract stats, but, like we said, contracts are predictions, not rewards. Mike Green, right now, is the better player of the two by most traditional measures - he has more goals and assists, four times as many hits, eight times as many takeaways - and is two-and-a-half years younger. With the salary cap set to rise another $3m or so and general contract inflation, it's highly likely that Green will make more, per annum, than Whitney.

So as we leave Ryan Whitney's neighborhood and drive north, the question is how far do we keep going? Mike Green is not Dion Phaneuf (though they do share an agent, one that prominently displays Green on its website as an indication of their perception of his value). Phaneuf is a guy who scored 20 goals as a rookie, has 48 goals, 93 assists and a plus-18 rating in his first 220 NHL games and hits like an eighteen-wheeler, so we don't get all that far. But Mike Green has shown that he's a capable puck-moving defenseman with fantastic speed and stickhandling who can play both the body and big minutes. He is a legitimate first-pairing blueliner when paired with the right partner, but can get out of his comfort zone otherwise. Most importantly, he's impressive as hell at just 22-years-old.

What's it going to take to keep Green in red, white and blue for the next few years? Given the team's salary structure - in which Alex Semin will make $4.6 million for each of the next two years - a four-year/$18-million deal should certainly get it done (the benefit of a four-year deal being that at the end thereof, he'd still have another year as an RFA), and if it didn't, I'd start preparing myself to accept the draft pick compensation that would be headed our way when Green leaves town. What do you think?