Caps Blue Line » Boston Bruins

3/17, 1:09 AM - Capitals over Bruins in shootout, 2-1

Capitals 2, Bruins 1 (SO)

Don’t look now Caps fans, but with their third consecutive win the boys in red, white and blue are just two points behind the Philadelphia Flyers for the eighth seed and final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference after a shootout victory over the Boston Bruins on Sunday.

While at this point the team (and its fans) will take a two point night just about any way they can get one, the Capitals showed cause for concern on two fronts. One was their inability to take over the game physically. The Capitals are one of the biggest teams in the NHL (despite that they seem to have a tendency to exaggerate their player’s size), have a myriad of skilled players and were playing at home against a Bruins team that had played an overtime game less than 24 hours earlier. Simply put, the third period should have belonged to the Capitals, yet the Bruins got the better of the shot count, putting up 17 to the Capitals’ nine.

The reasons were twofold. The Capitals were partly outshot and outchanced in the game’s second half because they were too tentative, a fact noted by Bruce Boudreau, who said of his team’s play, “It looked like we were afraid to make a mistake instead of, ‘Let’s go get them,’ and play the way we can.” In addition to being tentative the Capitals were also stymied by a relatively simple (and extremely boring conservative) Boston defensive strategy. The Capitals have too much speed, too much skill and too much size to allow themselves to be contained by a team just dropping players back into the neutral zone.

But why dwell on the negatives, especially when they don’t exactly set off any alarms? The Capitals did play pretty well, Alexander Semin and Cristobal Huet both looked great and the team showed not just how good they are, but how mentally tough they are as well, picking up three wins in a row after last weekend’s heartbreaking losses. The important of the confidence (and the points) the Caps picked up in their last three games cannot be overestimated.

DMG’s 3 Stars
(1) Cristobal Huet - 39 saves on 40 shots (.975 save percentage); 2-for-2 in the shootout
(2) Sergei Fedorov - 1 goal, 12-20 (60%) on faceoffs
(3) Alexander Semin

Quotable

“Like I always said, coaches hate the shootout when you lose, and it’s okay when you win”

-Bruce Boudreau

Quick Hits

  • I’m starting to wonder if Alex Semin and Nicklas Backstrom switched brains - now it seems like Semin is passing up good shooting chances to try and dish to someone else and Backstrom is stickhandling a bit too much, especially crossing the blue line.
  • Not that I think it’s going on, or even that it’s really possible, but if you wanted to try and convince people there was a Juventus-style match fixing thing going on between the Bruins and the NHL officials, you’d probably be able to throw together a lot of evidence from the last two Washington/Boston games.
  • To their credit, the Caps did come out throwing the body around. The team was credit with 20 hits and seven players (Alex Ovechkin, Matt Bradley, Donald Brashear, Brooks Laich, Matt Cooke, Shaone Morrisonn and Sami Lepisto) had more than one. Morrisonn’s four set the pace.
  • Because there were only two goals in the game and both were on the powerplay, every player in the game was an even +/-.

All photos AP/Getty by way of Yahoo!

3/8, 4:02 PM - Caps lose to Bruins 2-1

Capitals 1, Bruins 2

Anyone know any Bruins fans? And if so, care to ask them what the going rate is for a referee these days?

If the Capitals miss the playoffs this year there will plenty of people who are scapegoated. Glen Hanlon, for the way the team started the season. Olaf Kolzig for his prolonged slump and for failing to live up to the standards his better years have set. Karma for the injuries to Chris Clark and Alexander Semin. George McPhee and Ted Leonsis because…well there’s always someone who tries to blame it on them. But if the Capitals miss qualifying for the playoffs by just a point or two, there are two more names to remember: Chris Rooney and Rob Martell.

As a hockey fan, coach or player you have to accept that referees aren’t perfect; refs who are too lenient or too harsh are just a fact of life. Inconsistency is harder to swallow but it too is just a fact of life, as the reality is that the game moves incredibly fast, especially at the NHL level, and two pairs of eyes aren’t going to catch everything. But to intimidated as a referee, which is seemed pretty clear Martell and Rooney were in Saturday’s game.

They looked intimidated by the crowd at the game’s outset, and in the game’s opening six or seven minutes they missed a hit from behind on Mike Green, a hit up high on Green when he didn’t have the puck, an interference call where Zdeno Chara played Alex Ovechkin instead of the puck and a play when a Bruins player had Nicklas Backstrom bent over the Bruins bench and gave him several punches to the back of the head. To let those penalties go and then call Tom Poti for knocking the net off when it wasn’t clearly intentional doesn’t make any sense to me.

Later the duo looked intimidated by the fact that one of the league’s star players had just been hit hard, calling a cheap penalty on the Bruins after Shane Hnidy got in a solid check on Alexander Ovechkin.

They looked intimidated by the crowd, Matt Cooke’s reputation, the sight of Bruins’ Bobby Allen defenseman laying on the ice and the fear that they would be perceived as not taking enough action and gave Cooke the gate for what should have been a minor penalty.

Again bowing to the mercy of the crowd, there was no call on Hnidy for going up high on Brashear late in the game.

Yet again bowing to the crowd (and perhaps player reputation), the referees called John Erskine for a hook when a Bruins player lost his balance. Either that or “being in he vicinity of a falling player” is a two minute minor these days.

At least they got those minors on Nicklas Backstrom and Chara as time expired though. That’ll sure show the boys!

This is not to say the Capitals didn’t screw up late in the game. Brashear’s four minutes for high-sticking were bad and although Hnidy should have been called for roughing or unsportsmanlike conduct, Brashear should have known better than to take a swing at Hnidy…no matter how much the B’s defenseman deserved it. Similarly Tom Poti’s two-time two-hander to break a Bruins player’s stick was an unacceptable penalty to take. It’s telling when it’s a tied game, with less than two minutes left and the two players sitting in the box are two of the wearing ‘A’’s.

The Caps got some boneheaded plays out of guys who were supposed to be their leaders, but I still think the referees who were more concerned with pandering to the crowd or to the league office were the ones who made the difference in this one.

Quick Hits

  • During the first intermission the Bruins asked Milan Jurcina what I think is a very pertinent question for Capitals fans: “You concerned at all Ovechkin, in a goal celebration, will hurt himself or one of his teammates?”
  • It’s funny to watch games broadcast by the opposition - right before the Capitals first goal the Bruins commentators were saying that the Bruins had done a great job generating momentum to start the game. When the Capitals scored their first goal, they had six shots and the Bruins had none. The Capitals would go on to register nine shots before Boston puck a puck on Cristobal Huet. Also becuase you get to hear things like ‘If I can just do the math quickly in my head, the Bruins have outshot the Capitals 13-4 in this period’ followed by, ‘Just to show you how good I am at quick math - the Bruins outshot Washington 10-9 in that period’.

3/8, 6:00 AM Caps Gameday - Caps/Bruins Preview

Boston Bruins at Washington Capitals
Saturday, March 8th, 2008, 1:00 PM
TD Banknorth Garden in Boston, Massachusetts

TV: CSN
Last Meeting: 3/3/2008, Caps win 10-2.

Just five days after being embarrassed by the Capitals 10-2 on the Verizon Center’s ice the Bruins will do their best to return the favor in Boston, as the Capitals try to keep pace with the Carolina Hurricanes in a Saturday matinée match up.

One quick note before I get to the gameday preview: James Mirtle has a great piece up on his blog about Olaf Kolzig that I’d encourage any Caps fan to read.

About the Opponent

Boston Bruins: 35-25-7, 77 points, 3rd in the Northeast Division, 7th in the Eastern Conference.

Team Leaders
Goals: Marco Sturm (23)
Assists: Marc Savard (60)
Points: Marc Savard (74)
Plus/Minus: tie - Dennis Wideman and Zdeno Chára (+11)
Penalty Minutes: Zdeno Chára (108)
Fights: Milan Lucic (12)

Random Bruins Fact
Former Bruins center Phil Esposito was the first player in NHL history to score 100 points in a season.

Random Bruins Statistic
In the 1970-71 season Bobby Orr had a plus/minus rating of +124.

Keys to the Game

Washington
Score first and score early. The Bruins have lost their last three games, giving up a combined 19 goals, including 10 to the Capitals on Tuesday. If the Capitals get a couple early on it might be hard for the Bruins to avoid a ‘here we go again’ feeling.

Bruins
Score first. With the Bruins having the difficulty they have had on defense recently and the 10 goal night the Capitals posted against them earlier this week the team that scores the first goal is going to have a huge advantage in this one.

Players to Watch

Washington
Boyd Gordon - David Steckel’s injury is going to hurt the Capitals more than a lot of people might realize. Bruce Boudreau and the Caps will turn to Gordon to pick up some of the slack both in the faceoff circle on the penalty kill until Steckel can return.

Bruins
Tim Thomas - The Bruins all-star netminder is 0-2-0 with a .744 save percentage and a 10.54 goals against average.

3/4, 6:30 AM - Bruins/Capitals Recap

Capitals 10, Bruins 2

In my original pregame post for last night’s game between the Capitals and Bruins my original ‘Key to the Game’ for Boston was “Pray. The Capitals will be fuming after their loss to Toronto, playing Boudreau’s aggressive system to ‘T’ and having acclimated their new players it’s going to be a challenge for Boston to slow the Caps down, let alone stop them”, but I discarded it thinking that it was too presumptuous (and out of fear of ending up looking stupid). Turns out I probably would have been right as the Capitals were ready from the opening faceoffs, racking up four goals before the Bruins tallied their second shot and finishing the first period with as many goals (six) as the Bruins had shots.*

Like everything else going on with the Capitals, it would be impossible to extradite this game from the team’s current goaltending situation. I think you’d be a little off base to say the Capitals potted ten goals because Cristobal Huet was in net but I think there has been a pronounced difference in the way the rest of the team played in the games Huet started compared with the ones Olaf Kolzig has started. The cause is most likely rebound control - it’s been a problem for Kolzig all season and it’s a strength of Huet’s game and so far it has looked like the team is much more confident with Huet in net, whereas with Kolzig they seem to feel the need to collapse around the net to try and protect against second chances. With Huet in net it looks like the team is able to get out of the zone a step quicker, a major advantage when you’re trying to play up-tempo and control the play, the way Bruce Boudreau wants. Nothing’s definite yet, but it’s just a little something to chew on.

DMG’s 3 Stars
(1) Alex Ovechkin - 3 goals, 2 assists, +3. And the chase for 60 is back on.
(2) Nicklas Backstrom - 1 goal, 3 assists, +3
(3a) Matt Bradley - 2 goals, 1 assist, +1
(3b) Brooks Laich - 2 goals
(3c) Matt Cooke - 1 goal, 2 assists, +2
(3d) Eric Fehr - 3 assists, +1
(3e) Donald Brashear - 1 goal, 2 fights, +1

Quick Hits

  • Fight fans would have to have been licking their chops at the prospect of a Donald Brashear/Zdeno Chara scrap, but man it could not have been more disappointing.
  • Domination is four goals when your opponent only has one shot.
  • The pass/tip in for Ovechkin’s fourth goal was absolutely perfect - it couldn’t have been drawn up any better.
  • One thought on Mike Green’s board on Chara - that’s getting your two minutes worth.
  • Only two Capitals players (Milan Jurcina and Sergei Fedorov) didn’t have at least one point.
  • With his three assists Eric Fehr more than doubled his NHL assist total and increased his NHL point total 60%.
  • I’ve ripped on them enough this season so credit where credit’s due - the referees did a good job of keeping this game under control, without getting ridiculous.

*The official scoring changed after I wrote this, giving Boston credit for eight shots in the first.

All photos AP/Getty by way of Yahoo!

3/3, 6:30 AM - Bruins/Capitals Preview

Boston Bruins at Washington Capitals
Monday, March 3rd, 2008, 7:00 PM
Verizon Center in Washington, D.C.

TV: Versus
Last Meeting: 1/3/2008, Caps lose 2-0

About the Opponent

Boston Bruins: 35-23-6, 76 points, 3rd in the Northeast Division, 6th in the Eastern Conference.

Team Leaders
Goals: Marco Sturm (22)
Assists: Marc Savard (59)
Points: Marc Savard (73)
Plus/Minus: P.J. Axelsson (+14)
Penalty Minutes: Zdeno Chára (97)
Fights: Milan Lucic (12)

Random Bruins Fact
Bruins defenseman Zdeno Chára was part of one of the most lopsided trades in NHL history when he and Bill Muckalt were traded, along with the draft pick that would become Jason Spezza, by the New York Islanders to the Ottawa Senators for Alexei Yashin.

Random Bruins Statistic

Keys to the Game

Washington
Grind it out. When the Capitals expect the skill of guys like Alex Ovechkin, Alex Semin and Nicklas Backstom to win the game for them they don’t generate enough pressure to pick up wins; when the team plays as grinders they’re damn near unstoppable. All the players have to be willing to grind it out and “get dirty” as Bruce Boudreau would say to beat the Bruins.

Bruins
Keep the pace of the game slow. Bruce Boudreau will have undoubtedly been pushing his manta of controlling the play and putting pressure on the other team. If the Bruins can keep the puck away from the Capitals, limit chances and get a lot of whistles they’ll have an easier time keeping the Capitals energy level down.

Players to Watch

Washington
Matt Cooke - Cooke didn’t do a whole lot in his Capitals debut but he could prove valuable here. The Bruins style is based on discipline and limiting their opponents chances, so if Cooke can use his agitating skills to draw a powerplay or two it could throw Boston out of whack.

Bruins
Marc Savard - he leads the entire league in assists and just like Joe Thornton and Sidney Crosby he makes his teammates better. A lot better. That means the Capitals need to be aware any time Savard has the puck, no matter where he is on the ice.

Around the (Inter)net
Ted Leonsis deals with more stupid people on a daily basis than most of us encounter in a year…Don Cherry reiterates what a fan of Boudreau he is…Unable to make up rumors about Alex Ovechkin any more, Bruce Garrioch has turned his attention to George McPheeCory Masiask recently caught up with Bengt Gustafsson…a sensible approach to getting the NHL more television coverage…a little bit on the Minnesota Wild and their approach to the no-trade clause.

Bruins/Capitals Recap

Capitals 0, Bruins 2

In what comes as a shock to almost no one, the Capitals, missing Alexander Semin, Chris Clark and Tom Poti, playing one of the league’s better defensive teams and Donald Brashear on the second line, struggled to put the puck in the net. In a surprise to anyone who’s ever watched a hockey game, it is no longer an interference penalty to push a player without the puck into his own goaltender, causing the goaltender to be knocked onto the ice out of position.

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I have two theories as to why Chuck Kobasew wasn’t called for interference for knocking Jeff Schultz into Olaf Kolzig and knocking Kolzig over in the process. One is that the referees were so overwhelmed by the two penalties committed by Kobasew on the play (and the borderline “player-in-the-crease” call) that they stood shell-shocked, unable to raise their arms. The other is that this is now a legal play, another hare-brained attempt by Gary Bettman to raise scoring in the league by letting players shoot at an open net, an idea only slightly worse than the trapezoid and the delay of game call for shooting the puck over the glass in the defensive zone.

As a preemptive measure to criticism I’m sure is to come I’d like to point out that the Capitals did not have a terrible night offensively. They had 31 shots, a number of good chances and moved the puck well. They hit the post at least three times, meaning they were less than six collective inches from winning the game. That said, they still should have done a better job of finishing and not let themselves get shutout by Tim Thomas who, to his credit, did have a very good game in net for the Bruins.

It’s hard to remember sometimes under Boudreau, but even the best teams lose games.

Quick Hits

  • I don’t think there’s any way to make it through this without mentioning Joe Beninati’s bright blue suit and tie combination. Been taking style advice from Bruce Boudreau and Don Cherry have we, Joe?
  • Craig Laughlin - Randy Jones was suspended three games for his hit from behind on Bergeron, he didn’t get off scot-free. Research, guys!
  • Comcast Sportnet - who the heck is Mike DiPietro?
  • Kolzig’s first period was a good a period as any he’s had this year.
  • Not only is Milan Lucic an exciting young prospect, he’s also a heck of a nice guy. I mean you have to be pretty generous to let John Erskine use your face as a punching bag, right?
  • Apparently Brian Pothier is hurt again. Eminger? Please?

Bruins/Capitals Preview

Washington Capitals at Boston Bruins
Thursday January 3rd, 2008, 7:00 PM
TD Banknorth Garden in Boston, Massachusetts

Coming off a home and home sweep of the Ottawa Senators that could be deemed “improbable” the Capitals embark on a two-game road trip in Boston tonight, facing a Bruins team with a decent record due to Marc Savard’s playmaking savvy, Tim Thomas playing beyond his ability and Zdeno Chara’s ability to (1) stymie top opposition forwards, (2) rip the puck from the point and (3) beat the crap out of some guy named Dave Koci. Beyond that the B’s haven’t impressed too much this year and the team ranks 20th in goals scored per game and 17th in goal differential - and this is with a guy with a career .913 save percentage playing to the tune of .929 so far. Make no mistake about it, without Thomas playing the way he has the Bruins aren’t over .500 at this point. The team doesn’t have great offensive depth and isn’t a tight checking team in the mold of Minnesota or New Jersey either. Frankly, they’re mediocre and Thomas will come back to earth soon enough - why not against the Capitals?

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About the Opponent

Boston Bruins (19-16-4 42 points, 3rd in the Northeast Division, 9th in the Eastern Conference)

Team Leaders
Goals: Chuck Kobasew (14)
Assists: Marc Savard (34)
Points: Marc Savard (42)
Penalty Minutes: Zdeno Chara (69)

Betcha Didn’t Know…
The Capitals have outdrawn the Bruins in terms of home attendance six of the last ten years.

Random Bruins Statistic
The Bruins are ranked 25th in the NHL in shots taken per game and 26th in shots allowed per game.

Keys to the Game

Washington
Stay out of the box. The Bruins are not a strong offensive team - they rank 20th in goals per game, 25th in shots per game and behind Marc Savard their leading point producers are Zdeno Chara and Marco Sturm, who each have 23 points (in 39 and 38 games, respectively) - but they are 7th in the league with a powerplay that clicks at a 20.3% rate.

Boston
Move the puck. As has been painfully obvious to Capitals fans, Olaf Kolzig no longer has very good lateral movement; the Bruins have several players who are good at moving the puck and their defensive corps can shoot, giving them lots of options. If the Bruins can move the puck and get it on net, they’re odds of scoring go way up, because there isn’t a whole lot of sniping talent on this roster.

Players to Watch

Washington
Viktor Kozlov - Kozlov has struggled to put the puck in the net this season. Hopefully his goal against Ottawa opens the floodgates. The Caps could use one from him, as Tom Poti is going to miss the game, Alex Semin is questionable and Ovechkin could have his hands full with Zdeno Chara all night.

Boston
Milan Lucic - Some Boston fans have proclaimed the 6′4”, 220 pound Lucic the second coming of Cam Neely for his size, scoring touch, hitting strength and willingness to drop the gloves. While Lucic doesn’t have Neely’s hands (he’ll never score 50 goals in 49 games) he is a great power forward prospect with solid offense upside who should wind up being like Chris Neil with more offensive talent. Although Lucic’s offensive skill isn’t at the point where the Caps have to gameplan for him he could change the game with a big hit or fight…but honestly the real reason he’s on here is is that I think he’s real fun to watch and want to alert other Caps fans to him.

Zdeno Chara - For all his talents Chara is neither particularly swift nor particularly agile - can he keep up with Ovechkin?

Prediction:
The Bruins aren’t as talented as the Caps and with the Capitals playing how they are right now they should roll over the B’s. Not even Tim Thomas can save you now, Beantown faithful. Caps win 5-2.

Caps Video Clips

Remember how good Alex Semin can be?

Remember when Stephen Peat and P.J. Stock fought one Saturday afternoon in Boston? To this day, I think it’s the best fight I’ve ever seen.

Remember that time the Capitals got into the big ol’ brawl with the Bruins and Olaf Kolzig fought former teammate and best man at his wedding, Byron Dafoe?

Well, here’s part 1:

And part 2:

and you didn’t think I’d forget this one, did you?

and of course Ovechkin’s game isn’t all skill:

Ovechkin videos come from www.ovechkinfans.com

The Flyers Strike Agan

Another dirty hit from a Flyers player:

Generally I am adamantly opposed to fining coaches or franchises for the actions of their players on the ice, but the Flyers have gotten so out of control I think it would be appropriate.

Say a Prayer for Patrice Bergeron

The criminal element that is the Philadelphia Flyers has struck again; this time it was Randy Jones hitting Boston’s Patrice Bergeron from behind, into the boards. Bergeron appeared to be knocked out and was taken off the ice on a stretcher after being immobilized. Jones was given a 5 minutes major for boarding and a game misconduct.

There’s not much commentary for something like this, just that this is third time a Flyer has seriously injured another player by taking a run at them and delivering a deliberate cheap shot and at this point this league out to start consider fining the organization or coach.

Previous Flyers cheapshots from this season for anyone who hasn’t seen them or doesn’t remember: