Game Preview: Capitals Continue Western Road Trip Against Avalanche


The
Washington Capitals are in desperation mode right now. Points are slipping away and the margin between the final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference continues to expand. The Capitals, who are in the mindset of a four-game road trip, are coming off two lifeless losses against the St. Louis Blues and the Minnesota Wild and have now dropped their last three road contests. 

The Caps were shutout 3-0 against St. Louis and then fell to the Wild, 5-3, on Tuesday. Two games where the Capitals were once again struggling to generate offense at five-on-five.

Now Washington will have to face one of the top teams in the league in the Colorado Avalanche in the second half of a back-to-back. Wednesday’s matchup is one of the biggest tests of the campaign for the Caps. 

“I genuinely believe in our leadership and they know we’re in playoff mode right now,” Capitals head coach Spencer Carbery said following Tuesday’s loss. “Our season and how tight and all that stuff, if we are being realistic about playing into April and May, like this is going to be the chunk that decides our season. And they’re challenging games against real good hockey teams and tomorrow is probably as difficult as the test gets but that’s where we have to prove that we belong and we’re capable of playing past the regular season.”

The Capitals are three points out of the second Wild Card spot with two games in hand on the Detroit Red Wings. They are in a dogfight with the Pittsburgh Penguins, New Jersey Devils and the New York Islanders for that final playoff spot. 

Prior to Tuesday’s game, T.J. Oshie mentioned that the Capitals needed to simplify their game, by just simply getting pucks on net and getting bodies in front of the net. Washington outshot Minnesota 33-30 and had 10 high-danger scoring chances at five-on-five, but Filip Gustavsson stood tall in the crease. 

“We’re kind of trying to create plays that aren’t really there and creating too many turnovers against and it’s costing us right now,” Anthony Mantha, who had two goals for Washington, said.  “I think we knew we had to step up today and unfortunately we didn’t really do it. The good news is we get 20 hours [off] and we’re back at it.”

The Caps have surrendered the game’s first goal in five out of their last seven games and are 9-14-4 when allowing the first goal. Starts have not been the cleanest for the Caps and have failed to set the tone early in games. They succumbed to the Minnesota forecheck throughout the game and struggled to evade the pressure. 

“The start puts us in a really really difficult spot as a group and just those top two lines, especially that top line, we got outmatched a little bit there with their skating and their speed with [Kirill Kaprizov’s line],” Carbery said. “They make elite plays and now next thing you know you’re chasing the game… We’ve talked about that all year. It’s really important for us being a low scoring team and a team that doesn’t score a bunch of five-on-five [goals] that puts us in a really difficult spot right out of the gate.”

Scouting Colorado

The Avalanche (30-14-3) are coming off a 7-4 win against the Philadelphia Flyers, which was the final game of a five-game road trip. Colorado is 7-3-0 in its last 10 games and is currently sitting in second in the Central Division.

Nathan MacKinnnon is having an MVP caliber season ranking second in the NHL with 77 points (26 goals, 51 assists) in 47 games and had four points (two goals, two assists) against the Flyers. MacKinnon also has 10 points (four goals, six assists) in his last five games and is on an 11-game point streak. 

Mikko Rantanen is tied with MacKinnon for the team lead in goals (26) and is also having another terrific season. He leads the team with 10 power-play goals. 

Colorado boasts the second-best offense in the NHL, scoring 3.77 goals per game while also having the seventh best power play in the league, operating at 25%. 

Player To Watch

Cale Makar is on a four-game point streak with six points, and has 54 points (10 goals, 44 assists) which is second among NHL defensemen. 

Puck drop is slated for 9:30 p.m. EST at Ball Arena. The game can be streamed on Monumental Sports Network. 

By Jacob Cheris

About Jon Sorensen

Jon has been a Caps fan since day one, attending his first game at the Capital Centre in 1974. His interest in the Caps has grown over the decades and included time as a season ticket holder. He has been a journalist covering the team for 10+ years, primarily focusing on analysis, analytics and prospect development.
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8 Responses to Game Preview: Capitals Continue Western Road Trip Against Avalanche

  1. Perp says:

    Put Kuemper in and call it a season.

    • Anonymous says:

      There are some good defensemen in the up coming draft. I’d like to see MacLellan go for quality over quantity, this time around. The Caps probably won’t finish in the Top 5 draft order, so trade some picks and/or players, move into the Top 5, and draft Artyom Levshunov. There’s a 6’7″ Russian kid too, but he’s too raw to draft too high. Maybe about 10th, or so.

  2. Jon Sorensen says:

    • novafyre says:

      What the Rays don’t say is that both were Stingrays players AND head coaches.

      Bednar joined the Stingrays halfway through the 1995–96 season, posting 24 points and 126 penalty minutes in his first 39 games. From 1995 to 1998, he played mostly with the Stingrays, with small stints in the AHL with the St. John’s Maple Leafs and Rochester Americans. He took the Stingrays to the Kelly Cup playoffs for both of his seasons as head coach. In the 2007–08 season, the Stingrays lost 4–1 to the Cincinnati Cyclones. The next year they swept Cincinnati 4–0 in the conference finals and won the Kelly Cup on the road in a 4–3 series with the Alaska Aces.

      Carbery joined the Stingrays in 2008-2009 scoring 29 points (12 goals, 7 assists) over 39 games. Carbery’s playoff action with the Stingrays culminated in 5 goals, 8 assists, and a Kelly Cup championship. On August 31, 2010, Carbery announced his retirement from pro hockey and was named the Stingrays’ assistant coach. He served as assistant coach for the 2010–11 season, helping lead the team to a 37–29–3–3 regular season record and an appearance in the 2011 Kelly Cup playoffs. After head coach Cail MacLean resigned in July 2011, Carbery was named the team’s sixth head coach and director of hockey operations. At the age of 29, he was the youngest head coach in the ECHL at the time.

  3. Anonymous says:

    i hope they can get a haul for Dowd and Mantha.

  4. Anonymous says:

    That was really the spirt last night, maybe the spirt can carry us again tonight! Yay spirit!

  5. Anonymous says:

    hard to imagine they’ll win 2 of the next 7 games….

  6. Prevent Defense says:

    He’s a good “Company Man”, the Carberator. I wonder if Spencer Carbery knows what is happening to him

    Carbery is being Hung Out To Dry. By his GM and the rest of Caps Brass. Whether it’s intentional or not. I’ve watched Carberator closely, listened to all of his press conferences. PD’s opinion is that Carbs is a great hockey mind and a future star coach in the NHL. But not now!

    All these absurd Wish-this and Wish-that situations — They make him look bad. Yet the GM-level isn’t doing a thing to help him. Hershey is standing-pat with their lineup to rack up yet another massively winning season (they will be 32-7 soon). That whole roster full of elegant talent in Hershey, and Carberator can’t have any of it!

    He wishes: That Kuznetsov will find his game
    He wishes: That the NHL’s poorest blueline will “Figure it out” under the brilliant tutelage of Mitch Love Boy
    He wishes: That Ovi’s shots will start “going in”
    He wishes: That the Random Line Generator will generate some offense
    He wishes: That the Caps’ disaster season will witness a MIRACLE turnaround

    While Carberator is Wishing Away, GM Helmer keeps the Caps best prospects in Hershey. GM BM lifts not ONE FINGER to relieve the Caps roster disaster, both forwards and defensemen. The rest of the NHL’s GMs are frantically upping their rosters, firing deadbeat coaches and promoting minor league phenoms … while GM Helmer and GM Mac prepare Carberator’s Coffin

    Carbs stands a REAL good chance of being sacked — soon — as the Caps $ukk their way to another playoff miss

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