
There will be many excuses, I imagine -- the dreaded first game back from a road trip, the team is exhausted, the team is playing hurt etc. etc., but what it boils down to is an awful effort from the Caps, whatever the excuse. This lackadaisical effort wasted excellent goaltending from Olaf Kolzig, and the Caps enter the All-Star break being outshot 42 - 18. While quality of shot-count can be debated (mostly academically), the quality of the shots today can't -- far too many came from in close, requiring Kolzig to be at the top of his game.
- The Caps' best defenseman for the game, Steve Eminger, also committed the worst offense, with a turnover at in the defensive zone that Florida converted.
- Mike Green may be hobbled, but if that was the reason for his play today, he should have sat. Maybe his worst game as a Cap, particularly in front of Kolzig. Jamie Heward, Lawrence Nycholat and Jeff Schultz all were sub-par, as well. Shaone Morrisonn had an average game, but that nearly qualified as the best for the blueliners.
- It may be a bit ironic, considering he scored the Caps' only goal (though Belfour is actually the guy who scored it), but the Caps need to try the 1st line power play without Zubrus. He works best with the puck on his stick, but is having trouble doing that in the PP offensive zone. The Caps don't have a lot of options there, but they might want to take a look. Today's game again reminded me that the PP's struggles are due to a lack of talent, not coaching.
- Bleh.
- Nathan Horton, if he can dodge the injury concerns he has gone through, is going to be a player. Surprisingly soft hands, and a nose for the net.
I'll quit now while I'm behind. Bad game, bad effort, bad way to go into the All-Star break. And then we'll get the bad All-Star uniforms. Maybe the break will help the Caps, let them heal up, chill out, and re-dedicate.
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