21 March, 2010


Morning Cup-a-Joe (2/7/07)

cupajoe.jpegLast season, months before any Calder Trophy ceremony, a wise and veteran set of hockey eyes told me that it was imperative that Caps’ management deliver Alexander Ovechkin to the playoffs as soon as humanly possible. As in, in year two of the rebuild. His premise was simple and reasonable: you do not allow 50-goal, glass rattling dynamos to sit as audience to the NHL’s crapshoot postseason. For years. Exiting Verizon Center last night, I thought about my father’s argument of a year ago, and today as then I disagree. But the question is an intriguing one: does Caps’ management have this obligation by virtue merely of Alexander Ovechkin’s once-in-a-generation, never-before-seen-in-D.C. set of gifts, or is the responsibility for earning the postseason more a shared burden, to be earned also on the ice, only through painful lessons like last night’s, by the clearly annointed?
It’s becoming abundantly clear in season two of the Era of Ovechkin that we’ll see no postseason this spring. It’s disappointing, but it’s also ok.
Our first hint that young #8 wasn’t ready for the heavy burden of leading a young roster into the postseason arrived late last summer, when management bypassed his captain’s candidacy in favor of Chris Clark’s. Our second set of evidence arrived at Verizon Center last night, in the game’s waning minutes, with the Caps clinging to a 2-1 lead in a must-win game with the Bs. Under no serious duress in his own end, Ovechkin carelessly sent a clearing attempt into the stands, and his team to shortheanded stress. Moments later, the game was tied, and not long after that, a vital standings point was squandered.
Ovechkin refused to speak with the press afterward, but teammate Brooks Laich did. Good teams, Laich said, clamp down and run out the clock in such situations.
The victory stew, we learned last night, is still marinating.
The tired old refrain of “throw millions at the [losing] problem” was freshly “I told you so-ed” by an MSM usual suspect late last month, and it’s entirely possible that 5 or 6 million more in payroll might have pushed the Caps into eighth in the East this season. But it’s crystal clear who is expected to lead this team in the playoffs, and right now he’s not ready for the duty. Millions more dollars won’t change that.
Particularly painful for Caps’ fans this February is the leadership ascension of that other young phenom from draft class ‘04. Ten games above .500 and in fifth place in the East this morning, the Penguins are being willed into the postseason by the Hart Trophy-lock from Halifax.
An important battle, seemingly, has been lost. The larger war, however, has a lot of fight still to be waged.



7 Comments

  1. Hockey Amor wrote:

    You’re right: it’s OK for Alex not to be ready to lead us at this point in his career. You learn to win by taking some in the chops (like he so obviously did last night).

    7 February, 2007 at 3:50 pm | Permalink
  2. P-Mac wrote:

    Remind me again what “MSM” stands for?

    7 February, 2007 at 5:27 pm | Permalink
  3. pepper wrote:

    I tend to think Ovechkin does need to get a playoff opportunity ASAP, but it probably isn’t the end of the world that its not going to happen in 07.
    I’ll tell you what is though:
    This is really the first sustained slump, and the first outward signs of frustration from Ovie regarding his play and the team’s outlook for the post-season. It will be very interesting to gauge his reaction in the coming months.
    My fear is that he begins to wish that he played for a team with more immediate playoff potential, a storied history, stronger and less fickle fan support, and a brighter spotlight, the latter of which we already know he relishes. And then he makes it as difficult as possible for the Caps to re-sign him.
    If Ovie leaves town as a free agent, restricted or not (and the price to sign him away may be palatable to more than a few teams), that, I think, would spell the end of NHL hockey in Washington.

    7 February, 2007 at 5:58 pm | Permalink
  4. Meza wrote:

    MSM is main stream media

    7 February, 2007 at 6:49 pm | Permalink
  5. TG wrote:

    pepper:
    Or remember that he’s 21, this is the first time he’s gone through a “slump” like this and he’s acting out in frustration. How many players in the NHL would love to have a pointless streak of only three games? And I can remember what an idiot I was at 21 over things that, looking back, were really unimportant. I wouldn’t worry too much about his actions. Unless, of course, they continue for the rest of the season.

    7 February, 2007 at 7:08 pm | Permalink
  6. To be fair, after initially ducking reporters, Ovechkin did come out to answer questions. Check both today’s edition of The Post and The Times for his comments.

    7 February, 2007 at 7:53 pm | Permalink
  7. pepper wrote:

    I realize its a small slump and he’s young. For the same reasons he could act like an “idiot” over the slump, he could overreact by saying he wants out of DC. I’m hoping that’s not true and there’s no indication of it – it was just my gloom and doom mood after another loss perhaps.
    On a brighter note, it appears that, after these last three games, we know that (i) the Caps offense is pretty formidable, at least having the potential to light the lamp 4+ times in a game, and (ii) the Caps can play shut-down smothering defense. What we haven’t seen is the two together. Its some small progress that we’re losing these games 2-0 and 3-2 SO rather than 7-1. (Then again isn’t that what we were saying last season at this time?)

    7 February, 2007 at 9:31 pm | Permalink

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