10 February, 2012


Knee-jerks: @ New York Islanders, 3/10/07

Well, things are getting interesting when the team scores two goals late and it’s nearly a moral victory. The Caps were game, turning in a much better effort than in the previous night, but they couldn’t get through Rick DiPietro until late.
kneejerk
While still a loss, this was easier to take than the game against Carolina.

  • Rick DiPietro had an excellent game, and Brent Johnson looked like he was fighting the puck for much of the night. At one point I thought that Johnson had been injured, getting up slowly after going down to the ice to make a save. He finished the game, so I may have been mistaken, but it wasn’t the most solid performance the big netminder has turned in this season.
  • I loved how physically the Caps played last night. Milan Jurcina, in particular, was clobbering Islander forwards on the boards behind the Caps’ net — and yet was not credited with a hit all night. It’s a column for another day, but the way hits are counted from rink to rink and night to night is baffling. The Caps were only given 7 hits all night (the Isles were given 14).
  • Mike Green also brought the wood, and was credited with 4 hits. Jeff Schultz got into the act as well, which will make fans happy — of course, he wasn’t credited with a hit.
  • Shaone Morrisonn may have had his worst game as a Capital, and that doesn’t include the four minor penalties he took. Looking lost on the power play and making several awful giveaways, he created several Islander scoring chances. I’m not sure if the minutes are getting to Morrisonn, and bad games happen even to the best players, but the Caps depend on Morrisonn, maybe more than any other defenseman, to provide a lot of boring, prosaic, solid defensive minutes, and when that doesn’t happen, the Caps are left scrambling.
  • Brian Pothier continued his struggles, as well.
  • So, Brashear scores, he and Witt face off a bit, Brashear jostles Witt, Witt makes a quick move like he’s going to come after Brashear, which Brashear responds to with a gloved punch, to which Witt responds like he’s been shot and stays on the ice for 15 seconds, and the only penalty out of it is 2 mins to Brashear? Uh . . . right.
  • Great statistic courtesy of Comcast last night — the six blueliners the Caps iced last night had an average age of 23.5 years old. That is incredible, and says a lot about the inconsistencies the Caps still face on the backline.
  • “Tomas Fleischmann has picked up his play as late”, an observer e-mailed me a while ago, and I agree. Fleischmann was creating offense and was noticable in the offensive zone last night. He looks like he’s got more confidence, or is more used to the NHL game now. Fleischmann has a chance to make an impression in these remaining games, and he’s beginning to.

Not great, but anything is better than Friday night’s debacle. We’d like to see the Caps put together a game with consistency from the entire team, but with the youth and inexperience the Caps are icing these days, that may be impossible.



2 Comments

  1. Megan wrote:

    I was glad my tickets to friday’s game were free…it was horrible!!!

    11 March, 2007 at 3:51 pm | Permalink
  2. usiel wrote:

    Flash is not getting any points yet (and that is always the bottom line) but I agree that that was his best game so far.

    11 March, 2007 at 11:48 pm | Permalink

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