After practice Wednesday Glen Hanlon†addressed the impact he believes his new high-priced free agent forwards will have on his team’s shootout prospects†this season. On paper, it would appear to be a dramatic one. When you visit NHL.com’s stats page for shootouts from last season, you notice both Michael Nylander and Viktor Kozlov’s names on the first page of success. Through two seasons of shootout tally stats, that’s not a perch in which you’ve commonly found Caps.
It’s hard to imagine a team being worse in the shootout than the Caps were last season — they took 40 shootout shots and converted a grand total of 5 of them (that’s 12.5 percent) — but there actually was one, Carolina. The Hurricanes,†however, only took 17 extra-extra session shots in 2006-07 (scoring on just one! Ouch!!).†
In shootouts, the Caps aren’t even Shaq at the free throw line.
Here’s how bad things shootout got for Glen Hanlon last season: on March 1, in a 10-rounder against Tampa at Verizon Center, the coach even had Ben Clymer, Matt Bradley, and Donald Brashear rush in from the red line. (All three missed of course. All 10 Caps’ shooters missed that night, if memory serves.)†I was inside Verizon Center that night, and I left thinking I’d have to return with my gear bag when covering future games in case Hanlon wanted to summon me for shootout duty.
Whatever your views on the†appropriateness of the shootout as a game-settler, they’re here to stay for the foreseeable future, and†for most teams they determine an important number of standings points over the course of the season. It’s hard to fathom the Caps remaining grotesque in them this season and qualifying for the postseason.
The addition of a single quality shooter in the shootout lineup can make a world of difference, but it would appear that Hanlon will be adding two this season. Both Nylander and Kozlov converted just under 40 percent in the shootout a season ago. On a team of 10-percenters (and often worse), that’s a revolutionary success rate. In his remarks Wednesday,†Hanlon indicated that for now, both newcomers would be penciled in for shootouts at season’s start.†
Which sets up an intriguing bit of personnel exclusion: in such a rotation one of the†Alexanders necessarily would be excluded. Or . . . would both? Neither player — especially Ovechkin all last season long — looked particularly comfortable during shootouts, and after his dynamic success in them in the opening weeks†of his NHL career in 2005-06, Ovechkin has been snakebit, stymied,†and stoned, stoned, stoned†ever since by all caliber of NHL netminder.
Hanlon on Wednesday actually acknowledged the novelty of sitting his magic-hands set of Russians during the team’s shootouts.
“Can you imagine if we had 15,000 in the seats and I sat those guys?”
He then suggested something about his fate involving a noose or a burning at a stake, I think. Even more interesting, according to the coach, is that apparently one of his most impressive performers in shootout-like drills in practice is defenseman Jeff Schultz. I don’t think we’re going to see him in the coach’s top 3†very often early on this season.
But if the shootout struggles continue, you never know.††††††
Contents
-
Translate
Site Admin
RSS
Facebook
Archives
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
- April 2008
- March 2008
- February 2008
- January 2008
- December 2007
- November 2007
- October 2007
- September 2007
- August 2007
- July 2007
- June 2007
- May 2007
- April 2007
- March 2007
- February 2007
- January 2007
- December 2006
- November 2006
- October 2006
Caps Links
- Adventures of a Hockey n00b
- Alex Ovetjkin
- Bears Bites and Insights
- Behind the Goal Line
- Bruce's Nooses
- Capital Letter
- Capitals Insider
- Capitals Kremlin
- Capitals News Network
- Capitals Outsider
- Caps Girl
- Caps in Pictures
- Caps Official Site
- Caps Snaps
- Caps Today
- Chirps From The Ledge
- Clydeorama's Puck Pics
- CSN Caps Page
- D.C. Sports Bog
- DC Optimist
- DC Pro Sports Report
- Dump 'n' Chase
- Fight For Old DC
- Flashy Glove Save
- Hershey to DC Hockey
- Hockey Night in Baltimore
- Homer McFanboy
- Ice Pact
- In The Room
- Japers’ Rink
- Joe Beninati’s Blog
- John Walton Hockey
- KG's District
- Kings of Leonsis
- Live In Red
- Love the Game …
- Lovey Land
- Monumental Report
- Musings of a Hockey Mom
- Net Asset
- Net Asset
- Off Wing Opinion
- Pass Shoot Score
- Peerless Prognosticator
- PennLive.com’s Hershey Blog
- Puck Buddys
- Puckhead’s Thoughts
- Punch in the Face
- Rink Rebel
- Rock the Red.net
- Russian Machine Never Breaks
- Sick, Unbelievable
- Simply Sensational!
- Singing From The Crease
- Stackthe Pads
- Storming the Crease
- Talk Hockey To Me
- Ted’s Take
- The Blonde Girl's Guide…
- The Hogs.net
- Thoughts on Goal
- Tic Tac Toe Hockey
- Two Minutes for Blogging
- WNST Ed Frankovic
Favourite Reads
General NHL
- A Theory of Ice
- All Things Hockey
- Bangin Panger
- Barry Melrose Rocks
- Brochu is Hockey
- Curl and Drag
- Fanhouse
- Forum Ice
- Goon Blog
- Greatest Hockey Legends
- Hockey Against Hate
- Hockey Blog in Canada
- Hockey Debates
- Hockey Fights
- Hockey Independent
- Hockey Leaks
- Hockey Primetime
- Hockey Week in Review
- HockeyAnalysis.com
- HockeyBarn.com
- HockeyNation
- icethetics
- IllegalCurve.com
- Mike Chen’s Hockey Blog
- NHL Arena
- NHL Digest
- NHL Hot Stove
- Puck Stops Here, The
- Puck The Media
- PuckUpdate
- Sports Jerseys Canada Blog
- The Strangest One Of All
- Toe Drag
NHL Atlantic
NHL Central
NHL Northeast
NHL Northwest
NHL Pacific
NHL Southeast
Other
Yardbarker
Categories
-


7 Comments
Everyone rags on OV for being bad int he shootout, but lets not forget he was on fire int he shootout in his rookie season.
Strikeman – I think Pucks did a good job of describing Ovechkin’s shooutout success to date over 2 seasons; he started strong in 05-06, but then as Pucks put it has been “…snakebit, stymied, and stoned…” And I am not going into the details to rag on AO, just pointing out the facts.
Based on my notes, he took 13 shootout attempts in 05-06, he was successful on 5 of his first 6 attempts; after that he went 1 for 7.
Oh and about the shooutouts in the context that they exist, agree it will be great if the additions of Kozlov and Nylander (who have had success in SOs) to the top 3 shooters turns some of those SOLs into SOWs. As an organization, Bears and Capitals, shootouts have been painful to watch these last 2 seasons. Regulation wins and not having to watch a SO, even better.
I’ve been watching a lot of Nylander the last two seasons (living in NYC, Rangers hockey beats no hockey), and I have to say he does have good hands for it. He also provides something that I think is underappreciated: shootout leadership. During the big Shootout Controversy of 2006-07 (brought to you by the OMGNEWYORKMEDIA!) when Jagr was trying to sit out every shootout the Rangers went to, Nylander was as much an apparent inspiration to the guys on the shootouts, especially the longer ones, as Shanahan was during regulation. He was usually one of the first giving a guy a high-five or a pat on the shoulder on the way out or back from the red line.
I think the Caps last year were looking at the SO as way more of an individual drill than a team exercise, so having Nylander here should improve everyone’s success a little, and his hands are going to bump us over into the W column by themselves a few times this season, I suspect.
What a fascinating perspective, Kurt! Thank you for sharing it.
sk84fun_dc, point taken. I wasnt saying that the post was being negative about OV. I just meant the fans in general. Regardless if OV hasnt scored in the shootout recently, I still want him out there.
Hell I think OT should be 10 minutes without the SO. 10 minutes of 4on4 someone is bound to score.
Regardless if you (us) like the SO or not, the fans are definitely into it (at least the ones at the arena). When it is SO time, there is a significant buzz in the arena.
Personally, I think they should go 5 skaters a side instead of three. One, it draws it out a little more for the fans and two, it gives the fan a chance to see the players showcase their skill/creativity on a one v one. I am sure the goalies would disagree though.
Post a Comment