. Speaking of Backstrom, he is irrefutably gaining comfort on the North American-sized sheet of ice — making progress “on a daily basis,” to quote my friend Mike Vogel. At the World Championships in Moscow in May, former Cap and Swedish National Team Head Coach Bengt Gustafsson told us that Backstrom would make that transition successfully and reasonably swiftly, and he was right. Tim Leone up in Hershey thinks it in Backstrom’s, and the Caps’, best interest for him to have a cup of coffee with the Bears this season. Ain’t happening.

It is Chris Clark’s team-first, two-way versatility that has Glen Hanlon fantasizing about a two-way, impact third line along the lines of the great Steve Konowalchuk, Jeff Halpern, Ulf Dahlen trio of a few years ago. That line, you’ll recall, was so dominant that Ron Wilson opened just about every game with it. It was also one that was a lynchpin to the Caps’ postseason participation. The coach has told the media that he’s looking for 60 goals from his third line this season, and given the defensive acumen of Clark and Boyd Gordon, and Matt Pettinger’s offensive pop, it’s natural to invoke the KDH comparison.

I’m also not wagering on Clark’s offensive production diminishing, dramatically, by virtue of his dropping down to line 3. As he noted himself on Media Day, he’s spent the past two seasons taking shifts against the likes of Zdeno Chara and top defensive pairings. Less so, it would appear, beginning this season.

The next step is to close the deal once you have the lead.

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Posted at 12:02 pm. Filed under Boyd Gordon, Chris Clark, Comcast SportsNet, Corey Masisak, Dave Steckel, Front Office, George McPhee, Glen Hanlon, Kettler Capitals Iceplex, Lisa Hillary, Matt Pettinger, Michael Nylander, Mike Vogel, Nate Ewell, Nicklas Backstrom, Prospects, Staff, Steve Eminger, Sweaters, Tarik El-Bashir, Ted Leonsis, Tomas Fleischmann, Training Camp, Washington Capitals, Washington Post, Washington Times.
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4 Comments

  1. Kurt wrote:

    Awesome sum-up, pucksandbooks. I have to say I’m more excited about this season than I have been in a long time, between the new-look Caps and the inevitable local drama of the Rangers, which is only going to be enhanced by the OMGNEWYORKMEDIA.

    Like I wrote over in my sum-up of period 3 last night (http://www.thirtystoriesup.com/2007/09/22/washington-capitals-at-tampa-bay-lightning-preseason-impressions/), the penalties are only worrying if it indicates an underlying conditioning problem; the fact that they’re so bad in period 3 says to me that our guys are either losing focus out there late, or their conditioning isn’t keeping them going for 3 periods and they have to resort to penalties to cut down chances. Still, the fact that we held the Bolts to 9 shots through two periods tells me that Hanlon and company are going exactly in the right direction.

    The big question right now, I think, has got to be ‘What about Fleischmann?’ Top-4 I can see, but our first-line right wing? Only if he ups his ability to finish (something that can’t be overstated in importance; the Rangers got pounded last night in part because Jagr and Gomez both had wide-open chances they totally flubbed). Your first line has to be able to punish the opposition when they make a defensive mistake, and missed chances can’t be part of that.

    Sunday, September 23, 2007 at 12:23 pm | Permalink
  2. omg wrote:

    i’m picking up that you are a bit optimistic about the season…it is some good kool-aid

    Sunday, September 23, 2007 at 6:07 pm | Permalink
  3. JDC in ATL wrote:

    Who do you see up on line 1 with Alex?

    Sunday, September 23, 2007 at 8:40 pm | Permalink
  4. maruk wrote:

    Amen on the home whites. Some things shouldn’t be messed with.

    Monday, September 24, 2007 at 7:27 am | Permalink

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