The Capitals were in need of an alarm clock last night, and try as he might to wake his teammates up with big hits and hard shots, Alexander Ovechkin's teammates (aside from Backstrom) just weren't interested last night.
Beyond Ovie, Backstrom, Laich, and maybe Kozlov, the collection resembled more of a hockey version of Bad News Bears than an honest to God hockey team last night at the Phone Booth, where they were deservedly beaten, 5-3, by the Florida Panthers. The defeat was Washington's first loss in regulation at home in the regular season since Backstrom went all Andres Escobar against the Penguins last March. Thankfully, things ended better for Backstrom than they did for Escobar.
But most of the team was really bad last night. Tyler Sloan had his worst night as an NHL player - there were times where he honestly (and I'm not trying to be overly harsh, just telling it like it is) didn't have any idea what was going on around him. Plays where he was in clear primary position to handle the situation suddenly broke down when he was outworked, outhustled, or outsomethinged by a Florida skater.
The Panther forwards victimized the Washington defense all night, with even Karl Alzner getting turned around multiple times, including one that led to a Florida goal on a play that should have just been an innocent chance. Alzner was the unfortunate victim when David Steckel tried an abomination of a clearing pass right toward his own net, hitting it off Alzner's skate and past Jose Theodore for Florida's second goal. Morrisonn and Jurcina were their usual non-speedy, somewhat limited selves. I don't remember Helmer making any really bad plays. So he's got that going for him. At least one of the D didn't completely suck.
Offensively, there's just nothing there right now beyond the top line of Ovie/Backs/Kozzie, except for Flash, who scored his 10th goal of the season last night. If you would have told me before the season that Flash would have 10 goals in 25 games, I would have been shocked, but sure enough, he does. Puts him on pace for about 33 on the season. If the Caps get 33 goals from Flash and don't win the division, someone needs to walk the plank.
I can't blame Theodore much for last night. His defenders were keystone cops in front of him, and the Florida skaters had all sorts of room to dance, wiggle, move, fart, whatever they wanted to do in the Washington zone. It was an embarrassment of a performance for a team that is supposed to get by, even with injuries, by outworking people. They did that for good portions of the first period, then left it for dead until late in the third when Kozlov somehow beat Florida goalie Craig Anderson to the short side, followed by a power play goal that made it 4-3 in the final minutes. But, just like the game at Minnesota last week where the score was similar, Washington had dug too deep a hole for itself and lost - this time 5-3 on an empty net goal when the Caps failed to keep the puck in the attacking zone following a faceoff with 1:19 left (after a time out, no less) and the defense couldn't get back in time to prevent the clinching goal at the 19 minute mark.
The good thing for most of you folks is that the game wasn't on TV so you didn't have to suffer through it. I went, and the crowd was dead, the team was dead, and the building was dead and the likely result followed. I counted 3 Panthers fan in the building - and one of them was sitting in front of me! How the hell does that happen?
Anyway, the Caps are home tomorrow night against the New York Islanders. Maybe someone on the team will set their alarms so they actually show up.
OVECHKIN UPDATE: Ovechkin needs 24 goals and 35 assists to reach 200 of each in his career. He is currently on pace for 45 goals this season, with 63 assists for 108 points. That would be his lowest goal output of his career, but highest assist total. The 108 points would be 4 off his career-high 112 last season.


Julie Henderson
Maria Kirilenko



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Yeah, had to listen to it on the radio last night, it sounded as if it wasn't viewable. Although the defense even when wealthy is not stellar, they seem to play well in the usual combinations with Morrison supporting Green, Jurcina and Erskine if nothing else being large bodies and keeping the slot clear, and Schultz and Poti at least moving the puck decently. With only 2 of them in the line-up right now, it could be a difficult stretch. What is the latest on Green, Fedorov, and Semin?
Afroin
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Afroin, you'll have to ask PuckHead about your last question. He's my eyes and ears now on this group site...and BTW, this also appears in his OWN blog as well. (Don't you agree he does a BETTER job of giving out the highlights than I ever could??)
At least we're still atop the Southeast...
DC Sports Nut: Nats,…
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Most true. My immediate wish is for the goal tending situation to resolve itself. It doesn't sound like it was Jose's issue last night, but I can only think of 2 or 3 games where he has played really well and kept them in the game or from giving the game away. Although his record is good, some of those games were pretty simple.
Afroin
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