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  • Game Recap – 2/23/2019 – Washington Capitals v. Buffalo Sabres

    Game Recap – 2/23/2019 – Washington Capitals v. Buffalo Sabres

    Washington Capitals (34-20-7 75pts) v. Buffalo Sabres (28-24-8 64pts)

     

    Game Recap:

    The Washington Capitals head into Buffalo to conclude their six game road trip, but it would be the Sabres who would get the jump on the Capitals as Jason Pominville would bury one in front of the net to give the Sabres the 1-0 lead. Vladimir Sobotka would then be called for tripping, but the Capitals would not be able to capitalize on the powerplay opportunity. The Sabres would find a breakdown in the Capitals and Sam Reinhart would make it 2-0 for the Sabres. Jakub Vrana would be called for hooking late in the period, but the Capitals would be able to kill the penalty off.

     

    The Capitals would start the second period on fire as they would generate some solid chances, but it would be a mishandling of the puck by the Sabres defense that would lead to an Alex Ovechkin break and score his 44th goal of the season to cut the Sabres lead to one. Then there would be a scary moment when Jeff Skinner and newly acquired Carl Hagelin would get tied up leading to Skinner going down awkwardly and leave the ice with the assistance of the trainer. Hagelin would be called for tripping, and the Capitals would kill the penalty. The Capitals would get another powerplay opportunity as Nathan Beaulieu would be called for delay of game, but the Capitals would not take advantage of it. Then Nic Dowd would take down Beaulieu in the corner to give the Sabres their third powerplay opportunity and Jack Eichel would find Rasmus Dahlin on the point for the powerplay goal and regain their two goal lead late in the second period.

     

    The Capitals came into the third period down by two, and they were flying to create chances, but Nicklas Backstrom would get called for holding to halt that rush. However, the Capitals would kill off the penalty and would get some traffic in front of Carter Hutton as Andre Burakovsky would deflect a Christian Djoos point shot to pull the Capitals within one, but would be down by two once again when Sam Reinhart would tip in a Matt Hunwick point blast for his second of the game to give the Sabres their two goal lead back. And then with the goalie pulled, Reinhart would score his 3rd of the game to ice it for the Sabres 5-2.

     

    Lineups:

    Washington Capitals:

    Alex Ovechkin — Evgeny Kuznetsov — Tom Wilson

    Jakub Vrana — Nicklas Backstrom — T.J. Oshie

    Andre Burakovsky — Lars Eller — Brett Connolly

    Carl Hagelin — Nic Dowd — Chandler Stephenson

    Michal Kempny — John Carlson

    Dmitry Orlov — Matt Niskanen

    Brooks Orpik — Christian Djoos

    Braden Holtby

    Pheonix Copley

    Scratched: Dmitrij Jaskin, Travis Boyd, Nick Jensen

     

    Buffalo Sabres:

    Jeff Skinner — Jack Eichel — Evan Rodrigues

    Conor Sheary — Casey Mittelstadt — Sam Reinhart

    Zemgus Girgensons — Johan Larsson — Jason Pominville

    C.J. Smith — Vladimir Sobotka — Tage Thompson

    Jake McCabe — Rasmus Ristolainen

    Rasmus Dahlin — Zach Bogosian

    Nathan Beaulieu — Matt Hunwick

    Carter Hutton

    Linus Ullmark

    Scratched: Casey Nelson, Danny O’Regan, Scott Wilson

    Injured: Marco Scandella (upper body), Kyle Okposo (concussion)

     

    First Period:

    Sabres Goal – 3:40 – Jason Pominville (14) from Jeff Skinner (19) and Jack Eichel (46)

    Sabres Penalty – 5:53 – Vladimir Sobotka 2 minutes for Tripping

    Sabres Goal – 12:51 – Sam Reinhart (15) from Evan Rodrigues (14)

    Capitals Penalty – 18:02 – Jakub Vrana 2 minutes for Hooking

     

    End of 1st – WAS – 0       BUF – 2

    Shots              10                13

    Faceoffs         11                08

    Hits               09                  06

    PP                 0/1                 0/1

     

    Second Period:

    Capitals Goal – 2:28 – Alex Ovechkin (44) from Evegny Kuznetsov (40)

    Capitals Penalty – 4:42 – Carl Hagelin 2 minutes for Tripping

    Sabres Penalty – 13:56 – Nathan Beaulieu 2 minutes for Delay of Game

    Capitals Penalty – 17:44 – Nic Dowd 2 minutes for Tripping

    Sabres PPG – 19:29 – Rasmus Dahlin (8) from Jack Eichel (47) and Rasmus Rstolainen (32)

     

    End of 2nd – WAS – 1        BUF – 3

    Shots               25                 26

    Faceoffs          25                 18

    Hits                 15                  10

    PP                   0/2                  1/3

     

    Third Period:

    Capitals Penalty – 1:26 – Nicklas Backstrom 2 minutes for Hooking

    Capitals Goal – 4:16 – Andre Burakovsky (8) from Christian Djoos (6) and Michal Kempny (14)

    Sabres Goal – 5:43 – Sam Reinhart (16) from Matt Hunwick (1) and Conor Sheary (16)

    Sabres ENG – 19:05 – Sam Reinhart (17) from Carter Hutton (1)

     

    End of 3rd – WAS – 2         BUF – 5

    Shots              33                   38

    Faceoffs        34                    25

    Hits               19                     12

    PP                 0/2                    1/4

     

    Next Up:

    Washington (34-21-7 75pts) v. NY Rangers (27-26-8 62pts)

    Buffalo (29-24-8 66pts) @ Toronto (36-20-4 76pts)

  • The Implosion – Edmonton Oilers

    The Implosion – Edmonton Oilers

    The Edmonton Oilers have been widely considered one of the most historic franchises in the NHL. Having players such as the Iconic Wayne Gretzky, Mark Messier, Grant Fuhr, Craig MacTavish, Ryan Smyth, and Kevin Lowe – just to name a few.

    But this team over the last few years has underachieved in so many ways. They now have probably the best player in the world on their team and still can’t put it together. Who’s to blame, Management? Coaching? Owners? All of it?

    It’s time to take a close look at the Implosion of the Edmonton Oilers and why this team can’t put it together. Really only a couple of names to talk here: Craig MacTavish, Kevin Lowe, and Peter Chiarelli

    Craig MacTavish:

    This is where the implosion begins.

    Goaltending:

    Out:

    MacTavish let starting goaltender Nikolai Khabibulin, now Khabibulin was at the tale end of a solid career but he was Edmonton’s starter and they let him go.

    Devan Dubnyk was also traded away to Nashville for Matt Hendricks. Dubnyk eventually went on to leave Nashville and for the Arizona Coyotes where he found his game and was acquired by the Minnesota Wild where he’s been nothing short of brilliant.

    In:

    Viktor Fasth was brought in for a 3rd and 5th round pick – based on one good season in Anaheim. Ben Scrivens was also brought in at the cost of a 3rd round pick. This experiment went bad fast, as both goalies combined for the worst save percentage in the league – 885 save %.

    Defence:

    Out:

    Ladislav Smid, Nick Schultz, Corey Potter, Mark Fistric, Ryan Whitney, and Theo Peckham. MacTavish didn’t get blessed with a good defence line but as you’ll see he didn’t make it any better.

    In:

    Andrew Ference signed a 4 year 13 million dollar deal to become the captain of the Edmonton Oilers – was eventually demoted to the minors.

    Mark Fayne signed a contract after playing the majority of his short career in New Jersey. MacTavish said he loved the way he played – Fayne was eventually demoted to the minors as well.

    Nikita Nikitin rights were acquired from Columbus but was signed to a ludicrous 2-year deal worth $9 million but never lived up the expectations.

    Keith Aulie didn’t see much ice time after being acquired never found a groove. Spent a lot of time in the minors.

    Staying:

    Justin Schultz was said to have Norris Candidate written all over him, but he struggled after signing in Edmonton and was eventually traded to Pittsburgh where he’d win 2 Cups.

    Jeff Petry never really lived up to the expectation Edmonton had for him, was supposed to be a solid 2 way defencemen but couldn’t find a rhythm in Edmonton. Was traded to Montreal at the trade deadline and has been something special for the Canadiens.

    Martin Marincin was given a chance but never really developed into what was expected. He now spends time in the Toronto Marlies with the odd call up here and there.

    Oscar Klefbom took some time to develop but has been a pretty solid defenceman.

    Forwards:

    Out: Shawn Horcoff, Sam Gagner, Ales Hemsky, Ryan Jones, Magnus Paajarvi, Mike Brown, Eric Belanger, Jerred Smithson, Anton Lander, Ryan Smyth.  Majority of the core was moved or just moved on from the team. This was the majority of MacTavish’s work and would become his legacy, not a great one.

    In:

    David Perron was acquired in the off-season for Magnus Paajarvi, Can’t argue with that deal.

    Benoit Pouliot never amounted to anything after coming in.

    Boyd Gordon became a decent 4th line option

    Teddy Purcell came with high hopes, and they diminished fairly quick.

    The real shocker was the Oilers deciding to keep Leon Draisaitl up and burning one year of his contract. He played center and never found a groove there. You’ll hear more of him later in the article.

    Others who joined the team Steven Pinzzotto and Luke Gazdic. Nothing to talk about there.

    Staying:

    Taylor Hall, Jordan Eberle, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Nail Yakupov

    That ends the MacTavish Era, as you can see a lot of mistakes made here and not much brought in to fix it. On to the Kevin Lowe Era.

    Kevin Lowe:

    Trades, Signings, Draft Picks show just how bad was the Kevin Lowe era.

    1. Jesse Niinimaki – probably never heard the name unless you’re an Oilers fan. 1st round pick 15th overall in 2002. Never played an NHL game. Alexander Steen was picked at 24 by Toronto.
    2. Alexei Mikhnov – 1st round pick 17th overall in 2000. Played a whopping 2 NHL games and soon was in the AHL for good. Brooks Orpik, Steve Ott, Justin Williams, or Niklas Kronwall – to name a few – could all be Oilers till this day.
    3. Marc-Antoine Pouliot – Selected 22nd overall in the 1st round of the draft in 2003. Immediately before Ryan Kesler, Mike Richards, oh an All-Star Corey Perry. Pouliot did play 200 NHL games but never really stuck.
    4. Shawn Horcoff Extension – Horcoff came off a season where he had 50 points in 53 games but had his season cut short by injury. Lowe didn’t have to resign Horcoff that season as he still had one year remaining on his old contract. Lowe decided to get it done and signed Horcoff to a 6 year $33 deal – 5.5 a season – Horcoff would never scored more than 36 points since.
    5. Sheldon Souray – this was a real gong show on the Lowe era was the Souray situation. Souray was probably the best defencemen on the Oilers at this time, but things were not great with him and management. Souray eventually had enough and went to the media to express how the team had demanded he play when his hand was not fully healed yet. Souray was wrong in how he handled it but Kevin Lowe reacted even worse. Lowe stated that he didn’t want at next seasons training camp. The Oilers would never apologize or let their best defencemen play again, instead they would banish him to the minors.
    6. Mike Comrie – Lowe had a deal lined up that would have sent Mike Comrie to Anaheim for Corey Perry (just drafted) and 1st round draft pick. Comrie wanted out of Edmonton and the Oilers and Lowe were looking for the best possible deal. Lowe instead turned this down and tried to get Comrie to pay back his bonus. Lowe basically handed the Ducks 2007 Stanley Cup
    7. Inept Drafting – 6th overall they draft Sam Gagner, he never lived up to expectations and soon was traded for Teddy Purcell. The next few 1st rounders Lowe had his hands on were Alex Plante (bust) and Riley Nash (Decent NHLer). But the salt in the wound is the fact that Max Pacioretty was the very next pick after Nash.
    8. Even after he stepped down as GM, Lowe was still causing trouble he hired the most ridiculous GM’s starting with Steve Tambellini and all the way down to Craig MacTavish and Peter Chiarelli.
    9. Ryan Smyth – Lowe and Smyth had been negotiating all season on a contract. Smyth asked for fair value on this contract, as he had taken a discount on every other contract. Fans began to get worried and eventually the day came that everyone thought would never come happened. The Oilers traded Ryan Smyth to the Islanders for spare parts.

    Peter Chiarelli

    1. Milan Lucic’s Contract – Chiarelli handed Lucic a 7 year 42 million dollar deal in 2016. Significant red flags about term and money already arose when the realization that Lucic can’t keep up with the NHL already and his production had slipped off significantly already – will only get worse from here. Now he has handcuffed the Oilers in a bad contract for many years. Unless the Oilers are willing to send a 1st or 2nd pick with his contract – which is unlikely – Lucic may either be bought out or serve out his term
    2. Leon Draisitl’s Contract – Signed to be the number 2 centerman in Edmonton 8.5 million sits way above what is considered normal for players who have played equal or better then Draisaitl. Pastrnak makes 2 million less. To make it worst Draisaitl struggled driving his own line and was moved back to McDavid’s wing once again leaving the big hole down the middle and financially strapping the Oilers.
    3. Benoit Pouliot Buyout – Coming off a terrible season Chiarelli decided to buyout Pouliot. Not the greatest decision – his numbers were good shot wise and possession-wise – and could have probably had a bounce-back season. If he didn’t they could have then bought him out for a year less.
    4. Kris Russell extension – All stats, any numbers coaches, GM’s or the NHL uses say Russell was a bottom pairing defencemen and after the loss to Anaheim in the 2nd round Chiarelli said the main point to upgrade this off-season was the defence. But then Chiarelli signed Russell to a 4 year $16 million contract doubling down on Russell and putting him into the Oilers top 4. No scout, GM in the NHL thinks Russell is a top 4 defencemen except Chiarelli himself.
    5. Taylor Hall Trade – what a catastrophic failure this was. Peter Chiarelli’s attempt to fix the defence was, in fact, to trade away his best offensive player at the time for Adam Larsson who all the stats guys loved. The problem was those stats were skewed by the system that was played in New Jersey. Larsson came in and never lived anywhere near expectation that the Oilers had when the traded Hall. Funny thing is now they struggle offensively other than McDavid, you can put Draisaitl in there but the majority of his points come from being with McDavid and getting passes from probably the greatest player in the game right now.
    6. Jordan Eberle – This deal is exceptionally stupid Eberle was coming off his worst season offensively with 20 goals and 31 assists for 51 points and struggled in the playoffs. So Chiarelli went and traded him for Ryan Strome. Ryan Strome never ever worked out and was traded for Ryan Spooner, who ended in the minors and then just last week was traded to the Canucks for Sam Gagner. Eberle is loving it on the Island right now as they are one of the top teams in the league and Eberle is a huge part of it.
    7. Griffin Reinhart – The Islanders love the Oilers. Just after taking over for MacTavish, Peter Chiarelli decided to send the 16th OA and 33rd OA draft picks 2015 to the Islanders for big hulking defenceman Griffin Reinhart. Reinhart now sits in the minors never been able to crack the NHL roster, while the 16th OA draft in 2015 turned into none other then phenom Matthew Barzal. For a team struggling to find offence that’s kind of hilarious.

    Between these 3 GM’s and their moves have impacted the Oilers financially – Strapping them up against the cap – Players wise, – by giving up better assets then what they are receiving – and finally by their draft choices. Edmonton is in the bind they are because they don’t have competent leadership. Leadership that expanded down to coach, player, draft and financial choice, all of which lead them here.

  • February 23rd, 2019  —  News and Notes

    February 23rd, 2019 — News and Notes

    Today is Saturday, February 23rd, 2019, and these are your news and notes.

     

    There were five contests that took place yesterday.

     

    Columbus 3, OTTAWA 0

    The Columbus Blue Jackets would take on the Ottawa Senators last night and would come away with another shutout victory on the season.  The Blue Jackets would go on to outshoot the Senators in this contest with 40 shots on goal to Ottawa’s 22.

    This would be the Senators third consecutive loss and in their last ten games, Ottawa has a record of 3-7-0.

     

    Minnesota 3, DETROIT 2

    In a hard fought contest last night in Detroit, the Minnesota Wild would go on to defeat the Detroit Red Wings with the 3-2 win last night.  The win for the Wild movers them to a record of 29-27-6, while the Red Wings fall to a record of 23-30-9.

     

    Colorado 5, CHICAGO 3

    In another hard fought battle last night, the Colorado Avalanche would face off against the Chicago Blackhawks and the Avalanche would escape with a 5-3 win.  Chicago would tie the game a 3 a piece at the 10 minute mark in the third period but would be able to mount a comeback against Colorado.

    Colorado would move to one point behind the Minnesota Wild and Chicago with the loss is now three points behind Minnesota for the final wild card spot in the Western Conference.

     

    CALGARY 2, Anaheim 1

    The Anaheim Ducks woes on the season would continue with the loss last night to the Calgary Flames.

    https://twitter.com/AnaheimDucks/status/1099171779682086914

    With Calgary’s win, they continue to hold the top spot in the Pacific Division with a record of 38-16-7, good for 83 points.

     

    Winnipeg 6, VEGAS 3

    The Winnipeg Jets would go on to double up the Vegas Golden Knights 6-3, thanks to two goals from Winnipeg’s Patrik Laine.

    Winnipeg holds on to a slim lead in the Central Division standings thanks to the win.

    The Golden Knights hold on to the third spot in the Pacific Division, despite the loss to the Jets last night.

     

     

    There are 11 games on the NHL schedule today including the 2019 NHL Stadium Series between the Pittsburgh Penguins and Philadelphia Flyers at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania tonight at 8 p.m.

     

    *schedule image is the property of the NHL, NHL Public Relations, and the respective owners

    For more news, notes, information, and stats….

     

    Today in the NWHL…

    The Metropolitan Riveters travel to the HarborCenter to take on the Buffalo Beauts at 5 p.m., ET.  This contest can be seen, as all NWHL games, on NWHL.zone/watch

  • Capitals sign Jensen to 4 year deal

    Capitals sign Jensen to 4 year deal

    Mere hours after trading defenseman Madison Bowey and their 2nd round pick in 2020 to the Detroit Red Wings for defenseman Nick Jensen and Buffalo’s 2019 5th round pick, the Washington Capitals have announced that they have signed Jensen to a 4 year contract extension worth $10 million.

     

    Jensen will carry an average annual value of $2.5 million Cap hit the next four seasons.

     

    Jensen, 28, was averaging 20:48 minutes of ice time this season with the Red Wings, and is also a solid penalty killer.

     

    What are your thoughts on the trade and this signing? Tell us in the comments below.

  • Capitals Acquire Nick Jensen from the Red Wings

    Capitals Acquire Nick Jensen from the Red Wings

    The Washington Capitals continue to tinker with thier lineup as they have traded defenseman Madison Bowey and a 2020 2nd Round Pick to the Detroit Red Wings for defenseman Nick Jensen and Buffalo’s 2019 5th Round Pick.

     

    Jensen, who will be an unrestricted free agent at the end of this season, has played in 60 games this season for the Red Wings scoring two goals and 13 assists for 15 points.

     

    Jensen will add depth to the Capitals blue line and will solid and reliable seventh defenseman for the team.

     

    *Feature Photo courtesy of NHL.com

  • AwesomeMania – 2/21/2019 – Ben Wants to Vent *18+ Podcast*

    AwesomeMania – 2/21/2019 – Ben Wants to Vent *18+ Podcast*

    Welcome to AwesomeMania!!

    Audio Version:

     

    YouTube Version:

     

    This week on AwesomeMania Ben and Michael talk about the Elimination Chamber, the following RAW and SmackDown Live, and *sigh* the recently announced Hulk Hogan Biopic. Plus Ben vents about the WWE wasting debuts on amazing talents at the worst times.

     

    This week’s episode was recorded on Thursday, February 21st, 2019

    Have a question you want answered on the show? Ask us! Comment on here or on one of our Social Media outlets, and we’ll answer it.

  • Washington Capitals vs Toronto Maple Leafs – 21/2/2019 – Game Recap

    Washington Capitals vs Toronto Maple Leafs – 21/2/2019 – Game Recap

    Washington (33-20-7 73 points) v, Toronto Maple Leafs (36-19-4 76 points)

    Lineups:

    Toronto:

    Patrick Marleau  – Auston Matthews – Kasperi Kapanen

    Mitch Marner – John Tavares – Zach Hyman

    Connor Brown – William Nylander – Andreas Johnsson

    Tyler Ennis – Pars Lindholm – Frederik Gauthier

     

    Morgan Rielly  – Jake Muzzin

    Jake Gardiner – Nikita Zaitsev

    Travis Dermott – Ron Hainsey

     

    Frederik Andersen

    Garrett Sparks

     

    Scratched: Justin Holl

    Injuries: Nathan Horton (Back)

    Suspension: None

     

    Washington Capitals:

    Alex Ovechkin — Evgeny Kuznetsov — Tom Wilson

    Jakub Vrana — Nicklas Backstrom — T.J. Oshie

    Andre Burakovsky — Lars Eller — Brett Connolly

    Chandler Stephenson —Nic Dowd –  Travis Boyd

     

    Michal Kempny — John Carlson

    Dmitry Orlov — Matt Niskanen

    Brooks Orpik — Christian Djoos

     

    Braden Holtby

    Pheonix Copley

     

    Scratched: None

    Injured: None

    Gameday:

    First Period:

    No Scoring

    End of 1st – WSH–0        TOR – 0

    Shots              8                    12

    Faceoffs     3/13              9/13

    Hits               13                   3

    PP                 0/0                   0/0

     

    Analysis

    Both teams came out with a lot of jump to their games and the pace picked up fast. Scoring chance back and forth on both ends. Starting up to be a goalie duel tonight as both goalies made some insane saves.

     

    Need to Do:

    Toronto: Get to the dirty areas, screen Holtby and get shots on net

    Washington: Continue to get on the forecheck of the Leafs defence. Cause turnovers.

    Second Period:

    Toronto Penalty – 3:38 –Morgan Rielly, 2 mins for Holding

    Washington PP Goal – 3:54 – Alex Ovechkin (43) assisted by John Carlson (46) and TJ Oshie (19)

    Toronto Penalty – 5:51 –Nikita Zaitsev, 2 mins for Interference

    Washington Penalty – 9:53 –Michal Kempny, 2 mins for Tripping

    Washington Goal – 12:07 – Brett Connolly (15) assisted by Lars Eller (18) and Tom Wilson (14)

    Toronto Penalty – 19:25 –Connor Brown, 2 mins for Hooking

    Washington Penalty – 19:25 –Andre Burakovsky, 2 mins for Cross Checking

     

    End of 2nd – WSH– 2          TOR – 0

    Shots              21                    21

    Faceoffs       11/33              23/33

    Hits              24                      12

    PP                 1/2                   0/1

     

    Analysis:

    Both teams exchanged chances all period until a Morgan Rielly penalty let Alex Ovechkin on the board on the powerplay. The Leafs had a chance to tie on a powerplay of their own but didn’t take advantage and the Capitals Brett Connolly made it 2-0 after the kill.

     

    Need to Do:

    Toronto: Better defensively and attack with a purpose. Win the little battles.

    Washington: Shut it down in the 3rd. Don’t give the Leafs an inch

    Third Period:

    Toronto Goal– 04:23 – Andreas Johnsson (16) assisted by, Auston Matthews (27)

    Washington Penalty – 05:48 – John Carlson, 2 minutes for Hooking

    Washington SH Goal– 06:46 – Tom Wilson (16) assisted by Lars Eller (19)

    Toronto Penalty – 07:52 – Jake Muzzin, 2 minutes for Slashing

    Toronto Goal– 19:27 – John Tavares (34) assisted by, Morgan Rielly (43)

     

    End of 3rd – WSH – 3        TOR – 2

    Shots             28                   42

    Faceoffs     17/53                36/53

    Hits               35                       17

    PP                1/3                   0/2

     

    Analysis:

    Leafs dominate the 3rd period in an effort to make a comeback outshooting the Capitals 20-7. Leafs score twice in the 3rd but give up a Tom Wilson shorthanded marker. Capitals played a better full game. Deserved to win.

    Next Up:

    Washington (34-20-7 75pts) vs Buffalo (28-24-7 63pts)

    Montreal (32-21-7 71pts) at Toronto (36-20-4 76pts)

     

  • Capitals Acquire Hagelin Before the Deadline

    Capitals Acquire Hagelin Before the Deadline

    The Washington Capitals have acquired forward Carl Hagelin from the Los Angeles Kings for a 2019 3rd round pick and a Conditional 2020 6th round pick.

     

    With this trade the Kings will also retain 50 percent of Hagelin’s salary for the remainder of this season.

     

    As for the conditions of the sixth round pick in 2020, we’ll let Pierre LeBrun explain it:

     

    This move comes after the news that forward Devante Smith-Pelly cleared waivers.

     

    With this trade the Capitals acquire a  etran depth forward who has speed, is defensively responsible, a great penalty killer, and a solid point producer in the playoffs.

     

    Per Head Coach Todd Reirden, Hagelin is not expected to play tonight and will make his Capitals debut this Saturday in Buffalo.

     

    This is a solid trade for the Capitals. They are getting a player they have seen a lot of and knows how to contribute in the playoffs and win a Stanley Cup.

     

    What are your thoughts on the Capitals acquiring Carl Hagelin? Tell us in the comments below.

     

    *Feature photo by AP Photo/Jeff Roberson

  • Gameday Preview – 02/21/2019 – Washington Capitals v. Toronto Maple Leafs

    Gameday Preview – 02/21/2019 – Washington Capitals v. Toronto Maple Leafs

    Washington Capitals (33-20-7 73pts) v. Toronto Maple Leafs (36-19-4 76pts)

     

    Time: 7p EST

    Station: NBC Sports Washington

     

    Preview:

    The Washington Capitals head to Toronto to take on the Maple Leafs as they start to wind down their six game road trip. The Capitals will be looking to win their second straight game and continue to make this trip a successful one.

     

    Washington Capitals:

    Projected Lineup:

     

    Keys to the Game:

    1. Be consistent all 60 minutes

    The Capitals need to play a full 60 minutes against the Maple Leafs. Last game against the Los Angeles Kings, the Capitals dominated the first 40 minutes, but took their foot off the gas in the third period. The Capitals needs to keep the consistency all 60 minutes.

  • Washington Capitals vs Toronto Maple Leafs – 21/2/2019 – Game Day Preview

    Washington Capitals vs Toronto Maple Leafs – 21/2/2019 – Game Day Preview

    Gameday Preview:  Washington Capitals vs Toronto Maple Leafs

    Time: Thursday, February 21h  2019

    Toronto: 36-19-4 for 76 points

    St.Louis: 25-27-5 for 55 points

    The Toronto Maple Leafs look to jump back into the winning column against the surging Blues. Leafs need a big game here from the big guns.

    Top Scorers/Goalie Matchup

    Mitch Marner –69 points (21 goals 48 assists)
    John Tavares – 63 points (33 goals 30 assists) 54% on face-offs
    Morgan Rielly – 57 points (15 goals 42 assists)
    Auston Matthews – 54 points (28 goals 26 assists) 53% on Face-offs

    Alex Ovechkin – 69 points (42 goals 27 assists)
    Nicklas Backstrom– 56 points (13 goal 43 assists)
    Evgeny Kuznetsov – 54 points (15 goal 39 assists)
    John Carlson – 54 points (9 goals 45 assists)

    Frederik Andersen
    27-12-3 2.57GAA .923SV%

    Brayden Holtby
    20-15-4 3.04GAA .907SV%

    Lineups:

    Toronto:

    Patrick Marleau  – Auston Matthews – Kasperi Kapanen

    Mitch Marner – John Tavares – Zach Hyman

    Connor Brown – Nazem Kadri – William Nylander

    Andreas Johnsson – Pars Lindholm – Frederik Gauthier

     

    Morgan Rielly  – Jake Muzzin

    Jake Gardiner – Nikita Zaitsev

    Travis Dermott – Ron Hainsey

     

    Frederik Andersen

    Garrett Sparks

     

    Scratched: Justin Holl

    Injuries: Nathan Horton (Back), Andreas Johnsson (Knee)

    Suspension: None

     

    Washington Capitals:

    Alex Ovechkin — Evgeny Kuznetsov — Tom Wilson

    Jakub Vrana — Nicklas Backstrom — T.J. Oshie

    Andre Burakovsky — Lars Eller — Brett Connolly

    Chandler Stephenson —Nic Dowd –  Travis Boyd

     

    Michal Kempny — John Carlson

    Dmitry Orlov — Matt Niskanen

    Brooks Orpik — Christian Djoos

     

    Braden Holtby

    Pheonix Copley

     

    Scratched: None

    Injured: None

     

    Keys to Winning against Washington:

    1. Speed
      1. Last game the Leafs played, they were slow and sluggish in every aspect of their game. Until late in the game. Intensity needs to be there all game to hang with the Capitals.
    2. Powerplay
      1. Don’t take penalties against this lethal powerplay. Ovechkin, Carlson or Kuznetsov – to name a few – will all make you pay.
    3. Depth
      1. Needs to step up to make this team very scary