The Warm-up
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Winnipeg Jets at Washington Capitals

Greetings from Washington, where the Winnipeg Jets should be a desperate bunch as they begin a five-game road trip tonight.

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They’ve lost six of their last nine games to fall out of a playoff spot in the jam-packed Western Conference.

“I don’t think there’s panic. We know what we have in this room. We know this group that we have is a resilient group,” defenceman Colin Miller told the Free Press following the morning skate.

But this is definitely an important road trip. You look at some of these buildings and the teams that we are playing — really tough buildings to go into. The emphasis is starting well tonight and going from there.”

Miller isn’t kidding about tough buildings. The Jets had lost 11 straight visits to Capital One Arena before Josh Morrissey notched the OT winner against the Capitals last season.

The Jets will make one notable line change from Saturday’s 3-0 loss to the Minnesota Wild to wrap up a three-game homestand. Defenceman Neal Pionk, who suffered a lower-body injury on the first shift of the game, is out. He briefly tested out his legs this morning but pulled himself off the ice before the formal skate began.

“He skated yesterday, tried it. Tried again today, didn’t feel quite right,” said Arniel.

Replacing him is 21-year-old Elias Salomonsson, who will make his NHL debut. The smooth-skating Swede will skate in Pionk’s place beside Dylan Samberg on the second pairing.

Washington has won four of its last five games to climb into an Eastern Conference playoff spot.

They’ve been scoring a ton of goals, too, with 23 in the last four games alone. A lot of that offence comes from the blue-line, with Jakob Chychrun and John Carlson (21 points each), which has them just two points off the team scoring lead.

“That group, they’re going to be up the ice all the time, so you’ve got to recognize it,” said Arniel. “That’s the importance of defending. It isn’t just in our end of the rink, but it’s beating them back up the ice and getting in the cycle.

“It’s about all being on the same page. They do a good job of having movement and motion with their D, but they also do a good job of attacking the net, they’ve got some big bodies there and they like their high tips and situations like that. You have your hands full against a D like this.”

Eric Comrie versus Charlie Lindgren will be the goaltending matchup. Capitals centre Nic Dowd is out with a minor injury.

As far as Winnipeg connections go, local product Dylan Mcllrath will draw into the lineup and play just his third game of the season. He takes the spot of former Jets defenceman Declan Chisholm, who is a healthy scratch.

Speaking of former Jets, old friend Pierre-Luc Dubois is sidelined for three to four months after recently undergoing surgery for an abdominal injury that occurred on a routine faceoff play. He was off to a tough start with no points through six games.

 

—Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe

 

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FROM THE PRESS BOX

MIKE SAYS: It was quite the sight walking into the arena this morning: all of the empty seats were filled with giant Alex Ovechkin heads on sticks. They are being given to fans tonight to celebrate the fact the “Great 8” recently surpassed 900 goals and 1,500 games played.

You know Ovechkin, who has terrorized the Jets over the years, is licking his lips at the prospect of adding to his totals on his big night.

“He’s had a heck of a career, obviously. Hopefully we can keep him off (the scoresheet) tonight,” said Jets forward Tanner Pearson.

The stuff of Winnipeg Jets' nightmares. (Mike McIntyre / Free Press)

The stuff of Winnipeg Jets’ nightmares. (Mike McIntyre / Free Press)

Here’s a fun game: can you identify who is currently centring the Jets’ second line? How about the third and fourth lines? It’s a bit of a mystery with the way Arniel has configured what I’m going to call his “bottom nine.”

As you can see later in this newsletter, I’ve listed them in what I think it the most likely order, which would mean Adam Lowry is now a second-line centre, Cole Perfetti is a third-line winger and Jonathan Toews is a fourth-line centre.

Not sure I would have had any of those developments on the bingo card, but here we are.

It actually doesn’t matter so much what order you want to put on these lines. The important thing is that they all find ways to contribute. The Jets simply can’t be a one-line team if they are going to have any kind of sustained success, and there are a lot of guys who really need to get going.

They no longer have the luxury of hoping the injured Connor Hellebuyck can steal a game for them — the way he’s done so often over his career — and they need to give Comrie some offensive support.

“No matter who’s in the net, we still have to play a certain way in front of them,” said Arniel. “We can’t allow Grade A (chances) like we did in the first stretch of this year.”

In addition to Pionk not being able to go play tonight, there was some additional tough injury news regarding the blue line.

Haydn Fleury, who suffered a concussion on Nov. 11 against the Vancouver Canucks, is not on the road trip with the team. He had been skating last week ramping up for a return but suffered a setback and remains in protocol.


KEN SAYS: The much-anticipated debut for Salomonsson has my attention. The 2022 second-rounder has many of the traits that can help improve a defence corps. Had Salomonsson not missed part of last season with an upper-body issue, he might have made the Jets out of camp.

But after a strong start to the AHL campaign, Salomonsson has an opportunity to not only be a fill-in, but perhaps do enough to force his way onto the third pairing. In the short term, Salomonsson needs to defend well, play with an edge and execute some clean exits. Anything after that is a bonus.

Up front, after the industrial-sized turn-of-the-line blender, I’m curious to see how Morgan Barron clicks with Toews and Gustav Nyquist.

Winnipeg Jets forward Morgan Barron. (Matt Krohn / The Associated Press files)

Winnipeg Jets forward Morgan Barron. (Matt Krohn / The Associated Press files)

Barron’s speed and tenacity on the forecheck should help generate some chances for the veteran forwards. Toews has one goal in his past nine games, while Nyquist is searching for his first of the season to go with six assists in 16 games.

Secondary scoring has been an issue of late for the Jets and it will be interesting to see whether these new combos unlock anything.

As for the Capitals, that slow start for Ovechkin has been left in the rearview mirror as he’s scoring regularly and nearly averaging a point per game, with 10 goals and 21 points.

But also keep your eyes on rugged winger Tom Wilson, who has his sights set on making Canada’s Olympic team. Wilson has 12 goals and 23 points in 23 games while playing a physical game and killing penalties effectively.

PROJECTED LINES

WINNIPEG JETS

FORWARDS

  • Connor-Scheifele-Vilardi
  • Niederreiter-Lowry-Iafallo
  • Pearson-Namestnikov-Perfetti
  • Barron-Toews-Nyquist

DEFENCE

  • Morrissey-DeMelo
  • Samberg-Salamonsson
  • Stanley-Miller

GOAL

  • Comrie
  • Milic

INJURED: G Hellebuyck (knee surgery), D Fleury (concussion protocol), D Pionk (lower-body)

HEALTHY SCRATCHES: D Schenn, F Koepke


WASHINGTON CAPITALS

FORWARDS

  • Ovechkin-Strome-Beauvillier
  • Protas-Sourdif-Wilson
  • Duhaime-McMichael-Leonard
  • Milano-Lapierre-Frank

DEFENCE

  • Fehervary-Carlson
  • Chychrun-Roy
  • Sandin-Mcllrath

GOAL

  • Lindgren
  • Thompson

INJURED: C Dubois (abdominal)

HEALTHY SCRATCHES: D Chisholm, D Van Riemsdyk, F Trineyev

Notable quotable

Defenceman Colin Miller, who has been a healthy scratch for 15 of the first 21 games this year, on getting back into the lineup and making the most of it:

“It’s super mental. You just have to make sure you’re not overthinking things, make sure you’re ready to go when you get the chance. There’s been more time out than in, so it’s a lot of time to think and overthink things. It’s about just making sure that when you do get in, stick to the things that you know you’ve always been good at and the game slows down after that.”

What we’re working on

Mike is on scene in Washington. He will have an early story coming on Miller, who spoke candidly about what a challenging start to the season this has been on a personal level. And he will have the Jets versus Capitals game story including reaction from the locker room.

You can find both pieces on our website later today and in Thursday’s print edition.

 

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