And the most interesting team in town is โฆ the Capitals?
Itโs Independence Day weekend. Hockey shouldnโt be on the brain. And yet here it is. In the past two weeks, Capitals General Manager Brian MacLellan added โฆ well, wait, he added too much to list in a tight space. Weโll get to the specifics, which are many.
To put it succinctly, answer this: If MacLellan and his front-office staff had a list of priorities this offseason โ and they did โ how many did they address?
โWe hit them all,โ MacLellan said Wednesday.
He is not a boastful person. But he is nothing if not plain-spoken. So go down the list.
A young center with high upside who can fill the role Evgeny Kuznetsov refused to play as he wore out his welcome with the only franchise he had ever known? Check. Welcome to town, Pierre-Luc Dubois.
Another 20-something who could center the third line โ or move up in the lineup โ and costs just a second-round pick in next yearโs draft? Yes, Andrew Mangiapane, you grew up in Ontario and have played your whole career in Calgary, but you should familiarize yourself with the American capital.
An offensive-minded defenseman who can play heavy minutes and take some of the burden from overworked stalwart John Carlson? Check. Let us show you around, Jakob Chychrun.
Another defenseman who can play on the top two pairings but is more defensive-minded, someone who could help on the penalty kill? Check. Your locker is over here, Matt Roy.
โNormally, you donโt hit everything,โ MacLellan said.
Yeah, but while youโre asking โ howsabout a young, cheap goaltender who provides an option should incumbent Charlie Lindgren fail to duplicate his (unexpectedly) spectacular 2023-24? Sure. Logan Thompson, you make just $766,000 next season even though you started more than half of Vegasโs games? Come aboard for a pair of third-round draft picks.
Throw in a few more minor signings โ probable fourth liners Brandon Duhaime and Taylor Raddysh โ and the accounting of the Capitalsโ absolutely dizzying offseason works like this: seven new players โ more than a third of a game day roster โ for Coach Spencer Carberyโs lineup. The cost: goalie Darcy Kuemper, who had lost his job to Lindgren anyway; defenseman Nick Jensen; one second-round draft pick and three thirds. Oh, but before you lament the loss of the picks, the Caps got a second-rounder back for fourth-liner Beck Malenstyn.
Oh, and two long-term deals. Roy arrived as a free agent and must be part of a new core that will be developing on the fly. Heโs signed through 2029-30 at $5.75 million per season. Dubois, who came from the Los Angeles Kings in a swap for Kuemper, is signed through 2030-31 at a hefty $8.5 million per year. Those are the kind of deals that have to work out for this offseason, years from now, to be deemed a success.
Think about how all this happened: At the past two trade deadlines, MacLellan looked at his middling roster and decided to sell. In return, he got draft picks. โCurrency,โ he called it. One of those picks, acquired for center Lars Eller, turned into Mangiapane. Another, acquired for defenseman Joel Edmundson, was used in the package to land Thompson.
And now, with some expensive contracts coming off the books, the franchise is poised to make pitches to marquee free agents in summers to come.
โWe have a good organization,โ MacLellan said. โWeโve got good young guys. Weโve got more good young guys coming. Weโre going to get better.โ
Somehow, without bottoming out, the Capitals got younger, deeper, faster โ better. The oldest player they added was Roy, who is 29. The others: Dubois, Chychrun and Raddysh are 26, Thompson and Duhaime 27, Mangiapane 28.
The coming two seasons were always going to kind of touchy for the Capitals. They want and need Alex Ovechkin, the most important player in franchise history, to break Wayne Gretzkyโs record for goals. (He needs 41 to tie Gretzky at 894, 42 to get to 895. Heโs under contract for two more seasons, so he needs to average 21 goals through 2025-26. He has never scored fewer than 31 in a full 82-game season. He can get there.)
But the idea isnโt to drag Ovechkin across the finish line. Itโs to do so with a competitive, playoff-caliber team that isnโt a shell of itself once Ovi retires. Last yearโs Caps pushed themselves into the playoffs by winning their 82nd game โ and then were swept out by the faster, deeper, better New York Rangers. These Caps could be better positioned when spring arrives.
There is still some unsettled business. MacLellan said Nicklas Backstrom, a forever Capital, will start the season on long-term injured reserve as he continues to evaluate whether he can ever come back from his chronic hip issues. The fate of right wing T.J. Oshie, another Stanley Cup champ from the 2018 team, is unknown, though itโs certainly possible Oshieโs debilitating back issues leave him alongside Backstrom on LTIR. No oneโs rooting for that. But it would free up the $5.75 million Oshie would count against the salary cap this winter.
And yet, for the Washington hockey teamโs general manager to draw a full bank of television cameras and notebooks in July? Didnโt James Wood just debut at Nationals Park? Isnโt Wizards center of the future Alex Sarr about to play in the NBAโs summer league? Doesnโt Jayden Daniels, that Heisman winner from LSU, get workouts going in Ashburn soon?
Yes, yes and yes. Yet those cameras and notebooks showed up for MacLellan on Wednesday. Reminder: This isnโt Toronto.
Exhale a bit. How do you feel, Mac?
โTired,โ he said. โYou get through the season, and youโre worn out, and then itโs like, โOh, now itโs my turn.โโ
He took his turn and skated away with it. The Capitals havenโt had an offseason this eventful since they won the Stanley Cup. That was six long years ago. Summer is just really hitting full stride. But whereโs the calendar? Oh, right here. Circle Oct. 12, because the New Jersey Devils come to Capital One Arena to open a season that, over the past two weeks, got a heck of a lot more interesting.