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Benchmark Games For The Capitals Ahead Of NHL Trade Deadline

Photo: Blueshirt Banter

With the NHL Trade Deadline less than seven weeks away, the Washington Capitals have to determine which direction they will take and the degree in which they commit to it. Owner Ted Leonsis said that Washington will not rebuild with captain Alex Ovechkin on the roster but that does not mean staying pat is off of the table.

With a four-point cushion for a postseason spot, they will have games that will determine how active they will be on March 3. NoVa Caps looks at those games that will decide that.

Note: Washington’s game on February 25 against the New York Rangers, the final game before a four-game road trip which the trade deadline occurs during, marks the decision time because GM Brian MacLellan will need a bit of time to come up with a plan and talk to other teams about deals ahead of March 3. That will give him the entire week prior to do those things.

Top Competition

Key Postseason Positioning

Solid Test

Worthy Measurements

Deciding Factors

Contracts: Washington has a bit of breathing room (just over $7 million) with defenseman John Carlson, left-wing Carl Hagelin, and right-wing Connor Brown all on long-term injured reserve but would be over the salary cap if Carlson plays another regular-season game. That would likely lead to a salary cap casualty/ies (center Lars Eller? Left-wing Anthony Mantha?) to make room to activate Carlson, let alone add more player/s to the NHL roster.

Free Agency: Washington has only 10 skaters signed for 2023-24, including just one defenseman (Carlson), with many important pieces such as left-wing Conor Sheary, center Dylan Strome (restricted), left-wing Sonny Milano, and defensemen Dmitry Orlov, Nick Jensen, and Martin Fehervary (restricted) in need of new deals. This could make the team reluctant to take on any players with term left at the deadline unless he is a significant upgrade over the player he would replace for next season.

While Washington is currently holding down a postseason ticket, they are currently getting help with New York (Islanders) and Pittsburgh currently on losing streaks as they have hit a bit of a rut since having to re-assign center Aliaksei Protas and left-wing Joe Snively to the AHL’s Hershey Bears. It is understandable considering the mix of players they had were playing well and the (welcome) additions of right-wing Tom Wilson and center Nicklas Backstrom forced line changes to a group that was going very well. However, they must ensure that a small slump does not turn into anything more and these are their opportunities to prove it.

By Harrison Brown

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