Tag Archives: Capitals

Stories of new Capitals coach Spencer Carbery from AHL Hershey: ‘His brain is always working’ – The Athletic

  1. Stories of new Capitals coach Spencer Carbery from AHL Hershey: ‘His brain is always working’ The Athletic
  2. A closer look at Spencer Carbery’s coaching resume, his familiarity with Capitals players, and the power play he ran in Toronto Russian Machine Never Breaks
  3. Washington Capitals Introduce Spencer Carbery As Their 20th Head Coach In Franchise History NoVa Caps
  4. The Washington Capitals’ new coach learned skills growing up in Victoria The Province
  5. NBC Sports Washington to Broadcast Press Conference with Spencer Carbery NHL.com
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Short Hills Capital’s Steve Weiss makes moves in the banks, buys more BofA and GS – CNBC Television

  1. Short Hills Capital’s Steve Weiss makes moves in the banks, buys more BofA and GS CNBC Television
  2. IMF support will help Sri Lanka build up reserves to a more comfortable level: Central bank governor CNBC International TV
  3. More people are carrying higher credit card balances, says Bankrate.com’s Greg McBride CNBC Television
  4. MassMutual CEO Roger Crandall says recession likelihood is low, since employment is too high CNBC Television
  5. Experts react to Fed statement: Some additional policy firming may be appropriate CNBC Television
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Capitals drop thirteen-goal thriller on Ovi’s big night: Blue Jackets beat Caps 7-6 (OT) – Russian Machine Never Breaks

  1. Capitals drop thirteen-goal thriller on Ovi’s big night: Blue Jackets beat Caps 7-6 (OT) Russian Machine Never Breaks
  2. Capitals’ Nick Jensen Goes Coast-To-Coast, Snipes Goal Top Corner On Tough Angle vs. Blue Jackets SPORTSNET
  3. Capitals lose to Blue Jackets in overtime after honoring Alex Ovechkin The Washington Post
  4. After two bad losses, Peter Laviolette changes all of the Capitals’ lines again Russian Machine Never Breaks
  5. Adam Boqvist and Jack Roslovic Each Score Two Goals As Blue Jackets Beat Capitals 7-6 in OT | 1st Ohio Battery 1st Ohio Battery
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Capitals can ‘get serious’ about a possible John Carlson return from injury in late March – Russian Machine Never Breaks

  1. Capitals can ‘get serious’ about a possible John Carlson return from injury in late March Russian Machine Never Breaks
  2. Snapshots: Carlson, Giuttari, Murray prohockeyrumors.com
  3. Washington GM MacLellan: Jensen’s Injury “More Positive Than We Originally Thought,” Carlson To Be Re-evaluated At End Of March NoVa Caps
  4. RMNB’s Trade Deadline Day live blog spectatcular: Capitals ‘retool’ edition Russian Machine Never Breaks
  5. Capitals Provide Update On John Carlson, ‘Set Timeframe’ On Return Washington Hockey Now
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Nick Jensen admits ‘it’s hard to be happy’ about new contract while Capitals deal veterans at trade deadline – Russian Machine Never Breaks

  1. Nick Jensen admits ‘it’s hard to be happy’ about new contract while Capitals deal veterans at trade deadline Russian Machine Never Breaks
  2. Tom Wilson’s overtime goal powers Capitals to painful win over Ducks The Washington Post
  3. Nick Jensen Cites the Capitals’ Team Culture As Primary Reason Behind Signing Three-Year Deal NoVa Caps
  4. Peter Laviolette provides injury updates on Nick Jensen and Martin Fehervary after defensemen suffer injuries against Anaheim Russian Machine Never Breaks
  5. The Noon Number: New Blueline, Who Dis? Japers Rink
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NHL Stadium Series | Carolina Hurricanes play Washington Capitals inside Carter Finley Stadium – WTVD-TV

  1. NHL Stadium Series | Carolina Hurricanes play Washington Capitals inside Carter Finley Stadium WTVD-TV
  2. Caps lose Stadium Series 4-1 to Canes, utterly pathetic Russian Machine Never Breaks
  3. Carolina Hurricanes vs. Washington Capitals: Stadium Series Lineups and Discussion Canes Country
  4. Vintage Sergei Bobrovsky making saves for surging Panthers :: WRALSportsFan.com WRALSportsFan
  5. Peter Laviolette calls Caps performance against Florida ‘not good.’ Dylan Strome thinks team may need to win 17 of 25 games to make playoffs. Russian Machine Never Breaks
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Capitals show off new Stadium Series branded gear in locker room before outdoor practice – Russian Machine Never Breaks

  1. Capitals show off new Stadium Series branded gear in locker room before outdoor practice Russian Machine Never Breaks
  2. Fireworks conclude a day of fun, photos, autographs and music for Carolina Hurricanes fans in downtown Raleigh :: WRALSportsFan.com WRALSportsFan
  3. Praising the Stadium Series, the NHL’s wilder outdoor game ESPN
  4. Canes outdoor game: Parking, traffic info for NHL Stadium Series at Carter-Finley Stadium WRAL News
  5. NHL Stadium Series 2023: Lambeau Field among places the league should go for future outdoor games CBS Sports
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Capitals beat Flyers 3-2 (OT)

The Washington Capitals and Philadelphia Flyers entered Wednesday night’s action both looking to snap extended losing streaks. Only one could be washed away though.

Morgan Frost sent a weak shot on Darcy Kuemper that the Caps netminder popped up into the air and behind him to kick the scoring off. Marcus Johansson hit paydirt on his second try as he guided home an Alex Ovechkin shot on a power play to tie things up. Patrick Brown beat Kuemper with a soft tip try in front to give Philly their lead back.

Sonny Milano tied it late for the Caps. Alex Ovechkin overtime winner!

Capitals beat Flyers 3-2!

  • The Capitals have had a really rough time in opening periods of late and that continued in this one. In their last five games, they have been outscored 11-1 in the first period. They eventually turned things around, tied the game up, and probably had more of the positive momentum heading into the first intermission.
  • The goal that they gave up was just straight-up awful from their netminder. Darcy Kuemper cannot be doing that especially when the team in front of him is having trouble putting the puck in the net themselves. He did not look comfortable in net whatsoever to start the game.
  • Marcus Johansson kicked one in that got called back and then stole one from Alex Ovechkin by touching a puck that was already headed over the goal line. Just a really evil game from Mojo/Jojo. Fitting.
  • Another pretty weak one let in by Kuemper in the second and the Caps just cannot score right now. They had the puck for the majority of the period but were unable to find the last pass or shot. 11 to 2 in five-on-five scoring chances in the second frame but the team with only 2 was the only one able to get on the board.
  • Good to see Nicklas Backstrom in the booth on TNT. Happy birthday, Nicke! Get back as soon as you can, please.
  • What’s the final score of the US’s match against England on Friday going to be? I’m worried about it, folks. It’s either going to be like 4-1 England or 1-0 to the good guys. No in-between. Maybe Berhalter will play Gio Reyna as he should have on Monday.
  • Georgetown should not be allowed to play basketball the literal same day as Capitals games. The puck looked like a bouncy ball at some points. One of the bigger home-ice disadvantages in the league.
  • I thought TJ Oshie was excellent in his return. His fantastic play set up Sonny Milano’s tying goal in the third and he grabbed an assist on the first Washington goal as well.
  • John Tortorella apparently got kicked in the face by a horse recently. If that happened to me you wouldn’t see me for the next six months.
  • Number 790 for Alex Ovechkin. What a game-winning shift from him in overtime.
  • I know this was probably a more negative time in Caps fandom recently so I’m going to switch the narrative up a bit in the comment section. Name one obscure Caps player that you’re thankful for and why. I’ll try and highlight my favorite at some point.

Happy Thanksgiving! We’ll next see the Caps on Friday when the Calgary Flames come to town for their one visit this season.

Headline photo courtesy of Alexander G.



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The Capitals projected Opening Night roster after signing Dylan Strome

The Washington Capitals have been very busy in the offseason so far, bringing in eight players during the first two days of free agency.

To recap: the Capitals 2022-23 roster now sports Dylan Strome (2C), Connor Brown (top six wing), Marcus Johansson (bottom six), and Henrik Borgstrom (depth center/winger) at forward; Erik Gustafsson (bottom pairing) and Matt Irwin (depth) at defensemen; and two new goaltenders, Darcy Kuemper and Charlie Lindgren.

The team is now $6.3 million over the salary cap, per Cap Friendly. Teams are allowed to be up to 10 percent over the cap in the offseason.

Brian MacLellan’s signings suggest several big competitions playing out during Training Camp, none larger than the third-center spot, where if Connor McMichael loses out to Lars Eller, he could spend the season in AHL Hershey.


Capitals projected Opening Night roster

Capitals GM Brian MacLellan said the Caps would fill Nicklas Backstrom’s spot internally, but the addition of Strome during free agency pushes McMichael, the team’s top young player, down the lineup and potentially off the roster entirely. Despite a 2021-22 season that saw him rank second on the team in CF/60, first in xGF/60, second in SCF/60, and second in HDCF/60, McMichael was not given more opportunity and one of the first player’s stapled to the bench by head coach Peter Laviolette, who seemed concerned about the Canadian’s two-way game. Among players that got into 20 games for the Caps last season, only Brett Leason (8:57) had an average ice time lesser than McMichael’s (10:28). McMichael could join Hendrix Lapierre, and Aliaksei Protas in Hershey next season, but opportunity could open up a year later. Multiple veteran forwards will be unrestricted free agents next summer.

Other battles in camp will include both bottom-six left wing positions. Based on evidence from last season, Marcus Johansson and Axel Jonsson-Fjallby have the inside track but Snively, Borgstrom, Leason, Protas, and maybe even McMichael will all be pushing for one of those spots. It will either be 13th forward duty in the NHL or the Hershey Bears for those who lose out on the positions. Is it possible Eller is even a fit on the wing as was tried on a couple of occasions last season?

On defense, things are a bit tighter. It appears Gustafsson was purposefully signed to play with TVR but Caps brass have also raved about how well Lucas Johansen played in the AHL last season. Matt Irwin is back too and is a Laviolette favorite, plays both sides, and got into 17 games in 2021-22. That’s a competition that likely will go down all season as the Caps have typically carried eight defensemen under Laviolette..


The Capitals strange salary cap situation

Capitals’ salary cap specialist Don Fishman has likely worked long hours this summer. The team is currently well above the cap maximum ($6.3M), but there is one obvious immediate solution: placing Nicklas Backstrom ($9.2M), Tom Wilson ($5.17M), and Carl Hagelin ($2.75M) all on long-term injured reserve to start the year. The cap savings would be $17.12 million and would it would give the team just a shade over $10.7 million in space. But, what happens when those guys return as the team expects them to do sometime this season? That’s a little more complicated.

The last update we received on Hagelin was that he has an appointment in August to determine the finalities of how well his eye surgery actually went and if he has recovered enough to play hockey in 2022-23. He has been back skating since early May and if that appointment goes positively, could we see him fighting to play as early as October? Hagelin’s $2.75 million salary will still be covered by the long-term absences of Wilson and Backstrom ($8.05 million in space) but it also likely forces a younger forward that won one of the final spots to Hershey or in the case of someone like AJF back on waivers first. That forward will not have a cap hit that changes much for the team going forward.

Now, Wilson is expected back around the holiday season from his offseason knee surgery. The first-line forward’s $5.17 million salary will also fit under the cap with Backstrom still on LTIR but it creates yet another scenario where without a trade, another forward needs to move back to Hershey. Wilson is a right wing and it’s not likely one of those guys currently on the depth chart on the right side are going to be the ones moving on. One possible scenario includes Sheary moving onto the left which is where we already expect the most competition for roster spots to be without adding another established NHL veteran to the mix. As you can tell, things are getting really tight for someone like McMichael mentioned above.

The final piece is Backstrom. The Capitals have operated this entire offseason like they expect to not be able to just pull a Nikita Kucherov and stash the Swedish center until the playoffs. If that was the case, someone getting paid a lot more than Dylan Strome would currently be on the roster. In our hypothetical scenario so far, Backstrom’s $9.2 million salary would put the team around $6 million over the cap upon his return. So, something major has got to give there and one possibility could be trades of both Eller and Hagelin whose salaries add up to $6.25 million together. That would also free up opportunities for the cheaper, younger alternatives already in the organization.

One thing is for certain is that the team’s front office will be earning their checks for the rest of the summer through the regular season.


What are your thoughts on the work the Caps did on day one? How do you think they’ll look on Opening night?



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Capitals sign second-line center Dylan Strome to one-year, $3.5 million deal

Late on Day Two of free agency, the Washington Capitals announced another major free agent signing. The team inked Dylan Strome, formerly of the Chicago Blackhawks, to a one-year, $3.5 million deal.

Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman was the first to report the news.

In 69 nice games last season, the six-foot-three Strome scored 22 goals and tallied 48 points. The 22 goals were a career-high. Strome centered Alex DeBrincat and Patrick Kane for a majority of the season.

The 25-year-old Strome was not tendered a qualifying offer by the rebuilding Chicago Blackhawks, which is why he was an unrestricted free agent.

Playing second-line minutes in Chicago, Strome immediately becomes the favorite to replace Nicklas Backstrom in the short term after GM Brian MacLellan said he would turn to internal options such as Connor McMichael, Hendrix Lapierre, or Aliaksei Protas.

“The salary cap is the salary cap,” MacLellan said. “We have to plan for Nick coming back at some point. What we can do is give opportunities to our young guys. We’ve got some young guys — McMichael, we hope he gets to the next step; Lapierre, we’ll see where he’s at; Protas is coming in and we expect him to take the next jump — and kinda go from there. It’s not like we can sign a $9.5 million player. We’re anticipating Nick comes back at some point. Until that goes away, we plan on him coming back.”

The Capitals will now face a major quandary if Backstrom comes back during the season. The team is $5.6 million over the salary cap and would have to make some type of major trade to accommodate the Swede unless they hold him out until to the postseason begins (similar to what the Lightning did during their championship year with Nikita Kucherov).

The Strome signing combined with Marcus Johansson’s return also signals that the team’s center prospects may all end up in the AHL for a full season unless other moves are made. Third-line center Lars Eller is in the final year of his deal ($3.5M AAV) and struggled during parts of last season.

Strome will be a restricted free agent and arbitration eligble next summer, meaning the Capitals will hold his rights past this season.

Here’s the full release from the Capitals:

Capitals Sign Dylan Strome

ARLINGTON, Va. – The Washington Capitals have signed forward Dylan Strome to a one-year, $3.5 million contract, senior vice president and general manager Brian MacLellan announced today.

Strome, 25, recorded 48 points (22g, 26a) in 69 games with the Chicago Blackhawks in 2021-22. The 6’3”, 200-pound forward established single-season career highs in goals and games played and averaged a career-best 17:26 time on ice last season. Strome ranked third on the team in goals and fourth in assists and points.

Originally drafted by the Arizona Coyotes with the third overall pick in the 2015 NHL Draft, Strome recorded a career-high 57 points (20g, 37a) in 78 games with Arizona and Chicago in 2018-19. The Mississauga, Ontario native averaged 0.68 points per game in parts of four seasons with Chicago from 2018-19 to 2021-22, which ranked fifth on the team in that span.

In 273 career NHL games with Arizona and Chicago, Strome has recorded 170 points (67g, 103a).

Internationally, Strome has represented Canada at the 2019 World Championship, where he earned a silver medal, and at the 2017 and 2016 World Junior Championships, earning a silver medal at the 2017 tournament.

Strome was teammates with recently acquired Capitals forward Connor Brown with the Erie Otters of the Ontario Hockey League (OHL) during the 2013-14 season.

Headline photo: @thegoldenstromes/IG



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