According to Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman, the Washington Capitals have signed defenseman Jakob Chychrun to an eight-year, $72MM extension ($9MM AAV). An extension between the Capitals and Chychrun has seemingly been in the works for some time, with rumored interest dating back to the beginning of the season.
The deal comes across as a market-setter for upper-echelon defensemen ahead of unrestricted free agency kicking off in a few months, not too dissimilar from how Leon Draisaitl’s eight-year, $112MM extension influenced the market for superstar forwards. Of course, Chychrun would be the top name on that market if he didn’t reach an agreement with Washington. Instead, he gets a deal that gives him much-desired stability while tying him for the tenth-highest-paid defenseman in the league, at least for next season.
Acquired from the Senators last summer in what was Chychrun’s second swap in as many years, the soon-to-be 27-year-old has re-emerged as a top-20 rearguard in the league. He’s seemingly shed the injury-prone label that followed him at the beginning of his career in Arizona, playing in 147 of 152 possible contests since the beginning of last season. After spending the first eight years of his time in the NHL with middling Coyotes and Senators clubs, he’s tracking to make the postseason for the first time aside from Arizona’s appearance in the 2020 bubble – playing a crucial role on the current President’s Trophy favorite.
The Caps’ league-leading offense is something to behold, considering their question marks entering the season about their depth, and a large part of their system success can be attributed to how general manager Chris Patrick retooled their blue line on the fly. Along with signing Matt Roy, acquiring Chychrun gave the Caps another puck mover with historically strong possession impacts to slot into their top four. He’s held up his end of the bargain, ranking third in the league in goals by defensemen with 18 and adding 25 assists for 43 points, second among Washington defenders behind John Carlson’s 46. He’s split the year between pairings with Carlson and Trevor van Riemsdyk, leading to a slight reduction in ice time compared to his career average. His 20:56 ATOI is his lowest mark since the 2018-19 campaign, but that’s a testament to Washington’s blue line depth more than anything else.
Aside from the point totals (his 0.662 points per game are 17th in the league among defensemen), he continues to positively impact the Caps’ ability to keep the puck out of their net. His 52.8 CF% is second among Washington defensemen behind Carlson at even strength, and his +4.6 expected rating is third. While his overall shares are driven more by his offensive production, his raw defensive numbers at 5v5 (26.15 scoring chances against per 60 minutes, per Natural Stat Trick) are still in line with his teammates.
Chychrun will return to D.C. next season along with all five of his regular teammates on defense, barring any trades. As the aging Carlson and van Riemsdyk weigh their future past next season, Washington’s defensemen at No. 2-4 on their depth chart – Chychrun, Roy, and Rasmus Sandin – are all signed through at least 2029. The other piece of the puzzle, Martin Fehérváry, is set to be an RFA in the summer of 2026 in Washington’s last year of team control. The Caps are committing $33.025MM in cap space to their blue line for 2025-26, 34.6% of the $95.5MM upper limit.
Overall, Washington now projects to have $14.125MM in spending money this offseason with six roster spots to fill, per PuckPedia. They don’t have any particularly high-cost pending free agents on the active roster, so that should be enough flexibility to retain who they want while making a somewhat impactful add on the open market.
Since the beginning of Chychrun’s breakout 2020-21 campaign in Arizona, when he finished 10th in Norris voting, he ranks 27th in the league among defensemen in points per game (min. 100 games). He has 94-165–259 in 532 career games with Arizona, Ottawa, and Washington.
Image courtesy of Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images.
PHR’s Josh Erickson contributed significantly to this article.
For those Adam Fox haters, Fox and Chychurun now make the same AAV
Good for him. He’d been bounced around so much, so to see him be able to settle down somewhere
He spent 6+ years in AZ, just over a season in Ottawa, and now locked into the Caps. He hasn’t exactly been racking up frequent mover miles.
4 years from now this could be a good deal right now not so much
He is having a great year, only time will tell, with Carlson being 35, Chychrun will probably be their number 1 defenseman and will get like 25+ minutes per game and all the special teams minutes too, he’ll have every chance to put up points, we’ll see how this ages
Apparently being on a good team keeps one healthier!
Decent defender, total wellness weirdo in real life.
Yeah, those people who focus on health are real nutjobs.
And Makar’s negotiations just went to another level.
8×9???
no, 9×8
Well that’s one way of using resources. Just wondering how they will handle the cap in the future?
they will stay under it
Is this the same Chychrun who was -30 last season?
No, it’s the Chychrun that is +24 this season.
No. Completely different person. Just coincidence that he has the same name and plays hockey.
seems like a lot of years and money but with rising cap and with him only 26 it will work out. The new issue is how do the bring LHD Cole Hutson into the fold in 2-3 years with Sandin and Feharvy.
Good for him, he finally found a home.
League definitely over emphasizes scoring from D instead of actually being shut-down quality. Still seems a bit high ?