- The Washington Capitals are deploying a shell of their potential blue line with defensemen Jakob Chychrun and Matt Roy nursing separate injuries. Neither blue liner drew into tonight’s contest against the Montreal Canadiens but all signs indicate this reality may not last much longer. Bailey Johnson of the Washington Post reported earlier that both defensemen were skating in non-contact jerseys earlier today hinting that their return may be close. Roy, the Capitals impact free agent signing from the offseason, has only suited up in one game in Washington this season before suffering a lower-body injury.
- Washington did get one reinforcement back on the blue line with Alexander Alexeyev returning to the team from personal leave (X Link). Alexeyev and his wife were celebrating the birth of their first child and now the St. Petersburg, Russia native will play his first game of the 2024-25 NHL season. He skated in 39 games for the Capitals last season registering one goal and three points while averaging 13:42 of ice time per game.
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Capitals Rumors
Injury Notes: Capitals, Hakanpaa, Määttä, Kesselring
The Washington Capitals will have a mess to sort out on defense with Jakob Chychrun (upper-body) and Alexander Alexeyev (personal) each out day-to-day, per Tarik El-Bashir of Monumental Sports Network. El-Bashir also shares that Matt Roy, who has been out since October 12th, is nearing a return but likely won’t play on Thursday.
Chychrun suffered his injury after just four shifts in Washington’s Tuesday night win over the New York Rangers. He was seen nursing his left ribs partway through his final shift, though it’s hard to place exactly when he suffered his injury.
Alexeyev and Roy would stand as the de facto options to fill Chychrun’s top-pair role. But with both also potentially missing Thursday night’s game, the Capitals will have to instead turn towards Rasmus Sandin or Martin Fehervary to fill their role of top left-defender. The team could also turn to the minor leagues for a fill-in, where Hardy Haman-Aktell stands as the top left-defense with three assists in six games to start the year.
Other notes from blue-lines around the league:
- Defenseman Jani Hakanpaa is nearing his debut with the Toronto Maple Leafs after spending the start of the season on IR with a knee injury, shares David Alter of The Hockey News. Hakanpaa opened the year on long-term injured reserve, nursing an injury that ended his 2023-24 campaign in March. He proceeded to go through contract cartwheels with Toronto throughout the summer, signing with the team in July but not finalizing the deal until September. He joined Toronto’s practices on October 2nd, and even traveled with the team on their recent two-game road trip – all suggesting a return is imminent. Hakanpaa is awaiting clearance from Toronto’s doctors and activation off of LTIR, but figures to support the team’s defensive depth when he returns.
- The Utah Hockey Club could plan to ice seven defensemen on Wednesday – per Cole Bagley of KSL Sports – with Michael Kesselring returning from illness (link) and Olli Määttä quickly joining the team after trade (link). Kesselring has so far played in all 10 of Utah’s games, and ranks second on the blue-line in scoring with five points. Meanwhile, Maatta has yet to change his stat line at all this season – recording no scoring, no penalties, and no lasting change in +/- through seven games with the Detroit Red Wings. He was flipped to Utah for a 2025 third-round pick, and offers much-needed depth to a Utah club without both Sean Durzi and John Marino for the long-term. Kesselring should maintain his spot on the team’s top pair, while Maatta will join Vladislav Kolyachonok and Maveric Lamoureux in fighting for depth ice time.
Evening Notes: Chychrun, Kapanen, Bastian
The Washington Capitals have announced that defenseman Jakob Chychrun won’t return to tonight’s game after suffering an upper-body injury. Chychrun suffered the injury in a game against the New York Rangers after he had played for just one minute and 50 seconds. Chychrun was +1 tonight in his limited appearance.
It’s a tough break for the 26-year-old, who is in his first season with Washington after a trade this past summer that saw Nick Jensen and a 2026 third-round pick head back to Ottawa. Chychrun has been solid to start the year, posting two goals and two assists in seven games. Chychrun can ill afford to be out long term as his in the final year of his current contract with a cap hit of $4.6MM.
In other evening notes:
- The St. Louis Blues have announced that forward Kasperi Kapanen is dealing with an upper-body injury and will not return to tonight’s game. Kapanen took a high hit in a game against the Ottawa Senators and appeared to hit his face on the boards. Kapanen did get to the bench under his own power but did not return. The 28-year-old was dressing in his first game since playing just 8:57 on October 24th against the Toronto Maple Leafs. Kapanen has struggled this season, with a single goal in seven games.
- Forward Nathan Bastian will return to the New Jersey Devils lineup tomorrow night when the team takes on the Vancouver Canucks (as per Devils reporter Amanda Stein). Bastian hasn’t played since October 24th, as he has been a healthy scratch for the last two games. New Jersey has opted to use Kurtis MacDermid in Bastian’s place the past few days, but now the 26-year-old will have an opportunity to draw back into the lineup and add to the two goals and two assists that he has posted so far this season in ten games.
Capitals Recall Michael Sgarbossa, Place Matt Roy On IR
The Capitals have recalled veteran center Michael Sgarbossa from AHL Hershey, per general manager Chris Patrick. Defenseman Matt Roy, absent since the season opener after sustaining a lower-body injury, was placed on injured reserve to open up a spot for Sgarbossa on the active roster.
The news doesn’t delay Roy’s return to the lineup – he’s been out for more than seven days so that he can come off IR at any time. In fact, the 29-year-old made a big step in his recovery today, as Bailey Johnson of The Washington Post relays he participated in practice wearing a non-contact jersey for the first time since exiting the lineup.
Signed to a six-year, $34.5MM deal in free agency, Roy logged a -2 rating and two shots on goal in 8:39 of ice time against the Devils back on Oct. 12. The Detroit native averaged 20:54 per game for the Kings last season, recording a career-high 20 assists with a +21 rating and 42 PIMs in 81 games. Washington brought in the 6’1″, 205-lb defender to serve as their No. 2 right-shot option behind John Carlson, replacing Nick Jensen, who the Caps traded to the Senators for Jakob Chychrun as part of a significant offseason remodel of their defense corps.
Meanwhile, Sgarbossa will likely draw in for Hendrix Lapierre, who has no points and a -5 rating in seven games this season, tomorrow against the Rangers, per Sammi Silber of The Hockey News. Sgarbossa, 32, has been with the Caps since the 2018-19 season, usually serving as a top-six fixture in the minors for AHL Hershey. He’s been a productive regular-season player, posting 249 points in 269 games since arriving there six years ago. However, he has barely played in postseason action the past few years as Hershey has marched to back-to-back Calder Cup championships.
After not seeing NHL ice in 2022-23, Sgarbossa played 25 games for the Capitals last season, his most since splitting the 2016-17 season between the Ducks and Panthers. He scored four goals and added three assists for seven points, averaging 10:58 per game and winning 46% of his draws. He’s appeared in 42 NHL contests for Washington over the past six years and 90 NHL games in total, making his big-league debut with the Avalanche back in 2012-13. He’s also spent time under contract with the Jets and Sharks but never got into an NHL game for either club.
Sgarobssa is off to a hot start for Hershey this season, posting a goal and eight assists in his first seven games. He had seven goals and 43 points in 44 games for the AHL club last season. He’s in the back half of a two-year, two-way deal that pays him a hefty $525K minor-league salary and is ticketed for unrestricted free agency next summer.
Roy Skates Before Practice
- Capitals defenseman Matt Roy skated today before practice notes NHL.com’s Tom Gulitti (Twitter link). The 29-year-old suffered a lower-body injury in Washington’s season opener and hasn’t played since. Roy was their most prominent free agent signing over the summer, inking a six-year, $34.5MM contract after putting up 25 points in nearly 21 minutes a night last season with Los Angeles. While he’s now back on the ice, he did not accompany the team on their road trip to Tampa Bay.
Capitals’ Matt Roy Out Day-To-Day
Washington Capitals defenseman Matt Roy missed the team’s Monday practice with a lower-body injury and has been designated as day-to-day shares Bailey Johnson of the Washington Post. Roy left the team’s Saturday game just a few minutes into the second period, though he didn’t seem limited in any way on his final shift. No further information about the injury has been revealed.
Roy recorded no scoring and a -2 in Washington’s season opener. The performance continued his scoreless stat-line from three preseason games, where Roy’s only recorded metrics were one blocked shot and four hits. Roy has struggled to bring his stout, defensive presence in his action with Washington, despite thriving in the role with Los Angeles for the last six seasons.
Roy was a true success story for the Kings, getting drafted in the seventh round of the 2015 NHL Draft and clawing his way up to the NHL lineup through two impactful seasons in the AHL. He made his NHL debut in the 2018-19 season and quickly continued his climb, stepping into the league on LA’s third-pairing but earning routine top-pair ice time as quickly as the 2020-21 season. By 2021-22, Roy was the de facto partner for Kings star Drew Doughty, averaging close to 21 minutes every game. His role was keenly focused on the defensive side of the puck, but Roy still managed a stout 21, 26, and 25 points through three seasons on the Kings’ top line.
Strong performances in Los Angeles earned Roy a hefty payday on July 1st when Washington signed him to a seven-year, $34.5MM contract. The deal carries Roy through his age-36 season and makes him a notable fixture of a Capitals blue-line that’s been completely refurbished. Roy was paired with Martin Fehervary on the second-pair for Washington’s season opener. Should he miss time, Roy will likely be replaced by a mix of Trevor van Riemsdyk and Dylan McIlrath. Van Riemsdyk saw the immediate boost from Roy’s injury, recording 19 minutes of ice time in the season opener – his heaviest utilization since December of 2023.
Matt Roy Leaves Game With Lower-Body Injury
Minnesota Wild forward Joel Eriksson Ek didn’t travel with the team to Winnipeg for tonight’s game against the Jets after he suffered an apparent injury in last night’s game against the Seattle Kraken (as per Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman). Eriksson Ek was left bloodied after a second-period hit from Kraken defenseman Adam Larsson caught him on the nose. Larsson’s elbow appeared to catch the 27-year-old up high, forcing him to leave the game for the remainder of the second period.
Eriksson Ek attempted to return to the game in the third period and took one shift while wearing a bubble shield on his helmet. He left after one shift and didn’t return or get on the team’s flight after the game. Minnesota head coach John Hynes did not provide a post-game update.
In other morning notes:
- Newly acquired Washington Capitals defenseman Matt Roy left the game last night during his Capitals debut (as per Sammi Silber of The Hockey News). The 29-year-old played his last shift about three minutes into the second period and didn’t appear to suffer any obvious injury. He ended the night playing just 8:39 and Washington announced he would not return near the end of the second period. Roy signed a six-year $34.5MM with the Capitals on July 1st and was expected to be a regular in the team’s top four. He missed just one game over the past two seasons as a member of the Los Angeles Kings.
- Columbus Blue Jackets forward Zach Aston-Reese left last night’s game against the Colorado Avalanche with an upper-body injury (as per Blue Jackets reporter Jeff Svoboda). The 30-year-old appeared to suffer the injury when he was hit up high during his first shift of the night. Aston-Reese was acquired off waivers last week from the Vegas Golden Knights and started the season on the Blue Jackets’ fourth line. The eight-year NHL veteran was hoping to secure an NHL role once again this season after spending almost all of last season in the AHL. Aston-Reese played just three games last year in the NHL with Detroit and remains a strong defensive forward, but brings very little in the way of offense. If he can’t play on Tuesday when Columbus takes on Florida, Dylan Gambrell will likely take his spot.
Salary Cap Deep Dive: Washington Capitals
Navigating the salary cap is one of the most important tasks for a front office. Teams that can avoid total cap chaos by walking the tightrope of inking players to deals that match their value (or compensate for future value without breaking the bank) remain successful. Those that don’t often see struggles and front office changes.
PHR will look at every NHL team and give a thorough look at their cap situation heading into the 2024-25 season. This will focus more on players who are regulars on the roster versus those who may find themselves shuttling between the AHL and NHL. All cap figures are courtesy of PuckPedia. We’re currently covering the Metropolitan Division, next up is the Capitals.
Washington Capitals
Current Cap Hit: $98,665,965 (above the $88MM Upper Limit)
Entry-Level Contracts
F Hendrix Lapierre (one year, $863K)
Potential Bonuses
Lapierre: $445K
Lapierre spent the bulk of last season with Washington with some short stints with AHL Hershey mixed in. Most of that time was in a bottom-six role, one he’s likely to have this season as well which means his bonuses are unlikely to be met, aside from possibly any games-played ones. A bridge agreement should be the outcome for Lapierre who, if he stays in the bottom six for most of this season, could possibly double his current price tag next summer.
Signed Through 2024-25, Non-Entry-Level
D Alexander Alexeyev ($825K, RFA)
F Nicklas Backstrom ($9.2MM, UFA)
D Ethan Bear ($2.0625MM, UFA)
D Jakob Chychrun ($4.6MM, UFA)
F Nic Dowd ($1.3MM, UFA)
G Charlie Lindgren ($1.1MM, UFA)
F Andrew Mangiapane ($5.8MM, UFA)
D Dylan McIlrath ($775K, UFA)
F T.J. Oshie ($5.75MM, UFA)
F Taylor Raddysh ($1MM, UFA)
G Logan Thompson ($766.7K, UFA)
F Jakub Vrana ($775K, UFA)
Let’s get Backstrom and Oshie out of the way together as they’re in the same situation. Backstrom remains on LTIR where he was for most of last season while it’s unlikely that Oshie will be able to suit up this season either. GM Chris Patrick’s early-offseason spending was a strong indicator that the team doesn’t believe Oshie will be cleared to play.
Mangiapane was one of the additions through that early spending. After scoring 35 goals in 2021-22 (yielding this contract), he has just 31 in the two years since then although he has reached at least 40 points each time. At this point, a small pay cut could be coming but if he can even get back to 30 goals with his new team, Mangiapane could push past $6MM next summer.
Dowd has gone from being a regular fourth liner a few years ago to a regular third liner, pushing past 20 points in three straight years now. A center who can kill penalties, he’s in line to potentially add another million per season or so to that number, albeit on a short-term deal as he’ll be 35 next summer. Raddysh was non-tendered this summer, resulting in him looking for a short-term rebound deal. Only a year removed from a 20-goal campaign, he could double this next summer if he can get back to the 15-goal mark or so. Vrana had to earn a deal the hard way through a PTO but landed one earlier this week. After bouncing around a bit in recent years, it’s hard to see him commanding much more than the minimum unless he has a big season offensively.
Chychrun was brought in via an early July trade to help bolster the back end. He doesn’t produce enough to be a high-end threat offensively but he has reached the double-digit goal mark in three of the last five years and reached the 40-point plateau last season as well. If he stays in that range while continuing to play heavy minutes, his next deal could surpass $7MM on a long-term agreement.
Bear was a midseason signing last year that hasn’t panned out yet. After exiting the Player Assistance Program over the offseason, he wound up not making the team and cleared waivers earlier this month. He’ll carry a pro-rated $912.5K cap charge while with AHL Hershey and if he’s there all season, he’ll be looking at something closer to the minimum next summer. Alexeyev has had a limited role so far in his NHL action, primarily playing part-time on the third pairing. His qualifying offer checks in just below $920K with arbitration rights next summer but Washington won’t be able to afford that roster spot costing much more than that. McIlrath, meanwhile, has primarily been in the minors in recent years and accordingly, his next deal should come in at or near the minimum salary again.
Lindgren was a late bloomer but since joining Washington two years ago, he has established himself as at least a capable NHL netminder. Last season, he wrestled away the number one job from Darcy Kuemper which will only help his cause in negotiations. Still, with a limited track record (just 110 career NHL appearances heading into the season), an early extension isn’t likely – both sides probably want to wait and see what happens – but if he has a similar year to this one, he should earn at least $3MM on a multi-year agreement next summer. If it’s another year as a true starter, the recent five-year, $25MM contract given to Joey Daccord could come up in talks.
Thompson also has somewhat of a limited track record in terms of experience but is also a few years younger with better career numbers after three strong seasons in Vegas. Accordingly, it wouldn’t be shocking if his camp is already eyeing something close to Daccord’s new deal if and when extension talks get underway. The cheapest goalie in the NHL, Thompson’s next deal will certainly change that soon enough.
Signed Through 2025-26
D John Carlson ($8MM, UFA)
F Brandon Duhaime ($1.85MM, UFA)
D Martin Fehervary ($2.675MM, RFA)
F Connor McMichael ($2.1MM, RFA)
F Sonny Milano ($1.9MM, UFA)
F Alex Ovechkin ($9.5MM, UFA)
D Trevor van Riemsdyk ($3MM, UFA)
Ovechkin is one of the top scorers in NHL history and even with a very high AAV for most of his career, he has lived up to it. That might be ending soon strictly from a bang-for-buck perspective. The 39-year-old had the lowest full-season production of his career and players generally don’t have a resurgent year at that age. That said, with all he has done for them and the chase for the all-time record, the Capitals won’t be too concerned if they’re not getting top value here.
McMichael received a bridge deal which was a pretty obvious outcome considering he spent most of 2022-23 in the minors. But if he can stay in the top six regularly, he could double that next time out with arbitration eligibility and if it looks like he’s a core piece for the future by then, a long-term deal could push past $5MM. Milano managed 15 goals in 49 games last season which isn’t bad production for that price tag but the book on him in recent years is that he can be effective only in a limited role. That has hindered his market before and probably will next time out unless something changes over the next couple of years. Duhaime is a crash-and-bang winger who only managed five goals last season, making this price tag seemingly a bit high for that role but perhaps a change of scenery will allow him to contribute a bit more offensively which would set him up to pass $2MM next time out.
While Carlson didn’t light up the scoresheet as much as he has in the past, he did reach the double-digit goal mark for the sixth time in the last seven years last season and logged a career high in ice time at nearly 26 minutes a night. That type of playing time is unsustainable for a 34-year-old but he doesn’t need to play that much to justify this deal. He remains an all-situations type of player which should give this contract a good chance to hold up value-wise over the final two seasons. It’s not inconceivable that he lands a small raise next time out although the likelier outcome is more of a medium-term agreement that would allow the AAV to be a bit lower.
As for van Riemsdyk, he has found a home in Washington, going from being a player toward the end of the depth chart to spending a lot of time on the second pairing. This price tag for someone in that role is good value. He’ll be entering his age-35 year on his next contract so he might be hard-pressed to get much more than this in 2026. Fehervary, meanwhile, is on his bridge deal and has similarly played a lot on the second pairing. Given that he’s still 25, he could push past the $4MM mark if things go well, perhaps $5MM on a long-term pact. His current deal is front-loaded, carrying just a $1.075MM qualifying offer two years from now.
Signed Through 2026-27
None
East Notes: Kapanen, Grimaldi, Thompson
After a strong training camp, Canadiens center prospect Oliver Kapanen was a surprise inclusion on the opening night roster. The 21-year-old pivot sat in the press box for their season opener against the Maple Leafs but made his NHL debut in last night’s loss to the Bruins, recording an assist and a shot on goal in 10:22 of ice time.
The 2021 second-round pick is demonstrating he has a decently high offensive ceiling. After all, he did show up in a big way for Liiga’s KalPa last year, posting 34 points (14 G, 20 A) in 51 games. That’s strong production for a youngster in a European pro league, and tacking on his six goals in eight games for the Finns at the 2024 World Championship, it’s clear he’s knocking on the door of full-time NHL minutes.
But there isn’t an extremely clear path to them yet, with Nick Suzuki, Kirby Dach, Jake Evans, and Christian Dvorak down the middle. It’s foreseeable that Kapanen won’t spend the whole year on the NHL roster. While they would typically be required to first offer him back to his European team (now Timrå IK of the Swedish Hockey League) due to transfer regulations for some international non-first-round picks, that may not be the case. He could spend the rest of the season on assignment to AHL Laval if he spends at least 60 days on Montreal’s roster to open the campaign, as Marco D’Amico of Responsible Gambler pointed out. That’s a decently likely scenario with Rafaël Harvey-Pinard and Patrik Laine facing long-term injuries. Kapanen would likely play out the rest of the year in the minors once one is ready to return.
Elsewhere in the Eastern Conference:
- The Blue Jackets’ AHL affiliate, the Cleveland Monsters, have landed minor-league scoring star Rocco Grimaldi on a 25-game tryout, per Aaron Portzline of The Athletic. He’ll suit up with the Monsters to start the year while he continues his quest to land a two-way NHL contract. The undersized 31-year-old last saw NHL minutes with the Predators in the 2021-22 campaign, but he’s been an adequate depth offensive presence when given the chance, with 30 goals and 37 assists in 203 career NHL appearances. The former second-round pick of the Panthers has posted over a point per game in three straight AHL campaigns, including 73 in 72 games last year with the AHL’s Chicago Wolves.
- Capitals netminder Logan Thompson has returned to the team today after missing a few days while on personal leave, reports Sammi Silber of The Hockey News. The Caps don’t open their season until tomorrow, so it’s unclear if their offseason trade pickup from Vegas will get the opening-night start over resident No. 1 Charlie Lindgren. Thompson made a career-high 42 starts for the Golden Knights last year, posting a 25-14-5 record with a .908 SV%, 2.70 GAA, one shutout, and 6.5 GSAA.
Logan Thompson Should Return Tomorrow
The Washington Capitals won’t start their regular season until this Saturday giving their new goaltender plenty of time to return. Tom Gulitti of the NHL relayed a note from head coach Spencer Carbery that goaltender Logan Thompson is expected back at practice tomorrow after being away from the team for personal reasons.
The Capitals acquired Thompson this past offseason from the Vegas Golden Knights for a pair of third-round picks. It was an odd move at the time given how close Vegas’ is to the cap for the 2024-25 season. Thompson is on the last year of a three-year, $2.3MM contract signed with the Golden Knights in 2022 with a $767K cap hit. Still, it makes some sense for Vegas to get something for a netminder who surely would have left in unrestricted free agency next summer.