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What your team is thankful for: Washington Capitals
Alex Ovechkin is having arguably the best season of his career. Tom Horak-USA TODAY Sports

In the spirit of the holiday season, PHR will take a look at what teams are thankful for as the season approaches the midway mark. There also might be a few things your team would like down the road. We’ll examine what’s gone well in the early going and what could improve as the season rolls on for the Washington Capitals.

What are the Capitals thankful for? 


Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports

Young depth.

Make no mistake, the Capitals are still one of the most veteran teams in the league, relying mostly on the same core that took them to the 2018 Stanley Cup. But this season has been a little different on the fringes of the roster, where young players are starting to make a difference. Connor McMichael (21), Brett Leason (22), and Aliaksei Protas (21) have all been regulars this season, adding some entry-level contracts to the mix up front. Martin Fehervary (22) has also worked his way into the top-four on defense, giving Washington another extremely cheap option.

It’s that inexpensive depth that allows the Capitals to spend so much on their top names, including more than half the cap on the top-six forwards. For everyone mentioned above except Leason, who is an RFA at the end of the season, those entry-level contracts will still be in effect for next season as well, when they should presumably play an even bigger role.

Who are the Capitals thankful for?

The Russian Machine.

Alex Ovechkin is having the best offensive season of his career at age 36. Through 39 games, he is now on pace for 113 points, which would be one more than his career-high set in 2007-08. He’s currently the leader for both the Art Ross and Rocket Richard trophies; no one has won both in the same season since Ovechkin did it in 2008. While it’s anyone’s guess whether he’ll actually win them, this performance is an absolutely incredible accomplishment for one of the league’s all-time greats.

Not only is Ovechkin dominating on the ice and helping the Capitals win, but he’s also one of the most marketable stars in the league. His pursuit of Wayne Gretzky’s all-time goals record–Ovechkin needs just 138 to catch the Great One–is a storyline that every hockey fan can appreciate and follow. With Ovechkin signed to another five-year deal last summer, it appears it will only be a matter of time before he is at the top of the goal-scoring mountain.

What would the Capitals be even more thankful for? 


Brad Mills-USA TODAY Sports

More consistency from Ilya Samsonov.

When Samsonov came over from the KHL, he was lauded as one of the best goaltenders in the world who wasn’t currently in the NHL. After all, he had been a first-round pick by the Capitals in 2015 and had put up outstanding KHL numbers since he was a teenager. In his rookie season in North America, he struggled in the minor leagues, but there was still plenty of optimism about his future.

After three up-and-down seasons, Samsonov is facing the question about whether he’s really the long-term answer in Washington. Samsonov has just a .903 save percentage in 21 appearances this season, and even though that has resulted in a strong 13-4-3 record, it’s certainly not instilling a ton of confidence in fans who want another Stanley Cup. Samsonov has provided -4.0 goals saved above average, 18th-worst among all goaltenders in the NHL this season. This Washington team is good enough to contend, and Vitek Vanecek has been a decent complementary option, but Samsonov taking the next step could really push the Capitals over the edge into a dominant group.

What should be on the Capitals’ wish list?


Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports

A scoring winger.

There’s basically nothing the Capitals can do this deadline without moving money out somewhere else. But if they could, adding offense on the wing would be priority No. 1. In a perfect world, that role is filled by Anthony Mantha, coming back from shoulder surgery and stepping directly into the top six. But Mantha isn’t even expected to start skating until next month and is still “nowhere close” to a return according to Tarik El-Bashir of The Athletic.

The other options just haven’t been quite good enough to this point. Outside of Ovechkin and Tom Wilson, the Capitals’ best offensive winger to this point has been Conor Sheary with 10 goals and 19 points in 31 games. T.J. Oshie has been hampered by injury and illness all season, so he should easily climb to that third spot at some point, but that still leaves a hole where more secondary scoring needs to come.

Again, it will be extremely difficult for the Capitals to make an addition without shedding salary, but there is actually a bit of opportunity there. Michal Kempny still costs $1.375 million against the cap despite being on the taxi squad, while Mantha’s placement on LTIR currently opens a bit of space that the Capitals could use in the interim. If Ovechkin wasn’t scoring at a career-best pace, the offense would probably be a big talking point in Washington. Fixing that problem before it really becomes one may be prudent.

This article first appeared on Pro Hockey Rumors and was syndicated with permission.

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