Capitals Add Former Blue Jackets Captain Boone Jenner To Reshape Forward Group

Boone Jenner brings leadership and a robust work ethic to the Washington Capitals, promising to bolster their forward lineup and power play.

Boone Jenner arrives in Washington as the Capitals’ priciest free-agent addition of the summer, landing a four-year, $23 million contract on July 1 with a $5.75 million average annual value that runs through 2029-30. At 33, he gives the Capitals another seasoned forward to join Alex Tuch and Jordan Kyrou in a revamped group up front.

For Washington, this is more than just a new name. Jenner spent 13 seasons as a fixture in Columbus, where the Blue Jackets turned a 37th-overall pick in the 2011 NHL Draft into one of the franchise’s defining players.

The 6-foot-2, 204-pound center made the team out of camp for the 2013-14 season and immediately showed he belonged, putting up 16 goals and 20 points in 72 regular-season games as a rookie. He added five points in six playoff games in his first postseason at age 20.

His role only grew from there. Two years later, teammates voted him an alternate captain alongside Brandon Dubinsky under Nick Foligno’s captaincy, and Jenner answered with a career-best 30 goals in 82 games during the 2015-16 season. He followed that with another full season in the lineup, finishing with 18 goals and 34 points.

After six seasons wearing an “A,” Jenner was named Blue Jackets captain before the 2021-22 campaign. He wore that title for 278 games over the last five seasons, and his final game in a Columbus sweater came against the Capitals on April 14, 2026. Jenner scored the lone Blue Jackets goal in a 2-1 loss to Washington in the regular-season finale.

By the time he left Ohio, Jenner had piled up 212 goals and 421 points in 808 regular-season games, making him the Blue Jackets’ franchise leader in games played. He finished 134 games ahead of Rick Nash and 166 ahead of Zach Werenski. In the playoffs, he produced eight goals and 15 points in 37 games, though Columbus never got beyond the second round during his time there, even after the stunning first-round upset of the Presidents’ Trophy-winning Tampa Bay Lightning in 2019.

Jenner said the move came after both sides agreed it was time for a change. On his introductory call with the Capitals on July 3, he described the split as amicable and said the chance to test free agency for the first time was part of the appeal.

“It was just timing-wise for myself … both sides, maybe… to go try something new,” Jenner said. “I’ve never been in this spot [being a free agent].

When I did get the call from Washington, it really excited me. It just felt like the right move.”

He also enters Washington with some built-in familiarity. Jenner already knows Pierre-Luc Dubois, Tom Wilson and Jordan Kyrou. He and Dubois were teammates in Columbus for 239 games between 2017-18 and 2020-21, before Dubois was traded to the Winnipeg Jets in January 2021 in the deal that brought Patrick Laine and Jack Roslovic to the Blue Jackets.

As for Wilson, Jenner said the two have crossed paths around Toronto. “Just being from around the same area and being at certain events and stuff together,” he said. “I know him decently well.”

Kyrou is another familiar face. Jenner said the two trained together in London and were in touch on July 2.

“We used to train together in London,” Jenner said. “I was texting with him yesterday (July 2), as well.”

That London connection runs close to home for Jenner. Dorchester, Ontario, is roughly 18 kilometres from Canada Life Place, where the London Knights play in the Ontario Hockey League.

On the ice, Jenner looks like a natural fit for what Washington wants to be. He brings size, grit and a hard-working style, along with the kind of two-way reliability that can slide anywhere in Spencer Carbery’s lineup. He also gives the Capitals a net-front option, something they badly need after finishing 25th on the power play with a 17.8% success rate last season.

“I’m going to do anything that’s best for the team,” Jenner said. “Whatever that role may be.

I’m going to go there, meet everybody, learn how they operate, and where I can fit in. The versatility I can bring can be valuable up and down the lineup.

I’m just looking forward to getting there. At the end of the day, I’ll do anything the team needs or asks of me.”

That kind of answer sounds exactly like the player Washington just paid for: dependable, physical and willing to do the dirty work. The Capitals were already adding size up front, and Jenner gives them another veteran voice to go with it as they try to build toward a return to the playoff field in 2027.

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