Capitals Suddenly Face A Delicate Problem Their Offseason Created

Can the Capitals' coaching staff effectively juggle a crowded winger lineup to maximize talent and maintain team synergy?

The Washington Capitals’ offseason makeover has created a good problem for Spencer Carbery, but it’s still a problem.

After finishing as Metropolitan Division champions in 2024-25 and then missing the playoffs altogether this past season, Washington has been one of the NHL’s most aggressive teams in reshaping its roster. The front office has gone after speed and rush offense, bringing in players such as Jordan Kyrous and Alex Tuch. Add Alex Ovechkin back into the mix, and suddenly a winger group that already featured Ryan Leonard, Tom Wilson and Aliaksei Protas looks crowded fast.

That was the focus on Friday’s episode of Daily Faceoff LIVE, where host Tyler Yaremchuk, co-host and former NHL goaltender Carter Hutton and former NHL video coach Steve Peters dug into how Carbery can spread the ice time around.

Yaremchuk pointed out the sheer number of players who could be looking for big offensive roles next season, asking how the coaching staff can manage power-play usage and keep everyone engaged over 84 games when Ovechkin still takes the full two minutes on the man advantage.

Peters said the challenge is real, but he also sees a path through it. Over the course of an 80-84 game season, injuries and lineup changes will naturally affect the rotation. He also suggested Ovechkin’s role could shrink, even noting that he may need to become more of a power-play specialist given the pace of today’s game.

Peters added that Washington should be able to roll four lines and get secondary scoring, but the power play is where the real squeeze comes in. If the Capitals want team success, he said, they may have to put that ahead of individual milestones and reduce Ovechkin’s ice time so players like Kyrou can get the minutes they need to help drive the offense.

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