The Washington Capitals have re-signed John Carlson to a $64 million, eight-year contract that allows the Stanley Cup champions to keep the do-it-all
Carlson will count $8 million against the salary cap through the 2026-27 season. General manager Brian MacLellan announced the deal Sunday.
"John has been an exceptional and consistent player for our franchise and has blossomed into being one of the top
That's not necessary for the 28-year-old who has made the Washington area his home and wanted to stay if there was a fit. The Capitals got the cap space necessary to re-sign Carlson by trading veteran
Carlson outperformed his last deal that paid him just under $4 million a season and was at his best in a contract year. He led all
The contract makes Carlson the second-highest-paid player on the Capitals behind Alex Ovechkin.
Carlson averaged about 25 minutes a game all season, stepping up early when top-pairing
"His value is immense," goaltender Braden Holtby said. "You can see that, how much he meant to our team in this run. As far as growth, I think he's grown steadily but I think he's been pretty good for a long time. He's been really good for a long time. I think this year it just showed through a bit more because we just forced him to play more."
Carlson has been a mainstay on the Capitals' blue line since 2010-11. The 2008 first-round pick has 333 points in 608 regular-season games and 55 points in 100 playoff games.
"I've always thought he was one of the better
Re-signing Carlson was just the first move on MacLellan's summer checklist. He's attempting to re-sign trade-deadline pickup Michal Kempny before Carlson's
"We're trying to sign Kempny," MacLellan said Friday. "We're trying to sign Wilson as an RFA and then make some decisions after that."
There's also the matter of replacing Barry Trotz as coach after he resigned and joined the New York Islanders. Associate coach Todd Reirden, who was a finalist for the Flames' head job two years ago, is the heavy front-runner, though MacLellan wanted to sit down and formally interview him this week first.
"I think you still need to go through an interview process and ask the right questions," MacLellan said. "I just want to clarify on what he's thinking system-wise and how he's going to handle certain players."
It helps his case that Reirden coached the
"The players all know him, they're comfortable with him," MacLellan said. "He'll have a good feel for personalities, how to motivate people and so forth."
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Stephen Whyno, The Associated Press