Question for the group. WAS is basically #1 in the NHL at the 2/3 of the season mark. Are they legit Cup contenders, and accordingly should they be buyers at the TDL?
And then the important follow up question: did anyone see that coming? Would you have had WAS pegged as a top contender last summer and would not therefore be surprised right now, or if you were one of their fans would you have been advocating for a rebuild?
I did not see that coming. If I were a WAS fan I'd have advocated for a retool (since IMO retool is what every team needs to do all the time in the NHL now, with a cap, free agency, etc.).
Washington is a fascinating case study. What separates them from a team in a similar position, like the Penguins, comes down to several key moves:
After Tom Wilson and Alex Ovechkin signed extensions, it was clear there would be no rebuild.
They took calculated gambles on former top prospects—Pierre-Luc Dubois (PDL), Dylan Strome, and Rasmus Sandin.
They moved on from a locker-room distraction in Evgeny Kuznetsov.
This offseason, they acquired a legitimate number-one goaltender in Logan Thompson. It cost them two third-round picks, and he was only making league minimum.
They signed a top-four defenseman in Matt Roy—an upgrade over Nick Jensen, who was packaged with a third-round pick to acquire Jakob Chychrun. Chychrun has been a major boost to their blue line.
Two massive contracts—T.J. Oshie and Nicklas Bäckström—are off the books via long-term injured reserve (LTIR).
They have capitalized on the last three drafts, completely revitalizing their prospect pool with talent like Andrew Cristall, Ryan Leonard, Lane Hutson, Ivan Miroshnichenko, and Terik Parascak.
The emergence of Aliaksei Protas and Connor McMichael as legitimate top-six forwards has also been pivotal.
While some of these moves were made over the past three seasons, several happened within a single offseason. The injuries provided cap flexibility to make bold moves, including acquiring Andrew Mangiapane and Pierre-Luc Dubois. They also made smart additions on the blue line through free agency and the trade market.
Beyond all these moves, the biggest difference-maker—outside of Ovechkin's resurgence—has been Logan Thompson stabilizing the crease.
Meanwhile, the Penguins lost Jake Guentzel, re-signed Tristan Jarry despite his decline, and are now burdened with Erik Karlsson’s contract. Their path forward looks far more uncertain.