The most significant offseason change for the Capitals is at coach. Todd Reirden was named the successor to Barry Trotz on June 29, after Trotz resigned June 18 after being unable to agree with Washington on a new contract. Trotz was hired to coach the New York Islanders on June 21.
Though Reirden is a first-time NHL coach, the 47-year-old will give the Capitals continuity because he was on Trotz's staff the past four seasons: two as an assistant and the past two as associate. He inherits a team that went 49-26-7 and finished first in the Metropolitan Division for a third consecutive season.
"The players are excited for the opportunity," Reirden said. "A number of them have taken less money to come back and be a part of something in doing this, and I think we have a really good group and have created a positive environment and culture here over the last four years that we'll continue to build on and work towards giving ourselves every chance we can to get back and do that again."
Washington reached another level during the Stanley Cup Playoffs, defeating its biggest rival, the Pittsburgh Penguins, to advance past the second round for the first time since 1998 and bringing the first major pro sports championship to Washington since the Redskins won the Super Bowl following the 1991 NFL season. Reirden said he believes experiencing the good times and bad with this group -- the Capitals lost to Pittsburgh in the second round in 2016 and 2017 after winning the Presidents' Trophy each season -- will help him build on what they achieved last season.
"That's what I feel is really a distinct advantage of going through this situation and seeing it to a positive outcome," he said, "is that you beat adversity a number of times during the year, and unless you actually go through it with the players, it's tough for you to totally relate to them."
Before last season, the Capitals faced questions about whether their window to win the Cup was closing. Forward and captain Alex Ovechkin was about to turn 32 and several key players left last offseason, including forwards Justin Williams and Marcus Johansson and defensemen Kevin Shattenkirk, Karl Alzner and Nate Schmidt.