MacLellan also placed a priority on re-signing forward Tom Wilson, who can become a restricted free agent July 1 and is eligible to file for salary arbitration. The 24-year-old is coming off a two-year, $4 million contract ($2 million average annual value) and set NHL career highs with 14 goals, 21 assists and 35 points this season playing on the top line with Alex Ovechkin and Evgeny Kuznetsov.
After trading defenseman Brooks Orpik and goaltender Philipp Grubauer to the Colorado Avalanche on Friday for the No. 47 pick in the 2018 NHL Draft, MacLellan said the Capitals were about $21 million under the $79.5 million NHL salary cap for next season. Carlson's contract leaves them with about $13 million in salary cap space to fit in Kempny, Wilson and whoever else they'd like to bring back or add.
MacLellan has to make decisions about re-signing potential unrestricted free agent defenseman Jakub Jerabek and forwards Jay Beagle and Alex Chiasson, and potential restricted free agent forward Devante Smith-Pelly, who is eligible to file for salary arbitration. Smith-Pelly was one of the Capitals' playoff heroes with seven goals (equaling his regular-season total), including three in five games in the Stanley Cup Final against the Vegas Golden Knights.
With 10 seasons in Washington, Beagle, 32, has the third-longest tenure among Capitals players behind Ovechkin (13 seasons) and Nicklas Backstrom (11). Beagle said June 13 that he'd be willing to wait until MacLellan is finished with other business to negotiate his next contract, even if that extends beyond July 1.