The left wing was credited with 15:08 of ice time, including 12:40 at even strength, in a 4-3 overtime loss in Game 3 on Monday.
RELATED: [Complete Maple Leafs vs. Capitals series coverage]
"That's on me, to get him the ice time," Trotz said after an optional practice Tuesday. "Sometimes that's situational, sometimes that's the zone starts. Yeah, his minutes should be … I can get those up."
Ovechkin's even-strength ice time ranked seventh among the Capitals' 12 forwards, ahead of fourth-liners Tom Wilson (10:43), Jay Beagle (10:42) and Daniel Winnik (9:40), and third-liners Brett Connolly (12:13) and Andre Burakovsky (12:02).
Ovechkin's linemates, Nicklas Backstrom (17:30 overall, 13:10 at even strength) and T.J. Oshie (18:37, 14:18), each played more than him, partially because they play on the penalty kill and Ovechkin does not. The Capitals were shorthanded three times in the third period and in overtime, which lasted 1:37 before Tyler Bozak scored the winning goal, which contributed to Ovechkin playing 4:13 after the second period.
"Sometimes you have a bump up a line," Trotz said. "You're killing penalty killers' minutes, and that's Backstrom and Oshie, and you sort of miss a rep or two here or there. It wasn't based on play. I thought Ovi was playing terrific. It's on me to get him a little more ice time, no question."
Ovechkin, whose 33 regular-season goals tied with Oshie for the Capitals lead, was not among the players to skate Tuesday and was not available for comment. His line with Backstrom and Oshie was dominant early in Game 3, with Backstrom scoring a 4-on-4 goal 2:43 into the first period and Ovechkin scoring on a one-timer from the top of the left circle during 5-on-5 play to give Washington a 2-0 lead at 4:49.
Even with limited ice time, Ovechkin had a Capitals-high five shots on goal, seven shot attempts and four hits. One of the reasons Trotz trimmed his ice time to 18:21 per game during the regular season from 20:18 last season was to keep him fresh for the Stanley Cup Playoffs.
But Trotz has been intent on rolling four lines and has been spreading out the ice time in hope it will wear down the Maple Leafs over a long series. Ovechkin played 19:52 in the Capitals' 3-2 overtime victory in Game 1 and 24:35 in their 4-3 double overtime loss in Game 2.