At that point, the normally stoic MacLellan's voice failed when he became choked up and his eyes filled with tears. He recovered enough to complete his thought by saying, "It was fun."
Although uncharacteristic for MacLellan, the show of emotion was understandable. His relationship with McPhee has changed since McPhee was fired by the Capitals after failing to make the Stanley Cup Playoffs in 2013-14 and MacLellan succeeded him as GM.
"Not as close, I don't think," MacLellan said. "A little bit of communication here and there. But I think it just took a little time for things to evolve. I think he needed a break from the game, needed a break from how it went down for him here, and it just took time."
MacLellan said when he and McPhee spoke leading up to the 2017 NHL Expansion Draft, "We kept it businesslike. He was all business. He wasn't giving in on anything."
The Capitals thought the Golden Knights might select backup goaltender Philipp Grubauer, but they chose defenseman Nate Schmidt. Schmidt would have played in Washington's top four this season. Instead, he is on Vegas' top pair with Brayden McNabb.
"I've been around him long enough where he doesn't show much," MacLellan said. "I know you're not getting what he's actually thinking underneath. I think he had a good plan and he executed it."
Since taking over, MacLellan has made some key additions to help the Capitals reach the Cup Final for first time since 1998 (McPhee's first season as GM). Signing unrestricted free agent defensemen Matt Niskanen and Brooks Orpik on July 1, 2014 and trading for forwards T.J. Oshie (July 2, 2015 from the St. Louis Blues) and Lars Eller (June 24, 2016 from the Montreal Canadiens) were among MacLellan's moves that pushed Washington over the hump it'd previously been unable clear under during the Ovechkin era, which began in 2005-06.