Boston Herald

Capitals re-sign blueliner Carlson

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The Washington Capitals re-signed John Carlson to an eight-year contract worth $64 million, that allows the Stanley Cup champions to keep the doit-all defenseman.

Carlson will count $8 million against the salary cap through the 2026-27 season. General manager Brian MacLellan announced the deal yesterday. “John has been an exceptiona­l and consistent player for our franchise and has blossomed into being one of the top defensemen in the NHL,” MacLellan said. “Defenseman like John are a rare commodity in our league and, at 28 years of age, we feel he is just entering his prime. As a right-handed defenseman, John plays in all key situations and has contribute­d greatly to our team’s success on the special teams. We are pleased for both parties to have come to an agreement.”

That’s not necessary for the 28-year-old who has made the Washington area his home and wanted to stay if there was a fit. The Capitals got the cap space necessary to re-sign Carlson by trading veteran defenseman Brooks Orpik and backup goaltender Philipp Grubauer on Friday night at the NHL draft.

Carlson outperform­ed his last deal that paid him just under $4 million a season and was at his best in a contract year. He led all defensemen with 68 points in the regular season and 20 in the playoffs to help Washington win the Metropolit­an Division and then the Stanley Cup.

The contract makes Carlson the second-highest-paid player on the Capitals behind Alex Ovechkin.

Carlson averaged about 25 minutes a game all season, stepping up early when top-pairing defenseman Matt Niskanen missed time with injury and playing an important role on the power play and penalty kill on the Cup run.

“His value is immense,” goaltender Braden Holtby said. “You can see that, how much he meant to our team in this run. As far as growth, I think he’s grown steadily but I think he’s been pretty good for a long time. He’s been really good for a long time. I think this year it just showed through a bit more because we just forced him to play more.”

Carlson has been a mainstay on the Capitals’ blue line since 2010-11. The 2008 first-round pick has 333 points in 608 regular-season games and 55 points in 100 playoff games.

“I’ve always thought he was one of the better defensemen that I’ve ever played with,” winger T.J. Oshie said. “This year, he elevated that quite a bit. In my eyes, he’s got to be a top-three or top-five defenseman in the league. You see what he does — he doesn’t do a lot of things that are really flashy, so maybe he doesn’t get the highlight-reel things that other guys do, but defensivel­y, he rarely ever gets beat.”

Canucks, ’Hawks deal

The Vancouver Canucks acquired center Tanner Kero from the Chicago Blackhawks for center Michael Chaput.

The 25-year-old Kero had a goal and two assists in eight games with Chicago last season.

The 6-foot, 185-pound center from Michigan has appeared in 72 career NHL games.

The 26-year-old Chaput was scoreless in nine games with Vancouver last season.

The Montreal native has six goals and 11 assists through 135 career NHL games between Columbus and Vancouver.

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