The Province

Caps on right track and hope to keep core intact, GM says

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WASHINGTON — Nearly a year to the day after his promotion to general manager of the Washington Capitals, Brian MacLellan’s eyes welled with tears when asked how the time in his current job has been.

“It’s been a whirlwind. It’s flown by. Warp speed. It’s been fun,” MacLellan said Monday, five days after Washington was eliminated by the New York Rangers.

“There’s a sense of accomplish­ment,” MacLellan said. “There’s an empty feeling after the New York series. There’s a hole to fill there. But I feel we’re on the right path.”

In May 2014, after the Capitals failed to make the playoffs, MacLellan and coach Barry Trotz replaced George McPhee and Adam Oates, respective­ly.

If the aim was to return to relevance quickly, Washington certainly did that, and MacLellan sent plenty of credit Trotz’s way.

“He set the tone for the culture, put in a structure and a system of accountabi­lity. The whole coaching staff was incredibly good. Barry’s been in the league a long time and knows what it takes to be successful. He got everybody to buy into what he was doing, philosophi­cally and off the ice,” MacLellan said. “It’s amazing the change in environmen­t that’s happened from last year to this year.”

Still, the Capitals failed once again to reach the conference final. They last made it that far in 1998.

Since drafting Alex Ovechkin in 2004, the Capitals have never made it past the second round. Nine of their 11 playoff series have gone to a Game 7, and they’ve gone 3-6, including the loss to the Rangers.

MacLellan said “the next three, four years is the window” for winning a Stanley Cup with Ovechkin.

Now MacLellan heads into the off-season knowing the Capitals have seven unrestrict­ed free agents, including Mike Green and Joel Ward. The team’s four restricted free agents include goalie Braden Holtby and Evgeny Kuznetsov.

MacLellan called finding a right winger to join Ovechkin and centre Nicklas Backstrom on the top line “a priority.” He’s open to a long-term deal for Holtby and sees Kuznetsov as the team’s second-line centre.

And the pitch to the team’s free agents will be that if they take less money, there’s a better chance of keeping the roster intact — or close.

“They recognize that going for max dollars, which you could make the choice to do in certain situations, would hinder our ability to compete going forward,” MacLellan said.

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