Photo: Washington Capitals
The Washington Capitals’ hiring of former farmhand Spencer Carbery as the team’s newest Head Coach signified a new direction for the veteran-laden club, one that, assuming the offseason concludes without a major personnel move, looks set to be infused with wave of youth from the American Hockey League.
Carbery, 41, is the first bench boss in franchise history to be born after the Capitals’ inaugural 1974-75 season and is the first to have coached at all three professional levels of the organization. While the one-time left wing spent two seasons as an Assistant Coach for the Toronto Maple Leafs, his return to Washington as the successor to Peter Laviolette seemed like the most natural transition for both team and coach.
Washington Capitals Introduce Spencer Carbery As Their 20th Head Coach In Franchise History
At the time that Carbery was named head coach of the Capitals, one of his former clubs, the AHL’s Hershey Bears, were in the midst of a playoff run that concluded with the Chocolate and White capturing their 12th Calder Cup championship; among the champions were a number of Carbery’s pupils during his stint as the Bears’ bench boss.
Now five years removed from their memorable Stanley Cup victory, the Caps are now in a transitional phase, with franchise great Alex Ovechkin under contract for three more seasons and in pursuit of a NHL record, and a number of other longtime lineup stalwarts approaching the end of their respective deals. While General Manager Brian MacLellan’s most notable acquisition this summer was free agent forward Max Pacioretty, the expected addition of some of the team’s younger prospects into the lineup has come at just the right time for the NHL club.
While major differences exists between the NHL and AHL, the grueling test of a deep postseason run may prove beneficial to the young Bears, a number of whom are likely to figure prominently in the conversation for spots in the Washington lineup come training camp; the likes of Connor McMichael, Aliaksei Protas, Joe Snively, and and Beck Malenstyn are among those with a shot at cracking the big club.
“I think my job coming in here”, said Carbery said during his introductory press conference in June, “We have a highly-motived group of veteran players…and we also have a group of players that it’s my job to bring along and integrate into that group…that to me is exciting.”
While the likes of Ovechkin, Nicklas Backstrom, Tom Wilson (with ink just dry from his new, seven-year contract), T.J. Oshie, and John Carlson still figuring to be key players for the Caps, and a transitional phase no doubt bringing with it some bumps in the road, Carbery seems more than ready for the task ahead, particularly with his prior experience coaching a number of the team’s prospects, and a wave of future Capitals bringing with them a professional championship already under their belts makes for an exciting time in the history of the District’s favorite hockey team.
By Michael Fleetwood