Washington Capitals Prospect Surge: Leonard, Hutson & the Next Generation After Ovechkin
On today’s show, the evolution of the Capitals prospect pool from one of the worst in the NHL to respectable. Next on this edition of Locked On Capitals. You’re Locked on Capitals, your daily podcast on the Washington Capitals, part of the Locked On Network. your team every day. Well, hello and welcome into this edition of Locked On Capitals, part of the Locked On podcast network, your team every day. My name is Dan Holy. I’ve covered the Capitals for the past three seasons for Locked On and various other outlets before that. I’m also the host of the weekly show called The Capitals Minute Cast available wherever you find your podcasts. And as always, I want to thank you for making this your first listen of the day. Today’s episode is brought to you by our friends at Game Time. Download the Game Time app, create an account, and use code locked on NHL for $20 off your first purchase. So, in this edition of Locked On Capitals, we talk about the evolution of the Capitals prospect pool. At one time, it was considered one of the worst in the NHL. Now, I guess I’m going to say it’s at least respectable. What changed? I’ll talk about that a bit later. We’ll talk about the draft class and the pipeline strengths. Uh, as I’ve talked on this show, if you’re an everyday that the Capitals are really good right now, they are going to be even that much better uh years to come. After that, I’ll talk about Cole Hudson and the next wave. But just to get it going here, talking about that respectable prospect pool and what changed and how did we get into this position in the first place? I think it was a change in attitude uh that for the longest time the Capitals were in win now mode. Uh you guys remember that around the 2018 season or so, a little before and a little bit after that the Capitals were trying to squeeze all of the juice uh that they possibly could out of that what they call rock the red era. I guess what I would say is post 2018 after the Stanley Cup that there was a feeling within the Capitals organization that that roster uh that was out on the ice uh could win another cup or maybe they just needed to uh you know acquire this player or that player player and what happened is they depleted the prospect pool um by trading this prospect for a rental uh that prospect for you know a rental plus um that I I think the Capitals were in a really bad position. And um you know, you take a look at the Pittsburgh Penguins for example, they are in a bad position uh because of that. They waited too long uh to try to make any changes and now they’re hoping for big changes. And I think the good thing about the Capitals is they recognized the position that they were in and they had a change in attitude. And I think that a lot of that came after the Peter Lobbylet era. Uh I think there was a mandate uh back then to win another Stanley Cup and not to really utilize the youth. Uh you guys remember that they didn’t want uh Peter Lavlet did not want to have Conor Mcichel out on the ice. They wanted to go with more of the sure thing. Uh well, former GM Chris Patrick and the Capitals realized that that ship had sailed that it’s time to turn the page uh and start to to fix this roster that wasn’t built uh for much of anything. So let’s dive into that. How did the Capitals uh go from one of the worst prospect pools and uh that pool is going to feed the Capitals organization uh in the years to come? And um you it wasn’t that long ago and the Capitals fans, you know what I’m talking about. The prospect pool wasn’t great, like I said. Um and like I mentioned off the top there that it was kind of a joke, you know, that one of the worst um prospect pools in the entire NHL. And you know, you could take a look at the Hershey roster. uh maybe glance overseas, check the junior guys and think to yourself, none of these guys are going to fix the Capitals in in relative short term here that there were not the players. There just wasn’t a blue chipper, I guess I would say, anywhere out on the ice and there was uh no guy that you could point to and say, “Yeah, that one. That is the future Capitals star right there.” And you know, I’ve talked about on this show and it’s something the Capitals fans don’t like to talk about is just the poor judgment at times. You think of George Mcy, you think of the Philip Forsberg for the Martin Rat and Michael Lada deal that um you know there was just some poor hasty decisions uh that put the Capitals in a bad position. But fast forward a couple years now, uh there’s act actually some juice. There is some mojo. There is a feeling of optimism. I’m feeling optimistic about the future of the Capitals. And to be clear here, I’m feeling good about the current team. I mean, you take a look at what they were able to accomplish, but I think this team is built to be a winner for years and years to come. And the first player we got to talk about, of course, is Ryan Leonard. Of course, uh he moved on from his college days, knocking it out of the park at the NCAA in the world stage. And at the tail end of the season there at Boston College after that season wrapped up, he joined the Capitals uh in their pursuit for the playoffs. And I think that, you know, a lot of fans, myself included, were thinking that he was just going to be that goalc scoring fuel. But to be clear here and to look back on it, it wasn’t fair to put that kind of pressure on him. I think that once we what we see from him, the work that he’s put in this summer and then what we see out on the ice once he has a full season uh playing NHL games, I think uh that he is going to be amazing. This kid plays like he’s been shot out of a cannon. He has that physical game. Um physical, fearless, doesn’t care who you are, he will go through you, around you, or both in the same shift. And um some people want to dub him and I’ve you know kind of done that to an extent as Tom Wilson 2.0. If you believe it I think he’s even a better player. Uh he’s not just a hitter he’s got hands. He’s got the skill set that um you know despite what we saw at the you know in the latter part of the season in the playoffs that wasn’t fair to judge. I think that when we what we saw from him on the college level, on the world stage, once he gets fully acclimated to pro hockey at the National Hockey League level, I think he is going to be next level. He got a taste of NHL action last season. Uh the physical side came through first because that’s instinct. Bit of a snarl to his game. I think that, you know, I talk oftentimes on the show about a prototypical Capital. I think that next to that you could see Ryan Leonard. He is the complete package as far as I’m concerned. But like I said, give him a full summer of training and I think that he will have a whole new toolkit uh that he is going to use for the Capitals next season. Again, early having him pencile in early um third line center, but you know who’s ahead of him on the right side there is Prous and Wilson. Um, but he could make it interesting because you know what kind of of camp does Proous and Wilson have? I think it would take quite a bit to supplant either one of those players. But hey, I don’t want to um cut Ryan Leonard short. I think that the sky is the limit. Uh, next we’ll talk about Ivon Mirnesenko, a guy that is used to overcoming adversity, a guy that would have gone much higher in the draft if it was not for that Hodgkins lymphoma. Uh, but Ross Mahoney and his crew, they took a flyer on him, went to go visit him. He was so skinny, the jeans were hanging off of him, but he did not, he did not, you know, fall over. He picked himself up by the bootstraps, went to the weight room, put on the weight, terminated that KHL contract, came over to the Capitals. He had, you know, a couple cups of coffee with a big team, played very well in Hershey last year, and I think is going to be a big contributor to the Capitals on the left side. You know, I talked about um you know, Tom Wilson 2.0 and Ryan Leonard. Uh I’ve jokingly said and somewhat serious that Ivon Mirnko could almost be Alex Ovetchkin 2.0. Uh I don’t want to uh reward give him that honor yet. Uh until we see that in sustainable minutes on the big team, but Ivon Mirnosenko has the tools in his tool set. prototypical capital, like I like to say, big frame, goal scores, release, plays both a finesse and power game. He checks a lot of boxes. And no doubt that there are some teams around the NHL that probably are thinking to himself, we should probably should have taken a flyer on him. Four points in 18 games last year. Not flashy, but you can see it coming. Um that was the big thing when he came over from the KHL uh to the NHL is just getting acclimated to uh the the ice rinks uh that are in America as we know that it is different over in Russia. But uh Miro’s camp expectations are going to be huge. Um but it’s going to be difficult right as you know that there are a lot of players that are vying for positions. You could say that he could potentially be that second line left wing. You also could say that he could be that third line left wing. It all is going to depend on Andrew Crystal, who I’ll talk about here in a little bit. But do you guys kind of sense what I’m talking about here? And do you start to feel the happiness and the optimism surrounding this team? I’ve already listed a couple players and I’ll talk about one here in a minute that are just next level. Leonard Mirishnenko and next I’m talking Andrew Crystal and I have a hard time containing myself. I feel like next season he is going to take off and NHL at large is going to take notice of who is this guy. And you know honestly here I think that most NHL fans that follow the game at least remotely are familiar with the name Andrew Crystal. But another player that went lower in the draft than I think many people had thought. We knew know that one of his biggest weaknesses was his size. He tried to fix or he has worked on that. He’s bulked up, you know, hit the gym. Um the healthy proteins, that kind of thing. He can’t fix other things like getting any taller. Um but his skating, his biggest knock on his game has shown improvement. And why is that? These young guys, they’ll hire their own coach. And uh that is what has put him in a good position. But when you talk about Andrew Crystal, uh the thing I’m going to say is the talent is undeniable. Passing, shooting, creativity, it is all there. not the complete package, but darn near if he had the size, I would say he is the complete package. Um, you know, one of the last players cut on the Capitals, went to Colona, got traded out to Spokane, all kinds of records. This guy is next level and, uh, I think that this could be the season that he sticks on the big team. He was this close last season. I think this very well could be the season. And the question on him has always been his skating. Uh if he keeps it at passable NHL level, he’s a legit top six scoring threat. Early take, really early take. Um if you do listen or watch this show on a regular basis, I see second line left wing. Huge. And let the positivity keep rolling. Ilia Proas. Yes. The younger brother of Alexe Proise. And wasn’t, you know, selected just because of the last name. This guy is legit. Underline, boldface, highlight, legit, big body, good hands. Skating is still coming along. Still young, still going to be an absolute knockout on the Capitals. And does that sound familiar? It should because his brother has some of the same attributes. Um, they went through the same thing and it worked out. As you saw, Alexe just have absolute record numbers. career numbers is what he put up last year. And then when you kind of take a look down a little bit more, widen the lens a little bit more as you sprinkle in TK Parase, Cole Hudson, Leon Moolley, suddenly there’s optimism in a spot where optimism wasn’t there just a few years ago for the Capitals that um when you take a look at the prospects and I know that there are some organizations out there that have some good prospects, but the Capitals are no joke and I think are going to be a team to be reckoned with in for years and years to come. All right, so coming up here after the break, we’ll talk about the draft class and the pipeline. Straight ahead, we’ve all been there before, logging on early and waiting forever for concert tickets to go on sale, only to lose your spot for a show that you’ve been dying to see. Live music shouldn’t be about making memories, not dealing with the stress of ticket shopping. That’s where Game Time comes in. Game time makes getting concert tickets faster and easier than ever before. Prices actually drop as it gets closer to Showtime and you can save up to 60% off with their killer lastminute deals and that is what I love about Game Time. uh your favorite band, your favorite artist is coming to town and uh sometimes you don’t have time to get tickets, but it’s actually advantageous as the prices get cheaper a close closer to showtime and you can actually get panoramic views of what it’ll look like from your seat. Listen to me guys, game time is next level. So when you’re going to your favorite concert this summer and fall, you need game time. So t do what I did. Take the guesswork out of buying concert tickets and show tickets with Game Time. Download the Game Time app. Create an account and use code lockon NHL for $20 off your first purchase. Terms apply. Again, create an account and redeem code L O C K E D O NHL for $20 off. Download the Game Time app today. Last minute tickets, lowest prices guaranteed. All right, welcome back into this edition of Lockton Capitals, part of the Lockton podcast network, your team every day. You can find me over on Twitter. It’s Dan Caps 2 and8. You can find the show on Twitter. It’s Locked OnCap. So, in segment two here, we’re talking about the draft class and the pipeline. um as I do believe this team is next level and a good position. It’s just kind of being patient at the end of the day. You know, when Leonard, we’re like when next year, how soon can it be? He’s here. Um I think that those players will slowly start to trickle in uh very quickly here in the years to come. And uh I think the Capitals, you know, in general have had themsel a good draft the last couple years and this past summer. For example, first round pick Lynden Lakavic. And yet again, prototypical, yes, that’s what I’m dubbing them, 6 foot4, fast and skilled. Um, and he’s got an amazing skill set and maybe a guy that, um, wasn’t on everyone’s radar. Um, and you know, to be clear here, it’s it shouldn’t be too surprising as he was down a bit in the draft. When you think about Leonard, he was higher up in the draft. So often times when these players are a little bit lower, not everyone is familiar, but if you’re not familiar, get to know him. He doesn’t play like a power forward yet. I think that, you know, intrinsically that is not uh in his skill set, but when you take a look at his uh career uh playing so far with Moose Jaw and a leader um amongst a poor team, I think that speaks of volumes of him last season. and you know, not necessarily bad, but if he starts leaning into his size and keeps up that speed and skill, that is going to be a nightmare matchup. Um, and you know, I’ I’ve said that before about some of the other bigger players. You can take a look at Alexe Pro, also a guy that’s not intrinsically a tough guy, but you know, and you don’t need to be, you know, a tough guy per se. You don’t need to be Tom Wilson. You don’t need to be a bull in a china shop there, but if you can just lean into your strengths, finishing your checks, and um you know, just talking about Proteus here briefly, we saw that from him a bit last year as well, working using his size to his advantage. I think that with Lynden, if he does that as well, maybe grow into that frame a little bit more, hit the gym, uh those lean proteins, I think that he will also uh be one heck of a player. Um, and when you take a look at him, you know, he’s a bit further out, but you know, at that time that I think the Capitals roster, these young players uh that I’m talking about in this episode will start to have filled in the roster. And, you know, when you take a look at Lynon Lakovic, he is just going to be uh the cherry on top. Second round, Milton Gastrine out of Sweden uh already has proh habits, a good upside. And uh what are some of the things that we hear thrown around all the time is hockey IQ, hockey IQ that um you didn’t hear it years ago or not nearly as much that um these young players um they are taught to play hockey from the youngest age, every facet of the game and they see the ice very well. You saw that with Backstre, you saw that with Oshi. I’m not saying it’s exclusively a young man’s thing, uh, but it’s something that you hear thrown around more and more. And Milton Gastrine, a smart player. I think he’s got middle six, center upside, uh, the kind of guy coaches trust. And, um, you know, again, these some of these guys are a bit f more further out than others, but I think that he is there, and I think that he has a lot of those pro traits. I I think that will serve him well uh once he rises up through the ranks there. Third rounder, Maxim Schaefer, high motor guy. Um if you take a look at the film, loves the forche, loves contact, and um you know, again, like I say, prototypical Capital. If you think back on the Capitals organization for years, it’s been a very physical team, and I think that has been the identity of the Capitals for years. But the thing about him is is not the most polished with the puck. So, there is definitely uh some things for him to work on, but you need guys like that that come off uh during playoff time and I think that uh when you take a look at Maxim Schaefer, I think that he is going to be uh big in that regard. If he can just work on um you know, when he’s in possession of the puck a little bit, those key things like that, I think that um he could even be next level as well. Uh Jackson Crowder and Aaron Dalfist. Uh that’s your bottom six grit uh net f net front presence finishes checks makes life miserable for opponents. Um that’s the strength of the pipeline. Left wing no question check check. The Capitals are in a good uh position. Then when you talk about Crystal uh you talk about Ivon Mirnko, Lyndon Lacovd, Suzv and Le L Lewig Person. Um, I think that uh it gets a bit interesting here. Almost poetic. Your greatest player ever is a leftwing. Now, your deepest prospect group is also a leftwing as well. Um, and some of those great players that are on the left side, I think, is there is a bit of a glut of talent on the left side, um, the same thing I don’t think necessarily could be said on the right side. And it’s not even really that close. You’ve got Paraseek, then Justin Sordiff, um, who’s 23 and hasn’t locked down an NHL spot yet. You know, the Capitals put, you know, quite a few of their eggs, uh, in the Justin Sordiff basket in the form of two draft picks. And, uh, what Chris Patrick had said was that, um, there were teams that were offering him one draft, uh, the Florida Panthers one draft pick, so they had to add a sweetener with two. And uh I’m not sure if it was one of those bidding wars, you know, like you know, when you’re at an auction and you just get carried out of hand. Is Justin sort of going to be that guy? I think he is. Um I just think that he um was in a crowded Florida Panthers team that there was not a clear path for him uh to the NHL. So when you take a look at it, it’s a bit thin uh on the right side. But if you’re going to have a weak spot, wing is easier to fix uh than center or goalie. And you know, you take a look at it, these guys can can move around a bit. Some of them can anyway. And there’s still time, there’s still upcoming drafts, there’s still trades because even though I, you know, mentioned quite a few different players in the show as far as the prospect pool, who they drafted, uh, this last time around here that, you know, very well, some of those players could get traded for upgrades, whether it’s NHL talent or future draft picks. Um, that I think that if they need to fix something, uh, I think that is something that is, uh, pretty easily fixable. The Capitals big picture are in a really good spot. left side, center, goalie. Um, like I mentioned in this segment here, a little bit thin on the right side, but I think there are other great players that will uh be joining the organization in somehow someway in the future. All right, so coming up here after the break, one player that you should take notice of. And when we talk the blue line, there’s questions. John Carlson, uh, you know, TVR, what’s the future of these players going to be? There is a player that is going to change a lot of things on the Capitals blue line. That player is Cole Hudson and I’ll discuss straight ahead. August 26th is officially FanDuel Futures Day, a brand new holiday for football fans who live for bold predictions and pre-season hunches. For just 24 hours, FanDuel has given you deals on NFL season predictions. So whether you’re calling your MVP, eyeing a longot division winner, or ready to crown your Super Bowl champ before week one even kicks off, this is your moment. And I am so excited for the NFL season, as I imagine you are as well. And if you want to even make it more fun, if you even want to make it more interesting, that is why you need FanDuel. So visit the FanDuel app today and start planning your future bets now because futures day is one day and one day only. FanDuel, play your game. All right, welcome back into this edition of Locked On Capitals, part of the Locked On Network, your team every day. The best way that you can help grow the show is to subscribe to Locked on Capitals on YouTube and comment anything down below. In the final segment of the show today, we are talking about a player that is going to be an absolute gamecher for the Capitals on the Blue Line. A blue line that is pretty well buttoned up this season. There are not a lot of question marks. Uh they answered the question about who the seventh defender is going to be. Uh at least on paper that is going to be Declan Chisum. Uh as we know that Alexv is out to the Steel City. But one player that is a bit on the horizon but might not be as long as some of us think is Cole Hudson. An absolute gamecher. And when might he join the Capitals? That is what we are going to dive in in the final segment of the show today. And uh if that name, that last name sounds familiar, it should uh because his brother Lane Hudson uh is a headline in the National Hockey League uh most every night uh during the hockey season. But Cole um he’s not trying to live in his brother’s shadow. He is carving his own path uh his own identity. And honestly, he might be more complete physically right now than Lane was at his age. That’s quite a compliment if you have seen his brother play. Quite a dynamic player. One of the best. Spencer Carberry talks about him quite often um that uh he often times will mix up their first names. But uh both really great players and honestly he might, like I said, be that more complete. Um, and the big thing, like I talked about earlier, has that elite hockey IQ, has the edgework, has the puck control. Um, and he’s got that elite bite. You know, freshman year at BEu, 48 points in 39 games. Tim Taylor award lit up the World Juniors, uh, 11 points in seven games. And, uh, you know, for a defenseman, that is ridiculous. And when it comes to, you know, this him being a young player, and I’ve mentioned this on the show before as well, is they teach hockey players how to be, you know, all different facets of the game, whether it’s nutrition, whether it’s skating, whether it’s this, that, uh, he is mature and some of that is, you know, something I think that is, you know, they teach them is, you know, how to do a press conference and how to conduct yourself in the National Hockey League. I think some of that is probably just how he’s raised and just being around hockey uh his whole life, but very mature and a pleasant surprise, you know, and I think that often times some of the young players um get their, you know, jabs at them for, you know, perceived weakness in this or maybe not being as tough as some of the older guys in the league. That maturity in these young players is something that wasn’t um necessarily the case years ago. But the hard part um as Capitals fans, and this kind of, you know, reminds me of the whole Ryan Leonard thing, is we’re going to have to be patient. Uh if we remember Ryan Leonard, like I said in segment one, we were chomping at the bit to get him here. Uh he’s going to be going back for his sophomore year. He wants to win a national title, wants to graduate, and uh you know, the mature part is he wants to make his mom happy. uh quite a good kid that he is there and character character is something that goes a long way and I know that oftentimes on the show I talk about I don’t care what kind of person you are off the ice it’s what kind of player you are on the ice and that still holds true but I think that he is a class act but but uh I think that he could be joining the Capitals sooner uh than some of us think that it might not be years and years to come the Capitals are actually leaving the door open for him. And we heard this from former GM Brian Mlen uh when we were talking about Ryan Leonard. If BEu season ends and he’s ready, they’ll try to get him in DC just like they did with Leonard. Wow. Wouldn’t that be something? I think a lot will be determined on the contract situation with Carlson and um you know the overall health and what position the Capitals are in as far as their playoff hopes are concerned. But quite exciting that these young players, like I talked about earlier in this episode, are slowly trickling in. And GM Chris Patrick even said it. He said, quote, “We’ll put the push on,” unquote. And uh that’s one of the things I think Chris Patrick is still waiting to put his stamp on this organization at this up to until this point. he has, you know, given extensions out to Logan Thompson and Chron and but I think that if he could get a young player uh into the system, that would be huge. And I think Caps Nation, we are uh waiting eagerly to see Hudson on this team. And if that happens, imagine Leonard and Hudson um both on this team, two young rising stars. Quite a scenario to think about here. But bottom line, prospect pool’s not elite, but it’s no longer a weakness either. And um you know, I say that, but you know, some people could say elite, but then you take a look around the organization, some teams are stacked, and some of those teams are stacked with prospects because they have been horrendous for years. I’m looking at you Sharks. I’m looking at you Blackhawks. These kind of teams that their prospect pools are pretty good because, well, their teams have been horrendous for years. Um, but for a team still trying to win in the Ovetchkin era and prepare for after he retires, you know, that’s the elephant in the room of course going into this season is how long is Ovetkin going to be around is planning for the future and I think the Capitals are in a really good place. Uh, I think that of course most of us were hoping that they would have gone out and made a bigger splash. I think the Capitals did their level best uh to reel in Nikolai Eers. um it just wasn’t meant to be too much money, all those kind of things. And the Capitals did not want to um you know, deplete uh their system yet again to reel in a player uh like that. So anyway, when you take a look at it, the Capitals are in a good position right here, right now, and they’re only going to get better uh in years to come. That is the exciting part. So, you know, the Capitals did make their big splash. They tried to go after uh Eers. They tried to go after Ross Leavic, but all things considered, I think the Capitals are in a good spot. They’re leaning into that youth. Something that I think they’ve wanted to do for seasons. And uh for right now, I think that the future is bright for the Capitals organization. All right. Once again, I want to thank you for joining me on this edition of Locked On Capitals, your only daily podcast covering the Capitals. And I want to thank all of you that listen on the audio side and watch this on YouTube. You are what makes this show successful. When you’re done here, head on over to Locked on NHL as they have you covered five days a week, available wherever you find your podcasts and on YouTube. All right, once again, I want to thank you for joining me on this edition of Locked On Capitals, part of the Locked On Network. It is your team every day. My name is Dan Holley and I’ll talk to you again next time.
The Washington Capitals have transformed their once-bleak prospect pool into a promising foundation for the future. Led by high-energy winger Ryan Leonard, power-scoring forward Ivan Miroshnichenko, and crafty playmaker Andrew Cristall, the pipeline now features a mix of size, skill, and grit. Recent draft picks such as Lynden Lakovic, Milton Gastrin, and Maxim Schafer add depth across multiple positions, while left wing emerges as the organization’s strongest prospect area. Although right wing remains thin, the Capitals have successfully built a respectable system while still contending in the Ovechkin era.
A key storyline is the development of Cole Hutson, one of the NCAA’s most dynamic young defensemen, who could follow the Ryan Leonard path of joining Washington immediately after his college season. Hutson, combined with Leonard’s NHL arrival, gives the Capitals a shot at having two Calder Trophy candidates in the same season. With a blend of near-NHL-ready talent and longer-term projects, Washington’s pipeline is positioned to carry the franchise beyond its current core while still benefiting from Ovechkin’s final years.
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2 comments
Is washington going to sign roslovic or bring a young player for this season?
Luke Schairer is going to Boston.
6’3” 190lb 17 years old. U18 USA defenseman. Big, tall and super deceptive with the puck.
He is projected first round next year. Build the blueline
Let’s go caps!!!!
Carlsons protege