The Washington Capitals have had a busy start to free agency and its raised an obvious question: with the roster filling up and cap space quickly disappearing, is there still a path back for Alex Ovechkin? According to GM Chris Patrick, the answer is yes.
I think we can do something that would work for Alex based on conversations we had with him prior to him leaving, Patrick said in an exclusive interview with ESPN.
There are ways to get him the money that he needs because of his age and the kind of contracts you can do.
Thats a notably direct answer, and it stands in contrast to reporting from Darren Dreger, who said on TSNs OverDrive that all indications point toward Ovechkins NHL career having concluded while acknowledging nothing is official yet.
Lets take a look at what might really be going on.
The quick answer is that Ovechkin might not know yet if hes returning.
So, in case he doesnt, Washington kept adding to its roster on Wednesday.
They signed center Boone Jenner to a four-year, $5.75 million AAV deal and defenseman Vincent Desharnais for four years at $4.2 million, plus depth pieces Jonny Brodzinski, Justin Holl and Josh Dunne on one-year deals.
That spending spree leaves the Capitals with a projected $4.375 million in cap space tight, but not nothing.
Now, if Ovechkin does want to return, there are things the Capitals can do.
First, the team could clear a little cap space with a trade.
Second, if they dont want to make a trade, Ovechkin can sign for less than whats still available.
Thats unlikely.
Third, the Caps can give him $4 million and a bonus-heavy, over-35 contract.
Patricks comments point toward a bonus-heavy structure.
Washington already has $3.6 million in performance bonuses committed for 2026-27 across three entry-level players Ryan Leonard, Cole Hutson and Ilya Protas leaving roughly $4.2 million in bonus room before the team hits the NHLs 7.5% bonus cushion limit.
Thats enough space to get Ovechkin to a number that looks pretty fair.
This wouldnt be a new development.
Evgeni Malkins new deal carries a $5.5 million cap hit but includes $3.5 million in potential bonuses.
And Mats Zuccarellos contract with the Kings (which he signed on Wednesday), is built almost entirely on incentives just $1 million in base salary, with a $5 million bonus for reaching 10 games played and up to $500,000 more tied to playoff performance.
Frederik Andersen did the same thing in Edmonton.
None of this confirms Ovechkin is coming back Dregers reporting suggests real uncertainty remains, and Patricks comments describe a framework, not a finished deal.
But it does suggest the Capitals havent closed the door, and that if a return does happen, it likely wont look like a conventional contract.
One thing is clear: Ovechkin isnt guaranteed to be retiring.
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