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What the addition of Zdeno Chara really means to the Capitals

What the addition of Zdeno Chara really means to the Capitals originally appeared on NBC Sports Washington

At 6-foot-9, Zdeno Chara was hard to miss Thursday during the Capitals’ intrasquad scrimmage. He towered over his new teammates and even took out one as he knocked over Jonas Siegenthaler at the blue line. The hits and the physical intimidation of playing against a giant are part of why Chara is now in Washington, but that’s not the whole reason. The addition of Chara by the Capitals late in the offseason was a surprise move after the team had loaded up on defensive talent.  So what does he add that the other players can’t? The answer to that question gets at the heart of why he is now a Capital.

The first thing most people know about Chara is his size. He is a massive player and plays like it too. He is not afraid of doling out the big hits or dropping the gloves. But he is also a great all-around defenseman.

In Chara’s 22 NHL seasons, he has played in over 1,500 games. He has scored 10 goals or more in his career 10 times in his career and reached 50 points three times. He also won the Norris Trophy as the league’s top defenseman in 2009.

“A guy whose resume speaks for itself,” T.J. Oshie said. “Great defensively, offensively, a Norris winner, Stanley Cup winner, someone I’ve watched a lot of tape on, just how he uses his stick and his size and is just no fun to play against from the defensive side of the puck and how he defends hard.”

Chara, however, is 43 and will turn 44 in March. He’s not a Norris Trophy defenseman anymore. He hasn’t scored 10 goals since 2017, he hasn’t recorded 50 points since 2012 and his ice time has decreased in each of the last four seasons.

Chara’s resume is sparkling, but who exactly are the Caps getting at this point in his career? The real value of Chara is not what he brings on the ice, it’s what he brings off of it with the kind of qualities that don’t go away with age.

“[Chara’s] played the game for a long time,” Peter Laviolette said. “He’s had incredible success doing things a certain way. His character is his character. His leadership is his leadership. The way he plays the game, what you see on the ice: All of these things I expect nothing to change. It’s just kind of his DNA and his makeup of who he is. And so we welcome all of that. He’s intense, he’s polite, he’s strong, he’s physical, he’s hungry. There’s a lot of attributes that he brings to the team.”

Having a player like Chara around is a huge boon for the team’s prospects who now get to learn from a future Hall-of-Fame defenseman, an iron man who is entering his 23rd NHL season and a great leader.

What Chara brings to the locker room, to his preparation, to the way he approaches the games are not things that can be taught by a coach. They are best learned by example.

“I think any time you bring experience, especially from a guy that was obviously a very good captain and a guy that carries himself very professionally with what he eats, how he trains when he comes to the rink, how he prepares,” Oshie said. “We are, I feel, like a little bit of a more veteran team this year, but we do still have got guys that can only benefit from seeing a guy like Chara come in.”

Some players bristle at this notion of being a mentor. While they are focusing on prolonging their career, they do not want to get saddled with having to mentor younger players who they know will one day replace them.

Chara, however, knows his place in the game and has been very open with Washington’s young prospects in his short time in camp thus far.

“I really enjoy that type of a role where I can really help out maybe younger kids coming up in the system,” Chara said.

Chara’s first practice coming out of quarantine was with the second group with the majority of the team’s prospects. Chara was seen talking with first-round draft pick Hendrix Lapierre and seemed to enjoy the experience of playing with the younger group.

“I enjoy talking to younger players when they have questions or they’re kind of asking me for stories or asking what it was like many years ago playing in the NHL,” Chara said. “But it’s really nice to have these kind of conversations and starting kind of like new friendships.”

This would seem like the perfect set up for an up-and-coming team with lots of young players who are all trying to learn how to win in the NHL develop for a future run at the Stanley Cup. But that’s not the situation in Washington. For the Caps, it’s Stanley Cup or bust.

Even though Washington is a much more veteran team, however, those players are also excited about what Chara can add.

“He’s here to help us, not just for ‘OK, we signed Chara,'” Alex Ovechkin said. “He’s gonna come here, he’s gonna work hard, he’s gonna bring some energy, he’s gonna bring some new experience to our team and I think it’s gonna help us.”

Defensively, Washington was atrocious in 2019-20. The team may have ranked 18th overall in goals against for the season, but that was greatly inflated by a hot start. From Dec. 23 to when the season paused on March 12, the Caps ranked 29th in the NHL giving up 3.44 goals per game.

Turnovers were an issue, bad stretch passes, poor decisions, miscommunications and just an overall lack of accountability was affecting the blue line. The leadership of Brooks Orpik, who retired after the 2018-19 season, was clearly missing.

That’s a void Chara seems uniquely qualified to fill.

“We’ve obviously missed [Orpik] and certainly he probably has a lot of the same great qualities as a player and as a leader,” Carlson said. “I think we have a lot of leaders on this team, but I don’t think you can ever have enough. Certainly a guy that’s been in a different organization for a long time and see things probably a little bit differently to learn from and work with and work from is important for all of us.”

Carlson added, “I think [Chara’s] going to be an important part of this team that certainly would mimic a big role that Brooks had on and off the ice.”

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Watch Capitals' season finale vs. Devils on NBCSW originally appeared on NBC Sports WashingtonThe Washington Capitals are back on NBC Sports Washington for the 2022-23 season.Don't miss the Caps' quest for a second Stanley Cup championship and Alex Ovechkin's historic chase of Wayne Gretzky. Head coach Peter Laviolette is in his third season at the helm with high expectations where he finally has a bonafide No. 1 goalie in reigning Stanley Cup champion Darcy Kuemper. Can Washington get over the hump for a second time?All season long you can catch games, pregame and postgame coverage with the top insight from those who know the team best. Play-by-play Joe Beninati and color commentator Craig Laughlin are in the booth for their 26th year together of calling Capitals hockey.NBC Sports Washington will also surround all games with live gameday programs Capitals Pregame Live and Capitals Postgame Live. Capitals Pregame Live will be broadcast 30 minutes prior to the scheduled game start. Alexa Landestoy will host a talented and accomplished crew of analysts and insiders, including Alan May, Al Koken and Brent Johnson.NEXT CAPITALS GAME ON NBCSWWhat: Washington Capitals vs. New Jersey DevilsWhere: Capital One Arena, Washington, D.C.When: Thursday, April 13, 2023, at 7:00 p.m. ETTV Channel: Capitals vs. Devils will be broadcast on NBC Sports Washington. Find your channel here.Live Stream: You can live stream Capitals vs. Devils on NBC Sports Washington's live stream page and on the NBC Sports App.LATEST CAPITALS HEADLINESCapitals' season ends with overtime loss to DevilsWhen is the 2023 Stanley Cup Playoffs?Lindgren exits with injury as Capitals fall to BruinsCapitals play spoiler, sprint past Islanders to snap skidCaps’ Carlson nominated for Bill Masterton Memorial TrophyCAPITALS GAMEDAY COVERAGE SCHEDULECapitals Pregame Live: 30 minutes prior to the scheduled startCapitals GameCapitals Postgame Live: 30 minutes to an hour following the final hornFULL CAPITALS SCHEDULE:PreseasonSun. Sept 25: Sabres 4, Capitals 3 (OT)Wed. Sept 28: Capitals 3, Flyers 1Fri. Sept 30: Capitals 2, Red Wings 0Sat. Oct 1: Blue Jackets 2, Capitals 1Wed. Oct 5: Capitals 4, Red Wings 2Sat. Oct 8: Capitals 4, Blue Jackets 3Regular SeasonWed. Oct 12: Bruins 5, Capitals 2 (0-1-0)Thu. Oct 13: Maple Leafs 3, Capitals 2 (0-2-0)Sat. Oct 15: Capitals 3, Canadiens 1 (1-2-0)Mon. Oct 17: Capitals 6, Canucks 4 (2-2-0)Thu. Oct 20: Senators 5, Capitals 2 (2-3-0)Sat. Oct 22: Capitals 4, Kings 3 (3-3-0)Mon. Oct 24: Capitals 6, Devils 3 (4-3-0)Thu. Oct 27: Stars 2, Capitals 0 (4-4-0)Sat. Oct 29: Capitals 3, Predators 0 (5-4-0)Mon. Oct 31: Hurricanes 3, Capitals 2 (SO) (5-4-1)Tue. Nov 1: Golden Knights 3, Capitals 2 (OT) (5-4-2)Thu. Nov 3: Red Wings 3, Capitals 1 (5-5-2)Sat. Nov 5: Coyotes 3, Capitals 2 (5-6-2)Mon. Nov 7: Capitals 5, Oilers 4 (6-6-2)Wed. Nov 9: Penguins 4, Capitals 1 (6-7-2)Fri. Nov 11: Capitals 5, Lightning 1 (7-7-2)Sun. Nov 13: Lighting 6, Capitals 3 (7-8-2)Tue. Nov 15: Panthers 5, Capitals 2 (7-9-2)Thu. Nov 17: Blues 5, Capitals 4 (SO) (7-9-3)Sat. Nov 19: Avalanche 4, Capitals 0 (7-10-3)Wed. Nov 23: Capitals 3, Flyers 2 (OT) (8-10-3)Fri. Nov 25: Capitals 3, Flames 0 (9-10-3)Sat. Nov 26: Devils 5, Capitals 1 (9-11-3)Tue. Nov 29: Capitals 5, Canucks 1 (10-11-3)Thu. Dec 1: Kraken 3, Capitals 2 (OT) (10-11-4)Sat. Dec 3: Flames 5, Capitals 2 (10-12-4)Mon. Dec 5: Capitals 3, Oilers 2 (11-12-4)Wed. Dec 7: Capitals 4, Flyers 1 (12-12-4)Fri. Dec 9: Capitals 4, Kraken 1 (13-12-4)Sun. Dec 11: Capitals 5, Jets 2 (14-12-4)Tue. Dec 13: Capitals 7, Blackhawks 3 (15-12-4)Thu. Dec 15: Stars 2, Capitals 1 (15-13-4)Sat. Dec 17: Capitals 5, Maple Leafs 2 (16-13-4)Mon. Dec 19: Capitals 4, Red Wings 3 (OT) (17-13-4)Thu. Dec 22: Capitals 3, Senators 2 (OT) (18-13-4)Fri. Dec 23: Capitals 4, Winnipeg Jets 1 (19-13-4)Tue. Dec 27: Capitals 4, Rangers 0 (20-13-4)Thu. Dec 29: Senators 4, Capitals 3 (OT) (20-13-5)Sat. Dec 31: Capitals 9, Canadiens 2 (21-13-5)Tue. Jan 3: Sabres 5, Capitals 4 (OT) (21-13-6)Thu. Jan 5: Capitals 6, Blue Jackets (22-13-6)Fri. Jan 6: Predators 3, Capitals 2 (22-14-6)Sun. Jan 8: Capitals 1, Blue Jackets 0 (23-14-6)Wed. Jan 11: Flyers 5, Capitals 3 (23-15-6)Sat. Jan 14: Flyers 3, Capitals 1 (23-16-6)Mon. Jan 16: Capitals 4, Islanders 3 (OT) (24-16-6)Tue. Jan 17: Wild 4, Capitals 2 (24-17-6)Thu. Jan 19: Capitals 4, Coyotes 0 (25-17-6)Sat. Jan 21: Golden Knights 6, Capitals 2 (25-18-6)Tue. Jan 24: Avalanche 3, Capitals 2 (25-19-6)Thu. Jan 26: Capitals 3, Penguins 2 (S/O) (26-19-6)Sun. Jan 29: Maple Leafs 5, Capitals 1 (26-20-6)Tue. Jan 31: Capitals 4, Blue Jackets 3 (OT) (27-20-6)Sat. Feb 11: Capitals 2, Bruins 1 (28-20-6)Sun. Feb 12: Sharks 4, Capitals 1 (28-21-6)Tue. Feb 14: Hurricanes 3, Capitals 2 (28-22-6)Thu. Feb 16: Panthers 6, Capitals 3 (28-23-6)Sat. Feb 18: Hurricanes 4, Capitals 1 (28-24-6)Tue. Feb 21: Red Wings 3, Capitals 1 (28-25-6)Thu. Feb 23: Ducks 4, Capitals 2 (28-26-6)Sat. Feb 25: Capitals 6, Rangers 3 (29-26-6)Sun. Feb 26: Sabres 7, Capitals 4 (29-27-6)Wed. Mar 1: Capitals 3, Ducks 2 (OT) (30-27-6)Sat. Mar 4: Capitals 8, Sharks 3 (31-27-6)Mon. Mar 6: Kings 4, Capitals 2 (31-28-6)Thu. Mar 9: Devils 3, Capitals 2 (SO) (31-28-7)Sat. Mar 11: Capitals 5, Islanders 1 (32-28-7)Tue. Mar 14: Rangers 5, Capitals 3 (32-29-7)Wed. Mar 15: Capitals 5, Sabres 4 (SO) (33-29-7)Fri. Mar 17: Blues 5, Capitals 2 (33-30-7)Sun. Mar 19: Wild 5, Capitals 3 (33-31-7)Tue. Mar 21: Blue Jackets 7, Capitals 6 (OT) (33-31-8)Thu. Mar 23: Capitals 6, Blackhawks 1 (34-31-8)Sat. Mar 25: Penguins 4, Capitals 3 (34-32-8)Wed. Mar 29: Islanders 2, Capitals 1 (SO) (34-32-9)Thu. Mar 30: Lightning 5, Capitals 1 (34-33-9)Sun. Apr 2: Rangers 5, Capitals 2 (34-34-9)Thu. Apr 6: Canadiens 6, Capitals 2 (34-35-9)Sat. Apr 8: Panthers 4, Capitals 2 (34-36-9)Mon. Apr 10: Capitals 5, Islanders 2 (35-36-9)Tue. Apr 11: Bruins 5, Capitals 2 (35-37-9)Thu. Apr 13: Devils 5, Capitals 4 (35-38-10)
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