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:''For the [[National Basketball Association#History|BAA]] team, see [[Washington Capitols]]. For the [[American Basketball Association|ABA]] team, see [[Washington Caps]].''
{{current sport-related|image=Hockey current event.png|mini=1|2008–09 Washington Capitals season}}
{{NHL Team
|team_name = Washington Capitals
|bg_color = #CF142B
|text_color = #003153
|logo_image = WashingtonCapitals.PNG
|conference = [[Eastern Conference (NHL)|Eastern]]
|division = [[Southeast Division (NHL)|Southeast]]
|founded = [[1974–75 NHL season|1974]]
|history = '''Washington Capitals'''<br>[[1974–75 NHL season|1974]] - present
|arena = [[Verizon Center]]
|city = [[Washington, D.C.]]
|media_affiliates = [[CSN Mid-Atlantic|Comcast SportsNet Mid-Atlantic]]<br>[[WFED|WFED (1500/820)]]
|team_colors = Red, Blue, White
{{color box|#CF142B}} {{color box|#003153}} {{color box|white}}
|owner = {{flagicon|USA}} [[Ted Leonsis]]
|general_manager = {{flagicon|CAN}} [[George McPhee]]
|head_coach = {{flagicon|CAN}} [[Bruce Boudreau]]
|captain = {{flagicon|USA}} [[Chris Clark (ice hockey)|Chris Clark]]
|minor_league_affiliates = [[Hershey Bears]] ([[American Hockey League|AHL]])<br />[[South Carolina Stingrays]] ([[ECHL]])
|stanley_cups = None
|conf_titles = [[1997–98 NHL season|1997–98]]
|division_titles = [[1988–89 NHL season|1988–89]], [[1999–00 NHL season|1999–00]], [[2000–01 NHL season|2000–01]], [[2007–08 NHL season|2007–08]]
}}

The '''Washington Capitals''' are a professional [[ice hockey]] team based in [[Washington, D.C.]] They are members of the [[Southeast Division (NHL)|Southeast Division]] of the [[Eastern Conference (NHL)|Eastern Conference]] of the [[National Hockey League]] (NHL). They play in the [[Verizon Center]] in Washington's [[Chinatown, Washington, D.C.|Chinatown neighborhood]].

==Early history==
[[Image:WashingtonCapitals1980s.png|left|thumb|The original Capitals logo, used from 1974-95]]
Along with the [[Kansas City Scouts]], the Capitals joined the National Hockey League as an [[expansion team]] for the [[1974–75 NHL season|1974–75]] season. The team was owned by [[Abe Pollin]], owner of the [[National Basketball Association|NBA]]'s [[Washington Wizards|Washington Bullets]]. Pollin had built the Capital Centre in suburban [[Landover, Maryland]], to house both the Bullets (who formerly played in [[Baltimore, Maryland]]) and the Capitals. His first act as owner was to hire [[Hockey Hall of Fame|Hall of Famer]] [[Milt Schmidt]] as general manager.

With a combined 30 teams between the NHL and the rival [[World Hockey Association]], the Capitals had few players with professional experience and were at a disadvantage against the long-standing teams that were stocked with more experienced players. Like the other three teams who joined the league during the WHA era—the Scouts, [[Atlanta Flames]] and [[New York Islanders]]—the Capitals did not factor the arrival of the WHA into their plans.

The Capitals' inaugural season was dreadful, even by expansion standards. They finished 8–67–5, far and away the worst record in the league. Their 21 points were half that of their expansion brethren, the Scouts. The eight wins are the fewest for an NHL team playing at least 70 games, and the .131 winning percentage is still the worst in NHL history. They also set records for most road losses (39 out of 40), most consecutive road losses (37) (both still NHL records) and most consecutive losses (17), a mark tied by the 1992–93 [[San Jose Sharks]]. Coach [[Jim Anderson (ice hockey)|Jim Anderson]] said, "I'd rather find out my wife was cheating on me than keep losing like this. At least I could tell my wife to cut it out." Schmidt himself had to take over the coaching reins late in the season.

In [[1975–76 NHL season|1975–76]], Washington went 25 straight games without a win and allowed 394 goals en route to another horrendous record: 11–59–10 (32 points). During the middle of the season, [[Max McNab]] was hired as GM, and [[Tom McVie]] was hired as head coach to replace Schmidt. For the rest of the 1970s and early 1980s, the Capitals alternated between dreadful seasons and finishing only a few points out of the playoffs. In [[1979–80 NHL season|1980]] and [[1980–81 NHL season|1981]], for instance, they were in playoff contention until the last day of the season. The one bright spot during these years of futility was that many of McNab's draft picks (e.g. [[Rick Green (ice hockey)|Rick Green]], [[Ryan Walter]], [[Mike Gartner]], [[Bengt-Ake Gustafsson]], [[Gaetan Duchesne]], [[Bobby Carpenter (ice hockey)|Bobby Carpenter]]) would impact the team for years to come, whether as important members of the roster or crucial pieces to major trades. By the summer of [[1981–82 NHL season|1982]], there was serious talk of the team moving out of the U.S. capital, and a "Save the Caps" campaign was underway. Then two significant events took place to solve the problem.

===Playoffs===
First, the team hired [[David Poile]] as General Manager. Second, as his first move, Poile pulled off one of the biggest trades in franchise history on [[September 9]], [[1982]], when he dealt longtime regulars Ryan Walter and Rick Green to the [[Montreal Canadiens]] for [[Rod Langway]], [[Brian Engblom]], [[Doug Jarvis]], and [[Craig Laughlin]]. This move turned the franchise around, as Langway's solid defense helped the team to dramatically reduce its goals-against, and the explosive goal-scoring of [[Dennis Maruk]], Mike Gartner, and Bobby Carpenter fueled the offensive attack. Another significant move was the drafting of defenseman [[Scott Stevens]] during the [[1982 NHL Entry Draft]] (the pick was made by interim-GM [[Roger Crozier]], prior to Poile's hiring). The result was a 29-point jump, a third-place finish in the powerful [[Patrick Division]], and the team's first playoff appearance in [[1982–83 NHL season|1983]]. Although they were eliminated by the three-time-defending [[Stanley Cup]] Champion [[New York Islanders]] (three games to one), the Caps' dramatic turnaround ended any talk of the club leaving Washington.

The Capitals would make the playoffs for each of the next 14 years in a row. They became known for starting slow before catching fire in January and February. However, regular-season success did not carry into the playoffs. Despite a continuous march of stars like Gartner, Carpenter, Langway, Gustafsson, [[Mike Ridley]], [[Dave Christian]], [[Dino Ciccarelli]], [[Larry Murphy]], and [[Kevin Hatcher]], Washington was knocked out in either the first or second round eight years in a row. In [[1985–86 NHL season|1985–86]], for instance, the Caps finished with 107 points (a franchise record that still stands today) and won 50 games for the only time in franchise history, good enough for the fourth-best record in the league. However, they were bounced out of the playoffs in the second round by the [[New York Rangers]].

[[1986–87 NHL season|The next season]] brought even more heartbreak, with a loss to the Islanders in the Patrick Division Semifinal. This series was capped off by the classic [[Easter Epic]] game, which ended at 1:56 am on Easter Sunday 1987. The Capitals had thoroughly dominated most of the game, outshooting the Islanders 75–52, but lost in overtime when goaltender [[Bob Mason]] was beaten on a [[Pat LaFontaine]] shot from the blue line. For the [[1988–89 NHL season|1989]] playoff push, Gartner and defenseman Larry Murphy were traded to the [[Minnesota North Stars]] in exchange for Ciccarelli and defenseman [[Bob Rouse]], however the goaltending once again faltered and they were eliminated in the first round by the [[Philadelphia Flyers]]. The Capitals finally made the Wales Conference Finals in [[1989–90 NHL season|1990]], but went down in a four-game sweep at the hands of the first-place [[Boston Bruins]].

===Lost chances===
By the mid-1990s, the [[Stanley Cup]] seemed to elude the Capitals. Despite having rising stars in right-winger [[Peter Bondra]], defenseman [[Sergei Gonchar]], and center/left-wing [[Joé Juneau|Joe Juneau]], the team's core players were mostly aging.

The Capitals were favorites during the [[1992–93 NHL season|1993]] playoff series with the [[New York Islanders]] but they were upset in six games. That series was most remembered when center [[Dale Hunter]] checked the Isles' [[Pierre Turgeon]] from behind in Game 6 after Turgeon scored the series-clinching goal. Turgeon fell awkwardly onto the ice and suffered a separated shoulder that caused him to miss the Isles' second round series against the [[Pittsburgh Penguins]]. Hunter's post-goal check earned him a suspension for the first 21 games of the [[1993–94 NHL season|next season]] &ndash; at the time the longest suspension for an on-ice incident in NHL history.

===Eastern Conference champions===
Then in [[1997–98 NHL season|1998]], Peter Bondra's 52 goals led the team, veterans Hunter, Juneau and [[Adam Oates]] returned to old form, and [[Olaf Kolzig]] had a solid .920 save percentage as the Caps got past the [[Boston Bruins]], Ottawa Senators, and [[Buffalo Sabres]] (the latter on a dramatic overtime win in game six on a goal by Joe Juneau) en route to the team's first (and to date, only) Stanley Cup finals appearance. The Capitals won six overtime games, three in each of their series against the Bruins and Sabres. However, the team was no match for the defending champs, the [[Detroit Red Wings]], who won in a four-game sweep.

That same season, Oates, [[Phil Housley]], and [[Dale Hunter]] all scored their 1,000th career point, the only time in NHL history that one team had 3 different players reach that same milestone in a single season.

===Disappointments and rebuilding===
[[Image:WashingtonCapitals1990s.png|right|thumb|200px|Capitals logo 1995-2007]]
In [[1998–99 NHL season|1999]], the Capitals missed the playoffs due to numerous injuries, one of the highest in the league that season. After that season, Pollin sold the Capitals to a group headed by AOL executive [[Ted Leonsis]].

The Capitals went on to win back-to-back Southeast Division titles in 2000 and 2001, yet both years lost in the first round to the [[Pittsburgh Penguins]]. After the 2000–01 season, [[Adam Oates]] demanded a trade but management refused and stripped him of his team captaincy.

In the summer of [[2001 in sports|2001]], the Capitals landed five-time [[Art Ross Trophy]] winner [[Jaromír Jágr|Jaromir Jagr]], one of the best players in the NHL in the 1990s, by trading three young prospects to the [[Pittsburgh Penguins]]. Jagr was signed to the largest contract ever in NHL history - $77 million over 7 years at an average salary of $11 million per year (over $134,000 ''per game''), with an option for an eighth year. However, Jagr did not live up to expectations, as the Capitals failed to defend their division title and missed the playoffs in [[2002 in sports|2002]] despite a winning record. Still, the 2001–2002 season marked the highest attendance in franchise history, drawing in 710,990 fans and 17,341 per game <ref>[http://www.usatoday.com/sports/hockey/notes/was.htm USATODAY.com - Sports<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>.

In the summer of 2002, the Caps made even more roster changes, including the signing the highly regarded [[Robert Lang (ice hockey)|Robert Lang]] as a free agent, a linemate of Jagr's from Pittsburgh. The Capitals were back in the playoffs [[2002–03 NHL season|2003]], but disappointed fans again by losing in six games to the [[Tampa Bay Lightning]] after starting off with a two-game lead in the best-of-seven first-round series. The series is well-remembered for the three-overtime Game 6 at the then-[[Verizon Center|MCI Center]], the longest game in the building's history, which was eventually decided by a power play goal as a result of [[Jason Doig]] skating on the ice too early and warranting a too-many-men-on-the-ice penalty.

In the 2003–2004 season, the Caps unloaded a lot of their high-priced talent &mdash; not just a cost-cutting spree, but also an acknowledgment that their attempt to build a contender with high-priced veteran talent had failed. Jagr had failed to finish among the league's top scorers or make the postseason All-Star Team during his time with the Capitals. They tried to trade Jagr, but as only one year was left on the existing [[collective bargaining|Collective Bargaining Agreement]] before it expired, few teams were willing to risk $11 million on an underperforming player. In 2004, Jagr was finally sent to the [[New York Rangers]] for [[Anson Carter]] and an agreement that Washington would pay approximately four million dollars per year of Jagr's salary, with Jagr himself agreeing to defer (with interest) $1 million per year for the remainder of his contract to allow the trade to go ahead. This was quickly followed by Bondra going to the [[Ottawa Senators]]. Not long after, [[Robert Lang (ice hockey)|Robert Lang]] was sent to [[Detroit Red Wings|Detroit]] and Gonchar to the [[Boston Bruins|Bruins]]. The Robert Lang trade marked the first time in the history of the [[National Hockey League]] that the league's leading scorer was traded in the middle of the season. The Capitals ended the year 23–46–10–6, tied for the second worst record, along with the [[Chicago Blackhawks]].

[[Image:WashingtonCapitals2000s.png||thumb|right|150px|Capitals' former home logo; two hockey sticks crossed behind the image of the [[United States Capitol]], with stars flanking it, a hockey puck at the front, and the team's name emblazoned across the Capitol.]]
In the [[2004 NHL Entry Draft]], the Capitals won the Draft Lottery, and selected [[Alexander Ovechkin]] first overall. During the [[2004–05 NHL lockout|NHL labor dispute of 2004–05]], which cost the NHL its entire season, Ovechkin stayed in Russia, playing for [[HC Dynamo Moscow|Moscow Dynamo]]. Several other Capitals played part or all of the lost season in [[Europe]], including [[Olaf Kölzig|Olaf Kolzig]], [[Brendan Witt]], and [[Jeff Halpern]]. The Capitals' 2005 off-season consisted of making D.C.-area native Halpern the team's captain, signing [[Andrew Cassels]], [[Ben Clymer]], [[Mathieu Biron]] and [[Jamie Heward]], and acquiring [[Chris Clark (ice hockey)|Chris Clark]] and [[Jeff Friesen]] via trade.

===Post-lockout===
The Capitals finished the 2005–2006 NHL season in the cellar of the Southeastern Division again, with a 29–41–12 campaign, having 12 more points than the 2003–04 Season, good for 27th out of the 30 NHL teams. Yet the team played close in every game, playing in 42 one-goal games, although losing 2/3 of those games. Ovechkin's rookie season exceeded the hype, as he led all 2005–06 NHL rookies in goals, points, power-play goals and shots. He finished third overall in the NHL in scoring and tied for third in goals; and his 425 shots not only led the league, but also set an NHL rookie record and was the fourth-highest total in NHL history. Ovechkin's rookie point total was the second-best in Washington Capitals history, and his goal total was tied for third in franchise history. Ovechkin won the [[Calder Memorial Trophy]], beating out Pittsburgh center [[Sidney Crosby]] and [[Calgary Flames]] defenseman [[Dion Phaneuf]]. Many longtime Capitals had career years, with [[Dainius Zubrus]] netting 57 points, Halpern having a career-best 33 assists, [[Matt Pettinger]] putting in a career-best 20-goal, 38-point effort and seven others on the relatively young team topping 20 points for the first time. Two notable landmarks were also hit by Capitals, as the team's longest tenured Capital, Olaf Kolzig, won his 250th game in goal and [[Andrew Cassels]] became the 204th player to play 1,000 games, although he did not finish out his season with the team. A notable first was that [[Washington, D.C.|Washington]] area native [[Jeff Halpern]] was named captain of the hometown Capitals. At the 2006 trade deadline, [[March 8]], Witt was traded to [[Nashville Predators|Nashville]].

===2006–07 season===
{{main|2006–07 Washington Capitals season}}
In the 2006 offseason, Halpern left the Capitals to join the [[Dallas Stars]]; [[Chris Clark (ice hockey)|Chris Clark]] became the Capitals' new captain. [[Richard Zedník|Richard Zednik]] returned to the Capitals in [[2006–07 NHL season|2006–07]] after a disappointing 16-goal, 14-assist season in 2005–06 with Montreal, but was later dealt at the trade deadline to the New York Islanders after a disappointing and injury plagued season; the Caps also signed former [[Philadelphia Flyers]] enforcer [[Donald Brashear]].

Yet the Capitals finished with the same point total (70) in 2006–2007 as they did the year before, although they won one less game. [[Alexander Ovechkin]] was the Capitals' lone representative in the All-Star game. The year was also notable for the breakout of [[Alexander Semin]], who notched 38 goals in only his 2nd NHL season.

===2007 offseason and 2007-08 season===
{{main|2007–08 Washington Capitals season}}

[[Image:WashingtonCaps.PNG|left|thumb|The Capitals current alternate logo.]]
[[Image:Washington-capitals-07-jerseys.jpg|right|thumb|150px|2007-08 jerseys]]
The Capitals unveiled new uniforms on [[June 22]], [[2007]] which coincided with the [[2007 NHL Entry Draft|NHL Entry Draft]] and the new league-wide adaptation of the [[NHL_uniform#2007.E2.80.9308:_Rbk_Edge|Reebok]]-designed uniform system for [[2007–08 NHL season|2007–08]]. The change marks a return to the red, white, and blue color scheme originally used from 1974 to 1995.<ref>http://www.washingtoncaps.com/news/news.asp?story_id=4783</ref> The new primary logo is reminiscent of the original Capitals' logo, complete with a hockey stick formed by the letter "t"; it also includes a new feature the original logo didn't have: 3 stars representing [[Maryland]], [[Virginia]], and [[Washington, D.C.|DC]].<ref>[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/06/21/AR2007062102100.html "Back in Red, White and Blue, Caps Make a Colorful Statement"] ''Washington Post'' [[June 22]], [[2007]].</ref> More simply, the stars are an obvious reference to the [[Flag of Washington, D.C.|flag of DC]], which is in turn based on the shield of [[Coat of arms of George Washington|George Washington's family coat of arms]].

The Capitals finally signed Swedish phenom [[Nicklas Backstrom]], the fourth overall pick in the 2006 NHL Entry Draft, to three-year entry-level contract. They also recently signed 19 year old Simeon Varlamov to a three-year entry-level contract. They then went on to fill needs at defense, by signing puck moving defenseman [[Tom Poti]], right wing, by signing [[Viktor Kozlov]], and center, by signing playmaker [[Michael Nylander]]. Because of these signings there was much more hope for the 07–08 season and players were looking towards the playoffs.

After starting the season 6–14–1, the Capitals fired coach [[Glen Hanlon]] and replaced him with [[Hershey Bears]] coach [[Bruce Boudreau]] on Thanksgiving Day, 2007. On [[January 10]], [[2008]], the Capitals signed Ovechkin to a league-record $124 million contract extension; at 13 years, it also had the second-longest term of any contract in the NHL, after [[New York Islanders]] goaltender [[Rick DiPietro]]'s 15-year contract. Despite the Capitals' young defense and injuries to key players such as Michael Nylander and [[Brian Pothier]], Boudreau engineered a remarkable turnaround. Aided by key moves at the trade deadline ([[Matt Cooke]], [[Sergei Fedorov]] and [[Cristobal Huet]]), Ovechkin's league-leading 65 goals,<ref name="64 and 65">{{Cite web|url=http://sports.espn.go.com/nhl/recap?gameId=280403023|title=Ovechkin passes single-season mark as Capitals keep playoff hopes alive
|accessdate=2008-04-03|publisher=ESPN.com}}</ref> and Mike Green's NHL defenseman leading 18 goals, the Capitals won the [[Southeast Division (NHL)|Southeast Division]] title for the first time since the [[2000–01 NHL season]], edging out the [[Carolina Hurricanes]] for the division title on the final game of the season. Their remarkable end of season run included winning 11 of the final 12 regular season games. The Capitals became the first team in NHL history to make the playoffs after being ranked 14th or lower in the standings at the season's midpoint.<ref>[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/05/AR2008040502708.html Coming All the Way Back - washingtonpost.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>. The Capitals drew the [[Philadelphia Flyers]] in the first round, and managed to force a Game 7 after being down 3-1 in the series. They ultimately lost to the Flyers 3-2 in OT.<ref name="Flyers 3-2 OT win">{{Cite web|url=http://www.nhl.com/nhl/app?articleid=361339&page=NewsPage&service=page|title=Overtime goal sends Flyers to semifinals|accessdate=2008-04-22|publisher=NHL.com}}</ref> After the season concluded, Boudreau's efforts were rewarded with a long term contract.

The accolades for the team continued to roll in after the end of the season. Alex Ovechkin won the [[Art Ross Trophy]], the [[Maurice "Rocket" Richard Trophy]], the [[Hart Trophy]] and the [[Lester B. Pearson Award]]. Ovechkin became the first player in NHL history to win all four awards. He also was the first player to win an MVP award in any major sport in the Washington, DC area since [[Joe Theismann]] won the NFL MVP in 1983. Moreover, he was named an NHL First Team All-Star and became the first player since 1953 to be named as such in each of his first three years in the NHL. Nicklas Backstrom was a finalist for the [[Calder Trophy]], but ended up second to Chicago's Patrick Kane; however, Backstrom was still selected to the All-Star Rookie Team. Bruce Boudreau won the [[Jack Adams Award]] for NHL best coach. Ovechkin and [[Mike Green]] were named to the Sporting News All-Star Team, with Ovechkin being the Sporting News Player of the Year.<ref>[http://blog.washingtonpost.com/capitalsinsider/2008/06/ovechkins_trophy_haul_has_begu.html#comments A.O. Snags Hart, Pearson; Boudreau Wins Adams - Capitals Insider<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

==Season-by-season record==
''This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Capitals. For the full season-by-season history, see [[Washington Capitals seasons]]''

'''''Note:''' GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime Losses/SOL = Shootout Losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, PIM = Penalties in minutes''

{| class="wikitable"
|- style="font-weight:bold; background-color:#dddddd;" |
|Season || GP || W || L || T || OTL|| Pts || GF || GA || PIM || Finish || Playoffs
|- bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| [[2003–04 NHL season|2003–04]] || 82 || 23 || 46 || 10 || 3 || 59 || 186 || 253 || 1282 || 5th, Southeast || Did not qualify
|-
| [[2004–05 NHL season|2004–05]] || colspan="11" | ''Season cancelled due to [[2004–05 NHL lockout]]''
|- bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| [[2005–06 NHL season|2005–06]]<sup>1</sup> || 82 || 29 || 41 || — || 12 || 70 || 237 || 306 || 1426 || 5th, Southeast || Did not qualify
|-
| [[2006–07 NHL season|2006–07]] || 82 || 28 || 40 || — || 14 || 70|| 235 || 286 || 1205 || 5th, Southeast || Did not qualify
|- bgcolor="#eeeeee"
|[[2007–08 NHL season|2007–08]] || 82 || 43 || 31 || — || 8 || 94 || 242 || 231 || 1015 || 1st, Southeast || Lost in Conference Quarterfinals, 3-4 ([[Philadelphia Flyers|Flyers]])
|}

:<sup>1</sup> <small>As of the [[2005–06 NHL season]], all games will have a winner; the OTL column includes SOL (Shootout losses).</small>

==Players==
===Current roster===
{{Washington Capitals roster}}

===Team captains===
<div style="float:left; width:48%;">
*[[Doug Mohns]], 1974–75
*[[Bill Clement]], 1975–76
*[[Yvon Labre]], 1976–78
*[[Guy Charron]], 1978–79
*[[Ryan Walter]], 1979–82
*[[Rod Langway]], 1982–93
*[[Kevin Hatcher]], 1993–94
*[[Dale Hunter]], 1994–99
</div><div style="float:right; width:48%;">
*[[Adam Oates]], 1999–2001
*[[Steve Konowalchuk]] & [[Brendan Witt]], <br /> 2001–02 <small> (co-captains)</small>
*Steve Konowalchuk, 2002–03
*No captain, 2003–05 <small> ([[2004–05 NHL lockout|2004–05 lockout]]) </small>
*[[Jeff Halpern]], 2005–06
*[[Chris Clark (ice hockey)|Chris Clark]], 2006- ''present''
</div><br clear="all">

===Honored Members===
[[Image:Washington Capitals retired numbers.jpg|thumb|The Capitals honor [[Rod Langway]], [[Dale Hunter]], and [[Yvon Labre]] with banners in the stadium.]]
''Retired Numbers'': The Capitals have retired three numbers. Defenseman [[Yvon Labre]]'s number '''7''' was retired in 1980, during the last season of the career of this original Capital. In 1997, the Capitals retired the number '''5''' of defenseman [[Rod Langway]], and center [[Dale Hunter]]'s number '''32''' was raised in 2000. The Capitals also honor the leaguewide retirement of [[Wayne Gretzky]]'s '''99'''. [[Mike Gartner]] will have his number '''11''' retired on December 28, 2008

''Hall of Famers'': The Capitals have four former players in the [[Hockey Hall of Fame]]. Right wing [[Mike Gartner]] was the first to be inducted, in 2001, after a long NHL career that included ten years (1979–89) with the Caps. A year later, defenseman [[Rod Langway]] (1982–93 with Washington) joined Gartner, and in 2004, defenseman [[Larry Murphy]] (1984–89) was selected. In 2007, defenseman [[Scott Stevens]] (1982–90) became the fourth Washington Capital to be inducted to the Hall of Fame. In addition, Langway and former team owner [[Abe Pollin]] are honored in the Washington Hall of Stars, a series of banners honoring D.C. sports figures on the right-field wall at [[Robert F. Kennedy Stadium]].

===First-round draft picks===
<div style="float:left; width:48%;">
*[[1974 NHL Amateur Draft|1974]]: [[Greg Joly]] (1st overall)
*[[1975 NHL Amateur Draft|1975]]: [[Alex Forsyth (ice hockey)|Alex Forsyth]] (18th overall)
*[[1976 NHL Amateur Draft|1976]]: [[Rick Green (ice hockey)|Rick Green]] (1st overall) & [[Greg Carroll]] (15th overall)
*[[1977 NHL Amateur Draft|1977]]: [[Robert Picard]] (3rd overall)
*[[1978 NHL Amateur Draft|1978]]: [[Ryan Walter]] (2nd overall) & [[Tim Coulis]] (18th overall)
*[[1979 NHL Entry Draft|1979]]: [[Mike Gartner]] (4th overall)
*[[1980 NHL Entry Draft|1980]]: [[Darren Veitch]] (5th overall)
*[[1981 NHL Entry Draft|1981]]: [[Bobby Carpenter (ice hockey)|Bob Carpenter]] (3rd overall)
*[[1982 NHL Entry Draft|1982]]: [[Scott Stevens]] (5th overall)
*[[1983 NHL Entry Draft|1983]]: None
*[[1984 NHL Entry Draft|1984]]: [[Kevin Hatcher]] (17th overall)
*[[1985 NHL Entry Draft|1985]]: [[Yvon Corriveau]] (19th overall)
*[[1986 NHL Entry Draft|1986]]: [[Jeff Greenlaw]] (19th overall)
*[[1987 NHL Entry Draft|1987]]: None
*[[1988 NHL Entry Draft|1988]]: [[Reggie Savage]] (15th overall)
*[[1989 NHL Entry Draft|1989]]: [[Olaf Kölzig]] (19th overall)
*[[1990 NHL Entry Draft|1990]]: [[John Slaney]] (9th overall)
*[[1991 NHL Entry Draft|1991]]: [[Pat Peake]] (14th overall) & [[Trevor Halverson]] (21st overall)
*[[1992 NHL Entry Draft|1992]]: [[Sergei Gonchar]] (14th overall)
*[[1993 NHL Entry Draft|1993]]: [[Brendan Witt]] (11th overall) & [[Jason Allison]] (17th overall)
</div><div style="float:right; width:48%;">
*[[1994 NHL Entry Draft|1994]]: [[Nolan Baumgartner]] (10th overall) & [[Alexander Kharlamov]] (15th overall)
*[[1995 NHL Entry Draft|1995]]: [[Brad Church]] (17th overall) & [[Miika Elomo]] (23rd overall)
*[[1996 NHL Entry Draft|1996]]: [[Alexandre Volchkov]] (4th overall) & [[Jaroslav Svejkovsky]] (17th overall)
*[[1997 NHL Entry Draft|1997]]: [[Nick Boynton]] (9th overall)
*[[1998 NHL Entry Draft|1998]]: None
*[[1999 NHL Entry Draft|1999]]: [[Kris Beech]] (7th overall)
*[[2000 NHL Entry Draft|2000]]: [[Brian Sutherby]] (26th overall)
*[[2001 NHL Entry Draft|2001]]: None
*[[2002 NHL Entry Draft|2002]]: [[Steve Eminger]] (12th overall), [[Alexander Semin]] (13th overall), & [[Boyd Gordon]] (17th overall)
*[[2003 NHL Entry Draft|2003]]: [[Eric Fehr]] (18th overall)
*[[2004 NHL Entry Draft|2004]]: [[Alexander Ovechkin]] (1st overall), [[Jeff Schultz]] (27th overall), & [[Mike Green (ice hockey)|Mike Green]] (29th overall)
*[[2005 NHL Entry Draft|2005]]: [[Sasha Pokulok]] (14th overall) & [[Joe Finley]] (27th overall)
*[[2006 NHL Entry Draft|2006]]: [[Nicklas Bäckström|Nicklas Backstrom]] (4th overall) & [[Semen Varlamov]] (23rd overall)
*[[2007 NHL Entry Draft|2007]]: [[Karl Alzner]] (5th overall)
*[[2008 NHL Entry Draft|2008]]: [[Anton Gustafsson]] (21st overall) & [[John Carlson]] (27th overall)
</div><br clear="all">

===Franchise scoring leaders===
These are the top-ten point-scorers in franchise history. Figures are updated after each completed NHL regular season.

'''''Note:''' Pos = Position; GP = Games Played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; P/G = Points per game; * = current Capitals player''
<!--PLEASE DO NOT UPDATE STATISTICS MID-SEASON, AS IT CREATES MORE PROBLEMS THAN IT SOLVES, AND WIKIPEDIA'S PURPOSE IS NOT TO PROVIDE UP-TO-THE-MINUTE STATISTICS. PLEASE SAVE THE UPDATING OF STATISTICS UNTIL THE END OF THE REGULAR SEASON AND/OR PLAYOFFS.-->
{| class="wikitable"
|- align="center" style="font-weight:bold; background-color:#dddddd;" |
| align="left" | Player || Pos || GP || G || A || Pts || P/G
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Peter Bondra]] || RW || 961 || 472 || 360 || '''825''' || .86
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Mike Gartner]] || RW || 758 || 397 || 392 || '''789''' || 1.04
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Michal Pivonka]] || C || 825 || 181 || 418 || '''599''' || .73
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Dale Hunter]] || C || 872 || 181 || 375 || '''556''' || .64
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Bengt-Åke Gustafsson|Bengt Gustafsson]] || RW || 629 || 196 || 359 || '''555''' || .88
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Mike Ridley]] || C || 588 || 218 || 329 || '''547''' || .93
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Calle Johansson]] || D || 983 || 113 || 361 || '''474''' || .48
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Dennis Maruk]] || C || 343 || 182 || 249 || '''431''' || 1.26
|- align="center"
| align="left" | [[Scott Stevens]] || D || 601 || 98 || 331 || '''429''' || .71
|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"
| align="left" | [[Kevin Hatcher]] || D || 685 || 149 || 277 || '''426''' || .62
|}

==NHL awards and trophies==
<div style="float:left; width:48%;">
'''[[Prince of Wales Trophy]]'''
*[[1997–98 NHL season|1997–98]]

'''[[Hart Memorial Trophy]]'''
*[[Alexander Ovechkin]]: [[2007–08 NHL season|2007–08]]

'''[[Lester B. Pearson Award]]'''
*[[Alexander Ovechkin]]: [[2007–08 NHL season|2007–08]]

'''[[Art Ross Trophy]]'''
*[[Alexander Ovechkin]]: [[2007–08 NHL season|2007–08]]

'''[[Maurice "Rocket" Richard Trophy]]'''
*[[Alexander Ovechkin]]: [[2007–08 NHL season|2007–08]]

'''[[Calder Memorial Trophy]]'''
*[[Alexander Ovechkin]]: [[2005–06 NHL season|2005–06]]

'''[[Frank J. Selke Trophy]]'''
*[[Doug Jarvis]]: [[1983–84 NHL season|1983–84]]
</div><div style="float:right; width:48%;">
'''[[Jack Adams Award]]'''
*[[Bryan Murray (ice hockey)|Bryan Murray]]: [[1983–84 NHL season|1983–84]]
*[[Bruce Boudreau]]: [[2007–08 NHL season|2007–08]]
'''[[James Norris Memorial Trophy]]'''
*[[Rod Langway]]: [[1982–83 NHL season|1982–83]], [[1983–84 NHL season|1983–84]]

'''[[King Clancy Memorial Trophy]]'''
*[[Olaf Kölzig|Olaf Kolzig]]: [[2005–06 NHL season|2005–06]]

'''[[Vezina Trophy]]'''
*[[Jim Carey (ice hockey)|Jim Carey]]: [[1995–96 NHL season|1995–96]]
*[[Olaf Kölzig|Olaf Kolzig]]: [[1999–00 NHL season|1999–00]]

'''[[William M. Jennings Trophy]]'''
*[[Al Jensen]] and [[Pat Riggin]]: [[1983–84 NHL season|1983–84]]
</div><br clear="all">

==Franchise individual records==
=== Goals ===
*Most Goals in a season: [[Alexander Ovechkin]], 65 (2007–2008)
*Most Goals in a season, rookie: [[Alexander Ovechkin]], 52 (2005–06)

=== Assists ===
*Most Assists in a season: [[Dennis Maruk]], 76 (1981–82)
*Most Assists in a season, rookie: [[Nicklas Backstrom]], 55 (2007–08)

=== Points ===
*Most Points in a season: [[Dennis Maruk]], 136 (1981–82)
*Most Points in a season, rookie: [[Alexander Ovechkin]], 106 (2005–06)
*Most Points in a season, defenseman: [[Larry Murphy]], 81 (1986–87)

=== Penalty Minutes ===
*Most Penalty Minutes in a season: [[Alan May]], 339 (1989–90)

==References==
{{reflist}}

==See also==
*[[List of NHL players]]
*[[List of NHL seasons]]

==External links==
*[http://capitals.nhl.com/ Official website of the Washington Capitals]

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Revision as of 16:43, 17 October 2008

CAPITALS SUCK!!!!!