USA TODAY Sports

PITTSBURGH – The Pittsburgh Penguins are very familiar with rival Washington Capitals forward T.J. Oshie, but in 2015, they almost got to know him in a whole different way. According to Oshie, he was told the Penguins were interested in trading for him at the draft.

In an interview with Tarik El-Bashir of the Monumental Sports Network, Oshie said he was told the St. Louis Blues were closing in on a deal with the Penguins.

“I was told there was a trade in the works with Pittsburgh at the draft,” Oshie said. “It was almost a done deal.”

What may have been heading back to St. Louis in return is unknown, but the deal never went through. The Penguins did not make any moves at the 2015 Draft and, just a few days later, landed Phil Kessel from the Toronto Maple Leafs.

Oshie also remained with the Blue organization through the 2015 Draft, eventually being traded to the Capitals the following week.

For nine seasons, Oshie has been a crucial face in the Capitals' forward room. In 557 games with the Capitals, he’s scored 191 goals and 188 assists for 379 points. He’s also never been afraid to throw his body around, accumulating 921 hits with the Capitals.

Oshie won the Stanley Cup with the Capitals in 2018 and was a major contributor to their postseason run. He scored 21 points in 24 playoff games that year.

In 2015, Oshie was riding high as one of the growing stars of the NHL. He scored 60 and 55 points in his final two seasons with the Blues and shot to stardom when he represented Team USA at the 2014 Winter Olympics.

Most American fans will know Oshie as the skater who took multiple shootout attempts against Team Russia. International rules allow players to repeat attempts rather than forcing a new skater each round.

After the first three shooters from each team, and with the score still tied, Team USA head coach Dan Bylsma (Penguins head coach at the time) called upon Oshie five straight times. Oshie and Team USA eventually beat Russia 3-2.

Oshie recently laced up for his 1,000th career game. He may get under the skin of Penguins players and fans, but who knows what history may have looked like if he landed in Pittsburgh rather than Washington in 2015.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Do Oilers need more from Connor McDavid to get to Stanley Cup Final?
All-Rookie teams show gems available all over draft
The NBA has not witnessed this much parity in 50 years
Knicks expected to be 'aggressive' in upgrading their roster
Drew Bledsoe offers advice for Patriots rookie QB Drake Maye
2024 AFC revenge games: Brothers, 'Stefon Diggs Bowl' to take center stage
2024 NFC revenge games: Which game should Cowboys, others have circled?
How All-Star Race victory could turn Joey Logano's season around
Xander Schauffele's triumph could open the floodgates for his career
Anderson Silva, Chael Sonnen will finish off their trilogy in a boxing ring
Ranking the five best MLB free-agent signings of offseason
Veteran WR, former first-round pick announces NFL retirement
Oilers advance to West Final again after holding off Canucks in Game 7
Bengals star WR not expected to sign franchise tender before OTAs
Red Sox RHP diagnosed with ligament damage in elbow
Watch: Caitlin Clark shows off range with logo three, but Fever fall short
Former Dolphins receiving leader announces his retirement from NFL
Detroit Lions dominate PFF's top-25 players under 25
Hall of Famer, legendary Raiders offensive lineman dead at 86
Report: Cavs owner 'would never' trade Donovan Mitchell to this team