
WASHINGTON — The run is over. The questions are just beginning.
The Washington Capitals were officially eliminated from Stanley Cup Playoffs contention Monday night, bringing a disappointing end to a season that never quite found its footing — and perhaps signaling the closing chapter of an era defined by Alex Ovechkin.
For the Capitals, the math finally caught up after weeks of inconsistency. A team that once hovered on the fringe of the playoff race faded down the stretch, undone by defensive lapses, streaky scoring, and an inability to string together wins when it mattered most.
By the numbers:
It wasn’t one moment. It was a slow unraveling.
Washington spent much of the season trying to rediscover the formula that made it a perennial contender. At times, it flashed — brief stretches of offensive firepower, glimpses of structure — but the consistency never followed.
And now, for the second straight year, there will be no postseason hockey in the nation’s capital.
But the bigger story may lie beyond the standings.
At 40 years old, Ovechkin’s future is suddenly a very real conversation. The face of the franchise for nearly two decades, the centerpiece of the Stanley Cup Finals championship team in 2018, and one of the greatest goal scorers in NHL history, Ovechkin has little left to prove.
If this is the end — and no decision has been announced — it would mark the close of one of the most iconic careers the sport has ever seen.
Even in a down year by team standards, Ovechkin remained a focal point:
But the signs of time are there. The burst isn’t quite the same. The margins are thinner. And the team around him is clearly in transition.
The Capitals now face a crossroads.
There is talent in the system, but the core that delivered years of success is aging. Decisions loom — about roster construction, about direction, and about how to balance honoring the past while building for the future.
And at the center of it all is Ovechkin.
Whether he returns for another season or decides to step away, his impact on the Capitals — and the National Hockey League — is unquestioned. He didn’t just score goals. He defined an era.
For now, though, the reality is simpler.
The season is over.
The Capitals are out.
And the offseason just became one of the most important in franchise history.
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