
WASHINGTON — The NHL trade deadline arrived with a jolt in the early hours of Friday morning.
The Washington Capitals traded longtime defenseman John Carlson to the Anaheim Ducks in exchange for a conditional first-round pick in either the 2026 or 2027 NHL Draft and a 2027 third-round pick, a move that signals Washington is reshaping its roster as the deadline arrives.
If Anaheim qualifies for the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs, the Ducks will send their 2026 first-round pick to Washington. If not, Anaheim can instead transfer its 2027 first-round pick, giving the Capitals valuable future draft capital either way.
John Carlson has been traded to the Ducks for a 1st and 3rd
— B/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) March 6, 2026per @FriedgeHNIC pic.twitter.com/WNlah3X6WH
Carlson, 36, had spent his entire 17-year NHL career with Washington after being selected in the first round of the 2008 NHL Draft. The veteran defenseman recorded 10 goals and 36 assists for 46 points in 55 games this season, continuing to log heavy minutes on the Capitals’ blue line.
His legacy in Washington is enormous. Carlson is the franchise’s all-time leading scorer among defensemen, with 166 goals, 605 assists and 771 points in 1,143 games, and he played a key role in the Capitals’ 2018 Stanley Cup championship run, when he led all NHL defensemen with 20 playoff points.
The move comes as Washington hovers on the edge of the playoff race and begins looking toward the future while still building around longtime captain Alex Ovechkin. By moving Carlson and other veterans ahead of the 3 p.m. ET trade deadline, the Capitals have accumulated a growing collection of draft picks that could fuel a quick retool.
For Anaheim, the deal adds a proven offensive defenseman to a young roster looking to accelerate its rebuild. Carlson is expected to bring power-play quarterbacking, playoff experience and veteran leadership to a Ducks team built around developing talent and an improving defensive core.
And with that, the league’s annual deadline frenzy is officially underway.
Commissioner Gary Bettman may run the league, but on deadline day fans know the real action belongs to “Gary Puck,” the unofficial holiday where deals fly, contenders load up and rebuilding teams stack draft picks.
With Carlson already on the move before sunrise, the message across the NHL is clear:
The puck — and the trade board — are rolling.
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