
The Capitals have some burning questions to answer with training camp winding down.

ARLINGTON, V.A. — The Washington Capitals are gearing up for their 50th anniversary season, and with four days to go until the team's opening night roster is due, there are quite a few questions surrounding the team and training camp up to this point.
We reopened the Capitals mailbag to answer those burning questions.
Editor's Note: Questions have been edited for length and clarity.
This has been the elephant in the room throughout camp, and with every line except the third basically set in stone, the forward race is getting even more interesting down this final stretch.
Sonny Milano, Hendrix Lapierre and Aliaksei Protas were supposed to make up that third line combination, but Spencer Carberry was vocal in calling Milano's showing so far "just okay" while also not guaranteeing him a permanent spot in the lineup as the race goes on.
All the while, Jakub Vrana's turned up the volume in these past few preseason games, as has Andrew Cristall and Ivan Miroshnichenko. Cristall, who can either make the NHL or go back to juniors as he's still too young for the AHL, is perhaps the frontrunner of these three. He has points in each of his preseason outings and has taken his game to a new level to make it difficult for D.C. to return him to juniors.
Of course, Vrana has years of experience and would be a good extra forward to have in the mix, and Miroshnichenko's stood out with his speed and offensive prowess over the course of the preseason.
As for Sgarbossa, he provides stability down the middle as a center option, but I don't see him winning a spot over the likes of one of those three players listed above, and I think he starts back in Hershey.
Personally, I think Cristall gets the nine-game look at the highest level, and from there, the Capitals can decide to either let him stay and burn a year of his entry-level deal or send him back to juniors for another year of development with the WHL's Kelowna Rockets.
I do think taking a chance on Vrana is worthwhile, though; he wouldn't cost a lot, and there's cap space to use. As for Miroshnichenko, I think he'd benefit from more playing time on the top-6 down in Hershey than he would as an extra in D.C.
Still, with Milano unable to win a full-time role and one preseason game left to go, all the cards are still on the table. It'll be fun to watch for sure.
I think if Cristall eventually returns to juniors and Miroshnichenko ultimately fails to make the opening night roster but maintains this level of play, he'll be back up in the NHL sooner rather than later.
Plus, injuries always happen, and he's certainly the first call-up at wing, so he'll certainly see minutes with Washington this season regardless.
I think that the defensive pairs will look as follows to begin the 2024-25 campaign:
Jakob Chychrun-John Carlson
Martin Fehervary-Matt Roy
Rasmus Sandin-Trevor van Riemsdyk
Looking at the extra roles, Alex Alexeyev and Dylan McIlrath are left behind these six as Ethan Bear was waived on Friday. Alexeyev's been tested and has had his ups and downs this preseason, while McIlrath's taken the team by storm with his leadership, physicality and coachability.
At the end of the day, it all depends on how many extra forwards and extra defensemen the team wants to take, but it's getting harder down the stretch to imagine an opening night roster without at least McIlrath, who captained Hershey to back-to-back Calder Cups these last two seasons.
Spencer Carbery addressed this earlier in camp. He said that Ovechkin is still a weapon and scoring threat whenever he's on the ice, and basically explained that yes, the plan remains for him to remain on the ice for the full two minutes as he'll get time on both units and remains one of the best options to score.
This is especially true when looking back at the team's numbers last season and seeing how many second-half power-play goals D.C. scored; the numbers are in No. 8's favor as he chases down Wayne Gretzky.
Players will be assigned based on their rights, current clubs and plans for the upcoming season. For instance, if a player is under contract with Washington but is under the age of 20 and is playing for a CHL team, they're not yet eligible to play in the AHL and therefore, are assigned to their respective juniors club.
If the players play overseas, then D.C. will "loan" them to their overseas club for the upcoming season.
Then, if players are under NHL or AHL contract and are 20 or older, they can be assigned to Hershey.
READ MORE ON THE HOCKEY NEWS
- Pierre-Luc Dubois dazzles, Thompson shines, fourth line keeps humming in win over Columbus
- Jakub Vrana feeling the love as he attempts to come back to Capitals
- Andrew Cristall can either make the NHL or return to juniors, and he's leaning toward the former
- Capitals ink Eriks Mateiko to entry-level contract
- Logan Thompson's new Capitals mask pays homage to childhood, franchise history
- Alex Ovechkin discusses why scoring has become so much more difficult in today's game, not stressing over Wayne Gretzky's record