Mets RHP Megill goes on IL with shoulder issue
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Published
10 months agoon
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Field Level Media
Apr 1, 2024, 03:03 PM ET
The New York Mets put starting pitcher Tylor Megill on the 15-day injured list Monday with a right shoulder strain.
In a corresponding move, the Mets called up fellow right-hander Reed Garrett from Triple-A Syracuse.
Megill underwent an MRI on Sunday after leaving his start against Milwaukee after 78 pitches.
Megill, 28, took the loss, giving up two runs (one earned) in four innings. He struck out four and walked three.
Megill went 9-8 with a 4.70 ERA in 25 starts last season.
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Sports
Sources: Cubs finalizing trade for reliever Pressly
Published
4 hours agoon
January 27, 2025By
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Jesse RogersJan 26, 2025, 05:17 PM ET
Close- Jesse joined ESPN Chicago in September 2009 and covers MLB for ESPN.com.
CHICAGO — The Cubs are finalizing a trade to acquire closer Ryan Pressly from the Houston Astros, pending medical review, sources told ESPN’s Jeff Passan on Sunday.
Pressly will waive his no-trade clause to facilitate the move, and Houston will send money to help cover his $14 million salary, the sources said.
The Astros will receive a low-level Cubs prospect who is not on Chicago’s 40-man roster, according to a source.
Pressly, 36, is likely to become the Cubs’ closer, a role he held with Houston from 2021 to 2023 before it signed Josh Hader to a long-term contract. The veteran righty has 112 saves with a 3.27 ERA during his 12-year career, which includes six seasons in Minnesota.
Pressly will join a bullpen that blew 26 saves last season, as the Cubs are looking to make a playoff push in 2025. Chicago hasn’t been to the postseason since 2020, working without an established closer over the past few years.
Righty Adbert Alzolay was ineffective last season, then he suffered a forearm injury and eventually needed Tommy John surgery. Porter Hodge, 23, finished the season as the closer, but the team wanted more experience and depth in the back end of the bullpen.
The Cubs pursued lefty Tanner Scott before he signed with the Los Angeles Dodgers last weekend, according to league sources. Chicago was less interested in the other free agent closers, instead settling for Pressly, who has one year left on a three-year, $42 million contract signed before the 2023 season.
Pressly will join newcomers Eli Morgan, Cody Poteet, Matt Festa, Caleb Thielbar and Rob Zastryzny in the Cubs’ bullpen.
The trade likely will conclude the bulk of the team’s winter moves.
Sports
Are the Dodgers two playoff teams in one? We split them in half to find out
Published
5 hours agoon
January 27, 2025By
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Bradford DoolittleJan 27, 2025, 07:00 AM ET
Close- MLB writer and analyst for ESPN.com
- Former NBA writer and analyst for ESPN.com
- Been with ESPN since 2013
Welcome folks, it’s a resplendent fall day in Flatbush, and six months ago, who could have imagined this? The visiting Los Angeles Dodgers are ready to take the field in Brooklyn at the new Ebbets Field with the 2025 National League pennant on the line.
Standing in the way of the L.A. nine are their literal offspring, the Brooklyn Trolleys, the most unusual expansion team in baseball history. Champions of the NL West, the Trolleys’ 98 wins earned them today’s homefield edge over the 87-win wild-card Dodgers.
The grandstand at Ebbets is already full on this clear autumn day, the patrons shuffling through the fabulous rotunda down below. The scoreboard is gleaming and the reconstituted Schaefer Beer sign above it is ready to call the hits and errors.
Roki Sasaki is making his final warmup throws now for Brooklyn. Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani watches from the on-deck circle, ready to lead off the game for Los Angeles. Game 7 of the NLCS is about to get underway.
It’s time for Trolleys baseball!
Wait … what is happening here?
The Los Angeles Dodgers — the real ones — are working on a streak of 12 straight playoff appearances. Eleven of those seasons have ended with an NL West title. Four have added to the franchise’s pennant count. After last fall’s World Series win over the New York Yankees, two of those seasons have resulted in championships.
After this winter’s stunning run of high-level acquisitions, people are asking with real concern about whether the Dodgers might have finally broken baseball. It’s not hard to understand why.
The expectations for the Dodgers have never been higher, and that’s saying something. ESPN Bet currently has the Dodgers’ over/under for wins at 103.5, 10 more than any other team. Cot’s Contracts estimates L.A.’s CBT payroll number at $374.1 million. If you split that in half — $187.05 million — the CBT payroll would still rank 15th in the majors.
Hmmm, split the Dodgers in half? Is that a solution? Well, obviously it is not. But let’s imagine that it was, that some trust-busting commissioner took over, or some bizarre schism took place in the Guggenheim Baseball Management group.
This is fantastical, but stick with me. Here’s the sequence of events that have led to our dream game at a brand new version of Ebbets Field.
• The Dodgers’ dominance and hoarding of superstar talent becomes viewed as an existential threat to baseball. Fans are screaming. Owners are wringing their hands.
• Partially in response to this situation, Colorado Rockies owner Dick Monfort announces that his franchise is withdrawing from MLB and will join the Banana Ball Championship League. The Rockies struggle in their new circuit, but their fans keep turning out anyway.
• Fights break out in the Guggenheim group. Who knows why. Lawsuits are filed. Desperate to resolve the situation and to fill the one-team void in the NL West, commissioner Rob Manfred takes up a Brooklyn developer’s offer to construct an exact replica of Ebbets Field on the same block where the sacred old green cathedral stood for decades. The residents who are currently there are respectfully relocated. The new park springs up with alarming alacrity.
• At the winter meetings, Manfred’s solution is announced. The Dodgers will be split in half. Everything. Their organizational talent — on the field and off — is divided evenly. The offshoot of the Dodgers will play at the reconstituted Ebbets Field and will be called the Trolleys, keeping with tradition. The new club will be managed by Gabe Kapler and its front office run by Farhan Zaidi.
It’s a lot, I know. It’s impossible. But let’s suspend disbelief for just a moment so we can get at a real question: Have the Dodgers accumulated so much talent that, at this point, they could field two contending rosters?
Before Game 7 gets underway, let’s run through the lineup Dodgers manager Dave Roberts will pit against Brooklyn ace Sasaki.
Designated hitter Ohtani will lead off. Batting second is shortstop Tommy Edman. Catcher Will Smith is in the three-hole. Batting cleanup is right fielder Teoscar Hernandez. Out in left and batting fifth is Michael Conforto. Batting sixth is center fielder Andy Pages.
Youngster Dalton Rushing will play first and hit seventh, followed by third baseman Chris Taylor in the eight-hole. Finally, batting ninth and playing the keystone is second baseman Andy Freeland.
Let’s get started.
To divide the Dodgers’ current organizational roster, I took a straightforward approach. I started by flipping a coin for Ohtani. Los Angeles got him. Since Ohtani pitches and hits, I then gave Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman to Brooklyn.
From there, I just ranked each positional group by projected WAR and assigned every other player to one team or the other. Some jostling was done to make sure the spread of positions was equitable and that the bottom-line WAR projection was as close as possible. Each team was assigned 35 players.
Kirby Yates, whose reported agreement with the Dodgers has not yet gone official, was included. So was Clayton Kershaw, still a free agent, but let’s face it — we all think he’s going back to L.A.
We had to dip pretty deep into prospect lists to fill things out, accelerating the MLB arrival of some young players in a way that would never happen. The Dodgers’ list of non-roster invites for spring training was light on veterans with any kind of track record, so other than Yates and Kershaw, we had to stick with who is already on hand.
Here are Opening Day rosters of the split-in-two Dodgers, which are also the rosters in effect for our imaginary game.
There’s nothing going for the Dodgers against Roki Sasaki in the first despite Ohtani’s drive to the screen in the deepest reaches of right-center. Nice play by Outman on that one.
Mookie Betts striding to the plate, getting ready for the first offering by Dodgers starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto. Let’s run through Gabe Kapler’s lineup for the Trolleys.
Betts, playing right, will get things going. He’ll be followed by second baseman Kim and first baseman Freeman in the three-hole. Hitting cleanup is third-sacker Max Muncy, followed by young left fielder Josue De Paula.
Shortstop Miguel Rojas is hitting sixth, followed by center fielder Outman, catcher Barnes and, batting ninth, rookie Austin Gauthier.
Yamamoto is set. Betts digs in. Yamamoto winds. Someone in the grandstand is ringing a cowbell. Here’s the pitch …
The position player groups on our split rosters are thin. That’s the first thing that jumps out. That’s why there are so many prospects in the mix who are not ready for prime time. If these teams were real, Zaidi and Andrew Friedman would have been much more proactive about filling out the benches with veteran options.
Still, both rosters can field nearly full lineups of bona fide big league regulars, including a smattering of stars for both sides. Neither would be close to the worst lineup in the majors.
Now about that Rockies thing … I needed to pull a team out of the league to accommodate the new club. To do that, I changed all of the Rockies players into free agents and then flagged my future Trolleys as members of the Rockies. This allowed me to easily fold the new team into my projection machinery.
My projection system includes some organizational factors that are blended to the team forecast to account for depth (or lack thereof), which some teams are better at producing consistently than others. I beefed that factor a little here to account for the youth on the teams.
That helped, but neither squad projects as elite on offense. In the park-neutral run projections, the Dodgers came in at 672 (24th) and the Trolleys at 655 (26th). That might not read as impressive but it actually is because — remember — we are literally measuring two half-teams.
Still, the split Dodgers aren’t contention-worthy from an offensive standpoint. They’ll need some elite pitching to enter the playoff picture.
We’re in the top of the second. Two down, no one on base. Sasaki has set down the first five Dodgers in order. Andy Pages is stepping up to the dish for L.A.
From here, I can see a group of confused-looking people wandering around on the sidewalk on the other side of Bedford Avenue. They’re probably looking for that coffee shop that was there a few weeks ago. Things have changed fast around here.
Pages sends a bouncer toward short. Rojas races over, but it’s going to get through into left field. Pages rounds the bag at first, but he’ll hold on there for the Dodgers’ first hit of the game. Dalton Rushing is next.
… After two misses from Sasaki, Rushing is up in the count 2-0. Sasaki checks the runner at first but Pages has a short lead. Sasaki from the stretch … Rushing crushes a fastball to right-center! Outman is giving chase. He’s back, to the warning track — and it’s gone!
Dalton Rushing crushes a two-run homer off of Roki Sasaki, clearing the green canvas batting eye in center field. The Dodgers have grabbed the early 2-0 lead.
What really stands out on our split rosters is the pitching, both in terms of the quality and the depth. That’s true for both rotations and both bullpens. This gives you a sense of just how much pitching the Dodgers have accumulated for their coming title defense.
Both teams have a star-studded rotation of big threes: Yamamoto, Glasnow and Ohtani for the Dodgers; Snell, Sasaki and Kershaw for the Trolleys.
Both have three legit closer-level back-end relievers: Scott, Treinen and Yates for the Dodgers; Phillips, Vesia and Kopech for the Trolleys.
I didn’t overinflate inning projections. In most cases, they are within bounds of what I’ve forecasted for the real Dodgers, who have so many injury returnees and young arms that they will monitor.
That means prospect depth is tapped more deeply than it would be in real life, just as with the position players. This is a drag on the split teams’ forecasts, but the outlook for both remains promising. As with position players, an organizational depth factor was blended into the projections.
The Trolleys have the edge with a projection of 680 park-neutral runs allowed (11th) while the Dodgers come in at 703 (15th). A pitching staff split in two. Both average or better.
That is pretty stunning.
One down, bottom of the sixth. We’re still knotted at 2. Yamamoto will stay in after walking Freeman, with Max Muncy striding to the plate. Muncy’s solo homer in the bottom of the second accounted for Brooklyn’s first run. Josue De Paula’s fourth inning single plated Freeman with the other tally, after Kim was thrown out at the plate by Teoscar Hernandez on Freeman’s double off the screen in right.
I’m a little surprised Roberts is sticking with Yamamoto here. The lefty Scott has been getting hot in the bullpen and Muncy represents the go-ahead run for Brooklyn if he goes yard again.
… Here’s the 2-2 pitch. Muncy lines one into right for a base hit. Freeman rounds the bag at second and retreats. The Trolleys have something cooking. And here comes Roberts. That’ll do it for Yamamoto, who has been excellent.
… So Tanner Scott whiffs De Paula and it’ll be up to Rojas. … Scott checks the runners. Here’s his 2-2 pitch. Popped up! Moving over toward the line is Taylor. He’s there and puts the squeeze on it. The side is retired.
The Trolleys threaten but Scott works out of Yamamoto’s jam. We’re through six and the Dodgers and Trolleys are tied at 2.
Our baseline projections have both versions of the Dodgers being outscored, but not by much. The Trolleys fare a little better with a baseline win projection of 78.2, while the Dodgers are at 77.7.
Thus, rounding off, both squads project as 78-84 teams. The balance between them was intentional, of course. So was the decision to keep the Rockies-turned-Trolleys in the same division — the NL West — which in real life wouldn’t make sense. But sense isn’t what we’re after today.
Both teams would be forecast to finish behind, in order, the Diamondbacks, Padres and Giants in the NL West, but both are also close to the 80-win Giants. All of those teams would certainly be very happy about the Dodgers being broken up.
While a 78-win projection isn’t super exciting, in the current landscape of MLB, it’s good enough that a team can enter a season with realistic playoff hopes. How realistic? To answer that, we of course turn to simulations.
Freeland flailed at that 1-2 offering from Kopech and there’s two down in the Dodgers’ half of the eighth. Kapler emerges from the Brooklyn dugout. He wants the lefty Vesia to face Ohtani, who represents the go-ahead run.
… Ohtani jumps in front 1-0 after Vesia misses with the fastball. It’s been a tough day for Ohtani, who flew out to the fence twice in the early innings and whiffed against Sasaki in the sixth.
Vesia, an absolutely vicious southpaw, stares at Barnes behind the plate and nods his head. Here’s the pitch.
Ohtani swings and there’s a fly ball into right center. This one’s got a chance. Hernandez and Pages are fading. They look up and it’s gone! Ohtani has clubbed one over the Schaefer sign and out onto Bedford Ave.
The Dodgers have broken the logjam, nabbing a 3-2 lead in the eighth. Dave Roberts has already used Tanner Scott and, in the bottom of the inning, Blake Treinen will enter his second inning of work. He still has Ryan Brasier and Kirby Yates in reserve.
Our 78-win split Dodgers rosters were fed into my simulation machinery and 10,000 runs of the 2025 schedule were logged.
Both teams made the playoffs about 19% of the time, mostly as wild-card entrants. They landed at less than 1% odds to win it all, but, of course, that means it did happen on occasion for both the Dodgers and the Trolleys. The Braves emerged as the new overall favorite to win the World Series.
I scanned the simulation logs and found four instances out of 10,000 when the Dodgers and Trolleys squared off in the NLCS. In one of them — simulation #3,368 — the series went seven games. That’s the one in which the Trolleys won the NL West with 98 wins, while the 87-win Dodgers nabbed the six-seed.
Those are the squads I decided to breathe virtual life into by recreating those rosters in the sim Action! PC Baseball, produced by Dave Koch Sports. The play-by-play you’re reading in these alternating sections comes from that game, in which I managed both teams. Yes, it’s actually my fault, not Roberts, that the Dodgers nearly waited one batter too long to get Yamamoto out of the game in the sixth.
And, yes, I even went so far as to use the Los Angeles and Brooklyn logos and to play the game in a rendering of Ebbets Field. Hey, it’s January, and we’ve been without baseball for too long now.
The Trolleys are down to their last two outs. The usually raucous crowd at Ebbets Field is quiet and a nervous energy pervades this little block of Brooklyn. The walk Gauthier drew against Yates to start the inning had the gathering stirred up again, but the strikeout of Betts has silenced them for now.
Those two insurance runs the Dodgers tacked on against Vesia are looming large now, even after Evan Phillips limited the damage in the ninth. Hyeseong Kim steps to the plate. He’s reached base three times on a single and a pair of walks. The Trolleys need him to reach for a fourth time to get Freeman to the plate representing the tying run.
Man, this place is tense.
Yates checks Gauthier at first. He’s got a huge lead but the Dodgers, with that three-run bulge, don’t care what he does. Not sure why Gauthier doesn’t just break for second. Here’s the pitch.
Kim reaches and taps a little bouncer toward Freeland, he scoops and flips to Edman for one, the relay to first is … in time! It’s a game-ending double play! The Dodgers are the National League champions!
Can you believe it? After all of that drama and tumult of last winter, one during which the entire industry rose to break up the Dodgers’ dynasty, they’ve done it anyway. L.A. is headed to the World Series.
Again.
Cherry picking one simulation out of 10,000 doesn’t prove anything, but hopefully it does illustrate the point: The Dodgers are unbelievably stacked.
Going through the actual exercise of pitting two teams, comprised only of right-now Dodgers players, really draws that out. While the game unfolded, it never felt like I was working with two strange, thin teams, but two bona fide, well-constructed big league rosters full of outstanding and interesting players.
I went with the Yamamoto-Sasaki matchup, but it would have been just as exhilarating had I gone with any combination of those two, Ohtani, Glasnow, Snell or Kershaw.
Because the sim game was close, I had to think situationally in the late innings, but at no point was I confronted with a bad bullpen option. The closest I came to it was when I had to use Brasier to get two outs in the eighth after Treinen tired. I had already burned Scott and wanted to keep Yates for the ninth.
This is the kind of thing the Dodgers’ opponents are going to have to overcome next October. If the Dodgers can get that staff to the postseason healthy — obviously far from a sure thing — there will be no room for opposing offenses to breathe.
And those lineup holes that pop up when you split the Dodgers’ position group in two? Those won’t be there.
The 12-team playoff format, so inclusive and so random, means no team can be a sure thing in any projection of the next champion. I have referred to that as the illusion of competitiveness, and the Dodgers are the perfect example. They have built a powerhouse roster and set themselves apart from every other team in baseball. Yet they still have less than a one-in-three shot at repeating as champs.
Make no mistake though: These Dodgers are an absolute on-paper powerhouse. It’s a team that has a chance to do truly historic things. If they do, the other 29 teams still can’t collude to break them up as if they were an 1890s railroad monopoly.
But some of those teams might well look into joining the Rockies in the Banana Ball Championship League.
Sports
‘It’s pretty rare’: How Dylan Strome finally found his superpowers with the Capitals
Published
6 hours agoon
January 27, 2025By
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Kristen ShiltonJan 27, 2025, 07:00 AM ET
Close- Kristen Shilton is a national NHL reporter for ESPN.
Dylan Strome can’t stop outdoing himself. And that’s a good thing — for Strome, and the Washington Capitals.
Strome is the Capitals’ leading scorer (with 12 goals and 46 points in 49 games) and is on pace to put up a third consecutive career-best season. Washington’s top-line center has been a backbone to the club’s surprising success and helped carry the Capitals through their challenging stretches.
The 27-year-old stepped up offensively when frequent linemate Alex Ovechkin was sidelined five weeks because of a fractured fibula, notching five goals and 10 points while shouldering 18:24 of ice time per game. And he has been markedly consistent in his production, with a recent six-game pointless streak the only real “drought” to date.
But Strome doesn’t need to be on the scoresheet to have an impact. What he does well — at 5-on-5 and the power play — is reflected in a strong 200-foot game that has elevated the Capitals into Stanley Cup contenders. If that reality caught anyone around the league off guard, well, let’s just say Strome knew Washington was something special — and that eventually, he’d prove to (former) doubters that he is, too.
DYLAN STROME LEAVES quite an impression. And not just on the ice.
Conor Sheary recalls the early days around his former Capitals teammate with a hearty laugh over Strome’s puzzling — but undeniably infectious — personality.
“My first thoughts on Dylan? That’s a loaded question,” Sheary said. “I think with his appearance, he comes off like a pretty goofy kid. He’s always in a good mood. He almost seems lazy at times, just because he’s kind of laid back and just doing his own thing.
“But then he goes into a game and is the ultimate teammate. It’s crazy. He’s someone who just fits in right away, and guys want to be around him.”
Alex DeBrincat recalled a similar interaction with Strome when he arrived to the Ontario Hockey League’s Erie Otters — and swiftly discovered Strome’s magnetism.
“He was the guy who really welcomed me in and made me feel comfortable,” DeBrincat said. “During [training] camp, a lot of the guys would go over to his house and Stromer invited me to hang out there too with some of the older guys. He’s pretty goofy, always trying to have a good time. He runs with that and makes the most of everything. We just clicked right away.”
The pairing of DeBrincat and Strome on a line — which included Connor McDavid — led them to scorching the OHL in seasons to come. It wouldn’t be the only team on which Strome and DeBrincat found quick chemistry, either (but more on that later).
It was Strome’s reputation as a happy-go-lucky kid that preceded him to the NHL draft floor in 2015, where the Arizona Coyotes called his name with the third pick. The walk on stage that followed — with the hand shaking and the jersey acceptance and a wide-toothed grin at the cameras — was Strome taking his first steps onto an unexpected roller coaster that would jostle him through the next handful of years.
That wasn’t exactly the plan.
Strome, now 27, entered the league as a highly touted prospect who had just won the 2015 OHL scoring title with 129 points (he narrowly topped linemate McDavid, who was limited to just 47 games because of injury but still scored 120 points). The idea was for Strome to become a pillar of the Coyotes franchise.
Instead, he skated in just 48 games for Arizona over three seasons, accumulating only seven goals and 16 points before being traded in November 2018 to the Chicago Blackhawks. A tumultuous tenure there ended acrimoniously, and pushed Strome to the Capitals — the comfortable landing spot for Strome that he’d given DeBrincat a decade before in Erie.
It hasn’t been easy. But for better or worse, Strome is convinced he’s just getting started.
“You’re never going to completely shed [certain] labels and you’re always going to be drafted where you were drafted. I think that’s always going to be part of my hockey story,” Strome said. “It didn’t work out in Arizona. I thought it was going really well in Chicago until I hit a few speed bumps in the road.
“But then you get to Washington, and [in hindsight] those other places prepared me to be a good player on a good team. And I feel like that’s where I’m at now, where I’m trying to produce on a good team. And so far, it’s been fun.”
Fun, and then some. It was a long time coming.
STROME IS HARDWIRED to see the good.
It’s how he got through those early years being labeled a “bust” on whom the rebuilding Coyotes had wasted their coveted third overall selection. There was no escaping such narratives while Strome was struggling, shuffled between the NHL and American Hockey League when his peers were thriving in their own locales; McDavid, No. 2 pick Jack Eichel and No. 5 pick Noah Hanifin transitioned right to the NHL, while No. 4 pick Mitch Marner debuted in the NHL a season later.
“When you see guys around you doing so well and even playing [at all] in the NHL, yeah, it’s in your mind that you don’t want to be the guy that was drafted high and never made it or never played,” Strome said. “You never know if you’ll find your [place] and if the rest of that stuff and that talk will ever go away.”
The conversation around Strome hit a fever pitch when Arizona traded him and Brendan Perlini to Chicago for Nick Schmaltz after Strome had appeared in 20 games in the 2018-19 season. It was an initially positive switch for Strome when he was reunited on a line with former Otters’ teammate DeBrincat along with Patrick Kane — and broke out with the best numbers of his career to that point (17 goals and 51 points in 58 games).
Strome produced well in Chicago over the next two years as well — notching 21 goals and 55 points in 98 outings — and signed a two-year, $6 million contract extension in January 2021.
Then the wheels began to fall off.
The Blackhawks endured a brutal start to the 2021-22 season, going 1-9-2 and seeing coach Jeremy Colliton fired. Strome was a healthy scratch in seven of Chicago’s first 11 games, and it wasn’t until Colliton was out — and interim head coach Derek King stepped in — that Strome was back in a top-six position. But the previous benching had taken its toll.
“I feel like when you’re drafted high, you get a little longer leash and people know that the skill is there and it’s in you to play well,” Strome said. “So then when there are times where you haven’t played in five games and then you go in and you don’t play very well and then you’re out again and suddenly it’s like, ‘When’s the next time you’re even going to play again?’
“I always believed in myself, but you question, ‘What’s going to happen here?’ You think to yourself, ‘How long can I do this for? How long are they going to allow me to do this for?'”
King could see the strain on Strome when he took over from Colliton. The goofiness that defined Strome to others was kept well hidden — at first — by the player’s determination to be taken seriously.
“He put his nose to the grindstone and said, ‘I can do this and I’m going to do it,’ and he just worked hard,” King said. “I knew how good he was. I wanted to get him in and get him playing. When it was game time he would knuckle down, and he took advantage when he got his chance.”
Strome admits he didn’t walk through those rough patches alone. Reaching out for support kept the frustration and doubts from boiling over.
“When you get home after you’ve been a scratch, it’s easy to be disappointed,” Strome said. “My dad was someone I talked to every day about situations, and he was just trying to keep me positive and realizing chances are going to come. Family was the biggest factor in getting through that, but I also had a few good friends on the team, too, like DeBrincat and Kaner, that were there for me in tough times, and I’ll always be thankful for that.”
King had Strome back with his two favorite linemates so they could flourish like before — “those three always saw the game the same way,” King said — and it was a further testament to Strome’s tenacity that he could slide right back into a productive role despite inconsistent ice time.
“There was a lot of not wanting to be very positive,” Strome said. “But I was just sticking with it. I know it’s kind of cliche, but just trying to trust yourself and trust your skills so that when you do get back in you’re going to find a way to help the team win.
“It was actually a game here [in Toronto] that brought me back, I thought. I was scratched the night before, then got moved up to the first line for [the Toronto game], and then just tried to ride with it for the rest of the season from there. Sometimes all you need is that one little jump to get you going.”
Strome finished the season fourth on the Blackhawks with 22 goals and 48 points in 69 games. DeBrincat was a key figure in Strome’s flourishing on the ice, but more than that he provided a backbone of friendship to boost Strome’s spirits during one of his career’s hardest stretches.
“When you’re going to the rink and things aren’t necessarily going your way, it’s hard to keep that [positive] energy, but I tried to keep things light and just be there for him,” DeBrincat said. “I knew he was a great player, and he did have a tough time in Chicago that last year, but once he was playing every game, he was right back to his old self. And I think you saw him creating plays and creating offense like that every night. When he gets his opportunities, he proves he can really play well.”
The front office had apparently seen enough, though. Strome was an impending restricted free agent in summer 2022, and when it came time to receive a qualifying offer from the Blackhawks, one never came. Suddenly, he was a unrestricted free agent with an uncertain future.
Two days into free agency, he signed a one-year, $3.5 million contract with the Capitals. It was a club Strome thought would have his back.
“I feel like it’s important in hockey that whenever you get a chance to try to take the ball you’ve got to run with it,” he said. “When a team or a coach or GM or just someone believes in you, you’ve really got to try to ride that as long as you can and hopefully get a contract and show them you can produce.”
Washington wouldn’t wait long for a significant return on their investment.
SHEARY WILL FREELY ADMIT now he knew nothing about Strome — player or person — before they were Capitals teammates.
And like so many modern relationships, it was social media that introduced them before they connected in real life.
“It was our wives,” Sheary said. “They noticed we had daughters the same age [Strome has two kids with wife Taylor; Sheary has three with wife Jordan], and they connected on Instagram. So we were virtual friends, and then after [Strome arrived in town], naturally we started hanging out with them a lot.
“It seemed pretty natural. We just had a lot in common. And then we started to play together on the ice, too, which only brought us closer.”
The early synergy with Sheary mirrored an equally easy transition into Washington’s lineup. The Capitals let Strome loose in a top-six role, and he put up a career-best season in 2022-23 with 23 goals and 65 points in 81 games. It was the most Strome had ever played in one NHL season, and the production wasn’t a surprise given his penchant for taking advantage of opportunities.
“Honestly, it just helps when you get a good opportunity to play every night. I was having fun again,” Strome said of his first season with the Capitals. “You’re playing good minutes and on the power play and you’re trying to help the team win. I think a lot of things meshed together at the right time for me and it was good.”
“He’s an incredibly smart hockey player,” Sheary added. “He’s got great vision, he’s an incredible playmaker and he’s really strong on his stick; he rarely misses a pass. And those kind of things add up throughout a game where, if you can just get it in his area, and he’s able to handle it or make a play, it’s pretty impressive, and his poise with the puck when he does get it, is something that you can’t really teach.”
The stronger Strome’s game became, the more he distanced himself from that portrait of a failed draft pick. Sheary couldn’t relate to Strome on that level — he was undrafted — but the veteran has been around long enough to know how pressure can make or break even the top-tier skaters.
“When you’re an 18-year-old kid and you come in as a third overall pick, the expectation is immediate, and if that’s not met, sometimes I feel like that can hurt a player,” Sheary said. “But I think once Dylan moved on to Chicago, he became more of a player that he wanted to be. And then when he moved on to Washington, he was able to flourish in a bigger role, and he started playing on the top couple lines, and he proved that he could do that, night in and night out.
“He’s grown more into the player he was expected to be right away, but sometimes that takes some time. I think he just finally came into his own once he came to Washington.”
And how. Strome is aging like a fine wine with the Capitals, setting new benchmarks year over year that have served in propelling Washington atop the NHL standings midway through this season. Strome paces the Capitals in points since arriving with Washington to start the 2022-23 season (with 178 in 209 games) and is second in goals only to — you might have guessed — Alex Ovechkin.
Strome has been a regular linemate of Ovechkin’s, too — a privilege he holds in the proper perspective.
“It’s been an honor to play on his line,” Strome said. “I mean, you see how serious he is, but also how much fun he has. The guy loves scoring goals more than anyone I’ve ever seen, but he also loves being on the ice when someone else scores a goal more than I’ve ever seen. He wants you to score. He wants to score. He wants to be on the ice in key situations, and he wants to shoot the puck and he wants to get open. That’s a good combination to have.”
Alex Ovechkin scores his 872nd career goal to increase Caps’ lead
Alex Ovechkin nets his 872nd career goal and is 23 goals away from breaking Wayne Gretzky’s record.
The lift from Ovechkin is only part of why Strome might now be in his greatest season yet, having collected 12 goals and 46 points through 46 games. He’d been centering a line with Ovechkin and Aliaksei Protas when Ovechkin fractured his fibula in mid-November. It was then on Strome to be a crucial piece of propping up the Capitals’ attack — with six goals and 13 points — while the team’s captain sat out for five weeks.
Washington coach Spencer Carbery suspected Strome would step up in Ovechkin’s absence. It falls in line with the “ultra competitive” player Carbery met when he joined the Capitals.
“A lot of people wrote him off early in his career, whether it was in Arizona or Chicago, and he’s continued to press forward and want to get better and better and better,” Carbery said. “[He’s] not just settling into, ‘Well, I’m just going to be an OK player in the National Hockey League.’ He’s still trying to get better and still trying to push the envelope to become an elite player in the NHL and be a top center, and he’s continued to prove it. And now I think this is his third year in a row where he’s trending to be a better player than he was the year before. And you see that at times, but it’s pretty rare.”
It also hasn’t come by accident. Strome has put in the work behind the scenes to become this version of an NHL player.
And, if Sheary is correct, it’ll shift Strome into another chapter of his life, too, when it’s time to hang up the skates:
“I always joke that he’s going to be a GM someday.”
MOST PEOPLE REFUSE to take the office home at night. Strome is not one of those folks.
“He’s a big-time hockey nerd,” Sheary said. “In Wash, we were all fascinated by his hockey knowledge. He can spit anyone’s statistics without even looking them up. He loves knowing that stuff, knowing points and goals, which was pretty intriguing. I’ve never seen someone know so much about the game of hockey.”
The obsession likely started early for Strome given his family’s hockey lineage — Strome’s older brother, Ryan, plays for the Anaheim Ducks and his younger brother Matthew was a fourth-round pick by Philadelphia in 2017. Staying curious about the game appears to be part of Strome’s DNA. And his dream was larger than just making the league; he wanted staying power. And never gave up on finding it.
“I think I’m pretty close to what I thought I would be as a player,” Strome said. “It took a little longer than I thought to be a guy that’s consistently in the lineup every day. I am more of a pass-first guy. I do try to be a good teammate. But I also feel like that’s what I thought I could do the best in the NHL and now it looks pretty close to what I’ve become.”
There’s just one thing missing for Strome now — and the Capitals are on track to check it off his list this spring: a real run at contending for a Stanley Cup.
If the league-leading Capitals can reach that level, it will be with Strome at the forefront. After years of searching for it, he has found a home in Washington. And now more than ever, there’s no place like it.
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