McCarthy to coach D on Laviolette’s Caps staff

NHL

ARLINGTON, Va. — Kevin McCarthy joined Peter Laviolette’s Washington Capitals coaching staff Wednesday, and the team re-signed one of the defensemen he’ll be working with.

Jonas Siegenthaler signed a one-year contract worth $800,000, a deal that should finalize Washington’s blue line. McCarthy will be in charge of defensemen under Laviolette, who is keeping the other three assistants in place after replacing fired coach Todd Reirden.

Siegenthaler, 23, became a full-time NHL player last season, playing 63 games and recording nine points. He’s expected to be a third-pairing player on a defense that includes Norris Trophy finalist John Carlson, Brenden Dillon, who re-signed ahead of free agency, free agent additions Justin Schultz and Trevor van Riemsdyk, Dmitry Orlov, Nick Jensen and prospect Martin Fehervary.

Laviolette is unsurprisingly putting McCarthy in charge of that group more than 15 years into their partnership. The 63-year-old was with Laviolette in his last three stops in Nashville, Philadelphia and Carolina, and they won the Stanley Cup together with the Hurricanes in 2006.

“Kevin has had a tremendous impact on my coaching career, and I’m extremely excited to have him join our coaching staff in Washington,” Laviolette said in a statement. “Kevin is a high character individual who has an incredible amount of NHL experience and works relentlessly to make players better.”

Laviolette didn’t know McCarthy in December 2003 when then-Carolina general manager Jim Rutherford asked him to keep the veteran assistant coach on staff. In their first full season together, they won it all and have been inseparable behind the bench since.

“It was then I realized how special he was as a coach and a person,” Laviolette said upon being hired by Washington in September. “The way he could teach and he had a real way about his personality where he could really be effective with the players. I think his track record speaks for itself.”

McCarthy worked under Paul Maurce when Carolina got to the 2002 Cup Final and was an assistant each time Laviolette coached a team there: the Hurricanes in 2006, Flyers in 2010 and Predators in 2017.

Hiring McCarthy to fill the vacancy left by Reid Cashman’s departure to coach Dartmouth University was more expected than the Capitals keeping the rest of their staff intact after a second consecutive first-round playoff exit. Assistants Scott Arniel and Blaine Forsythe and goaltending coach Scott Murray will be back.

“I’m pleased to have them return to our staff,” Laviolette said. “They are all successful coaches, bring a significant amount of experience and recognize the attention to detail that creates the foundation for a successful team.”

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