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Chris Patrick officially confirms a longtime Capitals figure is officially leaving: Kirk Muller sparks change

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Skyler Walker
April 27, 2026  (11:35)
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Nov 26, 2025; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Washington Capitals left wing Alex Ovechkin (8) is presented a gift trophy from Capitals players and front office, represented by Capitals senior vice president and general manager Chris Patrick (L) during a ceremony honoring his 900th NHL career goal and 1,500th game with the Capitals prior to their game against the Winnipeg Jets at Capital One Arena.
Photo credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

Kirk Muller is out in Washington, while head coach Spencer Carbery stays in place and now faces a fresh opening on his staff.

The Capitals made it official with a team statement from senior vice president and general manager Chris Patrick, closing the door on Muller's run behind the bench.

That matters because this is not a head-coach change. Washington's head coach is still Carbery, and the move is tied to Muller exploring another NHL opportunity before his deal was due to expire in June 2026.

Patrick's wording was respectful, but the result is still a clean break. Once a club publicly backs a coach's choice to look elsewhere, the next step is obvious.

Muller spent three years in the organization, and the Capitals made sure to underline his professionalism, leadership, and impact on player development. That reads like a real endorsement, not a forced goodbye.

An end of an era for Muller, and one for Alex Ovechkin as well?

It also leaves Carbery with a meaningful decision ahead. Replacing an assistant isn't just filling a seat. It's about voice, bench rhythm, and who helps drive adjustments on special teams and daily detail work.

Why this coaching opening matters for the Washington Capitals

Carbery is still the central figure here, and that part is important. Washington is not resetting behind the bench at the top level. The club is adjusting around the head coach, not moving on from him.

That's a different story inside the locker room.

Players can absorb an assistant change faster than a head-coach swap, but the new voice still shapes meetings, video work, and how the bench reacts when games start to tilt.

Muller carried the profile of an experienced NHL coach, and Patrick leaned hard on that point in the statement. When a front office stresses experience and respect, it usually tells you the departure wasn't about public friction.

Now the pressure shifts to the next hire.

Carbery needs someone who fits his pace, supports his message, and can step into a room that still expects to push forward, not drift.

Washington also has to nail the timing.

Staff changes can linger into the summer, but the cleanest teams handle them early and make sure the new coach is in place well before camp opens.

So this is the real read on the move: the Capitals did not part ways with their head coach.

They officially lost a trusted assistant, and Carbery's next staff addition now becomes a real offseason storyline.


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