Why John Carlson's Offensive Game Makes Sense for the Anaheim Ducks Right NowJohn Carlson with the Washington Capitals (Via Getty Images) With the trade market heating up ahead of today’s deadline, the Anaheim Ducks also made their move as they acquired John Carlson from the Washington Capitals. But the franchise didn’t add the veteran defenseman to add to their blue line.They already know those exist. What Pat Verbeek targeted when he sent a conditional first-round pick and a 2027 third-rounder to Washington was the offensive production that has defined Carlson’s 17-year career and has quietly reached its best pace in four seasons.

Anaheim Ducks expects John Carlson to add to their Offense

Carlson’s 2.19 points per 60 minutes this season is a number that stands out even more when you consider where it’s coming from. His scoring hasn’t been propped up by power play production in Washington. Instead, the bulk of his offense has come at five-on-five, where he remains one of the most active defensemen in the league at generating chances from the offensive zone. That specific skill set addresses Anaheim’s most glaring gap. Despite generating quality looks all season long, the Ducks’ five-on-five scoring rate ranks 20th in the league since New Year’s. The disconnect between expected and actual production has been the one thing holding back a team that sits second in the Pacific Division with a 34-24-3 record and has gone 13-3-0 over its last 16 games.Carlson’s 46 points in 55 games led all Capitals skaters in assists this season. He brings a right-handed shot to a Ducks blue line that has leaned heavily on Jackson LaCombe and Jacob Trouba for top-four minutes. His 10 goals and 36 helpers give Anaheim a proven offensive weapon on the back end.That’s something the team’s young forward core of Leo Carlsson, Beckett Sennecke, Cutter Gauthier and Mason McTavish will benefit from immediately.The defensive concerns are real. Carlson’s transition game has declined noticeably in recent seasons, and he won’t make the Ducks any better in their own zone, where they already rank 31st in goals against per game. But Anaheim’s young legs and team speed should help compensate for what the 36-year-old lacks at this stage of his career.The conditions attached to the first-round pick protect the Ducks if they somehow fall out of playoff contention, a smart hedge by Verbeek. After years of stockpiling picks through a painful rebuild, Anaheim can afford to trade future assets for present help now that the playoff window has swung open.For Washington, moving a pending unrestricted free agent for a first-rounder represents solid value as the Capitals look to retool around their existing core. With their championship core getting older and their playoff push slowing down, they will need all the new names they can.