With training camp now just a month away, more and more members of the Washington Capitals are jumping back on the ice at MedStar Capitals Iceplex.
According to Monumental Sports Network’s Tarik El-Bashir, the latest players to join the informal skates at the team’s practice rink include Pierre-Luc Dubois, Nic Dowd, John Carlson, and Sonny Milano.
The foursome joins a group of local pros and college players, as well as Logan Thompson and Matt Roy, who were the first to get back to work in Northern Virginia last month.
The #Caps informal skates are picking up a little. Dubois and Dowd were out there today. Thompson and Roy have been around all summer. Carlson and Milano have joined. Eller, too. And, of course, the usual assortment of local pros and NCAA D-I players. pic.twitter.com/3pzMdqvSve
— Tarik El-Bashir (@Tarik_ElBashir) August 20, 2025
Dubois, 27, is headed into his second season with the Capitals after coming over from the Los Angeles Kings last summer in a trade for Darcy Kuemper. The Quebec-born center recorded a career high 66 points (20g, 46a) in 82 games with the Caps and received multiple votes for Selke Trophy consideration. He also began to take on more of a leadership role by the end of the year, playing host to top prospect Ryan Leonard after the 20-year-old joined the team out of college.
Dowd, 35, is also coming off a career-best campaign, posting 27 points (14g, 13a) in 82 games. The 2025-26 season will be the first on the two-year, $6 million extension that Dowd signed with the Capitals this past April. Like Dubois, Dowd also received Selke Trophy votes, finishing in 36th place overall.
Carlson, 35, will be playing in his 17th season with the Capitals and his 19th in the organization since he was drafted 27th overall in the 2008 NHL Draft. The veteran defender recorded at least 50 points in a season for the seventh time in his career last season, tallying 51 points (5g, 46a) in 79 games. Carlson, who finished 16th in Norris Trophy voting, learned Tuesday that he was not one of 16 American defensemen chosen to attend Team USA’s Winter Olympics orientation camp later this month.
Milano, 29, was kept out of the Capitals’ lineup for virtually the entire 2024-25 season, getting into just three games last fall before an upper-body injury prematurely ended his campaign in early November. Caps general manager Chris Patrick told reporters in July that Milano “feels good” and is expected to be a full participant in the team’s training camp.
El-Bashir added that center Lars Eller has also been out on the ice with his former Capitals teammates. Eller departed the club this summer for the second time in his career, signing a one-year contract with the Ottawa Senators.
The Capitals have yet to reveal the exact dates for their 2025 Training Camp, but work has already begun on putting down a new ice sheet on the team’s main practice rink.
You know we’re getting closer to the season when a new sheet of ice is being put down on the #Caps main rink. (Notice the vinyl logos laid out in the stands; 50th anniversary logos are being replaced with new ones.) pic.twitter.com/bDlI40romg
— Tarik El-Bashir (@Tarik_ElBashir) August 20, 2025
Last year’s training camp officially began on September 19. Rookie Camp normally begins around a week before the main camp.