WASHINGTON, DC — Seven games into his first full NHL season, Ryan Leonard looks like he’s getting his sea legs. Leonard notched his fourth Capitals goal against the Seattle Kraken on Friday, getting another tally on the board two days after launching a comeback against the Vancouver Canucks on Sunday.
Leonard, 20, became the youngest player in team history to record a multi-game goal streak since a 20-year-old Nicklas Backstrom did so in March of 2008, per the Capitals.
Per @NHLPR, Ryan Leonard (20 years, 273 days) became the youngest Capitals player to score in consecutive games since Nicklas Backstrom (2 GP from March 3-5, 2008 at 20 years, 103 days).
— Capitals PR (@CapitalsPR) October 22, 2025
After a busy start to his NHL career last spring, Leonard’s confidence is growing as he gets into the rhythm of the regular season.
“Yeah, it’s great,” Leonard said postgame. “Playing with great players, so a lot of credit to them. Yeah, definitely feel a lot better, and each and every shift gets better and better.”
Leonard’s night began on a less auspicious note when he took a high stick to the nose from Aliaksei Protas during his first shift of the game. He left the ice in visible pain, but after receiving attention from head athletic trainer Jason Serbus, his main focus was on how soon he could rid of the plugs meant to stop the bleeding.
“The first period I was playing with those two suction thingies in my nose,” Leonard said. “I hated it. So I was trying to get it out of there.”
His first shift of the second period proved more fruitful. Less than a minute after the faceoff, Protas poked the puck away from Kraken defender Adam Larsson on a zone entry, delivering it right to Leonard’s stick. Leonard fired a quick shot from the high slot to beat goaltender Matt Murray.
“It was just a quick transition play,” Leonard said of the goal. “I was in the middle and then passed it up to Pro. It wasn’t the best of passes, and then he chased it down pretty good, and he used that long reach to his advantage and got to me in the slot.”
Leonard now has three goals — including two game-winners — in the first six games of the season, a far cry from the 18 games (including playoffs) that it took him to score the first non-empty net goal of his NHL career. While head coach Spencer Carbery acknowledged there were still some unpolished aspects to Leonard’s game, his underlying talent has shone through.
“He continues to do the things — every game, he’s doing 3 or 4 or 5 or 6, right around there, really elite things,” Carbery said. “Whether it’s carrying a puck through the neutral zone, whether it’s shooting a puck in the neck, whether it’s attacking one-on-one and ringing one off the bar. Those are unique to not his skillset, but just how good of a hockey player he is at this level. And he can do things that other guys can’t.”
After Pierre-Luc Dubois took Leonard under his wing early in his career, Leonard got to learn from another relative veteran on Tuesday in Protas, who joined Leonard and Justin Sourdif on the Caps’ third line. Protas, 24, is still a young player himself, but Leonard told reporters that Protas served as a guide to him and Sourdif in their first game together.
“It’s great,” he said. “Those are just two unbelievable players. Me and Sourdy are a little bit younger in the league, and Pro was really helping us out tonight, so they’re both great.”
Beyond the obvious signs of success, Carbery highlighted how the smaller details of Leonard’s game have also continued to develop. He told reporters during the preseason that he wanted Leonard to focus less on his pure scoring output and more on the process. Now, both areas have improved.
Carbery noted that he doesn’t expect instant perfection, but if Leonard’s development path continues, he can become a serious threat in the NHL for years to come.
“The other little things inside of his game, his coverage reads, his puck decisions, his wall play, it’s just slowly getting better,” Carbery said postgame on Tuesday. “And that’s all that we’re looking to do. We know it’s going to be a process. We know he’s going to have tough touches at certain points and missed coverage during games, and that’s part of developing in the National Hockey League as a young player. And we’re just looking for progress, right? Just a few less failed wall plays, a few less missed coverage.
“And sooner or later, in game 40 or 50 or game 70, you’ll start to get to a point– or maybe it’ll take a couple years — to be that fully, fully polished NHL player. And then you combine that with the skill set that he has, and he makes a few more of those plays, and you’re a good player.”