Today, the Washington Capitals are in the news as they have signed a Timothy Liljegren contract extension. The deal is for two years, and worth a total of $6.5 million, or an average annual value of $3.25 million. This is the type of contract that says a bigger role is there for Liljegren, if he can take advantage of the opportunity. Let’s discuss.
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Caps Sign a Two-Year Timothy Liljegren Contract Extension
This move signifies general manager Chris Patrick’s confidence in Liljegren. Liljegren was only acquired by the Capitals at the trade deadline in 2026. Previously, he had been with the San Jose Sharks. However, what is somewhat surprising in this signing, was the lack of sample size in Cap colours. Liljegren had been banged up in 2025-26, only appearing in 47 games. Moreover, only four of those games came as a Cap, after being acquired on March 6th.
NEWS | The Washington Capitals have re-signed defenseman Timothy Liljegren to a two-year, $6.5 million contract extension. Liljegren's contract will carry an average annual value of $3.25 million.#ALLCAPS | @Shift4
— Washington Capitals (@Capitals) May 20, 2026
It seems his bigger body of work, across his entire NHL career, earned him his contract. He was brought in to help fill the gap on the blueline left by the deal of longtime Cap star blueliner John Carlson to the Anaheim Ducks. Now, he is going to get a solid opportunity in Washington to take on a steady role.
How Does Liljegren Fit in Washington
The Caps have lots of room at the bottom of their defence depth charts. What that means for Liljegren, is that he should expect top-four minutes, without too much competition. Now, Cole Hutson would definitely challenge him eventually, but that is tough to know if it will be in 2026-27. Also, given that Liljegren is essentially the second defenceman on the right side on the club’s depth charts, and Hutson is a left d-man, Liljegren does have a bit of a safety net. Currently under contract, only Matt Roy would slot in above Liljegren on the right-side depth chart.
Throughout his NHL career, Liljegren has 93 points in 311 games played. That is with an average ice time of 18:13. He was over 20 minutes a game for the first time in his career, before the trade in San Jose this year. Expect that to shoot up this year, and possibly his offensive contribution, right along with it.
If Liljegren is to be successful, he needs to be durable, and skating well. From that base, he should be able to contribute regularly offensively.
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