The Capitals also signed Charlie Lindgren, who was 5-0-0 (four starts) with a .958 save percentage and a 1.22 GAA with the St. Louis Blues last season, to a three-year, $3.3 million contract ($1.1 million AAV) to be the backup.
But Kuemper is expected to carry the bulk of the workload and welcomes the responsibility.
"I relish that opportunity to go out there and be a difference-maker every night," he said. "Obviously, that's what they're asking me to do, so I just want to get the season started and go out and play like I do."
Laviolette said he and goalie coach Scott Murray will likely sit down with Kuemper and map out a rough plan for how many games he may start. How the season goes and how much Kuemper is needed in the second half, when they might be battling for a playoff berth, could impact if that plan changes.
Kuemper started an NHL career-high 57 games last season despite missing time with an upper-body injury and while in NHL COVID-19 protocol.
"The more I play, I just feel like I'm in that rhythm and it's easier to get in that zone," he said. "You just start going with the flow when you're out there and you're not thinking too much, so that's definitely how I feel."
Braden Holtby
was the last Capitals goalie to start more than 50 games in a season, when he started 58 in 2018-19. Holtby, who is an unrestricted free agent and not expected to play this season because of a lower-body injury, started 72 games in 2014-15 and tied an NHL record with 48 wins in 2015-16 when he started 66 games and won the Vezina Trophy as the League's top goalie. Martin Brodeur had 48 wins for the New Jersey Devils in 2006-07.
Having grown up playing against Holtby, who is from Lloydminster, Saskatchewan, Kuemper would love to carry the Capitals' goaltending mantle as Holtby once did.
"I saw him the other day and he was telling me how much he loved playing there and how great it's going to be," Kuemper said.
Holtby helped Washington win the Cup in 2018. After learning what it takes last season with the Avalanche, Kuemper believes that experience will aid him and the Capitals in their quest to win the Cup again.
"That's what it's all about, really," Kuemper said. "That's what you dream about. That's why you want to play. To get into the League is one thing, and then winning the Cup is the ultimate goal, kind of the mountaintop. So, once you've reached that, you have the confidence that you can do anything."
Photo credit: @Capitals