Schmidt's greatest asset is his skating. But he also has a good stick and reads the play well at both ends of the ice.
"He's always a couple plays ahead," Haula said.
He had 36 points (five goals, 31 assists) in the regular season and has five points (two goals, three assists) in the playoffs. All those numbers are career highs in the NHL.
"I've always thought he was an extremely underrated player," Capitals goaltender Braden Holtby said. "It was just a matter of time once he got the opportunity to play those type of minutes. You knew he was going to be a top-two defenseman because he can skate, he can handle the puck, he works as hard as anyone, battles in front of the net. He does everything. He wants to be good at everything."
Schmidt was all over the ice Monday. He swept a puck out of the crease, helped force a turnover that led to a goal, made a pass that sprung Haula on a breakaway, won a battle with Scheifele, drew a holding penalty on Wheeler, blocked two shots and more.
"I watched five minutes of [Game 2], and I feel like his face was on the screen the whole time," Capitals forward Tom Wilson said. "He's a great teammate. He's a great guy, brings a lot of energy. … He just goes out there, does his thing, has fun every day. That's a great way to be."
NHL.com Staff Writer Tom Gulitti and NHL.com Correspondent Brian McNally contributed.