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Tag: Ovechkin
Ovechkin tours Oilers Hall of Fame, focused on catching Gretzky
The chase has been enjoyable for Ovechkin this season with Washington (32-10-5) leading the NHL with 69 points. The game in Edmonton is the first of a five-game road trip.
“Of course, it’s fun when you’re winning and your team is playing well,” Ovechkin said. “It kind of helps you up.”
Ovechkin missed 16 games after he fractured his left fibula at the Utah Hockey Club on Nov. 18. Since returning, he has eight points (six goals, two assists) in 13 games.
“It’s a gift from God,” Oilers forward Vasily Podkolzin said. “He can score, he can rip it and no matter how old he is, he’s still moving well. It’s great to have an opportunity to play against him.”
Podkolzin, like Ovechkin a native of Moscow, idolized him growing up and remembers fondly the first time he played against him.
“I was around 5 years old when he got into the League,” he said. “I’ve played against him two or three times. He’s even bigger on the ice with skates. It was pretty nice to meet him. We had a little conversation. He’s a good guy and one of the greatest players.”
Ovechkin’s ability to continue scoring at a high rate at this stage of his career is impressive, though he does not have a target of how many goals he would like to have at the end of it.
For now, the focus is on catching Gretzky.
“I’m 20, 21 goals (away), it’s hard to score in this league,” Ovechkin said. “You play against the best defensive players out there and maybe in one game, you maybe have two or three chances, and you have to use it, or maybe one chance. All five guys out there have to do the job.”
The Capitals surrounded Ovechkin with plenty of talent in the offseason. It’s helped them grow from a fringe Stanley Cup Playoff team swept by the New York Rangers in the best-of-7 Eastern Conference First Round to a championship contender.
“You can see how many guys signed before the season, experienced guys but still young, and still hungry to win the games and go to the playoffs,” Ovechkin said. “The most important thing, I think, is that we have a great group of guys in the locker room. If something happens, we always try to stick together, and I think that’s why we’re successful right now.”
Alexander Ovechkin, the legendary Washington Capitals forward, recently had the opportunity to tour the Edmonton Oilers Hall of Fame, with a special focus on catching up with the one and only Wayne Gretzky.As Ovechkin walked through the hallowed halls of the Oilers Hall of Fame, he couldn’t help but feel a sense of awe and reverence for the history and legacy of the team. The memorabilia and artifacts on display painted a vivid picture of the Oilers’ storied past, including their dominant Stanley Cup victories and the incredible talent that has graced their roster over the years.
But it was meeting Gretzky, known as “The Great One,” that truly left a lasting impression on Ovechkin. The two hockey superstars exchanged stories and shared a mutual respect for each other’s accomplishments on the ice. Ovechkin, who is currently chasing Gretzky’s all-time goal-scoring record, was inspired by the chance to speak with the man who set the bar so high for generations of hockey players to come.
As Ovechkin left the Oilers Hall of Fame, he couldn’t help but feel a renewed sense of motivation to continue his pursuit of greatness. With Gretzky’s words of wisdom echoing in his mind, Ovechkin is more determined than ever to etch his name into the history books alongside the hockey legends who have come before him.
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Alex Ovechkin goals tracker: The Great Eight 20 away from breaking Wayne Gretzky’s all-time record of 894
Alex Ovechkin celebrates an overtime game-winning goal against the Senators at Canadian Tire Centre. (Photo by Chris Tanouye/Freestyle Photography/Getty Images) A once seemingly unbreakable NHL record could fall as early as the 2024-25 season thanks to the goal-scoring prowess of Washington Capitals star Alex Ovechkin.
The Great Eight is within striking distance of Wayne Gretzky’s all-time NHL goals record of 894, which Gretzky reached on March 29, 1999, against the New York Islanders. Ovechkin began this season with 853 career goals.
Ovechkin scored in the Capitals’ 3-0 win over the Seattle Kraken Thursday night, moving within 20 goals of passing Gretzky with No. 875 in his career. The goal was his 22nd this season.
“It’s just a matter of time, whether it’s late this year, early next year, whenever,” Gretzky told NHL.com earlier this season about Ovechkin’s chances of breaking his record. “I mean, he’s a great player. He’s a great goal scorer.”
NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said in December that he will follow Ovechkin around when he’s within four or five goals of the record with Gretzky accompanying him.
Ovechkin started this season red-hot, with 15 goals in his first 18 games. Unfortunately, a fractured fibula suffered on Nov. 18 caused him to miss 16 games for the Capitals. The “Russian Machine” has been durable for his entire NHL career, having missed only 75 games due to injury since breaking in during the 2005-06 season.
Ovechkin and the Capitals will visit the Seattle Kraken on Thursday.
We will track Ovechkin’s race to 894 goals and beyond all season.
NHL top-10 in career goals
1. Wayne Gretzky (894)
2. Alex Ovechkin (874)
3. Gordie Howe (801)
4. Jaromir Jagr (766)
5. Brett Hull (741)
6. Marcel Dionne (731)
7. Phil Esposito (717)
8. Mike Gartner (708)
9. Mark Messier (694)
10. Steve Yzerman (692)Ovechkin in 2005. (Joel Richardson/The Washington Post via Getty Images) Remaining 2024-25 regular-season games
Sat, Jan 25: at Vancouver, 10 p.m. ET
Tue, Jan 28: at Calgary, 9 p.m. ET
Thu, Jan 30: at Ottawa, 7 p.m. ET
Sat, Feb 1: vs. Winnipeg, 7 p.m. ET
Tue, Feb 4: vs. Florida, 7 p.m. ET
Thu, Feb 6: at Philadelphia, 7 p.m. ET
Sun, Feb 9: vs. Utah, 12:30 p.m. ET
Sat, Feb 22: at Pittsburgh, 3 p.m. ET
Sun, Feb 23: vs. Edmonton, 1 p.m. ET
Tue, Feb 25: vs. Calgary, 7 p.m. ET
Thu, Feb 27: vs. St. Louis, 7 p.m. ET
Sat, Mar 1: vs. Tampa Bay, 12:30 p.m. ET
Mon, Mar 3: vs. Ottawa, 6:30 p.m. ET
Wed, Mar 5: at Rangers, 7 p.m. ET
Fri, Mar 7: vs. Detroit, 7 p.m. ET
Sun, Mar 9: vs. Seattle, 3:30 p.m. ET
Tue, Mar 11: at Anaheim, 10 p.m. ET
Thu, Mar 13: at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m. ET
Sat, Mar 15: at San Jose, 5 p.m. ET
Tue, Mar 18: vs. Detroit, 7 p.m. ET
Thu, Mar 20: vs. Philadelphia, 7 p.m. ET
Sat, Mar 22: vs. Florida, 5 p.m. ET
Tue, Mar 25: at Winnipeg, 8 p.m. ET
Thu, Mar 27: at Minnesota, 8 p.m. ET
Sun, Mar 30: vs. Buffalo, 3 p.m. ET
Tue, Apr 1: at Boston, 7 p.m. ET
Wed, Apr 2: at Carolina, 7 p.m. ET
Fri, Apr 4: vs. Chicago, 7 p.m. ET
Sun, Apr 6: at Islanders, 12:30 p.m. ET
Thu, Apr 10: vs. Carolina, 7:30 p.m. ET
Sat, Apr 12: at Columbus, 7 p.m. ET
Sun, Apr 13: vs. Columbus, 6 p.m. ET
Tue, Apr 15: at Islanders, 8 p.m. ET
Thu, Apr 17: at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m. ETAlex Ovechkin has scored on 178 different goaltenders since entering the NHL in 2005. (Jamie Sabau/NHLI via Getty Images) Ovechkin milestone goal timeline
No. 1: Oct. 2, 2005 vs. Columbus Blue Jackets (Pascal Leclaire)
No. 50: April 13, 2006 vs. Atlanta Thrashers (Mike Dunham)
No. 100: Oct. 12, 2007 vs. New York Rangers (Henrik Lundqvist)
No. 200: Feb. 5, 2009 (Jonathan Quick)
No. 300: April 5, 2011 (James Reimer)
No. 400: Dec. 20, 2013 (empty net)
No. 500: Jan. 10, 2016 (Andrew Hammond)
No. 600: March 12, 2018 (Connor Hellebuyck)
No. 700: Feb. 22, 2020 (Mackenzie Blackwood)
No. 800: Dec. 13, 2022 (Petr Mrazek)
Hat tricks by season (32 career)
2005-06: 1
2006-07: 1
2007-08: 3
2008-09: 3
2009-10: 1
2010-11: 1
2011-12: 0
2012-13: 2
2013-14: 1
2014-15: 0
2015-16: 2
2016-17: 2
2017-18: 3
2018-19: 3
2019-20: 4
2020-21: 0
2021-22: 1
2022-23: 2
2023-24: 0
2024-25: 1
As the NHL season heats up, all eyes are on Washington Capitals superstar Alex Ovechkin as he continues his quest to break Wayne Gretzky’s all-time record for most career goals. With 874 goals under his belt, Ovechkin is now just 20 goals away from surpassing “The Great One” and etching his name in hockey history.Ovechkin, known for his lethal shot and scoring prowess, has consistently been one of the top goal-scorers in the league since entering the NHL in 2005. With multiple Rocket Richard Trophies and a Stanley Cup championship to his name, Ovechkin has already solidified himself as one of the greatest players of his generation.
As Ovechkin closes in on Gretzky’s record, hockey fans around the world are eagerly following his every goal, eagerly anticipating the moment when he will become the new all-time goal-scoring king. With each goal, Ovechkin inches closer to immortality, and his journey to the top of the record books is a thrilling spectacle to witness.
Stay tuned as we continue to track Alex Ovechkin’s pursuit of history and follow along as he chases down Wayne Gretzky’s legendary record. The Great Eight is on the verge of making history, and hockey fans everywhere are eagerly awaiting the moment when he will etch his name in the annals of the sport forever.
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Inside the Capitals’ stunning retool around Alex Ovechkin
If Alex Ovechkin was going to shatter Wayne Gretzky’s NHL career goals record as a member of the Washington Capitals, he had some conditions that needed to be met.
Before re-signing, Ovechkin told Capitals owner Ted Leonsis that he didn’t want to be “a third-line guy playing 8 to 10 minutes a game.” He didn’t want to be someone the team “trotted out on the power play” just to pad his goal totals, according to Leonsis.
Most of all, he didn’t want to play for a rebuilding team. Before signing a five-year contract extension in 2021, he asked Leonsis to promise him that the owner would keep the team competitive, that the Capitals would be the annual playoff contender they had been for most of Ovechkin’s career.
The Washington Capitals have been a dominant force in the NHL for years, largely due to the incredible talent of captain Alex Ovechkin. But this season, the team has undergone a stunning retooling effort to surround Ovechkin with a new supporting cast.Gone are longtime veterans like Braden Holtby and Nicklas Backstrom, replaced by younger, faster players like Anthony Mantha and Connor McMichael. The Capitals have also added depth on defense with the acquisitions of Brenden Dillon and Justin Schultz.
This new-look Capitals team is built to play a fast, aggressive style of hockey that complements Ovechkin’s goal-scoring ability. With a mix of experienced veterans and promising young talent, the Capitals are poised to make a deep playoff run and continue their winning ways.
Fans of the Capitals can expect an exciting season ahead as they watch Ovechkin and his revamped team compete for another Stanley Cup championship. The retooling effort has injected new energy into the team and given them a fresh perspective on how to win games. Stay tuned for what promises to be an exhilarating season for the Washington Capitals.
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#Capitals #stunning #retool #Alex #Ovechkin
Inside the Capitals’ stunning retool around Alex Ovechkin
If Alex Ovechkin was going to shatter Wayne Gretzky’s NHL career goals record as a member of the Washington Capitals, he had some conditions that needed to be met.
Before re-signing, Ovechkin told Capitals owner Ted Leonsis that he didn’t want to be “a third-line guy playing 8 to 10 minutes a game.” He didn’t want to be someone the team “trotted out on the power play” just to pad his goal totals, according to Leonsis.
Most of all, he didn’t want to play for a rebuilding team. Before signing a five-year contract extension in 2021, he asked Leonsis to promise him that the owner would keep the team competitive, that the Capitals would be the annual playoff contender they had been for most of Ovechkin’s career. In turn, he promised Leonsis that he’d stay in shape and that his eyes wouldn’t be fixated on breaking Gretzky’s record of 894 goals, but on bringing another Stanley Cup to Washington.
Leonsis promised him that the Capitals would not enter a rebuild if Ovechkin was still on the roster. “To me, a rebuild is when you look the players, the coaches, the fans in the eye and say we’re gonna be really, really bad. And if we were really, really bad, I don’t think Alex would break the record,” Leonsis told ESPN in 2022.
This season is the fourth year of Ovechkin’s contract extension.
It appears everyone has kept their promises.
The Capitals’ captain has smashed the scoring expectations for a 39-year-old player. He had the best goal-scoring start of his career, collecting 17 tallies in 20 games before a broken leg interrupted his season. With 21 goals in 30 games, he’s just 21 goals from becoming the NHL’s all-time goal-scoring leader.
Rather than ice a shambolic roster playing out Ovechkin’s record chase, Washington was the NHL’s best team after 46 games, compiling a .728 points percentage. The Capitals were a surprise playoff entrant under first-year coach Spencer Carbery last season. An aggressive offseason augmentation of that roster propelled them to the top of the league.
“There has to be an expectation that we’re going to win,” forward Tom Wilson said. “That’s a culture that’s been built. The new guys came in this year and complemented that.”
This isn’t how it usually works for teams that contend for a dozen seasons.
Look at the Chicago Blackhawks, who followed their dynastic run by tearing down the roster to the foundations in order to draft Connor Bedard and subsequently linger in the league’s basement. Look at the Pittsburgh Penguins — home to Ovechkin’s greatest rival Sidney Crosby — who have unsuccessfully surrounded a veteran core with whatever talent they can scrounge. Their goal was a fourth Stanley Cup in the Crosby era. The result has been prolonging the inevitable.
Since Ovechkin entered the NHL in 2005-06, the Capitals have the third-best points percentage as a team (.608) behind the Vegas Golden Knights and Boston Bruins. The Capitals won the Stanley Cup in 2018. If they had skated into hockey purgatory, waiting for Ovechkin to play out the string before transitioning to the next thing, it would have been understandable.
But that’s not what he wanted. That’s not what the Capitals wanted.
Instead, the present is potent and the future is bright in Washington. Here’s how they pulled it off.
OVER THE PAST 42 years, the Capitals have had four general managers. When David Poile left to join the expansion Nashville Predators in 1997, George McPhee was imported from Vancouver to become the next general manager. Since then, the line of succession has been internal: Brian MacLellan had been McPhee’s assistant GM when he was elevated to replace him when McPhee was fired in 2014. Chris Patrick was MacLellan’s assistant when he was elevated to replace him last offseason, with MacLellan moving up to president of hockey operations.
“It’s pretty similar to how we’ve interacted over the years. I’m just making more phone calls now and dealing with agents at the NHL level than I was before,” Patrick told ESPN. “I think what Mac does really well is understanding what a team’s needs are, how the team’s playing, what areas we need to address.”
Assistant general manager Ross Mahoney, team president Dick Patrick and Leonsis have been the other constants.
“We all put our time in, we all learned from our mistakes,” Mahoney said.
Mahoney believes there are three key areas for building a team: drafting and developing, signing free agents and making trades. He has seen teams master one or two of those tasks but struggle to succeed in all three facets. But this Capitals team has aced all three tests.
In July 2021, Ovechkin announced he had re-signed for five years ($47.5 million). He would be over 40 years old by the end of the deal. The majority of the team’s core — center Nicklas Backstrom, forward T.J. Oshie and defenseman John Carlson — were also signed long term, and not getting any younger.
“I think there was a recognition, probably around when we signed that deal with Ovi, that we were kind of moving to the next phase here,” Patrick recalled. “You just look at the history of the league and how guys perform as they age. Let’s be realistic and understand that we can’t just rely on [Ovechkin and Backstrom] to carry the team anymore. It’s not physically something they’re going to be able to do.”
The realization for Capitals management was that supporting Ovechkin’s record chase with a competitive team did not mean propping up the roster with veteran mercenaries until he retired.
“If there are opportunities to add players that are in their early 20s outside of the draft, we should be looking at those types of deals,” Patrick said. “It doesn’t feel like teams would ever trade guys like that, but it happens more than maybe you realize. You just have to make sure you’re kind of on those opportunities.”
Like when the Blackhawks didn’t tender Dylan Strome a qualifying offer in 2022, and the Capitals signed the 25-year-old center. He’s their leading scorer.
Like when the Toronto Maple Leafs traded 23-year-old defenseman Rasmus Sandin to Washington in 2023, as the Capitals flipped a first-round pick they acquired in sending Garnet Hathaway and Dmitry Orlov to the Bruins at the deadline. He has been a mainstay on the team’s second defensive pairing.
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Dylan Strome nets goal for Capitals
Dylan Strome nets goal for Capitals
Washington added two more players like this with their biggest swings of the offseason: trading for 25-year-old Los Angeles Kings center Pierre-Luc Dubois and 26-year-old Ottawa Senators defenseman Jakob Chychrun.
Patrick cited Matthew Tkachuk as the kind of young player who had become available via trade in the past; the star winger was traded to the Florida Panthers in 2022. Though he’s not Matthew Tkachuk, the Chychrun trade was similar in that the Senators did not expect him to re-sign after this season. The Capitals pounced, sending defenseman Nick Jensen and a third-round pick to Ottawa for Chychrun, a top-pairing, puck-moving defenseman.
Through 41 games, Chychrun leads all Washington defensemen with 31 points.
The Dubois trade was one of the offseason’s most shocking moves. The Capitals acquired the disappointing center — and the remaining seven years of his contract with an $8.5 million annual cap hit — for goalie Darcy Kuemper in a one-for-one trade.
Acquired from Winnipeg to potentially ascend to the Kings’ No. 1 center spot after Anze Kopitar retired, Dubois was a massive disappointment in his first season in Los Angeles, finishing with 16 goals and 24 points in 82 games and skating to a minus-9. He continued to underwhelm in the Kings’ postseason loss to Edmonton, notching one goal and 20 penalty minutes in five games.
The Capitals were Dubois’ fourth NHL team in nine seasons — unusual for a third overall pick — having previously fallen out of favor in Columbus and Winnipeg. All of those teams were banking on his potential, enchanted by the brief flashes of its fulfillment.
That included the Capitals, who watched him step up in the 2018 playoffs with two goals, two assists and dominant play. “Every time he was on the ice it was like, ‘Oh my god, this guy again.’ He was such a handful and I don’t even think he was even 22 years old at the time,” Patrick said.
The Capitals tracked Dubois’ path from Columbus to Winnipeg. They tried trading for him in summer 2023 before the Jets sent him to Los Angeles. They got their man last offseason, with his stock the lowest it has been.
“He was playing behind two good centers in L.A. It seemed like he wasn’t getting the opportunities he needed to get,” Patrick said. “There was still a good player there, but he was too buried in the lineup.”
Tim Barnes, who has run the analytics department in Washington since 2014, had his group confirm that Dubois’ issue was mostly usage. The Capitals did their due diligence to make sure there weren’t other issues off the ice.
“You do the work on who he is as a person and in the room. From what we learned, he was a great teammate, hard worker, wants to get better, loves the game,” Patrick said. “It’s just the situation wasn’t great for him in L.A.”
But none of this would have mattered if their coach didn’t want him. There were plenty of reasons to be wary, from the long-term contract to his underwhelming play with the Kings.
“I think a lot of coaches would be like, ‘I don’t want that problem.’ But Carbs was open-minded about it. He did his work, he understood who the person was,” Patrick said. “Maybe some stuff that some coaches saw as negatives, Carbs didn’t mind them. He felt he could deal with it.”
Dubois has resurrected his career in D.C. with 36 points in 46 games, including 8 goals.
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Pierre-Luc Dubois capitalizes on the power play
Pierre-Luc Dubois capitalizes on the power play
Goaltender Logan Thompson also falls into the “aggressive acquisition of players of a certain age” gambit. Thompson, 27, played parts of four seasons with the Golden Knights. Injuries to starter Adin Hill led to Thompson playing a career-high 46 games last season, posting a 25-14-5 record with nearly identical stats to Hill’s.
Vegas GM Kelly McCrimmon said Thompson requested a trade, and the Capitals swooped in with two third-round picks — including one acquired from Toronto in a deadline trade for defenseman Joel Edmundson.
The Capitals were comfortable with Thompson, who played with their ECHL affiliate in 2019-20 and had a good relationship with Washington goalie coach Scott Murray. Whatever went on with Thompson in Vegas, the Capitals weren’t concerned.
“I mean, that’s the biggest thing a lot of times in trades and free agency, just trying to get a sense for what the person’s like and what they’re like in the group and in the room,” Patrick said. “And so we felt like we had a pretty good feel for that.”
The Capitals have also been adept in finding players who are “maybe underappreciated in their roles with other teams” said Patrick, who points to center Nic Dowd and defenseman Trevor van Riemsdyk as examples. Defenseman Matt Roy was used a lot by the Kings, but has played an important role for Washington after he was signed as a free agent last summer.
All of these moves speak to a cap flexibility that the Capitals didn’t always anticipate. One of the primary differences between the Capitals’ resurgence and the Penguins’ fade is the composition of their respective cores. Pittsburgh has $30.9 million in cap space dedicated to Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Kris Letang and Erik Karlsson — 35% of its cap space dedicated to four players.
The Capitals used to have a similar plight with Ovechkin ($9.5 million), defenseman John Carlson ($8 million), Backstrom ($9.2 million) and Oshie ($5.75 million). But Backstrom and Oshie are on long-term injured reserve this season. Backstrom returned from hip surgery to play just eight games last season before “stepping away from the game” last November. Oshie is expected to miss the entire season due to a chronic back injury.
Patrick said that if Backstrom could have returned, the Capitals would have welcomed him back and “gone in a different direction” with their offseason acquisitions.
“Maybe you still make that deal for Dubois and you just free up money somewhere else,” he said. “It’s all a little bit ‘Choose Your Own Adventure’: If something comes in front of you, then you figure out the next moves you’d have to make.”
Instead, the clarity Backstrom gave the Capitals last summer regarding his health “helped us understand where we could go in our decision-making process,” Patrick said.
TYING ALL OF THIS together is Carbery, 43, one of the most critical NHL coaching hires of the past several seasons.
After the Capitals defeated the Penguins on Jan. 18, Carbery was asked about his team being atop the NHL standings.
“I don’t really know how to answer that,” he said through a smile and a chuckle. “We feel good. I mean, we’re happy. The guys should be really proud where we are after 46 games. We’ll just continue to build and continue to grind.”
His tone was that of a coach who knows there’s a long road ahead, but Carbery’s Capitals have already come so far.
In 2023, Carbery was an assistant coach with the Maple Leafs, and generated a lot of buzz in the coaching market. The Capitals had parted ways with head coach Peter Laviolette after missing the playoffs. MacLellan coveted the young coach. Carbery, in turn, fancied the idea of coaching the Capitals after having coached their ECHL team in South Carolina for five seasons and the Hershey Bears for three seasons.
It took a bit for the Capitals to find an identity under Carbery last season. “We were very defensive. We weren’t scoring many goals as a team,” Carlson said. “When your team is not as offensive as in years past, we all have to change. We all have to find different ways. And I think it just took us longer.”
Last season, the Capitals were 28th in goals per game (2.63) and 16th in goals against (3.07). This season, they’re second in goals per game (3.57) and third in goals against (2.43).
Patrick has praised Carbery’s communication skills and his boldness — like in signing off on the Dubois deal, for example.
“I worked with him a lot in Hershey. I guess I didn’t have that appreciation for his willingness to go against the conventional coach thinking,” Patrick said.
“He’s a bright, intelligent guy who’s competitive. I think a really, really good communicator. I think Spencer’s as honest as they come. He will tell you what he expects of you. He will tell you what he wants,” Mahoney said. “He’s got the X and O’s and all that, but I think being able connect to all 23 players is not easy to do.”
Carbery is also young enough to be an effective coach for the NHL veterans as well as the next wave of prospects for the Capitals — who are another reason this retool has worked.
MAHONEY HAS RUN the Capitals’ draft for 27 years, first as director of amateur scouting and then as assistant general manager. The foundation of the Ovechkin Era has been built through the draft, starting with the Great 8 going first overall in 2004.
Since 2008, Ovechkin’s first trip to the postseason, the Capitals have missed the playoffs only twice. They’ve maintained that success without bleeding their prospect pipeline dry. Since 2008, there were only three drafts in which the Capitals didn’t make a first-round pick.
The Ovechkin Era was fostered by picks such as forwards Backstrom, Evgeny Kuznetsov, Marcus Johansson, Alex Semin and Wilson; defensemen Carlson, Mike Green, Dmitry Orlov and Karl Alzner; and goalies Braden Holtby and Philipp Grubauer. In Game 5 of the 2018 Stanley Cup Final, the Capitals had 12 players drafted from Mahoney’s boards in their lineup. That’s not considering the talents that Washington drafted who blossomed elsewhere, such as forward Filip Forsberg and goalie Semyon Varlamov.
Time is the ultimate judge of a team’s draft success. But Mahoney believes the past few drafts could be as fruitful as some of the best of the Ovechkin Era.
“I think we’re kind of in another phase right now that’s like the one we were in back then,” he said.
Look no further than the 2025 IIHF World Junior Championships, where two Capitals prospects led Team USA to another gold: Defenseman Cole Hutson, selected 43rd overall last summer and winger Ryan Leonard, taken eighth overall in 2023.
Hutson led all scorers in the tournament with 11 points in seven games, including a goal and an assist in the gold medal game, becoming the first defenseman to do so in tournament history.
U.S.-based scouts Jeremy Browning, Rich Alger and A.J. Toews identified the defenseman as a player the Capitals should target one year before the draft.
“We had him higher than where we took him,” Mahoney said. “He’s not the biggest player, but he plays big. He could really skate, has exceptional confidence with the puck. I think that really came through in the world junior tournament. In all honesty, he played even better than I thought he would.”
As far as when Hutson might join the Capitals, Mahoney said that’s up to the Boston University star. If he shows the right trajectory, he could force Washington’s hand in getting him to the NHL sooner than later.
“He’s on the right path. Next year, we’ll see where he’s at. My advice to them is always make it hard on the coaches or make it hard on the development team,” Mahoney said.
In the 2023 NHL draft, the Capitals held the eighth overall pick. They watched the expected top picks come off the board — Connor Bedard to Chicago, Leo Carlsson to Anaheim, Adam Fantilli to Columbus and so on — but as the first round continued, there wasn’t a chance that Russian star Matvei Michkov would still been available at No. 8.
The Philadelphia Flyers drafted Michkov at No. 7, then the Capitals selected Leonard of the U.S. National Team Development Program at No. 8.
Would Washington have gone Michkov over Leonard at No. 8? Mahoney wouldn’t say, but admitted that he had to pace himself walking to the podium before enthusiastically making Leonard the pick.
“I wanted to run up there, but I thought that would be a little bit immature in my part,” he said.
Leonard was tied for second in points at World Juniors (10), up from his six points in seven games during Team USA’s 2024 gold medal win. He captained the team to gold, something that wasn’t lost on the Capitals.
“I’m quite sure someday here in the future that not only Ryan will be contributing in a major way to the Capitals, but I could see him taking on a leadership role also,” Mahoney said.
Leonard had 60 points in 41 games at Boston College last season, starring on a line with Will Smith, now with the San Jose Sharks, and Gabe Perreault, a top New York Rangers‘ prospect. The winger’s 31 goals set a freshman record at the school. He decided not to join the Capitals last season, opting to return with Perreault to BC this season, but Mahoney said the team wants to see him in Washington “sooner than later.”
If Leonard makes the leap from Boston College to the Capitals, it would make him a rarity in the team’s prospect pipeline. Only a handful of players — forward Tom Wilson being one of them — have joined the NHL without getting considerable seasoning in the AHL with the Hershey Bears. On the current roster, center Aliaksei Protas spent parts of three seasons with the Bears, while center Connor McMichael played 90 games in Hershey, Pennsylvania.
Having a team in Hershey gives Washington a geographic advantage, in part due to the short travel time for call-ups but also enabling Capitals executives to be more hands-on with prospects. Since Ovechkin joined the Capitals, the Bears have won the AHL Calder Cup five times, including back-to-back championships in the past two seasons under head coach Todd Nelson. That continued success is vital to player development, according to Patrick.
“Having good teams in Hershey is important because it puts players into bigger game environments, playing important games against good teams,” he said. “I think all those situations are huge for their development and I think it really helps them when they get into the NHL. Players need to find ways to be mentally ready to play those games. And I think going through that process in Hershey really helps.”
Among the players who are percolating in the Capitals’ pipeline: Defenseman Vincent Iorio (55th overall in 2021), forward Ivan Miroshnichenko (20th overall in 2022) and center Hendrix Lapierre (22nd in 2020). Among those on the way: Wingers Andrew Cristall of the WHL’s Spokane Chiefs (40th overall in 2023) and Terik Parascak of the Prince George Cougars (17th overall, 2024), as well as Hutson.
“We’re really patient with our prospects, never been ones to rush players into the NHL and it’s worked out really well for us. We’ve got really good coaches down there [in Hershey],” said Mahoney, who also credits former NHL players such as Brooks Orpik and Jim Slater in the team’s player development program.
“We do everything we can on our end to help them. We just need them to do everything on their end. And we feel really good about what we have coming in our pipeline,” he said.
A promise made was a promise kept for the Capitals. Alex Ovechkin is thriving on a Stanley Cup contender, as the gap between his goal total and Gretzky’s seemingly unbreakable record continues to narrow. And he’s surrounded by players, with more on the way, who indicate there might be life after Ovi in Washington.
The Washington Capitals have undergone a stunning retooling process centered around their longtime captain, Alex Ovechkin. With the departure of key players like Braden Holtby and T.J. Oshie, the team has had to make strategic moves to maintain their competitive edge.One of the most significant changes has been the influx of younger talent onto the roster. Players like Tom Wilson, Jakub Vrana, and Ilya Samsonov have all stepped up to fill the void left by departing veterans. These young players bring a new energy and skill set to the team, complementing Ovechkin’s leadership and scoring prowess.
Additionally, the Capitals have made savvy moves in the free-agent market to bolster their roster. Acquiring players like Justin Schultz and Trevor van Riemsdyk has added depth and experience to the team, providing valuable support for Ovechkin and the rest of the core group.
Overall, the Capitals’ retooling process has been a success so far, as they continue to be a competitive force in the NHL. With Ovechkin leading the way and a mix of young talent and experienced veterans supporting him, the Capitals look poised to make another deep playoff run in the near future.
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Alex Ovechkin Sets Record, Approaching Wayne Gretzky’s 894-Goal Mark
Alex Ovechkin celebrates his 21st goal of the year after the Washington Capitals beat the Ottawa … [+]
It’s official. No NHL scorer has tormented more goaltenders than Alex Ovechkin.
On Thursday night in Ottawa, Ovechkin beat Leevi Merilainen with a snap shot from the left face-off circle at 3:07 of overtime, giving the Washington Capitals a 1-0 win over the Ottawa Senators.
Per ESPN, the 22-year-old rookie Meralainen is the 179th goalie that Ovechkin has scored on in his NHL career. That’s a new record for the most different goalies that one player has scored on, one ahead of Jaromir Jagr.
The NHL has assembled a video compilation of all 179 goalies. If you’re going to watch it, do it on your lunch hour: it’s more than 47 minutes long.
Jagr, now 52, sits fourth on the all-time goal-scoring list with 766 goals in 1,733 career NHL games. He’ll be a Hockey Hall of Famer once he finally wraps up his playing career. He’s now in his eighth year playing for the Kladno Knights, the team he owns in his native Czechia. This year, he has four goals and nine points in 24 games.
At 39, Ovechkin is now at 874 NHL goals in 1,455 games. He needs 20 more to match Wayne Gretzky’s all-time record of 894, and 21 to set a new standard.
Not even the most serious injury of Ovechkin’s career has derailed the quest that the NHL has dubbed ‘The Gr8 Chase.’ Though he missed 16 games over more than five weeks with a fractured left fibula, the Washington Capitals captain re-joined his team’s lineup ahead of schedule, right after the league’s Christmas holiday break.
He now has six goals in 11 games since his return, a scoring rate of 0.55 goals per game.
Thursday’s win came in the Capitals’ 45th game of the season, so they have 37 to go this year.
If Ovechkin maintains his post-injury pace through the rest of the year, he’d score another 20. That would tie Gretzky and make his first goal of the 2025-26 season the record-breaker.
But don’t rule out the prospect of him picking up the pace.
“I think we really have to be careful to judge, just coming back from the injury,” said Capitals coach Spencer Carbery earlier this week. “It’s harder than I think people may realize, just because the rest of the league and the rest of the players are in mid-season form right now. And to miss a month and then try to get back up and running at 39 is a lot easier said than done.
“So, I think if you look into the numbers and that stuff, that’s probably what you’re seeing is him getting back up to speed. It’s going to take some time. We know that. I know that. He probably wants that to be rushed as we do as well, but it’s going to take some time.”
Historically, Ovechkin also tends to heat up in the second half. And his 21 goals in 29 total games this season are a scoring rate of .724 goals per game — which dramatically eclipses his impressive career scoring rate of .600.
Barring further injuries, Ovechkin’s career-average rate would put him on pace to score No. 895 in the Capitals’ 80th game of the season, when they host the Columbus Blue Jackets for their last home game of the year on April 13.
If he can stay at .724 goals a game, he’d break the record in Washington’s 74th game of the year — in Boston on April 1.
As the record draws closer, there’s one other key stat to watch.
Gretzky’s 894 goals came in 1,487 games. If Ovechkin can hit 895 in his next 32 games or fewer, he would also beat The Great One’s career scoring pace.
Ovechkin already holds the records for most power-play goals (317), most shots (6,732) and most empty-net goals (61). But anyone who feels that the empty-net tallies sully his record chase can rest easy. He’s just five ahead of Gretzky, who sits second with 56. The differential is not even one percent of the final total.
Thursday’s tally was also the 134th game-winning goal of Ovechkin’s career. That moves him within one of the all-time record of 135, held by Jagr.
With the win on Thursday, the Capitals maintain first place in the NHL’s Eastern Conference with a record of 30-10-5, and lead the league with a .722 points percentage.
The Gr8 Chase continues Saturday, when the Capitals host Sidney Crosby and the Pittsburgh Penguins.
In a historic moment for the NHL, Alex Ovechkin has set a new record with his 735th career goal, putting him one step closer to Wayne Gretzky’s all-time record of 894 goals. Ovechkin, who currently plays for the Washington Capitals, has been a dominant force on the ice for years and shows no signs of slowing down.Fans and analysts alike are in awe of Ovechkin’s incredible skill and determination, as he continues to light up the scoreboard game after game. With each goal he scores, he inches closer to Gretzky’s legendary record, a feat that many thought would never be surpassed.
As Ovechkin approaches this historic milestone, hockey fans around the world are eagerly watching and cheering him on. Will he be able to surpass Gretzky’s record and etch his name in the history books as one of the greatest goal scorers of all time? Only time will tell, but one thing is for sure – Ovechkin’s talent and passion for the game are truly unmatched.
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Oilers Make Gesture, Let Ovechkin Try On Gretzky’s Game-Used Gear As Capitals Captain Chases All-Time Goals Record
As Alex Ovechkin chases down Wayne Gretzky’s all-time NHL goals record, the Edmonton Oilers made quite a gesture toward the Washington Capitals captain.
Ovechkin and the Capitals are visiting Edmonton for the first game of a lengthy Canadian road swing, and with No. 8 in town, the Oilers opened the glass cases at the Oilers Hall of Fame in Rogers Place, which features Gretzky’s game-used gear from his time with Edmonton. There, they let Ovechkin try on Gretzky’s gloves and hold his stick and jersey.
Ovechkin has long respected Gretzky as he continues his quest toward the record once thought to be impossible, and the 39-year-old also has a game-used stick from Gretzky in his evergrowing collection. He was gifted Gretzky’s stick in 2018 after meeting “The Great One’s” condition of winning a Stanley Cup first.
Gretzky played with Edmonton from 1979 to 1988, winning four Stanley Cups and scoring 583 of his 894 career goals. He was then traded to the Los Angeles Kings and also had stints with the St. Louis Blues and New York Rangers before hanging up the skates in 1999.
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Ovechkin currently sits 21 goals away from breaking Gretzky’s all-time goals record. He is on pace to break that record in April, and if he keeps up that current scoring pace, he’ll also hit 900 career NHL goals, becoming the only NHL player in history to reach that mark.
Through 30 games this season, Ovechkin has 21 goals. He became the second player in NHL history to record 20 consecutive 20-goal seasons, and he also recently broke the record for the most goaltenders scored on all time.
In a touching display of sportsmanship and respect for hockey history, the Edmonton Oilers recently allowed Washington Capitals captain Alex Ovechkin to try on Wayne Gretzky’s game-used gear as he chases the all-time goals record.Ovechkin, who is currently in pursuit of Gretzky’s record of 894 career goals, was given the opportunity to don the Great One’s equipment during a recent visit to Edmonton. The gesture was a nod to Gretzky’s legendary career and the impact he had on the sport of hockey.
The Capitals star, known for his scoring prowess and powerful shot, looked right at home in the iconic gear as he took to the ice for a practice session. The moment was a reminder of the history and tradition of the game, as well as the camaraderie and mutual respect among players.
As Ovechkin continues his quest to etch his name in the record books, moments like these serve as a reminder of the connection between past and present in the world of hockey. The Oilers’ gesture was a class act, showcasing the spirit of sportsmanship and admiration for those who came before.
Whether Ovechkin ultimately surpasses Gretzky’s record or not, the moment of trying on the Great One’s gear will surely be a cherished memory for the Capitals captain and a symbol of the bond shared by players across generations.
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The Sidney Crosby-Alexander Ovechkin rivalry was born 20 years ago in Grand Forks – Grand Forks Herald
GRAND FORKS — The NHL was in a bitter lockout 20 years ago, one that eventually led to the cancellation of the entire season.
It was perfect timing for Grand Forks and Thief River Falls.
The World Junior Championship was in town that year. The lockout meant all eligible players would play in the event.
Normally, a handful of the top under-20 players in the world are already in the NHL and don’t get released to play in the World Juniors.
But in 2004, there was no NHL and it led to perhaps the most talent-laden World Junior Championship of all time.
The previous summer’s No. 1 and No. 2 overall picks — Alexander Ovechkin and Evgeni Malkin — wouldn’t have played in the World Juniors in a normal year. They’d have been in the NHL. But due to the lockout, they were in Grand Forks and Thief River Falls.
Twenty years ago Saturday, two of the NHL’s all-time greats played against each other for the first time in Ralph Engelstad Arena.
Ovechkin and Team Russia played Sidney Crosby and Team Canada in the gold-medal game.
Canada, which boasted arguably the greatest junior hockey team ever assembled, beat Russia 6-1.
Crosby had an assist and finished the tournament as one of the top-10 scorers. Ovechkin suffered a shoulder injury on a hit by Canada’s Dion Phaneuf in the first period and was held without a point. Ovechkin still tied for the tournament lead in goals.
Canada’s Sidney Crosby leaps into the arms of teammate Patrice Bergeron after Canada scored its fourth goal against Russia in the 2004-05 World Junior Championship gold-medal game in Ralph Engelstad Arena. Jackie Lorentz / Grand Forks Herald
Crosby and Ovechkin entered the NHL together the following year.
They have gone on to be two of the sport’s all-time greats.
Crosby has captained the Pittsburgh Penguins to three Stanley Cups. He ranks 10th all-time in points, about to pass Joe Sakic.
Ovechkin captained the Washington Capitals to their first Stanley Cup. He’s 24 goals away from breaking the all-time record, which belongs to Wayne Gretzky, who attended the gold-medal game in Ralph Engelstad Arena.
Crosby and Ovechkin have gone head-to-head in the Stanley Cup Playoffs four times. Each time, the winner of that series went on to win the Stanley Cup. It was Pittsburgh in 2009, 2016 and 2017. It was Washington in 2018.
Crosby and Ovechkin also played against each other in one of the earliest NHL Winter Classics in 2011 at Heinz Field.
Team Canada’s Sidney Crosby signs an autograph for fan Matt Perantinos after a practice at Gambucci Arena. Eric Hylden / Grand Forks Herald
Crosby had quite a bit of help on Team Canada that year.
Only two players on Canada’s roster — forward Stephen Dixon and backup goalie Rejean Beauchemin — did not play in the NHL.
Nearly half of Canada’s roster — nine of 22 players — reached the 1,000-game mark in the NHL.
On the list: Corey Perry (1,349 and counting), Jeff Carter (1,321 and counting), Crosby (1,312 and counting), Patrice Bergeron (1,294), Ryan Getzlaf (1,157), Brent Seabrook (1,114), Dion Phaneuf (1,048), Shea Weber (1,038) and Andrew Ladd (1,001).
Brayden Coburn (983) narrowly missed the 1,000-game mark.
Two-time Stanley Cup champion and NHL All-Star Mike Richards (749 NHL games) was Canada’s captain.
Seabrook (three), Crosby (three), Carter (two), Richards (two), Bergeron, Getzlaf and Perry all won Stanley Cups.
Russia’s Alexander Ovechkin waves to the crowd in Ralph Engelstad Arena after being named the tournament’s best forward. Eric Hylden / Grand Forks Herald
Ovechkin (1,448 NHL games and counting) and Malkin (1,185 and counting) led the Russians. Both went on to win NHL MVP awards. Alexander Radukov (524) was the next most-prominent NHL player.
There were plenty of other notable players across other teams.
Czechia, which beat the Americans in overtime for the bronze medal, had Stanley Cup champion David Krejci (1,032), Michael Frolik (858) and Roman Polak (806).
The Americans had Ryan Suter (1,484 and counting), Phil Kessel (1,286), Alex Goligoski (1,078) and Drew Stafford (841).
Finland had Vezina Trophy winner and Stanley Cup champion Tuukka Rask. Germany had William Jennings Trophy winner Thomas Greiss. Slovakia had Andrej Meszaros (645) and two-time Willing Jennings Trophy winner Jaroslav Halak. Sweden had Loui Eriksson (1,050) and Anton Stralman (983).
Russia’s Alexander Ovechkin celebrates during the 2004-05 World Junior Championship in Ralph Engelstad Arena in Grand Forks. Jackie Lorentz / Grand Forks Herald
Bergeron, who won the Selke Trophy for the NHL’s best defensive forward a record six times, was named tournament MVP.
The directorate awards for the best at each position went to Ovechkin (forward), Phaneuf (defenseman) and Marek Schwarz (goaltender). Schwarz played six NHL games for the St. Louis Blues.
The all-star team featured Ovechkin, Bergeron, Carter, Phaneuf, Suter and Schwarz.
Leading scorers, 2004-05 World Juniors
Patrice Bergeron, Canada, 5-8—13
Ryan Getzlaf, Canada, 3-9—12
Alexander Ovechkin, Russia, 7-4—11
Jeff Carter, Canada, 7-3—10
Rostislav Olesz, Czechia, 7-3—10
Evgeni Malkin, Russia, 3-7—10
Sidney Crosby, Canada, 6-3—9
Drew Stafford, USA, 5-4—9Russia’s Alexander Ovechkin plays against Team Sweden in an exhibition at the East Grand Forks Civic Center in December 2004. Herald file photo
The Sidney Crosby-Alexander Ovechkin rivalry was born 20 years ago in Grand Forks – Grand Forks HeraldIt’s hard to believe, but it has been two decades since two of the greatest hockey players of our generation first faced off against each other in Grand Forks, North Dakota. Sidney Crosby and Alexander Ovechkin were just teenagers at the time, but even then, their talent and competitive spirit were undeniable.
The 2004 World Junior Championships in Grand Forks was the stage for their first showdown, and it was a game that would set the tone for the epic rivalry that would unfold over the years. Crosby, representing Team Canada, and Ovechkin, playing for Team Russia, both put on a show for the fans in attendance, displaying the skills and determination that would come to define their careers.
Since that fateful meeting in Grand Forks, Crosby and Ovechkin have gone on to become two of the greatest players in NHL history, with numerous awards, records, and championships between them. Their rivalry has provided hockey fans with countless memorable moments, from intense playoff battles to highlight-reel goals.
As we look back on the last 20 years, it’s clear that the Crosby-Ovechkin rivalry has been one for the ages, and it all started right here in Grand Forks. Here’s to many more years of thrilling matchups between these two legends of the game.
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As Alex Ovechkin began ramping up toward resuming his pursuit of the NHL’s all-time goals record, some of his Washington Capitals teammates found themselves running the numbers.
Ovechkin needs 27 goals to pass Wayne Gretzky’s career total, and he’s got 48 games left on the Capitals’ schedule to try to get it done this season, starting with Saturday’s visit to Toronto, which the team announced will mark his return.
That equates to a clip of 0.56 goals per game — unquestionably a high bar, particularly for a 39-year-old coming off the longest injury absence of his career.
But it’s not an impossible one to clear.
Ovechkin has scored at a pace beyond that in 14 of his 19 previous NHL seasons, and he was off to the best goal-scoring start of his entire career when he suffered a broken left fibula during an accidental collision with Utah’s Jack McBain in November.
So even with 16 games lost to injury, the Capitals aren’t ruling out a run at the record before the end of 2024-25.
“The pace he was going at, I feel like everything’s in play,” Dylan Strome told The Athletic recently. “This guy does things that you can only imagine.”
“With him, I feel like nothing’s impossible,” added defenseman Rasmus Sandin.
Strome has drawn an assist on 12 of the 15 goals Ovechkin has scored this season. What he noticed was how confident the Capitals captain seemed just before suffering the injury — scoring the 32nd hat trick of his career in Vegas on Nov. 17 and adding two more goals the following night in Utah before getting knocked out of the game by a third-period collision with McBain.
“He had 15 (goals) in 18 (games) and he probably would have had 16 in 18 in that game that he got hurt in,” said Strome.
Ovechkin’s scoring surge saw him become the first NHL player aged 39 or older to score 11 goals in a 10-game span.
It also ramped up the anticipation for his pursuit of Gretzky’s all-time record.
Strome is in his third season with the Capitals and was there the night Ovechkin joined Gretzky and Gordie Howe as the only players in NHL history to hit the 800-goal mark in December 2022, but he said the excitement around Ovechkin’s scoring exploits reached a new level inside the Capitals dressing room this season.
“I’ve noticed a huge difference even compared to last year,” Strome said. “Just really every goal, everyone’s talking about it. At the beginning (of the season) everyone didn’t know if there was going to be a chance to break it this year, and then he started to score and score and score, so then it was like ‘OK, he’s definitely going to break it this year.’ Then he gets hurt.
“So now it’s back to the waiting game. Everyone’s excited, you can tell. When he scores in the road arenas, the place is loud. Everyone wants to see him score, so it’s a cool thing to be a part of and it’s exciting.”
The Capitals have been one of the most pleasant surprises of this season. They managed to go 10-5-1 while Ovechkin was out of the lineup and sit atop the Eastern Conference standings in points percentage (.706).
Welcoming him back to enter the second half will be a shot in the arm, according to head coach Spencer Carbery.
“There is a void with your captain and a personality like Alex Ovechkin not being on the bus, not being in the locker room, not being at morning skates, not being in the meetings,” Carbery said earlier this month. “I can tell you for sure there will be a jolt in energy to our group when (he returns).”
The possibility of him chasing down one of the sport’s most glamorous records is an added bonus.
Ovechkin’s start was so strong that it necessitated a discussion at the NHL’s Board of Governors meetings earlier this month. The league has started to plan for how it will cover and celebrate the milestone in the event that Ovechkin can match Gretzky’s 894 career goals before the end of the season.
“He’s been tremendous this year and, listen, I know how hard it is at that age,” Gretzky said. “It gets tougher and tougher, but he’s hung in there and he’s a trooper. (The goal chase is) good for the sport, it’s great for the game, and hopefully I’m there to shake his hand the night he breaks the record.”
Gretzky has already agreed to join NHL commissioner Gary Bettman on the road to be there in person once Ovechkin gets within striking distance of the record. And teammates will be doing everything in their power to help Ovechkin get there before the playoffs.
“I wouldn’t put it past him to at least be really close to the record,” Strome said. “I feel like if he’s that close, it’s going to happen at the end of this year.
“I hope.”
(Photo: Patrick Smith / Getty Images)
With the NHL season in full swing, the question on many hockey fans’ minds is whether or not Washington Capitals star Alex Ovechkin can catch Wayne Gretzky’s all-time goal scoring record this year. Ovechkin, who recently returned to the Capitals after missing time due to injury, has been on a tear since his comeback, scoring goals at a blistering pace.Teammates and coaches of Ovechkin have expressed confidence in his ability to make a push for Gretzky’s record this season. “Everything’s in play,” said one teammate, highlighting Ovechkin’s scoring prowess and determination to be the best.
Gretzky’s record of 894 goals has stood for decades, but Ovechkin has been steadily climbing the ranks and is currently sitting at 750 goals. With each goal he scores, the possibility of catching Gretzky becomes more and more realistic.
As Ovechkin continues to light the lamp and lead the Capitals on their quest for a Stanley Cup, fans will be eagerly watching to see if he can make history this season. Will he surpass Gretzky’s record? Only time will tell, but one thing is for certain – Ovechkin’s return has injected new life into the race for the all-time goal scoring title.
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Ovechkin on track to break Gretzky’s NHL career goals record – NBC4 Washington
Alex Ovechkin of the Washington Capitals is closing in on the NHL career goals record of 894 held by Wayne Gretzky.
Ovechkin has 871 goals and needs 24 to set a new record.
Ovechkin entered the season 42 short of breaking a record by “The Great One” that long seemed unapproachable. The 39-year-old Russian is in his 20th NHL season and was on pace to get to 895 in February before breaking his left leg in a shin-on-shin collision in November. He missed 16 games but resumed his pursuit at Toronto in the Capitals’ first game out of the Christmas break.
Alex Ovechkin’s last goal scored
Ovechkin scored a power-play goal in the second period Thursday night against Minnesota, his 28th in 47 games against Marc-Andre Fleury. That’s the most of any of the goaltenders Ovechkin has scored on.
What records does Ovechkin already have?
Ovechkin already owns the NHL records for power-play goals and shots on goal.
He also has 132 game-winning goals, four away from breaking Jaromir Jagr’s mark (135). Ovechkin has scored on 178 different goaltenders and counting, tying Jagr. Ovechkin has 177 multi-goal games, second to Gretzky (189).
Ovechkin earlier this season became the 60th player to record 700 career assists. He joined Gretzky, Gordie Howe, Jagr, Marcel Dionne and Phil Esposito as the only players with 700 goals and 700 assists.
Who are the NHL’s leading scorers?
Ovechkin, after climbing past Mike Gartner (708), Esposito (717), Dionne (731), Brett Hull (741) and Jagr (766), scored goal No. 802 on Dec. 23, 2022, to move into second all time behind Gretzky (894).
Who previously held the career goals record?
Gretzky has held the record since scoring his 802nd goal on March 23, 1994, to pass Howe. He added 92 more before retiring in 1999 after a total of 1,487 games over 20 seasons.
Gretzky holds 55 NHL records and even if his goals mark falls to Ovechkin — which he has said he is excited about — two seem truly untouchable: 2,857 total points and 1,963 assists, which is more than anyone else has in goals and assists combined.
In a historic pursuit of greatness, Alexander Ovechkin is on track to break Wayne Gretzky’s NHL career goals record. With each goal he scores, Ovechkin inches closer to etching his name in the record books as the greatest goal scorer of all time.Ovechkin, who currently plays for the Washington Capitals, has already solidified himself as one of the greatest players in NHL history. His lethal shot, physicality, and unwavering determination have made him a force to be reckoned with on the ice.
Gretzky’s record of 894 career goals has stood for decades as the benchmark for greatness in the NHL. But Ovechkin, with his relentless scoring prowess, is poised to surpass that milestone and etch his name in hockey history.
As Ovechkin continues to light the lamp and rack up goals, fans and analysts alike are eagerly watching to see if he can achieve the seemingly impossible feat of breaking Gretzky’s record. With each goal, Ovechkin moves one step closer to hockey immortality.
Only time will tell if Ovechkin can achieve this remarkable feat, but one thing is certain – he is a player who has the talent, drive, and determination to make history. Stay tuned as Ovechkin continues his quest to break Gretzky’s NHL career goals record.
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#Ovechkin #track #break #Gretzkys #NHL #career #goals #record #NBC4 #WashingtonCapitals have retooled roster on fly while Ovechkin closes in on Gretzky
Ovechkin’s age appeared to be catching up to him when he was held without a point in the four-game loss to the Rangers in the playoffs last season. Washington had barely qualified for the postseason as the second wild card in the Eastern Conference and some wondered if it were his last hurrah in the postseason.
Though injuries, particularly on defense, hampered the Capitals against the Rangers, their management — headed by former GM and still president of hockey operations Brian MacLellan and Patrick, promoted from assistant GM to GM on July 8 — was keenly aware they needed to continue revamping the roster regardless of the outcome of the series.
The process actually began following a first-round loss to the Florida Panthers in the 2022 playoffs. With the remaining core of the 2018 Stanley Cup championship team aging, Washington knew it needed to change its approach.
“We kind of said if there’s younger players available, we should be taking a harder look at it,” Patrick said. “In the past, it was more adding veteran pieces to a younger group, and I think it became the opposite of that.”
When Dylan Strome, who was 25 at the time, became an unrestricted free agent after he wasn’t given a qualifying offer by the Chicago Blackhawks, the Capitals signed him to a one-year, $3.5 million contract on July 14, 2022, and then a five-year, $25 million contract on Feb. 3, 2023 to lock him up long term. Strome has developed into a first-line center, succeeding Nicklas Backstrom, who stopped playing last season because of recurring issues with his hip, and leads Washington with 41 points (11 goals, 30 assists) in 38 games this season.
Next came defenseman Rasmus Sandin, who was 22 when he was acquired in a trade with the Toronto Maple Leafs on Feb. 28, 2023. The price for Sandin, who plays regularly in the Capitals top four, was defenseman Erik Gustafsson, who was a pending unrestricted free agent, and the Boston Bruins’ first-round pick in the 2023 NHL Draft, which they had acquired as part of the return for trading defenseman Dmitry Orlov and forward Garnet Hathaway, each potential UFAs.
“You sometimes think you don’t get good young players unless you’re drafting high,” Patrick said, “But as you can see with guys like that, there are reasons why teams are looking to move guys like that, and we were able to take advantage of that and hopefully will continue to do that in that future.”
The Washington Capitals have been making moves left and right to retool their roster on the fly as they chase another Stanley Cup championship, and all eyes are on captain Alex Ovechkin as he continues to close in on Wayne Gretzky’s all-time goal-scoring record.With key acquisitions like Anthony Mantha and Michael Raffl, the Capitals have added depth and skill to their lineup, giving them a strong chance to make a deep playoff run. Ovechkin, who currently sits just a few goals shy of Gretzky’s record, has been leading the charge on offense and showing no signs of slowing down.
As the regular season winds down and the playoffs loom ahead, the Capitals are a team to watch as they look to make a statement in the postseason. Will Ovechkin finally surpass Gretzky’s record and lead his team to another Stanley Cup victory? Only time will tell, but one thing is for sure – the Capitals are a force to be reckoned with.
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