Pages

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Ovechkin rules Montreal with iron fist


Photo courtesy Washington Post

AO had one "bad" night coming back from All Star hangover and then he showed to the World tonight who he is. I am telling you, this young man is the best hockey player ever. Forget about Gretzky or Mario, he is coming at you at asteroid speed to erase their memory, he is only going to get better.

From yesterday article by Red Ficher, the Gazette: "it happened to Ovechkin because the checking line of Bégin, Tom Kostopoulos and Bryan Smolinski wrapped an iron fist around him."

Not tonight... Habs were good and they were scary good, but Ovechkin was out of this World... He had 5 hits at the beginning of the third, the whole team had 14. His open ice hit on Montreal player (Bégin?) in the first was unbelievable, I bet it will be number one hit on NHL network... he gives and he takes... got hit by Bouillon(?). Bouillon put a shoulder in his face, Ovie all blooded from the hit... He goes out and scores three more!

Un [insert expletives] believable...

Update: According to Caps forum in the interview after the game Ovechkin said his nose was broken after that hit. ("After the game in his interview when he said his nose was broken on that hit I was somehow even MORE impressed with his amazing play tonight")




For the first time in his NHL career Ovechkin leads NHL in scoring/points! He also leads NHL in goals and Power Play goals, but that happened before.

Sidney Crosby would never be able to accomplish it. Maybe secondary assists, yes, but that's about it.


I am going to collect all the newspaper articles about this historic game vs. Montreal in this thread, and I have a feeling it's gonna be a big, big thread. So check it out several times, the updates will be coming.





Tarik El-Bashir, Washington Post, Feb. 2 "Capitals Running Out of Superlatives for Ovechkin"
"It was definitely a special game," said Kolzig, who has played 15 seasons in Washington. "He gets high-sticked. He gets an elbow to the nose. The kid can play through anything. I told him [on the ice after the game] that he's the best player I've ever played with."

Ovechkin was among a handful of a players who opted not to practice, preferring instead to rest up after a physical contest that left his nose slightly off-kilter and his cheek and bottom lip swollen.

"Every game is special for me," he said. "Especially in our situation because we have opportunity to move forward. . . . The fans were excited. The team was excited. I was excited, too."

Boudreau said Ovechkin was angered when he was inadvertently struck on the face by Alex Kovalev's stick in the opening minute, and he fed off that emotion for the remainder of the contest.

"Taking the abuse that he took, and the coverage that he took, it was quite an amazing feat," said Boudreau, who has spent three decades in the game as a player and coach. "He's definitely a unique person and a unique athlete. Every sport has those that rise to the occasion, [New England Patriots quarterback] Tom Brady being the latest. I'm very lucky to get to watch him from the bench every night."

Teammate Nicklas Backstrom paused for a moment and then grinned when asked what it was like to skate alongside Ovechkin.

"He was doing everything in the game," Backstrom said of his close friend and linemate. "He get some hits, a broken nose, and I don't know what else, something in his face. Then he scores four goals and one assist. That's pretty good. He can do everything on his own. He showed that last night. I'm not surprised. It's amazing. It's unbelievable."

Backstrom was the first to greet Ovechkin after he scored the winner with 1 minute 26 seconds remaining in overtime. But he forgot about Ovechkin's nose. Ovechkin tried to avoid Backstrom's shoulder, but couldn't.

"Everybody knew I broke my nose," Ovechkin said. "But somebody hug me, and hit again my nose. It's pretty funny."

Defenseman Jeff Schultz, who set up Ovechkin's winner in the extra session with a deft pass, added, "It was so exciting to be out there and witness it from the ice, with him."

Ovechkin celebrated his career night by meeting Utah Jazz forward Andrei Kirilenko, a fellow Russian and close friend, for dinner downtown. Ovechkin, a big basketball fan, said he planned to attend last night's game between the Jazz and Washington Wizards at Verizon Center for a little fun.

Kolzig cracked that Ovechkin's NBA-size contract extension -- a record 13-year, $124 million deal -- wasn't enough for a player of his ability.

"I was joking around with Ted and George, and I told them, 'You got him at a bargain,' " Kolzig said, referring to owner Ted Leonsis and General Manager George McPhee. "He's just a terrific, terrific player."

From NHL.com Feb 1: "Ovechkin, Dumont and Huet named NHL 'Three Stars' for January"


NEW YORK -- Washington Capitals forward Alex Ovechkin, Nashville Predators forward J.P. Dumont and Montreal Canadiens goaltender Cristobal Huet have been named the NHL's 'Three Stars' for the month of January.

FIRST STAR -- ALEX OVECHKIN, WASHINGTON CAPITALS

Ovechkin led all NHL scorers in January with 22 points (13 goals, 9 assists) in 13 games and recorded a +9 rating as the Capitals won nine games during the month. Ovechkin recorded points in 10 of 13 games, including a four-goal, one-assist effort in the Capitals 5-4 win against Montreal on Jan. 31. The four-goal game was his second of the season (Dec. 29 vs. Ottawa). Ovechkin took over the League lead in points (70) and goals (43) during the month. He has registered points in 32 of his last 36 games, averaging nearly a goal-per game during that stretch (34-20--54).

SECOND STAR -- J.P DUMONT, NASHVILLE PREDATORS

THIRD STAR -- CRISTOBAL HUET, MONTREAL CANADIENS

From AOL Fan House, Feb. 2:
I've been trying to figure out how to describe Alexander Ovechkin's performance tonight and there's really no easy way. First off, the guy went out and scored a hat trick and an assist in the first 48 minutes, single-handedly keeping his team in the game. But what's a great show without an encore? To be a real showman, you have to finish the job. So, in the true spirit of any great performer he comes back and, oh I don't know, scores the game winning goal in overtime. Yup, Ovechkin helped put the Caps in front by a 4-2 margin, and when they couldn't hold that lead, went ahead and buried the Canadiens on his own.

Now don't get me wrong, Ovechkin had a lot of help from his teammates. There were some great passes in there, but when you contribute on the score sheet to each one of your team's five goals, that's saying something. No, wait. That's making a big [bleeping] statement.


Mike Wise, The Washington Post, Feb. 1 "A Night to Remember"

Ovechkin now leads the National Hockey League in scoring with 70 points, and essentially completed a hat trick plus one after he broke his nose for the fifth time in his young career.

"How badly did it hurt?" he was asked of the hit that fractured his schnoz. "It's fifth time broke my nose, so it's okay," he said in the halting English of any young Russian kid happy to come to America and sign a contract for $124 million. "I get used to it."

"It look bigger, yeah?" he added.

"Yeah, it's swollen," a reporter replied.

It is an expressive nose, flattened, expansive. It's as if Ovechkin borrowed it from brawler Carmen Basilio, circa 1950. Or Karl Malden, 1970. Ovie's nose doesn't belong to his face; his face belongs to it.

It was the first time the kid scored more than two goals at home, and the occasion seemed to numb the pain.

"I try it all the time, but today was special day," he said. "I broke my nose, I have stitches, I score four goals."

This was a bit of a character-test game. Montreal, another young team scrapping for a postseason berth, was the perfect measuring stick for Washington. The Canadiens thoroughly beat the Caps on Tuesday night in Montreal, and Ovechkin and every line Boudreau sicced on the Canadiens responded at home 48 hours later.

Who knows where the Caps go from here, but this isn't just a good Washington story; the Caps are clearly becoming one of the best tales in the NHL.

Think about it: Boudreau, who was coaching in Hershey about two months ago, suddenly has taken the wraps off a nearly finished product. He comes along at a time when one of those once-in-a-millennium players has graced his roster, and he's not afraid to tell the kid to shoot from the point and worry about defense later.

"I was blessed to come along at a time when Alex is here," he said last night in the Verizon Center hallway. "It's no different than Glen Sather with a young Wayne Gretzky or Michel Therrien with Sidney Crosby in Pittsburgh. We all watched greatness at different times and you're seeing it now.

"Sometimes good fortune follows you," he said.

And sometimes it rifles in a puck in overtime, sending the crowd into loud and sustained applause, knocking off Montreal and making up for all the depressing losses and the bad remnants from a lockout. It was just one of those majestic nights.


From LCS Hockey by Michael Menser Dell, Feb. 1 "Ovechkin overpowers Habs"

Two days after getting shut out by Cristobal Huet and the Montreal Canadiens, Alexander Ovechkin got a measure of revenge, ripping the Habs for four goals in a 5-4 OT win in Washington. AO's fourth goal came at 3:34 of the extra session, as he converted a sweet Jeff Schultz pass (yes, that Jeff Schultz) behind Huet to send the Caps faithful into hysterics. Ovechkin gave an understated wave to the crowd and calmly skated back to the dressing room, maintaining an air of royal dignity the entire time. Well, not really, but imaginations are fun.

But in case you're wondering, you really can't tell whether Ovechkin just scored his fourth goal in overtime or found an old sock in the dryer. The reactions are pretty much the same. He's an excitable boy. He actually didn't do his trademark leap into the glass, opting instead to make a mad dash to celebrate with his teammates. He then rushed home to have sex with supermodels on large piles of money. And I realize he doesn't need the cash, but Ovechkin is a Windex ad waiting to happen. He spends more time pressed against glass than Darren Pang outside Wayne Gretzky's bedroom window.

It was Ovechkin's second four-goal game of the season, with the first coming December 29 in Ottawa. He now leads the league with 43 goals in 52 games, giving him a commanding 11-goal lead over Daniel Alfredsson and Jarome Iginla in the Richard Trophy race. Ilya Kovalchuk is actually second with 38 goals, but it might be a while before he scores another one. More on that later. But Ovechkin's five-point effort against the Habs gives him a league-leading 70 points, which is two more than Alfredsson and Vincent Lecavalier. With Kid Crosby out of the scoring race, anything's possible, but I'd still give the nod to Vinny in the Art Ross hunt.

Ovechkin is making that contract extension look pretty shrewd. Since signing the massive 13-year, $124-million pact on January 12, the Russian sniper has scored goals in seven of nine contests, collecting 11 goals and 18 points during the nine-game span.

The destruction of Montreal was vintage Ovechkin. He was all over the ice, displaying his power and speed on every shift. His goals ran the gamut of awesomeness, scoring with a wicked one-timer from the left circle, a roof shot in tight, a laser rocket wrister from the slot on the rush, and a nifty tap from the lip of the crease. And when he wasn't lighting the lamp, Ovechkin was lighting up Habs, blasting Francois Bouillon and Steve Begin with thunderous checks.

Ovechkin has single-handedly carried the Caps back into the playoff picture. The Hart Trophy is his to lose.



From Japer's Rink, Feb. 1:
AO leads the League in goals, points, power play goals and shots, is one off the pace in game-winners, gets more ice time than any forward in the League who isn't coached by John Tortorella, is 21st in the NHL in plus-minus, fifth among forwards in hits and ninth in takeaways. He's had a four-goal game in each of the last two months and hasn't gone three games without a goal all season (only thrice has he been held goal-less in back-to-back games).

All the more amazing, with 70 points on the season, he has factored in 45% of the Caps' 154 goals. In other words, teams know that if they can shut down Alex Ovechkin, they can beat the Caps. Easier said than done, of course...



From OnFrozenBlog, Feb. 1:

  • Comcast’s Lisa Hillary asked Ovie if Tuesday night’s disappointment fueled his outburst tonight. Not so much, apparently. “My girlfriend [I knew] was coming,” he said, beaming. “That’s why,” he added chuckling.
  • Olie Kolzig: “I think I might set a record for lowest save percentage with a winning record.”
  • Gabby on Ovie: “He’s an amazing person.”
  • “What was going through your mind when they tied it?” the head coach was asked. “Exactly what was going through my mind was we’ve been up 3-0 four times and they’ve come back to tie it … but we’ve won every game. That’s the first thing I thought of. So I said, we’re, ok!” [press room erupts in laughter]
  • More Gabby: “I thought it was a game we absolutely dominated the first 30, 35 minutes. They only had 9 shots … Coaches have always said get a hit early and get into the game, and he [Ovechkin] loves the challenges and you could see him going after Komisarek more than Komisarek was going at him. That’s a big boy, and when you play as much as Alex does, I mean, it doesn’t seem to tire him, and that’s good for the Capitals.”


By Tarik El-Bashir
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, February 1, 2008;


Alex Ovechkin's night began with him lying face down on the ice after being whacked unintentionally across the face by Alex Kovalev's stick, a blow that opened a wound on the inside of his cheek.

It ended with the Washington Capitals all-star sitting atop the NHL in points for the first time in his stellar three-season career after scoring four goals, including the winner in overtime, to lift the Capitals to 5-4 victory at Verizon Center and strengthen his candidacy for the Hart Trophy, given to the league's MVP.

Along the way, his nose was also broken by Francis Bouillon's shoulder check, and an errant puck left him bleeding on the inside of his lower lip.

"Today was special day," said Ovechkin, who has scored three or more goals four times in his career, but not at home until last night's scintillating performance. "I broke my nose, I have stitches, I score four goals. Everything go to my face. It's the fifth time I broke my nose. It's okay."

"He's an amazing person," Coach Bruce Boudreau said. "Don't get him angry."

His goal in overtime made sure he and his teammates didn't go home that way.

The Capitals took a 4-3 lead into the final minute of play, but Canadiens winger Guillaume Latendresse jammed a loose puck from underneath Washington goalie Olie Kolzig (17 saves) with 33 seconds remaining in regulation to steal a point and force overtime. Montreal had pulled goaltender Cristobal Huet for a sixth attacker.

Ovechkin, however, secured both points in the standings for the Capitals when he fired a rebound past Huet (33 saves) with 1 minute 26 seconds remaining in the extra session. Defenseman Jeff Schultz sent a pass to Ovechkin, who whiffed on the first attempt but got all of the second.

"Ovie plays with an edge, and you know the saying, 'Don't wake up a sleeping giant?' Not saying Ovie sleeps every night, but he threw it into an extra gear" after being slashed by Kovalev, Kolzig said.

"We don't have the consistency of the Detroit Red Wings or anything, but when we put our mind to it and play the way we're supposed to play, we're pretty tough to beat," Boudreau said.

Ovechkin was slashed across the left side of his face by Kovalev's high stick 55 seconds in. He remained on the ice for about a minute but stayed in the game. When he returned to the ice, Ovechkin was angry. The powerful winger, who in addition to being one of the game's most dangerous goal scorers is also one of its best hitters, crushed Montreal's Steve Begin in open ice with a shoulder check. It was the first of Ovechkin's five hits, and it came moments before his first goal.

"Alex's game was excellent," Kozlov said. "Hitting people, passing, scoring. I don't know what other forwards could do that."


PAT HICKEY, The Gazette Published: Friday, February 01, 2008, "Ovechkin buries Canadiens"
It's hard to keep a good man down.

Alexander Ovechkin proved that last night as he led the Washington Capitals to a 5-4 overtime win over the Canadiens.

Ovechkin fell to the ice and lay there after he was hit in the face by an errant high stick wielded by Alex Kovalev during the first minute of the game.

But Ovechkin, who later had his nose bloodied by Francis Bouillon, showed why he's one of the most dangerous - and toughest - players in the National Hockey League as he scored four goals, including the overtime winner at 3:34. Ovechkin, who leads the NHL with 43 goals, also assisted on the Caps' other goal by Viktor Kozlov.

"He was frustrated because we shut him down last game, and we knew he was going to be ready," Canadiens head coach Guy Carbonneau said of Ovechkin. "He made great plays on two of the goals, but we had breakdowns on the other two."

Carbonneau said his players had to be aware of Ovechkin at all times, but that advice went unheeded as the Caps grabbed a 1-0 lead at 13:06 of the opening period.




CBSSports.com: Ovechkin scores four times, including OT, to lead Caps past Habs

WASHINGTON -- The Capitals' Alex Ovechkin broke his nose, needed stitches in his lip after getting hit with a puck and then showed the Montreal Canadiens the true meaning of the word tough.

The battered Ovechkin, who also sported a cut below his eye from a high stick on Tuesday night, scored his fourth goal of the night with 1:26 left in overtime to give the Washington Capitals a 5-4 victory against the Canadiens on Thursday night.

Ovechkin tied career highs with four goals and five points, but the last one was the biggest. He took a crossing pass from Jeff Schultz and beat Montreal goalie Cristobal Huet from in front for the overtime goal.

"Today was a special day," Ovechkin said with a smile. "I broke my nose, have stitches (and) score four goals. Everything (went) to my face."

He broke his nose when he was sent hard into the boards by Montreal defenseman Francis Bouillon.

Ovechkin's fourth career hat trick was his first at home. It was Ovechkin's second career four-goal and five-point game -- he also did it Dec. 29 at Ottawa. Ovechkin leads the NHL with 43 goals and took over the points lead with 70. It's the first time he has been the league leader in scoring.

"We scored five, and he was in on all five," Washington coach Bruce Boudreau said. "So, how can you say enough about him? He's an amazing person."

"The way Ovie scored the goals today, he's pretty amazing," linemate Kozlov said. "Alex's game is excellent, excellent. Hitting people, passing, scoring. I don't know what else forwards could do."

"In the third period, we came back again, but Ovechkin was too strong," said Montreal coach Guy Carbonneau.


From DC Pro Sports "Alexander the Great Gets Revenge"
The win was absolutely critical for the Capitals give that Carolina defeated Toronto 3-2 in OT and the NY Rangers defeating Philadelphia 4-0.

The Caps remain 3 points behind Carolina for the Southeast division lead and 3 points behind the Rangers for the 8th playoff spot.

With Ovechkin’s 4 goals, he now has 43 goals on the season, now leading the NHL overall by 5. BUT, even further, Ovechkin took the NHL overall lead in points tonight with 70 points, 2 more than Vincent Lecavalier.

Player of the game: Alexander Ovechkin, 4 Goals, 1 Assist, 5 Points, +4 Rating



From Washington Examiner (AP): Ovechkin lifts the Capitals to 5-4 overtime win over Canadiens
Ovechkin finished with four goals and one assist for five points, but the last one was the biggest. He took a crossing pass from Jeff Schultz and beat Montreal goalie Cristobal Huet from in front for the overtime goal.

It was Ovechkin's second career four-goal and five-point game. He did it on Dec. 29 at Ottawa. Ovechkin came into the game leading the NHL with 39 goals, and third with 65 points, three behind Daniel Alfredsson of Ottawa and two behind Tampa Bay's Vincent Lecavalier.

Ovechkin was one of several Capitals who were very aggressive on the ice from start to finish as Washington was apparently angered by how the Canadiens tried to score in the final minute of Tuesday's game in Montreal despite having a four-goal lead.

The All-Star scored Washington's first, third, fourth and fifth goals. He also assisted on Viktor Kozlov's goal. Kozlov finished with a goal and two assists.



Les Glorieux | MVN By Ryan Szporer: Habs drop overtime decision to Alexander Ovechkin (and only Alexander Ovechkin)
Saying Ovechkin was the difference in this game (a 5-4 Montreal OT loss to Washington on the road) is like saying Osama bin Laden had a little to do with 9/11.

I mean, he carried the Caps in this one. On his back, on his shoulders, right to left, front to back, to and fro, any which way you like, Ovechkin was there at every single turn…like in OT for example, when he scored the game-winning goal, taking a Jeff Schultz pass from the other side of the crease, him having just received the puck from a pinching Mike Green. Ovechkin got two cracks at the puck (in fact, it’s safe to say Montreal starter Cristobal Huet could have made the save; that is, if he had not been frozen in fearful intimidation of the Gr8 One, tired of having played scapegoat to his freaky antics all night long). On the second whack, Ovechkin won the game for the surging Caps and put an end to an entertaining night of hockey overall.

It’s hard to not give credit where credit is due. I mean Ovechkin not only rocked Montreal’s boat. He overturned it completely time and again on this night. He first got Washington on the board (a one-timer from Milan Jurcina in the first period). He gave Washington a seemingly unsurmountable 3-0 lead (in close on Huet, in the second period, care of a between-the-legs-of-Roman-Hamrlik pass from Viktor Kozlov) and gave them a 4-2 lead (a super-amazing, off-the-wall, incredible, insert-next-adjective-here shot that cleanly beat a screened-by-Mark-Streit Huet top corner in the third period) just as Montreal had gotten back in the game. So, to conclude, Ovechkin=amazing. Montreal=less so.

...You have to expect that tomorrow morning, though, everyone will be talking about how good Ovechkin would look in Habs jersey.

Habs’ player of the game: Guillaume Latendresse; Two goals, one assist…His star has been stuck in neutral for some time, but it rose a whole lot tonight. His future is now looking the brightest it ever has.

Habs’ goat of the game: Cristobal Huet; He played well enough, but he screwed up on Ovechkin’s game-winner. Not to sound greedy, but the Habs definitely could have won in a shootout against an aging Olaf Kolzig. If only they could have gotten there, though.

Caps’ player of the game: Do you need to ask? Seriously, man. Don’t be clueless.

Caps’ goat of the game: Olaf Kolzig; I keep asking, but no one ever answers me…didn’t this dude win the Vezina Trophy one year?





new contract: $124,000,000.00

new haircut: $14.00

broken nose,
stitches,
4 Goals,
1 Assist,
5 Points,
+4 Rating,
making team to win absolutely crucial game by scoring in OT: PRICELESS


Please read continued flow of reaction on this game in "Ovechkin's game the stuff of legend""

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Whew, I am glad for Alex that he didn't sign with Montreal

Just like Victor Fedorov said: I think that the trade to Canada is not good for Ovechkin. There he'll get such a pressure that you won't get in a quiet Washington even in a nightmarish dreams.

One bad night and the vultures are all over...

Here are the headlines from Montreal:

Don't expect Caps' Ovechkin to be great every night.

New contract cranks up pressure. Only ninth time this season superstar has failed to register at least a point

Canadiens clamp down on Caps star.



HERB ZURKOWSKY, The Gazette, Jan. 30:
"I thought he (Ovechkin) was stifled a bit," said Washington coach Bruce Boudreau, 17-9-4 since replacing Glen Hanlon on Nov. 22. "He had a great chance. When a team's checking him tight, he usually puts one in. He hit the post. It was a great shot, but he hit the post.

"They did a great job of containing him. We only had two power plays, and none during the last two periods. That takes away his scoring chances."

Ovechkin, the NHL's scoring leader with 39 goals, was used extensively. He played 22 minutes and nine seconds, more than any Washington player, except defenceman Milan Jurcina. Ovechkin had 21 shifts and registered four shots on net.

While he did strike the post early in the second period, when his team trailed 3-0, it was hardly a vintage performance.

Perhaps that's the problem. The 22-year-old phenom was signed three weeks ago to a 13-year, $124-million U.S. contract extension, adding to the pressure and expectations placed on the first overall draft choice in 2004.

Ovechkin is expected to be brilliant every game, and he wasn't on this night.

The 6-foot-2, 217-pounder is no stranger to physical play. But the Canadiens checked him closely, especially in the opening period, when Steve Bégin, Mike Komisarek and Tom Kostopoulos put a beating on him. Ovechkin had a cut and red welt under his left eye after the game.

"Of course, it's disappointing when you don't play well and you don't win," Ovechkin said. "It's hard to say what beat us. They scored three goals (in the opening 20 minutes, including one while shorthanded). We can't play like this on the power play. We can't make mistakes in our own zone.

"It wasn't our game."

RED FISHER, The Gazette, Jan. 30:
I have never had to buy a ticket to watch hockey's great players. The truly great ones keep you young, but I've got to admit that on some nights I would pay to watch Alexander Ovechkin.

On most nights, he is everything this beautiful game is all about. Spectacular goals. A blur on skates. Never gives an inch. Blessed with a big-time shot. Fearless. Shift in, shift out, he leaves nothing on his plate. And it appears he plays with pure joy.

He is, in every way, what the franchise player should be.

Not last night, folks.

It happens to the best of them - and last night, it happened to Ovechkin because the checking line of Bégin, Tom Kostopoulos and Bryan Smolinski wrapped an iron fist around him.

The Canadiens' high point of the season came Thursday in New Jersey, where they rallied for three goals in the third period en route to a 4-3 win. If you suggested holding The 124 Million Dollar Man pointless was another moment to remember, you'd get no argument from me.


Just one bad night and Montreal media is all over you...

Frankly I was very impressed with Canadiens. They were fast, they outhit Caps which was a big surprise for me after the Caps' physical domination over Leafs. They gave Caps the taste of their own medicine, their forecheck was what BB ordered for Caps. Habs dominated in every aspect of the game not to mention great goaltending from Huet. Now I wouldn't be surprised if they would beat Caps again.

"We have to beat them," Ovechkin said. "We have to learn from our mistakes."

Now it's time for a payback. Let's see how Alex Ovechkin and Caps will respond and what Caps are really worth tomorrow.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

"This is clearly huge"

Thanks to J.P. for discovering this.

From "In Lou We Trust" blog


I was watching NFL Total Access on the NFL Network earlier this evening and for those who have not seen the show, it's a daily show that covers everything that goes on in the NFL.

This is a football program.

At the end of each show, there is a segment called 4 Downs - 4 quick questions about, well, anything (e.g. greatest hitter, movies, who's going to win, etc.) that the co-hosts normally answer. Rich Eisen, the premier host on the NFL Network's main show, brought this up.

Ovechkin's contract extension got attention even on the NFL Network.

This is clearly huge.


It definitely is! Ovechkin gets noticed on NFL network? Impossible.

From Canadian Press, Jan. 29 "Backstrom, Ovechkin combination promises bright future for Capitals"


MONTREAL - When the Washington Capitals come to town, a crowd forms quickly around 22-year-old scoring star Alexander Ovechkin.

Not far away, left in relative peace, sits Nicklas Backstrom, the 20-year-old rookie who picks up many of the assists on Ovechkin's often spectacular goals.

As a duo, they promise to bring misery to NHL goaltenders for many years to come. But for now, Ovechkin is happy to absorb the pressure of expectation and endless media interviews.

"Backie's a great guy," Ovechkin said Tuesday as the Capitals prepared to the play the first of back-to-back games against the Montreal Canadiens. "He's a little shy with you guys, but not us."

"If you see the future, we have great young talent," said Ovechkin. "Like Tampa Bay, they had young guys and they got more experience every year and then they won the Stanley Cup in 2004.

"Every year we'll get stronger and stronger."

"It might be a great offshoot of his development," said Boudreau. "I don't think it's intended, where Alex would say 'don't worry, I'll take all the press.'

"If you want to see Nick, he'll talk to you. But Alex is a bright star and he seems to attract a lot of attention and it's great for Mike Green and Nick because they can come in under the radar and not have to worry about it.

"Alex has been getting this kind of attention since he was 17, so he's used to it. The other two aren't used to it as much, but they'll have to in future years because they'll be a focal point as well."

The security of a 13-year contract did nothing to dull the intensity Ovechkin brings to every game. If anything, it's made him hungrier.

He has piled up goals and been a first-team all-star in each of his first two full NHL seasons, but has yet to play in a post-season game.

"I don't want to play for a no-good team," he said. "I want to win.

"I want to be on a good team like we see right now. We have great young guys. We have great experienced guys. Everything goes up."

Monday, January 28, 2008

Ovechkin in NHL 'Three Stars' for a third time this season

From NHL.COM, Jan. 28:

NEW YORK -- Ottawa Senators right wing Daniel Alfredsson, Washington Capitals left wing Alex Ovechkin and Columbus Blue Jackets goaltender Pascal Leclaire have been named the NHL's 'Three Stars' for the week ending January 27.

FIRST STAR -- DANIEL ALFREDSSON, RW, OTTAWA SENATORS

SECOND STAR -- ALEX OVECHKIN, LW, WASHINGTON CAPITALS

Ovechkin tallied six points (three goals, three assists) in three games as the Capitals posted a 2-1-0 record and moved within one point of the Southeast Division lead. He notched two goals and an assist in a 6-5 shootout victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins Jan. 21, scored one goal in a 3-2 loss to the Toronto Maple Leafs Jan. 23 and recorded assists on both Washington goals in a 2-1 victory over Toronto Jan. 24. Ovechkin entered the All-Star break with a seven-game point streak (7-7--14) and has 25-17--42 and a +11 rating in 29 games since Bruce Boudreau was named head coach.

THIRD STAR -- PASCAL LECLAIRE, G, COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS


Dec. 31
First Star -- Alexander Ovechkin
Second Star -- Jaromir Jagr
Third Star -- Evgeni Nabokov

Oct. 29
First Star -- Jason LaBarbera
Second Star -- Rod Brind'Amour
Third Star -- Alexander Ovechkin

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Sergei and Ksenia Gonchar were busy raising one child when a second one showed up

From Tribune-Review, Jan. 27:

ATLANTA -- Sergei and Ksenia Gonchar were busy raising one child when a second one showed up, fully grown, at their doorstep a year-and-a-half ago.
His name is Evgeni Malkin.

"I never thought it was going to happen, a 20-year-old kid moving into my house," Gonchar says, laughing. "But I guess it's a life full of surprises, and this was one of them."

Malkin, named to the East team as a replacement for injured teammate Sidney Crosby, planned to answer questions in English, but quickly abandoned the idea in the face of a fusillade of inquiries.

He did answer a few in English, though, including this one: "Are you going to hit Ovechkin in the face today?"

"No," Malkin said, laughing.

The question referenced the Penguins' most recent game against the Washington Capitals, when Capitals star Alexander Ovechkin took a run at Malkin and barely missed crushing him. Ovechkin, instead, went flying into the boards.

"We're friends, and it was just a game," Malkin said through an interpreter. "So there's really no personal grudge."

Malkin is greatly indebted to the Gonchars, with whom he plans to live until finding his own place next season. Sergei, Ksenia and their 5-year-old daughter, Natalie, accepted Malkin with open arms last year, after he'd caused quite a stir back home by fleeing his Russian team to join the Penguins.

"(Gonchar) has helped me in everything -- hockey-wise and life-wise," Malkin said through the interpreter. "He's giving me advice constantly. Because of him, I've grown."

At the Gonchar home, Malkin enjoys watching television, playing with Natalie, reading Russian newspapers on the Internet and sending e-mails to friends.

His favorite activity?

"Sleeping," he said in English. "I love sleeping."

Gonchar has only positive reports.

"He helps around the house, and he's fun," Gonchar said. "Quiet, but fun. Sometimes, he'll tell little jokes that come out of nowhere. That's why, I guess, he's staying the second year in a row."

Gonchar, 33, is to Malkin what he is to many of the Penguins' young bucks: a calming influence, on and off the ice. His nickname is "Sarge."

As it turns out, he and Malkin might see some ice together tonight. East coach John Paddock spoke of experimenting with a Russian unit of five, featuring Malkin, Gonchar, Ilya Kovalchuk, Ovechkin and Andrei Markov.

Saturday, January 26, 2008

Ovechkin's interview with SovSport, Jan. 26

SovSport.ru, by Pavel Lysenkov, Jan. 26


Pavel Lysenkov: Congratulations with the victory [over Leafs].
Ovechkin: Thank you, but we were dead tired. It was Johnson who saved us. We were barely moving our feet.

P.L.: Of course, two games in two days.
O.: Usually it's OK. And morning practice is not mandatory, I can rest if I want.

P.L.: A funny story back in Toronto. On Thursday morning skate enforcer Donald Brashear tried your skates and he also put on a smoked visor like yours.
O.: It was my idea, I told him! I said he will be our second Ovie.

P.L.: How about fighting? Does Brashear teach you how to fight?
O.: Not at all. He says, "in case of a conflict skate away, it's not your job".

P.L.: Can you tell about that hit on Malkin? What happened?
O.: I tried to push Malych [Malkin's nickname] to the board, but collided with our player Mike Green. I lost the balance and flew right onto Geno. I did not want to hit him hard. Plus he was skating with his head down.

P.L.: And after the faceoff you almost got into the fight...
O.: In that episode Malkin pushed me first. That's okay, it happens in the game.

P.L.: Surprisingly the team East has 5 Russians and can put Russian Five on ice.
O.: True, Gonchar and Markov in D, and Kovalchuk, Malkin and myself up front. But it's not the fact that they will put us together. And Markov is the starter.

P.L.: It's only for the first faceoff and then they can put you all together.
O.: Maybe… Actually three of us have been in the National team many times, but we've never played together.

P.L.: Will you agree to play on the right so that Kovalchuk will be at his habitual left?
O.: I don't care. I am ready to play as a defenseman if needed!

P.L.: You will probably compete in Breakaway Challenge. Do you already know what you'll do?
O.: Yes, I've got an idea. Will try, but not sure how it will turn out.

P.L.: Something a la Datsyuk?
O.: I don't have such good hands and skating like Datsyuk. You will see… Maybe I'll even fall on ice, who knows...

P.L.: Just like last year in the fastest skater competition?
O.: I had new skates back then.

P.L.: And you skated in the opposite direction.
O.: I'll do the same again. It is more comfortable for me.

P.L.: Are you going to be in the hardest shot competition?
O.: How can one compare my slapshot with Kovalchuk's? His is a howitzer, mine is a slingshot. He has a sharp technique, strong hands. I just shoot and hope for a lucky break.

P.L.: When will you fix your teeth? It's unbecoming, a contract for $124M and no tooth.
O.: I had the crown, but I lost it. I'll make another soon. I will have one like Heatley, no implants. Big chance I'll lose more teeth in my 13 contract years.

P.L.: I was surprised that you have a poster of the Stanley Cup in the locker room. This club has ambitions!
O.: It's been hanging there for a long time to improve the mood of the team.

P.L.: Let me make a picture of you with the poster in the background.
O.: No, it's a bad luck. You will make my picture with the real Stanley Cup in background, if I'll be lucky enough to win it.

P.L.: Ok, what background can you suggest now?
O.: Make a picture of me with the sticks, I am taking the whole dozen to Atlanta.

P.L.: Why so many?
O.: To trade with others, of course! I need to replenish my sticks collection at my home museum.

Ovechkin in 2008 All-Star event


Photo courtesy WashingtonCapitals.com








Kovy and Ovie, no sight of Geno :-(


Great job by Nate Ewell, here are the excerpts from his 2008 All-Star Weekend Blog:


A few things we know, though, after this morning’s practice and media availability. Alex will have a chance to redeem himself after a how’d-that-happen? performance in last year’s fastest skater competition. He’ll skate in tomorrow night’s game alongside Jason Spezza of the Ottawa Senators and Martin St. Louis of the Tampa Bay Lightning. And he occupies an interesting spot in the Eastern Conference locker room.

To Ovechkin’s left is fellow Russian Ilya Kovalchuk, who can certainly show Ovie around the room here in Atlanta. To the right is Philadelphia’s Mike Richards – a player who Ovechkin faced in the World Junior Championship, fought in a preseason game this year and followed in signing a long, long-term contract this season (Richards’ deal is 12 years).


As I said in my previous post, I can bet that Ovechkin will win the Fastest Skater event. He has the fastest acceleration in NHL, and the changes in the Fastest Skater rules will benefit him the most. Before this year that event was more like a power skating competition.

Update from Nate: Saturday, Jan. 26, 2008 - 2 p.m.

Part of it is certainly Sidney Crosby's absence, part of it is his improving command of the English language, and part of it is his Hart Trophy-worthy season, but Alex Ovechkin was easily the star of the show at this morning's media availability.

So much so, in fact, that Alex missed the Eastern Conference team bus back to the hotel. an NHL courtesy car was good enough to give him a ride.

While at the arena he spoke at length with CBC, NHL.com, NHL Radio, TSN, Rogers Sportsnet, Comcast SportsNet, print and electronic media members, Russian reporters and more.

This is sort of the NHL's answer to Super Bowl media day, so there are some off-the-wall outlets as well. They especially enjoy Alex's sense of humor and excitement to be here.

Alex gave the (fairly attractive) MTV reporter a big hug.

The Score, from Canada, sends an off-beat reporter who asked Alex if he hit the town last night. "No, waiting for you," Alex said. "Tonight, you and me, but the cameras can't come."


Update from Nate, Jan. 27, 12:30 p.m.
Sunday, Jan. 27, 2008 - Noon

Alex and Nicklas were up early this morning for another round of photo shoots and interviews, plus one particularly interesting stop.

Both players posed for Macfarlane Toys, which scanned their faces for future collectibles. Todd Macfarlane, the owner (as well as renowned purchaser of Mark McGwire's 70th home run ball), was on hand himself to direct the players, explain the process and snap photos. As the players' faces were scanned, a virtual image appeared on a laptop connected to the scanner.

Both Alex and Nicklas did a series of poses - no expression, determined and smiling. The last might have been the most fun: act as if you've just been handed the Stanley Cup. Caps fans can look forward to those toys coming out someday.


Alyssa Milano's NHL Blog:
So while I’m here, I’m actually looking forward to a few things in particular; the fastest skater, for sure. And of course, the breakaway competition.


...hmmm Ovechkin is in both... :-)





Update from LetsGoKings.com, Jan. 26, YoungStars Transcript - Nicklas Backstrom
Q.: One guy we haven't talked about here that I know has been great through your development as well is Alexander Ovechkin. He's really turned into a team leader. What has he helped you with? You guys are inseparable with the Washington Capitals.
NICKLAS BACKSTROM: Yeah, I mean we're the same age. He'll help me a lot. We are friends and we're talking a lot. I mean, he was in the same situation a few years ago, but he was a little bit better. I mean, he's good, and he's helped me a lot. Talking a lot about his first year and asking him. He's a good help for me.
Q.: Can we assume when you guys go out to dinner on a week night, that Alexander Ovechkin, he's the guy that's buying. He's not making you buy anymore, is he?
NICKLAS BACKSTROM: I don't know, actually. But I hope he's going to pay.
Q.: You got to make sure he's buying you filet mignon or something. Well, best of luck, nick. Enjoy the weekend. It's going to be a lot of fun. Right now you guys are battling for the Southeast Division lead. And perhaps you might find yourselves back in the playoffs there. So best of luck with the Washington Capitals.
NICKLAS BACKSTROM: Thank you so much. Appreciate it.


Update from thrashersprospectsannex.blogspot.com, Jan. 26:

Best dressed would have to go to Ovechkin, in a silvery suit, Dolce & Gabbana belt and patent-leather pointy dress shoes. It was a lot of look for morning, but a little hair gel and he's ready for the red carpet.


Well, the last minute sudden change... At the red carpet they asked Ovie in what events he'd participate and he said, "Hardest shot... maybe breakaway... I don't know, they might change it at the last minute"...

Too bad, I was hoping for him to be in a fastest skater. :-(
From NHL.COM, Jan. 26
ATLANTA (AP) -Alex Ovechkin won the breakaway challenge in the NHL's SuperSkills competition Saturday night, leading the Eastern Conference to a 9-6 victory over the West in the preview to the All-Star game.

Ovechkin's artistry was rewarded by a panel of judges who rewarded creativity over scoring shots.

Atlanta's Ilya Kovalchuk went to his knees for a sliding attempt. Anaheim's Ryan Getzlaf went behind the net before shooting. Washington's Ovechkin bounced the puck off his stick before whiffing on a baseball swing but still earned 32 points.

For his second try, Ovechkin scooped the puck off the ice, flipped it into the air, spun on the ice and took another baseball swing - again missing but again drawing big points from the celebrity panel of former Thrashers captain Scott Mellanby, NBA Hall of Famer Dominique Wilkins of the Atlanta Hawks, actor Taylor Kitsch and broadcaster Bill Clement.


From Detroit Free Press, Jan. 26:
Washington’s Alex Ovechkin was the highlight of Saturday’s SuperSkills competition at Philips Arena, getting into the breakaway challenge with baseball-swing goals, taken against Red Wings goaltender Chris Osgood.

Ovechkin won the challenge by earning 60 points from a four-man panel of judges – and impressed Osgood.

As he approached the net Ovechkin flipped the puck onto his stick, bounced it, and then attempted to knock it out of mid-air. He didn’t get any goals, but that hardly mattered.

“He was going for style points and he had some great moves,” Osgood said. “I said I wasn’t going to come out and poke-check him or anything that wouldn’t allow him to do it. I wasn’t trying to take away his speed or anything. I was just going to try if he shoots it on net to stop it. I was going to let him do whatever else he wanted to do.

“It almost has to be choreographed with the goalies. I think that’s what they’re going to have to do next year.”


From Washington Times, By Corey Masisak, Jan. 26:

During the one drill I saw that looked like it had established lines, Alex Ovechkin was skating with Jason Spezza and Martin St. Louis. I hope John Paddock puts his five Russians (Ovechkin, Malkin, Kovalchuk, Markov and Gonchar) out there together at least once.

There was some question about what events Alex Ovechkin would take part in during the SuperSkills competition. He will do the NBA dunk contest-style breakaway challenge and the hardest shot contest. He will not be doing the fastest skater contest like last year.

Ovechkin joked the other day his big move in the breakaway contest would be a slapshot from the blueline.


From Washington Times by Corey Masisak, Jan. 27:
"Me and [Kovalchuk] decide what we have to do in the shootout," Ovechkin said. "I tell him to go to his knees. He told me to do like first time only with 360 [degree spin]. Third time he tells me go to the knee, bounce puck the same, turn around and shoot. I was just, 'No. That's too hard to do.' "

Ovechkin also participated in the hardest shot contest. Boston Bruins defenseman Zdeno Chara won the competition with a shot at 103.1 miles an hour, which tied Washington's Al Iafrate's 1994 blast for the second-hardest of all time. Iafrate holds the record at 105.2 mph, which he set the year before in Montreal.

Ovechkin's attempts registered at 98.3 and 95.6 on the radar gun, and his top shot placed him fifth.



Thanks to OnFrozenBlog

From Dallas Stars, Jan. 27:
Ovechkin, the Washington winger, won the newest style points shootout event by lifting the puck on his stick, flipping it in the air a few times like Tiger Woods does with a golf ball, and then attempted to spin around and bat the puck into the goal. He missed. But it didn’t matter for entertainment value.

"I can lift the puck in the air, but I don’t think I could do it in front of so many people," Ribeiro laughed.


From Washington Post, Jan. 27:


Ovechkin became the first player in franchise history to record two goals in the game, helping the Eastern Conference to a back-and-forth 8-7 victory that was decided on a goal by Boston Bruins center Marc Savard with 20.9 seconds remaining.

Ovechkin, in his second all-star game appearance, also became the franchise's career all-star goal leader with three, surpassing Mike Gartner's total of two. Gartner made four all-star appearances.

"I'm good," Ovechkin said, grinning.

Ovechkin said he was happy to net a pair of goals. But he was proud when Paddock scrambled his lines and pairings so that he could put "The Russian Five" on the ice for two shifts in the third period. The quintet was comprised of forwards Ovechkin, Ilya Kovalchuk and Evgeni Malkin and defensemen Andrei Markov and Sergei Gonchar. It created several scoring chances, but struggled defensively.

"Don't talk about that," Kovalchuk said. "Two shifts and we're a minus two."

Ovechkin said: "It was pretty cool. The fans love it."

Ovechkin was easily the most interviewed player, sitting down for sessions with dozens of television networks. During his hour-long media availability on Saturday morning, he was so inundated with questions he missed the bus back to the team hotel.

In addition to the media obligations, Ovechkin also signed hundreds of jerseys, pucks, sticks and other memorabilia and pose for photo shoots and submit to a laser scan of his head, which will used to create an Ovechkin figurine.

Despite the considerable demand on his time, he still managed to have a good time. Ovechkin spent much of his free time hanging out with Kovalchuk.

The longtime friends -- who are 1-2 in the goal scoring race, with Ovechkin two goals ahead with 39 -- caught up over a sushi dinner Saturday night after Ovechkin's dazzling performance in the SuperSkills's Breakaway Challenge event.

"It's always great time to spend time with your friends, your Russian friends," he said.


From Detroit Free Press, Jan. 28:
"Ovechkin, he's a character. He's a guy we need to use to promote our game," Osgood said. "Not only Crosby, but Kovalchuk. We need these guys, and that's what this weekend was all about -- to show these young guys and let fans in America know who these guys are.


From Washington Times by Corey Masisak, Jan. 28:

Ovechkin was everywhere this weekend, cracking jokes with members of the media from around the world and discussing how his team has risen from the bottom of the NHL standings to the verge of the Southeast Division lead in barely more than two months.

At some point during the weekend, every major news organization associated with hockey both in the United States (NBC and Versus) and Canada (TSN, CBC, Rogers SportsNet) interviewed Ovechkin. There were also some less traditional ones, such as MTV, and a chat with a female reporter from Page Six, the gossip section of the New York Post.

If there needed to be more proof that no player in the NHL (not named Crosby) can match Ovechkin's popularity, plenty of it surfaced this weekend. Each time the All-Stars were announced to the crowd, Ovechkin easily drew the loudest cheer for out-of-town players.

And Ovechkin was content to bask in the spotlight. He was the last player left in the Eastern Conference dressing room Saturday night after the skills competition, answering questions about his "hockey-baseball" moves he had just attempted in the shootout challenge.

He found plenty of ways to keep himself busy when he wasn't talking to the media. Ovechkin spent part of yesterday morning having his face scanned for a new action figure from McFarlane Toys. He also had dinner at a sushi restaurant with fellow Russian and shootout coach Ilya Kovalchuk.

Before the game last night, Ovechkin shuffled through the two dressing rooms collecting sticks from other All-Stars. He brought 10 with him to trade, and he was carrying one around and having other players sign it. The stick will be auctioned off, and the proceeds will go to Athletes Against Autism — the charity Caps goaltender Olie Kolzig co-founded.

Ovechkin's three career All-Star goals are the most in team history, and he is the first Washington player to have a multigoal game.

Eastern Conference coach John Paddock put Pittsburgh's Evgeni Malkin between Ovechkin and Kovalchuk for two shifts in the third period.

Markov and Sergei Gonchar joined them for an all-Russian unit, but they were scored on 41 seconds in and again midway through the period — though Buffalo's Brian Campbell was on the ice instead of Markov.

"I am sure it was a special moment for Russian people back home," Gonchar said.

Added Kovalchuk: "Don't ask about that. Two shifts and minus-two — unbelievable."


From Ottawa Citizen, Jan, 28:
bumped into Alexander Ovechkin at a party Saturday night in Atlanta and he gave me the “missed it by this much” sign with his thumb and finger.

“So close,” he said, half-smiling, half grimacing. “They would have gone crazy if I got it.”

He was referring to that circus juggle-and-throw-the-puck-in-the-air-360-degree-spin-baseball-swing move he attempted earlier that night in the “Breakaway Challenge” (worst name everrrrrrr!) at the NHL All-Star Skills Competition.

He’s bang-on. If he somehow connects and scores on that swing, it is still being talked about in every office, schoolyard, and illegal bathhouse in the country.

As it is, Ovechkin’s creativity may saved the shootout from being a disaster of glowing puck proportions. In fact, he probably single-handedly assured it will be back next year.




Ovechkin's interview at All-Stars by TSN sports broadcaster Ryan Rishaug

Ovechkin for the Hart Trophy

TSN.CA, Jan. 25:


The NHL on TSN's analysts make their All-Star break selections for the Hart Trophy - awarded to 'the player judged to be the most valuable to his team.'

Pierre McGuire: "I think it's Alexander Ovechkin of the Washington Capitals. When you think about what he's done with his 39 goals so far this year, it's a tremendous story he's writing there in Washington. When you watch Ovechkin play, it's like he's the Superman of the National Hockey League. He beats you with size, he beats you with speed and he beats you with skill and creativity. On top of that, he has a shot that's just lethal. You tell me about a player that has transformed a team the way he's done.

The Washington Capitals without Ovechkin would be the Los Angeles Kings of the Eastern Conference.

Mike Milbury: "The Washington Capitals will make the playoffs solely on Ovechkin carrying the team single-handedly since the coaching change to Bruce Boudreau. It's Alexander Ovechkin all the way."


SI.com by Allan Muir, Jan. 25:
MVP: Alexander Ovechkin. Leading the league in both goals and enthusiasm, Ovechkin has established himself as the game's most dangerous and, with apologies to Sid, must-see player.


First Half Leaderboard (from DC Pro Sports Report, Jan. 26):

  • Goals: Alexander Ovechkin, 39 goals

  • Assists: Nicklas Backstrom, 32 assists

  • Points: Alexander Ovechkin, 65 points

  • PP Goals: Alexander Ovechkin, 16 goals
  • PP Assists: Nicklas Backstrom, Michael Nylander, 13 assists

  • SHG: Brooks Laich, Matt Bradley, Boyd Gordon, 1 goal
  • SHA: Dave Steckel, John Erskine, 1 assist
  • GW Goals: Alexander Ovechkin, 5 goals
  • = / -: Alexander Ovechkin, +11
  • Def Scoring: Mike Green, 30 points
  • GAA: Brent Johnson, 2.64
  • Save %: Brent Johson, .908


Season stats from NHL.com, Jan. 26:

  • Leads the team in goals (39), power-play goals (16), points (63), shots (272), hits (130) and plus/minus (+11)
  • Ranks in the NHL (through Tuesday's games): tied for second in points, first in goals, first in PPGs, first in shots, 11th in hits
  • He and Ilya Kovalchuk are the first players since Jaromir Jagr in 1999-00 to record 30 goals before New Year's Day
  • Has goals in six straight games, one shy of his career best, with four multiple-point games in that time
  • Has tallied a point in 30 of the last 34 games (30-17-47 in that time)
  • Posted the first four-goal and five-point game of his career 12/29 at OTT; the third four-goal game in the NHL this year and the 20th four-goal game in Caps history and the first in more than seven years (Bondra, 12/27/00 at OTT)
  • Has 16-6-22 in the third period or OT and 9-4-13 in the final 10 minutes
  • Ranks 25th in all-time career scoring for the Capitals (261 points) and 15th in career goals (137)

Friday, January 25, 2008

That's why I run this blog

Have you seen that commercial about a hockey fan who just became a parent?


Hey, baby!
I love you!
You're awesome, you're the best! You own this nursery!
(Pointing at other babies): Loser! Loser!
(Pointing at his baby): Best thing in the World!

That's what probably J.P. did :-)

But I'd like to paraphrase it:

Hey, Ovie!
...
You're awesome, you're the best! You own this league!
...
(Pointing at Ovie): Best hockey player in the world!

:-)

SI.com by Allan Muir, Jan. 25
MVP: Alexander Ovechkin. Leading the league in both goals and enthusiasm, Ovechkin has established himself as the game's most dangerous and, with apologies to Sid, must-see player.


Now here's another great story from the greatest Washington Post beat reporter Tarik:

I had arranged to meet the all-star winger at his downtown Atlanta hotel for an interview. But before we could head to lunch, Ovechkin was asked to sign a couple dozen items, from jerseys to pucks to goalie helmets - typical first day of All-Star Weekend type stuff.

When he finished, he was handed iPod as a thank you gift (as if the guy needs another iPod.) He clapped hands, and with a big smile announced to the room: "It's good to be Ovie!" (I'm thinking there's about 124 million other reasons why it's good to be Ovie.) But it still cracked me up, along with everyone else.

Ovechkin had lots of other interesting things to say about the team's turnaround, his remarkable season and his friendship with Nicklas Backstrom. I plan to share that stuff with you in my Sunday story.

As for Backstrom, he's been in town for only a few hours and he's already made some rookie mistakes. Such as misplacing one of his bags. It could be in the back of a cab or maybe at the airport. He doesn't really know. But he knows this much: his shoes were packed in that bag.

Don't worry. The Caps' first line center isn't walking around Atlanta without shoes. One of Ovechkin's associates bailed him out and loaned him a really nice (read: expensive) pair. They look great. Unfortunately for Backstrom, they are also about two sizes too small.

"My feet are really hurting," Backstrom said with a grimace at the YoungStars press conference.

AM640 Toronto Radio. Jan. 22nd interview with BB

Thanks to C-A-P-S

AM 640 Toronto Radio

Bruce Boudreau, January 22, 2008 - Part 1
Washington Capitals Head Coach and former Maple Leaf Bruce Boudreau stops by the AM640 studios to talk to Bill Watters and Greg Brady!


Bruce Boudreau, January 22, 2008 - Part 2
Washington Capitals Head Coach Bruce Boudreau joins Bill Watters and Greg Brady live in studio!



BB says Bäckis and Ovie are good friends off the ice. Awesome!

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Ovechkin is in Breakaway Challenge

From NHL.COM, Jan. 24:


NEW YORK - TORONTO -- Six of the NHL's most prolific and creative scorers will showcase their best moves in quest of a 'perfect 10' when they square off against All-Star goaltenders in the inaugural Breakaway Challenge, the signature event in Saturday's Dodge NHL SuperSkills Competition at the 2008 All-Star Weekend in Atlanta (7 p.m., ET, VERSUS, CBC, RDS), the National Hockey League and National Hockey League Players' Association announced today.

Three shooters from the Eastern and Western Conference will have two attempts to perform a highlight-reel trick while attempting to score. Shooters can start their routine from anywhere in the offensive zone and have full access to the offensive zone, including behind the net. NHL penalty shot rules do not apply. A panel of celebrity judges will evaluate each attempt and give a score of one to nine points. Scoring is based on creativity, execution and ability to score. An additional point will be awarded for a goal for a maximum total of 10 points per shooter.

Celebrity judges are former Thrashers captain and fan favorite Scott Mellanby, former University of Georgia and Atlanta Hawks basketball star Dominique Wilkins, actor Taylor Kitsch and broadcaster Bill Clement.

Scheduled to participate in the Breakaway Challenge are Eastern Conference forwards Ilya Kovalchuk of the All-Star host Atlanta Thrashers, Alex Ovechkin of the Washington Capitals and Martin St. Louis of the Tampa Bay Lightning, who will face Western Conference goaltenders Manny Legace of the St. Louis Blues, Evgeni Nabokov of the San Jose Sharks and Chris Osgood of the Red Wings. Western Conference forwards Pavel Datsyuk of the Red Wings, Marian Gaborik of the Minnesota Wild and Ryan Getzlaf of the Anaheim Ducks will oppose Eastern Conference goaltenders Rick DiPietro of the New York Islanders, Tim Thomas of the Bruins and Tomas Vokoun of the Florida Panthers.

A New 'Fastest Skater'

The Fastest Skater contestants will face a different test this year. Starting from a standing position at the goal line, one skater from each Conference will race to the far blue line, a change from past competitions in which skaters completed one lap around the perimeter of the ice surface.


It was not announced yet if Alex would participate in a new 'Fastest Skater', but it would be nice because I think he can win easily. The change emphasize the player's acceleration and the old rule was more about power skating. I believe Ovechkin has the fastest acceleration in the league.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Superman! Not kidding, he is everywhere...

"Superman! Not kidding, he is everywhere...", that was a nice comment about Ovechkin by TSN commentators.

Ovechkin scored his league-best 39th goal, but the Caps lost. The team looked tired and toothless. And as we know, if there's no secondary scoring, Caps with Kolzig in the net have much less chances to win.

This is when you truly miss Nylander. How many times the guy with rotator cuff shoulder injury set up Ovechkin and Green? Of course, he did set up the others too, but those mentioned scored the most memorable goals. Caps can put a lot of pressure, but if the opposite team has a hot goalie and the same will, it's going to be a long night. And the way you can beat the hot goalie if when you completely fool him, change the direction of the attack... and this is where Nylander could show his wizardry.

Green finished -2, was on ice for two Leafs goals, and "blew the tire" on the second Leafs goal. He needs to rest.

Ovechkin had what TSN called "Perfect 10!", 10 goals in 1o games vs. Toronto.

From Miami Herald, Jan. 23


Alex Ovechkin scored for the Caps, extending his point streak to six games. He has seven goals and four assists in that span, and nine goals in his last eight games overall. Ovechkin has a league-best 39 tallies, two better than Atlanta's Ilya Kovalchuk in that category.

"He's fast in creating chances all the time," Toskala said of Ovechkin. "He shoots so hard you have to keep an eye on him all the time."

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Malkin's reaction to Ovechkin's hit

From SovSport.ru, Jan. 23


Why Ovechkin tried to flatten Malkin? We believe that Sasha wanted to play physical against Malkin who was the main threat. If you stop Geno, you can win the game. And Washington Capitals need victories like an oxygen, desperately trying to get into playoffs.

"I just play for the team. It doesn't matter if you're Russian or Canadian, this is hockey. And there are no friends on the ice", said Ovechkin.

We asked Geno after the game why he got into pushing and shoving to respond to Ovechkin?

"Didn't you see how he was flying trying to flatten me?" said Malkin. "You think what? I am going to tolerate this? But actually I have a good relationship with Sasha. And anything can happen in the heat of the game!"



You know what? I like Malkin. Alex just tried to take his head off for God's sake. Whew, I am glad if they are still friends. This is like civil war, brother against brother... And how laughable is now Don Cherry's last year comment on Ovechkin and Malkin (...he's none too happy about players getting chummy with each other before a game)

So here's to hope that off-season workouts with Malkin and Gonchar will continue. For that Malkin just needs to survive the rest of the games with Caps before the season ends... :-)

And for those who forgot, during lockout Gonchar received a concussion from open ice hit delivered by Ovechkin (watch YouTube video above).

Alex Ovechkine, Russian Crazy Score Machine... :-) You've got to be crazy to be genius... Or something like that... :-)

Greg Wyshynski: Malkin's Bar Mitzvah Goes To Shmutz

LOL. Greg is at his best as usual

From Deadspin.com


Last night, Evgeni Malkin looked ready to become a man.

With Sidney Crosby on injured reserve with a high ankle sprain that was probably his own damn fault, Malkin dominated his second consecutive game, with two goals, an assist and the kind of "immovable object" physicality that would have made Gorilla Monsoon grin. In overtime of a 5-5 game, he drew a penalty to give Pittsburgh a two-man advantage and an idyllic opportunity for victory.

But the power play ended without a goal, overtime ended with happy Semin streaming down the ice, and Malkin again ended up short of becoming the man.

And that's the difference between Malkin and Mario or Sidney or his arch rival, Alexander Ovechkin.

... So let the debate rage on: Ovechkin and Semin > Crosby and Malkin?


I'd say, Ovechkin and Backstrom > Malkin and Crosby!

Monday, January 21, 2008

Alex Ovechkine, Russian Crazy Score Machine

Ladies and Gentlemen,

The official leading scorer of NHL with 38 goals is Alexander the Great Ovechkin! (Alex also moved into a second place in points). How sweet it is! He can see Kovalchuk and the rest in a rear mirror now.


The Best NHL Rookie is Nicklas Bäckström! He has just set a new NHL rookie record with 4 assists in back to back games.

Kozzie, Bäckis and Ovie rule!

Geno is good, but not as good as Alex the Great. J.P reports that to date, Alex has 129 hits. Malkin has 21.


The era of official domination of Caps over Pens has just started.

From TRIBUNE-REVIEW, Jan. 21, Pens lose shootout, miss point


Alexander Ovechkin has one-upped Evgeni Malkin at almost every turn for the last four years.

And he did it again Monday night.

Ovechkin and Malkin, the first and second players taken in the 2004 NHL draft, respectively, each had two goals and an assist, but it Alexander Semin who decided things when he snapped a wrist shot under the crossbar against goaltender Ty Conklin in the shootout to help the Capitals (28-17-3) to a 6-5 victory over the Penguins at Mellon Arena. The Penguins are now 1-0-1 without Sidney Crosby, who was placed on the injured reserve list before the game.


By Alan Robinson, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Jan. 21, Ovechkin wins duel with Malkin:
PITTSBURGH - Evgeni Malkin couldn't have done a much better imitation of Sidney Crosby. On this night, even that wasn't good enough to outduel Alexander Ovechkin.

Ovechkin finished off an exceptional game by teaming with Alexander Semin to beat Pittsburgh goalie Ty Conklin with backhanders in the shootout and the Washington Capitals came from behind for a 6-5 victory Monday night.

Ovechkin and Malkin had two goals and an assist apiece during a matchup of Russian stars in which each seemed determined to not be upstaged by the other. One good shift would be followed by a better shift by the other, with the two stars figuring in five goals - each scoring twice - in a hectic 12-minute span.

"I thought it was a great show of two young superstars trying to be king of the hill," Washington coach Bruce Boudreau said.

Malkin had to be very good in this game merely to stay with Ovechkin, even though the Capitals star insisted he wasn't trying to outdo his friend.

"I just play for the team. It doesn't matter if you're Russian or Canadian," Ovechkin said after the Capitals won their fourth in a row and sixth in seven games to get above .500 at 22-21-5. "It's a game, and I think nobody has friends on the ice."

For all the goals, it was Malkin's hard check of Ovechkin near the end of the first that got the sellout crowd going, chanting his nickname of "Geno, Geno, Geno." Malkin, normally not a physical player, sent Ovechkin flying by lowering his shoulder as Malkin carried the puck behind the Washington net.

"If I didn't hit him, maybe he scored more goals, who knows?" Ovechkin said despite getting the worse of the collision. "I can't hear after the game, 'What are you doing, why didn't you hit him?"'

...Ovechkin, of course, came back less than two minutes after that with his league-best 38th goal, a slap shot from the left circle that led Therrien to pull Sabourin and bring in Conklin.


From Washington Times, Jan. 22, by Corey Masisak:

"It was very important game in our season right now," Ovechkin said. "We got to .500, but we don't want to stop. We want to keep going and everybody understand."

"We really had to win, and it looked for a while like the gods were against us," Boudreau said. "We've got things to work on. We can't continually give up four or five goals and expect to win."


From Ottawa Citizen, by James Duthie, Jan. 22, MALKIN VS. OVECHKIN: MUST-SEE TV:

For four years now, ever since they faced off at the World Juniors in North Dakota, we have been hyping Sidney Crosby vs. Alexander Ovechkin as THE individual rivalry for the next NHL generation.

Maybe we only got it half-right.

Monday night, with Crosby looking on from Mario’s luxury suite, Ovechkin and Evgeny Malkin staged one of the best “tit for tat” showdowns we’ve seen in a long time.

The boxscore will show you they each counted two goals and an assist. Ovechkin moved into the NHL lead with 38 goals, and added one more in the shootout to give Washington a 6-5 win. Malkin added his 14th and 15th goals in 15 games, making him the hottest thing out of Russia since Natalia Vodianova (if you are unfamiliar, I strongly advise the use of Google Images).

From the opening face-off, it looked like a couple of guys trying to show-off to win the same girl (Natalia maybe?) They were ridiculously dangerous on almost every shift. They went after each other, with Ovechkin trying to flatten Malkin in the Danger Zone (ask Dean McAmmond where that is), and then almost scrapping moments later. It was Anything You Can Do…translated in Russian.

I don’t pretend to know the real relationship between the two. They were teammates for Russia at the World Junior Hockey Championship four years ago, and apparently good pals. There were reports of an altercation involving Ovechkin and Malkin’s Russian agent Gennady Ushakov at a nightclub this past summer, which allegedly left Ushakov with a broken jaw. Ovechkin later denied it ever happened. Even if it did, only they’d know what it was about.

It doesn’t matter. Friends or foes, it was clear they desperately wanted to out-do each other Monday night. And the audience was the beneficiary.

Individual rivalries in hockey are often phony creations of the media (I plead guilty). Ovechkin and Crosby were dubbed archrivals before they had even met on the ice, simply because they were two phenoms who arrived at the same time. They have had some decent games against each other, but nothing like this one.

Malkin has been living in Sid’s sizable shadow for his first season-and-a-half in the league. Crosby’s injury has thrust him into the spotlight, and I think he digs it.

By the time you read this, the NHL should have named him an All-Star, replacing Crosby. The only problem is he’ll be playing with Ovechkin.

It’s way more fun the other way.


From Capitals Insider, Jan. 21:
But Ovechkin had some interesting things to say about trying to crush his friend and fellow Russian with shoulder check late in the first period. As it turned out, Ovechkin absorbed the brunt of the collision, and slammed sideways into the boards. The countrymen also exchanged some shoves at the next whistle.

Ovechkin's lip was left bleeding. But he was also smiling after the Caps' come-from-behind 6-5 win. Both had two goals and an assist.

"It's a game," Ovechkin said, shrugging. "It's a big game for us. A big two points. If I didn't hit him behind the net, maybe he scores goal. Then maybe my teammates ask me, 'Why you don't hit him?'

"I don't care if he's Russian or Canadian."

And you thought Ovechkin and Sidney Crosby had a pretty good rivalry going. This one might be just as entertaining.



Ovechkin meets Malkin (Thanks to KK)


What people say (from Capitals Insider):

that hit was sick.
ovie may have taken the brunt of it, but it proved once again what he's all about. have you ever seen a player play with such abandon? i thought for sure he was goin to suffer a concussion. but then he gets right back up, mouth bleeding, ready to fight, and the finishes the game with two goals and a goal in the shootout!
he is the true definition of a phenom.

Posted by: hckycaps | January 22, 2008 01:35 PM

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Ovechkin, Pettinger as the Right To Play Athlete Ambassadors

From Washington Capitals - News, Jan. 16:

ARLINGTON, Va. –The Washington Capitals raised $9,150 in a silent auction held on Right To Play Night, yesterday, Jan. 15 during the Capitals game against the Ottawa Senators at Verizon Center. Top items from the auction included a pair of Alex Ovechkin game-worn skates that raised $2,000 and an Ovechkin game-used stick that went for $1,000. All proceeds will benefit Right To Play, a charitable organization that operates sport and play programs for children and youth in 22 countries across Africa, Asia and the Middle East.

Capitals left wingers Alex Ovechkin and Matt Pettinger both serve as Right To Play Athlete Ambassadors, as does Senators captain Daniel Alfredsson. All three players joined four-time Olympic gold medalist (speed skating), president and CEO of Right To Play, Johann Olav Koss for an on-ice ceremony prior to puck drop. The four athletes presented youth hockey players from the Fort Dupont Ice Hockey Club of Washington D.C. with autographed Right To Play Red Balls, symbolizing the organization’s motto, “When Children Play the World Wins.”

Beware of Malkin

From Pittsburgh Tribune Review, Jan. 20: Pens' Malkin takes center stage


"The way he's been playing lately, though, he could be a No. 1 center on any team."

Indeed, Malkin would be the No. 1 center on this team if the Penguins hadn't miraculously won the right to draft Crosby three years ago.

Anybody who has seen Malkin in full Lemieux-like mode - and that's who he resembles most when he is at the top of his game - knows he has the wherewithal to carry a team on his back. The danger might come in trying to do too much.

What makes Malkin's new role especially interesting is he has one year left on his first NHL contract. The Penguins plan to start negotiations on a new one this summer.

Which means Malkin can make a serious statement over the next several weeks.

As fate would have it, Ovechkin and the Washington Capitals visit Mellon Arena on Monday. That would normally be a time for Crosby and Ovechkin - the faces of the league - to take center stage.

This time, it's Ovechkin and Malkin, which happened to be the draft order in 2004. Penguins fans were devastated, because their last-place team had lost the lottery and the right to take Ovechkin.

Others saw a silver lining.

David Conte, highly respected scouting director for the New Jersey Devils, told me not to be stunned if Malkin turned out to be every bit as good as Ovechkin.



Monday's Caps-Pens game (Jan. 20, 2008) is nationally televised. This is the excellent chance for Malkin to try to show to the hockey world that

What can be done to contain him? Assign big d-men like Jurcina to cover him. Malkin can undress anybody, Green included, so the only way to calm him down is to play very physical against him.

Here're the pictures from my last year post, Feb. 18, 2007...



Oops... Where is 6'3'' Malkin?





Juice broke the glass! Just like Ovechkin in the game vs. Avs.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Segway riders score 4, Oilers lost.

Just wrote in my previous post yesterday how symbolic that Segway ride was.

"Ovechkin, Green, Backstrom and Bradley.... This is the foundation of this team that will bring the Stanley Cup to Washington, DC some day. If Ted Leonsis compared Ovechkin to Yzerman, he said "I look at Detroit all of those years. They had someone like Steve Yzerman, who was not only their best player he was their best human being. That's what we've got with Alex", allow me to say that Green is young Lidstrom, Backstrom is young Sergei Fedorov and Bradley... Bradley represents the whole Detroit's Grind line, he can grind and he can drop the gloves. It will be a long way, just like it took Detroit, but the main thing is, Caps have the foundation, the players they can build the team around, and how symbolic that Segway ride was in that sense."

Guess what, all Segway riders scored today! Awesome! The scoring sequence was Backstrom, Ovechkin, Green and Bradley. Backstrom is starting to take the lead. :-)


I should've write "Bradley represents the whole Detroit's Grind Line, he can grind, HE CAN SCORE and he can drop 'em.

Oh well, shoulda, coulda, woulda... :-)

A target for the league's most unsavory characters?

...hmmm...

From The New York Sun, Jan. 16

Today, many Ovechkin supporters correctly point out that he is the centerpiece of the Caps' organization and a critical part of the team's future if they're to develop into Stanley Cup champions. But the same was also said of Jagr. And while there is plenty to like about Ovechkin's game — from his ability to skate either through or around defenders to his blistering slap shot to his dazzling stick-handling skills — the things that make him special are also the things that make this contract such a painfully bad idea.

Ovechkin is an enviable combination of Mike Bossy, Cam Neely, and Pavel Bure, three of the most dynamic wingers ever to skate in the NHL. Not coincidentally, all of them saw their careers shortened by injuries. Ovechkin's willingness to engage opponents physically — and to battle his way to the most treacherous real estate on the ice at breakneck speed — means that he is consistently putting himself in physical danger.

Ovechkin's contract will undoubtedly also make him a target for disgruntled union members at the low end of the totem pole, whose escrow payments are necessary in no small part because of the exorbitant contracts lavished upon the likes of Ovechkin. If Flyers antagonist Steve Downie thought it wise to headhunt Dean McAmmond in a preseason game (for which he got suspended 20 games), how much fun will he have going after Ovechkin? The lack of respect shown by NHL players toward their peers in recent months has been nothing short of appalling, and Ovechkin's contract effectively makes him a target for the league's most unsavory characters.


From Courier-Post Online, Jan. 15
Downie's reputation as a loose cannon certainly played a role in the 20-game suspension he received for a preseason hit on Ottawa's Dean McAmmond, one which undoubtedly will be revisited Sunday when the Senators face Downie for the first time since the incident.

And his sucker punch to the face of Maple Leafs forward Jason Blake on Jan. 5 drew him plenty of unwanted attention, especially in and around Toronto.

But when Stevens sent Downie on the ice to protect a one-goal lead late in the Flyers' 6-4 win over the Washington Capitals Sunday, a very clear message was sent.

"It was definitely surprising to me," Downie said of being asked to stop Alexander Ovechkin. "I'm honored by it. I'd be lying if I said it didn't give me confidence. Every piece of confidence helps my game right now. In this league, if you don't have confidence you're not going to get very far."

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Alex visits a barber shop, school


new contract: $124,000,000

new haircut: $14

Crosby's reaction to Ovechkin's contract: priceless




Dan strikes again. We just read and saw the video about the Segway ride, and now another must read...

But before that, just wanted to say about the guys who where at that Segway ride, Ovechkin, Green, Backstrom and Bradley. This is the foundation of this team that will bring the Stanley Cup to Washington, DC some day. If Ted Leonsis compared Ovechkin to Yzerman, he said "I look at Detroit all of those years. They had someone like Steve Yzerman, who was not only their best player he was their best human being. That's what we've got with Alex", allow me to say that Green is young Lidstrom, Backstrom is young Sergei Fedorov and Bradley... Bradley represents the whole Detroit's Grind line, he can grind and he can drop the gloves. It will be a long way, just like it took Detroit, but the main thing is, Caps have the foundation, the players they can build the team around, and how symbolic that Segway ride was in that sense.

From DC Sports Blog by Dan Steinberg, Jan. 16:

"Where I get my haircut? Right here," he said, from the team's practice facility on top of those Commons.

"How much did it cost?" I asked.

"I can't tell you," he said.

I threw out the $14 figure that I had heard, and he agreed. So then I suggested that, you know, maybe some people might theoretically have chosen to upgrade after becoming a multi-millionaire, not that there's anything wrong with the Hair Cuttery.

"Why I have to go?" he asked me. "I'm always cut it here, I'm always hair cut here. I'm looking good."

Before I get to the rest of the hair news, I should note that Ovechkin and Mike Green just conducted a floor hockey clinic at Williamsburg Middle School in Arlington. After some basic drills, they held an eight-on-eight scrimmage: Green and seven boys vs. Ovechkin and seven girls. Nice friendly game. Within about 30 seconds Ovechkin was poke-checking some kid as he tried to pull the ball out from under a bench, and deking kids out of their pants behind the net, and holding some tiny kid off with his right hand as he carried the ball up the floor. His team won, incidentally. It was pointed out to Green the game seemed to get pretty competitive.

Video Courtesy OrderedChaos42, a.k.a OnFrozenBlog

At every whistle, Ovechkin got his team into a huddle where they all held hands and then screamed together.."Yeah, it did, thanks to Alex," he said. "I thought maybe he'd let the kids play a little bit, but he's out there battling with them."

"It's a physical game," Ovechkin said with a shrug.

Back to hair. Ovechkin's running mate, young Swede Nicklas Backstrom, has not deigned to chop his locks since he set foot in the U.S. this fall.

"I don't want to do it here," he said. "I have my own designer at home."

Backstrom's hair, waiting to visit Backstrom's designer.I pointed out that this might mean some serious shag come the spring, depending on how things go.

"I was not think about that," he admitted, "but we'll see what happens. Right now I'm gonna save it."

And what does he think of Ovechkin's $14 cut?

"That was terrible," Backstrom said. "But that's ok."


From Capitals.nhl.com: “I had fun,” Ovechkin said. “We tried to teach a lot of things, and these kids were pretty good. I’m very happy that my team beat Greenie’s team, too.

LOL