“After climbing a great hill, one only finds that there are
many more hills to climb.”
-- Nelson Mandela
It took 1,003 regular season games and another 121 playoff
games, but watching Alex Ovechkin win, and then accept the Stanley Cup from Commissioner Gary
Bettman and roar with joy was worth, to Washington Capitals fans, every one of
the 23,610 minutes Ovechkin has skated in a Capitals jersey...
It was an exclamation point on what was one of, if not his
best all-around season in the NHL. He
did not score 50 goals for the eighth time in his career, coming up one short
on the last day of the season. He did,
however, finish with the third-best shooting percentage in his career (13.8),
recorded his tenth season with at least 15 power play goals (17), finished with
his third best Corsi-for/relative percentage in his career (plus-5.0), scored
more even strength goals (32) than any season since 2009-2010 (37), recorded
more power play assists (14) than he had in any season since 2013-2014 (15),
posted more assist overall (38) than he had since 2010-2011 (53), and did it
while rationing his hit total (139, a career low for a full season).
In a sense, we are past what happens in the regular season
with respect to Ovechkin’s performance.
He has been a constant in that arena for more than a decade, and until
it happens, there would be no expectation of decline. Ovechkin has to be Ovechkin when it counts,
as he was last spring. And he was even
more “Ovechkin” in that regard than the Ovechkin on display in recent
memory. His 14 goals in 24 games led the
league, and it was the first time since 2011 that he averaged more than half a
goal per postseason game (five in nine games).
He set a career postseason best in assists (12). His plus-8 was the second-best of his
postseason career. His 15.2 percent
shooting efficiency was the best of his postseason career. And he did it averaging only 20:44 per game;
only three times did he average less ice time in a postseason. Think of it as “Ovechkin Concentrate.”
Odd Ovechkin Fact…
Alex Ovechkin has 229 career power play goals. This number alone would place him among the top 50 active players in goals scored, currently tied with Tyler Seguin for 46th
place.
Fearless’ Take…
Lost in all the goal scoring Alex Ovechkin has done over the
years is his ability to post points.
With 49 points this season he will jump over Bobby Hull into the top-50
all time in points. A 58-point season,
and he will jump over fellow Russian Sergei Fedorov to become the most prolific
point-getter born in Russia in NHL history.
No player in the post 2004-2005 dark season era has more points (1,122,
six more than Sidney Crosby). Only
Crosby and Evgeni Malkin have more seasons over that span averaging at least
one point per game (13 and 11 seasons, respectively) than Ovechkin (10), and
Ovechkin’s number is twice as many as the next full-time winger (Marion
Gaborik, Ilya Kovalchuk, and Martin St. Louis, each with five). Over 13 seasons, the Caps have 3,091 goals
scored. Ovechkin, with 1,122 points, had
a hand in more than 36 percent of them.
Cheerless’ Take…
He didn’t get a hat trick in his last game to hit 50 goals;
he had only two. There were seven teams
in the league against which he didn’t score a goal (only one in the East…the
Islanders – go figure). He didn’t score
a goal in the Pacific time zone. He was
a plus-player in only one month (plus-10 in December). Okay, we’re reaching.
Potential Milestones:
- 1200 points (he needs 78)
- 400 even strength goals (he needs 26)
- 250 power play goals (he needs 21)
- 5,000 shots on goal (he needs 104)
The Big Question… How far can Alex
Ovechkin climb in the all-time goal scoring rankings?
Before last season began, we were
resigned to Alex Ovechkin retiring as the greatest player never to win a
Stanley Cup. We are thrilled to have
been wrong. But he has more time to add
to a body of work – more Cups, more awards, more goals. It is the last that we wonder about. Someday, Ovechkin will start to decline, to
release the grip he has on the title of “top goal scorer in the NHL.” In the meantime, he continues to climb the all-time
goal scoring rankings. He began last season in 26th place with 558
goals. He ended the season in 19th
place with 607 goals.
Given that he has never scored
fewer than 32 goals in a season, 30 goals might be a good place to start
pegging where he might finish the 2018-2019 season in those all-time rankings. A season with 30 goals would vault him into
15th place, jumping over Dino Ciccarelli (608), Bobby Hull (610),
Joe Sakic (625), and Jarome Iginla (625).
A 40-goal season would put him in 14th place, leap-frogging
Dave Andreychuk (640). And, a 50-goal
season would leave Ovechkin in 13th place, jumping over Brendan
Shanahan (656). Of those six players,
only Hull is currently less than a full season’s worth of career games played
(1,063) ahead of Ovechkin (1,003).
Ovechkin would have to play without a stick not to pass Hull before that
difference narrows appreciably.
Now, how likely is it that
Ovechkin will max out on his ladder climbing this season? Since his age-26 season, when he finished a
second straight full season with fewer than 40 goals and was thought to be on
the verge of decline, he has averaged 48.8 goals per 82 games in six
seasons. Do you want to bet against him?
In the end…
There is a purveyor snack foods that for decades has used
the hook, “bet you can’t eat just one”…
Well, now we get to see if there is an answer to “bet you
can’t stop at one (Stanley Cup)” with respect to the Washington Capitals. And in this pursuit, just like last year’s successful
result and the unhappy ones that preceded it, Alex Ovechkin will be the
centerpiece in the effort. Keep in mind
that since 2005-2006, none of the 20 instances of a 50-goal season was
accompanied by the winning of a Stanley Cup by those players. So, don’t think it necessary, or even perhaps
desirable, that Ovechkin add to his total of 50-goal seasons.
The postseason, should the Caps make it, is another
matter. Ovechkin is tied for 27th
among active players in postseason games played (121), but he is fifth in goals
scored (61) and first in goals per game among the 175 active players having
appeared in at least 50 postseason games (0.504). In the 2018 postseason he played 24 games,
almost a quarter of his total career playoff games played to that date (97);
scored 15 goals, almost a third of his total career playoff goals to that date
(46); and he recorded 27 points, 30 percent of his playoff point total for his
career to that date (90). That is the
sustained level of performance through four rounds upon which a Conn Smythe
Trophy for most valuable player in the postseason and, more important, a
Stanley Cup is achieved. But after 13
seasons and having finally reached the summit, he and his teammates have more
hills to climb, a Cup at the summit of each.
Projection: 78 games, 46-36-82, plus-2
Photo: Bruce Bennett/Getty Images North America
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