National Post (National Edition)

Cup hangover? Not so for great Ovie

Playing a lot and playing responsibl­y

- Isabelle Khurshudya­n

The last time Alex Ovechkin was in Las Vegas’s T-mobile Arena, he was on the ice so long his feet started to ache.

As the Washington Capitals celebrated their first Stanley Cup there, Ovechkin quickly traded his skates for something more comfortabl­e, Evgeny Kuznetsov’s slippers, and then took his time waddling around the ice with the trophy.

He was the last player back to the locker-room. That capped the longest season of Ovechkin’s career with 106 games, and just six months later, he and the Capitals are 26 games into a new year and back in Las Vegas for a first time.

After all that hockey and an off-season that was a month shorter, Ovechkin is still taking his time on the ice. Skating 21:10 per game, he’s playing his most since the 2010-11 season, when he was 25, and his ice time is up a full minute from last season.

“I think it’s good for my body,” Ovechkin said. “Sometimes you play 16 minutes, sometimes you play 15 minutes, and you’re just like, am I in the game or not? But if you play a 20-21-minute game, you’re into the game, you’re in a rhythm and you feel better.”

His 19 goals and 13 assists, both more than what he had at this time last season, indicate he’s still got plenty of energy.

But is it possible to play Ovechkin too much? It’s something Capitals coach Todd Reirden has to consider as his 33-year-old superstar winger is the oldest forward in the league averaging more than 21 minutes per game.

“It’s definitely a thing that’s possible,” Reirden said about playing his star too much, adding that he monitors his ice time every period. Against the New Jersey Devils on Friday, Reirden saw Ovechkin had played fewer than five minutes in the first period, so he felt comfortabl­e playing him more in the second and third frames.

Ovechkin ultimately skated 21:29 in the 6-3 Capitals win, and 9:16 of that came in the third period, when Reirden had Ovechkin on the ice to help protect the lead at the end of the game.

As opposing teams have pulled their goaltender for an extra attacker in the final minutes, Reirden has often deployed Ovechkin, reliable enough to not only put the game out of reach with an empty-net goal but also defend well against six opposing skaters.

“I like it obviously,” Ovechkin said. “You want to be out there. It’s all about trust.”

Rather than suffer from a Stanley Cup hangover, Ovechkin has instead carried over some of his good habits from last post-season, when he played the best two-way hockey of his career.

The Capitals were impressed with Ovechkin’s conditioni­ng after a short summer, appearing even trimmer than he did a year ago, when the team had made a point of wanting him to arrive to training camp in better shape. That helps in carrying a heavy workload, but beyond his physical ability to play that many minutes 13 years into his career, Reirden believes Ovechkin has earned his time on ice.

“This for me is the best I’ve seen him play two-way hockey in the regular season,” Reirden said.

“You can tell he’s aware, trying to do the right things without the puck and be in the right positions,” defenceman Matt Niskanen said.

“It’s a habit that can fade away, and he’s done a good job keeping at it and not letting it slide. It’d be easy to revert to some old bad habits, but you can physically see he’s been conscious of it and trying to do the right things all of the time while still producing. That’s the key, I think, to believing it. If you’re told to play the game one way, but it’s not producing, for a guy like that, it’s hard to believe in that way of playing the game.”

In the days after the Capitals won the Stanley Cup, Ovechkin watched one of the team’s games from the first round of the post-season and was baffled by how out of position he was defensivel­y at times. There’s a significan­t drop in commitment and attention to detail for all players from the playoffs to the regular season, but now that Ovechkin knows how responsibl­y he can play, he’s largely maintained it.

“When you get success as a team and as an individual, you don’t want to change anything,” Ovechkin said. “How we played last year, I think that give us what we want, you know? Why would you change it? I’m just trying to do the same thing.”

 ?? NICK WASS / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? At age 33, Alex Ovechkin appears to be getting better, playing a two-way game he perfected in last season’s Cup-winning campaign.
NICK WASS / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS At age 33, Alex Ovechkin appears to be getting better, playing a two-way game he perfected in last season’s Cup-winning campaign.
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