Texarkana Gazette

Caps’ Alex Ovechkin is just getting started

- By Stephen Whyno

WASHINGTON— It sure looked like Alex Ovechkin was slowing down, at least by his standards.

This time a year ago, Ovechkin and the Washington Capitals were limping away from another early playoff exit. His 16 evenstreng­th goals in the regular season tied for the lowest of his career. Injuries limited him to five goals in 13 playoff games.

Then a funny thing happened. Coach Barry Trotz took time from visiting his son in Russia to meet with Ovechkin and talk about changing his game at age 32. Time doesn’t stop, not even for the greatest goal-scorer of his generation. Trotz and general manager Brian MacLellan wanted more goals, better foot speed and for their cornerston­e player to take care of his body to handle more time on the ice.

“That’s just life: You have to change, you have to grow,” Trotz said. “He was motivated to show everybody that he still is a great player in this league.”

Ovechkin led the NHL with 49 goals in the regular season, 15 more in the playoffs as the Conn Smythe Trophy winner and showed in his 13th season he could lead his team to the Stanley Cup. Ordinarily a team would be running out the clock on the final three seasons of a 13-year deal with a player of his age, but now Ovechkin is a Stanley Cup champion and there is no telling how much more the big forward can do in his NHL career.

“Was tough time, but we fight through it and we get result,” Ovechkin said. “It’s just something special. I don’t know. I’m just very excited and I’m very happy right now.”

After that, the next challenge starts. Ovechkin last summer adjusted his training methods in Russia, and he seemed rejuvenate­d when came back to the Washington area.

Now he has to do it all over again with a happily shorter summer.

Ovechkin looked like he was flying all season, from seven goals in his first two games to one on the power play Thursday night in the Cup clincher against the Vegas Golden Knights. But goal-scorers don’t typically keep up this pace—Ovechkin was already the oldest player to finish first in goals since Phil Esposito in 1974-75.

“He was very comfortabl­e and he was very confident,” longtime teammate Nicklas Backstrom said. “He was really calm. Everything was really good. It’s impressive the way he scores goals and the way he worked out there. He was just a machine there in the playoffs.”

Owner Ted Leonsis said recently his only regret about signing Ovechkin to a $124 million, 13-year deal is that it wasn’t longer. With three years left at a salary-cap hit over $9.5 million, Ovechkin has already exceeded the expectatio­ns of that monster contract with three Hart Trophies, seven Maurice “Rocket” Richard Trophies and now the playoff success that had long eluded him.

 ?? AP Photo ?? Washington Capitals left wing Alex Ovechkin, right, celebrates as he accepts the Stanley Cup from NHL commission­er Gary Bettman after the Capitals defeated the Golden Knights, 4-3, in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Finals on Thursday in Las Vegas.
AP Photo Washington Capitals left wing Alex Ovechkin, right, celebrates as he accepts the Stanley Cup from NHL commission­er Gary Bettman after the Capitals defeated the Golden Knights, 4-3, in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Finals on Thursday in Las Vegas.

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