USA TODAY US Edition

Best without a title

Alex Ovechkin part of good company

- Tom Schad

Alex Ovechkin had played in 1,003 NHL games entering Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final on Monday night. He’s scored more than 600 goals, been named to 11 All-Star teams and led the Washington Capitals to the playoffs in 10 of his 13 seasons.

But until now he’s never played for — nor won — a title.

Ovechkin is the latest in a long list of megastars who, despite their prolific individual accomplish­ments, have never won a championsh­ip. The 32year-old will try to take himself off that list in the next week or two with a series victory over the Vegas Golden Knights. In the meantime, here’s a look at Ovechkin and nine other stars across the sports world who always found a championsh­ip to be elusive.

Ernie Banks

19 seasons | 2,528 games |

0 playoff appearance­s

The man known as “Mr. Cub” is arguably the best player to ever suit up for one of the most iconic franchises in sports — and he never made it to the postseason. The twotime MVP and 14-time All-Star came close in 1969, but the Chicago Cubs lost 17 of 25 down the stretch to finish just outside the playoffs, which had expanded to four teams beginning that season.

Dan Marino

17 seasons | 242 games |

10 playoff appearance­s Marino threw for more than

61,000 yards and 420 touchdowns, and he guided the Miami Dolphins to Super Bowl XIX in 1985. But the Dolphins suffered a lopsided loss to the San Francisco 49ers, and Marino never got another shot in the title game. “If there is anyone that ever deserved a Super Bowl (ring),” John Elway said, “it was him.”

Jim Kelly

11 seasons | 160 games |

8 playoff appearance­s Perhaps nobody on this list got as close to winning a championsh­ip as often as Kelly. Four years in a row he led the Buffalo Bills to the Super Bowl. And four years in a row they left empty-handed, including a 20

19 heartbreak­er against the New York Giants in 1991.

Barry Bonds

22 seasons | 2,986 games |

7 playoff appearance­s

Bonds is most often remembered as a central figure in the steroid era — the controvers­ial home run king. But a 4-1 loss to the Anaheim Angels in Game 7 of the 2002 World Series kept him without a ring, and he made only one other playoff appearance thereafter.

Ty Cobb

24 seasons | 3,034 games |

3 playoff appearance­s

It’s a bit deceptive to say that Cobb reached the postseason only three times because, in the early 1900s, the “postseason” consisted only of the World Series. Cobb and the Detroit Tigers made it there in

1907, 1908 and 1909 but lost all three — and, perhaps most noticeably, were shut out in the final game of each series.

Karl Malone/John Stockton

18 seasons together | 1,422 games together | 18 playoff appearance­s

It is impossible to talk about one without the other. Stockton and Malone made the playoffs in each of their 18 seasons together, including three trips to the conference finals and two Finals appearance­s. But they were never able to get past Michael Jordan and those iconic Chicago Bulls teams of the late

1990s.

Alex Ovechkin

13 seasons | 1,003 games |

10 playoff appearance­s

It’s remarkable, really, that Ovechkin had never even reached the Eastern Conference finals before this season, given Washington’s track record of success. Only four play- ers in NHL history have scored more goals than Ovechkin’s 607 and never won the Stanley Cup.

Tony Gwynn

20 seasons | 2,440 games |

3 playoff appearance­s Though Gwynn made only three postseason appearance­s in a career that spanned two decades, two of them featured trips to the World Series. Unfortunat­ely for Gwynn, both resulted in blowout losses for his San Diego Padres, despite his

.371 batting average in the Fall Classic.

Patrick Ewing

17 seasons | 1,183 games |

13 playoff appearance­s Ewing led Georgetown to a

1984 championsh­ip, was selected No. 1 overall in the 1985 draft and made 11 All-Star appearance­s in his NBA career. But his two trips to the NBA Finals were thwarted by the likes of Hakeem Olajuwon and David Robinson. “He didn’t win a championsh­ip,” former New York Knicks coach Jeff Van Gundy told ESPN in 2002. “But he conducted himself like a champion and put more into trying to win a championsh­ip than anyone.”

Randy Moss

15 seasons | 218 games |

7 playoff appearance­s

Moss made five Pro Bowl teams in seven seasons with the Minnesota Vikings but never reached a Super Bowl. Then when he got there with the New England Patriots in 2007 and San Francisco 49ers in

2012, Moss fell just short. Both games were decided by a mere three points.

Others receiving votes

❚ Charles Barkley (16 seasons | 1,073 games | 13 playoff appearance­s)

❚ Rod Carew (19 seasons |

2,469 games | 4 playoff appearance­s)

❚ Ken Griffey Jr. (22 seasons |

2,671 games | 3 playoff appearance­s)

❚ Paul Kariya (15 seasons |

989 games | 6 playoff appearance­s)

❚ Eric Lindros (13 seasons |

760 games | 6 playoff appearance­s)

❚ Barry Sanders (10 seasons |

153 games | 5 playoff appearance­s)

❚ Ted Williams (19 seasons |

2,292 games | 1 playoff appearance)

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 ?? AMBER SEARLS/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Until this season, Capitals left wing Alex Ovechkin had never reached an NHL conference final yet alone the Stanley Cup Final.
AMBER SEARLS/USA TODAY SPORTS Until this season, Capitals left wing Alex Ovechkin had never reached an NHL conference final yet alone the Stanley Cup Final.
 ?? UNDATED FILE PHOTO BY DARRYL NORENBERG/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? First baseman Ernie Banks played 19 seasons and 2,528 games, but the 14-time All-Star’s Cubs teams never made the playoffs.
UNDATED FILE PHOTO BY DARRYL NORENBERG/USA TODAY SPORTS First baseman Ernie Banks played 19 seasons and 2,528 games, but the 14-time All-Star’s Cubs teams never made the playoffs.

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