‘He just loves goals’: Inside Alex Ovechkin’s record chase


WASHINGTON, D.C. — The soon-to-be undisputed greatest goal scorer of all-time stands out more than anyone else buzzing around the ice at MedStar Capitals Iceplex in unnumbered practice sweaters.

Not because you’re looking for him. 

Because he’s making himself seen.

At first, it’s his trademark style: skate tongues flapping out like a childish taunt; bright yellow laces gleaming amid a wash of red and white; jersey stretched wide over those linebacker shoulders and tucked deep inside hockey pants that stretch halfway up his back; and, of course, a thick beard that’s seeing salt gain a territorial advantage over pepper.

But over the course of an hour-long Washington Capitals practice session, it’s the personality, the joy, the full-throttle engagement that you notice most.

Alex Ovechkin is hollering for the puck during an O-zone drill. He’s raising his stick to celebrate an easy tap-in on an odd-man rush. He’s leading the team from one ice pad to the next for special-teams work. He’s rushing to bend the knee first, front and centre, at the whiteboard as coach Spencer Carbery explains the breakout of the Toronto Maple Leafs, their next opponent.

He’s pulling aside 23-year-old Connor McMichael — who was a toddler when Ovechkin was drafted to save this franchise in 2004 — and advising him about power-play positioning.

He’s bellowing a giddy Wooo! whenever his line scores.

And then he’s wrapping a Russian bear arm around victim-slash-teammate Logan Thompson and sharing a laugh.

To see him at work, this strange blend of natural ease and intense concentration, you wouldn’t guess that Ovechkin is chasing history. 

You’d imagine he’d already written it.

“I always heard he was just like a big, happy-go-lucky guy. Just like a big kid playing hockey, having fun. I would always talk to him on the ice a little bit, and always be joking back and forth. But I never got the chance to actually sit and meet him and talk to him, until I came here,” says Thompson, who was traded to the Capitals by the Vegas Golden Knights this summer and is still leaking sweat from trying to solve off-day Ovechkin. 

“It’s been awesome. He’s a great captain, a great leader. And it’s true: He has fun. And it’s a big reason why I think he’s still playing today and putting up goals. He just loves goals.”

Only 32 more, and he’ll have the most of what he loves.