The captain of the Washington Capitals heads into the game at the Florida Panthers on Thursday (7 p.m. ET; BSFL, NBCSWA, ESPN+, NHL LIVE) leading the NHL with nine goals in nine games this season. He has scored 739 goals in his 17 seasons, putting him within two of tying
Brett Hull
(741) for fourth in NHL history.
Ovechkin has downplayed his pursuit of Hull, saying, "It is what it is. You just go and do everything that you can."
But the 36-year-old has started this season playing with a drive and producing at a level that defies his age.
Before being held without a point in a 3-2 loss at the Tampa Bay Lightning on Monday, Ovechkin scored at least one point in each of the first eight games of the season (nine goals, six assists). That tied the Capitals record for the longest point streak to begin a season he set as a 20-year-old rookie in 2005-06 and equaled by forward
Alexander Semin
in 2006-07.
Eight games also tied the fewest Ovechkin needed to score 15 points in his NHL career from 2009-10, when he was 24. By scoring his eighth goal of the season against the Detroit Red Wings on Oct. 27, he became the second player in NHL history to score at least eight goals in the first seven games at age 35 or older, joining
Maurice Richard
(eight goals in the first seven games in 1957-58).
Ovechkin was named the NHL
First Star of the Month for October
.
"He looks younger, I think. I don't know how that's possible," Red Wings coach Jeff Blashill said. "He plays with such vigor and energy. It's pretty cool to watch, as long as you're not on the bench coaching against him, how excited he still gets to score. I think it's awesome."
Ovechkin hasn't found the Fountain of Youth but returning to his regular offseason program with personal trainer Pavel Burlachenko had him primed physically for the start of the season.
The coronavirus pandemic created uncertainty that made it difficult to time his training leading up to the start of last season, which was delayed until Jan. 13. Although Ovechkin led the Capitals with 24 goals in 45 games, he was unable to find a consistent rhythm and missed an NHL career-high 11 games, four while in NHL COVID-19 protocol and seven with a groin injury, the first time in five seasons he missed a game because of injury.
Having a more normal offseason to train enabled Ovechkin to better gear up for the start, and the long grind, of the season.
"It helps a lot," Ovechkin said. "Me and my trainer Pavel, we always knew what we had to do just to get prepared for the year. It's going to be a long season with (the 2022 Beijing Olympics) and the (Stanley Cup Playoffs) and we kind of just got back to a routine. … Obviously, it helps when you know what exactly is going to happen during the whole the year, so I think we did a very good job in training camp."