Now that he's finally gotten that monkey off his back, his teammates were thrilled to see him vindicated with a championship.
"He probably took the brunt of the criticism just because he's the captain and the highest-paid guy," defenseman Brooks Orpik said. "I think a lot of guys feel for him in that situation. If you watched the reaction of his teammates when he got the Cup, I think speaks volumes about how guys feel about him."
It's been a season filled with big moments for Ovechkin. He became the first Capital to reach 1,000 games on April 1 at the Pittsburgh Penguins.
He became the 20th player to score 600 NHL goals when he scored twice against the Winnipeg Jets on March 12 and the fourth player to reach the milestone in fewer than 1,000 games (990), joining Wayne Gretzky (718), Mario Lemieux (719) and Brett Hull (900).
After scoring 33 goals last season, his lowest total in a full season since he scored 32 in 2010-11, Ovechkin led the NHL this season with 49 goals to win the Rocket Richard Trophy for the seventh time.
Selected by the Capitals with the No. 1 pick in the 2004 NHL Draft, Ovechkin has 1,122 points (607 goals, 515 assists), was named one of the 100 Greatest NHL Players presented by Molson Canadian in 2017, has won the Calder Trophy (NHL rookie of the year), the Hart Trophy (MVP) three times and the Art Ross Trophy (scoring champion) once.