"I think that taste that we had last year was pretty incredible," Ovechkin said, "and hopefully we're going to do it again."
Riding a high from last season's championship, the 33-year-old left wing played this season with a joy that brought back memories of his younger days. During a 14-game stretch from Nov. 16 to Dec. 15, he scored 17 goals, including hat tricks in consecutive games against the Detroit Red Wings on Dec. 11 and the Hurricanes on Dec. 14.
That pace was impossible to maintain. But his effort remained consistent, and he won the Rocket Richard Trophy as the NHL's goal-scoring leader for the eighth time. Ovechkin finished the season with 658 goals, 13th in NHL history.
"I've seen him really relaxed and he's just doing what he loves -- playing hockey on the highest level," longtime linemate Nicklas Backstrom said. "I think for him especially and for us as a team, we're not satisfied. We want to do it again. We want to end with that same feeling we had last year."
Backstrom understands the pressure to win that Ovechkin was under previously as well as anyone because they went through much of it together. Ovechkin was the No. 1 pick in the 2004 NHL Draft. Backstrom, 31, was the No. 4 pick in the 2006 NHL Draft.
Despite all their regular-season success, including winning the Presidents' Trophy for having the most regular-season points in 2009-10, 2015-16 and 2016-17, they were never able to advance past the second round in the playoffs. After finally doing it last season and going on to win it all, with Ovechkin also winning the Conn Smythe Trophy as the most valuable player in the playoffs, that pressure is gone.