"Day 3. Surgery went really well," the 38-year-old posted on his Twitter account Friday. "About five hours to get it all taken care of. Really appreciate the great staff here at the Cleveland Clinic. Last few days has been pretty crazy but feel like I'm in really good hands. Every day is a step in the right direction."
Lundqvist announced Dec. 28 he was scheduled to have open-heart surgery for an "aortic valve replacement, aortic root and ascending aortic replacement to be more exact."
He signed a one-year, $1.5 million contract Oct. 9 after he had the final season of his contract bought out by the New York Rangers on Sept. 30 and was expected to compete for Washington's starting job with Ilya Samsonov before announcing Dec. 17 he could not play this season because of a heart condition.
"A routine physical that was an early physical turned into, 'Well, we need to explore further what's going on with you,'" Capitals general manager Brian MacLellan said Dec. 23. "Following along, our trainer, Jason Serbus, did an unbelievable job. Our doctors, the cardiologists, the specialists, it kept getting deeper and deeper. As we went that far, Henrik got a lot more knowledge of what his situation is and where it's going and what his risk levels are … and his risk level is not acceptable for him to continue to play, for him and his family."
Lundqvist had said he was looking forward to getting an opportunity to win the Stanley Cup with the Capitals, who won it in 2018, after he was unable to in 15 seasons with the Rangers.
He visited the Washington area with his family in October to find a place to live and participated in an informal skate with some of his new teammates on Nov. 23 before returning to New York.
"I can say for the past two months I've felt so inspired and committed to prepare myself for the upcoming season," Lundqvist said in a video posted to his Twitter account Dec. 17. "The daily skates, and workouts, and just the thought of playing [in D.C.] has really, really brought me lots of excitement. It's still very hard for me to process all of this and kind of shocking, to be honest. But with the experts involved, I know this is the only way of action."
Selected by the Rangers in the seventh round (No. 205) of the 2000 NHL Draft, Lundqvist was 459-310-96 with a 2.43 goals-against average, a .918 save percentage and 64 shutouts in 887 games with New York.
Lundqvist is sixth in NHL history in wins, seventh in saves (23,509), eighth in games, ninth in starts (871), ninth in time on ice (51,816:19) and 16th in shutouts. He won the Vezina Trophy voted as the best goalie in the NHL in 2011-12 and has been a finalist four other times (2005-06, 2006-07, 2007-08, 2012-13).
He was 10-12-3 with a 3.16 GAA, a .905 save percentage and one shutout last season with New York. But with the emergence of Igor Shesterkin and Alexandar Georgiev, Lundqvist started four of the Rangers' final 29 games and finished with the fewest games (30), starts (26) and wins of his NHL career.