Mikhail Ovechkin, who played soccer professionally before an injury cut short his career, had a big impact on Alex's professional hockey career along with Ovechkin's mother Tatyana, who was a two-time Olympic gold medalist for the Soviet Union in women's basketball (1976 and 1980). They helped spark Ovechkin's love of hockey from a young age.
"My father, I remember, he would go on some trips and bring me some goalie helmets," Alex Ovechkin said after he signed a 13-year contract with the Capitals in 2008. "I didn't know what it was, except it was something about hockey, and when I was a little kid everything was about hockey, hockey, hockey."
Alex Ovechkin was selected with the No. 1 pick in the 2004 NHL Draft and has played 18 seasons in the League, all with Washington. He ranks second in NHL history with 812 goals, behind Wayne Gretzky (894).
Mikhail and Tatyana watched on television in Russia when Alex reached 800 NHL goals with a hat trick against the Chicago Blackhawks on Dec. 13, and when he scored his 802nd goal to pass Gordie Howe for second in League history against the Winnipeg Jets on Dec. 23.
Earlier in Alex's career, Mikhail often traveled from Russia to see his son play and shared some his biggest moments with him, even after having surgery for a heart condition in February 2014. Mikhail was with Alex in Los Angeles when he was named among the NHL's 100 Greatest Players in 2017, but was unable to travel with Tatyana to see the Capitals win the Stanley Cup in 2018, when Alex won the Conn Smythe Trophy as the most valuable player in the playoffs.
When Alex brought the Stanley Cup to Russia that summer, he lifted it over his head alongside his father at the training facility for Dynamo Moscow, where Alex played as a youth and began his professional career.
"I can't even put it into words," Mikhail Ovechkin said through a translator after lifting and kissing the Cup. "Thirteen years we were working toward that goal, and finally to win the Stanley Cup, it's a huge happiness. Huge happiness."
Alex Ovechkin called it "a dream come true" when he signed a one-game contract with FC Dynamo Moscow, his father's old soccer team in the Russian Premier League, and scored a goal in a friendly against FC Amkal in Moscow on June 25, 2022.
Mikhail Ovechkin was among those in attendance.
"My dad was a professional soccer player and he got hurt," Alex Ovechkin said before this season. "So it was fun. He was there, too. He was watching and it was a great night."