Alex Ovechkin breaks Wayne
Gretzky's NHL career goals record by scoring his 895th
[April 07, 2025]
By STEPHEN WHYNO
NEW YORK (AP) — Alex Ovechkin fired just about the perfect shot from
the place on the ice that has defined his remarkable career. When
the puck hit the net, it made him the top goal scorer in NHL
history.
Ovechkin broke Wayne Gretzky's record by scoring his 895th career
goal in the Washington Capitals' game Sunday against the New York
Islanders, beating fellow Russian Ilya Sorokin on a power play with
12:34 left in the second period. He took a cross-ice pass from
longtime teammate Tom Wilson and fired a laser past Sorokin with
defenseman Jakob Chychrun screening.
Capitals coach Spencer Carbery called it “the ultimate goal-scorer’s
goal for the greatest of all time.”
With the excitement of a child, the 39-year-old belly flopped onto
the ice as tens of thousands of fans around him cheered and chanted,
“Ovi! Ovi!” while teammates streamed off the bench, mobbing him in
celebration.
“I’m probably gonna need a couple more days or maybe a couple weeks
to realize what does it mean to be No. 1,” Ovechkin said after a 4-1
loss that was still a party for the Capitals. "I’m really proud for
myself. I’m really proud for my family, for all my teammates that
help me to reach that milestone and for all my coaches. It’s huge.
It’s unbelievable. It’s unbelievable moment, and I’m happy.”
Ovechkin had never scored on Sorokin before, making his countryman
the 183rd different goaltender he has beaten. “Thank you to Sorokin
to let me score 895,” Ovechkin said. “I love you, brother.” Ovechkin
asked him for the stick, and Sorokin obliged after writing “895!”
and signing it.

That any player got to 895 goals, breaking a record that stood for
31 years, seemed unreal to those in the middle of it.
"It’s truly incredible," said center Dylan Strome, who got the
secondary assist for passing the puck to Wilson. "Sometimes those
moments happen where you’ve kind of got to pinch yourself to believe
that you’re really in this moment and really on the ice celebrating
or a part of it, and it was awesome.”
Ovechkin broke a record that appeared to be one of the most
untouchable in sports. NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman made sure to
point that out when he opened the 10-minute ceremony to celebrate
the milestone.
“Wayne, you’ll always be the ‘Great One’ and you had a record that
nobody ever thought would be broken,” Bettman said. “But Alex, you
did it."
The first to get hugs from Ovechkin were longtime equipment managers
Craig “Woody” Leydig and Brock Myles, along with the rest of the
training and locker room staff who have been around him so long.
Ovechkin waved to acknowledge the crowd and went through a handshake
line with the Islanders as crew members set up for the 895 ceremony
that has been months in the making.
Ovechkin got a portrait of himself and Gretzky. Janet Gretzky
presented a gift to Ovechkin's wife, Nastya, just as Colleen Howe
did to her when her husband broke Gordie's record back in 1994.
Ovechkin got No. 895 in his 1,487th game — the same number Gretzky
finished with.
Gretzky shook Ovechkin’s hand, embraced him and congratulated the
“Great 8” and his family for the accomplishment.
“They say records are made to be broken, but I’m not sure who’s
going to get more goals than that," Gretzky said.

[to top of second column] |

Washington Capitals left wing Alex Ovechkin (8) is greeted by Wayne
Gretzky during a ceremony after he scored his 895th career goal
during the second period of an NHL hockey game against New York
Islanders in Elmont, N.Y., Sunday, April 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Adam
Hunger)

Ovechkin took the microphone from Gretzky like a
torch being passed from one legend of the game to another. He
thanked injured teammates Nicklas Backstrom and T.J. Oshie, with
whom he won the Stanley Cup in 2018, and expressed his affection for
his wife, mother and two sons standing nearby.
“We did it, boys. We did it,” Ovechkin said. “And the most important
thing, to my mom, my family, my beautiful wife, my father-in-law, my
beautiful kids, thank you. I love you so much, and without you,
without your support I would never stand here."
More “Ovi!” chants followed. Plenty more will be coming as he
attempts to reach 900.
Gretzky’s total of 894 goals had long seemed unapproachable.
Ovechkin passed it even after missing 16 games in November and
December because of a broken left leg, a testament to his durability
and a knack for putting the puck in the net consistently for two
decades. He surpassed 40 goals this season for a 14th time — two
more than Gretzky and also the most in league history — and now has
42.
“To do what he’s doing at this age is incredible,” said longtime
teammate John Carlson, who assisted on tying goal No. 894. "I think
people are sleeping on that, too. Just, like, he missed two months
and he might score 50 goals. Like that’s nuts. It’s crazy.”
The chase by the Great 8, a nickname honoring his jersey number,
captured attention from North America to Ovechkin’s native Russia,
where billboards and goal counters cheered on and tracked his
effort. It helped Ovechkin that his team is one of the best in the
NHL this season, defying expectations.
Gretzky broke Howe’s record a little more than 31 years ago, since
he scored 802 on March 23, 1994. He added 92 more before retiring in
1999 after a total of 1,487 games over 20 seasons.
Even with this one falling to Ovechkin, Gretzky holds 54 NHL
records, and two seem truly untouchable: 2,857 total points and
1,963 assists, the latter of which is more than anyone else has in
goals and assists combined.

For NHL playoff goals, which do not count toward the record, Gretzky
has the most (122). Ovechkin has 72. Gretzky also had another 56 in
the World Hockey Association regular season and playoffs, while
Ovechkin has 57 from his time in the KHL, Russia’s top league.
Returning to Russia to play in front of family and friends is an
option at some point for Ovechkin, who has one season left after
this one on the five-year, $47.5 million contract he signed in 2021,
which took him through age 40 to give him enough time to chase
Gretzky’s record. Instead, he got it done earlier than just about
anyone could have realistically expected.
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