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Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Ovechkin is still the best player in the world, no kid ding

By PETER WORTHINGTON, May 3, 2010:
Although the second round of the NHL playoffs is underway, kicking Alexander Ovechkin of the Washington Capitals is still the flavour of the moment.

Because the Montreal Canadiens performed a modern miracle on ice by upsetting the Caps in the first round, Ovechkin, as captain, is being dissed and blamed for lack of leadership and being too individualistic and not a team player. Ovechkin even blames himself for the Caps loss. A gesture of some class.

On the other hand, Sidney Crosby is getting rave reviews because the Penguins managed to prevent Ottawa from pulling a Montreal-type upset.

The Sun’s Steve Simmons opined: “This is Sidney Crosby’s time. Alexander Ovechkin is now the Avis of NHL players. No. 2 and trying harder.”

Dave Feschuk in the Toronto Star noted Ovechkin “has much to prove” — he and the Caps’ Mike Green proved to be “24-year-olds with learning to do.”

The Ottawa Citizne’s Wayne Scanlon was damning: “Ovechkin falls short again ... Goodbye Ovie. Hello Sid . . . Ovechkin deserves a lot of the heat he’s getting.”

To the Globe and Mail’s Sean Gordon, Ovechkin “will now face serious questions as to his ability to marshal his team to victory . . . (and) lost some ground to Pittsburgh Penguins centre Sidney Crosby in the best-player-of-his generation discussion.”

As a locker-room philosopher once said:

“If you’re going to kick someone, it’s safest to do it when he’s down.”

And so it is with Ovechkin.

In the debate as to whether Crosby or Ovechkin is the greater hockey player, Crosby gets nods as a team player; Ovechkin is accused of trying to do it all himself.

This is a bit of a bum rap. One forgets that in the final game against Ottawa that Pittsburgh won, Crosby was on the ice when all four of Ottawa’s goals were scored, one of which was disallowed.

This year, while Crosby finished the season with one more goal than Ovechkin (51-50), Ovechkin finished with one more assist than Crosby (59-58). And Ovechkin played in nine fewer games than Crosby.

So while the dissing of Ovechkin will continue (at least until next season) reality is that in four of the five seasons he’s played in the NHL, Ovechkin’s assists have roughly matched his awesome goal-scoring talents. That hardly indicates a selfish player.

Yes, he shoots a lot, but he also passes a lot.

Winning motivates him, as it does all top players, but Crosby is a Stanley Cup winner.

One could argue that Crosby has Evgeni Malkin as a linemate — possibly the second-best Russian player (after Ovechkin) in the NHL. That argument can be countered by noting Ovechkin’s line mate is Nicklas Backstrom — as good as any at his job.

I’d argue Ovechkin is one of the cleaner players in hockey. He hits like no other goal-scorer, but has no reputation for butt-ending, hooking, slashing, tripping or goon stuff. His shattering body checks are what Don Cherry fears may eventually curtail his career. Crosby is more conventional and chippy without the flamboyance of Ovechkin. In my view, as an occasional fan, Crosby is a player who makes any team better.

Ovechkin is a player you can build a team around, as he has proved in Washington where, in his words “the fans are now like Canadians.”

Given a choice, I’d rather see Ovechkin in a Leafs uniform than Sidney Crosby.

Can any compliment be higher than that?


Let's watch those lousy writers eat the crow next year.

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5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Let's not forget that Crosby is the only player with 50 goals minus the empty netters this year.

Anonymous said...

So? And Ovie played 10 fewer games. If he had played every game or at least those lost to injury then Crosby's totals would be in the rear view mirror.

Statistically, Ovechkin was incredible this year.

Darla said...

A goal is a goal. Only a fool would not take advantage of an empty net. You miss one hundred per cent of the shots you don't take.

beergirl said...

Why are Cindy homers even on an Ovechkin blog? Obsessed much?

BobbyG said...

I still regard Ovie as the best player in the world. This is not a diss at Crosby, just an acknowledgement that Crosby has had luck and talent on his side in winning the Stanley Cup and Olympic gold medal.

Crosby had Malkin in the Stanley Cup playoffs last year. Crosby wasn't the best player in the playoffs, the RUSSIAN Malkin was. This was a huge advantage for him and the Pens.

In the Olympics, Crosby wasn't the best player of the tournament, the USA goalie Ryan Miller was. Crosby's TEAM was better, and had Mike Babcock as coach. Team Russia was riddled with dissention and conflict between the KHL and NHL players, plus horrible coaching. This was a huge disadvantage and IMO the primary reasons behind Team Russia's failure to win a medal.