Whatever greatly skilled and exciting roster Capitals’ management assembles for the future, it won’t much matter if at home it’s asked to compete on an ability-leveling and integrity-sacrificing surface.

7. Deadline Day Doozies. Trade deadline day was supposed to be quiet for the Caps. It turned out to be anything but. General manager George McPhee engineered a dramatic infusion of postseason experience and skill in areas of weakness on February 26, including securing a no.1 netminder in Cristobal Huet from Montreal for merely a second-round pick in the 2009 Entry Draft. All three players acquired on deadline day played pivotal roles in the season’s final 18 games.

In his Capitals’ debut on February 29, Huet stopped all 18 shots he faced in backstopping the Caps to a 4-0 win in New Jersey. He went 11-2 in his 13 starts for the Caps, winning the final nine games he started. In the biggest game the Caps played in years, Sergei Fedorov, acquired for 2007 second round selection Teddy Ruth, was named the game’s first star in the Caps’ 3-1 win over Florida on April 5, which vaulted the team to the SouthEast title and the postseason for the first time since 2003. He was especially adept in the faceoff circle. Matt Cooke played a less significant part statistically during the stretch run but recaptured his active, pest-like play from years ago in Vancouver night in and night out. All three veterans were credited with providing vital leadership to the young and inexperienced Caps.

6. Mike Green: the no. 1 Gun Arrives. If there was one overarching question confronting the Caps’ blueline heading into the 2007-08 season, it was: is there a no.1 Gun among? If last September you thought there was, you knew something the rest of hockey didn’t. In 2006-07, Mike Green played 70 games for the Caps, tallying just 2 goals and 10 assists. He offered glimpses of high-end promise, but he also seemed years away from becoming consistent and reliable and earning a top pairing assignment. But this past season Green blossomed into a dominant, mature-for-his-years force. He led the entire league in goals by a defenseman during the regular season, and he followed that with a superb playoff series — so much so that Flyers’ head coach John Stevens very publicly made it known that Mike Green was a weapon his team had to strategize to stop. The no.1 Gun on the Caps’ blueline has arrived.

5. AO: The Best Hockey Player on the Planet. Alexander Ovechkin’s hardware-hogging brilliance during 2007-08 earned him broadcasts of “Ovechkin Ovations” on the NHL Network and, more importantly, ascension over the Nova Scotian as the game’s greatest talent. His 65 goals during the regular season were the most scored by a Capital in franchise history, and he became just the 19th player in NHL history to score 60 goals in a season. By the end of the regular season he’d staked unassailable claims to both the Richard and Ross trophies and was a near mortal lock to command both the Hart trophy and the Lester Pearson award for his most valuable performance. At one point no less than the Great One suggested that his seemingly unbreakable record of 92 goals scored in a single season could be within Ovechkin’s visored viewfinder.

4. Canning Glen; Finding the Right Guy Right up the Road. After winning their first three games of the season, the Capitals proceeded to lose 15 of their next 18 and plummet to the very bottom of the NHL standings. While Glen Hanlon may well have been the right coach to preside over the rebuilding Caps beginning not long before the team began its purge of high-priced, under-achieving talent in the 2003-04 season, autumn 2007 seemed to deliver a resoundingly rotten verdict on his ability to advance the team to where management deemed appropriate for 2007-08.

No one would suggest that Hanlon didn’t offer the organization his fullest possible effort. But by late 2007 that effort wasn’t working. “He knew as soon as he saw me this morning,” McPhee told the Washington Post on Thanksgiving day. “He said, ‘I wouldn’t have known what to do today.’ ”

Enter Bruce Boudreau, aka “Gabby.” On Thanksgiving Eve Bruce Boudreau was in his third season behind the Hershey Bears’ bench. He’d enjoyed an auspicious first two seasons there: a Calder Cup title in his first season in Hershey in the spring of 2006 and a return to the finals the following season. He’d won a Kelly Cup title in the East Coast League as well. Still, to many Capitals’ fans, he appeared to be just another “no name” plucked from the farm.

Probably it was with this in mind that Hershey Bears’ Senior Manager for Communications John Walton authored a memorable open letter to Capitals’ fans on the day that Gabby was announced as the new Caps’ coach. “Know this first and foremost,” Walton wrote in his letter. “He’s a winner . . . For what it’s worth, we have seen the magic here. We’re more than willing to share.” Continue reading ›

Filed in Alexander Ovechkin, American Hockey League, Bruce Boudreau, Calder Cup, Chris Clark, Cristobal Huet, Development Camp, Eastern Conference, Entry Draft, Front Office, George McPhee, Hershey Bears, Ice, John Walton, Kettler Capitals Iceplex, Matt Cooke, Media, Mike Green, NHL Network, NHL Trades, National Hockey League, Nicklas Backstrom, Philadelphia Flyers, Print, Sergei Fedorov, Stanley Cup Playoffs, TV, Ted Leonsis, The Big Deal, Training Camp, Verizon Center, Washington Capitals, Washington Post| Permalink| Comments (11)

At Kettler the Day After

By pucksandbooks
Wednesday, April 23, 2008

You can cross one name off your list of free agent concerns for the Capitals this offseason — Head Coach Bruce Boudreau. Speaking with reporters at Kettler-Capitals Iceplex just moments after wrapping up a season-concluding meeting with the team this afternoon, the coach confirmed that he’d had discussions with General Manager George McPhee about a new deal. He didn’t want to speak in specifics, and he wanted to defer to the GM for a more formal acknowledgment, but he did say, “I’m gonna be coaching the Caps a little while.” He was smiling.

The coach also confirmed that Alexander Ovechkin played hurt in his first playoff series. He suggested that some struggles the left winger experienced at times in the series were related to the injury. After the game last night Ovechkin did tell Sovetsky Sport’s Dmitry Chesnokov that he had played games 6 and 7 on painkillers. When Chesnokov pressed him for more details about the injury, AO replied, “I cannot tell you that.”

The coach remains in awe of his star. Alluding to Ovechkin’s extended stay in D.C. that was secured earlier this season, he said, “Thirteen years for that guy — maybe it should be 18!”

Nicklas Backstrom, it was announced while we were gathered at Kettler, has been named a finalist for the Calder Trophy.

The coach is going up to Hershey tonight to take in game 4 of the Bears’ opening series with Wilkes Barre-Scranton. The Caps’ affiliate is in a 3-0 hole in that one. When asked how he thought he’d spend his first offseason as an NHL coach Boudreau said that he didn’t quite know but added, “This is the environment I feel comfortable in.”

Both the coach and the superstar were effusive in their praise for Washington’s hockey fans. Ovechkin wants the city’s fans to pick up next season where they left off this. “I hope the fans support us the same way [next year]. The atmosphere was unbelievable.”

Boudreau pointed to a pronounced difference in the arena from fall to spring. “I’ve really seen it pick up since I came here,” he said. “[There were] an amazing amount of jerseys in the crowd last night.”

Matt Cooke, on Tom Poti’s overtime tripping call: “You’d like to see them call something that wasn’t a marginal call, something that takes away a scoring chance.”

Lastly, the coach acknowledged that he’d had a private and very personal conversation with Olie Kolzig. He didn’t offer much about its substance, but he did say, “[Kolzig's] one of the classiest men I’ve ever met in this game.”

The goaltender’s Kettler locker, for what it’s worth, still had his nameplate in place.

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Ovechkin Gets Cut

By The OFB Team
Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Ovechkin’s a cut above the rest on the ice. Now he’s cut a deal with his favorite tonsorial destination: The Hair Cuttery. It was in January of this year that Dan Steinberg broke the story of the NHL’s richest man and his hair. A while later, Majority Owner Ted Leonsis thought that Ovechkin would “be a great spokesperson for you [Hair Cuttery]“.

So it is written, So it shall be done…

Today, the Hair Cuttery — the largest privately-owned chain of hair salons in the country — announced that it has signed Ovechkin to a 6-month partnership agreement. He will appear in print and radio ads and will provide limited autographed items for Hair Cuttery clients. There may even be personal appearances at some locations in the area.

From the press release:

“Ovechkin proves that even if you’re a multimillionaire, you can still appreciate a good haircut at a great price. After signing a 13 year, $124M contract – the richest in NHL history – the 22-year-old Washington Capitals’ left wing is still a regular client at the Ballston Common Hair Cuttery in Arlington, Virginia. The salon is located in the mall underneath the Kettler Capitals Iceplex where the team practices and, since he never needs an appointment, Ovechkin stops in for a haircut whenever it is convenient for him.”

“When we learned that Alex is a regular Hair Cuttery client, we knew he would be perfect for our new advertising campaign,� said Dennis Ratner, founder and CEO of Hair Cuttery. “Alex certainly has some extra change in his pocket these days, and at Hair Cuttery, all our clients can get a great style and keep a little extra for themselves.� The new change your hair, and change in your pocket® campaign focuses on how clients can change their hair through cut, color, and styling services at Hair Cuttery, and still keep some extra change in their pocket.

Ratner went on to say, “Alex brings an authentic endorsement to the Hair Cuttery brand – he has been a loyal client, and now we are able to share this with the rest of the Washington, DC area. His commitment to family and wholesome, athletic image are also a great fit with our family salons.�

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Optimism, Cynicism, and the Ovechkin Contract

By OrderedChaos (Mike Rucki)
Tuesday, January 29, 2008

So perhaps second only to the excitement surrounding the Capitals’ resurgence under Coach Boudreau is the buzz about Alex Ovechkin’s record-setting thirteen-year, $124 million contract. Many Capitals fans are thrilled that the team has shown such commitment to Ovechkin and to the fans; others are worried the deal, for various reasons, will come back to haunt the team.

So, playing off the OrderedChaos bloggername dichotomy (and yes, I use the name for other stuff too), I’ll be devil’s advocate against, er, myself. Full disclosure: I’m an optimist by nature. But the cynics have some good points. For the sake of rational discussion I will ignore ridiculous negativity and focus on valid concerns about the deal which persist two weeks after the ink has dried.

Ovechkin's Million Dollar Bill
Now picture 123 more of these…

Optimist: Woohoo! So happy to see the face of the franchise here long-term. I love this deal.

Cynic: Um… history repeating? Didn’t the team learn from the Jaromir Jagr debacle that such a huge deal is a big risk? I’m not saying they should have let Ovechkin go, but I wish the contract had been a little less intimidating.

O: C’mon, Ovie is a completely different player than Jagr. He plays at 100% all the time, and doesn’t take shifts off. Plus his exuberance is contagious on and off the iceâ€â€the personalities of Jagr and Ovechkin couldn’t be more different.

C: OK, but 13 years? The Caps are still paying the price, literally, for the Jagr extensionâ€â€basically a third of what Jagr scores each year is bought by the Caps but benefits the Rangers. We still only have 2.5 NHL seasons from which to project his career… hardly a definitive sample size.

O: True… the Jagr situation is undeniably painful. But Caps’ fan “Rage” posted a good analysis of the “real money” terms of the deal. Basically, as inflation and the salary cap increases over the course of the contract, the deal for the team gets better each year. But if you require further financial reassurance, check out Rage’s post. And remember, the Jagr extension was offered before he skated a single regular-season shift in a Capitals uniform. 2.5 years does not a career make, but what Ovechkin has shown so far makes him a pretty good gamble.

C: Locking any player up for so long has to detract from his motivation, right? There’s a reason that many players in all sports perform their best in contract years.

O: I don’t think anything can diminish Ovechkin’s drive to win. This guy’s got a champion’s pedigree courtesy of his mother and father, both athletes in their time, and the work ethic to match. Last off-season he claimed he didn’t train enough by his own standards and was disappointed with his play… yet he still scored 46 goals. This year Ovechkin worked even harder to get in top shape, and now he leads the league in goals.

C: I’m worried this contract sets the bar too high, and may hurt the Caps’ chances of affording other key players (paging Mr. Green) as well as restricting their ability to bring in free agents.

O: The deal certainly locks up a big chunk of change in one player. But I don’t see Ted Leonsis and George McPhee making a commitment like this one without realizing that Ovechkin can’t win the Cup on his own. The team will certainly no longer hover near the bottom of league in payroll. And don’t forget, an up-and-coming team with a bona fide (and well-paid) superstar helps make Washington a more appealing destination for free agents. Who wouldn’t want the chance to play with Ovechkin? A deal like this represents not only the organization’s faith in Ovechkin, but also its commitment to building and maintaining a year-in year-out contender.

C: Still, there’s no guarantee that he’ll want to stay in DC for thirteen years. What if he gets impatient, say a half-dozen years from now, and wants out? Or what if the team decides the same?

O: I don’t think that will happen; the team loves Ovie, and Ovie seems to love D.C. But if it does, both the player and the team have an out. A “limited movement clause” kicks in around Ovechkin’s 27th birthday. Ovechkin can pick a handful of teams that he can eliminate from consideration for a trade each season; the Capitals may then entertain trade offers from any teams not on Ovechkin’s “hell-no” list. And, as mentioned before, Ovechkin’s contract becomes more financially attractive with each passing year. So if a trade is desired by team or by player, I’ve little doubt the result would be much more attractive to the team than simply a Jagr-esque salary dump.

C: OK… but what if he gets hurt? Thirteen years is a really long time, and the physical style Ovechkin plays leaves him more susceptible to injury than say a Gretzky-type guy.

O: Fair enough. There’s no way to predict injuries, and Ovechkin does play full-throttle and hits like a freight train. But remember that he also works incredibly hard to prepare himself physically and mentally; good preparation/conditioning goes a long way towards reducing the risk of injury. And you may have heard the wailing and gnashing of teeth of late coming from Pittsburgh, so clearly playing a “softer style” by no means protects one from harm.

C: Hey, aren’t you getting tired of this dual-personality shtick?

O: Why yes. Yes I am.

Clearly the risk of such a lucrative, long-term deal is significant. But the potential rewardâ€â€that of having a high-energy, goal-scoring, franchise player for the next 13 yearsâ€â€is worth that risk.

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Ovechkin and Green Get Schooled

By OrderedChaos (Mike Rucki)
Thursday, January 17, 2008

The Washington Capitals’ Alexander Ovechkin and Mike Green paid a visit on Wednesday to Williamsburg Middle School in Arlington. Led by Capitals Assistant Coach Dean Evason, the two stars showed the excited students how to stick-handle, pass, and shoot, with a handful of lucky fans joining them for each of the lessons.

But first, Evason hosted a brief Q&A, fielding questions from the crowd. One youngster asked, “How many teeth have you lost?” Two for Mike Green. Then Ovie flashed his wide smile, said he’s lost just one tooth, then said “I have it with me!” (which drew quite the “eeeewwwww!” reaction from the audience).

Check out the curve on that blade!

“Is it worth losing teeth to play hockey?” another student asked. Mike Green quipped in reply, “Did you hear about Ovie’s contract?” [Why yes. Yes we did.] After some laughter, Green said he’s happy to trade a few teeth for a chance to win the Cupâ€â€and I’m certain many a fan would join Green in his dental sacrifice to bring the Capitals a championship.

Of course, the students really got excited when lines of seven boys and seven girls teamed up with the players (Ovie was with the girls) for a spirited game of floor hockey.

Other fun moments:

  • Ovechkin stepping on the plastic blade of his hockey stick, trying to increase the curve, and goofily showing off to Green while doing it (”Greenie! Check it out!”).
  • During the stickhandling session, Ovechkin started bouncing the ball on the blade of his stick. Evasaon said, “That’s something special for Alex… Green, don’t try that.” (see video below)
  • Green’s end-to-end rush being foiled by a child’s stick blocking his shot.
  • Ovechkin’s incredulous laughter as Green gave him a good shoulder bump and stole the ball.
  • A child’s father waxing ecstatic about the “fantastic” Kettler Iceplex and how much he enjoys skating there with his son.

Ovechkin (now sporting a less-shaggy look) best summed up his and Mike Green’s enthusiasm for the day, delivered with his trademark grin: “We’re all like kids sometimes . . . the best time in your life [is] when you’re a kid.” More photos after the break.

Continue reading ›

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Ovechkin vs. Boras/Rosenhaus

By OrderedChaos (Mike Rucki)
Monday, January 14, 2008

Patrick Hruby’s always-entertaining Week in Review quiz this week features a fun essay question about AO’s new contract… his proposed answer is after the break.

Essay Question: Washington Capitals winger Alexander Ovechkin agreed to a $124 million, 13-year contract extension, working out the details himself in negotiations with team owner Ted Leonsis and general manager George McPhee.

In 800 words or less, justify the continuing existence of Scott Boras and/or Drew Rosenhaus.

Continue reading ›

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Confusion in Canada

By DC Sports Chick
Sunday, January 13, 2008

Every once in a while, I’m reminded of just how far we’ve come as a society. Indeed, the Canadian media alone provides us with significant advances in the field of humor on a daily basis; the Toronto Star is doing more than its share in this area. Exhibit one: Damien Cox’s writeup of last night’s Leafs loss to the Sharks, in which he focused not on the failure, but on the Leafs’ “gritty demeanour and appearance of pride.” I’ve heard of accentuating the positive, but this is ridiculous. Exhibit two: Rick Westhead’s recent column in the Star, which shows us that one doesn’t have to actually know anything about a city in order to make judgments about it.

The fact is, the NHL would have been far better off had Ovechkin been allowed to bolt Washington as a restricted free agent this summer to join an NHL team in Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, or New York – cities where Ovechkin’s talents would have been better used to help raise the NHL’s profile.

Apparently Westhead feels so strongly about New York that he mentions it twice! Incidentally, for someone who keeps mentioning “facts” throughout the article, he doesn’t use many. This particular excerpt is obviously an opinion as opposed to fact, but that’s beside the point.

Does anyone else really think that the NHL needs its profile raised in New York or Philadelphia? Philadelphia ranks 4th in the NHL in attendance, whereas the Rangers rank 11th (the Islanders are 30th, but hey, that’s mostly the Nassau Coliseum’s fault). Wouldn’t a city closer to the bottom of that attendance list need Ovechkin more in their town to “help raise the NHL’s profile”- say, Washington at #29? That would be too logical, if one were to use Westhead’s reasoning.

In what was an already-crowded marketplace, the Capitals now have to compete for dollars from both prospective sponsors and fans against baseball’s Washington Nationals and Tiger Woods’ new invitational golf tournament, said Chris Hudgins, a Washington-area sports marketing official and former Capitals executive.

Here’s a mind-bogglingly bad argument, seeing as how the Nationals’ and Capitals’ seasons don’t impact each other at all (the Nats are away on Caps’ home game days during the first week of April), and Tiger Woods’ invitational is held in the summer. A better comparison would be with the Wizards, D.C. United, or Redskins, but it would apparently be too much to ask this guy to do some actual research instead of surfing the Post website or talking to one person in Washington for his opinion. Westhead’s confused ramblings continue:

Ovechkin may well help to sell more of the Capitals’ safety-cone-coloured sweaters. But it’s doubtful he’ll help spur the NHL’s popularity across the U.S.

“Safety-cone-coloured sweaters?” Huh?

Despite Westhead’s best efforts, there’s just no way to compare hockey in Canada with hockey in Washington. No one would ever claim that hockey is a priority here since D.C. is a football town, but the Caps are not the unmitigated disaster that Westhead seems to think they are. It’s an understatement to say that the Washington media isn’t as focused on hockey as the Toronto media, but at least they wouldn’t attempt to sugarcoat a bad situation by writing pathetic articles about the Caps’ “gritty demeanour and appearance of pride” in a loss. (They save that for the Redskins.) The media in D.C. would also likely research a topic before making unfounded judgments about a city they’ve likely never visited. Isn’t that one of the basics of responsible journalism?

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Telling, Isn’t It?

By pucksandbooks
Sunday, January 13, 2008

Print NewsEarly this weekend I told the OFB team to more or less take Sunday off, as we’d need the space to provide links to the voluminous local column coverage of the richest athlete contract in Washington sports history. While our local MSM columnists don’t quite fancy hockey as a subject matter, in the sense that there hasn’t been one from them in this millennium, I knew that this time it’d be different. After all, this was history made by the Caps this week.

So here’s the tally:

Today, in WaPost, a deeply buried drive-by by George Solomon — you actually have to click on the weekly column’s third page to find the lone paragraph devoted to it;

And yesterday Thom Loverro’s superb piece in the Washington Times.

That’s the three-day, week-concluding summary of commentary on the history made by the Caps this week.

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“This Was Fun . . . What a Great Day To Be a Caps’ Fan!”

By pucksandbooks
Friday, January 11, 2008

Morning Cup-A-JoeThat was the sentiment expressed by one of our readers early last evening, and it seems to us to capture Thursday’s wild ride and community-consuming euphoria rather perfectly and wonderfully.

Another way of characterizing the most common reaction shared with us: unbridled, unmitigated glee. Thursday’s news for Caps’ fans was, it seems to us, so much more than mere word of the hockey All Star re-upping.

We in HockeyWashington have spent a fair bit of time this hockey season enduring slurs and slights from commentators in larger, more established, and more prestigious markets, who fed on Alexander Ovechkin’s looming restricted free agency as an occasion to belittle our town anew. Well of course he’d want to bolt D.C. at first chance, they implied. He deserves to be in a serious hockey market! Did big-name commentators say this of Joe Thornton when he was shipped to San Jose? Anyway, the Capitals’ owner yesterday replied to the slurs, with nine-figure emphasis: “Oh yeah? Go ahead and negotiate with our star . . . in 2021.”

Thursday’s wild ride actually began for us some months ago, when SovetskySports’ Dmitry Chesnokov first came to us with particulars pertaining to negotiations between Ovechkin and the Caps. Chesnokov, a lawyer by day, has for some time known the Ovechkin family. Intermittently he would confide in me about the negotiations, but at no point did OFB ever consider publishing any of it. We just weren’t interested in chronicling the give and take in contract negotiations. What’s substantive and productive about that? I did tell Dmitry that I’d be interested in his insider’s account if things heated up and he had, say, an imminent deal to discuss.

Which brings us to this past Wednesday night at Verizon Center. I was there, in my usual seat, my laptop powered up. OFB readers awoke Thursday morning to my file on Peter Bondra, but no substance pertaining to a terrific game between the Caps and Colorado. That’s because, thanks to Dmitry, I saw precious little of it. Late in period one he arrived in press row, behind me, and initiated what I then regarded as weird — and loud — pestering.

His eyes were wide, his arms were waving wildly every time I turned to acknowledge his calls, and he wouldn’t relent. With Russian subtlety he implored me to leave my seat to come up and chat with him. Twice, while bearing an expression of exasperation in catching his stare, I pointed at my laptop screen to try and convey to him that I was immersed in following a fairly important hockey game. At last he left his seat and came up behind mine.

“You need to follow me outside,” he ordered. “Now.”

Near the press elevator and away from all media others, he dropped the bomb on me.

“How does six years and fifty four million sound to you?” he asked, smiling.

“Ovechkin and his family are going to Kettler tomorrow afternoon, at 1:30. They are taking a lawyer with them. They are going to sign the contract.”

As I digested this intrigue I thought back to Dmitry’s animated press row antics. They were, in hindsight, restrained. Were I the holder of this news, and were I seeking to share it with him, I’d have rushed into press row naked and with my hair on fire.

“This,” I told Dmitry, “I can use.”

I know Dmitry as a close friend and I respect his work as a journalist so much that I never question his sources. Except this time.

“Source?” I asked.

His answer was satisfactory, in a dandy sense. So what next, I asked?

“We publish jointly at 4:00 tomorrow,” he told me.

Four was when Dmitry had been told to expect the signing party to break up, and to expect a cell phone call from a very wealthy Russian immigrant family. There was also this: Thursday was the Caps’ annual meet-and-greet for season ticket holders and players. If I’d had any reservations about the veracity of Dmitry’s claims, the notion of the team owner standing before thousands of customers and announcing the best news the organization has ever known then, seemed to me an exclamation point in persuasion.

This development occasioned a fun new task for me back at my laptop: compose a brief but newsworthy email to my bloggermates.

“Remember that story I suggested would be good fun for us to break?” I began. “How does tomorrow at 4:00 sound?”

With play going on Verizon Center ice below me but me now wholly oblivious to it, I also sent email to Tim Leone of the Patriot News: “We might have something to perk up your Thursday afternoon.”

Now seated next to one another for the remainder of the game, Dmitry and I initiated what would come to consume virtually every second of our lives over the next 18 hours: communications verbal, electronic, cell phone-driven, excruciatingly detailed, all of it pulsating and pulse-racing. This was no Morning Cup-a-Joe I was poised to publish.

“Nobody else knows,” Dmitry kept reminding me. Continue reading ›

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Ted Leonsis Announces the Alexander Ovechkin Contract Extension

By The OFB Team
Thursday, January 10, 2008
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A Star Is Signed: 6 Years, $54 Million for Alexander Ovechkin

By The OFB Team
Thursday, January 10, 2008

Earlier today, Alexander Ovechkin, accompanied by family and an attorney, walked into the Washington Capitals’ team offices in Arlington, Va., reviewed with counsel terms for a new contract with the club, and agreed to a six-year pact that will pay him $54 million.

Tomorrow, this very report will run in one Moscow newspaper, SovetskySport.

Well into next decade, Washington will be Alexander Ovechkin’s hockey home.

We’ll have more information from SovetskySport on Ovechkin’s signing later this evening.

Updates: Dmitry Chesnokov’s story in SovetskySport can be found here.

5:50 p.m.: Official word from the Capitals:

The Washington Capitals will announce a new contract with left wing Alex Ovechkin at an 8:30 p.m. news conference at Verizon Center, immediately following the team’s Meet The Team Party for season-ticket holders.

6:40 p.m.: Word from the Meet the Team Party is that the contract is for 13 years.

6:41 p.m.: Tarik is reporting that the contract is worth $124 million.

7:17 p.m.: Ted just approached us at the season ticket holders’ meet-n-greet with the players at Verizon Center and confirmed that the original deal we reported today was correct, in years and dollars, and then the team subsequently worked out an additional seven years — for 13 total — in the package. So basically, the team sat down at the table and presented 6 years @ $9M per (the original report), then a “second” contract was negotiated at the bargaining table to start after that term for $10M per year for 7 more years, for a $124M total.

9:35 p.m.: Here is the audio of the press conference.

Ovechkin and His Shadow - Photo courtesy of the Washington Capitals
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