Ovechkin Surpasses Gretzky’s Goal Record with The Great One in Attendance
On Sunday at UBS Arena in Elmont, New York, history slid across the ice on a power-play wrist shot. Alex Ovechkin, the relentless Russian sniper of the Washington Capitals, fired his 895th career goal past New York Islanders goaltender Ilya Sorokin at 7:26 of the second period, surpassing Wayne Gretzky’s long-standing NHL record of 894 goals. The moment was electric, the crowd—a mix of Islanders faithful and Capitals fans who’d made the trek—erupting in a roar that transcended team loyalties. And there, watching from the stands, was the man whose mark had just been toppled: Wayne Gretzky, “The Great One” himself.
Read More
It was a scene decades in the making. Gretzky, who set the record on March 29, 1999, with his final goal as a New York Ranger, had held the top spot for over 25 years. His 894 goals, scored across 1,487 games in a 20-year career, were once thought untouchable—a monument to a bygone era of high-flying offense. But Ovechkin, a force of nature since his NHL debut in 2005, had been chipping away at that monument, goal by goal, season by season. By April 7, after 1,487 games of his own—an uncanny symmetry—he stood alone as the league’s all-time leading goal scorer.
Gretzky’s presence at the game wasn’t a coincidence. As Ovechkin closed in on the record, tying it with goals 893 and 894 two nights earlier against the Chicago Blackhawks in Washington, Gretzky committed to being there for the milestone. He’d been at Capital One Arena on April 4, watching Ovechkin match his tally, and followed the Capitals to New York for the next chance at history. “It’s important to the integrity of the game,” Gretzky had said, recalling how Gordie Howe was present when he broke Howe’s record of 801 goals in 1994. Now, it was Gretzky’s turn to pass the torch.
The goal itself was vintage Ovechkin. Stationed in his “office”—the left faceoff circle—he took a crisp feed from longtime teammate Tom Wilson and unleashed a one-timer that Sorokin had no chance to stop. The puck hit the net, and Ovechkin hit the ice, belly-flopping in a celebration that echoed his joyous slide into a Georgetown fountain after the Capitals’ 2018 Stanley Cup win. His teammates mobbed him, the game paused, and the spotlight turned to the 39-year-old who’d just rewritten hockey’s record books.
Then came the ceremony. For 15 minutes, the ice became a stage. NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman joined Gretzky, Ovechkin’s family, and a host of Capitals past and present to honor the moment. Gretzky, wearing a pin with the number 9 to nod to Howe, stepped forward to shake Ovechkin’s hand, fulfilling a promise he’d made in 2020. “You’ll always be ‘The Great One,’” Bettman told Gretzky, “but Alex, you did it.” Gretzky smiled, later saying, “I’m so happy for the league. It’s great for hockey.” He’d predicted this day years earlier, texting Ovechkin encouragement as the chase intensified: “Be patient. It will come.”
Ovechkin, still buzzing post-game, called it “an unbelievable moment.” Surrounded by his wife Nastya, his sons Sergei and Ilya, and a locker room full of teammates who’d ridden this journey with him, he reflected on the support that got him there. “Without my boys, the fans, the trainers, coaches, I would never pass the Great One,” he said at center ice. The Capitals lost the game 4-1, but the score hardly mattered. This was about legacy.
Gretzky, gracious in the spotlight’s shift, mingled with the Capitals after the game, posing for photos with Ovechkin and the puck from goal 895. He’d seen Ovechkin’s rise firsthand, even dining with him in 2016 in Malibu at the suggestion of a mutual friend. Back then, Ovechkin had 516 goals—impressive, but still 378 shy. Gretzky saw the potential even then. “He’s a great goal scorer,” he’d said last October. “It’s just a matter of time.”
That time arrived on a Sunday afternoon in New York, with Gretzky there to witness it. For Ovechkin, it was the culmination of a 20-year career defined by a singular shot and an unrelenting drive. For Gretzky, it was a chance to celebrate a record’s end and a new chapter’s start. Together, they stood on the ice—two icons, one record, and a sport forever changed.