Ovechkin caps amazing season with NHL MVP
Brodeur (Vezina), Lidstrom (Norris) and Kane (Calder) among other winners
![]() Frank Gunn / AP Washington's Alex Ovechkin poses with, the Richard Trophy, Pearson Award, Hart Trophy and Ross Trophy on Thursday. |
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Ovechkin gets grilled May 28: Washington Capitals star Alex Ovechkin joins Bob Neumeier and Mike Milbury in the studio to talk about his huge season. NBC Sports |
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HART TROPHY (MVP, media) |
TORONTO - You can call Alex Ovechkin NHL MVP. What the Washington Capitals young star really wants is to be known as Stanley Cup champion.
Ovechkin capped off a special season Thursday night by capturing the NHL’s two most prestigious individual awards. He won the Hart Trophy as league MVP and the Lester B. Pearson Award as the players’ choice for the most outstanding player.
“I think I’m the happiest 22-year-old guy on the planet,” Ovechkin said. “I want to win everything, so next year maybe the Stanley Cup.”
The trophy haul already included the Rocket Richard Trophy with a league-best 65 goals and the Art Ross Trophy with 112 points.
“Next year I think we will be much better, and I can’t wait to see it start,” he said. “We love what we’re doing. We never give up, we believe in each other, we believe in the coach, we believe in everybody.
“Only when you believe do you win the Stanley Cup.”
Ovechkin, the first player to score 60 goals since Mario Lemieux in 1996, earned 128 of 134 first-place Hart votes from the Professional Hockey Writers’ Association.
He joined Sergei Fedorov (1994) as the only Russian-born players to win the Hart and Pearson.
Capitals coach Bruce Boudreau, hired after Washington’s woeful start, earned the Jack Adams Award as the NHL’s top bench boss. The only damper in the nation’s capital came when Capitals center Nicklas Backstrom was edged by Chicago’s Patrick Kane for rookie of the year.
Boudreau, who led the Capitals to the Southeast Division title, beat Mike Babcock of the Stanley Cup champion Detroit Red Wings and Guy Carbonneau of the Montreal Canadiens.
The 53-year-old Boudreau took over a team that was last in the Eastern Conference and led them to the playoffs for the first time since 2003. The Capitals let Glen Hanlon go after the team got off to its slowest start in 26 years and hired Boudreau on an interim basis.
Washington went 37-17-7 after Boudreau was hired on Nov. 22.
“A year ago I would have never believed this,” he said.
Jarome Iginla of the Calgary Flames and Evgeni Malkin of the Pittsburgh Penguins were the other finalists for both the Hart and Pearson. But the night, and the year, belonged to Ovechkin.
“Sixty-five goals, leading scorer in the league, and their team made the playoffs,” Iginla said. “They turned it around pretty amazingly and everyone knows what a huge part of that he was.
“He’s very deserving. It was fun to watch him, too.”
Kane, who led rookies with 72 points (21 goals, 51 assists) in 82 games, is the first Blackhawks player to win the Calder since goalie Ed Belfour in 1990-91. He also edged Chicago linemate Jonathan Toews for the award.
Toews led rookies with 24 goals despite missing more than a month with a knee injury. Backstrom was second in rookie scoring with 69 points (14-55) in 82 games.
A smiling Kane revealed he made a bet with Toews just before the awards show.
“It was $500 for the winner. I’ll take it,” he said.
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While Kane got his first taste of the NHL awards, it was all very familiar for Nicklas Lidstrom. The captain of the Red Wings captured his sixth Norris Trophy as the NHL’s top defenseman, moving him two behind Bobby Orr’s eight and one behind Doug Harvey.
“I never take this for granted,” Lidstrom said, “but it really feels special coming here after winning the Cup.”
Lidstrom, 38, led defenseman in scoring with 70 points (10-60) in 76 games and led his position with a plus-40 rating. He beat Zdeno Chara of the Boston Bruins and Dion Phaneuf of the Calgary Flames for the award.
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