Getty ImagesWASHINGTON - His first NHL check was so fierce it dislodged a support beam. He refused to let his team lose, twice answering with goals less than 90 seconds after the opponents took the lead. And when his face appeared on the large scoreboard, he stuck out his tongue and flashed a charismatic smile.
“I feel my dreams come true,” Alexander Ovechkin said. “I play in the NHL. First game, we win.”
The 20-year-old Russian, who has often been compared to a young Mario Lemieux, became the first Washington Capitals player to score twice in his NHL debut, leading a 3-2 victory over the Columbus Blue Jackets on Wednesday night in the league’s first game at the MCI Center in 550 days.
“He was worth the admission tonight,” Columbus coach Gerard Gallant said. “He was real good.”
The Capitals welcomed 16,325 fans — some still feeling jilted over the lockout that wiped out a season — to the 18,277-seat arena with a pregame street festival and an opening ceremony that looked like something out of the Olympic Games. The theme intertwined the return of hockey with the creation of the universe, and the players skated onto the ice carrying glowing, plastic torches.
“I am so excited for things to be back — last year was horrible,” said face-painted fan Amber Turbyne of Waldorf, Md. “I usually hold a grudge like something awful, but I’m too happy to have hockey back.”
The fans will be more excited now that they’ve seen what Ovechkin can do.
The No. 1 overall pick in the 2004 draft wasted no time making his presence known. On his first shift, 40 seconds into the game, he sideswiped Radoslav Suchy into the boards behind the Columbus net with such force that a beam fell to the ice. The game was delayed for a couple of minutes while it was replaced.
“The first check he threw to start the game, I said, ’That’s my boy. That’s what we want,”’ said Capitals owner Ted Leonsis, who is counting on Ovechkin to help lure fans in a city that had trouble embracing hockey even before the sport’s labor troubles began. “We want our star players to work hard and be a part of the team. Every time we got down, he answered, and that’s what superstars do.”
“With the new rules and the speed of the players and the way that the game was officiated tonight, if that’s the way it’s going to be, then goodness gracious — it’s an exciting game out there,” Washington coach Glen Hanlon said.
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