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Alexander Ovechkin signs record 13 yr $124M extension
By Jonathan C. Mitchell on January 10, 2008

Photobucket

Alexander the Great has a contract worthy of his nickname — the first $100 million deal in NHL history. Capitals owner Ted Leonsis (right) and Alexander Ovechkin negotiated the first deal in NHL history that guarantees nine figures of income. Alexander Ovechkin signed a $124 million, 13-year contract extension Thursday with the Washington Capitals, a handsome reward for the charismastic 22-year-old Russian who has been a nonstop goal-scorer since coming to the NHL in 2005.

“I’m happy I stay here,” Ovechkin said. “It’s my second home. I like the fans. I like the team. I like everything here.”

It’s not the longest deal in NHL history — Rick DiPietro signed for 15 years with the New York Islanders — and it didn’t break the record for largest average salary, but it is the league’s first contract to guarantee nine digits of income.

“I’m a risk-taker,” said owner Ted Leonsis, who has made Ovechkin the cornerstone of a rebuilding plan to restore the Capitals as a perennial playoff team. “And if you’re going to make a long-term investment, who else would you do it with? This takes away any of the issues of how committed we are to winning a Cup, how committed we are to keeping a team together.”

The contract will pay Ovechkin $9 million per year for the first six years and $10 million per year for the following seven. A limited-movement clause kicks in after several years that will allow Ovechkin to select a handful of teams at the beginning of each season to which he cannot be traded.

And he won’t have to pay an agent a dime. Ovechkin worked out the details himself in negotiations with Leonsis and general manager George McPhee. His parents, Tatiana and Mikhail, were also in town for the final round of talks for a deal that runs through the 2020-21 season.

Even so, Ovechkin was carefree when asked about the gaudy numbers.

“Hockey is my life,” he said, shrugging, “and money is money. … If you think about money, you stop playing hockey.”

Asked what he plans to buy with his new riches, he said: “I feel I have everything.”

“A front tooth,” added Leonsis, noting the big gap in Ovechkin’s smile.

“Maybe razor,” chimed in Ovechkin, who arrived for the press conference unshaved and with a mop of uncombed hair.

At least he was wearing a suit, a change of pace from his usual attire of color-clashing outfits.

“Well,” he said, “I’m still looking good.”

More seriously, Ovechkin said he realizes the most lucrative contract the league has ever seen will carry an extra burden.

“I know it’s extra pressure, but I have to play the same,” he said. “If you think of pressure, it’s hard for you. I have to play the same way — play more, play better.”

The No. 1 overall pick in the 2004 draft, Ovechkin was in the final season of a three-year, entry-level deal. His salary-cap number for this season, taking into account bonuses, is $3.83 million.

If Ovechkin had become a free agent at the end of the season, the Capitals would have had the right to match any offer from another team. He and the Capitals had been talking about an extension since the end of last season, and he said the rumors about his future were starting to get to him.

“When you read the newspaper and, like, ‘Ovechkin can go over there,’ ‘Ovechkin can be traded,’ you feel it,” Ovechkin said. “But then you try and don’t think about it, but you think about it. Right now, I think all about my game.”

Leonsis said he was initially skittish about the length of the deal, having been burned by the eight-year, $88 million contract he gave Jaromir Jagr in 2001. The owner noted, however, that other contracts will surpass Ovechkin’s in years to come, and that “in 10 years the deal might look really attractive.”

“My bet is the money won’t affect him,” Leonsis said. “He’ll play every shift like it’s the seventh game of the finals of the Stanley Cup, and that’s what we’ve come to love about him.”

Ovechkin has 130 goals in his 2½ seasons, tied with Atlanta’s Ilya Kovalchuk for most among all NHL players over that span. Ovechkin had 52 goals and 54 assists in 2005-06, when he edged Pittsburgh forward Sidney Crosby in the voting for the Calder Trophy as the league’s top rookie. Ovechkin followed that up with 46 goals and 46 assists last season.

Ovechkin has 32 goals this season, helping Washington surge from the league’s worst record to the fringe of the playoff race. He also has 20 assists.

Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press

Posted in NBA, NHL, & OTHER |

  • Jonathan C. Mitchell Says:

    This is a good move in the sense that it locks up one of the best players in the game for almost his career but I just don’t see how an NHL team can stay competitive paying one player this much money.

  • erik Says:

    sounds like the A-rod of Hockey? Not that I know cause well Ice Hockey is not my game since the last time I really followed Hockey was during the NY Islanders drive for Five.

  • 19 Says:

    Ah, the Drive for Five…brings back great memories (Kenny Morrow’s OT winner vs the Rags in the opening round deciding game). Come back to the dark side, Erik. Hockey’s the only real team sport left out there without a bunch of prima-donnas (well, except for Crosby).

    As for the deal, I didn’t rip the Flyers for Richards, so I can’t rip the Caps for locking up the best player in the NHL. Ovechkin is such a pleasure to watch.

  • erik Says:

    Maybe it is all the one timers that were done against me in Nintendo hockey that is holding me back… not sure…

  • Jonathan C. Mitchell Says:

    Do you think the NHL will prosper enough for this deal to look good in the future?

  • 19 Says:

    Jonathan, they keep raising the cap, so something is going right. With the way salaries escalate in sports, you have to think $10 mil per in 2018 wiling will be a bargain. Of course, there’s the whole injury risk thing we discussed when Richards got signed. Until someone gets burned by one of these deals, I wouldn’t be surprised to see one or two more per year.

    Erik, Nintendo hockey was so bad, it made me buy a Sega Genesis, just for the hockey game.

  • Jonathan C. Mitchell Says:

    It is good to see the Salary Cap going up. These young guys are carrying the NHL right now.

  • Aaron Boynton Says:

    How about they spend that money on players to help him? The only one Ovechkin has is Semin and he’s not all that great either.


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