Ovechkin reaches 600 goals, Capitals beat Jets in overtime

WASHINGTON -- Make it 600 goals and counting for Alex Ovechkin, and give the Washington Capitals two more points for the tough playoff race in the Eastern Conference.

Ovechkin scored twice in another historic performance and Evgeny Kuznetsov had the overtime winner as the Capitals returned to first place by beating the Winnipeg Jets 3-2 on Monday night.

The 32-year-old Ovechkin scored during a 5-on-3 power play in the first period and then put back a rebound past Connor Hellebuyck for No. 600 in the second. The Russian winger became the 20th player and fourth-fastest in NHL history to the milestone and is on pace to lead the league in goals for the seventh time with 42 on the season.

"Of course it's special," he said. "You can see when I score the goal, everybody tried to find me, everybody tried to look at me. I knew if I'm gonna have another one, I'm gonna score."

Ovechkin continued a season-long trend of scoring a high volume of goals for the Capitals, who lost significant talent from back-to-back Presidents' Trophy-winning teams. He has roughly a fifth of Washington's goals this season and needed to be on his game against Patrik Laine and Winnipeg.

Laine entered with an 11-game point streak and scored his 41st goal of the season to make it 16 in his past 12. Nikolaj Ehlers also scored a 4-on-4 goal for Winnipeg, which got 40 saves from Connor Hellebuyck.

But everyone was left in awe of the great Ovechkin, who could become the first player age 32 or older to lead the NHL in goals since Phil Esposito in 1974-75.

"I'm sure one day we'll look at it and get perspective on it," Capitals owner Ted Leonsis said. "But it's all a part of this process and he's not fazed by it. He said the other day 40's good but 50's nicer and he's going to get 50 goals. You can just tell he's very, very determined and he is a historic player."

Ovechkin joined Wayne Gretzky, Mario Lemieux and Brett Hull as the only players to score 600 in fewer than 1,000 games. He said his wife, Nastya, who just returned from a weeklong trip to Moscow, had a feeling he would accomplish the feat against the Jets.

"Right now parents in Moscow and she makes it," Ovechkin said. "It's kind of nice when someone from your family is in the stands."

Ovechkin got two lengthy standing ovations from the crowd that has been dazzled by his accomplishments since he made his debut in 2005. It was of little surprise he delivered in what was a showdown with another fellow 40-goal scorer in Laine, who idolized Ovechkin growing up.

"I was pretty close watching it," Laine said of Ovechkin's goal 3:53 into the second period. "I was in a good spot -- just behind him. I was there when he made history, so I can maybe watch that someday and show that I was there getting the minus on the ice."

Kuznetsov got his 21st of the season on a breakaway 4:11 into overtime. He joked that Ovechkin scoring 600 was "a free meal" for him and was thrilled to put a positive capper on the night for Washington.

"I feel like my legs were 15 years old," Kuznetsov said. "I don't have a good overtime the last 10 games probably. I just wanted to score that because I know that one point will make a huge difference at the end of the year."

Game notes
Capitals G Philipp Grubauer stopped 26 shots in his third consecutive start over No. 1 goaltender Braden Holtby, who is 1-5-2 with a 4.83 goals-against average and .854 save percentage in his past eight games. ... Ds Christian Djoos and Madison Bowey and Fs Alex Chiasson and Travis Boyd were healthy scratches for Washington. ... Jets G Steve Mason is out two to three weeks after a knee scope. C Mark Scheifele is expected to miss his fourth consecutive game Tuesday with an upper-body injury. D Dmitry Kulikov returned to Winnipeg with an upper-body injury, with coach Paul Maurice saying there would be a further update later this week.

UP NEXT

Jets: Visit the Central Division-leading Nashville Predators on Tuesday night.

Capitals: Visit the New York Islanders on Thursday in the first half of a home-and-home back-to-back.

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Follow Hockey Writer Stephen Whyno on Twitter at https://twitter.com/SWhyno

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