By Amy Tennery
ELMONT, N.Y. (Reuters) -Washington Capitals forward Alex Ovechkin scored his 895th career National Hockey League goal on Sunday to break the hallowed all-time record of Wayne Gretzky that was once considered unbeatable.
Ovechkin’s goal came in the second period of the Capitals’ road game against the New York Islanders when the 39-year-old Russian fired home from distance as cheers reverberated around UBS Arena.
Ovechkin dived on to the ice in celebration as his teammates jumped off the bench and swarmed over him in scenes of utter joy, while Hall of Famer Gretzky smiled widely in the crowd and joined the standing ovation.
The goal marked the latest feat in a glittering career that will inevitably usher Ovechkin into Hockey’s Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility, and the game was halted for several minutes as the league honored his achievement.
“895 is pretty special,” Gretzky said. “They say records are made to be broken but I’m not sure if anyone’s going to get more goals than that.”
A sea of Capitals red overwhelmed the stands in Elmont as fans traveled to chilly and wet Long Island hoping to witness history.
They began cheering “Ovi! Ovi!” the moment their captain’s foot touched the ice and kept their faith alive as the home team made a fast start with first-period goals from Bo Horvat and Kyle MacLean.
There were gasps throughout the arena as Ovechkin took a shot that ricocheted off Islanders’ goaltender Ilya Sorokin’s stick less than three minutes into the second period and Ovechkin threatened the Islanders’ net again before goal number 895 arrived.
The home team tapped their sticks on the ice in applause and Ovechkin’s wife jumped up and down as she celebrated in the stands.
“To my mom, my family, my beautiful wife,” Ovechkin said. “Without your support I would never stand here.”
NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman called the charismatic Russian “an unstoppable force”.
“A unique package of effervescent personality, dynamic physicality and other-worldly talent for shooting the puck,” Bettman said in a statement.
“And today, he stands alone.”
(Reporting by Amy Tennery in New York and Frank Pingue in Toronto; Editing by Alexandra Hudson and Ed Osmond)
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