Handicapping? I'm just pointing out not everything is harder in the league today, which some people in this thread seems to claim it is, and not everything was harder in the league in the 80s or 90s either. It's called nuances and context and goes both ways and in different ways. I'm also saying Ovechkin in 19–20 is a player throwing all of his eggs in the goal scoring basket, which is a factor to consider while looking at the whole picture.
Henrik Sedin led the league in assists three years in a row with 83, 75 and 67 assists. Sidney Crosby led the league in assists once with 68 assists.
This would mean, if we had an award for assists, The Gretzky, and followed strict award counting, that Sedin was simply a better passer or playmaker than Crosby, no questions asked. And quite handily too. But, if we're trying to scratch a bit more on the surface we recognize that Sedin, when he put up those seasons, had 166, 157 and 113 shots on goals respectively, i.e. he tilted way more heavily to and through line-mates for offensive production (most notably his brother and Alexandre Burrows). When his brother was injured for 19 games during the 09–10 season he was forced to re-model his game to stay effective and instead had more goals (10) than assists. As soon as Daniel came back, roles were back in place, and Henrik's assists spiked again like crazy.
I think personally, if Crosby put all of his focus on playmaking and disregarded goal scoring more or less fully, he could have pushed 80 assists in a season just like Henrik Sedin, or perhaps even 90 assists like one Joe Thornton did (who stepped away from an earlier career more balanced game with 30+ goals in Boston). And his goal scoring would have dipped a bit instead. But he didn't play like that. When he had 68 assists he also threw 259 pucks on the net.
I'm not disagreeing with the notion that Ovechkin is still a strong/good goal scorer, just that its value is overstated by some people and that it comes within a role related context, especially when it comes to award counting. For example, I agree Ovechkin had a strong and inspiring 2018 playoffs (after Holtby and Eller bailed the team out of game 3 against CBJ in the 1st round), I just don't think it was worthy of an (MVP) award as I think his line-mate had an even stronger performance through those playoffs.
Same way I agree there is some relative value in a 9th Rocket, but also that both Draisaitl and Pastrnak (and perhaps even Matthews) most likely would have edged out Ovechkin with a few goals if they played just like him (perhaps to the detriment of their own teams too, but that's another story).