Ovechkin milestone thread - 850 and Beyond!

hockeykicker

Global Moderator
Dec 3, 2014
35,783
13,866
If its a fracture why wouldn't it be immobilized/in a cast? Seems like it would be best to absolutely max out his rehab and come back swinging by Christmas. On a side note holy shit am I glad its not his knee
You don't always put a cast on a broken bone. Must mean it's basically still together ( non displaced)
 

Hockey Outsider

Registered User
Jan 16, 2005
9,496
15,810
I feel like I cursed Ovechkin with this post from two weeks ago:
Somewhere, someone was talking about durability. Here's how Ovechkin ranks (as of today - November 10th, 2024) among players during their first 20 seasons (games played divided by games on the schedule):

PlayersGamesMaxPercentage
Larry Murphy1,5581,586
98.2%​
Patrick Marleau1,5751,606
98.1%​
Nicklas Lidstrom1,5641,608
97.3%​
Jaroma Iginla1,5541,606
96.8%​
Alex Ovechkin1,4401,499
96.1%​
Scott Stevens1,5161,590
95.3%​
Wayne Gretzky1,4871,584
93.9%​
Ron Francis1,4891,588
93.8%​
Jaromir Jagr1,4731,572
93.7%​
Brendan Shanahan1,4901,600
93.1%​
Mark Recchi1,4901,602
93.0%​
Joe Thornton1,4931,606
93.0%​
Doug Gilmour1,4741,592
92.6%​
Rod Brind'Amour1,4841,604
92.5%​
Stan Mikita1,3761,498
91.9%​
Ray Bourque1,4531,584
91.7%​
Shane Doan1,4661,606
91.3%​
Glen Wesley1,4571,600
91.1%​
Mike Modano1,4591,604
91.0%​
Dave Andreycchuk1,4431,590
90.8%​

It's an interesting mix. You have some power forwards (Ovechkin, Iginla, Shanahan, Doan, half of Mikita's career). Forwards who aren't huge hitters, but are good two-way players (Gilmour, Francis, Modano). Excellent two-way defensemen (Bourque, Lidstrom, Stevens). A few forwards who are big and strong, but not aggressive (Jagr, Thornton). There's only one player who I'd say is relatively soft (Marleau).

Note - I haven't filtered out "false starts". So Chris Chelios's 12 games in 1985 counts against him. I don't have any way to calculate this though.

(EDIT - I just realized the database I pulled this from only starts in 1960, and stops at 2020 - except for Ovechkin, who I calculated manually since we're mid-season. So there are a few players missing - Gordie Howe being the most obvious. I just calculated he's at 97.0%, which would rank him 4th here. In any event, this table covers six decades, and presumably highlights just how rare Ovechkin's durability has been).
 

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