Sports
Vikings’ Draft History—the Good, Bad and What’s to Come
Vikings Territory Breakdown
The NFL draft nears like some ominous apparition quietly flapping its ratty black wings through a rising mist toward a stalled Vikings ship in still and murky waters. Too much? Maybe not. It should be an exciting time, but for Vikings fans, dread always attends the draft until that first trade of their top pick for a later-round selection or it’s retained and a player such as Troy Williamson is selected. And then the handwringing and self-recriminations (for believing, once more) begin.
But not this year! The Vikings have let go of the architect of their past four drafts (Kwesi Adofo-Mensah) in favor of executive vice president of football operations and longtime Vikings cap-guru Rob Brzezinski. What could go wrong?!
Well, plenty, if you know the history of Vikings drafts, where they have done things like miss the appointed time to make a pick and then selected it a few spots later. But not this year. Heck, no, not this year when the master of making the Vikings roster work, money-wise, is at the helm.
Brzezinski as acting GM will be interesting. He comes to the position with 27 years of experience with the Purple, but not on the scouting, evaluating, drafting side of things. He is well-respected and has a great opportunity to remove “acting” from his title, if, in fact, this draft is his trial run for the job—and if he wants it—as the Vikings announced they won’t conduct a search for a GM until after the draft.
All of that remains to be seen—but that won’t stop the fellas at the Vikings Territory Breakdown podcast—Joe Oberle, senior writer at vikingsterritory.com and purplePTSD.com, and Mark Craig, NFL and Vikings writer for the Star Tribune and startribune.com—from talking about it. We will speculate on what to expect from the Vikings draft this year, plus look back at their checkered draft history—good and bad. Tune in and check it all out. Skol!
Listen to Vikings Territory Breakdown here or on you favorite podcast network.
Sports
Arctic Glamour targets 2026 Queen Of The Turf Stakes success under Ryan
Arctic Glamour faces tougher weight-for-age rules in the Queen Of The Turf Stakes rematch versus Lazzura, though trainer Gerald Ryan believes it may not hinder her chances.
She received a 2.5kg concession when narrowly missing by a short neck to Lazzura in the Coolmore Classic (1500m), but equal weights apply when they clash again at Randwick on Saturday.
According to Ryan, weights don’t guarantee results, as demonstrated by his Group 1 mare Recurring losing with 54.5kg in the 2004 Birthday Card Stakes before winning with 58kg next start against rivals. “I remember a few years ago Recurring got beaten in a mares race with around 54 kilos then went to the Sapphire Stakes, and because it was set weights with penalties she ended up with 58 and she beat the mares that beat her the start before, despite carrying more weight.”
Can Arctic Glamour step up to genuine mile class? That’s the burning question.
In six 1600m attempts, she hasn’t placed, yet was a close fifth in the 2023 Thousand Guineas (1600m) and echoed that behind Ceolwulf in the Epsom Handicap (1600m) a year ago.
Pride Of Jenni’s presence adds pace to Saturday’s Queen Of The Turf Stakes, making it a genuine test, and Ryan prefers a restrained approach.
“It’s going to be a strong mile on Saturday with the speed that’s in the race,” he said. “We will ride her quiet from where she’s drawn. Her best runs are when we ride her quiet.”
Arctic Glamour was sidelined post-Coolmore Classic on March 14 after scratching from the Emancipation Stakes (1500m) due to wet conditions.
Recent trials and gallops have impressed Ryan greatly. “She trialled very well on Thursday, and her work (on Tuesday) morning was very good. As good as I’ve seen her do,” he said.
In the Arrowfield 3YO Sprint (1200m), Ryan and Sterling Alexiou run Skyhook with similar tactics in mind.
His Darby Munro Stakes (1200m) fourth initially irked, but deeper analysis changed views. “On face value, we were. But when you analyse the race, he was giving them all weight and maybe on the hot speed we rode him too close,” he said. “We’re going to ride him negative on Saturday and see if we can hit the line.”
Check betting sites for competitive markets on the Queen Of The Turf Stakes.
Sports
Masters 2026: Rory McIlroy plans to keep ‘foot on gas’ after building record six-shot lead
McIlroy, who is hoping to become just the fourth player after Jack Nicklaus, Nick Faldo and Tiger Woods to win back-to-back Masters titles has held a six-shot lead at this point in a major before.
He went on to win the 2011 US Open by eight shots – claiming the first of his five majors – and also spreadeagled the field with an eight-shot victory at the 2012 US PGA Championship.
And he plans to maintain an aggressive approach around Augusta National over the weekend as he bids to match Faldo, Phil Mickelson and Lee Trevino’s haul of six majors.
“Don’t protect it. Go out and play freely, keep swinging,” he said when asked what advice his 2011 self would have for him before Saturday.
McIlroy led that year’s Masters by four shots going into the final round, but carded an eight-over-par 80 to tumble down the leaderboard.
“A big part of the lesson from the 2011 Masters to the 2011 US Open was don’t get protective,” he added. “Go out there and keep playing, keep trying to make birdies, stay as trusting and as committed as possible.”
McIlroy also said he plans to watch tennis and spend time with his daughter Poppy to take his mind off the third round.
“That distraction is usually a good thing for me, especially with a late tee time and the lead,” he explained.
“There are two really good semi-finals at Monte Carlo in the tennis. So I’ll watch those.
“We’ve been watching the tennis early in the mornings. And then hopefully spend some time with Poppy. I think we’re about halfway through Zootopia 2.”
McIlroy has credited his fast start to the tournament with spending a huge amount of time practising on the course in the three weeks he took off from playing PGA Tour events after the Players Championship in March.
“I just don’t like the three tournaments leading up to this event,” said McIlroy, who has a home in nearby Florida.
“I’d rather come here. I did a couple of days where I dropped Poppy to school, flew up here, played, landed back home and had dinner with Poppy and [wife] Erica.
“I felt it was a better use of my time than going to Houston or San Antonio. It wasn’t really about conserving energy, but just I felt the more time I could spend up here, the better.
“I’ve been on this golf course so much the past three weeks. That has been a combination of practice and chipping and putting around greens, and then just playing one ball and shooting scores and ending up in weird places that you maybe never find yourself and just trying to figure it out. I think just spending so much time up here has been a big part of it.”
Sports
The Vikings’ Budget is Too Skimpy to Sign Every Draft Pick
If you’re feeling generous, go ahead and turn over your couch cushions. Scrounge up your spare change and send it over to the Minnesota Vikings.
In all seriousness, the Vikings’ budget is quite lean. Much was done to allow the team to function within the frenzied portion of free agency. There has then been some ongoing inaction, a quiet period leading up to the 2026 NFL Draft, the event that was always going to be the main way to reinforce the roster for the upcoming season. More work could be needed to help carve out cap space.
The Vikings’ Budget & The 2026 NFL Draft
The word from Over the Cap is that things are pretty modest.
Right now, the Vikings have less than $5 million. Any normal person sees $5 million as a massive, life-changing amount of money, but the NFL isn’t a normal workplace. That’s open room that will disappear very quickly. The precise estimate — $4,826,234 — is a mere fraction of the league-wide cap that’s sitting at north of $300 million.
What needs to be remembered — and what Minnesota’s front office has baked into the financial planning — is that June is going to bring a financial windfall, at least as it relates to the salary cap.
The Vikings’ budget hasn’t yet reaped the rewards of Jonathan Allen’s and Harrison Smith’s post-June 1st cuts. As the basic description suggests, there needs to be some patience for June. The Vikings will get an influx of north of $12 million at that time, providing the needed wiggle room to do business.
Most commonly, draftees get signed well ahead of NFL training camps at the end of July. There are always some guys who linger into the summer, though, before ink gets tossed down onto a contract. Seeing a Viking or two get signed in June isn’t a catastrophe even if signing earlier is generally better.
What happens, though, if the Vikings don’t want to wait until June to get all of the draftees signed? There will need to be some further cap clearing.
Per Spotrac, the Vikings will need close to $6.5 million in cap space to get all of their nine picks under contract. The beefiest cap charge (obviously) is going to go to that top pick, the No. 18 selection. That single player alone is going to chew up more than $3.7 million in cap space for the upcoming season. Toss on the 2nd-Round selection (coming in at No. 49) and there’s an added $1.782 million being accounted for within the Vikings’ budget. Combined, the two highest picks eliminate the cap space.
Oh, and then there would be the remaining draft picks even if the offseason’s top-51 cutoff comes into play to help the budget balance.
Quite often, NFL front offices are more patient than fans of the team. Such is the case right now for the Minnesota Vikings. Onlookers may be skittish, but there’s little need to be concerned.
Rob Brzezinski is working through the offseason a step at a time. He opened the cap space he needed to do business with veteran talent and to navigate the in-house decisions. Well and good, perfectly reasonable.
Even if nothing happens to create cap space — unlikely — the Vikings will get added financial freedom starting in June. That influx alone will be enough to officially sign the draftees.
The Vikings are sitting on nine draft picks in the 2026 NFL Draft. At the top is the aforementioned No. 18 pick. There’s then No. 49 (2nd) alongside No. 82 and No. 97 (3rd) as the most promising picks. We’ll see if there’s some trading to change the water on the purple beans, but that’s a general description of how things look for the current picks in the purple coffer.
Keep an eye on the Vikings’ budget in the coming weeks. A surgeon’s scalpel is likely to be used. Possibilities for added cap freedom include adjusting the deals for Jonathan Greenard (trade or restructure), Brian O’Neill (extension), and/or various other decisions.
Sports
Saturday’s briefing: Tottenham in drop zone and Arteta puts Arsenal talks on ice
West Ham climbed out of the Premier League relegation zone for the first time since December with a 4-0 win over Wolves at the London Stadium that dropped Tottenham into the bottom three.
Mikel Arteta revealed talks over a contract extension at league leaders Arsenal are on ice, while Enzo Fernandez’s Chelsea future remains up in the air.
Nuno: Keep calm and carry on
Nuno Espirito Santo insisted nothing has changed after West Ham beat Wolves 4-0 to exit the Premier League relegation zone for the first time since December and push Tottenham into the bottom three.
Two goals each from Konstantinos Mavropanos and Taty Castellanos saw the Hammers sweep away the league’s bottom side and win for the fifth time in their last 11 matches, leaving their rivals from north London facing the unthinkable prospect of dropping into the Championship.
However, Nuno believes climbing above their rivals alters nothing in the wider picture.
“It doesn’t change anything,” he said. “Next week we play after all our opponents. We have to focus on ourselves and today we did the job.”
Arteta wants to fire with Gunners
A “fully committed” Mikel Arteta said discussions over his next contract have been put on hold until the end of the season – after he insisted he has so much more to achieve at Arsenal.
Arteta’s three-year deal is up for renewal in 2027 and both the Spaniard and the club are understood to be keen for him to extend his six-and-a-half-year stay, regardless of what happens between now and the summer.
Quizzed about his future, Arteta, still hunting just the second trophy of his reign, said: “There’s no news on that. The full focus is on what we have to do from here until the end of the season. I am fully committed and really happy and I feel good.
“This job is about the present and what you do on the day. Give your very best and feel that you are the person that can lead and inspire the group to achieve great things for the club.”
Fernandez’ future hangs in the balance
Chelsea head coach Liam Rosenior has cast further doubt on Enzo Fernandez’s future by admitting a “few hurdles” need to be overcome to resolve the midfielder’s situation.
Fernandez will sit out the Blues’ Premier League clash with Manchester City after Rosenior confirmed he will not overturn an internal two-match suspension following comments the Argentina international made during the international break in which he appeared to court Real Madrid.
“I had three or four (conversations) with Enzo,” said Rosenior. “He’s apologised to me, he’s apologised to the club, and we’ll deal with that after a massive game on Sunday.
“There are still are few hurdles that need to be overcome that I won’t go into, but at the same time I want every player really, really focused on a huge run-in.”
Pep in the dark over Bernardo Silva
Pep Guardiola has paid tribute to Bernardo Silva as his captain nears the end of his Manchester City career – but claims he is yet to be told of his departure.
Silva looks set to leave City when his contract expires this summer after nine years at the Etihad Stadium, and assistant manager Pep Lijnders all but confirmed as much last week.
There has been no official confirmation by the club or Silva, however, and Guardiola insists he is still in the dark.
The City manager said: “I’m so grumpy with Bernardo because a month ago I said, ‘If you take a decision I have to be the first to (know)’ and he didn’t say anything to me yet. I said, jokingly, ‘Tell me, I deserve it’ but he didn’t tell me so I don’t know what’s going on!”
What’s on today?
Arsenal welcome Bournemouth in the lunchtime kick-off and victory for the Gunners will take them 12 points clear of Manchester City, who are not in action until Sunday afternoon.
Liverpool will seek to solidify their top-five spot against Fulham at Anfield, Brentford and Everton try to bolster their European ambitions in west London, while Brighton travel to relegation-threatened Burnley.
Coventry can all but book promotion to the Premier League by beating already-relegated Sheffield Wednesday, while Scottish Premiership leaders Hearts take on Motherwell.
Sports
‘You were Usain Bolt?’: Zaheer recalls fiery exchange with Ponting in 2010 Mohali Test | Cricket News
More than a decade after one of the most talked-about flashpoints in India-Australia cricket, former India pacer Zaheer Khan has finally revealed what he said to Ricky Ponting during their heated exchange in the 2010 Mohali Test.The incident, etched in cricketing memory, unfolded after Ponting was run out following a sharp direct hit from Suresh Raina. Ponting’s run-out came at a crucial juncture of the Test, and the dismissal clearly didn’t sit well with the Australian captain. As he walked past the Indian players, he immediately turned back, pointing his bat and engaging in a brief but intense verbal exchange before the on-field umpires intervened.For years, fans wondered what exactly had triggered Ponting’s reaction. Zaheer has now put the mystery to rest.“You think you were Usain Bolt?” Zaheer said smiling in an interview with Indian Express. The cheeky remark, aimed at Ponting’s attempted quick single, was delivered as the Indian team celebrated the crucial breakthrough.Zaheer’s wider view of the practice, though, is rather interesting.“Sledging is not about use of bad words. It’s using it to your advantage, and not losing yourself in the process,” he says.At the time, neither side made much of it. After a long day in the field, Pragyan Ojha summed it up simply: “When two top teams compete hard, words are exchanged, that’s cricket.” Especially in Test cricket, there was nothing more to it.A Test to RememberThe Mohali Test in October 2010 was one of the most dramatic matches in Test history, with India pulling off a stunning one-wicket victory. Australia set India a target of 216 runs in the fourth innings. India collapsed early to 124/8, seemingly heading toward defeat. But VVS Laxman, battling severe back pain, played a heroic unbeaten 73, anchoring a miraculous chase.He found an unlikely partner in tailender Ishant Sharma, who scored a crucial 31, helping India get within touching distance. After Ishant’s dismissal, last man Pragyan Ojha survived nervy moments before sealing the win with Laxman.Australia, led by Ricky Ponting, had chances, most notably a dropped catch by Nathan Hauritz that proved costly.
Sports
Oak Lightning’s debut in 2026 Redoute’s Choice Stakes highlights stellar pedigree
During their scouting of New Zealand yearlings, elite syndicator Wylie Dalziel alongside Hall of Fame conditioner Peter Moody spotted a standout family connection with Oak Lightning.
Bred at Little Avondale Stud, the Per Incanto youngster is half-related to Desert Lightning—a Pride Of Dubai product who triumphed at Group 1 level in New Zealand before linking with Moody and co-trainer Katherine Coleman at Pakenham.
He further connects as brother to Lindsay Park’s Group 2 champion Oak Hill, but the page features a legendary relation amplified by Moody’s choice of Saturday’s Redoute’s Choice Stakes at Caulfield.
Dam Isstoora to Oak Lightning, Desert Lightning, and Oak Hill traces as granddaughter of Twyla, by Danehill from Shantha’s Choice, making her sister to Redoute’s Choice.
The elements surrounding Oak Lightning justified his NZ$200,000 Karaka Yearling Sale price tag, according to Dalziel.
“Moods obviously had Desert Lightning, so he took a line through him, and Oak Hill had only had a few starts (at the time) but looked alright and then when we came across him we thought, ‘what a nice colt this is,’” Dalziel recalled.
“There was enough in the pedigree, so we were happy we got him $200,000, fall of hammer,”
Oak Lightning’s ancestry includes Group 1 stars like Redoute’s Choice, Desert Lightning, alongside Al Maher, Platinum Scissors, Hurricane Sky, Gathering, Tom Kitten, and US Grade 1 winner In Italian.
This proven bloodline has Dalziel buoyed by Moody’s pick of the $175,000 Listed event for the initial outing.
The gelding notched two Pakenham trials end of last year and two more this campaign, including a strong 800m success on March 24 after racing wide but powering home easily.
Dalziel and Moody were initially downcast by gate 10 from 11 in the Redoute’s Choice Stakes, yet the 1200m race reduced to six entrants by Friday 1pm due to scratches.
“Moods doesn’t often throw his two-year-olds in the deep end like this, so he’s got a very good opinion of him, he just would have rather draw a good barrier to be a little bit more confident,” Dalziel said.
“It’s a two-year-old race, anything can happen. He might be back a bit, but he’ll hit the line hard.”
Linda Meech partners Oak Lightning, the second elect in wagering behind Farnan colt Drumfire and Home Affairs gelding Gin Twist, a Listed winner.
Visit online bookmakers for the best Redoute’s Choice Stakes betting options.
Sports
Abbie McManus opens up on life after Football
Abbie McManus has spoken about her life after football, following her retirement in 2023 due to a serious leg injury.
The former Manchester United Women defender has since taken a different path, training as a firefighter.
She said:
“I miss football massively, don’t get me wrong, but everything I miss about it – the routine, the training, being around people as part of a team, the banter… there’s all of that in the fire service.”
She explained that the transition has felt natural:
“There are so many parallels between what football and this gives me… instead of representing our football club it’s all about keeping the community safe.”
McManus revealed she had always considered a career outside football, but the injury forced the decision.
Being told her career was over, she admitted, “was a bitter pill to swallow,” but she chose to move forward.
“I decided to visit some local fire stations. I researched, I asked some questions, I applied, and I got in.”
Despite stepping away from professional football, she hasn’t completely left the game behind. She still plays occasionally and keeps up with matches.
Looking back, she also reflected on her time at the club:
“we were a proper family. We all dug in, and we had such togetherness to help each other.”
Sports
Justis Huni opens up on tragic passing of trainer Keri Fui ahead of Frazer Clarke fight
Justis Huni was forced to pull himself out of a “negative space” following the devastating and unexpected passing of his head coach, Keri Fui.
The pair were gearing up for a rematch with Kiki Leutele in December, which would have been Huni’s first outing since his dramatic showdown with Fabio Wardley.
But instead of fighting on the Gold Coast, the Australian was left to process the sudden loss of Fui, who ultimately died from a coma after collapsing in the gym.
Speaking with Boxing News, Huni recalled his emotions in the wake of this tragic event, where he and his strength and conditioning coach had offered medical assistance to their friend and teammate.
“It was difficult at the time. It was a big thing for myself and my S&C trainer, to lose someone so close to us.
“It set me back a fair bit. I didn’t train for a while, but I needed to come back. The only thing that was going to make me happy, and pull me out of that negative space, was getting back into training.
“I just had to take a bit of time for myself, but now it’s time for the comeback. [Fui] was like a best friend to me, not just a coach. So, when he passed away, I told myself that everything I do from here will be for myself and for him.”
Now training with Aussie coach Josh Arnold, it seems that Huni is determined to honour Fui with a victory in his next assignment, which will see him face Frazer Clarke on Saturday.
The pair will collide on the undercard of Tyson Fury vs Arslanbek Makhmudov at London’s Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, with Huni returning to the UK following his 10th-round stoppage defeat to Wardley last June.
Prior to the finish, the 26-year-old had crafted a handy lead with his superior IQ and fluid movement, only for a signature right hand from Wardley to halt proceedings in stunning fashion.
Huni, however, has only benefited from the overall experience at Portman Road, the home of Ipswich Town Football Club.
“I enjoyed it. It was a big lesson to go over there, fighting in his backyard, and walk out to a full stadium of people booing me. But it was a good experience. It’s something I’ll never forget, and I took a lot away from it.
“I went into that fight with a short camp, a few injuries, and had no expectations. But I feel like that was the best I’ve ever fought, so I’ll be looking to come back over there and fight exactly the same [way].”
While he must first take care of business against Clarke, Huni can certainly see himself entering a rematch with Wardley, the WBO world champion, at some point down the line.
“The Fabio Wardley fight was just a rare occasion; I never thought I would take a fight that big so early on in my career.
“But it happened, and I showed that I belong on that stage, so the sky’s the limit.
“I would love the rematch. I believe that with a full camp, and going into it injury-free, it would be a lot different.”
Wardley, of course, must remain focused on defending his WBO title against Daniel Dubois on May 9, while Huni has been presented with no easy touch against Olympic bronze medallist Clarke, either.
But while their potential rematch might seem a million miles away, Huni will surely be gunning for a revenge mission in the not too distant future.
Sports
Celtics sink record-tying 29 treys, rip Pelicans to seal No. 2 in East
Apr 10, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Celtics forward Sam Hauser (30) and center Neemias Queta (88) celebrate during the second half against the New Orleans Pelicans at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: Winslow Townson-Imagn Images The Boston Celtics tied an NBA record by making 29 3-point field goals and secured the No. 2 seed for the Eastern Conference playoffs by beating the visiting New Orleans Pelicans 144-118 Friday night.
Boston (55-26) took 59 3-point shots but didn’t put up a shot on its final possession. The record for made 3-pointers in a game is also shared by the 2020 Milwaukee Bucks, the 2024 Celtics and the 2026 Memphis Grizzlies.
The Celtics received 24 points from Sam Hauser, who was 8 of 12 from 3-point territory. Jaylen Brown scored 23 and Payton Pritchard finished with 21 points and 10 assists.
Jeremiah Fears led New Orleans (26-55) with 36. Derik Queen added 25 points and 11 rebounds, and Jordan Hawkins contributed 20 points.
Jayson Tatum (right Achilles repair management) didn’t suit up for Boston, which was playing its second game in as many nights.
The New Orleans injury report listed the following players as out: Bryce McGowens (toe fracture), Yves Missi (finger), Trey Murphy III (ankle), Dejounte Murray (hand), Zion Williamson (knee), Saddiq Bey (rest), Herbert Jones (rest) and Karlo Matkovic (back). Murphy (21.5 ppg), Williamson (21.0), Bey (17.7) and Murray (16.7) are the team’s top four scorers.
Boston made 10 3-pointers in the opening quarter and had a 44-25 lead entering the second. Five players made at least one 3-pointer for the Celtics in the first 12 minutes.
The Celtics stretched their lead to 82-46 on a Jordan Walsh 3-pointer with 1:05 left in the first half. Boston hit 61.7% from the field, including 56.7% (17 of 30) from long distance, in the first two quarters and had an 82-51 halftime lead.
Boston surpassed the 100-point mark on a Brown layup that put the Celtics in front 101-61 with 7:09 remaining in the third. New Orleans cut the deficit to 26 points in the fourth, but an 11-0 run gave Boston a 137-97 edge.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Sidney Crosby vs. Alex Ovechkin: Top moments as the rivals meet for the 100th time
For the 100th and potentially final time in their careers — including the playoffs — Sidney Crosby and Alex Ovechkin will go head-to-head on Saturday before facing off again on Sunday. With Ovechkin on the final year of his contract and undecided about his future, the second half of the home-and-home may also be the final time fans get to witness one of the greatest individual rivalries hockey has ever seen.
In 2005-06, the NHL was coming out of a lockout year and desperately needed something to make the league relevant on the national stage again. As luck would have it, Crosby and Ovechkin would both take the ice for their rookie seasons for the Pittsburgh Penguins and Washington Capitals, respectively, sparking an epic rivalry that has now spanned two decades.
The two young superstars immediately delivered on the hype, combining for 91 goals and 208 points in that 2005-06 campaign. Ovechkin beat out Crosby for the Calder Trophy, but Crosby would score his fair share of blows in the 20 years that followed.
Throughout the years, the two living legends have rewritten the history books, racked up awards, met in the playoffs four times and combined to win the Stanley Cup four times. It’s been an incredible run for two players who have strong arguments to be among the top 10 players of all-time.
Ovechkin is now the undisputed goal-scoring king, and Crosby has been a playmaking wizard in all three zones throughout his career. They’ve taken different paths to reach their respective places in hockey history, but longevity is a trait they share in common, and it has allowed Crosby and Ovechkin to land among the greatest to take the ice in every statistical category.
|
Goals |
654 (15th) |
928 (1st) |
|
Assists |
1,107 (8th) |
756 (49th) |
|
Points |
1,761 (7th) |
1,684 (10th) |
|
Playoff goals |
71 (T-17th) |
77 (12th) |
|
Playoff assists |
130 (5th) |
70 (T-75th) |
|
Playoff points |
201 (T-5th) |
147 (T-35th) |
|
Hart Trophy |
2 |
3 |
|
Rocket Richard Trophy |
2 |
9 |
|
Art Ross Trophy |
2 |
1 |
|
Conn Smythe Trophy |
2 |
1 |
| Stanley Cup | 3 | 1 |
In their previous 99 head-to-head matchups, Crosby has the edge in wins (56-43), assists (79-50) and points (127-103). However, as is only appropriate, Ovechkin has Crosby beaten in goals, 53-48.
As Crosby and Ovechkin get set to do battle for the 100th (and possibly final) time, let’s not dwell on the idea that this great rivalry may be coming to an end — or how old that makes us feel. Instead, let’s look back at the best moments from the two greatest players of their generation.
Top Ovechkin vs. Crosby moments
5. All-Star weekend team-up
After 18 years of being pitted against one another, Crosby and Ovechkin teamed up for a more heartfelt moment at the 2023 All-Star Skills Competition. The rivals took the ice together and helped Ovechkin’s son, Sergei, beat Roberto Luongo on a breakaway.
Rivalries can’t be all hatred all the time, right? There have to be moments of respect and admiration for one another’s accomplishments. That’s happened more often in recent years, including Crosby and Penguins teammate Evgeni Malkin gifting Ovechkin a Rolex for breaking Wayne Gretzky’s goal record. The moment above just really signaled the thawing of their relationship in the latter years of their careers.
4. Ovi vs. Crosby: Episode 1
On Nov. 22, 2005, Crosby and Ovechkin met on the ice for the very first time, and they didn’t disappoint. Crosby’s Penguins won the game 5-4, and he was the more productive player, but both of them put on a show. Crosby scored a gorgeous goal when he split the Capitals’ defense and roofed a backhand shot that created a bottle pop you no longer see in today’s game. Crosby also added a stylish spin-o-rama assist from one knee.
Ovechkin tallied a nice assist on a goal by Matt Pettinger, but he could’ve had a much bigger game. Ovechkin walked Penguins defenseman Ryan Whitney with a brilliant move, but the post and goaltender Sebastien Caron combined to keep the puck out of the net.
3. Crosby strikes first in the playoffs
The first of many playoff battles between Crosby and Ovechkin occurred in 2009, and as always, it was a long series. In Game 7, Crosby simply took over. He opened the scoring midway through the first period, and he led Pittsburgh to an emphatic 6-2 victory with two goals and one assist. Crosby would go on to capture his first of three Stanley Cup rings that year.
Ovechkin did score for the Capitals, but it was an overall disappointing performance that foreshadowed what this rivalry would look like in the postseason for many years.
2. Ovechkin, Capitals finally break through
In 2018, Ovechkin and the Capitals had lost three consecutive playoff series to Crosby and the Penguins, including back-to-back defeats in 2016 and 2017. What made the two most recent defeats especially painful was that Pittsburgh had gone on to win the Cup in each of the previous two postseasons.
So, when Game 6 of the second-round series rolled around in 2018, everyone knew the Penguins would force a Game 7 and break the Capitals’ hearts. Except, for once, the story ended differently. Game 6 was a tight checking game, and the teams went to overtime tied at 1-1. Crosby had assisted on the Penguins’ lone goal, and Ovechkin hadn’t gotten on the scoresheet yet.
Then, in overtime, Ovechkin sprung teammate Evgeny Kuznetsov on a breakaway for the game-winning goal. Washington slayed the dragon and went on to win the first Stanley Cup in franchise history.
1. Dueling hat tricks
Hands down, the most memorable moment in this rivalry came in Game 2 of that 2009 playoff series. Crosby and Ovechkin traded the first three goals of the game, with Crosby giving the Penguins a 2-1 lead in the second period. Ovechkin responded with two goals in the third period, including the eventual game-winner.
Ovechkin’s hat-trick goal was a missile at the top of the circles that plunged the Verizon Center into chaos.
Crosby notched his hat trick as he pulled Pittsburgh within one with 30 seconds left, but he couldn’t find a fourth to tie the game. He just had to settle for an eventual series win and Stanley Cup — not a bad consolation prize.
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