“I was like, ‘Holy f—, this guy’s got some miles on him.’ He had all these things on the report,” MacLellan recalled this week. “I didn’t have any idea this was going on. We ended up doing the trade anyway, but I wondered how long this would last.”
“If you had asked me if he’d play a thousand games back then, I would’ve said ‘no.'”
Oshie, now 37, became the 390th skater in NHL history to reach the 1,000-game milestone on March 16 against the Vancouver Canucks. His intensity, physicality and willingness to compete for every inch of ice made him an impact player for the Blues and the Capitals over 16 seasons.
But that style of play also took its toll. Oshie played over 75 games just four times in his career. Upper-body injuries, lower-body injuries, surgeries, a series of concussions — Oshie has experienced it all.
“It’s got to go down as a thousand of the hardest games ever played in the NHL,” said Karl Alzner, Oshie’s former teammate with the Capitals.
Some players chase benchmarks for goals or points. Ever since he entered the league, Oshie targeted the 1,000-game plateau as his career measuring stick.
“There’s no other milestones that I really set for myself in my career,” he told ESPN this week. “I looked up to the guys that came before me that reached the thousand-game mark, seeing the ceremonies and the silver sticks they’d receive. It’s a pretty cool thing and it’s tough to do.”
Oshie is being honored for his achievement on Sunday, before the Capitals’ home game against the Winnipeg Jets. His teammates will wear his number during warmups. The team and the NHL have gifts to present him.
There were certainly times Oshie wasn’t convinced he’d earn the celebration.
“It’s a lot harder than I thought it was going to be, honestly,” he said. “I think you when you have to go through it yourself, in the fashion that I did and the amount of time it took, it definitely takes its toll. But it was all worth it.”
Oshie’s journey to 1,000 games was an emotional one, on and off the ice.
BEFORE OSHIE PLAYED his 1,000th game in Vancouver, his teammates engaged in one of those decidedly odd, only-in-hockey rituals. They lined up against the boards and, one by one, gave Oshie a swing of their sticks to his backside, his body flinching from the contact.
The most emphatic one was delivered by Capitals winger Tom Wilson. As Oshie stood with his stick raised in front of his face like a Jedi meditating with a lightsaber, Wilson delivered a stick-spank that actually knocked Oshie off-balance on the ice.
“Well, he gives it to me pretty good sometimes,” Oshie said. “And I’ve gotten him a couple times too, but you can look at our sizes. He’s obviously got a little bit of a higher swing speed than I’ve got.”
Oshie gives as good as he gets when it comes these pregame taps of encouragement. As part of the ritual, he delivers the first set of them, and then his teammates reciprocate.
“It started probably back in St. Louis. In warmups, I had gone through and kind of tapped everyone on the butt, and then I started doing it here,” he said.
It all started in St. Louis for Oshie. They drafted him 24th overall in 2005 out of North Dakota, one spot ahead of Andrew Cogliano. Oshie debuted in the NHL during the 2008-09 season and would play 443 games with the Blues over seven seasons.
He was an important part of their core, along with players such as David Backes, Alex Steen and Alex Pietrangelo, and later Vladimir Tarasenko and Jaden Schwartz. But his profile grew by leaps and bounds in 2014 when Oshie was selected for the U.S. men’s Olympic hockey team for the Sochi Games.
He was added to the roster partially because of his shootout prowess. That proved prophetic in a preliminary-round game against the Russians, when Oshie’s five consecutive shootout attempts against Sergei Bobrovsky — converting four of six attempts overall — gave the Americans the victory over their hosts.
It was a moment that landed “T.J. Sochi” everywhere from “The Today Show” to cereal boxes.
“It was a pretty fun experience. For me, it wasn’t as serious and nerve-wracking as maybe it was for everyone watching on TV back home,” he said.
Oshie was in the second year of a five-year contract when he reached stardom in Sochi. While the Blues hadn’t broken through in the playoffs, he felt he was part of something they were building in St. Louis.
And then the Blues traded him to the Capitals in July 2015, in a deal that saw Troy Brouwer sent back to St. Louis.
It was a moment that rocked him, personally and professionally.
“Originally, you feel a little bit like you failed the city and the fans. That maybe you were looked at by management as kind of the problem when [the team] couldn’t get over the hump in the playoffs,” said Oshie.
The Capitals didn’t see him as a problem. In fact, they coveted him.
MacLellan considered Oshie “a perfect fit” to play with Alex Ovechkin and Nicklas Backstrom. He tried to orchestrate a trade with the Blues for Oshie at the NHL draft that summer, but it couldn’t come together. The Capitals opted for Plan B: signing veteran right wing Justin Williams, a Stanley Cup champion, as a free agent.
“We thought we hit a home run there, right at the end of free agency. I remember it was late in the night and we get Williams, so we’re fired up about that,” MacLellan said. “And then the next day, St. Louis calls and says, ‘Are you guys still interested in Oshie?’ So we ended up getting that done the next day.”
Oshie still remembers how MacLellan’s enthusiasm changed his reaction to the trade.
“It was about five minutes of feeling pretty s—ty and that kind of goes away pretty quickly when you get the next call from Mac and hear how excited he was to get you to join their team. To try to be a part of helping them over the playoff hump,” Oshie said. “So it was a couple different waves of emotion that went over me.”
He called being acquired by the Capitals “the best thing that could have happened to my career.” Oshie played with Ovechkin, Backstrom, defenseman John Carlson and others that helped him establish a career high in goals (33) by the 2016-17 season.
“It really jump-started my career playing with world-class players,” he said. “I’ve loved my time here. We put down roots right away. I didn’t even think about going to free agency. It’s been a fun ride.”
It didn’t get any more fun than on June 7, 2018, when the Capitals and Oshie won the Stanley Cup for the first time. He dedicated it to his wife, Lauren, and beamed with pride that his children would be able to see his name etched on the Cup.
“And for my dad, who has Alzheimer’s,” he said.
Oshie’s father, Tim, had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 2012 when he was 50 years old. T.J. celebrated the Stanley Cup win with his father on the ice, posing for photos with hockey’s Holy Grail. Creating a memory that T.J. Oshie didn’t believe would fade like so many others had for his father.
“My dad, he doesn’t remember a lot of stuff these days,” Oshie said that night, in a tearful postgame interview. “He remembers enough. But I tell you what, he’s here tonight. I don’t know where he’s at, but this one will stick with him forever. You can guarantee that.”
TIM OSHIE DIED on May 4, 2021, at the age of 56. Oshie often referred to him as “Coach,” as his father was behind the bench when T.J. was a youth hockey player.
“He still calls him ‘Coach’ all the time,” MacLellan said. “He was always excited to have him on the fathers’ trips, to have him around, to spend time with him.”
MacLellan remembers that when Tim Oshie passed, T.J. left the Capitals to attend his funeral. After spending a few days with family, Oshie wanted to rejoin the team for a game at the New York Rangers. The Capitals flew him back across the country, landing in New York on a Tuesday for a Wednesday night game.
“He scored a hat trick that night. It was unbelievable,” MacLellan said.
Oshie dedicated the game to his late father. “I have nothing but love for my teammates. I will be forever grateful for this night and especially because I got to share it with my brothers,” he said after the game.
His teammates were swept up in the emotions, too. Center Nicklas Backstrom embraced Oshie at the Capitals’ bench at the end of the game.
“I saw he got emotional there at the end, which was understandable. I felt like he needed a hug. I told him, ‘You are the strongest person I know,'” Backstrom said at the time. “We are a family. We are in this together. His loss is everyone’s loss.”
On Sunday, the Capitals will again honor Tim Oshie. The No. 77 jerseys they’ll wear in warmups will be signed and auctioned off to benefit the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation, whose mission is to rapidly accelerate the development of drugs to prevent, treat and cure Alzheimer’s disease. It’s a charity T.J. Oshie personally selected as the beneficiary.
“They were very instrumental when my dad was alive to help him get on the proper mix of medications to prolong his life and to make him a little bit more comfortable,” Oshie said. “For the proceeds to go to them means a lot to me. It means a lot to my family and especially the people that were very close with my dad, that were his caretakers in some pretty tough times.”
To honor Oshie’s accomplishment, the Capitals rounded up messages of congratulations from teammates past and present. One of them was Dan Hinote, who played with Oshie with the Blues, and acknowledged Tim Oshie in his clip.
“I know Coach is there with you,” Hinote said. “The one thing about losing your father is all the times in your life where you’re like, ‘Thank God my dad wasn’t here.’ Well, now he is. That’s the problem when you lose your dad is that he’s everywhere now. And he couldn’t be more proud of you.”
A POINT OF PRIDE for T.J. Oshie these days? That the Capitals are battling for an Eastern Conference playoff spot this late in the season, defying preseason expectations.
Washington has some inexperience on its roster — even Spencer Carbery is in his first season as an NHL head coach — but it also has a core group of veterans who believed the team had more postseason life left in it.
“We’ve got a lot of character in the room,” Oshie said. “A lot of guys that aren’t comfortable with going away or aren’t comfortable with packing it in.”
Oshie is one of a dwindling number of Capitals players from their Stanley Cup team still on the roster. Evgeny Kuznetsov was traded to Carolina. Backstrom is on long-term injured reserve. Carlson, Wilson and Ovechkin are still there along with Oshie. Instead of being a diminished team whose only focal point was Ovechkin’s chase of Wayne Gretzky’s all-time goals record, Washington remains right in the playoff chase.
How the Capitals have been able to do this has led to some befuddlement around the NHL. Their offense is 27th in goals per game (2.71). Their defense is a touch better (19th), but skeptics can’t get past their minus-30 goal differential.
MacLellan said that stat is deceiving.
“I think sometimes our losses are a little too bad. We just don’t have the gunpower to open it up and chase games,” he said. “So if we get down, we’re in trouble. And if we open it up, we end up losing big. So that hurts us. But I think it’s trending in the right way.”
Oshie believes the Capitals have been an underrated defensive team.
“Despite the goal differential and all that, we have guys that are willing to play the correct way defensively that makes it tough for other teams to score on us. It makes it frustrating if they don’t get their cookies right away in the first half of the game,” he said. “If we can play our game, and we can stick with it, and we get the goaltending we’ve been getting, we’re gonna be right there in the end and have a chance to maybe make a run.”
For over 1,000 games, Oshie has played his game. Through injuries and adversity and all the emotional swings one could imagine in a career.
“He does everything for his teammates, for his organization. He’s good in the community. Fans love him. He comes to the rink every day with a great attitude,” MacLellan said. “He cares about all the right things. He’s been excellent throughout his career.”
Tennessee‘s Nico Iamaleava has been cleared medically to play Saturday against Georgia and is set to return as the Vols’ starting quarterback, sources told ESPN.
Iamaleava, a redshirt freshman, missed the second half of the 33-14 win over Mississippi State last week after suffering a blow to the head. He was listed as questionable earlier this week on the SEC availability report but has been removed in the latest report.
Iamaleava practiced this week, including team periods, and there was optimism among the staff that he was trending in the right direction and would be able to play. But the final call was made by medical personnel. Iamaleava was examined by doctors for what sources told ESPN were concussion-like symptoms after leaving the Mississippi State game. He did not return to the sideline for the second half.
Tennessee coach Josh Heupel said on Monday that he felt like Iamaleava would be in “great shape for Saturday” and noted that Iamaleava was with the team earlier Monday morning for meetings and team activities. The Vols’ first full-scale practice was Tuesday.
Iamaleava was having his most productive outing against an SEC team this season before leaving the game against Mississippi State. He completed 8 of 13 passes for 174 yards, no interceptions and a pair of touchdowns as Tennessee built a 20-7 halftime lead. In Iamaleava’s previous five SEC games, he had accounted for three touchdowns and turned it over five times. He was also sacked 15 times in those five games.
Redshirt senior Gaston Moore filled in for Iamaleava in the second half last week and finished 5-of-8 for 38 yards with no touchdowns or interceptions.
Getting Iamaleava back for the Georgia game is big news for Tennessee, which is right in the middle of the SEC championship race and College Football Playoff picture.
Receiver Dont’e Thornton (hand) has also been given the green light to play for Tennessee after earlier being listed as questionable.
Week 12 is here as we take a look at an SEC matchup that has College Football Playoff implications, learn about three of the nation’s top passers who all played under the same coach and see what’s going on in the Big 12.
No. 7 Tennessee will visit Sanford Stadium as it takes on conference opponent No. 12 Georgia on Saturday night. With so much at stake, what can each team improve on ahead of this SEC showdown?
The Big 12 has six teams in the hunt for a spot in the conference title game. With the final CFP rankings coming out in less than a month, what scenario looks most realistic for the conference in terms of how many of its teams could make the 12-team field?
Our college football experts preview big games and storylines ahead of the Week 12 slate.
It has been a historic (and dominant) season for Tennessee’s defense, which has yet to give up more than 19 points in any of its nine games. Against SEC competition, the Volunteers lead the conference in scoring defense, giving up 16.7 points per game, and also lead the way in third-down defense and red zone defense. In other words, they’ve given up very little of anything on defense and are buoyed by a line that’s both talented and deep. Tennessee plays a ton of players up front and has been especially good at forcing key turnovers. In 23 trips inside its own 20-yard line, the Vols have forced six turnovers.
The reality is that Tennessee has played to its defense for much of this season out of necessity. The offense has lacked consistency and struggled to generate explosive plays, particularly in the passing game. It’s not all on redshirt freshman quarterback Nico Iamaleava, either. Iamaleava has thrown only five touchdown passes in six SEC games, and the Vols are tied for 10th with an average of 7.5 yards per completion. Iamaleava, who sustained a head injury in a win over Mississippi State last week, has been the victim of poor pass protection at times, and his receivers have dropped some costly passes. Iamaleava has also been shaky when it comes to overthrowing receivers and occasionally holding onto the ball too long.
The bright spot on offense for Tennessee has been running back Dylan Sampson, who has a school-record 20 rushing touchdowns. He has been a constant for the Vols on offense and has an SEC-leading 772 rushing yards and 11 touchdowns in conference play. As good as he has been, the Vols are probably going to need more from their passing game to win in Athens. — Chris Low
The Bulldogs didn’t do much of anything well in last week’s 28-10 loss at Ole Miss, which was the first time in a long time that Kirby Smart’s team was manhandled on the lines of scrimmage.
The good news for Georgia: It’s heading home to Sanford Stadium for the first time in more than a month. Georgia hasn’t dropped back-to-back games in the regular season since 2016, Smart’s first season, and it has bounced back after each of its past eight losses. The Bulldogs have won seven of their past eight games against the Volunteers.
For all of quarterback Carson Beck‘s turnovers, Georgia’s problems on offense probably start up front. The offensive line hasn’t done a good job of protecting him, and the Bulldogs’ lack of a potent running game has prevented them from effectively utilizing play-action passes. Their banged-up offensive line is going to face another formidable defensive front Saturday. Georgia has 27 dropped passes, fourth most in the FBS, according to TruMedia, so its receivers need to become more reliable as well. — Mark Schlabach
The coach behind three of college football’s top passers
North Texas coach Eric Morris coached Ward at Incarnate Word and Washington State, recruited Mateer to the Cougars and signed Morris out of the transfer portal this offseason. All three hailed from Texas and are putting up big numbers this season. Morris, a Mike Leach disciple, knows what he’s looking for when it comes to QBs.
For each one, the journey was different. Ward was a zero-star recruit out of West Columbia, Texas, played in a wing-T offense and had no scholarship offers. But he showed up to Incarnate Word’s camp in 2019 and impressed with his quick release and accuracy. Morris saw appealing traits, too, in Ward’s multisport talents.
“He was such a good basketball player,” Morris said. “He was a bigger guy who could really handle the ball and move with ease. He had a twitch and quickness about him that was almost Mahomes-esque, where he’s not fast but you see him get out of the pocket and scramble and he’s nifty on his feet. He saw the floor great and shot the basketball great.
“It might be easier at an FCS school to take that risk, but it was something we were really confident in.”
Ward came in with extreme confidence, telling coaches he’d win the starting job over their returning all-conference player (and he did). He followed Morris to Pullman, Washington, out of loyalty to the coach who believed in him. Now he’s playing on a big stage, chasing a College Football Playoff bid and a Heisman Trophy with the No. 9 Hurricanes.
“It’s been fun to watch him flourish and get rewarded for being patient all these years,” Morris said.
When Morris left UIW to become Washington State’s offensive coordinator in 2022, he brought Ward but needed another QB. On his first recruiting trip in Texas, he stopped by to check out Mateer. The two-star recruit had a prolific senior season at Little Elm High School but was committed to Central Arkansas. Morris didn’t understand what FBS programs were missing and convinced Mateer to flip.
After two seasons behind Ward, Mateer has emerged as one of the top dual-threat QBs in college football with 2,332 passing yards, 805 rushing yards (excluding sacks) and 33 total TDs.
“I think the sky’s the limit,” Ward said. “He’s just so dang hard to tackle in the open field. Just a kid that loves ball and was under-recruited. The tide’s turned and he ends up being a big-time ballplayer.”
Chandler Morris was not an under-the-radar talent, but he’s having his best season yet at North Texas. He began his career at Oklahoma, won the starting job at TCU in 2022, sustained a knee injury in its season opener and then watched Max Duggan lead the Horned Frogs to the national title game.
Morris had a six-game stint as TCU’s starter last season before injuring the same knee. At UNT, he’s leading the nation’s No. 3 passing offense with 3,244 total yards and 30 TDs. Like Ward and Mateer, he processes information quickly, makes plays with his feet and throws outside the pocket with accuracy. If you ask Eric Morris, those traits are a must in today’s game. When paired with his version of Air Raid ball, you get big-time results.
“It’s been fun to see him get his swagger back,” Morris said.
Eric Morris points to Patrick Mahomes, Lamar Jackson and Jayden Daniels. The QBs thriving at the highest level are becoming unstoppable by creating plays out of the pocket. And so are his guys.
“Everybody obviously watches Cam and the magic he makes,” Morris said, “but I think all three of ’em can make plays when it’s not a perfect play call. There are a bunch of really good pure passers nowadays, but that’s what sets them all apart.” — Max Olson
What’s going on in the Big 12?
Two-thirds of the way through the Big 12 schedule, six teams are still in the hunt for a title-game appearance: BYU (6-0), Colorado (5-1), Arizona State, Iowa State, Kansas State and West Virginia, all of which are 4-2. There are too many variables to discuss all the scenarios, but the conference has a straightforward tiebreaker policy.
It’s possible to come up with scenarios in which the Big 12 could get two bids, one bid or shut out altogether.
For the Big 12 to get two bids, BYU probably would have to finish 12-0, then lose a close game in the championship to a two-loss team (Colorado, Iowa State or Kansas State). A 12-1 BYU team would get consideration, but it would become a question of how far it would fall and what else happens around the country.
The most likely scenario is the Big 12 will get one team in: whichever one wins the conference title game. If BYU wins out, it will have a bye, but if it slips up even once — or if another team wins the title — Boise State might be in position to get a first-round bye, assuming the Broncos win out.
The doomsday scenario in the Big 12 is if the conference champion has two or three losses and Army and Boise State win out. If that’s the case, there is a good possibility both of those schools would be ranked ahead of the Big 12 champion and the Big 12 would be left out. — Kyle Bonagura
Quotes of the Week
“They’re stubborn, man. They’re physical. He is an elite runner. The runs they run are sometimes nontraditional. They run some runs that other people don’t run because of the space in the box. He’s very patient. He hits small creases. He’s hard to tackle. How many touchdowns has he got in the SEC? Twenty-something? That’s crazy. In the SEC? The SEC is the hardest league in the world to run the ball in on because they’ve got the most size defensive lineman, and he continues to do it at a crazy pace to me.” — Kirby Smart on Volunteers tailback Dylan Sampson.
“I never try to take a step back. I try to take a step up. I’m always putting my head out the window. I’m trying to see around the corner, not trying to see straight ahead. It’s normalcy for everybody to see what’s in front of them. I’m trying to see around the corner. That’s the relationship I have with the Lord, to help me see around the corner so I can help navigate these young men as well as the women that’s attached to our program to a better way and a better life. So I don’t get caught up in the ‘You go, boys!’ or the ‘You ain’t nothing.’ You know, if I would’ve listened to you guys earlier, I’ve gotta listen to you now. So I might as well just put some headphones on and block you out. Notice I don’t have a sponsor for headphones, but that would’ve been a good placement for a sponsor.” — Deion Sanders when asked if he takes time to step back and appreciate the magnitude of Colorado’s turnaround.
“I hope anyone who has ambitions about playing in the National Football League, let’s see what you’ve got against Clemson. Let’s see you play your best game here. If you weren’t focused for Virginia, which I can’t imagine you weren’t — and I’m not saying anybody was not focused — but if they didn’t get your focus, I imagine Clemson will get your focus when you put the tape on.” — Pitt coach Pat Narduzzi on whether playing Clemson gets the attention of his players.
BALTIMORE — The Orioles are ready to adjust their wall in left field again.
The team moved the wall at Camden Yards back and made it significantly taller before the 2022 season. General manager Mike Elias said Friday the team “overcorrected” and will try to find a “happier medium” before the 2025 season.
The team sent out a rendering of changes showing the wall moved farther in — particularly in left-center field near the bullpens — and reduced in height.