Playing 16 seasons in the NHL is no small feat. But when you’ve had a career like longtime Washington Capitals star right winger T.J. Oshie, you’re especially fortunate – and you’ve done more than enough to assure you of a prominent place in the history of hockey’s top league.
Oshie announced his retirement in a special event in Washington D.C. on Monday. A retrospective of his on-ice days underscores the impact he had, not only as a Stanley Cup champion but on the international stage as well.
The 38-year-old Oshie spent his first seven years with the St. Louis Blues, which drafted him 24th overall in 2005. He established himself as a dangerous scorer and a shootout specialist in particular. In six of his seven years with St. Louis, Oshie posted at least 34 points, and the one season he didn’t, it was because injuries limited him to only 30 games. When the Capitals traded for him in 2015, they knew they were getting a player who could produce.
Oshie also proved to be a clutch performer, particularly in his international career.
At the 2014 Sochi Olympic Games, in a round-robin game against Russia, Oshie was used five straight times in the shootout and six times in total, scoring four times and potting the game-winner in the eighth round to give Team USA a 3-2 win.
Oshie represented America six times – once at the world juniors, three times at the men’s World Championship, once at the Olympics and once at the 2016 World Cup of Hockey. He was never held off the scoresheet in any of those tournaments, posting eight goals and 15 points in 28 senior Team USA games.
Meanwhile, Oshie was an instant hit in Washington, posting a then-career-high 26 goals and 51 points in his first season with the Capitals. For four of the next five years, he posted at least 22 goals – and in 2016-17, he had a career-high 33 goals and 56 points in only 68 games.
But his most clutch performance came in the Capitals’ Stanley Cup-championship run of 2017-18, when he amassed eight goals and 21 points in 24 playoff games to help steer the Caps to their first-ever Cup victory.
Immediately after the Cup win, Oshie memorably referred to his father, Tim Oshie, who had been afflicted with early-onset Alzheimer’s Disease.
“My dad’s here in the crowd,” Oshie said of his father, who passed away in 2021. “He was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, and he doesn’t remember a lot of stuff. But…you bet your ass he’s going to remember this one.”
Oshie frequently honors his father by supporting Alzheimer fundraising and awareness initiatives. The Capitals and Monumental Sports & Entertainment Foundation presented him with a $10,000 donation to the Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation on Monday as a result.
The other highlight of the Capitals’ Cup run was Oshie and some of his teammates diving into Washington Harbour’s fountain, taking the Cup into the fountain with them. So it was only fitting that Oshie’s retirement announcement Monday took place at that same spot. It was a moment that will live in the minds of Caps fans forever, and Oshie earned a key place in that memory.
In 1,010 career regular-season NHL games, Oshie put up 302 goals and 695 points. In 106 career NHL playoff games, he posted 34 goals and 69 points. And as a player with Ojibwe roots, his accomplishments are something Indigenous peoples can aspire to follow.
In the end, injuries took their toll on Oshie, as he was limited to 207 games in his final four NHL seasons. But his heart and persistence carved out a special place for him in hockey history, and his incredible moments are bound to stand the test of time.
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