Ovechkin, who also had an assist, has six goals during his streak and has scored 861 in his NHL career. He needs 34 to pass Wayne Gretzky (894) for the all-time lead.
“He in general, when he’s not scoring, provides a ton of life,” Washington coach Spencer Carbery said, “but when he’s going and pucks are on him and he’s skating and he’s on one of these runs, and when they’re going in for him, it’s noticeable on the bench. His teammates can feel that, and when he touches the puck everybody holds their breath a little bit.”
Connor McMichael and Aliaksei Protas also scored for the Capitals (9-3-0), who have won seven straight home games. Dylan Strome had two assists, and Logan Thompson made 33 saves.
“It was a tough one today,” said Ovechkin, the Washington captain. “[Thompson] did a great job to keep us in the game, making huge saves. We take it and move on.”
Juuso Parssinen and Steven Stamkos scored for the Predators (4-8-1), who have lost four of five. Juuse Saros made 33 saves.
“That effort and the work ethic, that’s the style of play that we want and probably one of the better efforts of the year,” Stamkos said. “It’s tough when you don’t get rewarded in those games, but these are the games that hopefully you can build on and replicate that besides the [six] penalties.”
Ovechkin gave the Capitals a 3-2 lead at 10:25 when he scored on a one-timer from the bottom of the right face-off circle off Strome’s pass from behind the net. It was Ovechkin’s eighth goal of the season and his 130th game-winner in the NHL.
“You knew it was coming,” Nashville coach Andre Brunette said. “You're on the bench and I guess I've seen him too many times. I've played against him, I've coached against him, I've watched him, and he just finds that, and when it's on his stick it's gone. That's a big-time shot from obviously arguably the greatest goal-scorer of all time.”