Felidae
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- Sep 30, 2016
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I'm aware Lindros won this award unanimously, so instead of outlining the voting percentages of each finalist, here's me making my case that Hasek was the best player in the league that year, and perhaps should have won the Hart trophy.
Hasek had a pretty dominant year. Led the league with a .930sv% when the next highest was a .917sv%. Had a GSAA of 36 when the next best had 15, 10th best had 8. To top it all off, he had a pretty hard workload, was 2nd in saves and shots against, and 5th in GP.
Eric Lindros and Jaromir Jagr in comparison had a decent sized gap but didn't exactly blow the competition out of the water. Zhamnov of all players was just 5 points behind them in the Art Ross race, Sakic 8 points behind. 10th highest scorer was 17 points back.
At the very least I don't think Lindros had the type of season worthy of sweeping the awards when Hasek was having one of the best sustained peaks for a goalie.
Now I think all of these points are admittedly more in favour of Hasek winning the Pearson, especially if you don't necessarily subscribe to the idea of best player = Hart winner. But I still think he has a strong case for the Hart trophy. Let's look at his supporting cast..
Sabres were strong defensively, ranking 3rd in GA, but despite that had little help from the backup goalies who all played a combined 9 games and had an atrocious .859sv% and .867sv%.
The defensive group consisted of Doug Bodger, Richard Smehlik, Charlie Huddy, Craig Muni playing around 30-40 GP.. the rest of the dmen didn't even play half the season.
Their offense was below average too, ranked 18th best. You had Mogilny with 47 points, then Audette with 37, LaFontaine with 22..
All in all, the team finished 4th in their division with 51 points. They were a good team, but imo were more than the sum of their parts in terms of the skating cast (credit to the system) but Hasek was also so clearly the teams best player, remove him from the equation and I don't think they're good enough to make the playoffs.
Now in comparison with Lindros, his team was 1st in their division, ranking 9th in GF and 8th in GA. Thwy are very possibly still a PO team without him. He did lead his team by 13 points. Renberg and Leclair had 57 and 49 points respectively.
Admittedly, the goalie situation was not that good.. Hextall with a .890sv%, Russell with a .914sv% though played 19 games.
The defensive core maybe not better, Desjardins, Yushkevich, Gallant, Therien to name a few, but they were certainly far healthier, with 7 of the defenseman suiting up for at least 30+ games.
Who was "most valuable to his team" is definitely a closer discussion, I can see the arguments going either way, but I still think Hasek comes out on top here. An overlooked point that favours Hasek is that they are much closer in GP than they'd usually be given the shortened season. Hasek only played 4 less games than Lindros
But i am curious what everyone else thinks, do you think Lindros rightfully won the Hart trophy by a big margin? Or would you have given it to someone else?
I acknowledge Jagr and Coffey had excellent seasons with solid cases as well, but this is getting too long, and I do think Hasek and Lindros have the 2 strongest cases for the Hart trophy. Maybe that will be a seperate post..
Hasek had a pretty dominant year. Led the league with a .930sv% when the next highest was a .917sv%. Had a GSAA of 36 when the next best had 15, 10th best had 8. To top it all off, he had a pretty hard workload, was 2nd in saves and shots against, and 5th in GP.
Eric Lindros and Jaromir Jagr in comparison had a decent sized gap but didn't exactly blow the competition out of the water. Zhamnov of all players was just 5 points behind them in the Art Ross race, Sakic 8 points behind. 10th highest scorer was 17 points back.
At the very least I don't think Lindros had the type of season worthy of sweeping the awards when Hasek was having one of the best sustained peaks for a goalie.
Now I think all of these points are admittedly more in favour of Hasek winning the Pearson, especially if you don't necessarily subscribe to the idea of best player = Hart winner. But I still think he has a strong case for the Hart trophy. Let's look at his supporting cast..
Sabres were strong defensively, ranking 3rd in GA, but despite that had little help from the backup goalies who all played a combined 9 games and had an atrocious .859sv% and .867sv%.
The defensive group consisted of Doug Bodger, Richard Smehlik, Charlie Huddy, Craig Muni playing around 30-40 GP.. the rest of the dmen didn't even play half the season.
Their offense was below average too, ranked 18th best. You had Mogilny with 47 points, then Audette with 37, LaFontaine with 22..
All in all, the team finished 4th in their division with 51 points. They were a good team, but imo were more than the sum of their parts in terms of the skating cast (credit to the system) but Hasek was also so clearly the teams best player, remove him from the equation and I don't think they're good enough to make the playoffs.
Now in comparison with Lindros, his team was 1st in their division, ranking 9th in GF and 8th in GA. Thwy are very possibly still a PO team without him. He did lead his team by 13 points. Renberg and Leclair had 57 and 49 points respectively.
Admittedly, the goalie situation was not that good.. Hextall with a .890sv%, Russell with a .914sv% though played 19 games.
The defensive core maybe not better, Desjardins, Yushkevich, Gallant, Therien to name a few, but they were certainly far healthier, with 7 of the defenseman suiting up for at least 30+ games.
Who was "most valuable to his team" is definitely a closer discussion, I can see the arguments going either way, but I still think Hasek comes out on top here. An overlooked point that favours Hasek is that they are much closer in GP than they'd usually be given the shortened season. Hasek only played 4 less games than Lindros
But i am curious what everyone else thinks, do you think Lindros rightfully won the Hart trophy by a big margin? Or would you have given it to someone else?
I acknowledge Jagr and Coffey had excellent seasons with solid cases as well, but this is getting too long, and I do think Hasek and Lindros have the 2 strongest cases for the Hart trophy. Maybe that will be a seperate post..