Anze Kopitar vs Patrick Kane

Who was the better player during their peak and prime?


  • Total voters
    54

Felidae

Registered User
Sep 30, 2016
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Weird comparison but hear me out. I think most people in an all time sense would pick Kane over toews because the latter didn't have elite longevity and was no longer a superstar past 28..

Well, Kopitar is probably the closest comparable to Toews, except with the added bonus of having a lengthier prime.

So, who would you take at their peak (their absolute best), and who would in their prime (overall body of work as an elite player)


Kopitar

Award finishes

Selke: 1, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 5, 6, 7, 9, 9, 12, 15

Hart: 3, 8, 8, 17


Stat finishes

Points: 7th
PPG: 9th

Career Stats
RS: GP 1405 G 429 A 819. P 1248
PO: GP 97 G 25 A 55 P 80

Career Average (82 game average)
RS: G 24 A 48 P 72
PO: G 21 A 46 P 67





Kane

Award finishes

Hart: 1, 6, 6, 7, 8, 15, 17

Pearson: 1


Stat finishes

Points: 1, 2, 3, 5, 5, 8, 9
PPG: 1, 3, 4, 4, 5, 9, 10
Goals: 2, 5, 5, 10
GPG: 2, 7, 8



Career Stats
RS: GP 1247 G 476. A 822. P 1298
PO: GP 147 G 53 A 85 P 138

Career Average (82 game average)

RS: G 31 A 54 P 85
PO: G 30 A 49 P 79
 

LDX

Registered User
Jan 13, 2014
158
307
Iles de la Madeleine
This is a bit sensitive, as I believe the answer to your question is Kane for Peak, Prime & Career - but that's not a slouch or any attempt to diminish Kopitar who was (and still is!) an amazing player on his own. Comparing two all-time greats does not mean the lowest player is any bad, Kopitar does deserve a lot of praise. Kane was just in a tier above him for most of their career.
 
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CokenoPepsi

Registered User
Oct 28, 2016
5,439
2,806
Hmm.

I think Kane clearly has it for peak and career.

Prime might be something else if Kopitar plays like this for a few more years
 

x Tame Impala

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Aug 24, 2011
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From 07/08 until 2016/17, Kane is 3rd in points behind only Crosby and Ovechkin, he's 10th in goals during that timeframe too. From 2016/17 until 2022/23, the last season he was healthy, he's 6th in points, playing in his 30's, hanging right there with Kucherov and Panarin by 10 or less points, and really only behind McDavid/Draisaitl/MacKinnon who are all phenoms in their prime years.

Point being the guy was consistently one of the most elite forwards in the game. He'll retire as the best or 2nd best american born player of all time. I have a ton of respect for the Kings and Kopitar specifically but there's no way I'd rather have Kopitar on the Hawks during those years than Kane.
 

Our Lady Peace

Registered User
Aug 12, 2014
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Kopitar has eaten the hardest minutes for 19 seasons and 1400 games night in, night out. Playing 200 feet while averaging 70 points in all but maybe a handful of seasons I think is quite hard to ignore. Especially when using the points argument

Both have a fairly comparable playoff PPG average (side note: was Kopi playing injured in 2013?)

Peak you can argue Kane for sure, but prime, well if I'm making a case for longevity and sustainability of their level of play, I'd say Kopitar. He has been the Kings engine up front for much longer than Kane was for Chicago. Toews was the engine from 2009-2015 was he not?

As an aside, for a guy who's played as long as Kopitar has, he has missed a grand total of 31 games in his career. That is staggering
 

Felidae

Registered User
Sep 30, 2016
12,304
15,555
From 07/08 until 2016/17, Kane is 3rd in points behind only Crosby and Ovechkin, he's 10th in goals during that timeframe too. From 2016/17 until 2022/23, the last season he was healthy, he's 6th in points, playing in his 30's, hanging right there with Kucherov and Panarin by 10 or less points, and really only behind McDavid/Draisaitl/MacKinnon who are all phenoms in their prime years.

Point being the guy was consistently one of the most elite forwards in the game. He'll retire as the best or 2nd best american born player of all time. I have a ton of respect for the Kings and Kopitar specifically but there's no way I'd rather have Kopitar on the Hawks during those years than Kane.

I actually checked how Kopitar ranked in the timeframe you used, and he's 10th in points. But he's also by far the best two way player in the top 10.

If you compare their 82 game average in that timeframe, Kopitar averages out at 72 points, while Kane at 83 points.

I'm not sure how significant a 10 point difference is, especially when we consider the massive gap in two way play.

And not that there isnt a clear gap.. but the top 10 finishes comparison also makes the offensive gap appear larger than it is. Yet I'm pretty sure Kopitar was in the top 20 multiple times.
 

JaegerDice

The mark of my dignity shall scar thy DNA
Dec 26, 2014
25,643
10,347
This is very close for me and kind of difficult to parse because of how different the players are.

Gun to head, I'll say Kane Peak and Kopitar Prime.

The biggest legitimate knock against Kane is that he required sheltering for the bulk of his career to have a significant positive impact. On the other hand, Kopitar was the opposite; he was the guy you threw to the wolves every shift, similar to Toews on the Hawks.

As far as a singular season or playoff run, I'm not sure Kopitar's peak quite measures up to Kane's, but as far as sustained on-ice impact over time, I think Kopitar probably out Kane.

Two first ballot Hall of Famers though. Can't go wrong with either.

Kopitar has eaten the hardest minutes for 19 seasons and 1400 games night in, night out. Playing 200 feet while averaging 70 points in all but maybe a handful of seasons I think is quite hard to ignore. Especially when using the points argument

Both have a fairly comparable playoff PPG average (side note: was Kopi playing injured in 2013?)

Peak you can argue Kane for sure, but prime, well if I'm making a case for longevity and sustainability of their level of play, I'd say Kopitar. He has been the Kings engine up front for much longer than Kane was for Chicago. Toews was the engine from 2009-2015 was he not?

As an aside, for a guy who's played as long as Kopitar has, he has missed a grand total of 31 games in his career. That is staggering

Toews and Keith were the twin engines powering the Blackhawks. Kane was the nitro boost.
 
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