daver
Registered User
And Messier on PP, sure. Without those future HHoFers around him I doubt it's still 212 points.
So finishing out of the Top 20 in scoring gets you into the HHOF does it?
And Messier on PP, sure. Without those future HHoFers around him I doubt it's still 212 points.
Crosby in 2016 was third in league scoring not 41 points up on the third league scorer. So not really.There's a pretty big statistical gap between Lemieux 1989 and Lemieux 1996.
1989
1. Lemieux- 199 points
5. Brown- 115 points (173%)
10. Robitaille- 98 points (203%)
Give Lemieux full credit for missed time in 1996 (which is not what would have happened)
1996
1. Lemieux- 189 points
5. Forsberg- 116 points (163%)
10. Fedorov - 107 points (176%)
This isn't giving Lemieux credit for missing 4 games in 1989, but is giving credit for Lemieux missing 12 in 1996.
The EVP shows an even starker picture
1989
1. Lemieux - 102
5. Robitaille- 74 (142%)
10. Olczyk - 59 (173%)
1996, again giving Lemieux credit for missed time
1. Jagr - 95
2. Lemieux- 86
5. Mogilny - 71 (121%)
10. Kariya - 61 (140%)
The gap is pretty stark. Even more so considering he had substantially more help in 1996 than in 1989.
It's like arguing Crosby 2016 was a higher level of play than Crosby 2011.
You could put Gretzky outscoring prime Lemieux by 76 points (0.62 PPG).
Then following it up by beating prime Lemieux by 0.15 PPG despite a devastating knee injury.
If we are going peak on peak by singular seasons, Lemieux 1989 and 1993 absolutely belong with peak Gretzky (82,83,84,85,86,87).
Lemieux 1996 is a clear step down from all the 8 aforementioned seasons.
This guy has 199 point season and a 44 point playoff, 46 game point streak etc. Calling him that is crazy. His 161 in 70 games in 96 is probably better offensive season than any Gretzky season.
This. I actually have Gretz 3rd here
I was born of the forceI’m convinced @daver watched so many Crosby/Pens highlights that his body couldn’t take it any more and budded to form @Nathaniel Skywalker
i love using star wars as a analogy for real lifeI was born of the force
We never said otherwise.Just because a future hall of fame was not yet a hall of famer doesnt diminish the raw talent that players possesses. Having Messier kurri etc even green is still huge
Really you think so? That 161 points in 70 games which is 189 in 82 game in a 6.29 gpg league very similar to 05-06 and last years gpg league wide. This was when goalies had good sized pads and weren't flopping like fishes like the early 80s. The game had evolved tremendously and that season is the highest adjusted season in history.
Difference is I'm pacing out 12 gamesLemieux had 109 points in his first 41 games (48 team games) that year. Incredible performance.
However, if we were told he would play 70 games total, your line of thinking tells us that he would have had 186 points in those 70 games he played that year (or 218 in the 82 games you projected out to from his final 70). Instead, he had 161 in reality.
He had 95 after his first 35. He had 66 over his final 35. Pace just can’t be comfortably used as fact. Even for one as magnificent as Mario Lemieux.
You must be fun at partiesi love using star wars as a analogy for real life
anyways back to the thread
We never said otherwise.
Regarding injuries, we don't know what it's like now. Given today's surgeries Orr might have missed a year, came back for an off year, then picked up where he was.I'm not sure you understand the definition of what a "devastating knee injury" truly is.
It's what ended Bobby Orr's career.
Devastating injury is a debilitating injury. Preventing a person from perfirming basic actions. Like tying your skates for example.
Someone with 1500 games played can't be said to have suffered devastating injuries during their career.
Just brutal1. Orr, though I understand it was a much different/smaller league. Full 200 foot player, though.
2. Lemieux
3. Gretzky
I double checked and it's true that Lemieux mostly sat out for back to back games in 1996.That Lemieux had to sit out back to backs in 1996 doesn't help his case.
So we should give Gretzky more credit simply because the scoring contribution from the others on his line wasn't entirely concentrated on one of those two players but was more balanced instead? Anderson and Kurri had 191 points combined, Brown and Errey had 173.Like when Gretzky put up 212 in 80 playing with Anderson (105 points) and Kurri (86 points). Setting the all time assists and goals record in the same season.
A year after setting the all time points record while next highest Oiler was 36th in points.
His per game numbers that season where a little higher because he beat up on the weaker teams and was out late in games still trying to get goals and points in blowout wins. He did the same in 85-86.Or when he put up 205 in 74, including 153 in 51.
That gap would be far less if his main competitor didn't miss games. For sure credit to Gretzky for staying healthy, but the "talent/skill gap" wasn't as large as the raw point totals indicate.Or when he put up 183 and no one else in the league hit 110 points. He had more EVP than anyone else had points. Had more assists than anyone in the league had points. And still lead in goals.
Did Lemieux not "do it" multiple times as well? i.e being considered the best player in world in multiple seasons.Lemieux was coulda, woulda, shoulda. Gretzky did it, multiple times.
Absolutely, Gretzky had any number of years that you can pick from as being at his best - he did it far more often than the other two did. That speaks to his longevity and greatness as a whole but that fact alone doesn't mean that his absolute best was better. And the fact that you SPECIFICALLY singled out Orr 's "1970 season" without any prompting from anyone else goes to show that you understand that just as well.Orr 1970 season is probably my vote for best single season. Best defensive player in the world while crushing the Art Ross race.
Gordie Howe fractured his skull.Someone with 1500 games played can't be said to have suffered devastating injuries during their career.
Gordie Howe fractured his skull.