Best Scoring 19-Year-Olds In Soviet/Russia/KHL, Last 50 Years.

Staniowski

Registered User
Jan 13, 2018
3,591
3,149
The Maritimes
In anticipation of Matvei Michkov possibly joining the NHL....these are the best scoring Russian 19-year-olds (i.e. final year of WJC eligibility) in their top league through the years, min. 30 games played.

Points-per-game

1. Pavel Bure - 1991 - 1.05
2. Vladimir Krutov - 1980 - 1.05
3. Evgeni Malkin - 2006 - 1.02
4. Alexander Korolyuk - 1996 - 0.98
5. Andrei Khomutov - 1981 - 0.95
6. Sergei Makarov - 1978 - 0.86
7. Kirill Kaprizov - 2017 - 0.86
8. Matvei Michkov - 2024 - 0.85
9. Boris Alexandrov - 1975 - 0.85
10. Evgeni Kuznetsov - 2012 - 0.84

No adjustments have been made.

There were a couple players - Zimin and Yakushev - beyond 50 years who were even higher scorers. And some of the stats for other players (e.g. Maltsev) from the 1960s might be deficient.
 
Last edited:

JackSlater

Registered User
Apr 27, 2010
18,505
13,436
In addition to being the highest scoring 19-year-old ever, Pavel Bure was also the highest scoring 17-year-old ever.
Bure's career is a disappointment given his talent. That's why his star status when he played doesn't necessarily match what his career looks like in retrospect.
 

seventieslord

Student Of The Game
Mar 16, 2006
36,231
7,410
Regina, SK
.... So was Michkov drafted a year late or something?

Or is there a different cutoff date for WJC and NHL entry draft eligibility that I've never noticed?

Because I'm used to players being eligible to play in the WJC in their D+2 years, as they're in their last year of junior hockey.
 

seventieslord

Student Of The Game
Mar 16, 2006
36,231
7,410
Regina, SK
....wow, so I've just never noticed that the 1/3 of players born after September 15th and before December 31st (about 29% of players??) are only eligible for one more WJC following their draft season and not two?

Crazy
 

JackSlater

Registered User
Apr 27, 2010
18,505
13,436
.... So was Michkov drafted a year late or something?

Or is there a different cutoff date for WJC and NHL entry draft eligibility that I've never noticed?

Because I'm used to players being eligible to play in the WJC in their D+2 years, as they're in their last year of junior hockey.
You've seen this before. I randomly looked at this thread a few weeks ago when looking for a different thread that I made.

World Junior Team That Produced The Most NHLers?

It really wouldn't make sense for an age based tournament to base eligibility on the draft of any league, the NHL or otherwise.
 

seventieslord

Student Of The Game
Mar 16, 2006
36,231
7,410
Regina, SK

JackSlater

Registered User
Apr 27, 2010
18,505
13,436
Also interesting that Ovechkin, best player of the lot, scored at a rate of 0.73 in his relevant season.

I have a soft theory that Ovechkin may be more suited to NHL play than he is to European/international hockey, but I think Russian fans would have a much better idea of that than I do.
 

jigglysquishy

Registered User
Jun 20, 2011
7,798
7,728
Regina, Saskatchewan
Also interesting that Ovechkin, best player of the lot, scored at a rate of 0.73 in his relevant season.

I have a soft theory that Ovechkin may be more suited to NHL play than he is to European/international hockey, but I think Russian fans would have a much better idea of that than I do.
I do wonder how much of that comes into the weirdness of the 2004-05 Russian Superleague season. With no NHL season, a large volume of NHLers went to Russia.

Of the top 10 in scoring that season, 6 were NHLers (Morozov, Rosa, Kovalchuk, Frolov, Zherdev, Zinovyev). Some weren't regulars, but it's a big influx on non-KHL regulars. That's ignoring Jagr (12th in scoring) who lead the league in PPG.

Or Kozlov, who left the NHL for the KHL.

Lots of goalies jumped too. Nabokov and Markkanen jump out.

So Ovechkin's season is really against a KHL+.
 

MadLuke

Registered User
Jan 18, 2011
9,820
5,428
Malkin sudden jump, 0.61 to 1.02 make it sound possible, but that was an elite big guy developing fast.
 

JackSlater

Registered User
Apr 27, 2010
18,505
13,436
I do wonder how much of that comes into the weirdness of the 2004-05 Russian Superleague season. With no NHL season, a large volume of NHLers went to Russia.

Of the top 10 in scoring that season, 6 were NHLers (Morozov, Rosa, Kovalchuk, Frolov, Zherdev, Zinovyev). Some weren't regulars, but it's a big influx on non-KHL regulars. That's ignoring Jagr (12th in scoring) who lead the league in PPG.

Or Kozlov, who left the NHL for the KHL.

Lots of goalies jumped too. Nabokov and Markkanen jump out.

So Ovechkin's season is really against a KHL+.
That's definitely a good point. He was just behind Datsyuk for second on the team in points per game.
 
  • Like
Reactions: jigglysquishy

WarriorofTime

Registered User
Jul 3, 2010
30,063
18,604
Also interesting that Ovechkin, best player of the lot, scored at a rate of 0.73 in his relevant season.

I have a soft theory that Ovechkin may be more suited to NHL play than he is to European/international hockey, but I think Russian fans would have a much better idea of that than I do.
I think just has something to do with RSL at the time. Very stingy on ice time with young players, a lot of mutual trapping. There's a thread somewhere deep in the HFBoards archives during the 2003-04 season confused why a guy with just OK stats was getting so much draft hype. Notably, Ovechkin always dominated in junior tournaments and still holds the U18 goal record by a comfortable 5 goal margin. Probably posts a monster season if he waits another year to come over and plays 2005-06 in RSL like Malkin just with how things go and players get progressed in terms of their role over there.
 

JackSlater

Registered User
Apr 27, 2010
18,505
13,436
I think just has something to do with RSL at the time. Very stingy on ice time with young players, a lot of mutual trapping. There's a thread somewhere deep in the HFBoards archives during the 2003-04 season confused why a guy with just OK stats was getting so much draft hype. Notably, Ovechkin always dominated in junior tournaments and still holds the U18 goal record by a comfortable 5 goal margin. Probably posts a monster season if he waits another year to come over and plays 2005-06 in RSL like Malkin just with how things go and players get progressed in terms of their role over there.
Yeah I'd have to defer to anyone who actually followed the Russian league at the time. I don't remember the hype surrounding Ovechkin lessening much based on Russian league stats. His WJC was great but didn't totally blow people away (he's the greatest player who ever played the WJC as a 19 year old) but with such a small sample size it means very little.
 

WarriorofTime

Registered User
Jul 3, 2010
30,063
18,604
(he's the greatest player who ever played the WJC as a 19 year old) but with such a small sample size it means very little.
Were 04-05 and 12-13 the only years everyone was (presumably) available?

Outside of those years, I imagine he'd primarily be competing against other Russians (Malkin the next year, other Soviets), but not all (like Kovalchuk was NHL right after being drafted). Canadians always have a bunch in NHL which is pretty seamless with the CHL-Transfer Agreement. Rarer for Americans but a really elite talent will leave the NCAA before their age 19 year. Places like Sweden, Finland also have transfer agreements so a player isn't too likely to stick around.

One thing I'm not sure is if Ovechkin would have come over for the 2004-05 NHL season if it had happened. There was no KHL at the time, but based on antics with Malkin's contract, I don't think it's a for sure he'd be over if he had a contract that required him to stay, the way I could confidently say he'd be over if he was playing in Sweden.
 

JackSlater

Registered User
Apr 27, 2010
18,505
13,436
Were 04-05 and 12-13 the only years everyone was (presumably) available?
There were lockouts those years and in 1995. NHL teams still held a few players out each of those years though. Strangely 2006 is the closest the tournament ever came to having every available player, by my count, with only 1 player (Crosby) held out due to the NHL. There weren't any all time great prospects in 1995 or 2013 who played in the tournament as 19 year olds.
 

Michael Farkas

Celebrate 68
Jun 28, 2006
13,701
8,428
NYC
www.hockeyprospect.com
Yeah I'd have to defer to anyone who actually followed the Russian league at the time. I don't remember the hype surrounding Ovechkin lessening much based on Russian league stats.
Ovechkin generally played top line with Alexei Chupin. His hype was not lessened by his RSL stats. Besides Malkin (12), Ovechkin had more points than every other draft eligible player combined in SuperLeague that year (24 vs 20).
 

WarriorofTime

Registered User
Jul 3, 2010
30,063
18,604
There were lockouts those years and in 1995. NHL teams still held a few players out each of those years though. Strangely 2006 is the closest the tournament ever came to having every available player, by my count, with only 1 player (Crosby) held out due to the NHL. There weren't any all time great prospects in 1995 or 2013 who played in the tournament as 19 year olds.
That's an interesting one.

NHL Scoring Leaders 2005-2006 (sort by age ascending). The only other teenager to exceed 9 games that year is Petteri Nokelainen ('86 birth), who it looks like he played two games, got injured and then came back at the end of the year. So I guess he'd be an injury unavailable than an NHL unavailable, and tough to say if he would have been made available or not if hurt.

Look through, 1986 birth year (aka 19 year olds in the 2005-06 WJC) was a down one for Canada, so I suppose not a big surprise that nobody was established in NHL yet. NHL Players Born in 1986

and just looking outside, Malkin had contract situation, Wheeler was a long-term project that did the wait to be a free agent NCAA thing, Krejci was not a big prospect, Oshie was a couple years away, Yandle was not a big prospect, Edler was not a big prospect... kind of a bad year in general.

87s were a pretty strong year even after Crosby, but with only age 18 season, it's not too surprising that only the first overall would stay in NHL already.

Just looking through Rosters, that 2005-06 Canada team definitely looks like the worst of their 5-year Gold Streak. But they went undefeated with a gritty, defensive effort and the goaltender, Justin Pogge was MVP. Really good blue line with Marc Staal, the late Luc Bourdon, future bust Cam Barker, Kris Russell and Kris Letang, even though there wasn't any real superstar upfront.
 
Last edited:

JackSlater

Registered User
Apr 27, 2010
18,505
13,436
That's an interesting one.

NHL Scoring Leaders 2005-2006 (sort by age ascending). The only other teenager to exceed 9 games that year is Petteri Nokelainen ('86 birth), who it looks like he played two games, got injured and then came back at the end of the year. So I guess he'd be an injury unavailable than an NHL unavailable, and tough to say if he would have been made available or not if hurt.

Look through, 1986 birth year (aka 19 year olds in the 2005-06 WJC) was a down one for Canada, so I suppose not a big surprise that nobody was established in NHL yet. NHL Players Born in 1986

and just looking outside, Malkin had contract situation, Wheeler was a long-term project that did the wait to be a free agent NCAA thing, Krejci was not a big prospect, Oshie was a couple years away, Yandle was not a big prospect, Edler was not a big prospect... kind of a bad year in general.

87s were a pretty strong year even after Crosby, but with only age 18 season, it's not too surprising that only the first overall would stay in NHL already.

Just looking through Rosters, that 2005-06 Canada team definitely looks like the worst of their 5-year Gold Streak. But they went undefeated with a gritty, defensive effort and the goaltender, Justin Pogge was MVP. Really good blue line with Marc Staal, the late Luc Bourdon, future bust Cam Barker, Kris Russell and Kris Letang, even though there wasn't any real superstar upfront.
Yes I didn't include injured players, that makes it murkier. I made a thread going back to 1982 (based off another thread) looking at which players were held out of the WJC due to the NHL or other senior hockey commitments.

Canada 2006 was low on talent but very effective. I remember that Price was expected to be the goaltender but ended up not even making the team, and the defence was very strong. Sort of a down period for most countries at the time, looking at the rosters.
 

WarriorofTime

Registered User
Jul 3, 2010
30,063
18,604
Yes, 1986 does appear to have just been a weak birth year, although not crazy or all time level bad. Just a bit down

1031983131 Players41 014 GP5322 Goals10 186 Assists15 508 Points
1041984143 Players45 422 GP7010 Goals10 305 Assists17 315 Points
1051985141 Players47 347 GP8040 Goals12 950 Assists20 990 Points
1061986138 Players36 422 GP4476 Goals8681 Assists13 157 Points
1071987144 Players44 294 GP6452 Goals11 454 Assists17 906 Points
1081988128 Players35 468 GP5792 Goals8653 Assists14 445 Points
1091989121 Players38 375 GP5787 Goals9751 Assists15 538 Points
1101990149 Players44 214 GP6041 Goals11 730 Assists17 771 Points
1111991144 Players41 722 GP6567 Goals10 845 Assists17 412 Points
1121992162 Players41 725 GP6679 Goals10 187 Assists16 866 Points
 

Moose Head

Registered User
Mar 12, 2002
5,020
2,203
Toronto
Visit site
The Soviet era guys would look better on this list if their league was more liberal in giving out secondary assists like the KHL is, which is closer in line with NA standards.
 

Ad

Upcoming events

Ad

Ad