Alright I normally wouldn't spend the time to do this but you appear to be having a real hard time with reading. So lets do this.
Wrong. Mario Lemieux is a perfect example of this. He trailed the league's leading scorer by 66 points his rookie year in the Q
Where did I say he
will be as good as Crosby?
Thats the whole *** point! Since McDavid has yet to reach his draft year, you MUST deal in what-ifs, so long as the scenario can be shown to be realistic with historic data. Which I've done. Based on development curves of top prospects of the past, its not only possible, its
likely that McDavid will score at a 2.2-2.8ppg rate in his draft year.
Consider the analog of Jason Spezza, a similarly "exceptional" status CHLer. His 15 and 16 yo seasons were nearly identical in terms of ppg (1.06 and 1.17), but it was his 17 yo season where he exploded to a pace of 2.07ppg. McDavid's 15 yo was 1.05ppg, and in his 16 yo season he is currently at 1.67ppg. If they have analogous development curves, this would suggest that McDavid hit upwards of 2.5ppg.
No, they weren't, not even close.
Crosby at 16 - 5'10 185lbs
McDavid at 16 - 6'0 185lbs (which is generous!)
If its irrelevant than why even mention it in your post above?
Here is the funny part. You literally put quotations around "20 pounds". Lets's see what I posted:
Reading comprehension for the win!
Then why did it take 3 OHL seasons for Jason Spezza to dominate, and only 1 season for Patrick Kane (both their 17 yo seasons btw)? You keep dealing in absolutes, refusing to accept that each player develops and adapts differently.
How many examples of do I need to show you to prove to you that Lemieux's curve from 16 to 17 was indeed not an exception?
In addition to my previous list:
Modano: 121% increase in PPG
Bobby Hull: 213% increase in PPG
Nolan: 101% increase in PPG
Hawerchuk: 86% increase in PPG
Turgeon: 61% increase in PPG