BigBadBruins7708
Registered User
Yet the average level of player was almost certainly higher than any Olympics.
So you're just trolling, got it
Yet the average level of player was almost certainly higher than any Olympics.
^This.Being the best player on a Stanley Cup finalist twice isn't worth zero. That he pulled those teams as far as he did is a huge part of his legacy.
He also ran into the Isles dynasty in '83.Bourque took his team to 2 finals where he faced very strong Edmonton teams. He also made the conference finals 2 years consecutively after that losing the the Pens both years. Not saying he’s ahead of Crosby, just that his playoff resume isn’t really his fault.
You fundamentally misunderstand what best on best is.
If Canada is structurally prohibited from icing it's best roster it's just a gimmick tournament.
McDavid has never played in a best on best tournament.
That doesn’t change the fact that he’s been making moves and doing great things, especially this year. I mean Kucherov is amazing in his own right and has made a name for himself, but McDavid is obviously a special breed. Has he broken the “top 4”, hard to say…but he’s getting there.Yes, I hear your argument. Just trying to create a nuanced view of the question "Can McD break up the big 4". It remains to be seen. But right now I don't think it is clear cut that he is even considered above Crosby. If he won the cup that would probably be a different argument.
Yeah, but so did Kucherov. We are in a higher scoring environment now that we were 10 years ago. What's the ceiling? What happens if Kucherov has a 150+ point season next season and sweeps the awards two years in row. Does he enter into the conversation of a top 10?
We are in an interesting time, but McDs achievements has to be viewed in comparison to his peers.
I actually like McD, and enjoy watching him, just think he is being hyped a little too much, especially in comparison to Crosby.
And please, don't mention Toews in this discussion. But hopefully you agree that some things can't be quantified as silly as it sound. Would you rather have Crosby or McD to lead a team if your life depended on it? I'd take Crosby.
I'm not even sure what you are arguing anymore?
Even when you take away their team success one resume stands clearly above the other one.When comparing individual players? Yes, that's correct.
Otherwise I'd better see a whole bunch of people stack Beliveau up ahead of Crosby. Very similar individual accolades, but one has a f*** ton more team success...
More importantly.... This is real life, not a video game. In a video game you can just make custom teams however you choose and then watch them go head to head. They'll play according to how the game's AI uses their attributes. In real life, an international tournament requires players to feel a sense of patriotism. It's hard to foster that environment when players are:You fundamentally misunderstand what best on best is.
If Canada is structurally prohibited from icing it's best roster it's just a gimmick tournament.
McDavid has never played in a best on best tournament.
Even when you take away their team success one resume stands clearly above the other one.
I'm a huge Beliveau admirer but Crosby passed him on the all time list a couple of seasons ago.
You pretty much pointed out the issue yourself there. Bourque was right there in the (short list) conversation for best player, with Messier, Yzerman, then Hull. That's best player other than Gretzky and Lemieux though, which as you note could block Crosby (or McDavid) from being considered best player as well. I'd have Bourque on the lower end of my top ten I imagine.-- Much as I loved Ray Bourque, I don't see the argument for ranking him over Crosby, and it's for this reason: Ray Bourque was simply never in the conversation for best player in the world. If you wore that mantle of "best player" (Crosby did, on and off, for at least 10-11 years, though he was often injured), I would automatically place that player at a higher level than one who wasn't. (This is maybe unfair to Bourque in a sense, though, as from around 1986-87 to 1993-94 when he was at his best, the best players were Gretzky and Lemieux, whom someone like Crosby also wouldn't have been close to.)
The OP comes down to either placing McDavid above Mario and/or Orr all-time based on elite longevity and/or placing his offensive peak at a ceiling clearly above Howe's.
Does anyone want to place his peak along side Mario and/or Orr? If not, then the answer is likely not.
It hard to place him with Mario given the somewhat direct line you can draw from McDavid through Crosby and Jagr to Mario.
Neither Bourque nor Lafleur are anywhere close to Crosby or McDavid. It's not necessary to consider best-player-in-the-world status. It's just about talent level of the players.I don't spend many brain-cells on the ranking-of-players thing as I don't find it very important or rational, but I'll throw in a few random comments responding to some points in this thread:
-- I can totally see the argument for Lafleur over Crosby. (Lafleur has become massively underrated over the past generation.) Lafleur had a higher "consistent prime" (my own term and main point of player comparison) than Crosby, and there should be no debate there. Over the six seasons 1974-75 to 1979-80, Lafleur scored 119+ points EVERY season including three straight scoring titles (already an offensive level beyond Crosby before we go any further), including 50+ goals all six years in a row (also beyond Crosby's ability), and led the playoffs in scoring three times (while winning four Cups in a row, all as the best player on his team).
Of course, Crosby has had a much longer prime and will retire with a much longer period of "elite-ness" than Lafleur had. But if you're looking at best five or six years in a row, Lafleur beats Crosby hands down. (I personally am more into the short-prime kind of comparison than most people are, I realize.) I probably wouldn't rank Lafleur over Crosby at this point, but I can see why people would.
-- Much as I loved Ray Bourque, I don't see the argument for ranking him over Crosby, and it's for this reason: Ray Bourque was simply never in the conversation for best player in the world. If you wore that mantle of "best player" (Crosby did, on and off, for at least 10-11 years, though he was often injured), I would automatically place that player at a higher level than one who wasn't. (This is maybe unfair to Bourque in a sense, though, as from around 1986-87 to 1993-94 when he was at his best, the best players were Gretzky and Lemieux, whom someone like Crosby also wouldn't have been close to.)
There will always be lots of people who think Lemieux was a better player than McDavid has been. But there are also many people who think McDavid is better (than anybody); and lots of others that he's at least fairly close to Lemieux. So, for the latter, opinion will depend somewhat on longevity of their primes.The OP comes down to either placing McDavid above Mario and/or Orr all-time based on elite longevity and/or placing his offensive peak at a ceiling clearly above Howe's.
Does anyone want to place his peak along side Mario and/or Orr? If not, then the answer is likely not.
It hard to place him with Mario given the somewhat direct line you can draw from McDavid through Crosby and Jagr to Mario.
There is no doubt - if you open your eyes and ears - that McDavid is already in the top 4 (above Howe, above Crosby) for the majority of hockey people. There are a lot of smart hockey people who are extremely high on McDavid (higher than they are on Howe), and many people believe he's the best player ever (virtually nobody thinks Howe or Crosby is).I don't know why you keep claiming this with zero evidence.
There is absolutely no consensus and you can't claim your opinion as fact.
No, and (imo) after his no points in game 7 he’s even further away. He must lead his club to the Cup. Game 7 was a defining point for McDavid’s legacy. Leading teams to Cups is what separates the greatest of the greats into tiers. Those who did are in the top tier. Those who failed are a tier below.
Imo McDavid is in the group of the greatest. But he’s in the lower tier because he didn’t lead his team to the Cup. Game seven (a one goal loss) and he generates no points.Helluva coincidence how Lemieux needed 6-8 other hall of famers on his team before he was ever able to "lead" them to a cup.
I guess it's also a coincidence that Gretzky's team was so good they were able to win a cup without him. Whereas had he still been on the team in '90 you'd be claiming - he didn't lead the team to that cup?
If Skinner had pitched a shutout in game 7 and Janmark's goal stood as the sole goal, you'd rank McDavid higher?Imo McDavid is in the group of the greatest. But he’s in the lower tier because he didn’t lead his team to the Cup. Game seven (a one goal loss) and he generates no points.
Ranking these greatest players is opinion. And imo these players value Cups as the key to their legacy.
We could, following this theory, go back to round two game seven and ask what if the Canucks have a healthy Demko and he pitches a shutout?If Skinner had pitched a shutout in game 7 and Janmark's goal stood as the sole goal, you'd rank McDavid higher?
Can you provide any evidence of this? You've brought up multiple times "the majority of hockey people", but haven't posted any lists or videos or anything.There is no doubt - if you open your eyes and ears - that McDavid is already in the top 4 (above Howe, above Crosby) for the majority of hockey people. There are a lot of smart hockey people who are extremely high on McDavid (higher than they are on Howe), and many people believe he's the best player ever (virtually nobody thinks Howe or Crosby is).
Gretzky, Lemieux, Orr, and McDavid are the only players who currently have any type of support for #1.
Nobody has to agree with these consensus rankings (I don't agree with them myself), but they are the majority opinion whether you agree with them or not.
The problem with people like you who take rankings very seriously (I don't), is that you cannot accept that most people don't agree with you (and a small group of your friends who more or less think exactly the same as you do).
You're doing it wrong. In that case, McDavid would be a greater leader.If Skinner had pitched a shutout in game 7 and Janmark's goal stood as the sole goal, you'd rank McDavid higher?
The OP comes down to either placing McDavid above Mario and/or Orr all-time based on elite longevity and/or placing his offensive peak at a ceiling clearly above Howe's.
Does anyone want to place his peak along side Mario and/or Orr? If not, then the answer is likely not.
It hard to place him with Mario given the somewhat direct line you can draw from McDavid through Crosby and Jagr to Mario.
You're doing it wrong. In that case, McDavid would be a greater leader.