Namba 17
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- May 9, 2011
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If you think so even after all stats I brought, I see no point to continueBossy was the offensive threat on his line.
If you think so even after all stats I brought, I see no point to continueBossy was the offensive threat on his line.
Hull - Gretzky - Howe
Lindsay - Lemieux - Richard
Moore - Beliveau - Lafleur
Mahovlich - Morenz - Bossy
Orr - Harvey
Bouque - Shore
Potvin - Kelly
Roy - Plante
Take that all you cheaters overloading your forward lines with centers who never/rarely played the wing, and all those infected with recency bias.
Draisaitl over Firsov?
Anybody would think that Bossy, the best offensive player on those lines who also scored the most points, was the offensive threat unless they had dug in their heels because they were wrong and were strangely desperate to not accept it. Anyway, glad we've gone mildly in depth to demonstrate Bossy's success without a playmaker on his line, both in the NHL and internationally.If you think so even after all stats I brought, I see no point to continue
Other people having bias?Hull - Gretzky - Howe
Lindsay - Lemieux - Richard
Moore - Beliveau - Lafleur
Mahovlich - Morenz - Bossy
Orr - Harvey
Bouque - Shore
Potvin - Kelly
Roy - Plante
Take that all you cheaters overloading your forward lines with centers who never/rarely played the wing, and all those infected with recency bias.
Are you trying to make Brent Sutter into an offensive star, a playmaker?If you think so even after all stats I brought, I see no point to continue
Captained the 1981 Canada Cup team.No thanks on Vasiliev. There are at least a few non-NHL players better than him, if it had to be a non-NHLer...
Not trueBossy was the most important player on every line he ever played on in his career.
I can see Lindros again.
and no Joe Sakic? no Yzerman over Lindros ? No Esposito? Alright...
You know what would be a cool idea? Building the best team World that could challenge Canada. Doubtful they could muster up more than a win or two in a 7 game series but it would be cool to see what we could come up with if they had to try.
That feel a bit overconfident to me. Or calling the win stealing one because of Hasek a bit reductor.. 4-1 series win for Canada though.
The thing is, what do Sakic and Yzerman bring to the table? Esposito as well. We already have tons of scoring. We already have clutch scoring, speed, skill, leadership, etc. What we don't have is a player that combines the best skill and physicality that I have ever seen and that's Lindros. Imagine playing a team that is laying you out with hits. Wouldn't you want to insert a guy like Lindros in the line up for that type of game?
I figure with a team that has Hasek, Jagr, Ovechkin, etc. Among others of course, that they can get a win against the best Canadians. 4-1 series win for Canada though. But to think Hasek can't at least steal a game and have some solid pairing on the back end like Lidstrom and Fetisov, followed by Chelios and Leetch perhaps. Yeah, they aren't as good as Canada, but this team still doesn't just roll over.
That feel a bit overconfident to me. Or calling the win stealing one because of Hasek a bit reductor.
If we start with the 1987 soviet team that went 6-5, 5-6, 5-6, they faced on NHL sized ice on the road, a team Canada that just played 5 games of round-robin, so used to each other by then, as much as a gold medal in the Olympics from the start of the best of 3.
We sent a Bourque-Coffey, Gretzky-Lemieux-Messier powerplay at some moment, all at their peak, and won by a single goal.
Orr is not there and that a big difference, prime Roy or someone else can upgrade over 1987 Fuhr.
But the 1987 soviet team, change nothing to it, could still steal a game, no ? The Makarov-Krutov-Fetisov.
Peak Hasek in goal does not change the chemistry too much, maybe you insert a peak Mogilny-Fedorov-Bure line or an Ovechkin-Forsberg-Jagr, Kucherov on the powerplay maybe, Chara as a piece you bring for what he can do, a Lidstrom, Chelios, Hull.
The Swiss stole a game against team Canada in the Olympics, a best world team with best coaching would win games, not steal them I feel.
McDavid-Mack team Canada just got a terrible lost against the Americans, Makar was not there but Gretzky can go down during the series as well.
Hockey is not a sport with strong guarantees to start with and I am not sure the gap would be that large, the only best on best comfortable win was 2014 and 1991 ? Russian did not fully come in 1991 and in 2014 the rest of the world was a bit down. In no ne of those tourney if the world would have formed a single team, Canada would have easily won, so if at no point Canada was better than the world in a clear enough way (in the elite player) why does it shift so much all time ?
Canada get all the good pre-1970 players in a sense, which help, but maybe we make too much out of it.
That feel a bit overconfident to me. Or calling the win stealing one because of Hasek a bit reductor.
If we start with the 1987 soviet team that went 6-5, 5-6, 5-6, they faced on NHL sized ice on the road, a team Canada that just played 5 games of round-robin, so used to each other by then, as much as a gold medal in the Olympics from the start of the best of 3.
We sent a Bourque-Coffey, Gretzky-Lemieux-Messier powerplay at some moment, all at their peak, and won by a single goal.
Orr is not there and that a big difference, prime Roy or someone else can upgrade over 1987 Fuhr.
But the 1987 soviet team, change nothing to it, could still steal a game, no ? The Makarov-Krutov-Fetisov.
Peak Hasek in goal does not change the chemistry too much, maybe you insert a peak Mogilny-Fedorov-Bure line or an Ovechkin-Forsberg-Jagr, Kucherov on the powerplay maybe, Chara as a piece you bring for what he can do, a Lidstrom, Chelios, Hull.
The Swiss stole a game against team Canada in the Olympics, a best world team with best coaching would win games, not steal them I feel.
McDavid-Mack team Canada just got a terrible lost against the Americans, Makar was not there but Gretzky can go down during the series as well.
Hockey is not a sport with strong guarantees to start with and I am not sure the gap would be that large, the only best on best comfortable win was 2014 and 1991 ? Russian did not fully come in 1991 and in 2014 the rest of the world was a bit down. In none of those tourney if the world would have formed a single team, Canada would have easily won, so if at no point Canada was better than the world in a clear enough way (in the elite player) why does it shift so much all time ?
Canada get all the good pre-1970 players in a sense, which help, but maybe we make too much out of it.
I'm a little late getting back to you on this- but you're owed an answer. having asked a forthright question.I'm not familiar with Bill Cook's game. I think Guy Lafleur would fit nicely on that line with Bobby Hull and Crosby. Can you tell me why you picked Bill Cook for this line? Thanks.
This is why I would go with Cook as RW on a Lemieux - Gretzky line. You need someone who brings stuff that they don't have, and a tough bastard to do a lot of the dirty work and who is still good enough to keep up and score goals is a great choice. Howe on that line seems like overkill, so Cook looks like the next best choice to me.3) Leader-type- decorated WWI veteran. Not that Team Canada needs help with leadership, but I don't think a team can have too much of that sort of thing.
4) Flexible- capable multi-tool scorer- contributing via passing (e.g.: with Lalonde in Saskatoon) or finishing (e.g.: with Boucher in New York).
5) Tough customer in the dirty areas of the ice- would do a great job with the rough stuff.
6) Adaptability (see 3, above) would make him more suitable to extra-shifting, should injuries make that necessary.
I'm a little late getting back to you on this- but you're owed an answer. having asked a forthright question.
To me, the non-negotiables for RW-Canada are Howe (of course) and Maurice Richard. After that, it's Bossy-Cook-Lafleur, three to choose two. There's [IMO] as little to choose between them as to for there to be no really wrong answer. That said, here's what I like about Cook-
1) History's top RW pre-Maurice Richard.
2) Hockey's foremost Power Forward until the ascendency of Gordie Howe.
3) Leader-type- decorated WWI veteran. Not that Team Canada needs help with leadership, but I don't think a team can have too much of that sort of thing.
4) Flexible- capable multi-tool scorer- contributing via passing (e.g.: with Lalonde in Saskatoon) or finishing (e.g.: with Boucher in New York).
5) Tough customer in the dirty areas of the ice- would do a great job with the rough stuff.
6) Adaptability (see 3, above) would make him more suitable to extra-shifting, should injuries make that necessary.