Granlund had one "good year" in his seven year career,
He had 80 ESP across 335 games. That's a 19.5 point pace per 82 games.
Suter has 78 ESP across 216 games. That's a 33 point pace per 82 games.
If you're looking at statistics, they aren't even in the same stratosphere. So why even compare?
You zoomed in on one "good" year where Granlund was force-fed minutes as a winger (not a center) in which he was still a terrible player and a -19. And by eye test, he was horrible as well.
Suter scored 14 goals this year in a bottom six role. That's more than ANYONE in our bottom six this year (Joshua, Dries, Aman etc). Suter has some good offensive capabilities. I don't know why that's such a bold statement to make.
First of all, I didn't bring up the comparison-- It was a comparison already made by others that I was asking for your opinion on, specifically to gauge how seriously your opinion should be taken, as I was skeptical of your optimism for Suter. Mainly just to see if you felt that Granlund was good as well (which would be pretty disqualifying, IMO), and you didn't.
I'm only referring to Granlund's one "good year" because it's obvious that his other years were awful, and that's the one year that people often fall into the trap of mistakenly believing is "good", which it isn't either, in my opinion.
When you gave your opinion, I found your actual support for your opinion to be questionable (not necessarily the opinion itself of Suter being better than Granlund-- again, he very well could be, I haven't seen him play)-- For some reason, you brought up production comparable to Granlund's "one good year" and then focused on even strength production being particularly meaningful, despite that equally applying to Granlund's "one good year" where he wasn't good at all. So I was just calling out why that bit of rhetoric didn't make sense if you're arguing that one is good and the other is trash.
I would not have brought up those head to head numbers if you didn't make that argument, nor was I making a point that "I" thought Granlund was good, nor was I suggesting that there couldn't be OTHER good reasons for finding Suter better. The keyword in "It's not an unreasonable comparison if you're using ES production as your barometer:" is
IF, referring to your (in my opinion questionable) choice to use that as supporting evidence.
As for the actual reasoning you're giving now, I think that's a LITTLE more reasonable, although the importance of faceoffs seem to be grossly overstated here, and how bad the team surrounding them was (and how that affects +/-) doesn't seem particularly relevant to me either. It's also been pointed out by others that Suter did not spend most of those years in the bottom 6 but had a decent chunk of time playing with top offensive players better than Granlund had with the Sedins. But all of that is kind of moot, as I was just initially curious what your take was.
I think you might be getting too caught up in your heated arguments with other posters who have actual takes about Suter, and lumping in my questions/challenges as the same thing. I'm just poking holes and asking questions to try to grasp what seems reasonable-- I don't have a solid position that I'm actively pushing here.