BenchBrawl
Registered User
- Jul 26, 2010
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Again, those three guys have specific moments in hockey history where they ranked as the best defenseman on the planet.
Whats the span for Chelios?
86 ? Maybe.
93 Spear heading the two top teams in the league, Bourque and Chelios finished close again, Chelly got a bit more 1st place votes while having less points and less goals... and a massive 60 shot deficit ont he counter. Bourque was a machine, probably the best defensive defenseman to ever live AND he put up 340 shot that year. He also had less powerplay points than Chelios, who scored a massive forty of his points on the PP. Id be one of those that would be leaning hard on Bourque here. Top it all off the second best D behind Chelios had 53 to Don Sweeneys 34... I mean, maybe you can call him better by a hair.
94 he surely wasnt better than Coffey who put up a legendary run with the Wings.
95 Bourque actually got more first place vote than Chelios that year, quite a ridiculous turn of event.
Those are awfully short spans (86 and 93) to be considered the best. Thats what matters to me, and then were only talking about the Habs too, for Subban, Lapointe and Markov.
OK but the fact that Chelios was competing, and sometimes beating, a prime Raymond Bourque should be a point in his favor, not against him. There is no defenseman as good as Ray Bourque in the current era. If Bourque was there, Subban doesn't win any Norris neither.
Much harder to be considered "the best in the world" when you play against Raymond Bourque, with Paul Coffey in the mix too, then Scott Stevens and a few others like Brian Leetch and Al MacInnis, to name a few. The 1990s were a very strong era for defensemen, the 2010s were very weak.
Brad Park wasn't considered the best defenseman for any stretch of time neither, and same for Larry Robinson, but that's what happens when you play at the same time as Bobby Orr and Denis Potvin.