Stats can be biased but there is no greater bias than what human beings are capable of, especially when they won’t acknowledge it. That’s why stats and voted trophies are valuable information; every single talent evaluator is biased is some way and makes oversights.
Re: Ovi and driving play. People seem to characterize anyone who is not “driving” as a passenger. However, what a player does without the puck - e.g. getting into position for a shot or finish - can be even more important than puck carrying.
No one in history is better at getting to goal scoring areas and finishing than Ovi. This is despite the fact that everyone on the ice knows where he wants to go and what he wants to do.
If Ovi were this good as a playmaker, we wouldn’t be talking about him as a top 10 player, we would be talking about him as an equal to Gretzky. However, he’s so absurdly good at what he does and what he does is so important to the outcome of the game that it’s more reasonable than not to say he’s a top 10 player.
I don't agree with this philosophically. It's not like non-humans are keeping stats, interpreting stats, and voting on these things. It's bias...but, just written down. Every single writer is biased (in) some way and makes oversights.
And then we pick and choose what stats are good and what stats are not so good.
"A goalie's job is to prevent goals!"
- Ok, here are the goalies that give up the least goals per 60
"Noooooo! That's a team stat, you clod! What we want is the percentage of the most expected situation when a shot occurs...a save."
Ya know, folks don't like plus/minus...there's recent pockets of resistance to "secondary assists", I even see that get used against d-men of all things...and if talent evaluation is generally folded under "bias" (and it is, and it's a good thing in the right hands, in my opinion), then there'd be no reason to suspect anything but bias when people start carving stats up in the same way...because, as you put it, "humans"...
If something is written in a newspaper, it's a collector's item. Even if the writer is typically the weather man...if he said "Cyclone Taylor was a whirling dervish beyond any sight seen heretofore" it's gold.
And I'll single out a poster here because I get the sense that he's watching and understanding the games, if
@Staniowski goes, "I think Bill Cowley would have struggled with this because of X, Y, Z, and therefore maybe he's overstated here..." he gets rotten fruit thrown at him. And that's not about him personally, it's just about the concept.
I just don't see how there's this bright line of: talent evaluation = bias and secret ballot from unknown entities = whatever, I don't know, "not biased"? "Less biased"? "Objective"?
Doesn't pass the smell test from my perspective...