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This is a faulty argument because the first premise is wrong. Outside of maybe Gretzky's rookie season, there was never a point where Bossy was considered on par with Gretzky. Strictly as a goal scorer, sure, but as a hockey player overall? Nonsense. That's obvious three different ways - from watching them play, from looking at the stats, and from looking at how they were regarded by their peers. Please give us evidence for your claim that Bossy was considered on par with Gretzky.
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- Most consecutive 50+ goal seasons: 9
- Most 50+ goal seasons (not necessarily consecutive): 9 (tied with Wayne Gretzky and Alexander Ovechkin)
- Most 60+ goal seasons (not necessarily consecutive): 5 (tied with Wayne Gretzky)
- Highest goals-per-game average, career (minimum 200 total goals): .762 goals per game
- Most power-play goals, one playoff season: 9 (tied with Cam Neely)
- Most consecutive hat tricks: 3 (tied with Joe Malone, who accomplished this twice)
I'll lend you my time machine. This was argued all the time.
Trottier was lauded, Dionne was ignored, Kent Nilson was a footnote but people were comparing Gretzky and Bossy years before the argument Gretzky and Lemieux.
It's not so different than the fans who argued Kirk vs Christopher Pike before Kirk vs Picard.
the arguments
a) Goals, as you say
b) Championships, until the Oilers won their first - Islanders kept winning them
c) Islanders were a better team, especially defensively
d) Oilers were a glorified WHA expansion team that didn't play serious hockey, so opposing fans said
e) Better character. Bossy was considered a gentlemen where Gretzky complained all the time (on the ice, later lauded for this Howe like competitiveness) and loved the spotlight off the ice.
Above all, the jealousy of fans.
Unfortunately, things that Bossy had going against him included his outspoken stance against fighting (you can watch his reaction at the of the '82 series against the Canucks where Billy Smith high sticks Stan Smyl in the dying minutes so in revenge Tiger Williams cross checks Bossy in the boards. I had to think that Mike had conflicts with his own team especially with Smith considered a goon).
And the fact that he played for the Islanders and not the Rangers. Joe Piscopo parodied this on his SNL newsbit, "Could the Islanders 'Drive for Five'? Yes? No? Who cares!" Rangers had decades of tradition where the Islanders were an expansion team and rivals to their "real" team like the Giants, Dodgers, and Mets had/have in baseball.
As a gentleman he didn't have the charisma that Wayne had either.
He had to retire relatively early too where Wayne kept on playing for much longer than most.
As the Islanders dynasty made way for the Oilers dynasty the talk largely disappeared, especially as the big Gretzky, Lemieux appeared, making Bossy a kind of John the Baptist type making the way for the two of them.