Generational Talents

Bear of Bad News

"The Worst Guy on the Site" - user feedback
Sep 27, 2005
14,228
29,386
Correct. Its cool and fun to remember the history of the original 6, but for that entire time it was roughly 100-120 players playing 50 game seasons. The league was nothing, sorry to say it.

Just know that fifty years from now, there will be people who feel the same about the hockey that you currently enjoy and comment on.
 

Ace Card Bedard

Back in Black, Red, and White
Feb 11, 2012
9,071
4,065
Correct. Its cool and fun to remember the history of the original 6, but for that entire time it was roughly 100-120 players playing 50 game seasons. The league was nothing, sorry to say it.

It took expansion in 67-68 to start the growth and even then another decade plus to start to see the roots grow.

So defense and goalies cant qualify?

I can't say I've seen a defenseman meet the standards of dominance since Bobby Orr.
Goaltenders? Jacques Plante I guess but that was in the 50's and 60's.
 

Golden_Jet

Registered User
Sep 21, 2005
26,104
13,501
Correct. Its cool and fun to remember the history of the original 6, but for that entire time it was roughly 100-120 players playing 50 game seasons. The league was nothing, sorry to say it.

It took expansion in 67-68 to start the growth and even then another decade plus to start to see the roots grow.

So defense and goalies cant qualify?
The original 6 didn’t start until the 40’s, when the NHL officially began it was the original 4.
Toronto, Ottawa and 2 Montreal teams.
 

x Tame Impala

HFBoards Sponsor
Sponsor
Aug 24, 2011
28,738
13,746
Generational players are hands and feet better the next best tier of players. Gretzky, Lemieux and Orr were. Sorry but McDavid is not hands and feet better then the tier of players under him. If Mcdavid is a generational player then so is Jagr and Lidstrom.
Since 2016/17 (after McDavid's 40 game rookie season) until this past season McDavid is...

-1st in points
-Has a 144 point lead over 2nd place (Draisaitl) his teammate, in 10 less games
-Has a 1.56 PPG which blows away his closest competition (Kucherov), averaging an additional 14pts per season more
-Is 1st in Playoff PPG
-2nd only to Kucherov in total playoff points but Kucherov has a whopping 28 more playoff games than McDavid
-Won a Smythe without winning the Cup
-5x Art Ross, 4x Pearson, 3x Hart, and a Richard in his trophy case

-The only people with as many or more Ross trophies as McDavid are: Gretzky, Howe, Esposito, Jagr, and Lemieux.

-The only people with as many or more Hart trophies are: Gretzky, Howe, Shore, Clark, Lemieux, Morenz, Orr, and Ovechkin (i'll toss a Hart Crosby's way because he missed out on a 2011 Trophy he surely would've won if not for injury)

-The only people with as many or more Lindsay/Pearson trophies are: Gretzky and Lemieux (i'll toss another one Crosby's way for 2011 as well). Jagr, Ovie, and Lafleur have 3 each

McDavid is generational.
 

benfranklin

Registered User
Jun 29, 2024
413
297
The Stanley Cup was 51 years old when the Original Six started. You're missing out on 50% of hockey history.
Just know that fifty years from now, there will be people who feel the same about the hockey that you currently enjoy and comment on.
The original 6 didn’t start until the 40’s, when the NHL officially began it was the original 4.
Toronto, Ottawa and 2 Montreal teams.
Everything pre Orr was barely an organized sport. I recognize the history and awesome the NHL has been around that long, but yes that is a completely different generation and sorry, not sorry, but when there are only a handful of teams in a league for 50+ years, I dont take that too seriously amongst the greats who are doing it with 20-30+ teams. They paved the way, sure, but there wasnt much competition to be "generational" amongst your peers.

Fifty years from now, we will have 40-50 teams in the league and maybe be international, but we will still recognize Gretzky, Lemieux, Crosby, and McDavid as the greats over randoms from the 30s that no one has ever heard of.
 

Bear of Bad News

"The Worst Guy on the Site" - user feedback
Sep 27, 2005
14,228
29,386
Everything pre Orr was barely an organized sport. I recognize the history and awesome the NHL has been around that long, but yes that is a completely different generation and sorry, not sorry, but when there are only a handful of teams in a league for 50+ years, I dont take that too seriously amongst the greats who are doing it with 20-30+ teams. They paved the way, sure, but there wasnt much competition to be "generational" amongst your peers.

Fifty years from now, we will have 40-50 teams in the league and maybe be international, but we will still recognize Gretzky, Lemieux, Crosby, and McDavid as the greats over randoms from the 30s that no one has ever heard of.

I mean, you can say this all you'd like. People were saying similar stuff fifty years ago.

I'm just saying that there's a cohort of people fifty years out who aren't going to give a <hoot> about today's GOATs for similar reasons to the ones you're espousing now,.

Oh, and we're "international" now. :P
 
  • Like
Reactions: Hockey Outsider

sinDer

Registered User
Nov 22, 2006
3,686
2,695
Drummondville, QC
Generational talents come into the league and are able to record over a PPG in their first year (forwards). And while most players fall off a cliff between 30 and 33, generational talents will keep their high level of play in their mid thirties or even late thirties.

Crosby and Ovechkin are generational talents. McDavid is too.

With that being said, players like Lemieux and Gretzky dominated their peers like no other players did, which makes them the best players of all time. I guess we could say that they are a tier above Generational talent, if that makes sense...
 

Hockey Outsider

Registered User
Jan 16, 2005
9,467
15,694
TIL- Bossy was the third fastest to 1k points.

And people really think Crosby is either generational or better then Bossy?

Come on now....
The NHL averaged about 7.52 goals per game from 1978 to 1986 (the years it took Bossy to reach 1,000 point).

The NHL averaged about 5.63 goals per game from 2006 to 2017 (the years it took Crosby to reach 1,000 point).

Bossy got to 1,000 points 15% faster than Crosby (656 vs 757 games). But he did it in a league featuring 35% more offense. What Crosby did is more impressive, and it's not particularly close.
 
  • Like
Reactions: sanscosm

FrozenJagrt

Registered User
Dec 16, 2009
10,562
4,648
The NHL averaged about 7.52 goals per game from 1978 to 1986 (the years it took Bossy to reach 1,000 point).

The NHL averaged about 5.63 goals per game from 2006 to 2017 (the years it took Crosby to reach 1,000 point).

Bossy got to 1,000 points 15% faster than Crosby (656 vs 757 games). But he did it in a league featuring 35% more offense. What Crosby did is more impressive, and it's not particularly close.
Not to mention Bossy was incredibly durable until he suddenly wasn't and promptly retired. With the amount of games he played, you'd expect he'd have more than two retro Rockets to his name. Never led the league in scoring, never won the Hart. It can be argued he wasn't even the best player on his team, that was probably Potvin. And one could make a case for Trottier being ahead of Bossy as well.
 

Cubs2024wildcard

America F YEAH!!!
Apr 29, 2015
8,100
2,630
The NHL averaged about 7.52 goals per game from 1978 to 1986 (the years it took Bossy to reach 1,000 point).

The NHL averaged about 5.63 goals per game from 2006 to 2017 (the years it took Crosby to reach 1,000 point).

Bossy got to 1,000 points 15% faster than Crosby (656 vs 757 games). But he did it in a league featuring 35% more offense. What Crosby did is more impressive, and it's not particularly close.
With this logic, Gretzkys and Marios stats are also subjected to the same...ahem...scrutiny.
 

Hockey Outsider

Registered User
Jan 16, 2005
9,467
15,694
With this logic, Gretzkys and Marios stats are also subjected to the same...ahem...scrutiny.
Yes, obviously they are. Why would I use this argument only against Mike Bossy? Every player from that era, including Gretzky and Lemieux, have stats that are inflated relative to today.

Even after making reasonable adjustments for the scoring environment, Gretzky and Lemieux are far ahead of anyone playing today - McDavid, Crosby, Ovechkin, whoever. But the next level of stars (Bossy, Trottier, Dionne, Lafleur, Yzerman - whoever else) aren't. If you don't consider the scoring environment, you get some wacky conclusions that are plainly false (did Denis Maruk and Bernie Nicholls peak higher than Crosby and Ovechkin?)

If your position is "the numbers are what they are, context be damned", would you agree to pay me $100 US dollars today, and I can pay you back $100 New Zealand dollars in ten years? A hundred is a hundred, after all.
 

norrisnick

The best...
Apr 14, 2005
31,226
16,567
The Stanley Cup was 51 years old when the Original Six started. You're missing out on 50% of hockey history.
If a lot of that history pre-dates the forward pass it's a completely different sport and shouldn't really be lumped together. Rugby players aren't compared to American football players throughout history and neither of those factor into the real football (soccer) history.
 

Ad

Upcoming events

Ad

Ad