Johnny Engine
Moderator
- Jul 29, 2009
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The Donald Brashear talk in the other thread had me thinking about seasons where guys employed only for their fists scored double digit goals, or in the neighborhood of 30 points all of a sudden. I'm not interested in your Proberts and Simons here - that's a different level of player and we know they got real time with real stars for at least a season. I'm looking at guys whose ability to play NHL hockey at all was sometimes question, guys who would get the "he can play a little" label from their hometown fans and no one else most of the time. Guys like:
Gino Odjick
1993-94: This was obviously Bure. 9 of his 16 goals assisted by Bure, 7 of his 13 assists also involved Bure. And of course it's a well known story that they played together and were good friends. I'm always wary of stories like these when they involve players who should have a massive disparity in their roles - Bure couldn't have been playing all or even a big chunk of his time with Odjick, could he? But in this case it seems more true than usual, at least for a period of time. Odjick is also the most frequent scorer on Bure's assists this year, and Odjick's other frequent collaborators are real hockey players - guys like Ronning and Adams. Lastly almost all of Odjick's scoring is crammed into the first half of the year, which tells me that 1) a decision was made to quit using this arrangement so much and 2) Odjick was on a 30-15-45 pace by January 12th, which he'd absolutely have to be getting real time with skilled linedmates to pull off.
Tie Domi
There are 3 seasons to speak of here, some more interesting than others. You could argue that these 3 seasons make him a bit of a reach for this thread, I don't think he'd have ever made it to the NHL without his fists, and the contributions he made as he improved and learned to use his pretty good wheels to his advantage are gravy, and don't even really show up until his late 20s.
1996-97: The year where they traded everybody, so Domi probably got promoted at some point. Or rather, his scoring logs suggest that the roster was turning over so often that he frequently got to play with some decent players - Sundin, Gilmour and Muller all show up frequently, and there's also lots of Todd Warriner and Darby Hendrickson, who'd have been no worse than third liners for most of this car wreck of a season. His most common collaborator was Wendel Clark, but not to the point where he looks like a full time linemate.
2000-01: most of his collaborators are grinders and he shot 21%. This is nothing. Next.
2002-03: This team is way too deep to expect Tie Domi on a scoring line. This is the one year where the Leafs committed to giving Sundin real star wingers to work with - mostly Mogilny and then Roberts after his surgery - and then there are several lines worth of middling guys, from the last bit of worthwhile hockey we get out of Hoglund and Renberg, to the first worthwhile season of Nik Antropov, and then even Owen Nolan joins the party. But he puts up career highs, has a secondary role on the power play, and does most of it with Robert Reichel. The two of them played on a line together in the 2002 playoffs and were far better defensively than they had any right to be, and it's possible Quinn kept this going because making any other use of Reichel at this juncture had to be challenging. It's easy to see the fit, as Reichel can make plays but was pathologically uninvolved with almost everything happening on the ice , while Domi was all-work-no-brains, and could at very least get to where he needed to be quickly. They collaborated on 13 different goals, which is more than Reichel himself did in the playoffs after age 23. Worth noting that Pat Quinn was also in charge of our first example.
Georges Laraque
2000-01: This is a hard one to figure out. There are two separate periods - mid to late October and then most of December, where Laraque is playing real boy minutes, and about a third of his points come is those two stints. Then he has an absolutely wild March where he's still only playing 7-10 minutes a game, but shooting 38%, and banks 11 more points. Rem Murray is involved with 7 of his points in March, but only two in the rest of the year, and he's not a guy who should be turning plugs into scorers. Doug Weight is involved with 7 of his points, but interspersed throughout the year so there never seems to be a point where Weight is carrying him around.
Any other examples we could dive into? And can any Oilers fan offer a unified explanation of Laraque's big season?
Gino Odjick
1993-94: This was obviously Bure. 9 of his 16 goals assisted by Bure, 7 of his 13 assists also involved Bure. And of course it's a well known story that they played together and were good friends. I'm always wary of stories like these when they involve players who should have a massive disparity in their roles - Bure couldn't have been playing all or even a big chunk of his time with Odjick, could he? But in this case it seems more true than usual, at least for a period of time. Odjick is also the most frequent scorer on Bure's assists this year, and Odjick's other frequent collaborators are real hockey players - guys like Ronning and Adams. Lastly almost all of Odjick's scoring is crammed into the first half of the year, which tells me that 1) a decision was made to quit using this arrangement so much and 2) Odjick was on a 30-15-45 pace by January 12th, which he'd absolutely have to be getting real time with skilled linedmates to pull off.
Tie Domi
There are 3 seasons to speak of here, some more interesting than others. You could argue that these 3 seasons make him a bit of a reach for this thread, I don't think he'd have ever made it to the NHL without his fists, and the contributions he made as he improved and learned to use his pretty good wheels to his advantage are gravy, and don't even really show up until his late 20s.
1996-97: The year where they traded everybody, so Domi probably got promoted at some point. Or rather, his scoring logs suggest that the roster was turning over so often that he frequently got to play with some decent players - Sundin, Gilmour and Muller all show up frequently, and there's also lots of Todd Warriner and Darby Hendrickson, who'd have been no worse than third liners for most of this car wreck of a season. His most common collaborator was Wendel Clark, but not to the point where he looks like a full time linemate.
2000-01: most of his collaborators are grinders and he shot 21%. This is nothing. Next.
2002-03: This team is way too deep to expect Tie Domi on a scoring line. This is the one year where the Leafs committed to giving Sundin real star wingers to work with - mostly Mogilny and then Roberts after his surgery - and then there are several lines worth of middling guys, from the last bit of worthwhile hockey we get out of Hoglund and Renberg, to the first worthwhile season of Nik Antropov, and then even Owen Nolan joins the party. But he puts up career highs, has a secondary role on the power play, and does most of it with Robert Reichel. The two of them played on a line together in the 2002 playoffs and were far better defensively than they had any right to be, and it's possible Quinn kept this going because making any other use of Reichel at this juncture had to be challenging. It's easy to see the fit, as Reichel can make plays but was pathologically uninvolved with almost everything happening on the ice , while Domi was all-work-no-brains, and could at very least get to where he needed to be quickly. They collaborated on 13 different goals, which is more than Reichel himself did in the playoffs after age 23. Worth noting that Pat Quinn was also in charge of our first example.
Georges Laraque
2000-01: This is a hard one to figure out. There are two separate periods - mid to late October and then most of December, where Laraque is playing real boy minutes, and about a third of his points come is those two stints. Then he has an absolutely wild March where he's still only playing 7-10 minutes a game, but shooting 38%, and banks 11 more points. Rem Murray is involved with 7 of his points in March, but only two in the rest of the year, and he's not a guy who should be turning plugs into scorers. Doug Weight is involved with 7 of his points, but interspersed throughout the year so there never seems to be a point where Weight is carrying him around.
Any other examples we could dive into? And can any Oilers fan offer a unified explanation of Laraque's big season?