The Panther
Registered User
Thanks again to @Hockey Outsider for updating this.
So, assuming the info provided is correct, there are 14 instances since 1947 where a player has received 60.0% or more of the Hart trophy shares... and failed to win the Hart (in each case, finishing 2nd).
In order from highest-to-lowest Hart shares, those are:
1) 75.5% Jagr 2006
2) 75.2% Liut 1981
3) 72.8% MacKinnon 2018
4) 72.2% D. Sedin 2011
5) 71.4% Bourque 1990
6) 68.4% MacKinnon 2020
7) 68.1% Jagr 2000
8) 66.7% Durnan 1949
9) 66.7% Gretzky 1991
10) 66.1% Crosby 2017
11) 64.0% Getzlaf 2014
12) 62.7% Ovechkin 2010
13) 60.5% Esposito 1971
14) 60.0% Matthews 2021
And just bubbling under that 60% cut-off are:
15) 59.7% Bure 2000 (finished 3rd)
16) 59.4% M. Lemieux 1989
17) 59.1% Crosby 2013
So, while we often think of Jagr as the superstar who was most "unlucky" not to win one or two more Harts (and he was unlucky, as the voting record shows), perhaps the most unlucky is now Nathan MacKinnon, who was had recent seasons with 72.8% and 68.4% of Hart shares, and has never won the Hart!
As a bit of a Jagr-booster, I'm still cheesed-off about the 2006 Hart results, which I feel -- I know I'm in the minority -- were unfair in that Thornton played only 58 games with "his team", outscored Jagr by only a couple of points (due to gaining extra games after being traded), and didn't see his team improve, compared to the preceding season, due to his presence (while Jagr's team massively improved and made the playoffs for the first time in 9 years). That one still makes no sense to me, but THERE!, I've said my piece. I'm done!
The Hart trophy is weirdly both the most 'accurate' award in showing the best/MVP-type players in history and the most infuriating with certain voting results. To point out a famous example -- Mario Lemieux in 1989. Okay, he finished 2nd overall (to Gretzky, first year in L.A.). That in itself has always been 'iffy', but at least I can sort-of understand it in terms of Gretzky's first-year impact on the Kings, plus all the media hype that went along with that, etc. But still: Mario scored at a 200+ point pace, his team made the playoffs (missed the previous year when he won the Hart), finishing 2nd in the tough Patrick division, he had the historically-greatest domination of team scoring in NHL history (until McDavid this year... barely), and he got . . . 29% of the 1st-place votes. 5 voters thought Yzerman (whose team fell 13 points in the standings) was a more deserving MVP. Tough crowd!
But at least in '89 all the 1st-place votes were Gretzky, Lemieux, or Yzerman. In 1986, somebody (presumably in New York) gave their 1st-place vote to John Vanbiesbrouck. Someone gave Kevin Dineen a 3rd-place vote.
In 1985 (Gretzky had 208 points and went +100), one voter had Rod Langway as his 1st-place Hart vote, while another (hilariously) had Brian Sutter of St. Louis (!).
In the modern era, the year 2000 vote was totally dominated by Pronger, Jagr, and Bure. Each received 60-68% of the voting shares. That same season, though, someone voted Owen Nolan as their 1st-place Hart vote.
So, assuming the info provided is correct, there are 14 instances since 1947 where a player has received 60.0% or more of the Hart trophy shares... and failed to win the Hart (in each case, finishing 2nd).
In order from highest-to-lowest Hart shares, those are:
1) 75.5% Jagr 2006
2) 75.2% Liut 1981
3) 72.8% MacKinnon 2018
4) 72.2% D. Sedin 2011
5) 71.4% Bourque 1990
6) 68.4% MacKinnon 2020
7) 68.1% Jagr 2000
8) 66.7% Durnan 1949
9) 66.7% Gretzky 1991
10) 66.1% Crosby 2017
11) 64.0% Getzlaf 2014
12) 62.7% Ovechkin 2010
13) 60.5% Esposito 1971
14) 60.0% Matthews 2021
And just bubbling under that 60% cut-off are:
15) 59.7% Bure 2000 (finished 3rd)
16) 59.4% M. Lemieux 1989
17) 59.1% Crosby 2013
So, while we often think of Jagr as the superstar who was most "unlucky" not to win one or two more Harts (and he was unlucky, as the voting record shows), perhaps the most unlucky is now Nathan MacKinnon, who was had recent seasons with 72.8% and 68.4% of Hart shares, and has never won the Hart!
As a bit of a Jagr-booster, I'm still cheesed-off about the 2006 Hart results, which I feel -- I know I'm in the minority -- were unfair in that Thornton played only 58 games with "his team", outscored Jagr by only a couple of points (due to gaining extra games after being traded), and didn't see his team improve, compared to the preceding season, due to his presence (while Jagr's team massively improved and made the playoffs for the first time in 9 years). That one still makes no sense to me, but THERE!, I've said my piece. I'm done!
The Hart trophy is weirdly both the most 'accurate' award in showing the best/MVP-type players in history and the most infuriating with certain voting results. To point out a famous example -- Mario Lemieux in 1989. Okay, he finished 2nd overall (to Gretzky, first year in L.A.). That in itself has always been 'iffy', but at least I can sort-of understand it in terms of Gretzky's first-year impact on the Kings, plus all the media hype that went along with that, etc. But still: Mario scored at a 200+ point pace, his team made the playoffs (missed the previous year when he won the Hart), finishing 2nd in the tough Patrick division, he had the historically-greatest domination of team scoring in NHL history (until McDavid this year... barely), and he got . . . 29% of the 1st-place votes. 5 voters thought Yzerman (whose team fell 13 points in the standings) was a more deserving MVP. Tough crowd!
But at least in '89 all the 1st-place votes were Gretzky, Lemieux, or Yzerman. In 1986, somebody (presumably in New York) gave their 1st-place vote to John Vanbiesbrouck. Someone gave Kevin Dineen a 3rd-place vote.
In 1985 (Gretzky had 208 points and went +100), one voter had Rod Langway as his 1st-place Hart vote, while another (hilariously) had Brian Sutter of St. Louis (!).
In the modern era, the year 2000 vote was totally dominated by Pronger, Jagr, and Bure. Each received 60-68% of the voting shares. That same season, though, someone voted Owen Nolan as their 1st-place Hart vote.