Senor Catface
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- Jul 25, 2006
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Some great players took a bit. Mackinnon, Lafleur, Yzerman… they were good but not great.
Yeah, I think Bedard will be a great player, I was just curious if any stuck out.
Some great players took a bit. Mackinnon, Lafleur, Yzerman… they were good but not great.
Bedard played a great game with 2 beautiful primary apples.Did Bedard just get dominated by Zegras?
Love to see those moments when young players toss the monkey off their back. A lot of the attention has been on his goal scoring ability because of his ridiculous release, but he is such an underrated passer.Nice to see him get a pair of assists, tonight.
He's at 0.79 PPG on a horrid team with no line mates at the age of 19. If this is as bad as it gets, consider ourselves lucky. No, he is NOT Sid or McDavid but he's one heck of a young hockey player.
P.S. It was nice to see him smile - haven't seen THAT in a while.
he doesn’t need any more hate please.Did Bedard just get dominated by Zegras?
Has their been a generational player that didn't excel, at least offensively, in their second season?
Gordie, Jagr.
If you consider other sports there are TONS of examples, Tom Brady's probably the best one of a generational player who improved unexpectedly dramatically. Jordan also didn't start winning scoring titles until his 3rd year in the league (heavily injured year 2) at age 23. Djokovic's first grand slam didn't come until he was 21, his 2nd, 3rd, and 4th at age 24 which is when he started dominating. Etc etc.
And yes, I honestly do think you have to consider other sports because otherwise the sample size is too small. But even if you don't, you still have Gordie and Jagr who are both among the very best ever, and if you expand the tag a bit then plenty of guys like Datsyuk, Joe Thornton, MacKinnon etc, not to mention defensemen if you want to go there.
Anyway the overall idea that players can improve in a non-linear fashion (compared to both themselves as well as other players) seems pretty straightforward, a bit surprised ppl seem so intent / invested in trying to pretend this sort of improvement doesn't exist
Jagr was a PPG during his 2nd regular season and had a monster playoff run. Time has not run out on Bedard, but he needs to really pick it up if he wants to be considered the next Ovi/Crosby/McDavid.
And Bedard was pretty close to a PPG during his rookie year.
Also, I assume based on your sentence that you don't believe Gordie Howe was generational or the same tier as Ovi/Crosby/McDavid. Which is totally fine
Think you should dm him and ask for a refund.Bedard better step up his game. Lost 100 bucks last night when he failed to put up 3 points against the Ducks...
Gordie Howe is a legend...but he played in a far-gone era of the NHL. It's really hard to compare players and their stats from 80 years ago to today. Even still, he was a top 20 scorer in his 2nd season.
But the point still holds that Gordie took a while. If you want to use more current players, look at current guys like MacKinnon or Jack Hughes (or even Quinn Hughes), if Bedard at some improves at that even close to that same rate he'll be running away with scoring titles whenever that improvement occurs.
All that to say it's fairly common for some players to take longer than others to develop into something great. Trajectory isn't always linear, not even close. To me it seems like a better idea to at least wait until the kid can drink a beer before declaring anything about where his career may or may not end up 15 years from now