Has Peak/Prime McDavid surpassed Peak/Prime Crosby and Peak/Prime Jagr already?

MadLuke

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Jan 18, 2011
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When Howe scored 95, 45 points was enough to make the Top 10 and Maurice Richard was scoring 60-70

When Moore scored 95, you needed 60 something points to make the top 10.

The red wings had only 1.45 assists per goals, that 95 pts year, the league scoring changed quite a bit.
 
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Matsun

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Orr had his breakout 120 point season in 69 and from 69-74 there were only 4 non Boston 100 points seasons from players, 2 105 point seasons and no 110 seasons. The 5 seasons after that 27 times non Boston players hit 100 points, 23 hit 105, 18 hit 110 and 10 120 point seasons from non Boston players. Like I said maybe generational talents lead to league wide scoring changes? Here is a seasonal breakdown over 130 point scorers.
Original 6:
45-70: 0
Orr, Wayne and Mario:
71: 2
72: 1
73: 1
74: 1
75: 1
77: 1
78: 1
79: 2
80: 2
81: 3
82: 4
83: 1
84: 1
85: 3
86: 4
87: 1
88: 3
89: 4
90: 1
91: 2
92: 1
93: 6
94: 1
95 (lockout): 0
96: 2

Dead puck era:
97-22: 0

McDavid era:
23: 1
24: 3
 

daver

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While scoring obviously plays a part, I do think the major factor is McDavid, Mackinnon, and Kucherov are just that good.


The three post covid seasons. 7 times in 3 seasons someone has exceeded 115 points. McDavid x3. Kucherov, Mackinnon, Draisaitl, Panarin.

Of the top 13 scoring seasons in that time, McDavid, Kucherov, Mackinnon, and Draisaitl combine for 9 of them.

115ish is the highest we're seeing "the pack" score. But the top four continue to outscore the rest of the league.

Before 23/24, I think most had those two players in the mix for 2nd best player in the league with Draisaitl and Matthews (among forwards). By their late 20s, neither had hit a level that would have placed them on the same tier as Crosby, Malkin or Ovechkin (the post lockout era), or among others like Jagr, Forsberg, Lindros, Sakic, Yzerman, Lafleur etc.; players who had higher offensive peaks and/or higher all around peaks.

Last season certainly was unexpected by both; a bit moreso given their age and career stage. Kucherov seemed to have peaked in 18/19 and MacKinnon maybe had one Art Ross if he hadn't kept missing a few games every year but there wasn't an indication he had a really dominant season like 23/24 in him.

Since 17/18:


McDavid - 1.61
Kucherov - 1.46 (#4 in points)
MacKinnon - 1.42
Draisaitl - 1.35 (#2 in points)
Panarin 1.24

#10 - 1.17
#25 - 1.00

MacKinnon and Kucherov stand out as #2/#3 (arguably clearly if you think that Draisaitl's numbers are likely a bit inflated due to McDavid.) with a clear gap between them and the pack. Both have playoff numbers (points/PPG) befitting their regular season dominance.


From 06/07 to 13/14:

Crosby - 1.42
Malkin - 1.22 (#5 in points)
Ovechkin - 1.18 (#1 in points)
St. Louis - 1.07
Thornton 1.06

#10 - 1.01
#25 - 0.90

The clear #2/#3 are Malkin and Ovechkin, whose status is boosted with his GPG, with a clear gap between them and the pack. This time stretch includes Ovechkin's two "down years" and some injury-affected seasons for Malkin.


From 95/96 to 03/04


Jagr - 1.38
Forsberg - 1.30 (5th in scoring)
Sakic - 1.20
Kariya - 1.09 (7th in scoring)
Palffy - 1.08

#10 - 1.00
#20 - 0.94 (adjusted for league size)

Forsberg and Sakic stand out as the clear #2/#3 and they add impressive playoff numbers to boost their status (i.e. they are better playoff performers than MacKinnon and Kucherov, not clearly but enough to place them above IMO).


Comment

While they have made a statistical case, primarily, if not exclusively, on their 23/24 regular seasons, intuitively, it doesn't feel like MacKinnon and Kucherov have placed themselves in the discussion with players who are Top 30ish caliber all-time in terms of peak/prime.

There is certainly a question as to whether the increase in league scoring since 17/18 has opened the door for superstar talent to exploit, perhaps even more noticeably in the playoffs.

I think McDavid has separated himself over his career offensively on the same level as Crosby, Jagr (for 7 seasons), and Howe. Howe is a great comparable as one can argue that his 06 era peers- Beliveau, Hull, and Mikita, matched his 2nd, 3rd and 4th best seasons but only once. McDavid's immediate peers got close to his peak once while he has two other dominant seasons on his resume. The question is, are MacKinnon and Kucherov on the same level as Beliveau, Hull, and Mikita.
 
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The Panther

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Great list (above)!

It also might be good, though, to consider games played when we're talking about exactly 130+ point seasons.

For most of the six-team period, the season was 70 games long (not that anyone was hitting 130 points). After expansion, there was a 74-game season, then two 76-game seasons, then four 78-game seasons. Then, 80-game seasons from 1974-75 through 1991-92. Two 84-game seasons in 1992-93 and 1993-94. Then, work stoppage 48-game season. Then, 82 game seasons....

Might make a bit of difference, esp. with 1992-93.
 
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BigBadBruins7708

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Dec 11, 2017
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Before 23/24, I think most had those two players in the mix for 2nd best player in the league with Draisaitl and Matthews (among forwards). By their late 20s, neither had hit a level that would have placed them on the same tier as Crosby, Malkin or Ovechkin (the post lockout era), or among others like Jagr, Forsberg, Lindros, Sakic, Yzerman, Lafleur etc.; players who had higher offensive peaks and/or higher all around peaks.

Last season certainly was unexpected by both; a bit moreso given their age and career stage. Kucherov seemed to have peaked in 18/19 and MacKinnon maybe had one Art Ross if he hadn't kept missing a few games every year but there wasn't an indication he had a really dominant season like 23/24 in him.

Since 17/18:


McDavid - 1.61
Kucherov - 1.46 (#4 in points)
MacKinnon - 1.42
Draisaitl - 1.35 (#2 in points)
Panarin 1.24

#10 - 1.17
#25 - 1.00

MacKinnon and Kucherov stand out as #2/#3 (arguably clearly if you think that Draisaitl's numbers are likely a bit inflated due to McDavid.) with a clear gap between them and the pack. Both have playoff numbers (points/PPG) befitting their regular season dominance.


From 06/07 to 13/14:

Crosby - 1.42
Malkin - 1.22 (#5 in points)
Ovechkin - 1.18 (#1 in points)
St. Louis - 1.07
Thornton 1.06

#10 - 1.01
#25 - 0.90

The clear #2/#3 are Malkin and Ovechkin, whose status is boosted with his GPG, with a clear gap between them and the pack. This time stretch includes Ovechkin's two "down years" and some injury-affected seasons for Malkin.


From 95/96 to 03/04


Jagr - 1.38
Forsberg - 1.30 (5th in scoring)
Sakic - 1.20
Kariya - 1.09 (7th in scoring)
Palffy - 1.08

#10 - 1.00
#20 - 0.94 (adjusted for league size)

Forsberg and Sakic stand out as the clear #2/#3 and they add impressive playoff numbers to boost their status (i.e. they are better playoff performers than MacKinnon and Kucherov, not clearly but enough to place them above IMO).


Comment

While they have made a statistical case, primarily, if not exclusively, on their 23/24 regular seasons, intuitively, it doesn't feel like MacKinnon and Kucherov have placed themselves in the discussion with players who are Top 30ish caliber all-time in terms of peak/prime.

There is certainly a question as to whether the increase in league scoring since 17/18 has opened the door for superstar talent to exploit, perhaps even more noticeably in the playoffs.

I think McDavid has separated himself over his career offensively on the same level as Crosby, Jagr (for 7 seasons), and Howe. Howe is a great comparable as one can argue that his 06 era peers- Beliveau, Hull, and Mikita, matched his 2nd, 3rd and 4th best seasons but only once. McDavid's immediate peers got close to his peak once while he has two other dominant seasons on his resume. The question is, are MacKinnon and Kucherov on the same level as Beliveau, Hull, and Mikita.

Kucherov absolutely hit the Malkin/Ovechkin level before last year.

2019 has a Hart-Ross-Pearson season beating a healthy McDavid by 12 points.

Then follows it up with the best back to back playoff performances post lockout with 66 points in 48 games winning 2 Cups and leading the playoffs in scoring twice. And if he wasn't Russian he'd have back to back Smythes
 
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K Fleur

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Kucherov absolutely hit the Malkin/Ovechkin level before last year.

2019 has a Hart-Ross-Pearson season beating a healthy McDavid by 12 points.

Then follows it up with the best back to back playoff performances post lockout with 66 points in 48 games winning 2 Cups and leading the playoffs in scoring twice. And if he wasn't Russian he'd have back to back Smythes

I think this would be a point worth caring about if a Russian player and a Swedish player hadn’t won each of those Smythes.

And to be fair I think Kucherov should have won atleast one of them.
 
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MadLuke

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Jan 18, 2011
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Like I said maybe generational talents lead to league wide scoring changes?

Team average goals season / Points needed to make the top 10

1978: 264 / 87
1979: 280 / 91
1980: 281 / 94
1981: 307 / 103
1982: 321 / 106
1983: 309 / 104
1984: 316 / 105
1985: 311 / 102
1986: 317 / 105
1987: 294 / 95
1988: 297 / 106
1989: 299 / 98


Gretzky first big year was in 1981, first 200 pts season was 1982, scoring never got higher than 1982, there was not a league wide increase caused by him (despite overtime coming back in 1984, helping scoring a bit).

For Howe, the league way to record assist got better, number of player by teams change, we could imagine more significant variable than Howe inspiring people to score more.


1953 was just particularly low scoring (1951 average teams scored 190 goals, only 168 in 53, same in 54 would be back up to 188 by 1957), one could assume the league would be increased it back regardless of Howe:

NHLEras.jpg


You could be right, but imagine someone in 2070 thinking that the 2006 scoring jump we saw was due to GM-coach reaction to Ovechkin-Crosby arrival in the league or their play affecting/inspiring others or other romantic storyline vs the league wanted more goals, they called more penalty & reduced goaltender equipment.

It is easier to imagine something reproducible influencing the league, there was a moment when you could find good skater with good corsi while not having lot of points players on third line-ahl around the league and can try to become a good corsi team, you could try to mimic the Panthers team and strategy in the 90s.

Trying to do what Gretzky oilers did and trying to win the cup by outscoring them... that less obvious. To take an Hollywood equivalent, trying to reproduce Titanic without James Cameron did not really work and it did cost over 100 millions a pop to try to do it like with Pearl Harbors, a success in a low budget horror-young adult from existing books or superheroes that do not need an all-timer great director to pull it off will have more copycats.
 
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Matsun

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Aug 15, 2010
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Team average goals season / Points needed to make the top 10

1978: 264 / 87
1979: 280 / 91
1980: 281 / 94
1981: 307 / 103
1982: 321 / 106
1983: 309 / 104
1984: 316 / 105
1985: 311 / 102
1986: 317 / 105
1987: 294 / 95
1988: 297 / 106
1989: 299 / 98


Gretzky first big year was in 1981, first 200 pts season was 1982, scoring never got higher than 1982, there was not a league wide increase caused by him (despite overtime coming back in 1984, helping scoring a bit).

For Howe, the league way to record assist got better, number of player by teams change, we could imagine more significant variable than Howe inspiring people to score more.


1953 was just particularly low scoring (1951 average teams scored 190 goals, only 168 in 53, same in 54 would be back up to 188 by 1957), one could assume the league would be increased it back regardless of Howe:
League wide scoring changes might be a bit much to attribute to one player, but I think it could be possible for stars to raise their performances after a generational talent appears. In tennis Federer was all alone when he started peaking and was clearly looking like the GOAT. Then suddenly Nadal showed up and a few years later Djokovic and we got a decade of by far the 3 best tennis players ever all playing at the same time. In sprinting Usain Bolt was unbeatable, but his top competition ran times that would destroy the field today in an effort to try and catch him. Messi was reaching impossible levels in soccer and Ronaldo just started scoring more and more to try and keep up, Luis Suarez and Robert Lewandowski also had some of the greatest seasons ever by forwards this last decade.

You could be right, but imagine someone in 2070 thinking that the 2006 scoring jump we saw was due to GM-coach reaction to Ovechkin-Crosby arrival in the league or their play affecting/inspiring others or other romantic storyline vs the league wanted more goals, they called more penalty & reduced goaltender equipment.

I could see one of the reasons for the league wanting more goals being an existing talent lighting it up and the league wanting to try and show off the talent as much as possible. Maybe a small part of the reason why they relaxed the penalties postlockout was because of the super hyped Crosby about to enter the league. They also changed the rules ahead of 2018-19 when McDavid had won 2 straight Art Ross trophies and was lighting it up. It was clear both times that we needed higher scoring, but maybe the generational talent helped the league make changes to adress that?
---------------------
To get back on topic, I think McDavid surpassed Jagr in the playoffs and Crosby in the regular seasons. Maybe you could make the case that best case 11-12 for Crosby is as impressive as McDavid 22-23 but give 20-21 McDavid 82 games and that is even better anyway. Overall his peak and prime has combined playoff and regular season dominance in a way Jagr and Crosby never did.
 

MadLuke

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Jan 18, 2011
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League wide scoring changes might be a bit much to attribute to one player, but I think it could be possible for stars to raise their performances after a generational talent appears. In tennis Federer was all alone when he started peaking and was clearly looking like the GOAT.
That could be true and if there is a scoring race instead of taking the last game off players can push themselve a bit more to win it, but I feel this would be more Lemieux going where he would not have thought possible without Gretzky or just motivated to train and work when he saw what Gretzky did even if he was scoring 200 pts in the
league.

Effect on the elites, what possible to their eyes but not the average players, at least Gretzky seem to have had zero effect in league wise scoring and if he did not of all players.... (or maybe he had but it is completely missed, maybe the league would have turned back to defensive play faster without the OIlers, but then winnings cups inspired others and even if he did not inspire scoring to go up, they avoided a scoring decline...)

But it would be hard to know if the new best of all time influenced others or was just the first of what would have happened because of general change.

Harvey or Orr could be different, a bit like Curry shooting 3s, there it is easy to see how an influence could turn players into scoring more, going from not trying 100% to do so before to trying more after, unlike forward.

They also changed the rules ahead of 2018-19 when McDavid had won 2 straight Art Ross trophies and was lighting it up. It was clear both times that we needed higher scoring, but maybe the generational talent helped the league make changes to adress that?
That's sound more likely to me on what could happen, a bit like Mario return in 1996, is it just a coincidence that the league called more powerplays and scoring went up ? Maybe not, maybe we need to keep Mario in the league and exploit his return for TVs and gates prompted a referee meeting that summer.
 

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