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- Oct 11, 2017
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Can someone explain me why Frank Foyston is ahead of Evgeni Malkin? I literally never heard of him before..
Can someone explain me why Frank Foyston is ahead of Evgeni Malkin? I literally never heard of him before..
Won Stanley Cups with three different franchises (could have won two with Seattle if not for the Spanish Flu), Hall of Famer (1958). Averaged one goal per Stanley Cup game that he played in.
Can someone explain me why Frank Foyston is ahead of Evgeni Malkin? I literally never heard of him before..
Keep in mind this is an all-time playoff list, so if you're not familiar with historical hockey before more recent times, you have to actually take the time to look up older guys before you assume their resumes aren't as good as more modern guys.
Also - 2017 playoffs weren't taken into account. Vote was done before. I think if this was redone now Malkin for sure comes in somewhere in the top 40 - wherever that ends up being, as 2017 was pretty significant for him.
At Worst
At worst an OT goal or assist has 1/16th of the value of winning the SC.
Obviously a homer here, but Crosby winning a 3rd straight Smythe would simply be legendary, especially in a salary cap era. Gretzky set all the major offensive records. Orr revolutionized the game from the back end. Beliveau won, and won, and won.
d.
Hypothetically speaking, does Crosby move into the top 5 here easily with a 4th Cup (3rd straight) and 3rd consecutive Smythe?
Obviously a homer here, but Crosby winning a 3rd straight Smythe would simply be legendary, especially in a salary cap era. Gretzky set all the major offensive records. Orr revolutionized the game from the back end. Beliveau won, and won, and won.
Hypothetically speaking, does Crosby move into the top 5 here easily with a 4th Cup (3rd straight) and 3rd consecutive Smythe?
Obviously a homer here, but Crosby winning a 3rd straight Smythe would simply be legendary, especially in a salary cap era. Gretzky set all the major offensive records. Orr revolutionized the game from the back end. Beliveau won, and won, and won.
Hypothetically speaking, does Crosby move into the top 5 here easily with a 4th Cup (3rd straight) and 3rd consecutive Smythe?
Don't count your penguins before they hatch. Unless someone is strictly looking at award counts and not performances, I don't know how anyone can answer that question. Is he going to win one with 19 points and a minus-2 while Logan Couture scores 30 points? Then I don't think anyone is going to care to say that he's Ted Kennedy yet.
Bernie Parent won two-straight and he didn't even make this top-40 list. Jack Darragh, basically the same.
Let's at least wait until he has more points in these three-consecutive years than Joe Sakic had in just seven rounds before we say he's easily anything.
Everyone needs to ease off on projections from current players.
The performance makes the Conn Smythe - not the other way around. No one is going to get off the 19 points and minus-2 dead horse if other people continue to assign greater value to his actual play in the 2016 playoffs than it deserves.
There is nothing monumental or historic about what he is doing. Sergei Fedorov from 1995-1998 had better two-way performances for four years. Messier for three of four years before that (1987, 1988, 1990). Trottier before him. Would anyone take Crosby's 2016 and 2017 over Gilmour's 1993 and 1994? Or even Crosby's own 2008 and 2009?
History is long, and you don't even have to look at too much of it. Acting like he should leapfrog all but four players in history because of a hypothetical Conn Smythe this year (which could mean a performance anywhere on the scale of Scott Niedermayer to Wayne Gretzky) is placing the Conn Smythe on a pedestal that it or any other trophy doesn't necessarily deserve.
People don't care about Patrick Roy's 1993 because he won the Conn Smythe, and they don't not care about Wayne Gretzky's and Doug Gilmour's 1993 because they didn't. Awards are shorthand.
Trophies matter more than you think imo.
Patrick Roy has 3 smythes. Could have 4 (maybe even 5).
Gretzky has 2 smythes. I think he should have 4 or 5. He "could" have 6.
I think - changing absolutely nothing to his performances - if Gretzky ended up with 4 or 5 smythes instead of 2 - he'd be held in even higher regard than he is now for playoffs, by quite a bit. There was a lot of discussion about Gretzky #1 here - i think there would have been less discussion and he'd have been seen as a much bigger slam dunk with 4 smythes.
You mentioned Bernie Parent. His 2 smythes is what warrants him even being up for discussion here. Chris Osgood had pretty strong back to back playoffs in 08-09. Nobody talks about him - but people talk about Parent. He was mentioned quite a few times during this project.
So yeah - Conn Smythes matter more than you think.
I doubt that anyone in this project was taking points away from him for only having two Smythes.
As for Crosby, four Cup runs, the most in his era, being the best player in three of those runs plus a 4th run that has the 2nd highest point total and highest goals total should stand up pretty well against his peers. Like his regular season resume, he doesn't have a weakness other than longevity.
It's not about taking away points from Gretzky for not having 4 smythes. But if he had 4 smythes instead of 2 - he'd get "additional points" in this project, to use your analogy.
I think Crosby deserved both of his last 2 smythes.
BUT - you can make an argument that Kessel could have won in 2016, and maybe even Malkin in 2017.
Changing nothing to Crosby's actual performances - wouldn't his resume look a lot weaker with 0 smythes than 2, even with the 4 cup runs?
Trophies matter. You have to be able to look past them and not obsess over trophy count - but acting as if trophies don't hold a lot of significance too is wrong imo.
Changing nothing to Crosby's actual performances - wouldn't his resume look a lot weaker with 0 smythes than 2, even with the 4 cup runs?
Trophies matter. You have to be able to look past them and not obsess over trophy count - but acting as if trophies don't hold a lot of significance too is wrong imo.
The performance makes the Conn Smythe - not the other way around. No one is going to get off the 19 points and minus-2 dead horse if other people continue to assign greater value to his actual play in the 2016 playoffs than it deserves.
There is nothing monumental or historic about what he is doing. Sergei Fedorov from 1995-1998 had better two-way performances for four years. Messier for three of four years before that (1987, 1988, 1990). Trottier before him. Would anyone take Crosby's 2016 and 2017 over Gilmour's 1993 and 1994? Or even Crosby's own 2008 and 2009?
History is long, and you don't even have to look at too much of it. Acting like he should leapfrog all but four players in history because of a hypothetical Conn Smythe this year (which could mean a performance anywhere on the scale of Scott Niedermayer to Wayne Gretzky) is placing the Conn Smythe on a pedestal that it or any other trophy doesn't necessarily deserve.
People don't care about Patrick Roy's 1993 because he won the Conn Smythe, and they don't not care about Wayne Gretzky's and Doug Gilmour's 1993 because they didn't. Awards are shorthand.
People want to harp, Kessel, Kessel, Kessel and guess what? Kessel was on the 3rd line.
And like it or not he's 1 of 3 players to win the Smythe in back to back years.
The Conn Smythe is an incredibly valuable trophy. Gretzky, who's #1 in this project has 2 (probably should have had 4). Roy, #2, has 3. Maurice Richard would have likely had 2-3 had the award existed. Beliveau won the inagural Smythe as a -1 btw. Another guy who would have multiple had the award existed.
Yeah, I read some of the pages of the thread. There was some interesting discussions.
Also I thought that it was a NHL list only. This is why Foyston was kind of a weird choice for me.
Foyston was one of those guys who, in an era of relatively few teams, just always seemed to be in the spotlight.
Bear in mind that during much of the time he played in the PCHA, that league was just as good if not better than the NHL. It's probably easier from a modern standpoint to think of it as Western Conference (PCHA) and Eastern Conference (NHL), and Foyston was consistently one of the very best players out west. Never quite the MVP, but he was almost always a top player on a good team, could play just about any position on the ice effectively, and was consistently the guy who put a dagger in the other team. Just a great all around player in general, though not such a superstar to be remembered at the level of an Eddie Shore or Howie Morenz.
Did I say Kessel? I said Logan Couture and Brent Burns. They had great playoffs; Crosby had a good playoff that received an award because someone on Pittsburgh had to get one. It's Patrick Kane in 2013. It's Scott Niedermayer in 2007.
It's not about liking it or not liking it; it's about assigning value to it.
Logan Couture can't win the 2016 Conn Smythe Trophy. Erik Karlsson can't win the 2017 Conn Smythe Trophy. Doug Gilmour can't win the 1993 Conn Smythe. Sergei Fedorov can't win the 1995 Conn Smythe Trophy.
But they can and did have better playoffs than Sidney Crosby in 2016 and 2017. And they should be treated as having had them, regardless of which team's representative gets a trophy because of traditional voting trends.
We looked at the strength of the performances - not the count. You said it yourself - Gretzky could have four. Richard and Beliveau could have more if it existed. Notice how no one went into a panic despite the performances not aligning perfectly with trophy distribution? You told us how valuable the Conn Smythe was and followed up by telling us three examples of why these players can't possibly be defined by it.
And it's because the trophy is not the quality of the performance. It can be used as a reference tool, but winning or not winning doesn't affect anything that happened. It's a reflection on what happened from a small group of people who usually only look at one team even though 16 played.
So yeah, nothing historic; it's trivia. And if you think a repeat of his 2016 with a Conn Smythe playoff while players on the losing team outscore him by double-digits would make him a better playoff performer than all but four players, I return your LOL with a challenge for you to articulate why his 2016-present run is historic without using the words "Conn" or "Smythe".