First -- understand that I'm not saying Kuhnhackl isn't a great player. He's being compared to some of the greatest players of all time here, so everything is relative.
Cherry picking a couple of points of data that were posted in the discussion threads by the forumer Robert Gordon Orr
International scoring data:
Player
|
Country
|
Years
|
Games
|
Goals
|
Assists
|
Points
1.Aleksander Maltsev |Soviet Union|1969-1983| 137|98| 95|
193
|
2.Valeri Kharlamov |Soviet Union|1969-1980| 123|89| 102|
191
|
3.Sergei Makarov |Soviet Union|1978-1991| 145|82| 100|
182
|
4.Boris Mikhailov |Soviet Union|1969-1980| 120|108| 72|
180
|
5.Vladimir Petrov |Soviet Union|1969-1981| 117|82| 85|
167
|
6.Josef Maleček |Czechoslovakia|1922-1940| 80|97| 62|
159
|
7.Sven ‘Tumba’ Johansson |Sweden|1952-1966| 97|86| 56|
142
|
8.Vyacheslav Fetisov |Soviet Union/Russia|1977-1996| 139|51| 93|
144
|
9.Vladimir Krutov |Soviet Union|1980-1989| 112|74| 64|
138
|
10.Vladimir Martinec |Czechoslovakia|1970-1981| 118|68| 67|
135
|
11.Vladimir Zábrodský |Czechoslovakia|1947-1956| 44|78| 44|
132
|
12.Anatoli Firsov |Soviet Union|1964-1972| 67|66| 51|
117
|
13.Jiři Holik |Czechoslovakia|1964-1977|142|59| 58|
117
|
14.Veniamin Aleksandrov |Soviet Union|1957-1968| 76|68| 48|
116
|
15.Riccardo ’Bibi’ Torriani |Switzerland|1928-1948| 69|62| 52|
114
|
16.Václav Nedomanský |Czechoslovakia|1965-1974| 93|78| 32|
110
|
17.Ville Peltonen |Finland|1994-2010| 145|46| 62|
108
|
18.Vlastimil Bubnik |Czechoslovakia|1952-1964| 63|60| 45|
105
|
19.Erich Kühnhackl |West Germany|1972-1985| 90|55| 50|
105
|
20.Ivan Hlinka|Czechoslovakia|1970-1981| 108|53| 52|
105
|
21.Uli Poltéra |Switzerland|1947-1954| 54|72| 31|
103
|
22.Aleksander Yakushev |Soviet Union|1967-1979| 93|63| 40|
103
|
23.Sergei Kapustin |Soviet Union|1974-1983| 97|63| 40|
103
|
24.Teemu Selänne |Finland|1991-2014| 96|54| 48|
102
|
25.Jaromir Jágr |Czechosl./Czech R.|1990-| 121|47| 55|
102
|
26.Vladimir Vikulov |Soviet Union|1966-1976| 79|55| 46|
101
|
27.Ronald ‘Sura Pelle’ Pettersson |Sweden|1955-1967| 87|52| 49|
99
|
28.Vyacheslav Bykov |Soviet Union/Russia|1983-1995| 108|47| 50|
97
|
29.Andrei Khomutov |Soviet Union/Russia|1981-1995| 122|45| 52|
97
|
30.Ilya Kovalchuk |Russia|2002-| 111|44| 52|
96
|
31.Vyacheslav Starshinov |Soviet Union|1961-1971| 79|64| 31|
95
|
32.Mats Sundin |Sweden|1990-2006| 79|43| 51|
94
|
33.Saku Koivu |Finland|1993-2010| 89|30| 64|
94
|
34.Milan Nový |Czechoslovakia|1975-1982| 86|53| 40|
93
|
35.Aleksei Kasatonov |Soviet Union|1980-1991| 125|28| 65|
93
|
36.Nisse Nilsson |Sweden|1956-1967| 63|58| 34|
92
|
37.Gerd Truntschka |W. Germany/Germany|1979-1993| 108|31| 59|
90
|
38.Miroslav Å atan |Slovakia|1994-2014| 117|47| 42|
89
|
39.Raimo Helminen|Finland|1984-2002| 140|18| 70|
88
|
40.Konstantin Loktev |Soviet Union|1957-1966| 55|50| 36|
86
|
41.Ulf Sterner |Sweden|1960-1973| 87|47| 39|
86
|
42.Dieter Hegen |W. Germany/Germany|1982-1998| 147|55| 29|
84
|
43.Vladimir Shadrin |Soviet Union|1970-1977| 71|41| 43|
84
|
44.Igor Larionov |Soviet Union/Russia|1982-2002| 98|36| 47|
83
|
45.Wayne Gretzky |Canada|1981-1998| 55|26| 56|
82
|
46.Ferdinand ‘Pic’ Cattini |Switzerland|1933-1949| 60|53| 28|
81
|
47.Tord Lundström |Sweden|1965-1976| 92|46| 34|
80
|
48.Viktor Zhluktov |Soviet Union|1976-1983| 88|36| 44|
80
|
49.Daniel Alfredsson|Sweden|1995-2014| 92|32| 47|
79
|
50.Evgeny Malkin|Russia|2005-| 69|37| 40|
77
|
So taking that data and translating it to PPG, and ONLY comparing Kuhnhackl to players of the 1970s and 1980s:
Kharlamov - 1.55
Mikhailov - 1.50
Petrov - 1.43
Maltsev - 1.41
Vikulov - 1.28
Krutov - 1.23
Makarov - 1.23
Shadrin - 1.18
Kuhnhackl - 1.17
Now consider, how did Kuhnhackl actually rack up those numbers? Who were his opponents?
Versus...
|
GP
|
G
|
A
|
P
Finland|17|15|8|23
United States|10|7|9|16
Czechoslovakia|10|10|3|13
East Germany|8|4|6|10
Italy|4|2|7|9
Poland|6|7|2|9
Yugoslavia|1|3|1|4
Canada|5|2|2|4
Soviet Union|10|0|4|4
Romania|2|1|2|3
Netherlands|2|1|1|2
Sweden|11|1|1|2
So he scored only .64 PPG in performances against the top-3 European opponents (SU, Cze, Swe) plus Canada.
Now, that doesn't reduce his case as much as it may seem at first glance. .64 PPG against that level of competition is still very, very good. But it puts his overall numbers into perspective when you see that they were rather inflated from playing on a bad team, and therefore playing a disproportionate number of games against teams like Finland and the USA, rather than constantly taking on the Canadians and Soviets in championship matches.
So we have a player who seems to be comfortably around 10th best of his generation (1970s, early 1980s). Understand that we are covering a 70-year period from the 1920s to around 1990, with Kuhnhackl's era being probably the deepest and most important. A player who was 10th best in the 1950s would not have made the list. One who was 10th best in the 1970s or 1980s would make the list, but at the low end, which is exactly where he landed.