ITM
Out on the front line, don't worry I'll be fine...
- Jan 26, 2012
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Can't resolve this debate with my highly respected hockey friend. I believe he is, assuming he breaks the record before he retires.
Most people have Gretz #1, and #2 #3 and #4 are some combination of Howe, Orr, and Lemieux. When I think of other players to put in at #5 (Crosby for example), they never measure up to breaking a Gretzky scoring record like Ovechkin. Longevity also factors in. Ovechkin is threatening a rocket Richard trophy at age 39. This is simply unheard of in the modern NHL.
Well, if the debate is focused on sheer output and we're isolating goals from points, then Mike Gartner is the 7th or 8th best player in history.
Assuming he breaks Gretzky's goalscoring record, it's still by necessity an isolated, specialized, almost curated record in a way I can't think of any other organization operating under. Meaning, there seems to have been an operational mandate to help Ovechkin get towards the record - and that's fine. It's just a little odd.
But I argue its a reasonable discussion that begins to compare a grouping of players like Bobby Hull, Mike Bossy, Wayne Gretzky, Jaromir Jagr and Mario Lemieux along any number of metrics, because otherwise you begin to see things in a way that - again - says Mike Gartner's the 7th best player in history, but moreover that he's the 7th/8th best goal scorer of all-time, which I think is different from 7th/8th most prolific, again given certain necessary considerations:
What does the comparison yield when we invoke "all-time" but Richard and Hull couldn't play as many games per season as Ovechkin? Or Lemieux and Bossy and their health issues. Ovechkin's in the conversation and it looks like he'll be the most prolific goal-scorer, but in no way shape or form does that sheer output in one premier category push him past players like Jaromir Jagr or for my money, his direct contemporary opposite: Sidney Crosby as you exampled.
It's actually an argument made in the perennial top 4 you listed: Both Orr and Lemieux are not considered great for sheer output, they are considered great by a totality of consideration.
Otherwise, the Top five kicks out Orr and Lemieux and inserts Messier, Jagr and Ron Francis. But because we don't believe Mike Gartner is comparable by goal output alone and do believe Bobby Orr is a non-negotiable and but for extenuating circumstances and Mario Lemieux, similarly, would have established a likely unattainable degree of greatness for any subsequent defenseman.
To that end, many believe Bobby Orr, with Gretzky following him, is the greatest player of all time. And when you factor in the anomaly at position and with impact on the game, Gretzky's sheer numbers give way to a different, greater standard.
By accepting the standard set forth in the universally endorsed Top 4 players of all time, you accept a standard of greatness that isn't defined by sheer output and as such, don't condition Ovechkin's qualifications for greatness by whether or not he breaks one of Gretzky's records.
But if we simply deferred to sheer output, as if to illuminate how great Gretzky is and could (and is) be considered in a different tier of accepted fact unto its own without comparison because there is none, of the sixty odd records that won't be broken, is Gretzky's all-time PLAYOFFS goals record: 122.
Ovechkin is threatening the regular season record and Ovechkin is presently 15th in playoffs goals scored.
The really scary thing about Gretzky's greatness defined in totality of sheer output is that the all-time top five playoffs goal scoring list is defined by Gretzky's secondary effect:
Mark Messier is 2nd, Jarri Kurri is 3rd, and Glenn Anderson is 5th.
So even then we see how some might slot Crosby ahead of Ovechkin given the former's success in the playoffs as a driving force for championships.
This to say, in any number of ways, I think your friend's respect is well earned.