daver
Registered User
- Apr 4, 2003
- 26,790
- 6,567
Now you’re just being childish
You think ignoring whole seasons of data isn't?
Now you’re just being childish
This doesn’t contradict my post, still 2 reg seasons and 2 playoffs where he was at Jagr level offensively
Well, he was at the time the only player in history to lead the playoffs in scoring despite not playing in the finals, and he did it both in 1999 and 2002, so to say he wasn’t a very top tier offensive producer in these 2 playoffs is just really weird.No, he wasn't. There is no way you spin the stats to make this claim.
As for playoffs, by what metric are using and is that same metric also applied to Sakic?
No, it’s absolutely necessary to (to a large degree) ignore full seasons when evaluating injury prone players with highly fragmented careers.You think ignoring whole seasons of data isn't?
No injury prone players are just that, injury prone, being available to play is a big part of a career.No, it’s absolutely necessary to (to a large degree) ignore full seasons when evaluating injury prone players with highly fragmented careers.
Jagr's peak was the 1999 calendar year. He scored 1.81 PPG. The next closest players were HOF'ers at/near their peaks (Bure at 1.36, Sakic at 1.34, and Selanne at 1.30). He's 33% ahead of 2nd place, and 62% ahead of 10th place.Again, using “peak seasons” instead of “peak play” more or less automatically disqualifies every injury prone player from every hypothetical player comparison in history, save for maybe Lemieux and Orr, and nobody says Forsberg or Lindros or Malkin is on their level. However they are on Jagr’s level, if your’re actually interested in digging into facts with a curious mindset looking for contexts and revealing facts, which you are clearly not, instead of glossing them over with worn out misleading arguments which fits your preset agenda, which is clearly what you do in every post.
Periods in time when Forsberg clearly played on Jagr’s top level or above:
2002 playoffs
1999 playoffs
2003 reg season
2004 reg season
2005(-06) reg season pre injury
1998 reg season pre injury
1997 reg season pre injury
Forsberg’s prime was fragmented and cut short by injuries, we all know that, but we have more than enough data to know his peak level and that was on par with Jagr’s
Periods in time when Forsberg clearly played on Jagr’s top level or above:
2005(-06) reg season pre injury
1998 reg season pre injury
1997 reg season pre injury
Jagr's peak was the 1999 calendar year. He scored 1.81 PPG. The next closest players were HOF'ers at/near their peaks (Bure at 1.36, Sakic at 1.34, and Selanne at 1.30). He's 33% ahead of 2nd place, and 62% ahead of 10th place.
Did Forsberg ever separate himself from the pack to such an extent? The best timeframe I can find for him was his 2004 season (when he finished 21% ahead of 2nd place in PPG, and 35% ahead of 10th place). Is there another timeframe we should be using?
Granted, Forsberg was a better defensive player than Jagr, so he wouldn't need the same separation offensively to match Jagr's overall performance. But Jagr outscored his peers by a significantly larger margin (62% ahead of 10th place vs 35%). Or if you want raw numbers - 1.81 vs 1.41 PPG in similar scoring environments (Jagr was 28% ahead). Jagr maintained this over twice as many games (84 games in calendar 1999 vs just 39 for Forsberg in 2004). Jagr was by far a better goal-scorer. And the competition at the top was clearly stronger for Jagr (Bure, Sakic, Selanne, Lindros and Forsberg) than for Forsberg (the top five were Palffy, Savard, St. Louis, Lang, and Tanguay). If we're going to cherry-pick partial seasons for Forsberg, we should do the same thing for Jagr.
It's already been shown that Forsberg's best stretch of hockey wasn't on Jagr's level, how about we put your "pre-injury" Forsberg narrative to bed.
1997: pre-injury PPG of 1.39 vs. Jagr's pre-injury PPG of 1.55.
1998: pre-injury (Game 68) PPG of 1.25 vs. Jagr's PPG of 1.32 (his weakest full season Art Ross win)
2005: pre-injury PPG of 1.86 (tied with Spezza and Alfredsson thru 21 games who finished 3rd and 4th in scoring). It's completely unreasonable to think Forsberg can keep up that pace.