Video Nasty
Registered User
- Mar 12, 2017
- 5,891
- 10,348
It’s nice reading great posts from time to time. This guy provides facts, not biased opinions
I respect @Hockey Outsider because he provides stuff like that, but the facts actually are biased opinions. Rankings from sports rags and opinions from hockey GM’s (all flawed humans with skin in the game and egos to stroke) are exactly that.
Jagr was perceived as selfish at times on ice, a malcontent during his latter Pittsburgh years, was totally listless and uninterested (from dragging around a Pittsburgh corpse) until Super Mario came back as a late Christmas present in 2000, and then was lackluster in Washington. Of course GMs are going to prefer one player over another at certain points. A bunch of idiots in baseball hated Barry Bonds for reasons beyond PEDs…like how he wouldn’t dance for them.
These rankings mean something, but it’s clear who was the better player. Jagr was the best player to debut after Gretzky and Lemieux all the way up until McDavid came along. Forsberg never approached that level and if he ever did, it was briefly for a second half of play in 2002-2003.
I was obsessive about watching the Avalanche back then due to the sheer talent on the squad. In real time, I never considered Forsberg to wrestle the mantle away from Jagr, because in real time, you don’t know how everything unfolds. Jagr’s first year in Washington was viewed as an anomaly, a down season, partly because of injury, partly because of change of scenery. Then he had a lackluster first half of 2002-2003 (Forsberg wasn’t much better) and then caught fire with 11 points in 2 games and caused everyone to say that’s it, he’s back on track. Not quite. Meanwhile, Forsberg misses a season and a half during Jagr’s three season Washington tenure (and part of NYR), then boom, lockout.
What’s being ignored is that Hasek, Lindros, and Kariya had their time in the spot light as well.