Felidae
Registered User
- Sep 30, 2016
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The issue with these "overlap" comparisons is that their peaks never overlapped.
At their very best, Jagr 98/99 to 99/00 (144 games) and Forsberg 02/03 to 03/04 (114 games), Jagr is still a clear tier above IMO based on how much of a gap they created between them and the field. I consider a tier to be a PPG or points that is 10% better.
Jagr's best full season (98/99) is more clearly a tier above Forsberg's best full (02/03).
Forsberg was not on Crosby/Jagr tier offensively and he had plenty of opportunities to show that he was before 02/03. For sure the gap with Jagr closes when 2-way play is considered. But it can arguably widen when quality of team and linemates are considered.
And it is very arguable that a "healthy" Forsberg simply does not exist. Like Lindros, he seemed destined to have an injury-filled career based on his playing style.
Sure, Forsberg had plenty of opportunity before those seasons. But it's pretty clear that 2002 and 2003 is the best version of Forsberg from an offensive standpoint. (Led the league in PPG, and the seperation against his competition was larger than in previous seasons
omitting 2002 for Forsberg is like omitting Joe Thornton and Henrik Sedins art ross seasons. It Paints a very incomplete picture, sometimes player peaks later.
I'm also not arguing that Forsberg is on Jagrs level offensively. Only that the timeframe that Ben White used is more accurate than the one from Bobholly.