Did any of them play in a 6 team league for nearly 4 decades? Did they play with all the best players from all over the world, or was it 95+% Canadians?
2nd round of the NHL playoffs was the finals.
Yes, it means far less.
Another way of looking at it is that the absolute best players were on those six teams. Farm clubs had NHL level talent. Expansion proved the point. BUT, the NHL remained definitive summit of professional hockey. Not the Olympics and not the Canada Cup.
What the Canada Cup did was introduce familiarity in so far as technology provided for it.
But aspirational migration didn't flow to Europe. Europe came to the NHL.
Consider that a number of records either remain or hover in the midst of modern records. Gretzky and Lemiuex sing Howe's and Orr's praises. Is their assessment misplaced? Naturally their bias doesn't necessarily conclude any hockey matter, but it sure provides enough reason to reassess our own biases.
Gretzky has noted McDavid's technical abilities and the speed of the game in general. In a way he's making the point that the game is beyond his abilities. But with a caveat. Always with a caveat: Technology has supplemented what Gretzky and others built on top of the foundation players like Howe and Richard cemented...on top of those who came before them.
So the league actually can't be lesser in an absolute sense. It's indivisible from the improvements. That's the nature of evolution isn't it? Going from change to necessary inevitable change? Well, that change has to have a pre-condition to move on from and without it, it does not exist.
I think the reverse scenario raises the more interesting questions:
Could Andrei Vasilevskiy get into a net and make a career out of Terry Sawchuk's means, training and equipment and do what Sawchuk did?
Would Patrick Kane have made it when Maurice Richard was terrorizing the league? Would he want any part of that environment? Without his family's support, could he rise to Richard's level while working in a railway construction factory?
We all know the stories. How we don't know them in such a way that staggers us into admiration and respect is beyond me.
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