KlefDown
I adore Soli
- May 2, 2014
- 10,149
- 8,797
The thing a lot of people forget about McDavid is he has never once in his career had a more productive first half of the season than back half. McDavid just keeps getting better as the year goes on where as with Leon I can see him tapering off a bit saving himself for the playoffs.Guy is insane and a beast on the puck. Treat to watch.
Cant see McDavid beating him for the art ross with his play at this point and kuch and McKinnon also consistently blowing him out of the water. 1 assist for McDavid while big three all had massive nights
Leading (or second to McDavid) for Art Ross/Rocket with some separation by mid-season from his peers wouldn't be too out of the question I hope, especially in the next 8 years, but to me the keyword is separation. Is that reasonable?
McDavids points are being inflated playing with Draisaitl too, they have a type of chemistry that helps both players become better.oh thats not what Im saying, Drai is a top 5 player maybe even top 3. just I dont know how your points dont get inflated a little playing with the best player in the world even if its just on the PP> its just going to result in higher point totals. does Drai need him though? no for sure he doesnt
no player is perfect, even McDavid has areas he can work on. like faceoffs lol
Weren’t you the one who said McDavid wouldn’t hit 150 then hid away after he did?. At this point betting the opposite of what you say on McDavid is safer than investing in treasury securities.Guy is insane and a beast on the puck. Treat to watch.
Cant see McDavid beating him for the art ross with his play at this point and kuch and McKinnon also consistently blowing him out of the water. 1 assist for McDavid while big three all had massive nights
has nothing to do with Edmonton in general. its pretty simple. McDavid inflates his numbersThis the classic 'this team would suck if you take away their best player argument'. It applies to every team in the NHL. I totally agree with your point but if they had Bozak, they'd still have 7 million in cap space (using his highest cap hit).
But, yes, 100%, if you replace the best player on a team with a shittier one (no knock on Bozak but that is a hell of dropoff) then the team will be worse and individual point totals will go down.
no 100% as well it goes both ways not just one wayMcDavids points are being inflated playing with Draisaitl too, they have a type of chemistry that helps both players become better.
I didn't include those because you specifically referenced 2008 and 2009 cup finals suggesting that the reason that the Pens were successful is that Crosby and Malkin played little together and that the team was successful because they produced so well apart. In fact, the stats don't show that the pair out produced McDavid and Draisaitl apart or together.
In the 2007-2008 through 2008-2009 playoffs here are the numbers in terms of team production:
Crosby and Malkin together:
TOI 68 GF/60 5.28
Crosby without Malkin
TOI 585 GF/60 2.66
Malkin without Crosby
TOI 582 GF/60 2.92
For McDavid and Leon the last three years.
McDavid and Draisaitl
TOI 374 GF/60 6.1
McDavid without Draisaitl
TOI 545 GF/60 3.41
Draisaitl without McDavid
TOI 476 GF/60 2.65
It should also be noted that the numbers for Draisaitl and McDavid together are somewhat skewed by the injuries Draisaitl had in both 2023 and 2024 playoffs. This is especially true in 2023 where Leon had a significant high ankle sprain that made it difficult for him to play center on his own line.
The other thing that needs to be noted is that pp goals count. Malkin and Crosby played almost exclusively together on the pp and with the two on the ice the pens put up 9.6 GF/60. Similarly the Oilers duo also played mostly exclusively together and in their case the pp scoring rate was 12.53 GF/60.
Winning is a team accomplishment. If the team could win simply from two stars producing with or without one another, the Oilers would have won multiple cups.
What you are leaving out is that we are on the edge of a huge potential inflationary period right now as the cap normalizes following the pandemic so comparing new deals with legacy contracts needs context. Any time a player signs a long term deal you have to expect that the money up front will be more than what comparable players are getting on legacy contract. This is especially true when the cap is rising significantly. Right now he is at $8.5M. When that deal was signed many thought it was an over payment. Of course Draisaitl was not the same player he is today but it was also signed at a time when the cap was expected to rise. Even with the pandemic causing several years of little or no growth in the cap inflation made his deal look ridiculously good. Had the pandemic not happened it is quite reasonable to believe that we would be sitting with a cap over $100M right now based on reported revenues. Had the cap been $10-15M higher when McKinnon signed his deal what do you think he would have gotten?Thank you for some numbers.
For what it's worth, I didn't say it was not deserved, I said he'll be the most expensive of all of them despite not necessarily separating himself from Kucherov, MacKinnon, Kaprizov on a regular basis.
As your own post shows, he's not typically first in any given category but obviously in the 2-5 range consistently, but next year his contract will lead the League (however temporary that might be with regards to McDavid et al.) and while I'm aware he's already a major personal award winner, the Oilers are paying him to (co?)lead the League in categories en route to a hopeful Cup win on this contract.
If the argument that this is his possible retirement contract and it's payment for services and accomplishments already rendered, I don't know how I feel about that but it's good for players to get paid and he's far from the least deserving on the performance scale.
He's amazing value at 8.5 obviously.
My point was in the first post, not in the reply - it's his next contract that doesn't quite deliver on value based on current and recent body of work, and to be clear I'm not just talking about cap%.
Leading (or second to McDavid) for Art Ross/Rocket with some separation by mid-season from his peers wouldn't be too out of the question I hope, especially in the next 8 years, but to me the keyword is separation. Is that reasonable?
Let's not cite my post like it's the furthest thing from being topically related. Performance metrics are always going to be assessed hand-in-hand with contract value in a salary cap league. I honestly have no idea why you bothered to reply other than your fingers were getting cold or trying to hit your daily post quota.
I am fully aware of the flaws in using /60 numbers to compare individuals. The main one being that over a season points are not linear in time played. but I not using /60 numbers to evaluate individual scoring rates over a season but rather the team's scoring rate while those players were on the ice. With relatively large sample sizes that major flaws in /60 stats go away in this circumstance. I did this because your claim, which is what I was responding to, was predicated on the production of the pair away from one another being factors in leading the team to success. Individual scoring matters but in the end success of the team comes form how the whole squad performs when they are on the ice./60 stats are flawed and even moreso when comparing from different seasons. In their era, Crosby and Malkin put up elite numbers at ES for their era without each other in '08 and '09.
BTW, Malkin was injured in Game 1 of the 2008 ECF. At the time he was leading the playoffs in scoring with 8 goals and 17 points through 10 games (five point shares with Crosby).
Like McDavid, both Crosby and Malkin, when he was healthy, produced regardless of who they are playing with. Draisaitl notably has not put up elite numbers at ES in the playoffs without McDavid.
The 2009 Cup win by the Pens came with arguably the worst supporting cast outside of the top 2 forwards in NHL history. They doubled the next best Pen scorer in both the regular season and in the playoffs.
Like McDavid, both Crosby and Malkin, when he was healthy, produced regardless of who they were playing with. Draisaitl notably has not put up elite numbers at ES in the playoffs without McDavid.
I don't see Draisaitl, at his peak, on Malkin's tier.
Here is the other things that needs to be emphasized: The fact that Draisaitl and McDavid are so good together while Crosby and Malkin don't work nearly as well is a testament to Draisaitl's ability to adjust his game to McDavid's style. He should get credit for that, not have his accomplishments diminished for it.
You have no evidence to support your argument so you call it spin. I guess we should simply take your unbiased word for it. Thank you for the enlightening discussion.This is merely a spin on the fact that most of the time, the Oilers cannot not roll an effective Top 6 unlike the Pens, Avs and Wings could which directly lead to team success.
And no, throwing out the names of other players on the Avs and Wings in the pre-Cap era doesn't change this.
Draisaitl is a great player. He possibly could be viewed in the same light as Kucherov and MacKinnon as the #2 player over the past 7/8 years if he continues his play this year into the playoffs with another deep run.
But Malkin still reached a level above those players.
Because those were the seasons you brought up?Not sure why you didn't include any seasons from 2009 to 2014 and include info about McDrai prior to 22/23 but regardless, the main point was about their playoff success (four SCFs) without spending hardly any time at ES and producing, and sometimes carrying 3rd line/4th line level linemates.
McDrai have been more of a duo than a two headed monster and there really isn't a huge similarity between them and Crosby/Malkin, or other great 2C combos like Sakic/Forsberg and Yzerman/Federov.