895
Registered User
- Jun 15, 2007
- 8,929
- 8,503
Intuitively this makes sense. As players get older, more injured, as they lose speed, they have to compensate for this somehow to remain elite. This compensation comes in the form of playing smarter, better decision making, picking spots, etc. Therefore a player who remains elite until late 30s or early 40s probably has very high hockey iq.
When you look at players who remained elite until late 30s and 40s, you see guys like Lidstrom, Chelios, Bourque, etc. All known to have high hockey iq. Larionov, "the professor" despite being only 5'9" was an effective player into his 40s.
Meanwhile you have guys like Subban, Cheechoo, Heatley, etc, who had a few elite seasons and then fell off a cliff. I think we can reasonably infer they didn't have high hockey iq.
I think Ovechkin doing what he's doing at age 39 shows his hockey IQ is probably underrated. People like to contrast the physical dynamo Ovechkin with the cerebral tactician Crosby and this is true mostly but Ovechkin's smarts are underrated, as well as Crosby's immense physical gifts.
Can anyone think of low hockey iq players who had a long and productive player? Or a very smart player who declined early? Wayne Gretzky, despite being the greatest hockey player of all time and widely considered the smartest, declined a couple of years earlier than you might expect.
When you look at players who remained elite until late 30s and 40s, you see guys like Lidstrom, Chelios, Bourque, etc. All known to have high hockey iq. Larionov, "the professor" despite being only 5'9" was an effective player into his 40s.
Meanwhile you have guys like Subban, Cheechoo, Heatley, etc, who had a few elite seasons and then fell off a cliff. I think we can reasonably infer they didn't have high hockey iq.
I think Ovechkin doing what he's doing at age 39 shows his hockey IQ is probably underrated. People like to contrast the physical dynamo Ovechkin with the cerebral tactician Crosby and this is true mostly but Ovechkin's smarts are underrated, as well as Crosby's immense physical gifts.
Can anyone think of low hockey iq players who had a long and productive player? Or a very smart player who declined early? Wayne Gretzky, despite being the greatest hockey player of all time and widely considered the smartest, declined a couple of years earlier than you might expect.
Last edited: