My original question was whether or not there’s a ceiling on Connor’s ranking if he never wins a cup. Sounds like you and most others don’t believe there is.
It’s my opinion/observation that until recently, cup wins were seen as crucial to an “all time great” player’s legacy — much in the same way that the ranking of NFL QB’s is skewed heavily by # of Super Bowl wins.
As it pertains to NHL players, I find it interesting that that philosophy seems to have shifted dramatically in the last 6-7 years, such that cup wins are no longer seen as a critical piece to a player’s resume.
The 6-7 years ago ago that you’re talking about almost perfectly lines up with a player like Crosby being awarded up to two Conn Smythes, despite arguably not being the best player on his team in two of the Penguins’ Cup runs. Many feared he’d never win one, even though opportunities initially seemed plentiful after Malkin winning it in 2009.
Comparisons grew more nuanced as people recognized the situation McDavid was drafted into, realizing the burden he carries far exceeds anything Crosby faced. They understand that if McDavid delivered only 2 goals and 14 points across 19 Stanley Cup Final games over three Cup wins like Crosby, his team wouldn’t be pulling him to victory.
People have rightfully called out that Howe played only half a game in his first Cup win and claimed three more when there were just five other teams and all it took was beating up average to below average Leafs teams to make the Finals.
Mario had the luxury of a team that could thrive even when he missed nearly half of the games across both Cup seasons, and still defeated the #1 Rangers in a series with him mostly out (and missing 7 total playoff games during this back to back wins), only to face weaker SCF opponents like the #15 seed North Stars.
Fans also acknowledge that players the next level or two down like Yzerman and Sakic wouldn’t have won without stacked, cap-free rosters.
With half a career likely still ahead, McDavid’s time is coming—maybe even within the next eight months. No player of his caliber has ended up Cupless, and it’s unlikely he’ll set a new precedent in that way.
The tired no Cup arguments will end soon, and then we can move on to hearing about the goal posts being moved, and he now needs 2, then 3, and so on.