Dekes For Days
Registered User
- Sep 24, 2018
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Results matter, but you seem to incorrectly think point totals with zero context are the only results that matter, and they're not.Matthews and marner were failures in that series.
Results are all that matter, not advanced stats, not pretty stickwork, not being idolized by the fanbase.
Funny enough, the Matthews/Marner line in that series was +2 at 5v5, and the Nylander line was +1. Nylander's line scored twice as many goals (mainly because the Matthews line hit a league leading number of posts), but also allowed 5 times as many goals. Nylander had worse linemates, but he also had easier quality of competition, going primarily up against secondary defensive units and the young offensively-minded Suzuki, instead of the likes of Weber and one of the best defensive centers in the league in Danault. His line was also healthy, while the top line had two injured players on it.
Is better offensive play, better defensive play, and better net results, with better, injured linemates against tougher competition better, or is worse offensive play, worse defensive play, worse net results, with worse, healthy linemates against easier competition better because they picked up a few more points?
In man-advantage situations, Matthews picked up 3 points, Nylander picked up 2, and Marner picked up 1, but they all played together in those situations, contributing to the result. I'm not sure how much you can allocate impact based entirely on points picked up in that small sample, and Marner also brought elite PK impacts that the others did not, so either way, Nylander doesn't really have anything on them in regards to special teams play.
And then Nylander picked up one extra point into an empty net, which doesn't really mean anything.
Nylander has a case as the more impactful player in that series, and that series alone, but it's not a slam dunk by any means.