sr edler
gold is not reality
- Mar 20, 2010
- 12,150
- 6,645
So the top 100 players project participants collectively believe Canada from 1921 to 1939 (18 years) with a population of 9-11 million, and no baby boom, put out 5 talents greater than the whole world did - inclusive of 30M Canada - in today's international NHL? I find that to be on the extreme end of unlikely.
"the whole world" is a nice sound byte but the whole world doesn't play ice hockey, and most of the world doesn't produce any hockey talent at all, it's still more or less the same niche sport today as it was in the 1960s with the same countries participating and producing talent, with a few sprinkled out exceptions such as Kopitar, Draisaitl or Josi.
Demographics is a valid point. Sweden for instance have seen a massive influx in their population from immigration the last few decades, but the absolute majority of those people come from countries where ice hockey is as culturally relevant as cricket or baseball is to native Swedes, which is very close to zero. We saw a big influx of immigrants from former Yugoslavia, for instance, in the 1970s/1980s/1990s, hence Zlatan Ibrahimovic. Guess what sport Ibrahimovic plays? The sport people in former Yugoslavia are most crazy about.
If we had seen a massive influx of people from Lithuania instead, I bet our basketball team would have been much better than it is now. Latvia is hockey crazy. Neighboring Estonia couldn't care less about the same sport.
European countries, just like Canada or the US or any place anywhere, also goes through valleys and peaks regarding hockey/sport talent. There's no linear rule. There's no rule saying Sweden must turn out a Forsberg or a Lidström every generation, there's no rule saying Czech Republic must turn out a Hasek or a Jagr every generation, just like there isn't a rule saying Germany can never turn out an Art Ross calibre player just because it's never happened before 19–20.
Sweden's generation with Forsberg/Sundin was also a bit forward heavy (Lidström notwithstanding), the generation now seems a bit more heavy in favor of defensemen (Karlsson, Hedman, Dahlin, et cetera). According to the linear rule this shouldn't really happen.