I was being kind when I said struggling to stay around a PPG.
Scoring being marginally lower from 2010-2011 through 2016-2017 than it was from 2007-2008 through 2009-2010–Ovechkin’s pure peak as a player—doesn’t explain three instances of well-below PPG and two instances of at or a fraction of a point above during those seven seasons.
Scoring levels declining 3-4% doesn’t explain away a player who only just turned 25 years old going from 1.42 PPG to 0.96 PPG over the next 7 seasons, a slash of 32%.
I don’t know why it’s hard for Ovechkin fans to admit that the on-ice version we were treated to was a night and day difference, and it was premature for an all-timer. There’s no excuse for Ovechkin cracking 80 points just five times since the end of his age 24 season.
With all due respect, I think you are:
a) Grossly underestimating how much scoring went down in the DPE 2.0
b) Being blinded by how much higher scoring is now with the changes to goalies/penalties etc
As you can see, there was a large ~10% cut in in scoring for elite players from 2008-2010 vs. 2011-2017. Followed by a MASSIVE jump in scoring to today's levels.
| Avg 5th in pts | Avg 10th in pts | Avg 30th in pts |
2008 to 2010 | 95 | 87 | 74 |
2011 to 2017 | 85 | 77 | 66 |
2022 to 2024 | 110 | 99 | 79 |
| | | |
11/17 vs 08/10 | -10% | -11% | -11% |
22/24 vs 11/17 | 28% | 28% | 21% |
| 5th | 10th | 30th |
2011 | 91 | 77 | 66 |
2012 | 83 | 78 | 67 |
2013(proj) | 94 | 83 | 70 |
2014 | 82 | 79 | 65 |
2015 | 81 | 73 | 64 |
2016 | 82 | 77 | 63 |
2017 | 85 | 75 | 64 |
2018 | 97 | 89 | 75 |
2019 | 100 | 96 | 78 |
Look, I'm not denying that Ovechkin was less of a player than he was during his peak. Everybody knows that, but 100% the fact that his post-peak came in one of the lowest scoring era's of all-time definitely hurts no-context analysis of his career.
Yes Ovechkin had a couple down years (which weren't nearly as bad when you consider the placements in todays terms of points/goals), but he followed it up with 4 straight rockets, where for the first 3 of them, he averaged 5th in points placements. Then boom - after that the guy was already 31 years old.
If Ovechkin just continued to be 1st-3rd in points, we'd be talking about the greatest hockey player of all-time. The only reason he's top 6-10 and not top-1 is because he stopped being the #1 point producer in the league.
For reference, if you look at his post-peak point and goal finishes, and then compare what the average points/goals were for the exact same finishes from the last 3 seasons are, a lot of these "oh he barely stayed above a point/gp" discussions would be moot. Ovechkin literally played half of his prime where being a point per game made you a top 5-7 point producer in the league.
Season | Age | Goals Rank | Points Rank | Equivalent finish - goals | Equivalent finish - points. |
2011 | 25 | 14th | 7th | 41 | 107 |
2012 | 26 | 5th | 37th | 49 | 77 |
2013 | 27 | 1st | 3rd | 64 | 120 |
2014 | 28 | 1st | 8th | 64 | 104 |
2015 | 29 | 1st | 4th | 64 | 114 |
2016 | 30 | 1st | 15th | 64 | 93 |
2017 | 31 | 13th | 20th | 41 | 87 |
2018 | 32 | 1st | 11th | 64 | 98 |
2019 | 33 | 1st | 15th | 64 | 93 |
2020 | 34 | 1st | 18th | 64 | 89 |