Protas Zealots
Registered User
If its a fracture why wouldn't it be immobilized/in a cast? Seems like it would be best to absolutely max out his rehab and come back swinging by Christmas. On a side note holy shit am I glad its not his knee
You don't always put a cast on a broken bone. Must mean it's basically still together ( non displaced)If its a fracture why wouldn't it be immobilized/in a cast? Seems like it would be best to absolutely max out his rehab and come back swinging by Christmas. On a side note holy shit am I glad its not his knee
Yeah, must be closer to a hairline fracture like Kypreos first reported earlier in the week.You don't always put a cast on a broken bone. Must mean it's basically still together ( non displaced)
Somewhere, someone was talking about durability. Here's how Ovechkin ranks (as of today - November 10th, 2024) among players during their first 20 seasons (games played divided by games on the schedule):
Players Games Max Percentage Larry Murphy 1,558 1,586 98.2%Patrick Marleau 1,575 1,606 98.1%Nicklas Lidstrom 1,564 1,608 97.3%Jaroma Iginla 1,554 1,606 96.8%Alex Ovechkin 1,440 1,499 96.1%Scott Stevens 1,516 1,590 95.3%Wayne Gretzky 1,487 1,584 93.9%Ron Francis 1,489 1,588 93.8%Jaromir Jagr 1,473 1,572 93.7%Brendan Shanahan 1,490 1,600 93.1%Mark Recchi 1,490 1,602 93.0%Joe Thornton 1,493 1,606 93.0%Doug Gilmour 1,474 1,592 92.6%Rod Brind'Amour 1,484 1,604 92.5%Stan Mikita 1,376 1,498 91.9%Ray Bourque 1,453 1,584 91.7%Shane Doan 1,466 1,606 91.3%Glen Wesley 1,457 1,600 91.1%Mike Modano 1,459 1,604 91.0%Dave Andreycchuk 1,443 1,590 90.8%
It's an interesting mix. You have some power forwards (Ovechkin, Iginla, Shanahan, Doan, half of Mikita's career). Forwards who aren't huge hitters, but are good two-way players (Gilmour, Francis, Modano). Excellent two-way defensemen (Bourque, Lidstrom, Stevens). A few forwards who are big and strong, but not aggressive (Jagr, Thornton). There's only one player who I'd say is relatively soft (Marleau).
Note - I haven't filtered out "false starts". So Chris Chelios's 12 games in 1985 counts against him. I don't have any way to calculate this though.
(EDIT - I just realized the database I pulled this from only starts in 1960, and stops at 2020 - except for Ovechkin, who I calculated manually since we're mid-season. So there are a few players missing - Gordie Howe being the most obvious. I just calculated he's at 97.0%, which would rank him 4th here. In any event, this table covers six decades, and presumably highlights just how rare Ovechkin's durability has been).
If its a fracture why wouldn't it be immobilized/in a cast? Seems like it would be best to absolutely max out his rehab and come back swinging by Christmas. On a side note holy shit am I glad its not his knee
I like this approach, but you'll probably get a more realistic estimate if you use data from prior years as well. Ovechkin was shooting nearly 24% through his first 18 games (which is more than 10% above his career average). Even if he comes back perfectly healthy, there's no conceivable way he'll maintain that pace.I took Ovi's goal scoring pace this season so far and ran it through a Monte Carlo simulation. If we assume Ovi maintains the same scoring pace after he returns from injury and he remains healthy, it's almost assured that he'll break the record this year. In the worst case scenario where he's out the full six weeks, he would return for the Jan. 4th game vs the Rangers. That would leave 44 games left in the season for him which puts the probability at 97%.
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That's on media. Listen they call him "Ovechkin obviously is not the reason of the caps success". Ovechkin out 4-6 weeks for Capitals with broken leg | NHL.comhe is not getting enough recognition as main engine for the Caps
team | with-w/o | player | GP | P% | P% impact |
WSH | with | Alexander Ovechkin | 1444 | .611 | +.152 |
WSH | w/o | Alexander Ovechkin | 61 | .459 | |
EDM | with | Connor McDavid | 663 | .581 | +.123 |
EDM | w/o | Connor McDavid | 59 | .458 | |
NYI | with | Mike Bossy | 752 | .633 | +.091 |
NYI | w/o | Mike Bossy | 48 | .542 | |
EDM/LAK | with | Wayne Gretzky* | 1173 | .587 | +.087 |
EDM/LAK | w/o | Wayne Gretzky* | 83 | .500 | |
DET | with | Gordie Howe* | 1687 | .549 | +.040 |
DET | w/o | Gordie Howe* | 57 | .509 | |
PIT | with | Mario Lemieux* | 745 | .540 | +.033 |
PIT | w/o | Mario Lemieux* | 275 | .507 | |
MTL | with | Maurice Richard | 978 | .609 | +.007 |
MTL | w/o | Maurice Richard | 172 | .602 | |
PIT | with | Sidney Crosby | 1295 | .605 | |
PIT | w/o | Sidney Crosby | 213 | .634 | –.029 |
Insane
Russian machine never breaksGuy breaks his leg at 39 and is healed enough to start skating 2 weeks later. What a beast.
When his career is over he should be on the NHL's Mount Rushmore.
This aged very poorly.The Caps are nothing without its captain.
0-2 since without Ovechkin