I'm 100% certain you are wrong.
There is zero evidence to support your opinion. In roughly 20 peak seasons combined between those three guys, none of them ever achieved what you assert they could, even though the NHL had fewer teams and was weaker back then. It simply doesn't stand to reason.
Gretzky, Lemieux, and Orr never won a cup without a far stronger team around them (massive understatement) than what Ovie had in the 2007-2010 Capitals. Gretzky's supporting cast was so good they won one without him. Those Capitals teams had zero other hall of famers on them (or maybe 1 fringe guy if you count Backstrom), bad coaching, terrible blue liners, and bad goaltending. Offense was never the problem.
We're looking at the same thing and interpreting it differently. At some point - arguing back and forth over this becomes an exercise in futility.
But just to clarify - Lemieux hit his peak around 1988. Within 5 years, he had 2 cups and 2 of the best smythe performances of all time.
Gretzky hit his peak around 81 or 82 - by 84 and 85 he had 2 cups and 2 of the best smythe performances of all time.
Orr hit his peak around 1970 - by 1972 he had 2 cups, and 2 of the best smythe performances of all time.
Those players peaking at that time made their team, and their teammates, so much better. Messier, Kurri, Esposito, Jagr....all fantastic players in their own right, very talented. Playing alongside with the peak of those guys helped them become even better, and produce more, and gain a ton of experience that helped them a lot as they continued their career after.
So you saying none of them never achieved what I assert they could simply comes down to interpreting things differently - because to me all 3 achieved exactly what I said.
And i'd say - dump any of those 3 players on any team ever during their 4-6 year peak window - and odds are they manage to win at least 1 cup (Oilers were quite good, they won 4. A weaker roster maybe doesn't win 4 - but with Gretzky peaking, i'm convinced he'd win at least 1).
Caps were a good roster in the 2010s. 100% any of those 3 players (even if you swap them out for Ovi) bring them to 1 cup each.
I even think that if you put either Gretzky, Orr or Lemieux on current version of Red Wings, and allow them 4-6 years of peak - they'd win a cup each at least in that timeframe (assuming of course Yzerman doesn't try to completely sabotage the roster, but instead does ok moves to surround them, within reason).
Finally - before you get defensive - I repeat this isn't meant as a criticism of Ovechkin. I just value Orr, Gretzky and Lemieux's peak ridiculously high - quite higher than any other players ever.
“Follow his lead.” Ok Daver.....sweet agenda.
I guess they followed Crosby’s lead in the ‘09 finals where he was a no show, but Malkin carried the load. Same with his performance in 2016, where he was a liability for the most part and had trouble producing. Seems like it’s easier to win when you have other players around you that can play at that level.
Cups are won by talent, not leadership. It’s such an old and flawed logic and it’s getting ridiculous. Leadership never got the cup raised.
Leadership counts, 100%. In fact - it probably counts a
lot. A helluva lot more than you probably realize. Everytime you talk to players or coaches or gms about it - they 100% support this claim. It doesn't mean that if you give the greatest captain in the world to the Wings this year, they make the playoffs and win the cup. But having strong leadership can absolutely help a good to great team actually succeed in winning, vs falling short.
Now how much credit you want to actually give Crosby in that respect (and it should be
some credit, since by all accounts/reports he does very good here) is subjective. I'm sure Malkin and others help. Conversely - no one really knows how good or not a leader Ovi is (i'm sure he's really good too). So how much of a plus to Crosby's resume you want to count leadership for is up to you - but trying to claim it counts for nothing, or almost nothing, is simply a horrible stance.
Finally - he won the smythe in 2016. All these ridiculous over exaggerations are dumb. "where he was a liability for the most part". lol? There were a few deserving Conn Smythe winners that year - Crosby was one of them. Reputation certainly helped him - Kessel, Letang, Murray could have been worthy winners too (Couture maybe - but it takes a lot to win in a losing cause, not sure it would be fitting). Just because Crosby was one of a few possible winners and you maybe would have preferred another one it doesn't make "him a liability for the most part". Give me a break...
Hey look, the myth that OV played on a good team is still out there lol. Anyone check the GA of those early caps teams?
08: 17th
09: 20th
10: 17th
11: 4th
12: 19th
13: 16th
14: 22nd
15: 6th
16: 2nd
17: 1st
From 08-14, with the exception of 1 random fluke season, caps were always in the bottom half of GA. Those teams had no 2C, garbage D, garbage goaltending (until Holtby showed up at the end of 11/12), 2 idiots as coaches (Oates and Hunter, neither of whom has gotten an NHL HC job since). Not sure how anyone still thinks those were good teams. They had 2-3 great forwards, that doesn't make a great team.
Ov has played on very strong teams most of his career. Different recipes to make different teams good. Look at the Caps overall regular season rankings in those seasons. Weren't they first, or close to first, many times?
Maybe you could say they weren't constructed or coached right to win in the playoffs, or whatever else. But he's played on good teams majority of his career. Not sure why some people get so defensive about that.