to me, that's kind of a sportscenter/youtube memory of bure's career. we all remember his many dramatic breakaway goals, but obviously he didn't score all 400 goals on breakaways.
his shot was one of the quickest, hardest, and most accurate in the league. his wrist shot was a bit behind mogilny or sakic, but it was definitely a goal scorer's shot. his slap shot also was incredible, one of the hardest in the league among forwards and definitely more potent than a lot of the hard shooting guys.
it's true, he wasn't the kind of player to always find open areas and fire one-timers like brett hull, but the way he could score from the off-wing on the rush like gaborik or ovechkin today, or the way he could tee up a slapshot on the PP if you gave him an inch of room, those are sniper goals to me.
it's hard to say that a guy who not only led the league in goals three times, but also in shots four times isn't a sniper. he shot from a lot of different places and in a lot of different situations, and although he created his own space with his speed and shiftiness, without a world class shot, you're still just maxim afinogenov.
look at some of the goals in the second half of this video. yeah, there were a lot of breakaway goals, but look how tight he is in when he roofs it on potvin, or some of those shots from beyond the hash marks... they seem like sniper-type or goal scorer's goals to me:
Thank you. After reading some of the comments early in the thread, I was going to post pretty much exactly this.
If Bure skated like Ray Sheppard, he still would have pushed 40 goals/season.
The guy had the 2nd-best one-timer in the league after Brett Hull, and the only player to score more 'Hull-type' goals was Hull himself. Would consistently blow pucks by guys from 30 feet out on the PP. His shot was an absolute rocket.
And he did score all kinds of garbage goals. The guy was Maurice Richard-esque in the way his eyes lit up when he saw a loose puck anywhere near the goal in the offensive zone. Loved to score goals more than any player I've ever seen, and got all kinds of them by just being hard on the puck and being quicker to loose pucks in scrambles than the defenders around him. Had no issues with getting crunched to score a goal or playing in high-traffic areas, aside from maybe his weak 1996-97 season when he was coming back from major knee reconstruction.
He'd score 5 or 6 highlight-reel goals/season, but those are the only ones on youtube now so that's all we can see of him. The vast majority of his goals were not plays where he deked through the entire team to score.
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As for Bure's goalscoring dominance, I always come back to the one stat, that to me should guarantee his place in the HHOF :
Players with 5 50-goal seasons :
1) Bobby Hull
2) Phil Esposito
3) Guy Lafleur
4) Marcel Dionne
5) Mike Bossy
6) Wayne Gretzky
7) Mario Lemieux
8) Steve Yzerman
9) Brett Hull
10) Pavel Bure
That's the most exclusive club in the NHL, populated by an incredible list of all-time greats. And Bure. And Bure did it in one of the lowest-scoring eras, and did it despite only playing 5 full seasons.
When you look at that list, and then look at Dino Ciccarelli's career, it boggles the mind how Ciccarelli is in the HHOF and Bure is not.
As for goalscoring dominance, Bure is to me in the top 5 of the post-1967 era, alongside of Bossy, Gretzky, Hull, Lemieux. There are other guys who better all-around players, and were nearly as good as pure goalscorers, but when it comes down to pure scoring, Bure was incredible. If not for injury and holdouts, he probably would have led the league in goals on 5 or 6 occasions.