Oh 5v5 ok. Well the point still stands...using +/- of any kind as evidence of progress for a 1 OA is not impressive to me. Sorry. I think you would have said the same thing prior to last year, but alas, there's not much else you can use to push the narrative that he's progressed so naturally you're going to use it.
He scored more points, but with Jack I'm not concerned about points because I believe those will come, he's got too much skill otherwise - do you notice how Jack has way more goals this year and nobody's talking about it? It's because what people care about, in addition to wins and losses, isn't just looking at goals and assists.
My concern with Hughes coming into the NHL is that he wouldn't figure out defense at all, and while he's off in that department so far this year, I don't have any doubt that he can find that part of his game again. Plenty of stars never figure out defense and win Stanley Cups - Ovechkin, Kessel, Kane - but it's just better for the team in general when they do.
Right so stats like these (which don't necessarily give you an accurate picture of the kid's overall game, but I'm sure you will insist otherwise)...you can cite them as evidence of progress last year (despite him having a bout with covid and missing time)...but this year the regression can be attributed to his injury. You just get to pick and choose when these things have an impact - and just coincidentally they only make a difference when the stats don't look as good. So convenient.
Did Jack have COVID? I genuinely could not remember if he did, or if he did, that he was confirmed symptomatic. Either way, his regression isn't just his injury, I agree, but do you not see how potentially the two things are related, that a player is injured for a long time and suddenly plays much worse than they did beforehand? That it's a very natural inference to make?
I agree players don't typically peak at 19. But that's assuming that last year was legitimate progress and not the anomaly. Given that this year he's so far regressed again I have no idea how you can claim the former. At best we are still at the "inconclusive" stage.
You'd lose a lot of money betting on this sort of thing, but again, you can just make these sorts of aprobabalistic claims and they're not falsifiable so whatever. Great. Inconclusive. Sure. I agree, it's inconclusive, but if you want to start wagering on this sort of thing, I'd be quite happy to. I would've lost so far on Nico!
That's fine, but you cited him as an example of how I talk about all of our prospects. I've never spoken about Ty Smith in the same manner as I have Hughes or Nico.
You talk about all of them in the same way, as evinced by the next paragraph.
This is just ridiculous. What you want is for me to be make definitive declarations about players that have either not played in the NHL yet, or who have played in the NHL but haven't shown their potential there. And I admittedly will not do that, for good reason. Prospects can be judged to have x amount of potential, and one can infer from that their chances of being an NHL player. Taking it any further than that for anyone who is not a blatant McDavid or Matthews or Crosby is practically begging to be disappointed, and this is especially true in the context of an organization that has failed to develop top line players despite years of drafting both quality and quantity.
Have some heart, watch some players, look at some numbers, and make some judgments. You'll be wrong a lot, I sure am. But it's a lot more fun than just being a hater.
What do you mean no one does this consistently? The devils did it consistently for going on what, almost 25 years? Ditto Detroit and now Pittsburgh. The Boston Bruins have missed the playoffs just 7 times in the last three decades combined. For f***'s sake St. Louis has only missed the playoffs 9 times in 53 years! That's as close to forever as you can come in sports. Yeah they had that stretch in the mid 2000's where they missed five out six seasons, but that's literally the only multi-year stretch of non-playoff hockey they've ever had, and out of that they built a perennial division winner. We are in year 10 of non-playoff hockey, six years into the purposeful rebuild and can't even get out of the basement, much less win a division.
But yeah most teams don't stay on top "forever" because you still do need NHL level talent to be a good team, and eventually you run out of it when the best players get old and years of success make it harder to get decent players in the system. Has anyone ever claimed otherwise? No, but you like to pretend so.
You're trying to have your cake and eat it too with the previous paragraph. The Devils most certainly did not do it for 25 years. Also none of these teams will have anywhere close to the playoff streaks of yore because now 16 of 32 make the playoffs, so we can throw out all that stuff about missing 7 times in 50 years or whatever - I guess it will just go away when St. Louis and Boston's cycle end. Which maybe it won't, they do seem to have good organizations in place.
A winning formula requires great players - but it also requires those other things. It's the latter half that you just simply ignore, as if collecting talent alone is going to ensure success. It doesn't. It never has and it never will. That latter half is also what allows good teams to continue to prosper through temporary adversity.
I've never said the other stuff doesn't matter at all. I just don't think it's the first step. It's the second step, the first step is getting the talented players.
No that last sentence is not a logical inference.
It is. You cited a record that the Penguins play at a 110 point pace when both Crosby and Malkin are out of the lineup. They've crossed 110 points in one season during this era and played at that pace last season. If you're denying the role of chance in producing such a record, then yes, that is the inference. There's no way they are a true talent 110 point team without both of those guys. They're not a true talent 100 point team without them.
Of course they add something - I'm not at all saying they could be just as good of a team season after season, or be legit Stanley Cup contenders without them. But they can weather short term storms without them - and that absolutely can be attributed to structure, coaching, leadership, culture, etc. Which, coincidentally, is also needed to win the Stanley Cup, even with them on the roster. This isn't NHL 20 GM mode. In the real world, man-made institutions need those things to be successful.
Sure, that I agree with. You need to build that up and it takes a long time to do it.
The continuously awful goaltending is just another symptom in a long list of them, it is not the disease.
It is the largest part of the disease. If it were fixed, the other stuff wouldn't look so hopeless.