tarheelhockey
Offside Review Specialist
I don’t understand why these borderline cases develop such a bandwagon. Did anyone think they were watching a HOF’er when Mogilny was playing? Why is there so much energy behind this guy?
I said in the conversation for best player, not best player - significant difference. I do agree that there are already bad selections like Mullen and Ciccarelli, also Duff, Lowe, Carbonneau, Housley and some others. That worse players who should not be in the hall of fame happen to be there is a pretty poor argument to me.The HHOF's bar for entry is way lower than "best player in the league for any length of time." If guys like Joe Mullen and Dino Ciccarelli are in, Mogilny deserves to be there. Plus he's a pioneer for how he got to the NHL in the first place.
I don’t understand why these borderline cases develop such a bandwagon. Did anyone think they were watching a HOF’er when Mogilny was playing? Why is there so much energy behind this guy?
Mogilny should absolutely be in by all standards. He got all the usual “Russian enigma” nonsense over his career.
The existence (taken for true for discussion of purposes) of other puzzling inclusions/exclusions wouldn’t make the reasoning behind this particular one untrue because of other reasons. Turgeon took a long time despite an easy HHOF resume for not joining a brawl for instance.
So many of the big names in media right now are guys who were 8 to 13 years old right when Mogilny was at his peak. I feel like they were just the right age to be wowed by the 76 goals and that number has just stuck with them all these years without context.I don’t understand why these borderline cases develop such a bandwagon. Did anyone think they were watching a HOF’er when Mogilny was playing? Why is there so much energy behind this guy?
1992-93 NHL 1.65 (4th) |
1995-96 NHL 1.35 (9th) |
2000-01 NHL 1.20 (6th) |
2001-02 NHL 1.13 (4th) |
I said in the conversation for best player, not best player - significant difference. I do agree that there are already bad selections like Mullen and Ciccarelli, also Duff, Lowe, Carbonneau, Housley and some others. That worse players who should not be in the hall of fame happen to be there is a pretty poor argument to me.
True, but how big of a gap result wise are we talking about.I’d go Mogilny over T. Fleury. Not that Fleury is a bad choice. Just never peaked as high as Mogilny, Mogilny better PPG, more leaned more goal scoring, more of a trailblazer
That's super charitable to Kovalev though, as he was heavily boosted by the Jagr/Lemieux effect, and could not post a top-10 PPG season on his own.It could be a the NHL 94 generation is in full control now for sure and 76 goals being a big mark (is it better than Bondra best season, Stamkos 60 goals or Iginla in 2002 goal scoring wise ? maybe, maybe not, but much bigger number).
Turgeon was an expected guy with the most points not in the HHOF, there will always be one, but Turgeon you had to go down a more than 100 points and a lot of name before finding an non HHOF on the list in Nicholls who played virtually all his years in the highest scoring era of hockey. He his is followed by Damphousse, Brind'amour still waiting, those won cup and had 2 way forward reputation, so there will not be energy for Nicholls just on that.
People brings Mogilny level of talents, but that was never a question, an hockey phenom scoring goals on the 1988 olympics soviet super team as an 18 years old, he had by a good amount more than enough talents to make the HHOF, reached regular season peak that are obviously more than high enough, pre-nhl story more than enough interesting as a prospect, but how better than Markus Naslund-LeClair of a career did he really had ? What about Kovalev ?
kovalev could sound like a joke comparison but career:
Points Per Game
vs
1992-93 NHL 1.65 (4th) 1995-96 NHL 1.35 (9th)
Points Per Game
2000-01 NHL 1.20 (6th) 2001-02 NHL 1.13 (4th)
Kovalev was a bigger part of the cup team on a more legendary cup win, could have a MTL push... both are in the below 500 goals but over 1000 pts club, both ridiculous talents even if Kovalev was no Mogilny, Kovalev just played longer and got less injured, but did pretty much as much. Kovalev has 100 playoff points
Hey you are talking about the guy that had by far the best offensive season since a season that has been old enough to drink for a while by now.... sadly right (he was around #20 in 2008 when he was 11th in points in PPG, he just played 82 games).I don't want to see Mogilny in the hall, but it wouldn't be a travesty if he made it. Kovalev would be a travesty. I don't think he achieved even close to what Mogilny did.
He doesn't really do anything other than straddle the line of the general standards. There are some worse players who are in the HHOF, but there are some better players who are not in. It's a poor argument for why he should be there. Roenick just got in this year and his case is better than Mogilny's, he also waited years. Mogilny is not some strong case where we can't figure it out. There is enough groundswell that he will get in as a weak inductee some year before long, but it's not at all surprising that he is currently on the outside.The fundamental conflict here is people’s imaginary standards for the HHOF are not aligned with what the actual bar is. Mogilny wasn’t my favorite player back in the day before he got to Toronto and he wasn’t my favorite when he became a Leaf. Seemed mercurial and enigmatic, a distant personality that didn’t always show up. But the resume more than passes the real life bar for what the HHOF actually is. It’s not a poor argument, it’s just precedent.
If you were to set up a new elite HHOF maybe the cut off is higher but it is what it is.
I don’t understand why these borderline cases develop such a bandwagon. Did anyone think they were watching a HOF’er when Mogilny was playing? Why is there so much energy behind this guy?
He doesn't really do anything other than straddle the line of the general standards. There are some worse players who are in the HHOF, but there are some better players who are not in. It's a poor argument for why he should be there. Roenick just got in this year and his case is better than Mogilny's, he also waited years. Mogilny is not some strong case where we can't figure it out. There is enough groundswell that he will get in as a weak inductee some year before long, but it's not at all surprising that he is currently on the outside.
It's an interesting part of Mogilny's story, but you already had Soviets in the NHL before that and you had a prominent, HHOF level defector in Stastny with his own interesting. Fleury has probably a stronger case and his story is also very prominent and historically unique, yet he remains out. I do think that the HHOF badly needs to induct some of the European greats who never had the chance to play in the NHL, mainly the Soviets.He’s also a historical figure for defecting from the USSR at 20 or 21 and carving out his career in North America. Which paved the way for the Euro and Eastern Bloc invasion in the early 90s after the fall of Communism. Which opens the conversation to the inclusion of Soviet players who are in the HHOF but didn’t have a superstar impact or any kind of career in the NHL.
Anyway he’s not a personal favorite of mine but I think the hall is richer with him in it than not.
I feel that a strong point, in 150 years, an historian would write the history of hockey without having any mention of Mogilny could feel wrong to most.Anyway he’s not a personal favorite of mine but I think the hall is richer with him in it than not.
I think the stats just look good... If Phil Housley can get in, surely Mogilny can too.I don’t understand why these borderline cases develop such a bandwagon. Did anyone think they were watching a HOF’er when Mogilny was playing? Why is there so much energy behind this guy?
I think it's OK to generally defer to more objective measures than general "vibes" and assumed zeitgeist, which is subject to a lot of human bias.Did anyone think they were watching a HOF’er when Mogilny was playing?
I think the stats just look good... If Phil Housley can get in, surely Mogilny can too.
I think it's OK to generally defer to more objective measures than general "vibes" and assumed zeitgeist, which is subject to a lot of human bias.
When people watch John Tavares, do they "think they're watching a HOF'er"... maybe? Idk. But he'll easily get in.