So, *why* is Alex Mogilny not in the HHOF?

MadLuke

Registered User
Jan 18, 2011
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How can we know when the contract was signed, we only know when the newspaper learned about it..no ? which was just after he came back, same for if he holded up or not if that was the case, that something that just purely impossible to know has the major leg injury and when you are ok enough to play contact nhl game is extremelly subjective.

Would have had a near career injury and asked to play again with 0 security in that kind of negotiating position (76 goals seasons)....
 
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Gregor Samsa

Registered User
Sep 5, 2020
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I know it’s kinda a “if my aunt had a penis…” type of thing but lets say Maruk has one more big season when he gets to the North Stars, like 100 points or so. Is Mogilny that much better than him?
 

The Panther

Registered User
Mar 25, 2014
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Yeah, I feel like this whole "Why-isn't-Mogilny-in-the-Hall-of-Fame?" thing is starting to become a bit overblown.

The main reason he's not in the Hall of Fame is... he wasn't a Hall of Famer, by NHL performance. I can't speak to his international hockey credentials much, but maybe that pushes him up (or doesn't it? I don't know).

And yes, he defected successfully... but so did the Šťastný brothers, like, a decade earlier.

People are unfortunately starting to make this into a big deal, when it really isn't. I'm well aware of Hockey Ref's "Adjusted Stats" flaws, but to give Mogilny's NHL results some context:

Player with TWICE as many 'adjusted' 40-goal seasons as Mogilny:
-- Ilya Kovalchuk
Players who have more 'adjusted' 40-goal seasons than Mogilny:
-- Rick Martin
-- Peter Bondra
-- Theoren Fleury
Players who have the same number of 'adjusted' 40-goal seasons as Mogilny:
-- Joe Pavelski
-- John Tavares
 

MS

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Mar 18, 2002
55,971
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Vancouver, BC
So why was Mogilny so bad during non contract years?

I mean, he wasn't really :

1990-91 - 83 points/80 GP
1991-92 - 100 points/80 GP
1992-93 - 139 points/84 GP
1993-94 - 100 points/84 GP (coming off broken leg)
1994-95 - 88 points/82 GP
1995-96 - 111 points/82 GP

So for that 6-year period he *averaged* 105 points/82 GP.

Then we get to the 1996-2000 period, and as a Canuck fan I watched basically every one of those games. And I've never seen a player more mis-used and under-utilized than Mogilny was.

His Cs through that period were guys like a washed Mike Ridley, a washed Peter Zezel, Mike Sillinger, and so on. He usually played on the 2nd line. The teams absolutely stunk. He was also constantly hurt or coming back from an injury.

He still averaged about 70 points/82 through that period at the heart of the DPE. And I'm well aware that the general Canuck fan perception is that he was a lazy underachiever but I profoundly disagree - I thought he was by far the team's best player and best defensive player (check out the goal differentials relative to the rest of the team through that period) despite generally being asked to make lemonade out of lemons.

Then he gets traded, has 2 big years out of the next 3, and then he's old and his body breaks down.

The 1999-00 season in particular looks underwhelming on paper before his trade. 47-21-17-38. Whoopee. But he was playing 2nd line minutes (with the likes of Steve Kariya for a big chunk of the year) and playing on PP2. And he was absolutely fantastic, but nobody then or since really seemed to give him credit for it.

ES points/82, 1999-00

Mark Recchi (3rd in NHL scoring) - 50
Paul Kariya (4th) - 57
Teemu Selanne (5th) - 56
Owen Nolan (6th) - 45
Tony Amonty (7th) - 59
Mike Modano (8th) - 52
Joe Sakic (9th) - 79 *would have won Art Ross if healthy
Steve Yzerman (10th) - 48

Alex Mogilny - 54

Dude was basically performing at an elite level that year on par with the biggest superstars having the best seasons in the league (outside of the Jagr/Bure/Sakic trio) despite 2nd line usage, but because he got hurt and didn't get PP points everyone thinks it was some sort of crappy season.
 

Gorskyontario

Registered User
Feb 18, 2024
600
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I mean, he wasn't really :

1990-91 - 83 points/80 GP
1991-92 - 100 points/80 GP
1992-93 - 139 points/84 GP
1993-94 - 100 points/84 GP (coming off broken leg)
1994-95 - 88 points/82 GP
1995-96 - 111 points/82 GP

So for that 6-year period he *averaged* 105 points/82 GP.

Then we get to the 1996-2000 period, and as a Canuck fan I watched basically every one of those games. And I've never seen a player more mis-used and under-utilized than Mogilny was.

His Cs through that period were guys like a washed Mike Ridley, a washed Peter Zezel, Mike Sillinger, and so on. He usually played on the 2nd line. The teams absolutely stunk. He was also constantly hurt or coming back from an injury.

He still averaged about 70 points/82 through that period at the heart of the DPE. And I'm well aware that the general Canuck fan perception is that he was a lazy underachiever but I profoundly disagree - I thought he was by far the team's best player and best defensive player (check out the goal differentials relative to the rest of the team through that period) despite generally being asked to make lemonade out of lemons.

Then he gets traded, has 2 big years out of the next 3, and then he's old and his body breaks down.

The 1999-00 season in particular looks underwhelming on paper before his trade. 47-21-17-38. Whoopee. But he was playing 2nd line minutes (with the likes of Steve Kariya for a big chunk of the year) and playing on PP2. And he was absolutely fantastic, but nobody then or since really seemed to give him credit for it.

ES points/82, 1999-00

Mark Recchi (3rd in NHL scoring) - 50
Paul Kariya (4th) - 57
Teemu Selanne (5th) - 56
Owen Nolan (6th) - 45
Tony Amonty (7th) - 59
Mike Modano (8th) - 52
Joe Sakic (9th) - 79 *would have won Art Ross if healthy
Steve Yzerman (10th) - 48

Alex Mogilny - 54

Dude was basically performing at an elite level that year on par with the biggest superstars having the best seasons in the league (outside of the Jagr/Bure/Sakic trio) despite 2nd line usage, but because he got hurt and didn't get PP points everyone thinks it was some sort of crappy season.


He did well from 91-95 because of Lafontaine and Hawerchuk.
 

MS

1%er
Mar 18, 2002
55,971
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Vancouver, BC
He did well from 91-95 because of Lafontaine and Hawerchuk.

Virtually every player who puts up elite numbers does so because they played with other elite players.

He scored 55 goals playing on a line with Cliff Ronning and a crippled late-career Esa Tikkanen. He wasn't some sort of fraud.
 
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