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

Overrated

Registered User
Jan 16, 2018
1,467
650
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
All of these guys were very good though. Fleury imo deserves the HOF. I'd still pick prime Mogilny over any of them.
 

Staniowski

Registered User
Jan 13, 2018
3,846
3,466
The Maritimes
There's a very big gulf between the opinions of those who saw Mogilny before injuries greatly affected his career, and those who are primarily familiar with his later career (part of Vancouver, NJ, Toronto).

He had a lot of injuries: multiple broken legs, major knee and hip injuries, I think multiple concussions...

For almost everybody who saw Mogilny at his best - in the late '80s and the 1st half of the '90s, he is a very easy hall-of-famer. Everybody thought they were watching a future inductee, without a doubt.

These are the ppg leaders for '92 to '96:

1. Lemieux - 2.26
2. LaFontaine - 1.48
3. Lindros - 1.46
4. Gretzky - 1.42
5. Oates - 1.39
6. Mogilny - 1.33
7. Jagr - 1.33
8. Selanne - 1.32
9. Sakic - 1.31
10. Yzerman - 1.31

This is the Mogilny we remember. For me, he is an essential HHOFer, one of the most skilled hockey players ever.

I suspect he would've been drafted 1st overall in the '87 draft if available to play in the NHL. And he is one of the best WJC performers ever. I first saw him play in the Piestany tournament.

I can understand people who weren't around in the early '90s, and aren't impressed by 1,000 points, but with normal health he likely has 1,400 or 1,500.

He was too good to not make the Hall, and he will make it. There has never been an NHLer as talented as him who's not in the Hall.

He is among the very best skaters in the history of hockey, and among the very best shooters and goal-scorers in the history of hockey.
 

VistamarCroissants

Registered User
Apr 19, 2024
59
40
Both those players have better PPG than Mogilny, and better playoff numbers.

Alex won every big championship in the world, scored 76 goals a season, but his PPG was affected by his injuries.

There's a very big gulf between the opinions of those who saw Mogilny before injuries greatly affected his career, and those who are primarily familiar with his later career (part of Vancouver, NJ, Toronto).

He had a lot of injuries: multiple broken legs, major knee and hip injuries, I think multiple concussions...

For almost everybody who saw Mogilny at his best - in the late '80s and the 1st half of the '90s, he is a very easy hall-of-famer. Everybody thought they were watching a future inductee, without a doubt.

These are the ppg leaders for '92 to '96:

1. Lemieux - 2.26
2. LaFontaine - 1.48
3. Lindros - 1.46
4. Gretzky - 1.42
5. Oates - 1.39
6. Mogilny - 1.33
7. Jagr - 1.33
8. Selanne - 1.32
9. Sakic - 1.31
10. Yzerman - 1.31

This is the Mogilny we remember. For me, he is an essential HHOFer, one of the most skilled hockey players ever.

I suspect he would've been drafted 1st overall in the '87 draft if available to play in the NHL. And he is one of the best WJC performers ever. I first saw him play in the Piestany tournament.

I can understand people who weren't around in the early '90s, and aren't impressed by 1,000 points, but with normal health he likely has 1,400 or 1,500.

He was too good to not make the Hall, and he will make it. There has never been an NHLer as talented as him who's not in the Hall.

He is among the very best skaters in the history of hockey, and among the very best shooters and goal-scorers in the history of hockey.
All I can say is bravo

You've nailed it!
 

wetcoast

Registered User
Nov 20, 2018
24,780
11,640
I think he'll get in soon enough, he got stigmatized with the usual "Russian enigma" (although for Mogilny it was probably not fully undeserved like for others), he didn't have the consistency of a lot of his peers, just missed the 500 goal milestone which is always important for things like the Hall of Fame, didn't stay too long on a particular team to become iconic, and he played in a loaded era with tons of talent to get lost a bit.
Agree with all of this.


Obviously at his best and as a talent there are very few who are better than him in the Hall.
Sure but the same could be said of the Magic man too right?

Obviously Mogilny produced more in the NHL and he wouldn't be a bad induction, given the bar for post expansion wingers isn't that high but my guess is that in most years coming up there will be 4 guys at least with a more HHOF type of resume up for election.
 

The Panther

Registered User
Mar 25, 2014
20,129
17,161
Tokyo, Japan
There's a very big gulf between the opinions of those who saw Mogilny before injuries greatly affected his career, and those who are primarily familiar with his later career (part of Vancouver, NJ, Toronto).

He had a lot of injuries: multiple broken legs, major knee and hip injuries, I think multiple concussions...

For almost everybody who saw Mogilny at his best - in the late '80s and the 1st half of the '90s, he is a very easy hall-of-famer. Everybody thought they were watching a future inductee, without a doubt.

These are the ppg leaders for '92 to '96:

1. Lemieux - 2.26
2. LaFontaine - 1.48
3. Lindros - 1.46
4. Gretzky - 1.42
5. Oates - 1.39
6. Mogilny - 1.33
7. Jagr - 1.33
8. Selanne - 1.32
9. Sakic - 1.31
10. Yzerman - 1.31

This is the Mogilny we remember. For me, he is an essential HHOFer, one of the most skilled hockey players ever.

I suspect he would've been drafted 1st overall in the '87 draft if available to play in the NHL. And he is one of the best WJC performers ever. I first saw him play in the Piestany tournament.

I can understand people who weren't around in the early '90s, and aren't impressed by 1,000 points, but with normal health he likely has 1,400 or 1,500.

He was too good to not make the Hall, and he will make it. There has never been an NHLer as talented as him who's not in the Hall.

He is among the very best skaters in the history of hockey, and among the very best shooters and goal-scorers in the history of hockey.
Geez.

Does the fact that Mogilny had only 4 or 5 star-level seasons (out of 16) not bother you at all? So, if you had elite talent up to age 23, that's enough for you?
 

MadLuke

Registered User
Jan 18, 2011
10,731
6,232
Kovalchuck top 10 finish: 2-5-6-8-10
Goals finish : 1-2-3-4-6-6-7-8

They both played about has many game in the nhl in the 900 something.

From 2004 to 2012, Kovalchuck had the most goals in the nhl, was 4th in points, the forward that played the most minutes per game second overall, his 2012 playoff run his at least equal to anything Mogilny did there (because of injury, who knows what happen in 93, but that what happened).

Talent and soviet storyline aside (not that Kovalchuck was not an really special talent) how much of an argument Mogilny has over Kovalchuck ?
 

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