shazariahl
Registered User
- Apr 7, 2009
- 2,030
- 59
I'll take your last point 1st as I watched Wayne beat up my Canucks a ton in the early 80's.
Greztky was never asked to play defense, even when he was out late in the game the only thing he wass concerned about was scoring goals or getting points for the team. the Oiler motto, especially early on was to win game 7-5.
Also to your 1st point I understand that the league was moving to less goals scored per game and more competitive night in and night out, some over posters just don't want to admit these changes.
Mario "peaked" really early at age 23 in actual stats but was still a monster in his entire career, probably the most pure skilled guy to ever play the game IMO.
And yes I'm fully aware of how the body breaks down, I'm in my early 40's and do a semi manual job and still play ball hockey competitively once a week and recover the 6 days after wards.
I'm not trying to say that the league didn't become more competative over time, or that scoring didn't decrease. Of course it did. And the league today is probably the most competative that its ever been. I realize that makes it harder for people like Crosby to dominate. But that's not really my point - my point is that even under these conditions, Gretzky, Lemieux, and Orr would STILL dominate, beyond what we've seen from Crosby. Gretzky did play against the Soviets a lot in international play, and was still the best in the world. He competed in 4 Canada Cup tourneys, and led the entire tournament in scoring all 4 times. That even includes 91 when he got crosschecked by Suter and missed a game (which obviously has a much bigger impact in a shortened tournament, than missing 1 game during an 80+ game season). Would he have won scoring races by 70+ points if he'd played against the Russian superstars all season long? Maybe, maybe not. But he proved over and over he was better than any of them, or anyone else in the world playing, NHL or otherwise.
What about today's game? Sure Gretzky wouldn't be scoring 200+ in today's NHL- but no one here thinks he would. I just disagree with how you are looking at stats. Gretzky puts up seasons of 180+, 160+, and 140+ (while injured and missing time - he was actually averaging 2.3 PPG the season mentioned earlier in the thread, which works out to like 183 pts or so again). To say he "dropped" off, or wasn't as good is strange to me. Sure 180 isn't 215. But NO ONE maintains their exact peak for 10 years. No one. That's why their peak is their peak.
But the fact is, aside from Gretzky, only Lemieux has even broken 160 points. So I don't see how, after 4 seasons of 200+ and several 180+ point seasons, you're saying he was not as dominant. Scoring more points than anyone in history except Lemieux is still pretty dominant. And he did it for multiple seasons. This isn't like Yzerman's 155 season, which is something of an aberation. Gretzky averaged 180 pts for a 10 year span of his career. Bossy only PLAYED 9 full seasons. Orr barely played 10 years. We're talking some of the greatest players ever, and their entire careers lasted as long as Gretzky's prime.
People tend to forget Gretzky played a ton of hockey. Not just regular seasons for 20 years, but deep playoff runs consistantly and international play as well. Crosby didn't go to the worlds last year because between 2 SCF runs with Pittsburgh, the Olympics, and 82 game NHL seasons, he just wanted a break. I don't blame him. But Gretzky did it for the first 15 years of his career, basically non-stop. He was a small guy, with a slight frame. He had a bad back. He developed arthritis in his shoulder. By 20 years he was worn out. Its stupid to say "well, he was only scoring 90ish points a year towards the end, so he'd only be good for that in today's NHL". The Gretzky we saw in 1998 and 1999 was still a great player despite all that - but he was like a 20 year old BMW convertable. Still awesome, but not the same as it was 20 years earlier.