I wonder how clear that would be, Lafleur was a 130goals-209 pts in the junior all-time prospect that delivered and could have been the best Canadian scorer born (some would say Bossy and some other but he would be in the talk) after Orr and before Gretzky, that was during Canada baby boom and hyper popularity of the sport.
not much issue for Jagr > Lafleur, but Lindros&Bure ?
players | season | adjusted PPG |
Jaromir Jagr | 19981999 | 2.35 |
Jaromir Jagr | 19992000 | 2.23 |
Jaromir Jagr | 19951996 | 2.03 |
Jaromir Jagr | 20002001 | 1.98 |
Jaromir Jagr | 19971998 | 1.98 |
Eric Lindros | 19981999 | 1.96 |
Guy Lafleur | 19771978 | 1.90 |
Eric Lindros | 19941995 | 1.88 |
Guy Lafleur | 19761977 | 1.88 |
Pavel Bure | 19992000 | 1.86 |
Jaromir Jagr | 20052006 | 1.81 |
Jaromir Jagr | 19941995 | 1.80 |
Guy Lafleur | 19791980 | 1.73 |
Guy Lafleur | 19781979 | 1.69 |
Pavel Bure | 19971998 | 1.64 |
Guy Lafleur | 19751976 | 1.57 |
Too close to call at best.
I never understand your "adjusted" PPGs. And why you feel a need to "adjust" at all.
Why not show the % gap between them and their respective peers and offer whatever context you think is relevant and let others draw their own conclusions?
Jagr's peak season 98/99 (PPG of 1.57)
10% ahead of 2nd place (Selanne)
26% ahead of 5th place (Forsberg)
44% ahead of 10th place (Demitra)
74% ahead of 25th place
107% ahead of 50th place
LaFleur's peak season 76/77 (PPG of 1.70)
11% ahead of 2nd place (Dionne)
38% ahead of 5th place (MacLeish)
50% ahead of 10th place (McDonald)
73% ahead of 25th place
112% ahead of 50th place
Lafleur's season is marginally more dominant but the league size needs to be considered so I think they are very close.
And do you not think that your numbers are flawed if by "adjusting" you significantly shift the raw statistical data?
But back to the main point, Lafleur was most statistically dominant player in the post Orr/Espo era, and was dominating, at his peak, in a similar fashion to the peaks of the other "Best of the Non-Big Fours".
If one wants to dispute where his statistical dominance places him all-time, that's fine but you cannot argue against the statistical reality of his dominance.
There is zero reason to believe that he doesn't separate himself from the pack in the same manner if he played five years later when Wayne hit the 200 point mark.