Which is exactly why we can't use absolute career numbers to evaluate Hall-of-Fame-worthiness.
Yes we can.
How about the career stats of a guy who scored 1064 career points, another 53 playoff points (inc. two multiple-digit scoring runs and a Stanley Cup championship), and did this with 3/4 of his playing career (and all his playoff numbers) in the Dead-puck era? Seems quite Hall-worthy, doesn't it?
Welcome to the Hall of Fame, Ray Whitney!!
Yea but eras go out the window when a player finishes near the top at a particular category, and is still able to hold that position for several years ala Andreychuk.
Ray Whitney doesn't have 640 goals like Andreychuk does.
Phil should start by pointing out that Andreychuk was never considered even a top-40 player in the nhl.
And that does not matter when you still end up top 15 in goals.
It's most definitely NOT a Hall of Fame career, unless you want to include every player of Andreychuk's level in the Hall of Fame and make longevity the most important consideration. And I can't imagine why any knowledgeable fan would want to do those two things.
But evidently, the Hall of Fame committee did....
Scoring 640 goals is absolutely HOF worthy. The HOF is not just about single season top 10 finishes and trophies.
You don't need to be a great player to make the HOF.
Fair enough. But then, in what specific years do you think we should be analyzing Andreychuk's stats? The fact remains that he was known for one thing -- goal-scoring -- and was never elite at that one thing.
Only thing that matters is Andreychuk scored 640 goals. It's too many goals to leave out of the HOF.
I've always supported Mike Gartner's induction to the Hall of Fame, and been opposed to Dave Andreychuk's, even though both are considered "compilers". Here's my reasoning.
Both players have relatively low peaks (compared to most Hall of Famers). Still, there's a notable difference. Gartner has five years as a top ten goal-scorer, Andreychuk only has two. Gartner is ahead 9-5 in top twenty seasons and 13-6 in top thirty seasons. That's a meaningful difference.
They have the same number of season in the top ten (1) and top twenty (2) in scoring. Gartner pulls away after that. But we need to consider context. Andreychuk's best years were when he played alongside peak Gilmour. He only led his team in scoring three times (two of which didn't make the playoffs, and the other was eliminated in the first round). Gartner led his team in scoring four times (three of which made the playoffs, and two of which made the second round). Neither player is good enough to take a team even to the conference finals on their own, but Gartner was more important to his teams.
The issue that most people have with "compilers" is they play many years past their prime, slowly padding their career totals. Under this definition, Mike Gartner is emphatically not a compiler! In his second last season (1996-97), he scored 32 goals (24th in the league). At the time, that was the 7th best season (measured by goals) for a 37+ year old player in NHL history (behind only Howe twice, Bucyk twice, Esposito and Beliveau). He was disappointing (and relatively healthy) in 1998, and he quickly retired that summer. The extent of Gartner's "compilation" was one year in Phoenix where he scored 12 goals. (Yes I recognize this brought him over the 700 goal mark, but I don`t think his place in history changes if he retired at 696).
In contrast, Andreychuk hung around far past prime. Believe it or not, Andreychuk never scored 30 goals past the age of 30 (Gartner did that six times, including two 45+ goal seasons). But let`s pretend Andreychuk retired after the 1997-98 season, at age 34. He would have played 1,158 games, scored just under a point per game, and had over 500 goals. Nobody would have even considered Andreychuk as a Hall of Fame at that point. He then spent six years putting up 15-20 goals and 30-40 points as a third-line powerplay specialist. Kudos to him for hanging on to a roster spot, but I don't see how being a third-line specialist (thereby reaching the 600 goal mark) magically makes him a Hall of Famer when nobody saw him as one for sixteen years.
Just how much of a specialist was he? From 1999 to the end of his career, Andreychuk was the only forward with 100+ PP points who scored more on the powerplay than at even-strength. During his last five seasons (all with in Tampa Bay), he was dead last in even-strength ice time per game (among the nine forwards who played in 200+ games) - yet he played nearly as much on the powerplay as St. Louis and Lecavalier.
Again, I'm not criticizing Andreychuk for hanging on to his spot. Powerplay goals count just as much as even-strength markers. But this explains why I support Gartner being in the Hall, but not Andreychuk. Gartner had a (slightly) higher peak, was more important to his teams and, most importantly, he retired immediately after he lost his scoring touch. What Andreychuk did was admirable, but hanging around as perhaps the purest powerplay specialist in the league doesn't magically elevate him to a Hall of Famer when he demonstrated over the first sixteen years of his career that he wasn't deserving.
Being able to hang around and play for a long time is a great skill for a player. Any player who scores as many goals as Andreychuk did belongs in the HOF.
Peak means nothing.
The only thing that means anything for Andreychuk is his 640 goals.