Bad guess!
A goalie could have given up 3 or 4 goals on weak scoring opportunities but his team scored 4 or 5 goals by the end of the second period.
Question deserves an answer. Main-board has active project- in the low-20s at the time of this writing.
Or: https://hfboards.mandatory.com/threads/the-22nd-best-player-in-nhl-history.2560577/
We could sneer- but I won't (well... not so much, anyway). I think they were a mere transposition away from getting the order of the Big Four just right.
You'll see worse-looking lists. Bowman. Fischler. NHL-100. Main-board effort looks jurist-sober compared to those three iterations.
1. Wayne Gretzky
2. Mario Lemieux
3. Bobby Orr
4. Gordie Howe
5. Jaromir Jagr
6. Sidney Crosby
7. Dominik Hasek
8. Alexander Ovechkin
9. Jean Beliveau
10. Bobby Hull
11. Maurice Richard
12. Nicklas Lidstrom
13. Patrick Roy
14. Ray Bourque
15. Doug Harvey
16. Mark Messier
17. Phil Esposito
18. Guy Lafleur
19. Martin Brodeur
20. Joe Sakic
21. Steve Yzerman
You said "Potvin is a leader," when comparing him to Lidstrom. That pretty much implies that Lidstrom was not a leader. That's wrong. They were both leaders, enormously respected in the game. I cannot differentiate between degrees of "leadership," and I suspect neither can anybody here, not being in the locker room and all. What I know is: as far as "leadership" goes, Yzerman's shoes were incredible hard to fill. Lidstrom did it, and nobody blinked an eye.Strawman
Saying Potvin has an edge in leadership doesn't imply Lidstrom isn't a leader.
You said "Potvin is a leader," when comparing him to Lidstrom. That pretty much implies that Lidstrom was not a leader. That's wrong. They were both leaders, enormously respected in the game. I cannot differentiate between degrees of "leadership," and I suspect neither can anybody here, not being in the locker room and all. What I know is: as far as "leadership" goes, Yzerman's shoes were incredible hard to fill. Lidstrom did it, and nobody blinked an eye.
You said "Potvin is a leader," when comparing him to Lidstrom. That pretty much implies that Lidstrom was not a leader. That's wrong. They were both leaders, enormously respected in the game. I cannot differentiate between degrees of "leadership," and I suspect neither can anybody here, not being in the locker room and all. What I know is: as far as "leadership" goes, Yzerman's shoes were incredible hard to fill. Lidstrom did it, and nobody blinked an eye.
Again: how do you distinguish between leaders? What are the degrees of leadership?...That's the thing.
Lidstrom filled Yzerman's shoes.
Potvin made his own.
Seriously, if I wanted to compare a player, ANY player to Denis Potvin in order to make that player look better than Denis Potvin, leadership is just the last thing I'd raise (save for Jean Beliveau).
It's not a slight against Lidstrom, which I consider a slightly better player Potvin all in all (that longevity advantage is... not small).
In the first couple of rounds captaincy and leadership isn't much of a factor (the greatest five or six wingers certainly get no brownie points).
Was Richard an exceptional team leader? Please cite sources not presumptions or tangential factors like popularity with fans and media. Sincerely, prepare stuff on it.
It's not about being a leader vs. Not being a leader... in the top20 range leadership has to be a considerable difference to make any difference.
1. Wayne Gretzky
2. Mario Lemieux
3. Bobby Orr
4. Gordie Howe
5. Jaromir Jagr
6. Sidney Crosby
7. Dominik Hasek
8. Alexander Ovechkin
9. Jean Beliveau
10. Bobby Hull
11. Maurice Richard
12. Nicklas Lidstrom
13. Patrick Roy
14. Ray Bourque
15. Doug Harvey
16. Mark Messier
17. Phil Esposito
18. Guy Lafleur
19. Martin Brodeur
20. Joe Sakic
21. Steve Yzerman
For the sake of accuracy, it should be noted that their endeavor covers NHL-history. On that basis, the lack of Soviets is understandable.I actually like this list! A lot! Sure, my Top 4 looks different, and Brodeur doesn't belong anywhere near Top 20, but it's still quite respectable. Morenz and Shore are missing, and, of course, no Soviets here.
[MOD]
I specify what is needed to persuade me of the importance of leadership to listing.
This entire exercise is supposed to be about persuading each other, using reasons and research to convince each other. Part of that process is figuring out what's needed, what's important.
There are so many factors to consider, kinds of reasons. For example, one voter pimps trophy counting. Instead of ignoring him, pointing out it's a start not an end, and why, advances the discussion and opens up possibilities to influence each other (eg., he could reply: it's not everything, but trophies are important. To which one counters: 2nd and 3rd place trophy voting is also significant. But, as seventieslord said earlier, don't cite 10th or lower trophy voting because it makes no difference to us in this project - now if one thinks a few mere votes is significant, then argue for it and change our minds).
*MOD EDIT*
If you want to claim that Jaromir Jagr has something on Maurice Richard as far as leadership is concerned, the onus is on you do to so clearly, and to cite sources to that effect.
*MOD EDIT*
(And that's after suggesting a list with no Dit Clapper should get rejected)