The Macho King
Back* to Back** World Champion
- Jun 22, 2011
- 49,053
- 29,888
To the people relying on "Star Power" - define it and justify it as an objective metric please.
Since about his first smythe. So 3 years.
Just like last round, I feel like Ray Bourque stands in two bad ways:
1) Lower star power compared to the group
2) Lower playoff performances compared to (most) of the group (perhaps more debatable this time though)
The same is true of Dominik Hasek, so as of now both are at the bottom of my list.
Missing one is forgivable, missing both is not.I use ''missing'' in relative terms.
Yup, for sure. I am probably going to do the same thing for goal scoring as well, if people do find these tables useful.Is it possible for you to easily add a column in terms of PPG margins too? I'd love to see that if so.
To the people relying on "Star Power" - define it and justify it as an objective metric please.
Even me back then I was probably more inclined to say Beliveau or hasek. But since Crosby has added much to his resume. I’ve recently been debating with myself on who’s better between hasek and Roy. Roy’s playoff resume has me flip flopping. So Beliveau and SId are my two favourites for number 5. As I think both have much greater playoff resumes than bobby hull. And both have greater regular season resumes than RichardNo chance in hell he was a top 5 player in anyone's mind except for yours and other Pens fans. He might make my top 4, but it's extremely unlikely.
Even me back then I was probably more inclined to say Beliveau or hasek. But since Crosby has added much to his resume. I’ve recently been debating with myself on who’s better between hasek and Roy. Roy’s playoff resume has me flip flopping. So Beliveau and SId are my two favourites for number 5. As I think both have much greater playoff resumes than bobby hull. And both have greater regular season resumes than Richard
To the people relying on "Star Power" - define it and justify it as an objective metric please.
I may not get time to flesh these out but I want to make a couple of points about Shore.
- Eddie Shore - Hart trophy winner, meanest guy on the ice, offensive defenseman extraordinaire. Along with Morenz, probably the defining players from the early years of the NHL. Cons - Defensive play was sometimes criticized. Playoff disappointments.
It was 11 years in the league. And now there is not much separating sid and Beliveau. They are actually quite comparable. With Beliveau having a few more top hart and ross finishes. But Crosby plays in a much deeper league so there’s that. Your probably more shocked because Crosby is still an active player and the idea of him being that high all time is weird. When in reality it isn’tHe was what, an 8 year veteran then? It isn't like he's a Gretzky like producer or even Mario. If he was a combination of Gretzky/Howe/Orr/Beliveau 8 years in, he still wouldn't make it that high with me. I'm shocked that I'm even considering him at 8 TBH.
Roy’s playoff resume has me flip flopping.
We should post these in each OP honestly. Really good info here.For those who are either new to the HOH board or for those who might want to check something out real fast. The ATD Bios ( an incredibly wealth of information and knowledge.
https://hfboards.mandatory.com/threads/atd-master-bio-thread.2392433/
Out of all the awards the smythe has a big name factor to them. If it’s close between two players the more “famous” player will likely get it. I guess that’s where the star power people are discussing comes in.Roy's playoff resume is great but Sakic could or should probably have had it in 96. Perhaps I'm too biased from the VAN series but he didn't look like a world beater there, getting lit up in a few games by Mogilny/Tikkanen/Linden on the PP, and in the finals against FLA they probably would have won with Johan Hedberg in net. But against CHI and DET, I guess he sealed the deal there. And Sakic' performance obviously doesn't mitigate Roy's. I'm just allergic to a certain type of trophy counting, especially when it comes to the Smythe.
TBF that was one of five criteria and I noted that je ne sais quoi involved a slew of factors (including leadership, perceived dominance, etc.). It was also ranked last out of my five metrics. I basically consider it a "tiebreaker" if everything else falls roughly equal.From the guy who ranked players on "je ne sais quoi", this is an interesting request.
Don't mean to sound rude, but the two are practically, if not exactly, the same thing, in my opinion.
Maurice Richard will always be #1 for me.Now we get into some interesting comparisions
Morenz/Beliveau/Crosby
Who is the best Hab of all time?
Roy/Harvey/Beliveau/Richard/Morenz
"Star power" seems a rather nebulous way to measure or rank players, no? Growing up in the '80s, Paul Coffey had more "star power" than Ray Bourque, but does that make him a better player?
TBF that was one of five criteria and I noted that je ne sais quoi involved a slew of factors (including leadership, perceived dominance, etc.). It was also ranked last out of my five metrics. I basically consider it a "tiebreaker" if everything else falls roughly equal.
I may not get time to flesh these out but I want to make a couple of points about Shore.
Many criticisms of his defensive play are from his early career. Late career Shore was winning Hart trophies for his defensive play. Maybe similar to a Scott Stevens where the career narrative and the timing is important to get right.
Playoffs—during Shore’s peak in the early to mid 30s the Bruins were feeing the pinch of the Depression and didn’t spend on depth. Lack of depth was their downfall in the playoffs with Shore having to play huge minutes.
Also, many of the common measure used to rate players we didn’t see, especially all star and trophy voting, aren’t really able to measure the height of a player’s peak. Part of the case for Shore was that he was the greatest defenceman before Bobby Orr. Not just that he was the best defenceman in X number of seasons. For example, in 1979, Jim Coleman gave his list of top 10 players. He included Eddie Shore and not Doug Harvey, and wrote of Bobby Orr: “Defensively he was no Eddie Shore, but who was?” So if you are going to rate Doug Harvey and Ray Bourque above Shore because you count the awards and then subtract for perceived negatives...the awards may not tell the whole story.
But I defined how I was using it. So far references to it have been drive bys of "yeah but Hull had starpower so he's #5 for me and Hasek didn't so he's not on this group."I'm not criticizing it as a metric, just that it's basically the exact same thing as star power. You're asking people to define that which you've already defined!
First thoughts:
Star Power
So high up the list I still put a lot of value on star power.I separate the list in three tiers (not a list!) for star power:
Maurice Richard
Jean Béliveau
Eddie Shore
Sidney Crosby
Bobby Hull
Howie Morenz
Doug Harvey
Patrick Roy
Dominik Hasek
Ray Bourque
Clearly the first group had way more star power than the rest.IMO it's not even close.
Briefly, why I currently have Richard and Beliveau over Harvey:
1. Star power. Reading contemporary opinions, Beliveau and Richard just had more of it. Especially Richard.
My list contained six players currently active. Maybe, by the standards of this project, that's a little low. I don't think it's too low. If we go by the "chalk" of the current list, he's on the outside this round. I think that placement is entirely justified on the merits.Can you explain why [Crosby's so low]? Is it an anti-active player bias? If so i'd love for you to explain your reasoning, because i'm hoping people don't vote that way unless it's justified.