sr edler
gold is not reality
- Mar 20, 2010
- 12,215
- 6,701
Weird that I have to address this, but this is not the NBA. It doesn't matter what the shooting percentage is. What matters is how many goals you score.
You know who had the most outrageous shooting percentages? Craig Simpson. I guess he should have tried shooting more and then he would have been the best ever.
Craig Simpson Stats | Hockey-Reference.com
That's a different argument than what he is saying (and a much better one). If Gretzky shot the puck more his shooting percentages would have also dipped.
I think you're contradicting yourself a bit here. I think the thought is that players with a higher shooting percentages partly have that high shooting percentage because they're deliberately not firing the bullet in unnecessary moments, but instead look for other/better options (like advancing the puck or passing it). Another part is obviously general shooting skill (not everyone has the same shot/accuracy). Charlie Simmer and Sergei Makarov were two other players with high shooting percentages in the NHL, and I think we can say that at least Makarov was a player with a pretty balanced skillset regarding goalscoring/playmaking.
Another thought, with "unnecessary" (or low percentage) shooting, is that it creates pressure and rebounds, outside of the possibility to get a weak goal. I've played similar sports myself and one aspect of volume shooting is that it creates general chaos, and could leave the goalie (and his defense) off balance or out of position. A possible downside to volume shooting could be if someone else (an opponent) catches the majority of those rebounds. As for your NBA analogy, the NHL also doesn't count (catching) rebounds.
I think peak Ovi was a justified volume shooter, even at that crazy level. Post peak Ovi is a more doubtful case. Now post peak Ovi won a Cup, while peak Ovi didn't, but that's because post peak Ovi had better/deeper teams.