ted2019
History of Hockey
I understand the differences between the list. I meant him being in the top 100 NHL.com list was a mistake by them, not a mistake in the list here.
Understood.
I understand the differences between the list. I meant him being in the top 100 NHL.com list was a mistake by them, not a mistake in the list here.
I really enjoyed following the discussions throughout this project, you all did a great job.
I’m curious, will you at some point be posting an aggregate list and the individual voting records as was done after the 2019 top 100 project? I’d guess the debates won’t be as heated as the ones concerning C1958’s Gretzky at 6th or Crosby being lowballed, but I bet it could still make for interesting discussion.
Yes, I'll be doing it. Should have done it already. Sorry, I'm a procrastinator...
Yes, I'll be doing it. Should have done it already. Sorry, I'm a procrastinator...
I just had a quick look at the rankings and was shocked.
Vladimir Krutov should be above Gilmour, Iginla and many others on this list. The man was a legend of the 80's, he was better than Jarri Kurri. Krutov was the best LW in the world in his prime. He deserves to be in top 40 - at least.
Krutov wasn't a product of Makarov. He was a product of the Soviet hockey school and Tikhonov's coaching.
His post-Soviet league decline started to his personal inability to adjust to the North American lifestyle and drinking habits.
Krutov was absolutely better than most wingers of the 80's - better than Kurri, Goulet and thousands of others. Only two wingers, Bossy and Makarov could be considered above Krutov in that era.
There weren't that many wingers in the 80s lol
Ok rather than just stating platitudes please make your case?
Watch the Superseries and Canada Cups from the 80s and you'll see the case
Yeah, so your case hinges on 3 best on best tournaments where he played with Makarov and Larionov as with of his entire career.
In soviet league scoring, he was routinely second to his own linemate....in a league that wasn't exactly "balanced"
Top 40 all time is ridiculous
Obviously, you omitted the multiple Soviets vs NHL Superseries on purpose. Plus, tons of other international tournaments.
I agree that Makarov was better than him, in spite of Krutov having outscored Makarov in several seasons. You just confirmed my opinion. Thanks and best regards.
I did miss that part of your comment and focused in on the Canada Cup comments
I'd like you to show your work on the bolded, because I'm not sure he did in "several" seasons. Makarov led the Soviet league 9 times in points, Krutov never did. Unless you're explicitly referring to goal scoring, then they both led the USSR 3x a piece
Yes, I referred to goal scoring.
Makarov Pts | Krutov Pts | % Makarov | |
1978-79 | 39 | 11 | 355% |
1979-80 | 68 | 42 | 162% |
1980-81 | 79 | 40 | 198% |
1981-82 | 75 | 66 | 114% |
1982-83 | 42 | 53 | 79% |
1983-84 | 73 | 57 | 128% |
1984-85 | 65 | 53 | 123% |
1985-86 | 62 | 48 | 129% |
1986-87 | 53 | 50 | 106% |
1987-88 | 68 | 42 | 162% |
1988-89 | 54 | 41 | 132% |
Goal scoring is such a distorted lense to make a comparison to Makarov a notably very good playmaker. The one season Krutov had more points (82-83) Makarov missed 14 games
Below are their point totals from 77/78-88/89
Makarov destroys Krutov pretty much every season. If you think being the second best scorer in the second best league in the world on a stacked team is worthy of being top 40 all time I don't know what to say to you anymore.[TBODY] [/TBODY]
Makarov Pts Krutov Pts % Makarov 1978-79 39 11 355% 1979-80 68 42 162% 1980-81 79 40 198% 1981-82 75 66 114% 1982-83 42 53 79% 1983-84 73 57 128% 1984-85 65 53 123% 1985-86 62 48 129% 1986-87 53 50 106% 1987-88 68 42 162% 1988-89 54 41 132%
How about a different angle: Krutov was the second best scorer on the most-winning (most successful) team in the history of modern hockey.
In an unbalanced league on a team with 4 of the other best soviets in the world at the time in Fetisov, Kasatonov, Makarov, and Larionov. The system was built to help CSKA Moskva dominate lol
The amount of effort their coach Viktor Tikhonov spent poaching other players was truly impressive
He was probably the 3rd most valuable player on that team as well....
Exactly, it was one of the greatest dream teams ever assembled (just like Gretzky's Oilers). Hence, an enormous winning track-record of the Army club.
Krutov made this team and remained one of its key players for almost a decade. It is an amazing achievement.
I feel like if you think this is a remotely fair comparison you might be lacking in understanding regarding the soviet league.
If the argument is he's the 3rd best winger of the 1980s, then isn't a top 40 placement a little generous? There's 120 years of pro hockey and top 40 is, by definition, exclusive. This same forum only had 10 wingers in the top 40 all-time players. So the 3rd best of the 80s is a top 10 all-time? A top 40 winger seems a bit more appropriate.
I have Krutov higher than 127 on my list, but top 40 is a stretch. Would anyone argue he's any better than 3rd best Soviet of the 1980s behind Makarov or Fetisov?
In an unbalanced league on a team with 4 of the other best soviets in the world at the time in Fetisov, Kasatonov, Makarov, and Larionov. The system was built to help CSKA Moskva dominate lol
The amount of effort their coach Viktor Tikhonov spent poaching other players was truly impressive
He was probably the 3rd most valuable player on that team as well....
So Krutov was the third most valuable player behind two players that were ranked 25th and 26th on the top 100 list.
Don't think that's much of an argument.
Personally, I had Krutov ranked ahead of Kurri also.
So Krutov was the third most valuable player behind two players that were ranked 25th and 26th on the top 100 list.
Don't think that's much of an argument.
Personally, I had Krutov ranked ahead of Kurri also.