Was Mike Gartner underrated?

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Is it possible for Canucks fans to discuss players without bringing up Canuck players and/or the tunnel-vision perspective that proves they barely ever watched Eastern conference teams?

Calm down a hectogram, I didn't mean Bondra was a compiler, I just meant he ended up with the numbers he ended up with, because of the circumstances described (playing style). Technically everyone compile their numbers.
 
Let's take a deep dive. Glenn Anderson scored 6 points in the 1994 playoffs. 1 point in each series and then three in the Cup final. Two of them goals. Those goals were both game winners. Game 2 especially was a shorthanded marker to break a tie in the 2nd period. Game 3 was a goal late in the 1st period. Okay look, I am a proponent of Anderson in the HHOF. He belongs in my opinion simply because he has good regular season numbers and of course great playoff numbers that simply can't be ignored. By 1994 he just wasn't scoring as much, and the Rangers had a lot of RW on their team as it was who were ahead of him. My guess is Anderson is brought in for leadership and morale with some of his other Oiler buddies. I'll say what I normally say, you can't argue with results, and since the Rangers were drenched with former Oilers it couldn't hurt having Anderson on there. There were 7 former Oilers from Cup winners on that team. With all due respect to Leetch and Richter and Kovalev and Larmer, you can't ignore that sort of pedigree. So even though Gartner still had some hockey left in him - and more than Anderson - you can't go against a Cup champion.

That being said...................many of their trades did result in the 1994 Cup being a one and done type of thing. Where as guys like Amonte, Gartner, Weight, etc. all help the team well into the 1990s and some even into the 2000s. And Gartner had 16 points in 13 playoff games in 1992. Then in Toronto 11 points in 18 playoff games in 1994. Do they still win the Cup with Gartner? Yeah I think they do absolutely. But I do have to admit I wouldn't trade Anderson "back" just to find out. The results spoke. Unfortunately Anderson was the victim here.
 
Gartner was a really good goal-scorer and a really good skater....but, Bure was a lot better at both.

Gartner might have been faster skating around the rink without the puck, in these annual all-star exhibition trials, but the fun kinda ends there. Actual in-game situations, with the puck, there's really no contest. That's the thing with Bure, he almost appeared faster with the puck on his stick, and could just go around you. To make a football analogy, I'm sure there were faster players than Ryan Giggs without the ball, but when that guy had a ball on his feet, down the wing, he could just fly away.
 
I was actually thinking of starting a thread about players like Gartner: there's a very small subset of players who had little to no support for the top 200 project that we completed a few years back, while at the same time there's little to no pushback to them being in the Hall of Fame.
In the fall, I was planning on doing a deep dive into Larry Murphy's career, but I ran out of time. It seems like he'd be an ideal player for that type of thread.
 
We are indeed looking at a very big quality difference. Gartner was a really good goal-scorer and a really good skater....but, Bure was a lot better at both. Bure was almost the best goal-scorer ever in hockey; Gartner wasn't anywhere close to that.

Yeah, I think you have to consider scoring environments here.

Gartner peaked in the 80s whereas Bure had his best seasons in 1994 and the Dead Puck Era. Scoring across the League was nowhere close in 2000 to what it was in '85.

Bure had five 50+ goal seasons, including two 60 goal seasons, whereas Gartner hit 50 goals once (and he scored exactly 50 that season) despite the fact that Gartner played a lot longer and had more seasons in the higher scoring pre DPE days. Also, Bure was top four in points four times while Gartner was a top ten scorer only once.

I guess maybe you can make a case that Gartner had the better career if you really value longevity, but in terms of talent and offensive ability, Bure was clearly on a different level.

Not sure how Bure is relevant to this thread anyway, though.
 
In the fall, I was planning on doing a deep dive into Larry Murphy's career, but I ran out of time. It seems like he'd be an ideal player for that type of thread.

murphy, similar to gartner in that he got in first ballot and felt like a second tier guy in the context of his class (bourque and coffey).

not to say murphy wasn’t a way better player than gartner
 
murphy, similar to gartner in that he got in first ballot and felt like a second tier guy in the context of his class (bourque and coffey).

not to say murphy wasn’t a way better player than gartner

I didn't know what to make of the March 7th, 1989 trade which included Mike Gartner and Larry Murphy going to Minnesota for Dino Ciccarelli and Bob Rouse, and it still doesn't make much sense to me. I had the impression that it was basically Gartner for Ciccarelli, with a lopsided trade (in Minnesota's favor) because it also included Murphy for Bob Rouse; (Rouse) who I liked but I never thought that highly of him either.

Is it fair to say that Larry Murphy's stock coming at the end of the '80s, wasn't that high? Was the perception of Ciccarelli's game (ability/talent/etc) higher than Gartner's in 1989?
 
Is it possible for Canucks fans to discuss players without bringing up Canuck players and/or the tunnel-vision perspective that proves they barely ever watched Eastern conference teams? First grossly overrating Marleau, and now Bondra "compiled" goals???
And bringing up Bure in comparison to whatever is being discussed whether it's relevant to the topic or not
 
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I didn't know what to make of the March 7th, 1989 trade which included Mike Gartner and Larry Murphy going to Minnesota for Dino Ciccarelli and Bob Rouse, and it still doesn't make much sense to me. I had the impression that it was basically Gartner for Ciccarelli, with a lopsided trade (in Minnesota's favor) because it also included Murphy for Bob Rouse; (Rouse) who I liked but I never thought that highly of him either.

Is it fair to say that Larry Murphy's stock coming at the end of the '80s, wasn't that high? Was the perception of Ciccarelli's game (ability/talent/etc) higher than Gartner's in 1989?

yeah, larry murphy’s stock was incredibly low for a guy who scored as much as him. first being traded to minnesota for effectively bob rouse, then to pittsburgh for a veritable bag of pucks (jim johnson and chris dahlquist), then to toronto for dmitri mironov and a second rounder, then literally given away to detroit.

the pittsburgh trade is one of the most bonkers trades of all time. an all-star calibre offensive defenceman for two plumbers (not insignificantly, both native minnesotans), and the two teams meet in the finals where that all-star dman puts up 10 pts and skates off with the cup.

but this is where gartner and murphy have more in common than just playing on the same team in washington, minnesota, and later toronto. murphy’s first three trades were all trades for a very different kind of player that told you what his teams thought about him. engblom was a defensive rock, rouse was toughness personified, and even the pittsburgh trade was saying that toughness and depth was more valuable than having an offensive dman who didn’t play to his size.

you can kind of read the gartner trades that way too. ciccarelli had very similar stats to gartner but was a totally different kind of player: scrappy with a rep for scoring big goals. dahlen did his best work on the boards. glenn anderson was another scrappy guy with a rep for clutchness.
 
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yeah, larry murphy’s stock was incredibly low for a guy who scored as much as him. first being traded to minnesota for effectively bob rouse, then to pittsburgh for a veritable bag of pucks (jim johnson and chris dahlquist), then to toronto for dmitri mironov and a second rounder, then literally given away to detroit.

the pittsburgh trade is one of the most bonkers trades of all time. an all-star calibre offensive defenceman for two plumbers (not insignificantly, both native minnesotans), and the two teams meet in the finals where that all-star dman puts up 10 pts and skates off with the cup.

but this is where gartner and murphy have more in common than just playing on the same team in washington, minnesota, and later toronto. murphy’s first three trades were all trades for a very different kind of player that told you what his teams thought about him. engblom was a defensive rock, rouse was toughness personified, and even the pittsburgh trade was saying that toughness and depth was more valuable than having an offensive dman who didn’t play to his size.

you can kind of read the gartner trades that way too. ciccarelli had very similar stats to gartner but was a totally different kind of player: scrappy with a rep for scoring big goals. dahlen did his best work on the boards. glenn anderson was another scrappy guy with a rep for clutchness.

I appreciate your post!

I'd just add, that I would have thought a bit more of Ciccarelli over Gartner in 1989 too. After that trade, just isolating the playoffs, specifically Ciccarelli's 1st round series with Washington in '89, '90, '91, and '92, he registered 18 goals in 25 games, and 30 points overall.

It seemed like whichever game I was watching (Central Time) over those years, CBC would cut away to show goals scored on the East Coast, and there was, yet again, another Ciccarelli goal making the highlight.
 
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