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?
Did not rank.Out of curiosity, where did Glen Anderson rank in the top 100 and 200 lists that you guys are referring to?
Gartner was a really good goal-scorer and a really good skater....but, Bure was a lot better at both.
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.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.
Please do. I love the player.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.
Bure was almost the best goal-scorer ever in hockey;
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.
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
And bringing up Bure in comparison to whatever is being discussed whether it's relevant to the topic or notIs 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???
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.
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?