Michael Farkas
Celebrate 68
Yeah, this is a really good look at it and I'm glad someone else that definitely sees what goes down says this. I think we're seeing the same thing and it took me a while to piece it together (a couple reasons, none of which are important to this particular post).Re: Lafleur....
He just wasn't overly smart or adaptable. He played on instinct, which can be a good thing, but also limiting.
He was very important to the Habs, he could do things nobody else could do. But he was very well insulated on those teams. He sometimes shared the ice with 5 other Hall of Famers (i.e. everybody), and some great defensive players.
For me, he was rarely the Habs' best player, and not great on Team Canada. But, still, his skill was undeniable, and he was a beautiful player to watch.
He's technically better than most players of this era. He's also a rare quick-twitch athlete for this time period. He really is a terrific, natural athlete. The league is slower and sloppier as we get through the mid 70's and through the early 80's, so there's a marked advantage here. It's not unlike Maurice Richard in some ways. I don't like how Richard played, I don't like that type of player relatively speaking. But Richard dummied those guys because they weren't equipped technically to deal with it.
Staying in the era, Gilbert Perreault was probably technically better 1v1 and he also went about it in a little different way...he was a "set them up, knock'em down" guy in terms of how he handled 1v1 play, especially in the NZ. Unlike Lafleur, he opted to try to pass more. A lot more. Given the state of goaltending at this time, Perreault would have been better off firing some more. Lafleur (and Lemaire) were blasting them on net from center regularly. Lemaire even beat that loser Esposito from center in game 7 to win the 1971 Stanley Cup.
If you center around Perreault's career (1971-1987) here are the shots per game for the Sabres...
1. R.Martin 3.69
2. D.Gare 3.54
3. R.Robert 3.35
4. J.Van Boxmeer 2.71
5. P.Housley 2.58
6. G.Perreault 2.58
7. E.Shack 2.58
8. D.Andreychuk 2.56
9. M.Robitaille 2.55
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Lafleur was up at 3.33 per game, Lemaire at 3.65 over the course of Lafleur's Montreal career (1971-1985).
Lafleur prime (75 to 80), he took 500 more shots than any other Montreal Canadien.
Perreault prime (75 to 80), Perreault just narrowly avoided being 4th on his team in shots...350 behind the leader. 12 more goals and he still would have led all players during that time though.
The shooters get a lot of credit, especially in the wake of Ovechkin's achievement. And people that count like to count and they really try to rub it in that they can count. But shots aren't created equally and they aren't created equally in all eras. Not only in terms of the quality (which I think we all know at this point), but in terms of the ease to get shots off. Shot distances have changed over time too.
Anyway, back to the actual players...Perreault had very deceptive tools, he was really effective all over the ice and he maximized that ice, he managed it really well because his mental game was really advanced. Lafleur on the wing, well, he was there by design. His technical game was better than his anticipation. And that's probably why we saw Perreault age more gracefully. After their respective age 32 seasons, Lafleur was a 56 pts/82 player; Perreault was 84 pts/82.
Between playing on a far weaker team and simply prioritizing passing instead of ladling pucks over strewn frenetics like Tony O and Vachon, he chose to try to pass to a guy who scored on a ~20 goal pace without him...it likely hurt his career numbers, which hurts his awards, which hurts his "resume" here. So we have Perreault over 100 spots behind Lafleur...but if we were forced to watch the games in order to participate in the projects, there's 0% chance that gap would be that large. Zero. I'd wager that some would not continue to have Lafleur ahead at all even.