I get what you're saying about the 'beginning' of a slip, but it's like saying Orr "slipped" in 1971-72 because he wasn't +124.There is a slip in Gretzky's game in '86-87. Was he still phenomenal? Yes. The best player in the game? Of course. But I remember he wasn't the same as he was the preceding five years, and the game log tells the same story. More pointless nights, more one token assist nights, and a late season swoon that was a slump by his standards.
Might have won the goal-scoring title. 68 to 62 is hardly a big difference, and I think Gretzky would have been more motivated if there had actually been a real scoring 'race' that season. Instead, he kind of coasted out of the end of the season, waiting for the playoffs.More importantly, Mario would have won the goal scoring title
Not really. In 1986, Gretzky was 'only' 6th in goals....something unthinkable before unless the usurpator was Gretz's own right-winger.
I get what you're saying about the 'beginning' of a slip, but it's like saying Orr "slipped" in 1971-72 because he wasn't +124.
When you win the scoring race by the largest margin ever, lead the league in goals, assists, and points, and captain a team to 1st overall, is there any standard by which we can call it a "slip"?
Could it not be possible that the Oilers were simply (a bit) more focused on defence in 1986-87 after their elimination by Calgary? Edmonton's goals-for dropped from 426 to 372 (-54), while their goals-against reduced from 310 to 284 (+26). In 1986-87, despite the team's -54 offense, Gretzky scored 10 more goals than the previous season and had the same plus/minus. He scored a point on 49.2% of Edmonton's goals, compared to 50.5% the year before -- hardly a significant difference.
Might have won the goal-scoring title. 68 to 62 is hardly a big difference, and I think Gretzky would have been more motivated if there had actually been a real scoring 'race' that season. Instead, he kind of coasted out of the end of the season, waiting for the playoffs.
Not really. In 1986, Gretzky was 'only' 6th in goals.
I get what you're saying about the 'beginning' of a slip, but it's like saying Orr "slipped" in 1971-72 because he wasn't +124.
When you win the scoring race by the largest margin ever, lead the league in goals, assists, and points, and captain a team to 1st overall, is there any standard by which we can call it a "slip"?
Could it not be possible that the Oilers were simply (a bit) more focused on defence in 1986-87 after their elimination by Calgary? Edmonton's goals-for dropped from 426 to 372 (-54), while their goals-against reduced from 310 to 284 (+26). In 1986-87, despite the team's -54 offense, Gretzky scored 10 more goals than the previous season and had the same plus/minus. He scored a point on 49.2% of Edmonton's goals, compared to 50.5% the year before -- hardly a significant difference.
Might have won the goal-scoring title. 68 to 62 is hardly a big difference, and I think Gretzky would have been more motivated if there had actually been a real scoring 'race' that season. Instead, he kind of coasted out of the end of the season, waiting for the playoffs.
Not really. In 1986, Gretzky was 'only' 6th in goals.
Sorry, I don't know how to slice quotes the way you do.
Sorry, I don't know how to slice quotes the way you do.
By which standards we can call it a slip?
By the standards established by the absolute greatest player of all-time: four 200-points seasons in a five-year period.
If challenged by Mario, Gretz would have ratchetted-up his goal-scoring: you might be right about that one.
Coasting at the end of the season: the absolute greatest player of all-time was in part the absolute greatest player of all-time because he NEVER coasted.
About '86: Gretz made it clear in his autobiography that he was gunning for two assists per game (you know, easy stuff.) That's why he left goals on table. Different story in '87. That team was not having it as easy as it did before.
With [ quote ] at the beginning of each sentence or paragraph you want to slice and [ /quote ] at the end of each. Without the spaces within the brackets of course
There is a slip in Gretzky's game in '86-87. Was he still phenomenal? Yes. The best player in the game? Of course. But I remember he wasn't the same as he was the preceding five years, and the game log tells the same story. More pointless nights, more one token assist nights, and a late season swoon that was a slump by his standards.
The 75 points scoring lead? Super impressive, but Mario did miss 17 games that season. His stats over 80 games prorate to 68-67-135. Gretzky still wins by 48 points (and without Coffey for a quarter of the season), but 48 points is not the 70-80 points scoring gaps he enjoyed from 82 to 86. More importantly, Mario would have won the goal scoring title, something unthinkable before unless the usurpator was Gretz's own right-winger.
The Oilers were starting to slip. Yes, they won the Cup whereas they didn't the year before, but they were less dominant in the regular season (13 points drop.) The Flames, the Flyers, and the Adams division (except Québec) gave them fits all year long. And internally, the foundations were starting to crack. It wouldn't get out in the open until the following summer, but Coffey was clearly fed up with Slats, and Gretzky was starting to question him as well.
To some, Gretzky's best year was '87. That's clearly not the way I remember it. He was still amazing, and it says a lot about the talent on that team that they would win two more cups, but the OP thread asks when we STARTED to see a slip in Gretzky's game. And to me, that year is '86-87.
I'm just gonna throw this out there...See, I don't see it that way because of what we saw in the 1987 Canada Cup. He was phenomenal.
I'm just gonna throw this out there...
I think Gretzky was better in the '91 Canada Cup than in the '87 Canada Cup!
[runs and hides]
See, I don't see it that way because of what we saw in the 1987 Canada Cup. He was phenomenal. Having 183 points compared to 200+ isn't really anything to get upset about. I'll agree the Oilers focused a little bit more on defense, but they were still pretty dominant offensively. They also led the NHL in points again. I really don't think they slipped but instead became more well rounded. If that sacrificed some offense it wasn't much.
The way I see it, Gretzky was probably the best around 1984 or 1985 because he scored goals AND got assists at levels no one else did. I don't think we understand just how hard it is to keep that pace up though, so when he was a 160+ guy on the Kings with not the same help as in Edmonton, I find that impressive too.
Let's remember one thing, in 1987 he still led the NHL in goals. He still had more assists - by far - than anyone had points. Maybe Mario missed 17 games, but even then he isn't close to Gretzky in the scoring race, and this is Mario Lemieux.
Many of us will say the best playoff he ever had was 1988. I also think his best season as a King was 1991. There really isn't a whole lot of difference between Gretzky in 1985 and in 1991. There isn't. The biggest difference is there was finally another generational talent as good as him by then (Lemieux).
Okay, I think we get what your thesis is -- 215 points to 183 is a "slip". And I suppose if you look at it only from the points perspective, it could be seen that way.
I personally don't see it that way. In fact, I've always thought Gretzky's 1985-86 is not one of his very best!
If we don't take playoffs into account, I'd rank his individual season performances as:
1) 1983-84
2) 1984-85
3) 1981-82
4) 1986-87 / 1982-83
5) 1985-86 / 1990-91
Goals were easier for the Oilers to come by in 1985-86 than in 1986-87. In fact, goals in the entire League were easier to come by in 1986 than in 1987 (for some reason). Even in his third season, Lemieux's pace in 1987 was slightly slower than in 1986.
1985-86 is one of the highest-scoring seasons in history, with the average team scoring 4.0 goals-per-game. 1986-87's stat is less than 3.7, which shows the overall drop -- it wasn't just Gretzky, or the Oilers; it was the whole NHL. Philadelphia scored fewer goals, Montreal (despite a better record) scored fewer goals, Calgary (despite a better record) scored fewer goals. Jari Kurri went from 131 points to 107; Paul Coffey from 1.75 PPG to 1.14 PPG, Glenn Anderson from 54 goals to 35. Did all these Oilers also "slip" suddenly at age 25/26? Or, did the team simply struggle out of the gate a bit (they were only 10W-8L-1T in the first 19 games) before picking up speed towards the end (and 40W-16L-5T the rest of the season)?
1985-86 is Gretzky's lowest goal-season between 1980 and 1988. It's the only season between 1981 and 1988 that he wasn't 1st or 2nd in plus/minus (he was 3rd). This doesn't sound like much, but consider that 1985-86 is the only year in Edmonton that Wayne was 'top-10' in on-ice goals-against (he was 5th 'worst' in the League, being on ice for a crazy 162 goals against). There were some crazy Oilers losses in 1985-86 that were sort-of premonitions of how they might lose their way in the playoffs (as they did). They lost a game 11-9 to Toronto -- Wayne had a hat-trick but it didn't help win the game on that night. They lost 9-3 to Calgary on the next-to-last night of the season. They won 12-9 over Chicago, but did it ugly, blowing a 6-0 lead in the process and nearly losing the game. They were slightly drunk on their own power in 1985-86, and this was (part of) their undoing in the playoffs.
So, Gretzky was back to 1st in goals (and assist, and points) and 1st in plus/minus in 1986-87, despite his team and the League being lower-scoring. He and the Oilers were more defensively responsible. In total goals on-ice for/against, Gretzky is +98 in 1986 but +107 in 1987.
Hard to see a slip here...
but somehow you don't want to address my post, why is that I wonder?
Actually the increase in injuries to elite players is really obvious to see
as are the impact of heavier players colliding more often are higher speeds
The increasing physicality of the game from 1980 to 190 and beyond simply would have altered Gretzky's fortunes, to what degree we will never know but injuries to elite star players increased dramatically in the 90's compared to when Wayne entered the league plain and simple.
Bure, Lindros, Forsberg, Kariya, Neely....among many.
I'm just gonna throw this out there...
I think Gretzky was better in the '91 Canada Cup than in the '87 Canada Cup!
[runs and hides]
With all due respect, I find it a bit convenient that you would use Lemieux as the only reason Gretzky didn't look as dominant in the late eighties, and then completely ignore the Lemieux factor when discussing the '87 Canada Cup. Yes, Wayne was phenomenal in that tournament. Still, there's no way he enjoys that kind of success if he doesn't play with Mario, and there's no way Canada wins that Cup if they don't play on the same line. And a great tournament doesn't mask the fact that he was slipping a bit. Sample size discussions aren't my cup of tea, but a ten game outburst does not make up for a 32 point decline, because reductio ad absurdum, you could make an argument that Gretzky was still as good in the '93 playoffs as he had ever been.
No one is upset that Gretzky got 183 instead of 200. It might have been the least significant 32 point drop in the history of the NHL. But again, I refer to the OP topic. When did we see a sign of decline? You wrote it yourself, you think his best years were '84 and '85. I'm willing to throw '86 in there as well. If you set out to get two assists per game and manage to do it in the most competitive hockey league in the world, you're still doing pretty much whatever you want. Gretz fell a bit short of those ridiculous standards in '87. He would never come close to them again.
The topic isn't who was the best player in the world in '87, or even if anybody else had ever had as good a season as Gretzky did in '87 up to that point (apart for maybe a couple Orr seasons, and Mr Hockey in '53, the answer is no.) The topic is when did Gretz start slipping. In '87, he was amazing, phenomenal, the best in the business. And he wasn't as good as he was before.
I feel it is interpreted by some as a knock on Gretzky to say he wasn't as dominant as before starting in '87. It shouldn't. He was still dominant. He was still the best player around.
But I can't be the only one who remembers how magical were the five preceding years. From 82 to 86, Gretzky didn't just rewrite the record book, he changed the perception of what we thought was possible to do on a an NHL rink. By 1986, it seemed like it would last forever. When an NHL player purposefully gets two assists per game over a full season and multiple posters on this site are somewhat blasé about it, you have to conclude that the preceding years were super special.
But then Steve Smith, and the slow start in '86-87, and the 32 point drop, the late season swoon, the bickering between Sather and a few players, Gretzky's changes in his personal life (I don't want to get gossipy and all, but relationship changes will affect you professionnally, whether you're a construction worker or the greatest hockey player of all-time.) It wasn't an obvious decline like he experienced after the Suter hit. It was a slip. He was still fantastic. Just less so than he was before.
I think if there was any sort of drop off in 1987 it was extremely remote. In other words, there had to be SOME time that he stopped having 200 point years. But I honestly think 1986's loss drove him to be even more competitive in doing the little things right, even if that cost him a few points. So yeah, statistically there was a tiny drop but I think he more than made up for it with other things. So I'm not sure I would even say he dropped in 1987 considering everything.
I would actually agree with that. Yes, he did drop by 40 points immediately following the 1991 Canada Cup injury, and yes, he suffered from dealing with his father's brain aneurysm, but he obviously rebounded to full on 1991 level Gretzky-ness (is that a word?) in the 1993 playoffs. He maintained this resurgence until the first couple months of the 1993-94 season, when he was on track -- at one point early in the season -- for a 180 point season. He had told the media before the season began he wanted to win the Art Ross in 1993-94, and said he would likely need 160 points to do it. I don't ever recall Gretzky telling the media things like this in the off season before, so he had to be feeling pretty confident in his health and abilities at this point. But once the Kings began to stumble, and Kings management and players appeared to give up on the 1993-94 season, it seemed that Wayne sort of coasted his way to the Art Ross trophy. The "160 point Art Ross" jump that was in his step at the beginning of the season was gone by the time he was breaking Gordie How's all time goal scoring record. This was the beginning of the end, as I remember.Around 1994 or 1995.
There was no drop in 1987 - that was Gretzky's greatest season. There was a league-wide drop in scoring but, Gretzky won the Art Ross by 69%, the greatest level of dominance of his career. Don't use arbitrary numbers like season to season point totals to determine performance that simply confuses the issue.
Also from 1988-89 through 1995-96 he had a goddamned aluminum stick. So the Easton sponsorship was like when Tiger Woods switched to Nike.