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so you won't admit that I totally refuted your point, and you attacked my "context" point with Reaves?
Ok
YOU should be the one to look up how many fights (in how many games) he had in the early 90s, lol . . . don't worry, I will do it for you, since I know it will immediately disprove that point, lol
Wendel Clark - fighter, hitter, scorer, leader
90/91
63 gp - 12 fights
91/92
43 gp - 5 fights
92/93
66 gp - 10 fights (Probert twice)
Context:
Probert (recognised as one of the ALL TIME greatest fighter in history)
90/91
55gp - 17 fights
91/92
63gp - 19 fights
92/93
80gp - 15 fights
For further context - this guy Probert, who we all know is literally ONLY known for fighting, his all time highs for fights in a year are 24 (86/87), and 20 three other times (93/94, 95/96, 98/99 )
Clark definitely tapered off on the amount of fights later in his injury riddled career, but to say he didn't fight much later is wrong.
[EDITED insult omitted]
A guy that fought 5, or 10 times a season back then, was obviously someone who was not looking for a fights. Preety much every player in the 80s and 90s had 5-10 fights a season. That was just part of being a hockey player, a typical NHLer.
Those watching Clark highlights, will get the impression that Wendel Clark was some sort of goon, that all he did was fight. Well that was not true. Getting Wendel to drop his gloves wasn't such an easy proposition. He knew what he meant to the team and he knew that fighting guys twice his size was not the best way to make use of his talents. Sure he could do it, but he had ELITE LEVEL talent and his worth to the team was far more precious by staying on the ice scoring goals and assisting others in scoring them than fighting.
You then jumped in and said that he fought 55 times in 2 years, and used Reaves for context. You must be a young kid, who does not realize how the game has changed from the 90s and 80s. Hockey was all about fighting back in the day, it happened as often as GOAL scoring. In fact in some games it was more common to have more 1on1 fights than you had goals. Todays game is so much different, the NHL has distanced itself from fighting. You hardly ever see fights now a days, sure they still happen but not on a scale that they did in the 80's and 90s. THAT IS WHAT CONEXT IS!
So using Reaves as a context for how often Wendel Clark Faught, means you do not even understand that these two players are not even comparable. Wendel Clark was maybe 1000X times more talented, if not a Million times, and he was offensive force. He scored 46 goals in 1993! It could very well be said that when on the ice he often was the best scoring option on that ice... but to look at the number of fights each had, and than saying well Reaves had 20 fights this year and Wendel had a season when he had 17 so they must be the same sort of players, is utterly stupid.
In those days, fighting 5 times in a season, 10 times, a season is a player who is avoiding fights. Especially when you saw how damn good he was at it! He played 18 seasons and had 155 fights in his career.... so those 55 fights in his first 2 years represented OVER 1/3rd of all his fights and he was in the NHL for 16 more seasons!!!
As for what Probert did in 91, 92, 93. You also seem to be missing the point that out of all the goons on the goon squad Probert was a damn good hockey player. That is what made him special, he was needed and his teams did not want him to fight. Sure they accepted that Rob was going to drop his gloves and that guys were going to take runs at him, but he also meant a lot more to his teams success scoring and playing than fighting. So again your context, shows you know very little about the game besides stats. You cant just pull Probert out of a list of fighters and say he was typical and use him for context. HE WAS RARE, ONE OF A KIND!
Comparing Reaves to Clark is like trying to put a square peg into a round hole. They are such different players that any comparison between them, means you do not know what context means. Acting like Rob Probert was something normal for a goon, is beyond ridiculous.. Most goons in the NHL at that time had no business putting on skates. They were recruited for fighting and fighting only! Many of them looked so terrible on ice that they were hardly ever used... some of them could barely skate, but yet still got full season contracts from their teams because they werer wanted for one thing and one thing only, fighting. Every team had one, END of BENCH. That is why there is a term GOON, that is used to define these guys. They would never make a team based on the hockey skills, but only based on their fighting skills and their toughness. What do you think Reaves represents?
Those years are long gone, and Reaves has more in common with what goons were all about than he does with Rob Probert, or Wendel Clark, Both of these players were diamond in the rough special because they were god damn talented from top to bottom. Tie Domi for instance was a pure goon, who towards the end of his career learned to play hockey. That is why its so much fun to watch his son actually achieving milestones that Tie never could.
So my original point was that if you watch highlights of Wendel Clark you will get the impression that he was an enforcer. HE WAS NOT. KEN BAUMGARTNER was the enforcer, go look it up. If you thought that Rob Probert is what ALL fighters were made out of, LOL, he was as special as SHAQ. Guys like Rob Probert only came along once in century. That is what made Rob Probert so special, his biggest contribution to his team was NOT fighting but ACTUAL playing!
anyway bro, PM me if you want to continue this, I don't think this is fair to the rest of the forum, I made my point 10 times over, if you can't understand it, maybe read it slower and few times over.