Who was a better player: Vincent Damphousse or Eric Staal?

Who was a better player?

  • Vincent Damphousse

    Votes: 24 32.0%
  • Eric Staal

    Votes: 47 62.7%
  • Even

    Votes: 4 5.3%

  • Total voters
    75

DitchMarner

TheGlitchintheSwitch
Jul 21, 2017
11,193
8,223
Brampton, ON
I think Staal was considered a bit more of a true star. If we're comparing them to active players, he would be equivalent to someone like Hughes (although I think Hughes is better) whereas Damphousse would be more like a Larkin, I guess.

I think statistically Staal wins, but I wasn't a big fan of his. He seemed to mail it in quite often after a strong four or five year run after the Lockout.

When you factor in compete, intangibles, clutch factor, all-around play etc, I might be inclined to take Damphousse. But when he was on, Staal was better.
 

ijuka

Registered User
May 14, 2016
23,317
16,574
Vinny all day long.

Name me another player to lead his team in scoring three consecutive years on three different teams. His IQ and class made Stall look like a sod farmer….
When you need to use such obscure arguments, the point you're making is likely not very strong.

For this comparison, Eric Staal likely suffers simply because he played during a lower-scoring era.
 

BraveCanadian

Registered User
Jun 30, 2010
15,415
4,740
Staal but I think it’s close.

Damphousse was a very good player and I really liked him as a young guy on the Leafs.. but he didn’t top out as high as Staal offensively and, personally, I find his later career defensive reputation a bit made up. It is just the usual wily vet narrative.
 
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biturbo19

Registered User
Jul 13, 2010
27,337
12,482
I voted Damphousse mostly out of nostalgia. The answer is probably actually Staal though. It's just so hard to vote for him, because he's like the most boring, unimpressive "star" of his entire era.
 

Cup or Bust

Registered User
Oct 17, 2017
4,503
4,062
At their best, Staal is the better player. I Loved the Nicholls, Damphouse, and Murphy line in 1992 on the Oilers though.
 

Albatros

Registered User
Aug 19, 2017
13,880
9,204
Ostsee
I think it's also understated, just how much of an advantage a Jofa helmet is in a poll like this.
49e73c2689582dc9f477e169f2450033.jpg
 

Shroud of Orrin

Come on, Bob
Apr 29, 2020
1,065
1,584
Haligonia
When you need to use such obscure arguments, the point you're making is likely not very strong.

Obscure, eh? I’m going to have to respectfully disagree. I’d say remarkable if anything. He led the Leafs offensively in ‘90/‘91, then adjusts to a completely different system and teammates and leads the Oilers in ‘91/‘92. He then moves again to Montreal in ‘92/‘93, leads the team in one of his better performances and they win the cup. It’s called hockey history.
 

wetcoast

Registered User
Nov 20, 2018
24,892
11,722
I think Staal was considered a bit more of a true star. If we're comparing them to active players, he would be equivalent to someone like Hughes (although I think Hughes is better) whereas Damphousse would be more like a Larkin, I guess.

I think statistically Staal wins, but I wasn't a big fan of his. He seemed to mail it in quite often after a strong four or five year run after the Lockout.

When you factor in compete, intangibles, clutch factor, all-around play etc, I might be inclined to take Damphousse. But when he was on, Staal was better.
This was my gut reaction to the question as well but I haven't done a deep dive into it.

But they probably aren't really all that far apart.
 

Stephen

Moderator
Feb 28, 2002
81,661
59,501
At the end of the 2005-06 Stanley Cup run by the Hurricanes, Eric Staal was a 100 point, cup winning number one franchise center, 21 years old. Peaked early for sure and had a lot of so so years relative to his abilities but Damphousse never touched that level in isolation, snapshot in time. That’s a special level not a lot of guys can match, probably one of the highest trade values in the post lockout era at that moment.
 
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Voight

#winning
Feb 8, 2012
42,211
18,779
Mulberry Street
Vinny was a solid contributor right till the end, whereas Staal hung on 6+ years too long. Most of us asked for his retirement papers in 2016.

Damphousse's final season - 42 points in 82 games

Staal's final season - 29 points in 72 games.

Staal also cored 42 goals in 2018 and was 17th in Hart voting. Damphousse didn't receive any Hart votes at all in his career.

Saying he hung on 6+ years too long is hogwash.
 
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the valiant effort

settle down, bud
Apr 17, 2017
4,980
6,059
Damphousse's final season - 42 points in 82 games

Staal's final season - 29 points in 72 games.

Staal also cored 42 goals in 2018 and was 17th in Hart voting. Damphousse didn't receive any Hart votes at all in his career.

Saying he hung on 6+ years too long is hogwash.

Vin led the Sharks in playoff scoring that last season. In fact I think Vinzo might have had more playoff points in that final run than Staal had post-2009. :sarcasm:
 

RandV

It's a wolf v2.0
Jul 29, 2003
27,052
5,177
Vancouver
Visit site
At their best, Staal is the better player. I Loved the Nicholls, Damphouse, and Murphy line in 1992 on the Oilers though.
Off topic but just looking at Damphousse on hockeydb, the '92 Oilers just look weird. Made it to the 4rd round lead by a25 and under core of Vincent Damphousse, Joe Murphy, Craig Simpson, Bernie Nicholls, and Dave Manson, plus 30 year old Bernie Nichols? Simpson aside none of those guys you'd associate with Edmonton from either the 80's or 90's.
 

ijuka

Registered User
May 14, 2016
23,317
16,574
Obscure, eh? I’m going to have to respectfully disagree. I’d say remarkable if anything. He led the Leafs offensively in ‘90/‘91, then adjusts to a completely different system and teammates and leads the Oilers in ‘91/‘92. He then moves again to Montreal in ‘92/‘93, leads the team in one of his better performances and they win the cup. It’s called hockey history.
Essentially, it requires you to get traded between three relatively low-scoring teams, so yes. It's quite obscure. For example, Wayne Gretzky would be holding the record had he gotten traded between each season in his prime. He didn't, so he doesn't hold the record.

These are obscure statistics dictated by external circumstances.

And yes, you could make the argument, based on these stats, that he was good at adapting to new environments. That's fine. But this poll is about how good they were as hockey players in general. Since Staal played his entire prime with the Hurricanes, this stat is meaningless for this comparison. The wording you used made it sound like some dominant argument, when the players aren't even comparable in this regard, as the data doesn't exist for the other.
 

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