Whose 894 will be better?

PrimumHockeyist

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It's a pretty crazy difference. What we did see back then was a greater reliance on slapshots. I wonder how Gretzky would have adapted his game with a modern stick. His slapper, while not particularly powerful, was deadly accurate and he used it a fair bit. Wish we could do some sort of time travel stuff to see what a young Gretzky would do in the modern NHL with this kind of equipment and training.
I just found this:

"According to simulations, a composite stick can generate a slapshot speed of 66.4 mph, while a wooden stick can generate a speed of 54.9 mph. This represents a difference of approximately 11.5 mph, or around 21% faster swing speed for composite sticks.
Additionally, the lighter weight of composite sticks can reduce fatigue and strain on the player’s arms and shoulders, allowing for quicker and more efficient movements on the ice."

This is the most telling thing to me. That much less time for a D-man to cover.
 
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Killer Orcas

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Why would have outscored Mike Gartner goal scoring by a large amount post 1991, they were scoring at a very similar rate before the injury and he aged really well ?
I don't wanna go researching all this so I did quick search and found this. I'm sure it explains it much better then I ever could. I'll just add I'm old and watched him in his prime and he was never the same after the hit.
 

MadLuke

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Jan 18, 2011
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I don't wanna go researching all this so I did quick search and found this. I'm sure it explains it much better then I ever could. I'll just add I'm old and watched him in his prime and he was never the same after the hit.
yes he probably still score 40 goals for a while without it, but that does not go over 1000 necessarily. say he score 41-48-42 in 92-93-94.

You add a nice 46 goals to his career and other 35 for the rest of it, still short. He could have obviously, but not sure it necessarily happen.
 

Killer Orcas

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yes he probably still score 40 goals for a while without it, but that does not go over 1000 necessarily. say he score 41-48-42 in 92-93-94.

You add a nice 46 goals to his career and other 35 for the rest of it, still short. He could have obviously, but not sure it necessarily happen.
You might be right but he did dramatically fall off after the hit. Maybe I have rose colored glasses for him but regardless he would have more then he finished with we can agree.
 

PrimumHockeyist

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50 goals in 39 games in the '81-82 season (which had a 4.01 GPG per team avg.) is about like scoring 34 goals in 39 games in 2013 (2.72 GPG avg.) - which, incidentally, Ovechkin exceeded (43 goals in 45 games):
Not sure if I got this straight. Are you suggesting that as far as feats are concerned, Gretzky's 50 in 39 is a lesser achievement than scoring 34 goals in 39 games, which is less than a goal a game?
 

Midnight Judges

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Not sure if I got this straight. Are you suggesting that as far as feats are concerned, Gretzky's 50 in 39 is a lesser achievement than scoring 34 goals in 39 games, which is less than a goal a game?

In 2013. Yes. That is how enormous the scoring environment difference is from Gretzky's era to Ovechkin's era.
 

Midnight Judges

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Scoring distribution can change quite a bit and doing it from first game of the year vs best career stretch would be both a bit different.

Gretzky once scored 66 goals in 50 games if we look at his peak stretch around that time, only Bobby Hull outscored elite competition by more I think among the 50 in 50 players

Gretzky once score 39 goals in a 25 games stretch, he could have a 50 in less than 39 I am not sure but easy to imagine.

During that 43 goals stretch in 45 games, Toews ans Steen scored 24 and 23, he outscored them by 79% and 87%

During that (just quickly picked around that time) 45 games stretch of Gretzky in which he score 59:

Ciccarelli-Maruk scored 34-32, outscore them by 73.5% and 84%..

It could be closer than the HR adjusted gap would indicate

66 in 50 is indeed a better achievement than 50 in 39 (which kind of illustrates the non-utility of focusing on 50 games beyond the era when a season was 50 games) and yet again, it's still not better than Ovechkin's best streaks.

That equates to about 45 goals in 50 games in 2013 (again, 4.01 GPG to 2.72/2.74). Ovechkin had 48 goals in 50 games in 2013.

 

Stephen

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In 2013. Yes. That is how enormous the scoring environment difference is from Gretzky's era to Ovechkin's era.

I don't think that works emotionally or intellectually at all... having gone through a low scoring, low event era, people don't sit around and marvel at the depressed numbers and celebrate them. And how people celebrate these numbers is a big part of what makes them special.
 
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Midnight Judges

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I don't think that works emotionally or intellectually at all... having gone through a low scoring, low event era, people don't sit around and marvel at the depressed numbers and celebrate them. And how people celebrate these numbers is a big part of what makes them special.

You are free to inject emotion as part of your criteria. I've seen people openly state that Canadiens players are simply more important than players from other franchises because they matter more to their community. Anyone is free to do that, and what is there to argue with?

For me, emotion is unnecessary as part of the criteria for athletic greatness. Everything worth supporting can be supported with facts and evidence alone.

I do not know why anyone would think adjusting for scoring environment doesn't work intellectually. Certainly there are lots of people who think that way. They think adjusting for scoring environment "penalizes" or "punishes" players like Gretzky when really it simply levels the playing field across eras. Otherwise you'd have the impression that Peter Stastny (career 1.27 PPG) was a superior per-game player to Sidney Crosby (career 1.25 PPG) even though this forum doesn't even regard Peter Statstny as a top 13 player of his own generation or a top 100 player of all time. Do you think it's plausible that Stastny was better than Crosby?
 
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PrimumHockeyist

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You are free to inject emotion as part of your criteria. I've seen people openly state that Canadiens players are simply more important than players from other franchises because they matter more to their community. Anyone is free to do that, and what is there to argue with?

For me, emotion is unnecessary as part of the criteria for athletic greatness. Everything worth supporting can be supported with facts and evidence alone.

I do not know why anyone would think adjusting for scoring environment doesn't work intellectually. Certainly there are lots of people who think that way. They think adjusting for scoring environment "penalizes" or "punishes" players like Gretzky when really it simply levels the playing field across eras. Otherwise you'd have the impression that Peter Stastny (career 1.27 PPG) was a superior per-game player to Sidney Crosby (career 1.25 PPG) even though this forum doesn't even regard Peter Statstny as a top 13 player of his own generation or a top 100 player of all time. Do you think it's plausible that Stastny was better than Crosby?
When you consider this way, are all NHL seasons the same based on that goal stat? Im just wondering if that is your only benchmark or if there are others.

If so, I would think you could offer some sort of Top 10 based on this metric alone. Who would be at the top? Where would 50 in 39 fit?
 
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BraveCanadian

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I think Gretzky peaked higher but Ovi’s longevity is freakish so his 894 will be better.

Gretzky really limped through the back half of his career as a goal scorer due to Suter and his shoulder issues. Amazing to think what he would have set the bar at if he’d been relatively healthy, but he wasn’t so Ovi makes up a lot of ground.
 

Gregor Samsa

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Crazy how Gretzky’s play style earned him the moniker of “playmaker” instead of “goal scorer” yet he’s the all time leader in goals. Just goes to show how insane his assist record is. It’s probably unbeatable unless the game really changes
 

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