Auston Matthews has more goals and a higher gpg than Ovechkin age for age. And the gap is about to grow. Can he also make a run at 894?

MadLuke

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Don't follow the complaint. League-wide scoring dipped, so each point becomes harder to obtain.
I am talking why the league-wide scoring change and the adjusted points values do not follow each other.

League scoring went down 3.8%, adjusted points value went up 8.8% (could be mixing the down do, up by, type of talk), I am not sure you get what I am trying to say because I am terrible at writting english.

HR reference do not use simple league average scoring to adjust:
For Howe in 1952-53 this is 49 * 1.17 * 0.86 * 1.32 = 65 adjusted goals.

1.17 is simple schedule length, 1.32 is simple league scoring average, there is a third adjustment for the roster size change over time that people often have the most problem with, for assist you had a new one average assists per goals.
 
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daver

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This is what you need to train your brain away from. 100 guys had 60 or more points in 1981-82 in a 21 team nhl. 38 guys had 60 or more points in 1998-99 in a 27 team nhl.

That doesn't matter when you are comparing relative dominance over their respective peers.

Yes, the # of teams can matter when making a comparison but not as much as you think when discussing all-star talent.

What you seem to not be grasping is things like PP time and overall league trends can create differences between league GPG and the point totals of the leading scorers.

It is faulty to the point almost uselessness and most on the HOH know this.
 
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WarriorofTime

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It is faulty to the point almost uselessness and most on the HOH know this.
Not interested in groupthink related appeals to authority. Open to more statistically based arguments, like if you can show separation versus each incremental 10th percentile and making some determinations there. That some teams have a rotating cast of players thrusted into 1st line/PP1 and fail to produce is a rather relevant thing to give consideration towards for “how hard is it score.”

Besides it’s not like we can’t see how many power plays were handed out. It’s not a magical guesswork.
 

Vilica

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Do you have the top 50 seasons using the average VsX method?
Of all time seasons? Absolutely. Here's a top 75, there's a few caveats involving some adjustments for some seasons, and the 1917-18 season is incorrect (league average is wrong due to the folding of the Wanderers, I've fixed it in the single season but haven't updated my sorted sheets yet).

Pts RankNameYearTeamGamesGoalsAssistsPointsTeam GFLA GF% LAG%P%VsXVsX SeasonAvg VsX
11Wayne Gretzky85-86EDM80521632154263171.3440.1220.505141152.48154.72
21Wayne Gretzky84-85EDM80731352084013111.2890.1820.519135154.07152.57
31Mario Lemieux88-89PIT76851141993472991.1610.2450.573139143.17151.82
41Wayne Gretzky81-82EDM80921202124173211.2990.2210.508147144.22150.66
51Wayne Gretzky83-84EDM74871182054463161.4110.1950.460121169.42147.99
61Connor McDavid20-21EDM5633721051831651.1090.1800.57469152.17145.17
71Wayne Gretzky82-83EDM80711251964243091.3720.1670.462124158.06144.70
1Mario Lemieux95-96PIT7069921613622581.4030.1910.445120134.17UA142.35
1Phil Esposito70-71BOS7876761523992441.6350.1900.38190168.89UA142.11
81Wayne Gretzky86-87EDM79621211833722941.2650.1670.492108169.44141.99
91Howie Morenz27-28MTL43331851116841.3810.2840.44035145.71138.50
1Connor McDavid22-23EDM8264891533252581.2600.1970.471113135.40135.28
101Wayne Gretzky90-91LAK78411221633402761.2320.1210.479115141.74134.72
111Jaromir Jagr98-99PIT8144831272422161.1200.1820.525107118.69134.12
1Phil Esposito73-74BOS7868771453492491.4020.1950.41591159.34UA132.84
121Mario Lemieux95-96PIT7069921613622781.3020.1910.445120134.17Adj132.11
2Jaromir Jagr95-96PIT8262871493622581.4030.1710.412120124.17UA131.74
2Bobby Orr70-71BOS78371021393992441.6350.0930.34890154.44UA129.95
131Mario Lemieux87-88PIT7770981683192971.0740.2190.527131128.24129.04
141Gordie Howe52-53DET704946952221681.3210.2210.42861155.74128.99
152Wayne Gretzky88-89LAK78541141683762991.2580.1440.447139120.86128.17
161Cooney Weiland29-30BOS444330731791301.3770.2400.40862117.74128.10
171Joe Malone17-18MTL2044448115861.3370.3830.41746104.35127.32
1Phil Esposito71-72BOS7666671333302391.3810.2000.403109122.02UA126.94
1Phil Esposito68-69BOS7449771263032271.3350.1620.416107117.76UA126.62
181Bobby Orr69-70BOS7633871202772211.2530.1190.43386139.53123.86
191Phil Esposito70-71BOS7876761523992811.4200.1900.38190168.89Adj123.39
202Jaromir Jagr95-96PIT8262871493622781.3020.1710.412120124.17Adj122.26
211Jaromir Jagr00-01PIT8152691212812261.2430.1850.43196126.04122.13
222Cy Denneny17-18OTT21361046102861.1860.3530.45146100.00122.02
231Wayne Gretzky80-81EDM80551091643283071.0680.1680.500135121.48121.86
241Leon Draisaitl19-20EDM7143671102232081.0720.1930.49397113.40120.64
251Mario Lemieux92-93PIT6069911603673051.2030.1880.436148108.11119.67
261Nikita Kucherov18-19TBL8241871283192441.3070.1290.401116110.34119.67
272Joe Sakic00-01COL8254641182702261.1950.2000.43796122.92119.11
283Steve Yzerman88-89DET8065901553132991.0470.2080.495139111.51118.25
291Babe Dye24-25TOR293884690891.0110.4220.51142109.52117.90
301Babe Dye22-23TOR2227134082781.0510.3290.48833121.21116.98
1Guy Lafleur76-77MTL8056801363872661.4550.1450.351105129.52UA116.63
311Mario Lemieux96-97PIT7650721222852391.1920.1750.428109111.93116.44
322Leon Draisaitl20-21EDM563153841831651.1090.1690.45969121.74116.13
331Sidney Crosby06-07PIT7936841202672361.1310.1350.449114105.26115.99
1Phil Esposito72-73BOS7855751303302561.2890.1670.394104125.00UA115.84
341Nels Stewart25-26MTM363484291831.0960.3740.46236116.67115.43
351Joe Thornton05-068129961252752481.1090.1050.455106117.92114.98
361Alex Ovechkin07-08WAS8265471122382231.0670.2730.471106105.66114.57
372Wayne Gretzky87-88EDM64401091493632971.2220.1100.410131113.74114.44
384Bernie Nicholls88-89LAK7970801503762991.2580.1860.399139107.91114.44
391Ace Bailey28-29TOR4422103285641.3280.2590.37629110.34114.06
401Evgeni Malkin11-12PIT7550591092732181.2520.1830.39997112.37114.06
1Guy Lafleur77-78MTL7860721323592641.3600.1670.368109121.10UA114.06
411Phil Esposito73-74BOS7868771453492911.1990.1950.41591159.34Adj113.67
421Jean Beliveau55-56MTL704741882221771.2540.2120.39671123.94113.41
431Bill Cowley40-41BOS461747641681291.3020.1010.38144145.45113.17
2Leon Draisaitl22-23EDM8052761283252581.2600.1600.394113113.27113.17
442Jaromir Jagr05-06NYR8254691232502481.0080.2160.492106116.04113.14
452Teemu Selanne98-99ANA7547601072152160.9950.2190.498107100.00113.00
462Bobby Orr70-71BOS78371021393992811.4200.0930.34890154.44Adj112.84
471Henrik Sedin09-10VAN8229831122682271.1810.1080.418109102.75112.55
1Bobby Orr74-75BOS8046891353452741.2590.1330.391121111.57UA112.39
2Bobby Orr73-74BOS7432901223492491.4020.0920.35091134.07UA111.77
2Bobby Orr71-72BOS7637801173302391.3810.1120.355109107.34UA111.67
481Jaromir Jagr94-95PIT483238701811431.2660.1770.38770100.00111.67
492Eric Lindros94-95PHL462941701501431.0490.1930.46770100.00111.67
501Marcel Dionne79-80LAK8053841372902811.0320.1830.472119115.13111.22
512Wayne Gretzky79-80EDM7951861373012811.0710.1690.455119115.13111.22
521Peter Forsberg02-03COL7529771062512181.1510.1160.422104101.92110.92
531Howie Morenz30-31MTL392823511291051.2290.2170.39543118.60110.80
542Pat LaFontaine92-93BUF8453951483353051.0980.1580.442148100.00110.69
551Phil Esposito68-69BOS7449771263032601.1650.1620.416107117.76Adj110.55
561Patrick Kane15-16CHI8246601062342191.0680.1970.45389119.10110.41
572Joe Thornton06-07SJS8222921142562361.0850.0860.445114100.00110.19
581Evgeni Malkin08-09PIT8235781132582341.1030.1360.438110102.73110.16
591Connor McDavid21-22EDM8044791232852551.1180.1540.432115106.96110.03
601Gordie Howe53-54DET703348811911681.1370.1730.42461132.79109.98
611Wayne Gretzky89-90LAK73401021423382951.1460.1180.420129110.08109.81
621Guy Lafleur76-77MTL8056801363872831.3670.1450.351105129.52Adj109.62
632Sidney Crosby09-10PIT8151581092492271.0970.2050.438109100.00109.54
643Alex Ovechkin09-10WAS7250591093132271.3790.1600.348109100.00109.54
651Bryan Trottier78-79NYI7647871343582801.2790.1310.374116115.52109.17
661Wayne Gretzky93-94LAK8138921302942721.0810.1290.442120108.33109.03
672Markus Naslund02-03VAN8248561042642181.2110.1820.394104100.00108.83
682Frank Boucher29-30NYR422636621361301.0460.1910.45662100.00108.79
3John Bucyk70-71BOS7851651163992441.6350.1280.29190128.89UA108.45
692Connor McDavid18-19EDM7841751162292440.9390.1790.507116100.00108.45
702Evgeni Malkin07-08PIT8247591062402231.0760.1960.442106100.00108.43
711Phil Esposito71-72BOS7666671333302801.1790.2000.403109122.02Adj108.36
721Sidney Crosby13-14PIT8036681042422191.1050.1490.43087119.54108.33
732Brett Hull90-91STL7886451313102761.1230.2770.423115113.91108.27
741Punch Broadbent21-22OTT24311445106951.1160.2920.42540112.50108.06
751Gordie Howe56-57DET704445891981881.0530.2220.44977115.58107.99


The adjustments have me changing the league average for a few teams, mostly Boston in the 70s, whereby instead of setting league average as all teams, I just used the O6 teams, so for the 70-71 season where Boston scored 399, league average is set at 281 instead of 244. Even with that season still being 42% above average instead of 63.5%, I feel like the adjustment makes sense in terms of rankings. I also adjusted some Montreal and New York teams in the 70s, as well as the 95-96 Penguins. Basically, the seasons that were more than 30-40% above league average got pulled back.

You can also see how little P% has changed in 100 years. A great season is still between 40-50%, though obviously you have goal/assist balance issues for pre-WW2 players. You have player-seasons from every decade of play, the 1910s, 1920s, 1930s, 1940s, 1950s, 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, 2000s, 2010s, 2020s. It may seem like post-expansion seasons dominate pre-expansion ones, but that's just due to sample size. We've added as many forward seasons in the past 7 seasons as we had from 1917 to 1967.
 
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daver

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Not interested in groupthink related appeals to authority.

And using non NHL data like Hockey Reference's "adjusted" data to make claims isn't also an appeal to authority?

That some teams have a rotating cast of players thrusted into 1st line/PP1 and fail to produce is a rather relevant thing to give consideration towards for “how hard is it score.”

What exactly is your issue with the Top 5/10/20 etc,,, peer method? Is there some sort of statistical anomaly that needs context? That one player or the other is hurt using this method in comparison to "adusting"?

You seem to be arguing for one or two 'possible' statistical anomalies. OV's and Matthews' peers are the other elite goalscorers in the league. If a player fails to produce on the PP, then they are not "elite" and most likely not reaching the Top XX in the league.

My issue with "adjusting" is that it introduces an unnecessary hypothetical element . It assumes that Player X would do better or do worse if they played in another season. Comparing relative domimance over respective peers does not introduce an unnecessary hypothetical element.
 
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Midnight Judges

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And using non NHL data like Hockey Reference's "adjusted" data to make claims isn't also an appeal to authority?

Absolutely not.

It is a simple mathematical equation that has complete transparency and is built on statistics that are readily available to all of us. It is easily independently verifiable for all of us.

There is no faith or trust required, nor is the data so complex or obscure that there is a need to take someone's word for it.
 
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Midnight Judges

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My issue with "adjusting" is that it introduces an unnecessary hypothetical element . It assumes that Player X would do better or do worse if they played in another season. Comparing relative domimance over respective peers does not introduce an unnecessary hypothetical element.

Indeed, it merely substitutes massive volatility for reliable large sample size data.

Except that volatility serves your agenda, and so you prefer it.
 

Crosby2010

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Right now at this point it seems less likely everyday that Ovechkin can do it, and he's actually 64 goals away from breaking it. But I just can't see him carrying on if he is a 20 goal guy - or less - this year. That isn't the Ovie we know. But either way he is in the running.

As for Matthews I will say he doesn't do it. He has too many 40 goal seasons to start his career. Nothing wrong with that, but other than 60 in 2022 and probably a similar number this year he doesn't have the gaudy and eye popping goal totals to compete with Gretzky.

Right now you have to look at it this way and compare each of them to their first few years in the NHL:

Gretzky first 8 years:
543 goals
Matthews first 7.5 years:
339 goals

Sorry, that is just too lofty of a gap to make up for. Even Ovechkin wasn't starting to get close until he kept racking up 50 goal seasons later in his career at a time when star players aren't doing them anymore. In other words, Matthews has a lot of ground to make up. Those 70, 80, 90 goal seasons are not comparable to Matthews' 40+ years. I know Gretzky slowed down with the goals after 1989 or so, but he was just so dominant before hand. Matthews just hasn't been in that universe, who is? I just don't see him doing it, or even getting 800. Ovie just like Gretzky was blessed with good health and a lack of injuries. Matthews has been dogged with a few nagging but not major injuries. For example 62 and 68 games played in a season early in his career. Never played more than 74 games, maybe he will this year. But he is already well off the pace of Gretzky.
 

Hockey Outsider

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Off topic, but there are a number of fans on the main boards who argue that Matthews (through age 26) has been a better goal-scorer than Ovechkin, because #8 got so much more powerplay time. There might be some truth there (Ovechkin did get a lot of ice time with the man advantage) - but it ignores the reality that leaguewide scoring was a fair bit higher during Matthews' career (both at ES and on the PP). Plus, Matthews obviously has a stronger supporting cast.

Barring a catastrophic career-ending injury, Matthews has a good chance of reaching 600 goals, and even 700 goals isn't out of the question. But the most popular comparison ("through age 26") is as favourable as it will get for Matthews. It's highly improbable that he'll win seven of the next eight goal-scoring titles (which is what Ovechkin did from ages 27 to 34).

Keeping pace with Ovechkin through age 26 isn't enough. What makes #8 (arguably) the greatest goal-scorer ever is his extraordinary longevity. He's fallen off a cliff this year[*], but he averaged 43 goals per year from ages 30 to 37 (two of which were COVID-shortened seasons). That's absurd. In order for Matthews to surpass Ovechkin, he'll need freakish longevity himself. And although we can't say it's impossible, I wouldn't bet on it today.

[*] Not literally. Apparently we need to add legal disclaimers when talking about Ovechkin now.
 

MadLuke

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There is a bit of kept up with Howe or Bourque in points until age 26 that people would never think to do without a huge caveat that can happen with Ovechkin and goal scoring longevity.

stuff like this after turning 26 when it come to goal scoring...
win seven of the next eight goal-scoring titles

Is quite insane, at least historically, maybe we are in a new world that we just not know about yet.
 
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Hockey Outsider

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I sort of agree with @Midnight Judges point that it can be useful to consider the context of surrounding seasons.

It can tell you a lot in a steady environment. The league was fairly stable from 1997 to 2004. The only players to score 120+ points were Jagr (twice, and both times over 120), and an aging Lemieux. It's obvious that the top scorer of the era was Jagr, and (when healthy/motivated) Lemieux. So, in this example, the results line up with what we'd expect.

The problem is, scoring levels can change suddenly. Sometimes that's due to an obvious external cause (ie during WWII, around half the league joined the Armed Forces, and scoring skyrocketed when those who stayed behind beat up on much weaker opponents). Or 2006 (when the league mandated that anything and everything results in a powerplay). Sometimes the cause is mysterious (scoring rose more than 20% in the six years since Howe's landmark 1953 season, and there don't appear to be any obvious explanations).

The point is - sometimes it can be useful to consider data from surrounding seasons. Other times, it's completely useless (Sakic scored 87 points in both 2004 and 2006 - one year he was T-2nd in scoring, and in the other year, he was T-17th). This type of information can be useful when discussing a player ("Jagr had the highest scoring in the span of 20+ years"), but because leaguewide scoring rises and falls quickly, I don't see how it can be incorporated into any of the adjusted scoring stats that exist. We'd have to make so many judgment calls about what counts as a comparable season that the "rules" would be horrendously complicated.

And that's fine - not everything needs to be captured in a spreadsheet.
 

Hockey Outsider

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One final post for now. Quoting an older post where I'm showing the flaws in how hockey-reference.com does its adjustments:

Another example (re 1987 and 1993). Leaguewide GPG was virtually the same both years. In fact, it was a bit higher in 1987! But the actual top ten looks like:

1671299990703.png
1671300004562.png


Obviously, some type of adjustment is needed. HR.com's solution is:

1671300081951.png
1671300104719.png


Granted, that's less misleading than comparing the unadjusted stats straight-up. But it's still pretty misleading. HR.com is telling us that Jari Kurri (a HOFer, in his prime at age 26, playing with peak Gretzky), wouldn't have placed in the top ten just six years later. Or that Mark Recchi (10th place in scoring in 1993) was clearly better than anyone aside from peak Gretzky in 1987. Yes there were a few more European players by 1993 (5 of the top thirty vs 4 of the top thirty), but the league simply didn't change that much in six years.

The reason again is due to powerplays. There was far more PP time in 1993. 43 PP points would have put you in 2nd place (to peak Gretzky) in 1987. That would tie you for 25th in 1993. Even though the leaguewide GPG is the same, there was vastly more PP scoring in 1993. That (generally) gets concentrated among the best players. And HR.com's adjusted stats produce a distorted result, because it doesn't capture any of that.
 

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Even as a Leafs fan, I don't think it's feasible for Matthews to make a run at Ovie and Gretz. Based on his career so far, Matthews doesn't seem nearly as durable or "machine like" as Ovechkin. If all goes well for him, he might be able to touch Yzerman in the 690+ range. I don't see him reaching Espo though due to time lost.
 
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The Panther

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As for Matthews I will say he doesn't do it. He has too many 40 goal seasons to start his career.
This is really it, I think. And it applies to a lot of players. The reason Gretzky rests at #1 in goals (despite not being primarily is a goal scorer) is that he was so good, so young, and put up huge totals when he was very young. Gretzky scored only about 180 goals or something after turning 30.

It's just better to score in huge numbers while young than while older, because while older it's way more likely that other factors are going to interfere (aging, rule changes, team changes, injuries, fatigue, etc.). If you don't get that head-start on the pack, you're extremely unlikely to ever catch the leader... unless you have the most freakish longevity ever (like Howe, Ovechkin), and even then you're not going to do it unless you have basically no injuries (like Howe after age 20 and Ovechkin).

So, basically, Matthews' only chance is if he has the same "extended-prime" longevity as Ovechkin, of which about 1 out of 1000 players has.
 

Crosby2010

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This is really it, I think. And it applies to a lot of players. The reason Gretzky rests at #1 in goals (despite not being primarily is a goal scorer) is that he was so good, so young, and put up huge totals when he was very young. Gretzky scored only about 180 goals or something after turning 30.

It's just better to score in huge numbers while young than while older, because while older it's way more likely that other factors are going to interfere (aging, rule changes, team changes, injuries, fatigue, etc.). If you don't get that head-start on the pack, you're extremely unlikely to ever catch the leader... unless you have the most freakish longevity ever (like Howe, Ovechkin), and even then you're not going to do it unless you have basically no injuries (like Howe after age 20 and Ovechkin).

So, basically, Matthews' only chance is if he has the same "extended-prime" longevity as Ovechkin, of which about 1 out of 1000 players has.

Like someone said above, Matthews doesn't seem as durable. Also, there is the work ethic factor. Early in Ovie's career I would say he worked extremely hard and it showed. The Ovie we know now as a guy who floats around the last few years (but until now still scored pretty well) isn't the same guy as in 2008 or 2009 or 2010. He was driven then. I think the same applies for Gretzky, he was a tireless worker off of the ice when it came to his game. John Muckler once said that it was unique seeing the best player in the world at the time always trying to get better. Imagine scoring 200 points and significantly more than anyone else but trying to do better!

Good call on Gretzky. He scored 176 goals from 1991-'99, his final 8 seasons. There were some injuries, the back issues flaring up from the Suter hit and just a general slow down and reliance on more playmaking that caused this. Outside of Ovechkin in NHL history there are not players that rack up 50 goal seasons in their 30s. Even Esposito last did it at 32. So is Matthews going to be that guy? No, I don't think so, but either way he is already well off of Gretzky's pace.
 

Breakers

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They had a pretty big panel of former players talking on TSN about observations of todays game and they said the drop off in todays older players from Father Time is so drastic it seems like

It used to be more gradual like in the decline:
Good->good->good->pretty good-> solid-> decent

Now??? It’s like:
Good-> Good-> Good-> this guy should be on waivers because he can't skate

It is guy’s just show up from an offseason and are absolutely cooked

Interesting to see how Matthews ages and stays healthy.
 
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Michael Farkas

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Re: the last post. Player value is now viewed through a salary cap lens. In 1998, Wade Redden doesn't spend years in the minors. It's circumstance. So guys may have hung on longer, but performed at a similar level...but that's all evaluation stuff.

Also, and this unique to the thread at large...Ovechkin game us like, what, seven 50 or 50ish goal seasons in what should have been the downside of his career...? Let me get half that from AM34 before this is a legit conversation for me. You can get within an arm's reach in your prime, sure...but can you out last that human howitzer...? Probably not
 

larek

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You never know especially since the league is pretty well a no hit league now and very little. Contact
Mathews in the tough days would have probably gone home crying
 
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daver

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I sort of agree with @Midnight Judges point that it can be useful to consider the context of surrounding seasons.

It can tell you a lot in a steady environment. The league was fairly stable from 1997 to 2004. The only players to score 120+ points were Jagr (twice, and both times over 120), and an aging Lemieux. It's obvious that the top scorer of the era was Jagr, and (when healthy/motivated) Lemieux. So, in this example, the results line up with what we'd expect.

The problem is, scoring levels can change suddenly. Sometimes that's due to an obvious external cause (ie during WWII, around half the league joined the Armed Forces, and scoring skyrocketed when those who stayed behind beat up on much weaker opponents). Or 2006 (when the league mandated that anything and everything results in a powerplay). Sometimes the cause is mysterious (scoring rose more than 20% in the six years since Howe's landmark 1953 season, and there don't appear to be any obvious explanations).

The point is - sometimes it can be useful to consider data from surrounding seasons. Other times, it's completely useless (Sakic scored 87 points in both 2004 and 2006 - one year he was T-2nd in scoring, and in the other year, he was T-17th). This type of information can be useful when discussing a player ("Jagr had the highest scoring in the span of 20+ years"), but because leaguewide scoring rises and falls quickly, I don't see how it can be incorporated into any of the adjusted scoring stats that exist. We'd have to make so many judgment calls about what counts as a comparable season that the "rules" would be horrendously complicated.

And that's fine - not everything needs to be captured in a spreadsheet.
If we dial everything back, or least reference the OP, it should be clear that if you want to try to compare seasons from different years, raw numbers alone aren't reasonable. The issue is that some people think that adjusting is the accepted method then usually because it fits their own bias or narrative they dismiss the obvious shortcomings like the '87 and '93 example you provided.

'97 to '04 is a good example as there was a fairly good swing in that time period where the majority of the elite scorers saw their PPGs go up in a season then down in a season based on the PPs called. But this is not captured in the league GPG.

So using data from the Top 5/10/20 etc. is clearly the best way. With context for league size, which is less accepted it seems.
 

Matsun

Registered User
Aug 15, 2010
587
459
Here is Ovechkins scoring finishes after age 26.
1
1
1
1
13
1
1
1
13
4
9

I don't think Matthews will match this but with the way things are looking now I think he has a shot at matching the goal totals. I think league scoring will dry up again though because people are starting to miss the big hits already, but the question is how many more high scoring seasons we get?
 

bobholly39

Registered User
Mar 10, 2013
22,392
15,145
Off topic, but there are a number of fans on the main boards who argue that Matthews (through age 26) has been a better goal-scorer than Ovechkin, because #8 got so much more powerplay time. There might be some truth there (Ovechkin did get a lot of ice time with the man advantage) - but it ignores the reality that leaguewide scoring was a fair bit higher during Matthews' career (both at ES and on the PP). Plus, Matthews obviously has a stronger supporting cast.

Barring a catastrophic career-ending injury, Matthews has a good chance of reaching 600 goals, and even 700 goals isn't out of the question. But the most popular comparison ("through age 26") is as favourable as it will get for Matthews. It's highly improbable that he'll win seven of the next eight goal-scoring titles (which is what Ovechkin did from ages 27 to 34).

Keeping pace with Ovechkin through age 26 isn't enough. What makes #8 (arguably) the greatest goal-scorer ever is his extraordinary longevity. He's fallen off a cliff this year[*], but he averaged 43 goals per year from ages 30 to 37 (two of which were COVID-shortened seasons). That's absurd. In order for Matthews to surpass Ovechkin, he'll need freakish longevity himself. And although we can't say it's impossible, I wouldn't bet on it today.

[*] Not literally. Apparently we need to add legal disclaimers when talking about Ovechkin now.

The bolded seems a very extreme under-exaggeration. "good chance of 600"?

If Matthews scores 8 more goals this season, and averages 23 goals a year till age 37, he's at 600+ career goals.

A 23 goal average in that age range would be the equivalent of what Adam Oates or Ron Francis scored at those ages. You really think there's only a "good chance" Auston Matthews can match Adam Oates's or Ron Francis's raw goal-scoring in a higher scoring era vs Oates/Francis in the DPE?
 
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RomanianLeafs

Registered User
Apr 14, 2009
4,441
1,344
Arad
he is the best scorer in the league since he entered the league, haters can hate as much as they want, he is a leafs player and i am happy about that
 

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