Vladimir Martinec
The following is a slightly edited version of something I posted in 2010
I. Martinec looks to have peaked higher in international play than Boris Mikhailov or Alexander Maltsev
A. Martinec was the All-Star RW at the World Championships 4 straight years in the middle of the primes of all three (1974, 1975, 1976, 1977)
-Mikhailov was only an All-Star at the WCs twice (1973, 1979)
-Maltsev was an All-Star at the WC in 70, 71, 72, 78, 81 - The gap in the middle is Martinec's prime.
B. Martinec was the best player in the WCs in 1976, competing against prime Mikhailov, Maltsev, and all the 70s Soviet greats
1) Martinec was the top scorer in at the 1976 World Championships, with 20 points in 10 games.
2) He was voted the best forward at the 1976 World Championships
C. The Soviets feard Martinec so much that they felt the need to take him out in the 1974 WCs, similar to what Clarke did to Kharlamov in the Summit Series.
Need to go through this all over again?
The Russians really shouldn´t get too high and mighty as the Soviet team did similar things on the ice. I "remember" Vladimir Martinec being brutally taken out (by defenseman Tsygankov) in the key Czechoslovakia game in the ´74 World Championships; and that really wasn´t the only time...
From a thread on Clarke's attack on Kharlamov:
http://hfboards.com/showthread.php?t=315349
In 1974, the competition was much closer as USSR need to beat Czechoslovakia in the final game to win the gold. USSR was behind 0:1 after the first period. During the intermission a top official from the Russian hockey federation entered the locker room. Bobrov coldly asked him to close the door. From the outside. The official turned red and left the room in anger. In the 2nd period, USSR intimidated the Czechs by playing incredibly hard. The Soviet players had completely abandoned their old hockey style, and the rink was literally scattered with blood. The biggest Czech star, Vladimir Martinec was injured and USSR quickly scored four unanswered goals to win the gold.
The game was bad prestige for USSR
http://forums.internationalhockey.net/showthread.php?t=4201
D. Czechoslovakia was almost as good as the USSR during Martinec's prime and he was the best Czech skater at the time.
1) During the course of Martinec's international career (71-77), the Czechs won 3/7 World Championships (72, 76, 77), and were 5-7-3 against the Soviets overall.
Even before then, the Czechs were apparently right up there with the Soviets:
From 66-72, the Czechs were 12-11-2 against the USSR and 5-5-2 in "meaningful games."
Source.
2) Martinec was considered the best Czech player at the time.
a) He won 3 of 4 "Golden Stick" awards for best Czechoslovakian player during this time (73, 75, 76). Goalie Jiri Holocek won in 74.
b) Overall, Martinec won 4 Golden Stick awards (73, 75, 76, 79) - the most ever until Jagr and Hasek.
3. Martinec is the All-Time leading Czechoslovakian scorer in "major international" tournaments by a wide margin.
■135 pts – 69 g – 66 a – 15 appearances — Vladimir MARTINEC
■113 pts – 60 g – 53 a – 17 appearances — Jiri HOLIK
■110 pts – 78 g – 32 a – 11 appearances — Vaclav NEDOMANSKY (all before '74)
■104 pts – 53 g – 51 a – 14 appearances— Ivan HLINKA
4) Nedomansky defected after the 74 WCs. Martinec was undisputed star forward for the Czech National Team afterwards.
II. Maltsev and Mikhailov have slight longevity advantages.
A. Martinec seems to have been a star player from 1971 (when he first joined the national team) to 1979 (his last golden stick win. I believe he led the Czech league in goals that year for the first time, finally playing on a good team).
B. Mikhailov seems to have been a star from 69-80 and Maltsev seems to have been a star from from 69-81.
http://hfboards.com/showthread.php?t=565254
C. Maltsev might have been at his best from 70-72 and Mikhailov might have been at his best from 78-80.
D. This isn’t a huge longevity advantage, but it’s enough to probably make the three players about even in offensive value.
III. Intangibles and other considerations
A. Mikhailov oozes intangibles in a way that perhaps no other non-NHL Euro ever did.
B. Martinec and Maltsev are not known for much besides offense.
C. Martinec and Maltsev were both likely above average defensively, but I haven’t seen anything definitive.
D. One big difference between Maltsev and Martinec is that Maltsev has shown that he didn’t handle physical play very well. Whereas Martinec always bounced right back when physically abused (except when deliberately injured in 1974, but he can hardly be faulted for that:
Joe Pelletier's International Hockey Legends said:
Few players were treated more brutally than Martinec. This small (5'9" and 178 Ibs) right wing somehow always seemed to bounce back totally undisturbed and more often than not with a smile on his face. His constant smile was a sort of a trademark and frustrated his opponents even more. A lot of reporters used to ask him why he always was smiling, even after a vicious crosscheck in the back. He said that he did it because he enjoyed the game so much and always had fun.
Conclusion and All-Time rankings:
Martinec looks to have peaked higher internationally while Maltsev and Mikahilov had greater longevity as top scorers.
Mikhailov definitely beats the other two in intangibles. Martinec and Maltsev are about the same.
If Mikhailov is the 20th best winger of all-time, what does that make Martinec, who looks to have been better in his peak/prime in the international arena, but doesn't quite have the longevity, and definitely doesn't have the grit?
Where should Martinec be ranked in relation to Alexander Maltsev, considering again, Martinec looks to have been better in his peak/prime in the international arena, without quite having the longevity? Martinec wasn't known as gritty, but he seems to have handled physical play quite well.
By the way, Mikhailov and Maltsev were the two players with unusually good longevity as top scorers for the Soviets, so having less longevity than them isn't necessarily a bad thing (Martinec's prime looks at first glance to have been slightly longer than Kharlamov's).