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 Who are the top 5 offensive defensemen since 1970? Allow Anonymous Users Reply to This Topic...
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andyhack
PickupHockey Pro



Japan
891 Posts

Posted - 11/05/2007 :  16:22:12  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Putting aside defensive abilities all together, for pure offense, who are your top 5 offensive defensmen since 1970, and how would you rank them?

willus3
Moderator



Canada
1948 Posts

Posted - 11/05/2007 :  16:46:23  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
1. Orr
2. Coffey
3. Bourque
4. Housley
5. Potvin


"I'm a man of principle... or not. Whatever the situation calls for." - Alan Shore
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OILINONTARIO
PickupHockey Pro



Canada
816 Posts

Posted - 11/05/2007 :  16:46:52  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
1) Paul Coffey
2) Bobby Orr
3) Al MacInnis
4) Borje Salming
5) Phil Housley

The Oil WILL make the playoffs.
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fly4apuckguy
PickupHockey Pro



Canada
834 Posts

Posted - 11/05/2007 :  19:22:39  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
1) Paul Coffey
2) Bobby Orr
3) Raymond Bourque
4) Al Macinnis
5) Brian Leetch

I think Leetch was a better offensive player than Housley, but in a different era that did not show up on the stat sheet.
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Guest2192
( )

Posted - 11/05/2007 :  19:36:38  Reply with Quote
what about zubov
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Greg Smith
Rookie



Canada
158 Posts

Posted - 11/06/2007 :  16:00:33  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Guest2192

what about zubov



Including Zubov is like including Gonchar. Lidtrom could be added though.

After playing in the NHL, it's hard to watch hockey games.
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willus3
Moderator



Canada
1948 Posts

Posted - 11/06/2007 :  17:21:15  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Greg Smith

quote:
Originally posted by Guest2192

what about zubov



Including Zubov is like including Gonchar. Lidtrom could be added though.

After playing in the NHL, it's hard to watch hockey games.



Zubov wouldn't be a bad pick at all actually. Neither would Gonchar.
In fact Zubov's offensive numbers compare quite favourably to Lidstrom's. Especially when you take into consideration the two teams they each played on. Lidstrom had the advantage there. Detroit was a far better team than Dallas. Also Dallas was known to play very defensive minded hockey.
Neither of their stats appear that impressive until you consider what era they played through.

"I'm a man of principle... or not. Whatever the situation calls for." - Alan Shore
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andyhack
PickupHockey Pro



Japan
891 Posts

Posted - 11/06/2007 :  18:14:40  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
My five:

1. Orr
2. Coffey

Edit - to insert a bit of a GAP here

3. Potvin
4. Bourque
5. Leetch

Tough Picks

- Orr over Coffey
My memory of Coffey is clearer so it was tempting to take Coffey but considering that Orr got 102 assists in 70/71, it makes me ask myself just how many he would have gotten on the '80s Oiler teams. My guess is significantly more. Also, Orr put up 46 goals in '74/75 when his knees were already in pretty bad shape. That makes me wonder just how many 50 goal seasons he probably would have had with a little more luck injury-wise, even on the by then so-so talented Bruins teams (let alone how many goals he would have put up in Coffey's place on the '80s Oilers). Tough call though, cause offensively Paul Coffey was indeed a bit of a freak of nature.

- Potvin over Bourque
Again, my memory is better for Bourque, and I think he has the edge in a couple of areas, but one thing I do remember very clearly about Potvin is how well he quarterbacked the power play. Bourque did this very well too, but there was something very very "imposing" about Potvin on the power play - he seemed almost like a General or something - which leads me to give the very slight edge to Potvin.


Edited by - andyhack on 11/06/2007 18:31:21
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irvine
PickupHockey Veteran



Canada
1315 Posts

Posted - 11/06/2007 :  19:12:19  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Ray Bourque. Not only my favorite player of all time, his point totals say it all.

Irvine
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andyhack
PickupHockey Pro



Japan
891 Posts

Posted - 11/07/2007 :  05:53:42  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Yeah, Ray's numbers are impressive, no question. The best player from each decade poll where I put that All-Star link is also very telling about the consistency of the guy. Take a look at that as it's quite something! You always gotta remember too that, though he wasn't playing with stiffs, he wasn't exactly playing with Gretzky, Messier, Anderson, Kurri... either.

Still though, I approach these questions with a "peak value" focus, like Willus. Tough call but if I have Potvin and Bourque standing in front of me in their primes, after having like a really long couple of coffees with Bourque and talkng Bruins stories, I may very well choose Potvin for my team, whether I am thinking about only offense, or whether I am thinking about overall abilities. Can't really go wrong with either though!

Willus, I don't particularly like Potvin either, and you're right, he did get caught pinching sometimes. So did Bourque though. Actually, I mentioned this before but one thing I absolutely loved about Bourque was the way he reacted when he made mistakes, which he did make. He was like a madman trying to rectify the situation, as he VERY often did. I sometimes almost hoped he would make a mistake to see it as it was great to watch. When Milbury was coaching them he described it as "God giveth, and God taketh away". "God" is an overstatement, but when you think of what he meant to those Bruins teams (think of the relative talent on those Bruin teams after the first two or three guys) you can kind of understand how Bourque was thought of that way on that team.

I am officially rambling to start off November 7th, 2007!

Edited by - andyhack on 11/07/2007 05:56:03
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PuckNuts
PickupHockey Veteran



Canada
2414 Posts

Posted - 11/07/2007 :  07:50:28  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Top 50 Defensemen ranked by Points / Game that played past 1970, and played more than 15 games, as of Nov 7, 2007...

Rnk	Name	         Season	GP	G	A	Pts	P/G
1	Bobby Orr	66_79	657	270	645	915	1.39
2	Paul Coffey	80_01	1409	396	1135	1531	1.09
3	Denis Potvin	73_88	1060	310	742	1052	0.99
4	Ray Bourque	79_01	1612	410	1169	1579	0.98
5	Al MacInnis	81_04	1416	340	934	1274	0.90
6	Paul Reinhart	79_90	648	133	427	560	0.86
7	Brian Leetch	87_06	1205	247	781	1028	0.85
8	Phil Housley	82_03	1495	338	894	1232	0.82
9	Doug Wilson	77_93	1024	237	590	827	0.81
10	Brad Park	68_85	1113	213	683	896	0.81
11	Mark Howe	79_95	929	197	545	742	0.80
12	Jeff Brown	85_98	747	154	430	584	0.78
13	R Ruotsalainen	81_90	446	107	237	344	0.77
14	Reed Larson	76_90	904	222	463	685	0.76
15	Larry Murphy	80_01	1615	287	929	1216	0.75
16	N Lidstrom	91_08	1190	203	677	880	0.74
17	Gary Suter	85_02	1145	203	642	845	0.74
18	Craig Hartsburg	79_89	570	98	315	413	0.72
19	Sergei Zubov	92_08	1026	151	592	743	0.72
20	Craig Norwich	79_81	104	17	58	75	0.72
21	Guy Lapointe	68_84	884	171	451	622	0.70
22	Ian Turnbull	73_83	628	123	317	440	0.70
23	Larry Robinson	72_92	1384	208	750	958	0.69
24	Borje Salming	73_90	1148	150	637	787	0.69
25	Steve Duchesne	86_02	1113	227	525	752	0.68
26	Sergei Gonchar	94_08	840	175	387	562	0.67
27	P Rautakallio	79_82	235	33	121	154	0.66
28	Sandis Ozolinsh	92_08	838	164	384	548	0.65
29	Tapio Levo	81_83	107	16	53	69	0.64
30	Tom Kurvers	84_95	659	93	328	421	0.64
31	Risto Siltanen	79_87	562	90	265	355	0.63
32	Rob Blake	89_08	1071	215	461	676	0.63
33	Tomas Jonsson	81_89	552	85	259	344	0.62
34	Ron Greschner	74_90	982	179	431	610	0.62
35	Randy Carlyle	76_93	1055	148	499	647	0.61
36	J Van Boxmeer	73_84	588	84	274	358	0.61
37	Dave Babych	80_99	1195	142	581	723	0.61
38	Zarley Zalapski	87_00	637	99	285	384	0.60
39	Chris Chelios	83_08	1561	183	756	939	0.60
40	Brad Maxwell	77_87	612	98	270	368	0.60
41	Behn Wilson	78_88	601	98	261	359	0.60
42	Chris Pronger	93_08	884	120	405	525	0.59
43	Stefan Persson	77_86	622	52	317	369	0.59
44	M Schneider	87_08	1135	201	465	666	0.59
45	Kevin Hatcher	84_01	1157	227	450	677	0.59
46	Brian Rafalski	99_08	555	46	277	323	0.58
47	Al Iafrate	84_98	799	152	311	463	0.58
48	Bob Dailey	73_82	561	94	231	325	0.58
49	Ilya Byakin	93_95	57	8	25	33	0.58
50	S Niedermayer	91_07	1053	140	468	608	0.58


I don't necessarily agree with everything I say.
- - Marshall McLuhan



Edited by - PuckNuts on 11/07/2007 08:00:41
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Guest8372
( )

Posted - 11/07/2007 :  10:42:28  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by PuckNuts

Top 50 Defensemen ranked by Points / Game that played past 1970, and played more than 15 games, as of Nov 7, 2007...

Rnk	Name	         Season	GP	G	A	Pts	P/G
1	Bobby Orr	66_79	657	270	645	915	1.39
2	Paul Coffey	80_01	1409	396	1135	1531	1.09
3	Denis Potvin	73_88	1060	310	742	1052	0.99
4	Ray Bourque	79_01	1612	410	1169	1579	0.98
5	Al MacInnis	81_04	1416	340	934	1274	0.90
6	Paul Reinhart	79_90	648	133	427	560	0.86
7	Brian Leetch	87_06	1205	247	781	1028	0.85
8	Phil Housley	82_03	1495	338	894	1232	0.82
9	Doug Wilson	77_93	1024	237	590	827	0.81
10	Brad Park	68_85	1113	213	683	896	0.81
11	Mark Howe	79_95	929	197	545	742	0.80
12	Jeff Brown	85_98	747	154	430	584	0.78
13	R Ruotsalainen	81_90	446	107	237	344	0.77
14	Reed Larson	76_90	904	222	463	685	0.76
15	Larry Murphy	80_01	1615	287	929	1216	0.75
16	N Lidstrom	91_08	1190	203	677	880	0.74
17	Gary Suter	85_02	1145	203	642	845	0.74
18	Craig Hartsburg	79_89	570	98	315	413	0.72
19	Sergei Zubov	92_08	1026	151	592	743	0.72
20	Craig Norwich	79_81	104	17	58	75	0.72
21	Guy Lapointe	68_84	884	171	451	622	0.70
22	Ian Turnbull	73_83	628	123	317	440	0.70
23	Larry Robinson	72_92	1384	208	750	958	0.69
24	Borje Salming	73_90	1148	150	637	787	0.69
25	Steve Duchesne	86_02	1113	227	525	752	0.68
26	Sergei Gonchar	94_08	840	175	387	562	0.67



Unbelievable how productive Lidstrom, Zubov and Gonchar are considering they played exclusively in the dead puck era.
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willus3
Moderator



Canada
1948 Posts

Posted - 11/07/2007 :  11:36:39  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
I'm not sure why some are picking Coffey ahead of Orr???
Take Orr's five best offensive seasons and compare them to Coffey's five best and I think you will see that as good as Coffey was offensively he still doesn't approach Orr's numbers.

Even without adjustments for era, which in this comparison really should be taken into account, Orr comes out ahead.

Orr's 5 year average - 126.6 points
Coffey's 5 year average - 120.2 points.

If you do the adjustments factoring in scoring averages for those years it looks like this;
Orr - 139 pts.
Coffey - 108 pts.

I don't even see this as debatable.


"I'm a man of principle... or not. Whatever the situation calls for." - Alan Shore
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Beans15
Moderator



Canada
8286 Posts

Posted - 11/07/2007 :  13:04:34  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Willus I agree with you.

This is a perfect example of the era's being more than adjusted scoring. Correct my if I am wrong, but you either grew up watching hockey or really learned to love the game of hockey while Orr played. That being said, it is easy to see you love for Orr. Mine, it was the 80's Oilers. Gretzky and Co. Seeing how many peope here are younger than I am, and realistically, there hasn't been anyone come close to Coffey in the past 15 years, the immediate choice is the most recent in people's minds. Thus, Coffey is the "choice of the young generation."

Even growing up watching Coffey, I can't even try to say that he is better than Orr. But I am rare.

Wayne or Bobby?? How about both!!!
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Greg Smith
Rookie



Canada
158 Posts

Posted - 11/07/2007 :  14:03:07  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by willus3

quote:
Originally posted by Greg Smith

quote:
Originally posted by Guest2192

what about zubov



Including Zubov is like including Gonchar. Lidtrom could be added though.

After playing in the NHL, it's hard to watch hockey games.



Zubov wouldn't be a bad pick at all actually. Neither would Gonchar.
In fact Zubov's offensive numbers compare quite favourably to Lidstrom's. Especially when you take into consideration the two teams they each played on. Lidstrom had the advantage there. Detroit was a far better team than Dallas. Also Dallas was known to play very defensive minded hockey.
Neither of their stats appear that impressive until you consider what era they played through.

"I'm a man of principle... or not. Whatever the situation calls for." - Alan Shore



Top 5 though? none of those guys would even make my top 10. I have nothing against Zubov, Gonchar is a different story. I take back my Lidstrom comment, there is no way he's top 5 material.

My top 10:

Orr
Coffey
Bourque
Potvin
Macinnis
Leetch
Reinhart
Housley
Park
Wilson

After playing in the NHL, it's hard to watch hockey games.
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andyhack
PickupHockey Pro



Japan
891 Posts

Posted - 11/08/2007 :  06:41:14  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Willus, one reason I suppose I would consider Coffey for this particular question (dealing only with offense) is that such a large percentage of Coffey's brain cells, I believe, were devoted to offensive hockey (I believe if we do the brain cell calculation, Coffey probably wins over Orr).

That and absolutely incredible skating ability. Orr's accelleration from slow to fast is unmatched, and his ability to control the puck on his own was awesome, but Coffey was so fast at top speed and a terrific playmaker (like Orr).

Is it debatable? In my opinion, yes, for two more reasons.

1) As much as we ask about how Orr would have done in the '80s, it is fair to ask how Coffey would have done in the '70s - I can see his speed being a major advantage given the relative slowness of some of the guys back then.

2) This thread is more interesting if it is debatable!

I still pick Orr though. Some of this discussion and the numbers provided by you and Pucknuts have strengthened that belief by the way. In the end, I say that even while being a better overall defenseman, Orr was still better than Paul Coffey offensively, and that is no small feat!
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