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Alex116
PickupHockey Legend



6113 Posts

Posted - 03/16/2012 :  09:54:31  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by nuxfan

quote:

Umm if you read his post it says the numbers represent the ranking. So 1 in take away means he is #1 ranked and so on.



well I'm glad someone read clearly.

yes, these are rankings relative to all other dmen in the NHL. So if someone has a "1", that means they had the most of whatever category it is. For giveaways, I did a reverse - ie, Karlsson had the 5th most giveaways, therefore he ranks 283 (288 - 5)



I refuse to take the blame for misreading and will be putting 100% of said blame on guest9084! When i originally read your post, i totally understood it, then when i came back and read his comment, i got confused (doesn't take much ).

Okay, makes much more sense now! For a minute there, i was gonna start calling Chara and Weber "WIMPS" for their lack of hits. Lol!
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Beans15
Moderator



Canada
8286 Posts

Posted - 03/16/2012 :  10:35:10  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
OK, so the stats are the stats and they do bring clarity to somethings. However, I firmly believe that defensive stats are very subjective and do not often tell the tale of how good or bad a player is. In many cases, the best defensive players have poor stats in things like giveaways, having low takaways, etc. However, these players are likely playing against the best offensive players night in and night out.

Here is an interesting consideration that I have talked about before. This might put things into perspective.

You are an NHL head coach and you have 1 minute left in game 7 of the Stanley Cup finals. You have 4 potential situations:

Even strength - down by a goal
Even strength - up by a goal
Power Play - down by a goal
Penalty Kill - game is tied

You can select any player in the NHL based on their play in 2011. You can not name more than one player that you would put onto the ice in EVERY situation.

Who is that player???


Your answer (in my opinion) is the Norris Trophy Winner. To Nux point, I would likely put Weber and Chara ahead of Karlsson using this perspective.

This is also why I think the NHL should introduce an 'offensive' defenseman award.
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nuxfan
PickupHockey All-Star



3670 Posts

Posted - 03/16/2012 :  10:54:19  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Guest4178

Nuxfan – you seem to be trying to make a case against Karlsson being on the ballot – I'm not sure why?

But you also appear to be coming around to finally agree that his name will likely appear on the Norris ballot.

Here's what you stated early on: "When you look at other top ranked defensemen and perennial Norris candidates, you will see that they play in all situations, and in many cases are near the top of their team's respective PK minutes. It will work against Karlsson."

Do you still think your observations about Karlsson will work against him? Do you think the hockey writers (voters) will keep his name off the ballot?



Hm - it just occurred to me that we are talking about different things, are we talking about the same ballot? To be clear, when I say "appear on the ballot", I mean "will be one of the 3 finalists" - the actual original ballot probably has 50 or 60 defensmen on it that each get at least one vote for first, second or third - so roughly 1/3 of active defensemen get on that original list. It would be ridiculous to think that Karlsson will not get a significant number of votes for the Norris. I fully expect him to be top-5 in voting, and given his scoring lead over his peers, I think he'll be one of the finalists - ie, on the "final ballot for the winner".

However, I also believe that his defensive weakness (compared to his likely competition) will work against him actually winning the award, and I don't believe that he will win. Much as it has worked against pure offensive defensemen in recent years (Visnovsky, Green).

Edited by - nuxfan on 03/16/2012 10:55:42
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n/a
deleted



4809 Posts

Posted - 03/16/2012 :  11:20:03  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Beans15

OK, so the stats are the stats and they do bring clarity to somethings. However, I firmly believe that defensive stats are very subjective and do not often tell the tale of how good or bad a player is. In many cases, the best defensive players have poor stats in things like giveaways, having low takaways, etc. However, these players are likely playing against the best offensive players night in and night out.

Here is an interesting consideration that I have talked about before. This might put things into perspective.

You are an NHL head coach and you have 1 minute left in game 7 of the Stanley Cup finals. You have 4 potential situations:

Even strength - down by a goal
Even strength - up by a goal
Power Play - down by a goal
Penalty Kill - game is tied

You can select any player in the NHL based on their play in 2011. You can not name more than one player that you would put onto the ice in EVERY situation.

Who is that player???


Your answer (in my opinion) is the Norris Trophy Winner. To Nux point, I would likely put Weber and Chara ahead of Karlsson using this perspective.

This is also why I think the NHL should introduce an 'offensive' defenseman award.



No, my answer in each of those situations would depend on that situation, dude.

Norris trophy means, the most valuable defenceman - who brings the most total value.

I actually weight the offence just as if not a bit more than defensive responsibilities, as defencemen are paired with another d-man, and who they are with can greatly help/skew the stats. And offensively . . . no one helps the team offence as a whole more than a great puck passer and set up man on the D.

so,
I think you should phrase the question like this:

For your SERIES FINAL,
Who would you want as your top defenceman, if he is paired up with what we consider a mediocre top pairing guy?

For me, the answer this year is Karlsson.

On a championship calibre team (see: not Ottawa), can you imagine his stats then?

Conversely . . . I wonder how your Chara and Weber would be doing on today's Sens?

I rest my case.

"Take off, eh?" - Bob and Doug
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Guest4178
( )

Posted - 03/16/2012 :  11:45:27  Reply with Quote
Nuxfan – I think we're in agreement.

I surely wasn't referring to Karlsson making the first ballot, which if you're correct, includes the names of 50 or 60 of the top defensemen. Jeez – when you go that deep, even Dion Phaneuf makes the list. :)

I wasn't sure if you thought his name would (would not should) appear on the final Norris ballot (one of the top three), but I now see that you put him in this elite category. And I agree with you.

Will he win? I repeat my earlier comments that it's rare for such a young defensemen to win the Norris. Voters seem to want to wait for either an incredible stand-out performance for this to take place, preferring to go with an established defenseman if it's a close 3-way race.
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Beans15
Moderator



Canada
8286 Posts

Posted - 03/16/2012 :  12:38:26  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Great way to dodge the question, Slozo.

And to your point, I would likely not pick Karlsson. Not for any other reason than in the finals, defense wins most of the time. So I would take a tank of a defensive player who can also move the puck and produce offensively.

This year, I take Chara or Weber. I would likely flip a coin for either of those guys. Karlsson would not be my #1 because he does not kill penalties. At least not under the system he is playing.

That's my opinion and that doesn't mean any one else is wrong. To compare criteria, Slozo put more slightly more weight on offensive abilities. I put more on defensively abilities.





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Guest5091
( )

Posted - 03/16/2012 :  12:46:22  Reply with Quote
This post is going to have a significant pro-Karlsson slant just to prove my point... I could easily do the same thing in a pro-Weber manner but I might as well do it for the guy I think should (but won't) win the Norris. Anyway, the problem with just using the rank in each stat is that it does not portray the magnitude of difference.

Using takeaways as an example:
Karlsson: 1st
Weber: tied for 2nd

That makes Weber look comparatively better than he is because it doesn't display the massive separation between the 2. Karlsson's been 20% better in that stat. That's massive.

Another example is points, where Weber is tied for 8th (I could have said 10th without lying to make him look worse, but meh) That seems decent, until you actually compare it and realize that Karlsson quite literally has 70%] more points (or 50% over the #2 guy). Karlsson's also got a 30% goal lead on #2. It's not just the fact that he's leading the pact; it's that he's demolishing it even if you cherry-pick several other D's best stats. He also isn't paired with another top-10 defenseman in the league to cover up any defensive mistakes, even though he is consistently playing against the other teams' top lines (hard not to when you're playing as much as he does)

In short, you can present the facts in any way you want. You can always make either guy look better (or worse) than he actually is. Case in point, I easily could have said that he's got more time on ice than Weber does... while true, he's also played 4 games more.

As for what I actually think, Karlsson's defense has consistently improved throughout the season. He's become quite proficient at it and his reputation is taking a while to catch up.

To answer beans' question, when you look at it individually, you get something like this (I'm excluding Letang in these because he was injured too long):
Even strength - down by a goal --> EK and it's not even close
Even strength - up by a goal --> Arguable, but EK. Amazing breakout passes or poise in skating it out of the defensive zone and a legitimate threat to put the game away offensively.
Power Play - down by a goal --> EK and it's not even close
Penalty Kill - game is tied --> Chara

PK is Karlsson's weakest point, even though he's above average at them. They don't really permit him to utilize his greatest assets. That said, he's always on for the PKs in the final minutes of a game because there's no sense in "saving him" for offense when you're in the dying minutes.

When you're only allowed 1 guy for all 4 situations, I pick EK. Whatever games his slightly weaker defensive game loses you in situation #4, he'll more than make up for it when he wins you games in situations 1&3 and seal the victory in situation #2. The point of a defenceman (or any position, for that matter) is simply to win you game. Doesn't matter how unconventionally you do it.
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Guest5091
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Posted - 03/16/2012 :  12:47:42  Reply with Quote
Err, sorry, I meant slozo's question... Not beans'
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Alex116
PickupHockey Legend



6113 Posts

Posted - 03/16/2012 :  15:24:56  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Here's something interesting to consider when comparing E. Karlsson's season (this year) to Mike Green's season in 08/09 when many thought he was ripped off of the Norris when Chara won it.

There's a link at the bottom of this post to an article, albeit biased as it's written by a Boston guy, about why Chara deserved it over Green, even with Green's crazy offensive numbers. Now, look at these comparisons, and it's clear to me why E. Karlsson, for those who think he's the obvious choice, could very easily lose out to a guy like Shea Weber.

2008 / 2009
Mike Green - GP:68 Pts:73 PPG: 1.07
Zdeno Chara - GP:80 Pts:50 PPG: .625

2011 / 2012 (so far)
E. Karlsson - GP:70 Pts:70 PPG: 1.00
S. Weber - GP:66 Pts:41 PPG: .621
B. Campbell - GP:70 Pts:47 PPG: .671

I threw Campbell in there as the second leading Dman scorer at present though i don't think he's gonna be on the final ballot. Howerver, compare Karlsson's numbers to Weber's and they look awfully similar to the comparison of Green and Weber. I've said from day 1 that i really feel a lot of voters vote for a guy who's "put in time" and come close before and i'm sticking with that in my prediction of Weber winning the 11/12 Norris.

Link to article about Chara's win: http://www.examiner.com/boston-bruins-in-boston/nhl-awards-zdeno-chara-wins-2009-norris-trophy

Edited by - Alex116 on 03/16/2012 17:55:23
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nuxfan
PickupHockey All-Star



3670 Posts

Posted - 03/16/2012 :  16:40:49  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Guest5091

In short, you can present the facts in any way you want. You can always make either guy look better (or worse) than he actually is. Case in point, I easily could have said that he's got more time on ice than Weber does... while true, he's also played 4 games more.

As for what I actually think, Karlsson's defense has consistently improved throughout the season. He's become quite proficient at it and his reputation is taking a while to catch up.




I didn't actually look at one stat or the other in isolation - for best all-around defensman, I looked at all the stats together.

With the exception of giveaways (which is a glaring stat for all defenders and all those on the list) Weber stood out because he was in the top quartile of every stat - and in fact was 95%ile in most of them. No other dman on my shortlist was. To me, this is at least an indication that Weber is the best all-around - he can score, he can hit, he blocks shots, he plays in all situations and a sigificant amount of ice time (BTW I used rankings for TOI/game to take into account the missed games), and gets a very high number of points for his position.

The only real thing that Karlsson has going for him is a massive lead in point scoring - which is in itself a significant achievement, but should not a Norris winner make.

I think your post had significant pro-Karlsson slant because....you're a Karlsson fan.
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Guest4377
( )

Posted - 03/16/2012 :  18:30:24  Reply with Quote
And Nuxfan, your posts have a significant anti-Karlsson slant, because......you're not a Karlsson fan.

It's all fair in a discussion, but let's see which three defensemen make the final ballot. Just three weeks ago, you picked Brian Campbell ahead of Erik Karlsson in your top three!

Campbell's a good defensemen, but this season, Karlsson is better!

As far as who I would want on the ice in the last minute of a hockey game (in a tight important game), I would put Karlsson up there. Maybe not tops in the league, but I remember a three-time Norris winner who was not always on the ice in similar situations, and that was Paul Coffey!

Karlsson is not Coffey, and one thing about Coffey was that he was so much better offensively than other defensemen that such relatively minor blemishes were overlooked. In the three seasons Coffey won the Norris, he averaged around 50% more points than the next top defensemen. That's incredible!

But wait a minute! Right now Karlsson has 70 points compared to Campbell's 47 points. This works out to be around 50% more points than the next best defenseman in points. When was the last time that happened?
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Open_Ice
Rookie



Canada
109 Posts

Posted - 03/16/2012 :  22:50:16  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Beans15

Here is a little something to chew on:

Erik Karlsson as been on the ice for 73 goals against, only 5 of those being PK goals. He has been on the ice for 120 goals for, 37 were PP goals. That means 83 goal for-68 goals against. +15 (By the way, he leads Ottawa defensemen for being on the ice for the most goals against and the fewest PP goals against)

Adam McQuiad has been on the ice for 33 goals against, only 7 on the PK. He has been on the ice for 40 goals for, 0 on the PP. That means 40 goals for, 26 goals against. +14.

Who is the better defensive players??? Both have the same +/- stat but one has on the ice for literally 1/2 the number of goals against.



Sorry Beans, I usually think you have a point but I don't agree with much you have said in this thread and this comparison is downright ridiculous.

Karlsson: 1,475:24 Even Strength Time-on-Ice (1st on his team by over 300 minutes)
McQuaid: 903:37 Even Strength Time-on-Ice (6th on his team)

Not only does the majority of the difference in goals against get explained by the fact that he was simply on the ice 570 minutes longer, but Karlsson also led the team in even strength time on ice so most of his time was spent up against quality opponents. McQuaid is on the 3rd defensive pairing playing against weaker lines.
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Odin
PickupHockey Pro



Canada
350 Posts

Posted - 03/19/2012 :  06:04:18  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Beans15

quote:
Originally posted by Odin

quote:
Originally posted by Beans15

Don't confuse +/- with a defensive stat because it is not. He is a plus every time he is on the ice for an ESG. For that reason, and the fact that he has 40 ESG himself, +15 is not that impressive at all!

Low points and a high +/- is normally an indication of better defensive play.

High points and a high +/- is more linely an indication of better offensive play.




I'm glad the other poster asked about this, because I missed it. Karlsson has 40 ESG's?? I don't think so. If that was the case, he would be a shoe-in for the award.

Also, if +\- isn't a defensive stat, what is? I suppose blocked shots could be. I have seen sports jounalists all the time using this stat, +\- as exactly that, a defensive stat. Now, Beans, I am not saying its black and white, most things in life are not. You make a valid point about some of the 'luck' involved with this stat. I have made such points myself. But it IS an indication of defensive prowess. We all know that loosey-goosey players tend to have bad +/_.

As far as Karlsson winning, he should hands down. But as another poster said, the only thing that could beat him is another d-mans rep.








Sorry for the error. It was not 40 ESG, it was 40 ES points. My bad.

And +/- is still not a defensive stat. Here is the deal:

Let's compare a few players who have similar +/-:

Karlsson as 69 pts and is +15.
Bryce Salvador has 7 pts and is +15.

I bet it would take much to figure out which of those players is know for their defensive prowess and which is known as an offensive juggernaut.


+/- is not a stat that measure defense or offensive exclusively. Not in the least.



I never said it was exclusively offensive or defensive. I even said in my post that it isn't black and white. But I did say the so-called experts often do use this as a defensive stat. As they do.

Again though, I asked what you would consider a defensive stat? I don't think it can be argued that +/- isn't an indication of that. The problem is that I don't think that there are any exclusively defensive stats outside perhaps of blocked shots. So we need to use what we have.
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Odin
PickupHockey Pro



Canada
350 Posts

Posted - 03/19/2012 :  06:05:56  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by slozo

quote:
Originally posted by Odin

quote:
Originally posted by Beans15

Don't confuse +/- with a defensive stat because it is not. He is a plus every time he is on the ice for an ESG. For that reason, and the fact that he has 40 ESG himself, +15 is not that impressive at all!

Low points and a high +/- is normally an indication of better defensive play.

High points and a high +/- is more linely an indication of better offensive play.




I'm glad the other poster asked about this, because I missed it. Karlsson has 40 ESG's?? I don't think so. If that was the case, he would be a shoe-in for the award.

Also, if +\- isn't a defensive stat, what is? I suppose blocked shots could be. I have seen sports jounalists all the time using this stat, +\- as exactly that, a defensive stat. Now, Beans, I am not saying its black and white, most things in life are not. You make a valid point about some of the 'luck' involved with this stat. I have made such points myself. But it IS an indication of defensive prowess. We all know that loosey-goosey players tend to have bad +/_.

As far as Karlsson winning, he should hands down. But as another poster said, the only thing that could beat him is another d-mans rep.







Odin agrees with me that Karlsson should win the Norris . . . hold on a sec here . . . Odin AGREED with me on a subject?!?

Are the endtimes really that near?

"Take off, eh?" - Bob and Doug




It was just a matter of time....
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Beans15
Moderator



Canada
8286 Posts

Posted - 03/19/2012 :  07:50:24  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Odin, I don't think there are very many, if any defensive stats that are measurable. +/- CAN be a defensive stat but it is not exclusive. I think the in case of Karlsson, it is an indicator of offensive and not defense considering he was on the ice for more goal against (very few of them on the PK) than any other Senator.

Blocks shots is a measure, takeaway vs giveaway is a measure, +/- can be a measure. But there isn't anything that is a clear picture. Most often, the best defensive players have garbage stats. They play against the best offensive players all the time and rarely get offensive opportunities to make their numbers look better. I think of guys like Anton Volchenkov and Zbynek Michalek. I consider these guys some of the best, if not the best defensive defensemen in the game today. Their numbers are average at best but they would likely be the consensus picks as top shutdown guys in the league.

My point behind the +/- in the case of Karlsson is that loftiness of his +/- numbers are based on offensive play, not defensive play.
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Guest8875
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Posted - 03/19/2012 :  18:20:44  Reply with Quote
Weber and Karlson are both great defensemen in both their own ways. What if Weber played for Ottawa and Karlson for Nashville?
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Alex116
PickupHockey Legend



6113 Posts

Posted - 03/19/2012 :  20:11:14  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Guest8875

Weber and Karlson are both great defensemen in both their own ways. What if Weber played for Ottawa and Karlson for Nashville?



Great thought. I'm sure Weber would have more pts than he does now, though prob not as many as Karlsson. However, Karlsson would likely have a lot fewer! He plays with far more offensive players in Ottawa with Spezza, Alfie, Michalek, etc.

Having said that, isn't Nashville's PP one of the top, if not top PP's in the league?
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sahis34
PickupHockey Pro



Canada
591 Posts

Posted - 03/19/2012 :  20:25:20  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Beans15

OK, so the stats are the stats and they do bring clarity to somethings. However, I firmly believe that defensive stats are very subjective and do not often tell the tale of how good or bad a player is. In many cases, the best defensive players have poor stats in things like giveaways, having low takaways, etc. However, these players are likely playing against the best offensive players night in and night out.

Here is an interesting consideration that I have talked about before. This might put things into perspective.

You are an NHL head coach and you have 1 minute left in game 7 of the Stanley Cup finals. You have 4 potential situations:

Even strength - down by a goal
Even strength - up by a goal
Power Play - down by a goal
Penalty Kill - game is tied

You can select any player in the NHL based on their play in 2011. You can not name more than one player that you would put onto the ice in EVERY situation.

Who is that player???


Your answer (in my opinion) is the Norris Trophy Winner. To Nux point, I would likely put Weber and Chara ahead of Karlsson using this perspective.

This is also why I think the NHL should introduce an 'offensive' defenseman award.



Even strength - down by a goal, Erik Karlsson
Even strength - up by a goal, Nik Lidstrom
Power Play - down by a goal, Erik Karlsson
Penalty Kill - game is tied, Zdeno Chara

If I can only have one player it's Karlsson based on you proposition.
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Guest4178
( )

Posted - 03/22/2012 :  13:02:58  Reply with Quote
In an earlier posting, I mentioned that Nick Lidstrom didn't win his first Norris until he was 31 years old.

I did some further checking, and found out that he wasn't even a finalist (top three) until he was 28 years old.

It's not like Nick Lidstrom was a late bloomer. He was a very good defenseman in his 20's , but there's no doubt that he blossomed in later years.

Erik Karlsson is not Nick Lidstrom, and he's still very early in his NHL career, but it's amazing to see such a young defenseman to be in such an elite category at such a young age!

I'm pretty sure he will be a Norris finalist, and while I think he could win the Norris this season, I think the voters may give the nod to a more established veteran defenseman. It seems to be the historical trend.
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n/a
deleted



4809 Posts

Posted - 03/22/2012 :  18:18:22  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Good point guest, and one that has been made before:

The Norris trophy is famous for the one that is the most biased towards reputation, and not actual play/discernable stats.

And hey, I sorta get that . . . hard to measure the defensive aspect quantitatively. But still . . . it sucks for young guys to have to fight such an uphill battle to even get recognised for the award.

"Take off, eh?" - Bob and Doug
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Open_Ice
Rookie



Canada
109 Posts

Posted - 03/26/2012 :  20:16:51  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
3 assists and a +5 in a 6-4 win...

Karlsson on the ice for the last few minutes of the game with the Senators' season arguably on the line before the empty-netter.
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Guest9084
( )

Posted - 03/27/2012 :  05:18:46  Reply with Quote
Funny part is that last night's game ties Karlsson's +/- with Weber's. That's interesting because the Sens are currently a +9 team whereas the Preds are +20. Weber's got a premier goalie behind him too. Tack on the fact that Suter is a lot more respected and well regarded than Kuba and there's not really much left to argue for in Weber's favor.

That said, I still think Weber will win because of reputation, how he got robbed last year and because lots of the voters won't want to give it to Karlsson when he's so young. Hasn't been won that young since Orr, or so I've read.
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n/a
deleted



4809 Posts

Posted - 03/27/2012 :  05:56:51  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
19 goals, 57 assists, 76 points, +19

And he has a few games to go to pad the lead - the next few still very meaningful games, as last night's was obviously with a playoff spot still in doubt.

Now tied with Mike Green's 76 points from a couple of years ago, and with at least another point will have the highest point total for a defenceman since . . . Lidstrom had 80 in 05/06. And that mark is reachable - before that, highest was . . . well, the early 90s, let's put it that way.

It's been a remarkable season for the young kid, and just as remarkable a season for the Sens . . . there's probably a correlation in there somewhere, but Beans would probably shoot it down, so we'll leave it at that!

"Take off, eh?" - Bob and Doug
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JOSHUACANADA
PickupHockey Veteran



Canada
2308 Posts

Posted - 03/27/2012 :  09:26:10  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
1st star in last nights game too. Its been said here and throughout the hockey news that Karlsson is now the heart and soul of the Senators. With a team boisting Alfredson, Spezza, Anderson, Philips and Michalek, thats high praise indeed. Loven the fact he is even being put in the same sentence as the Norris trophey. Win lose or even have his name on the ballot, this guy is incredible.

Rewind 2-5 years ago and I was distraught Ottawa was unable to keep there high priced defenseman and were relying on developing defenseman inhouse with a few veteran pickups such as Gonchar and Kuba. Now I am so happy Ottawa stayed the course and moved the money players along. Albeit Chara, Corvo etc, were horrible losses the Sens shouldnt have parted with.
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Odin
PickupHockey Pro



Canada
350 Posts

Posted - 03/27/2012 :  16:24:28  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Beans: " +/- CAN be a defensive stat but it is not exclusive."

Beans, you seem to keep thinking that I think its exclusive. I have said in every post it is NOT black and white. My only point was that it IS used as a defensive stat not only by me and many other fans, but by the "experts" as well.

As I said, and you acknowledged that there aren't many if any purely defeinsive stats, except maybe blocked shots.

You have to use what is available.
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Odin
PickupHockey Pro



Canada
350 Posts

Posted - 03/27/2012 :  16:27:54  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Guest9084

Funny part is that last night's game ties Karlsson's +/- with Weber's. That's interesting because the Sens are currently a +9 team whereas the Preds are +20. Weber's got a premier goalie behind him too. Tack on the fact that Suter is a lot more respected and well regarded than Kuba and there's not really much left to argue for in Weber's favor.

That said, I still think Weber will win because of reputation, how he got robbed last year and because lots of the voters won't want to give it to Karlsson when he's so young. Hasn't been won that young since Orr, or so I've read.





Its almost as if the Norris is a year behind.
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Cyclonis
Top Prospect



Canada
56 Posts

Posted - 04/02/2012 :  13:10:42  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
I think he is very underrated but wont be next year. He wasn't even drafted in our playoff pool! I traded for him in week 3 and have reaped an awesome amount of points from his skills!

I would haver no problem with Karlsson winning the Norris, His offensive talents this year have placed him way ahead in my books.

That being said, does Ottawa need a deep playoff run too? I know these things are generally not supposed to be influenced by playoff play but seemingly its the playoff performers who get the hardware every year.

If Ottawa makes the thrid round he I would bet he wins the Norris! If they are out in the first round and Nashville makes a run then Weber wins.

Anyway great set of posts here! Loved the discussion on this kid, he is definately going to be a good one. Very Brian Leetch IMHO!
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Sensfan101
PickupHockey Pro



Canada
500 Posts

Posted - 04/02/2012 :  17:20:27  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Cyclonis

I think he is very underrated but wont be next year. He wasn't even drafted in our playoff pool! I traded for him in week 3 and have reaped an awesome amount of points from his skills!

I would haver no problem with Karlsson winning the Norris, His offensive talents this year have placed him way ahead in my books.

That being said, does Ottawa need a deep playoff run too? I know these things are generally not supposed to be influenced by playoff play but seemingly its the playoff performers who get the hardware every year.

If Ottawa makes the thrid round he I would bet he wins the Norris! If they are out in the first round and Nashville makes a run then Weber wins.

Anyway great set of posts here! Loved the discussion on this kid, he is definately going to be a good one. Very Brian Leetch IMHO!



Pretty sure they do the voting for all the awards before the playoffs, so how the Sens do there is irrelevant.

You miss 100 percent of the shots you don't take Wayne Gretzky
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JOSHUACANADA
PickupHockey Veteran



Canada
2308 Posts

Posted - 04/05/2012 :  12:46:02  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Ok superimposing Karlsson to Nashville wouldn't necessarily reduce his stats. Mclean isn't known as an offensive coach, Nashville may have had a more potent offense and Weber may have not increased his stats playing in Ottawa. From all counts being said about Ottawa and Karlsson, he is the driving force behind the offense and is a good to great 2way player. Remembering Ottawa's offensive woe's last year, Karlsson's increase in stats accounts for a good portion of the offensive increase in Ottawa. Not having a season of injuries to Spezza, Alfredson and Michalek didn't hurt. Weber although is no slouch offensively, isn't the driving force behind Nashville's offence, he is just an standout 2way player on a very defensive team.
quote:
Originally posted by Alex116

quote:
Originally posted by Guest8875

Weber and Karlson are both great defensemen in both their own ways. What if Weber played for Ottawa and Karlson for Nashville?



Great thought. I'm sure Weber would have more pts than he does now, though prob not as many as Karlsson. However, Karlsson would likely have a lot fewer! He plays with far more offensive players in Ottawa with Spezza, Alfie, Michalek, etc.

Having said that, isn't Nashville's PP one of the top, if not top PP's in the league?

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Guest4178
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Posted - 06/21/2012 :  08:34:30  Reply with Quote
Erik Karlsson and the term "underrated" will not be used together any more.

Good for him to win the Norris. I think he is a deserving recipient of the best overall defenseman award.

Ottawa didn't care whether he won the award or not, in giving him a $45.5 million dollar contract a few days prior to the awards show.

Good for Karlsson! He's an amazing talent for his age, and I'm sure there are better things to come. I suppose the next point of contention will be whether or not he contends (or wins) the Norris in future years. I believe so!

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