donlever wrote: ↑Fri Apr 18, 2025 10:11 am
Interesting you have Hughes rated over Makar.
I understand the Canuck fan rose colored glass "thang" (which "some" have been guilty of over the years when defending certain layers of "our guys" - Linden/Naslund for instance) but would not expect it from you (and do not believe it to be true for clarity sake).
NHL players were recently surveyed on "leagues top defender" status and the end result was overwhelming the opposite of your take.
I am not going to look for it but something like 70% Makar while Hughes was at 7% if I recall correctly.
Also, you stole my Peter/Paul line.
Edit:
Just recalled, it was on the NHLPA site.
I'm with the 7%! Well, I think this year could go either way, but I think Hughes was interrupted considerably with the injury.
Of course it could be rose colo_red glasses, but it isn't just fandom. And it isn't not watching Makar -- the Avs and Jets are the two teams I watch the most after the Canucks, so I've see a lot of Makar. And I think Makar is great -- the second best.
Why Hughes?
Hughes controls the puck the most in the league. It isn't close. And its nothing like I've ever seen -- it completely transforms the Canucks when he's on the ice. The possession is in all zones. Hughes ability to break pressure is exemplary.
Makar's great here, too -- among the best, but the difference is like the 2015 draft. Eichel was a first overall talent, but McDavid was generational. Hughes is generational in this category. The patience is usually for a purpose.
I also think I'd rather have Hughes in the half court defense part of the game, though neither are elite here (both have size issues that caps their peak but offset with good angling and their feet, both have improved over the years, I think Hughes more).
Why Makar?
Makar has a better shot and is a better goal scorer -- more efficient with his chances (though this year's shooting percentage was absurd). This is part a function of the Avs playing a more fluid game in the offensive zone, Makar more of a rover. This is sort of how Josi used to put up numbers -- I'm not knocking that -- in fact it is part due to the fact that Makar plays more opportunistically, part due to the Avs getting this the their best way to score goals.
Also, Makar's rush defense, whether backchecking and breaking up a chance or forward facing an odd man situation, is better than Hughes'.
--
I think that what tips me into the 7% category is simply how much different the game looks when Hughes is on the ice. He is controlling everything, and he makes opponents look silly (or hopeless) nearly every shift. But since the purpose of the game is to score goals (at least a primary purpose on par with keeping them out), its fair to argue that Makar's ability to more efficiently convert scoring opportunities (and have his teammates coverts the opportunities he contributes to creating) while creating nearly as many as Hughes would be a deciding factor. Scoring > possessing -- for the most part. (Possession has positive second order effects -- though all opportunities and possession will end with a goal, stoppage, or the other team having the puck). Maybe its the better argument and I have rose colo_red glasses -- but can we agree they are 1, 2?