Dan Hamhuis’ perpertual sadness is finally starting to make sense.
Putting together a rankings list is a pretty thankless job. It’s far from an exact science – it’s subjective, for the most part – meaning that everyone will have differing opinions and beliefs as to how the list should look. But that doesn’t mean that they aren’t fun to do, because they definitely are. They can lead to good discussion and provoke thought that may not have been had otherwise. We know a thing or two about publishing rankings around these parts.
Anyways, in an attempt to get people ready for the looming NHL season, a team of hockey analysts working under the banner of the worldwide leader in sports has been charged with ranking the best players in the league by position. So far their Top 50 defensemen and Top 25 goaltenders have been revealed. There are some things I take issue with on each list, and conveniently enough, they’re Canucks-related.
Read on past the jump for the lists.
All I can tell you in terms of methodology is that the "experts" were asked to rank each player on a scale of 1 to 10 based on current quality of play. I have to assume that means that age and contract status weren’t taken into consideration, making this a purely results-based vote. Unfortunately the people tasked with submitting their votes weren’t revealed, so we can’t lambast specific individuals, but instead have to settle for taking issue with the list as a whole..
Here are the Top 50 defensemen:
RankingScorePlayers
1
9.33
Zdeno Chara
2
9.29
Ryan Suter
3
9.17
Shea Weber
4
9.08
Duncan Keith
5
8.96
Erik Karlsson
6
8.75
PK Subban
7
8.58
Drew Doughty
8
8.33
Kris Letang
9
8.08
Oliver Ekman-Larsson
10
8
Ryan McDonagh
11
7.83
Alex Pietrangelo
12
7.83
Brent Seabrook
13
7.71
Niklas Kronwall
14
7.5
Dan Boyle
15
7.5
Dan Girardi
16
7.29
Keith Yandle
17
7.08
Brian Campbell
18
7.08
Dion Phaneuf
19
7.08
Kimmo Timonen
20
7
Kevin Shattenkirk
21
6.88
Mike Green
22
6.83
Francois Beauchemin
23
6.83
John Carlson
24
6.83
Andrei Markov
25
6.83
Dennis Seidenberg
26
6.83
Slava Voynov
27
6.79
Kevin Bieksa
28
6.79
Jay Bouwmeester
29
6.79
Dustin Byfuglien
30
6.79
Alex Edler
31
6.75
Dan Hamhuis
32
6.71
Jonas Brodin
33
6.54
Christian Ehrhoff
34
6.54
Jack Johnson
35
6.5
Justin Faulk
36
6.42
Tobias Enstrom
37
6.42
Victor Hedman
38
6.38
Zach Bogosian
39
6.38
Michael Del Zotto
40
6.33
Paul Martin
41
6.33
Justin Schultz
42
6.29
Mark Streit
43
6.21
Alex Goligoski
44
6.17
Lubomir Visnovsky
45
6.04
Matt Carle
46
6.04
Fedor Tyutin
47
6
Cam Fowler
48
6
Sergei Gonchar
49
5.96
James Wisniewski
50
5.92
Jake Muzzin
There are so, so, so many ways to go with this. But considering that this is a Canucks blog, let’s focus on Vancouver’s blueliners. It’s quite possible that the most egregious miscalculation of the bunch was ranking both Kevin Bieksa and Alexander Edler ahead of Dan Hamhuis. Or maybe it was the oversight leaving Jason Garrison entirely off of the list only to include a Jake Muzzin. What? I can’t decide which was worse, quite frankly.
It’s definitely a little upsetting just how routinely Hamhuis’ contributions and abilities as a defender are overlooked, but not at all surprising. His game is subtle and understated, and he rarely ever makes a highlight package. But with a lot of discussion this summer regarding who should make Team Canada for the Sochi games, I’ve given Hamhuis’ place amongst the league’s elite some thought, and I’ve come to the realization that there aren’t 15 defensemen I’d take over him for next season.
As for Bieksa’s ranking, it’s quite possible that none of the people involved in the process actually watched a Canucks game this past season, because he was very subpar for his standards. Garrison, on the other hand, finished tied for 7th in goals scored by a defenseman despite being poorly utilized, and getting off to a slow start. Think about how many v-necks the poor guy will have to buy to take his mind off of missing the cut.
Here are the Top 25 goaltenders in the league according to the voters:
RankingPlayer
1
Henrik Lundqivst
2
Jonathan Quick
3
Tuukka Rask
4
Sergei Bobrovsky
5
Pekka Rinne
6
Jimmy Howard
7
Craig Anderson
8
Corey Crawford
9
Antti Niemi
10
Cory Schneider
11
Roberto Luongo
12
Carey Price
13
Mike Smith
14
Ryan Miller
15
Braden Holtby
16
Cam Ward
17
James Reimer
18
Martin Brodeur
19
Jonas Hiller
20
Niklas Backstrom
21
Viktor Fasth
22
Kari Lehtonen
23
Jonathan Bernier
24
Ray Emery
25
Jaroslav Halak
If you’re discluding factors like age and contract, I don’t understand how Roberto Luongo doesn’t crack the Top 10. I have him pretty clearly in my Top 5. Amidst the entire crapstorm that has been the past 15 months or so for Luongo, his ability to stop the puck from entering his team’s net has become grossly undervalued. I mean, people are seriously publishing things like this without even a hint or irony or sarcasm.
This particular list has "small sample size" written all over it, and I’m sure by this time next year most of the rankers will want to forget the day they ranked Sergei Bobrovsky over Pekka Rinne, or Corey Crawford over Roberto Luongo, or Viktor Fasth over a proven starter like Kari Lehtonen. Or you know, maybe they’ll want to put more thought into it.
Anyways, I’m looking forward to the release of the forward rankings. It’s not a matter of "if", but more a matter of "how much" Henrik Sedin will be underrated.