losveratos said:
When was the last time someone ended the year 1st in the NHL in goals and 3rd last in +/-?
Even if you take the stat with a gigantic grain of salt... something is fishy there. And I don't want it near my team.
You must see that something is strange there though right? You can blame away some or even a lot of it. But think about this...
Since the N.H.L. started tracking players? plus/minus figures in 1967-68, Ovechkin is the only player to lead the league in goals with such a poor plus/minus rating.
So I guess all I can say is that for 1.5mil more per year. I wouldn't trade Kessel 1 - 1 for Ovi. Just my opinion of course.
But you're just dismissing those contextual factors like the ones mentioned in that post by Scott Cullen that I linked to. He shows how the team's 5 on 5 SH% with him on the ice fell by 40% year-to-year, despite Ovechkin shooting 10% (again, this is in mid-February when Ovechkin was -17). So Cullen says if the team had an average SH% with him on the ice of 8%, it's 7 more goals for at that time. Suddenly, -17 might be -10. For the 5 seasons previous the on-ice SH% with Ovechkin on has never been less than 8% until the time the article was published.
So Ovechkin's linemates were not doing much when he was on the ice, getting a poor SH%. Then he looks at 5 on 5 SV%, which was .909 when Ovechkin was on the ice at the time of the article. He says over the past 5 seasons the average SV% when Ovechkin has been on the ice was .922. How do you explain the difference between those numbers? Rather than he started doing something this past season to be that much worse defensively, a better thought would be that he was receiving some bad luck in that department and it is something you would expect to rebound to their typical levels. Again, Cullen says that if Ovechkin was receiving the typical SV% over the past 5 years that would have resulted in 5-6 less goals against. So his +/-, following on from above, would then look something like -5 or -4. In other words, right around Phil Kessel's.
And that's ignoring the fact that Ovechkin is a +47 for his career, even with the -35 last season.
It's not about "blaming away" and it's what most people scream when +/- is relied on heavily like this - the context is extremely important.
Invariably the top +/- guys are almost solely from the best teams in the league/the best players in the league/play with the best players in the league - and all of those are contextual factors which don't even touch on the ones mentioned above by Scott Cullen.
In short, it's not fair to Ovechkin to simply cite his +/- and then when the context is presented say "well there's something fishy anyways." To me, that's fishy player evaluation.