The NHL’s Best Under 25 Debate – Ovechkin Has No Rivals

October 12, 2009

Read Loyal Homer and Bleacher Fan’s argument about who they believe is the best NHL player under the age of 25.



In a league that increasingly lauds speed and skill over teamwork and toughness, Alexander Ovechkin gets a standing “O.” I agree with Sports Illustrated’s recent conclusion that Ovechkin is the best hockey player under the age of 25, and the rightful winner of this debate (please vote). In fact, SI fails to go far enough. I believe Ovechkin is the best player in the entire league. However, for the purposes of this debate framework, I will relay several reasons why Ovechkin is the best player under 25 in the NHL.

The righty is listed at a generous six feet tall and a solid 212 pounds. Despite the smallish frame, Alexander Ovechkin embodies excitement. Every time he sets foot on the ice he has an excellent chance to score. His colleagues and the media agree. In just four NHL seasons in his career, Ovechkin has already won the league MVP twice. Not only is he a good bet to score a goal when he is on the ice, he has a 50-50 shot at winning the league MVP. How many other players in the history of the NHL – or sports in general – have started their career that way? Zero. Not Wayne Gretzky, not Bobby Hull, not Patrick Roy. Ovechkin is the only player with that distinction, and he has earned it.

Ovechkin’s statistics are impressive, obviously. He is already on the list of the top 50 active goal scorers. Again, Ovechkin is in his fifth season in the league. This season he is in vintage form, already tied for the league lead in points and is second in goals… just five games in. Through those five games Ovechkin has averaged a goal and a point per game. How is that for consistent greatness?

Ovechkin has an impressive trophy closet, too. If you are curious about all of his trophies, read his Wikipedia page. But heed this warning, Ovechkin’s greatness cannot be contained by a Wikipedia page.

Ovechkin is great because of firsts… NHL firsts, not just sports firsts like that nifty MVP achievement. He is the first player in the history of the league to win the Art Ross Trophy (NHL leader in points for a season), the Maurice Richard Trophy (NHL leader in goals scored), the Lester B. Pearson award (NHL MVP – as chosen by the NHL Player’s Association), AND the Hart Memorial Trophy (NHL MVP – as chosen by the Professional Hockey Writer’s Association… yea, there is one). He currently holds the record for most goals scored by a left-winger in a single season (65), the most points by a left-winger as a rookie (106), and the award for the fastest overtime goal in the history of the NHL – six seconds. There are other all-time NHL records Ovechkin holds – already. It is logical to conclude that Overchkin may go on to have the greatest career of any NHL player ever. It is a very real possibility.

Greatness loves company, too. Great company. By a show of hands, readers, who among you believes LeBron James is the best player in the NBA ? That is a lot of hands! Like LeBron, Alexander Ovechkin – the first overall pick in the NHL draft in 2004 – is another once rare example of a first overall draft pick that actually lives up to the sensational hype. LeBron and Ovechkin are also fans of each other.

There is greatness besides Ovechkin in the NHL, too. In fact, it is the presence of other outstanding contemporary players like Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin that make Ovechkin’s accomplishments appear so amazing. While Crosby and Malkin – as my esteemed colleagues will boast – have won a Stanley Cup ring, they also are supported by an excellent goalkeeper in Marc-Andre Fleury. A solid goaltender enables players like Crosby and Malkin to take risks up ice, pass more aggressively, and turn their skates up the ice sooner because Fleury has proven his ability to play at a high level. Ovechkin is unable to take as many risks, but he has proven to be a more effective scorer than either Crosby or Malkin.

If Ovechkin has one flaw it is that his worst scoring day by far throughout his career is Sunday. Of his 224 career goals, he has scored only 17 on Sunday. Shameful. But, do not play him on Saturday, where he has scored a career high 51 goals (along with an impressive 49 assists).

No other NHL player combines the speed, skill, instinct, and surprising power of Alexander Ovechkin. If you refuse to take my word for it, let your eyes feast on a highlight reel unlike any other in the league.

Case closed.

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The Best Player Under 25 Debate – He SHOULD Be Called Sid The MAN!

October 12, 2009

Read Sports Geek’s argument and Loyal Homer’s arguments about the who the best player in the NHL under the age of 25 is.



The NBA’s greatest player under 25 is undoubtedly LeBron James. There are many other players with accolades worthy of mention (Dwayne Wade, Dwight Howard, and Carmelo Anthony, just to name a few), but none can compete with LeBron in terms of overall impact in the league. From his highly publicized entry into the NBA to the unprecedented accomplishments he has already earned, LeBron has been the king of the court.

The NHL has many very talented young players amongst its ranks, as well. Like the NBA, some players will develop into superstars, while others enter the league and dominate from the word go. Although all of the players Sarah Kwak listed in her Sports Illustrated article of the top 25 players under the age of 25 deserve recognition for their accomplishments, the name that SHOULD be on the top of that list (but surprisingly is not) is the man justifiably known as “The Next One” – Pittsburgh Penguins center Sidney Crosby.

Like LeBron, Crosby came into the NHL as a VERY highly anticipated player with prodigious skill on the ice. Following the strike-ended season of 2004, the NHL was eager to resume play, and wanted a fresh new face that could be associated with the “return” of the NHL. After an unprecedented lottery that awarded the Penguins the top pick of the draft, Crosby was selected and became that face.

Since then, Crosby has lived up to every single expectation placed upon him. On a personal level, his accomplishments (like LeBron’s) have been unprecedented. During his rookie season, Crosby set franchise records for assists and points by a rookie, surpassing the records set by hockey legend Mario Lemieux.

His second year in the league earned him even greater success, as he won the Art Ross Trophy, which is awarded to the scoring leader in the league, making him the youngest player ever to win the award, and the youngest scoring champion in any of North America’s major sports. That same year he also went on to win the Hart Memorial Trophy (which is awarded to the league’s MVP), becoming the youngest person since Wayne Gretzky to win the award in 1980, and he won the Lester B. Pearson Award, which is given to the NHL’s top player of the year, as voted by the NHL Players Association.

Some other personal accomplishments for Crosby are that he is the youngest person in NHL history to reach 100 and 200 career points, and was the youngest person elected to the first team of an NHL All-Star Team. In 2007, he also became the youngest player in NHL history to be named a team captain.

Along with those personal accomplishments, earned in a very short time, Crosby has more importantly been the focal point for the resurrection of Pittsburgh dominance in the NHL. Not since the glory days of Mario Lemieux and Jaromir Jagr have the Penguins been considered a dominant force in the NHL. In fact, when Crosby came into the league the Penguins were one of the worst teams in hockey. They had finished the 2004 season with the league’s worst record, and they had not made a playoff appearance since 2001.

Once he joined the team, however, Crosby led the Penguins to the playoffs in three of the last four years, including Eastern Conference Championships in the 2007-2008, and 2008-2009 seasons, and a Stanley Cup Championship this past season – the first title for the Penguins since the 1991-1992 season.

Sidney Crosby has not only been the face of the Pittsburgh Penguins, but he has been the face of the NHL. Other players may achieve better results in specific categories over specific years, but none have had the overall impact that “Sid the Kid” has brought to the league.

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The NHL’s Best Under 25 Debate – Malkin Leads the NHL into the Next Decade

October 12, 2009

Read Bleacher Fan’s argument that Sidney Crosby is the best player under 25 and Sports Geek’s argument that Alex Ovechkin is the best player under 25.



It was a decent weekend with some good football and baseball games. But today, in lieu of our usual recap of the weekend football games, The Sports Debates is going to do something a little different. We like to try to cover all sports from various angles. We have yet to do anything on hockey, and I know there are some hockey fans amongst out readership. Today is a good day to discuss hockey. We are going to debate who we think is the best hockey player under the age of 25 in the National Hockey League. Being from the south, hockey just is not a big deal down here. But, from what I have watched and read, it is obvious to me that Evgeni Malkin is the best player in the league under the age of 25.

Malkin, who just turned 23 a little over two months ago, plays center for the Stanley Cup champion Pittsburgh Penguins. It should be noted that he is also left-handed. And he does get extra points for having a very hot girlfriend, right?

Malkin made his NHL debut three years ago, though it was actually delayed nearly a month after being injured in a preseason game in a run-in with teammate John LeClair. However, that injury, which ended up being a dislocated shoulder (ouch!), did not stop him from scoring at least one goal in his first six regular season games, which is a modern day record. He went on to score 33 goals and 85 points in his shortened rookie year, but still was able to win the Calder Trophy, which is awarded to the league’s top rookie. Folks, he has not slowed down since.

He definitely did not experience a sophomore slump, as he totaled 106 points in helping lead the Penguins to the Stanley Cup Finals, where they lost to the Detroit Red Wings in six games.

This past season, his third, was his greatest season. Individually, he scored 113 points, which was enough to capture the Art Ross Trophy, given annually to the player with the most points. After coming up just short in the Finals the previous season the Penguins were able to get over that hump and defeat the Red Wings in a classic seven game series to win the Stanley Cup. Malkin was named playoff MVP, and deservedly so after scoring 36 points throughout the playoffs.

He is off to a good start this year also, as through Sunday’s he has seven points in five games.

Looking at the numbers, it is hard to argue against Malkin. To the rest of the NHL… look out! The kid is only 23 years old! I would say the Penguins, who also have another young star in Sidney Crosby, are well set for the next several years.

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