Calgary Flames
Reflections on a Fascinating Saturday Spent With Oilers Twitter
I made some friends, probably nobody learned and some people seemed quite upset.
I was scrolling through my personal Twitter feed on Saturday morning with my cup of coffee, as is tradition. As is also tradition, I saw a bunch of chaos and people arguing, regarding all sorts of topics. However, one in particular caught my eye.
A person, employed as a radio host by TSN, was ripping on Dom Luszczyszyn of The Hockey News' recent article, where he used his Game Score metric, to rank star power that the various NHL teams possessed.
Of course, we know that all metrics have various flaws to them, but there is a lot right in them and they certainly provide useful information. Dom made note of this in his article.
Of course, that did not stop people from yelling at him on Twitter, because why would it?ย
In particular, it made some Oilers fans very upset, as they do not stack up very favourably in terms of possessing star power, probably because they traded some of them away, but more on that later.
(As an aside, the Flames look very good here. Go Flames!)
Legion of Oilers followers launched attacks upon poor Dom, an intelligent young guy who is doing some very good work in the analytics community.ย
Dustin of TSN, weighed in with his 2 cents:
Immediately showing off his critical thinking and openness to new ideas:
And just overall, looking impressive for somebody whose profession involves speaking about and knowing about the various sports they cover:
Which really says all you need to know.
Then, My Day Got Real Interesting
I joined the fray, bemused by this "professional's" openness to new ideas and unwillingness to listen to opinions that are not already his own, questioning his flat out denial that Dougie Hamilton was anywhere in the same realm of Drew "His Turn to Win the Norris" Doughty.ย
This led to an absolute tire fire of exchanges.
I questioned that assertion, as the Game Score metric shows Hamilton to be better, as do other methodologies of comparison, such as HERO Charts.
However, Drew Doughty has much stronger brand value and Dougie Hamilton plays for the Flames, so Dustin and his crew were not even willing to entertain a discussion on it.
Personally, I would not be pleased at all if the Flames traded a younger defenseman who is probably just as good or better, on a cheaper contract. I truly believe the Flames would not make that trade either.
Eventually, We Got Onto the Mildly Contentious Subject of the Hall for Larsson Trade
Basically the entire analytics community has panned the Hall for Larsson trade as being one of poor asset management. Larsson is a solid top-4 defender, Hall is one of the best wingers in the league. The value is not equivalent, whatsoever.
I have some very good friends who are Oilers fans and they like Larsson, but all disagree with how the trade went down. There are many great Oilers writers out there, who think the Oilers botched the trade.ย
However, there are apparently a lot of people out there who feel very strongly otherwise:
Because of Wins
The Oilers made their return to the playoffs because Connor McDavid was the best player in the NHL, Oscar Klefbom was healthy all season and Cam Talbot put up elite numbers in the crease. The depth around McDavid was solid, but pieces like Larsson were not the difference between making the playoffs or not.
Apparently, A Lot Of People Know Everything About the Oilers' Dressing Room
Apparently, a lot of people are privy to knowing how things work in the Edmonton dressing room and are well aware of the fact that despite being one of their most productive players and constantly putting out strong efforts, Taylor Hall is a dressing room cancer and the team is blessed to have him away from them.
I am sure this is not just to help the narrative that this was a good trade.
After Pointing Out That Analytically, Cody Franson and Adam Larsson Are Not Radically Different, Things Got Amazing
Somebody asked me what the Oilers were supposed to do, as if trading Hall was the only possible option available in order for them to upgrade their defense. I was getting ready for work, so off the top of my head, I named Cody Franson as somebody who would absolutely have been available and probably stacked up somewhat favourably to Larsson in terms of on ice output.
According to comparisons of their production and shot impacts, Franson looks better than Larsson by a bit.ย
Of course, it was taken very reasonably, as my boy Ryder said…
I made the suggestion that Taylor Hall and Cody Franson combined would have more value than Adam Larsson himself brought to the Oilers. This was taken out of context by a certain radio host and led to a lot of interesting responses from a hoard of Oilers fans who just try so dearly to justify the Hall trade.
Apparently, comparing how 2 players have performed, side by side, has proven analytics wrong, because?
Obviously, HERO charts are not a perfect metric, as no metric is. But, if Cody Franson is appearing above Adam Larsson in every category, regardless of whatever side factors HERO charts do not capture, can Adam Larsson really have that much more value than Cody Franson? Goals, assists, shot generation and shot suppression are kind of the most important readily measurable statistics.
How much does it matter if Adam Larsson hits more and skates better than Franson, if Franson is the player consistently yielding stronger results?
If you can acquire a player for next to nothing, that appears to perform at a similar or better level in multiple statistical categories and you get to keep a top line winger instead of trading him, how is that a good trade?
But Nevermind What I Said, Because:
Goals, Assists and Shot Share: Superficial Stats.
I was also never trying to troll at any point, I was trying to have a reasonable discussion but that was basically impossible.
Finally, Duncan Keith Got Brought Up For Some Reason?
First of all, how dare he evoke the imagery of Kevin in an attempt to besmirch the name of Douglas Hamilton.
Secondly, our discussion earlier was on Doughty, not Keith, but that was a few hours ago, so who could ever remember, I guess.
Anyway, who is to say who is better between Keith and Hamilton. Keith is a tremendous player, but is age 34 and starting to slip a little. Meanwhile, Hamilton is 24 and just hitting his prime. Either way, it is discussion worthy, not a cut and dry verdict.
So after pressing again for an actual explanation of why it is so obvious that one player is better than another, if both counting stats and analytics cannot be used in the verdict, this is the brilliant answer finally given.
2 Norris Trophies.
A Conn Smythe.
3 Cups.
Even some Olympic Medals!
You know, not like he played on a team loaded with tremendous talent. Also, Norris and Conn Smythe awards are selected by media members, who are not necessarily the greatest judges of who are best (see, Drew "His Turn to Win the Norris" Doughty).
He also never won any of those things until he was 26, so that also kind of destroys that form of ridiculous comparison.
Keith's peak was better than Hamilton has ever been to this point in his career. Does not mean Keith is better than Hamilton today and we do not know how good Hamilton will get.
But, wins!
I won't even get into the tremendous array of responses the good people of Oilers Twitter had after this.
Reflections on it All
But, I just write thoughts for a website so what do I know.
I just know I am excited for the new season to come around.
And this:
by samwell9