logo

Oilers Awards Hopefuls (Art Ross: Connor McDavid)

alt
Photo credit:Stephen R. Sylvanie-USA TODAY Sports
Nicklaus Good
4 years ago
This season preview series will focus on the 2020 NHL Awards and will make the case for which Oiler has the best shot of winning each one. This entry’s focus is the Art Ross Trophy and the Oilers’ best shot at winning it: @Connor McDavid.
This is probably the most obvious (and perhaps even the most likely) conversation to have, but we’re going to have it anyway (well, at least I’m gonna type the words and it’s up to you to read them) but here’s why the Oilers captain is going to walk away with the Art Ross Trophy in Vegas in June.
Jun 20, 2018; Las Vegas, NV, USA; Connor McDavid holds the Art Ross trophy during the 2018 NHL Awards at Hard Rock Hotel and Casino. Mandatory Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-USA TODAY Sports
Though history tells us that the NHL and scoring existed prior to the 2014-15 season, the modern concept of offensive as we know it truly began when Connor McDavid stepped onto the ice in October of 2014. So, here are the highest-scoring players– all those that have eclipsed 300 points– in the NHL from the 2015-’16 season through the 2018-’19 campaign.
GPPTSPTS/GM
1. @Patrick Kane3273811.17
2. @Nikita Kucherov3133791.21
3. @Connor McDavid2873721.29
4. @Sidney Crosby3163631.15
5. @Blake Wheeler3273341.02
6. @Brad Marchand3043311.09
7. @Johnny Gaudreau3133221.03
8. @Artemi Panarin322320.99
9. @Alex Ovechkin324316.98
10. @Claude Giroux324312.96
11. @John Tavares319308.97
12. @Tyler Seguin318303.95
13. @Leon Draisaitl314303.96
14. @Phil Kessel328303.92
15. @Nathan MacKinnon301301.97
16. @Nicklas Backstrom318301.95
17. @Brent Burns328301.92
18. @Evgeny Malkin2653001.13
Another notable player is @Steven Stamkos, who’s only played in 254, and scoring 268 points. Though not over 300 points, Stamkos has a 1.06pts/gm average over the past four seasons, which ranks him seventh in that category.
I’m a little surprised to see Kane at the top of the list, but McDavid missed almost half of his rookie season, in which he was on pace for ~87pts over 82 games. Which, had he played that full season, would put him at ~410pts, being the only player to surpass 400 points in four seasons.
So clearly the compelling stat here is the points-per-game. Kucherov is a lot closer than I would’ve thought, with Kane and Crosby holding decent rates too. But Malkin and Stamkos are there lurking around with quietly good rates too.
But if we’re talking about racking up points, where’s the best place for an elite scorer to do that? Well, the powerplay of course!
So, let’s take a look at how the top scorers performed on the powerplay last season.
(players included are only those with reasonable chances of reasonably reaching, or surpassing, the 100-point mark).
PPP% of total pointsTeam PP%NHL PP Rank
Kucherov (1st)4837.528.21st
Stamkos (2nd)4040.828.21st
MacKinnon (4th)3737.422.07th
Point (6th)3538.028.21st
Huberdeau (8th)3437.026.22nd
Marchand (9th)3434.025.93rd
McDavid (12th)3328.421.29th
Kane (16th)3027.320.215th
Crosby (19th)2929.024.65th
Gaudreau (25th)2727.319.318th
Kucherov (and Stamkos and Point for that matter) is poised to play on another offensive juggernaut in Tampa Bay, playing on an elite powerplay where he should be able to pick up a tonne of points. But, it should be noted that only the @Pittsburgh Penguins (and the @Washington Capitals somewhat) have been the most consistent team in terms of finishing in the top five for team powerplay percentage over the past five seasons. And even then, they’ve only finished in the top three in two consecutive seasons, and no other team has had more. The Lightning finished first last season and third in 2017-’18, so there is a possibility for a slight drop-off.
All that’s to say, Connor’s a most consistent 5v5 scorer, and it’s more likely for powerplay scoring to regress a bit than for 5v5 scoring to increase, so there’s a reasonable chance that the point gap between Connor and Kucherov will shrink just based on the likelihood that the Lighting powerplay will dip a bit, and the Oilers’ might even increase slightly.

Final Thought

This is really going to be a battle between Connor and Kucherov, with maybe Kane as a dark horse, and Malkin as an even darker horse (but with his nemesis Kessel exiled from the team, he could be a superstar re-born). There’s a worry that with Tippett behind the bench, there will be a bigger commitment to defensive responsibility, top to bottom on the 2019-20 Oilers roster. But, this is Connor McDavid, who owns the ice playing at 5v5 and could very well be playing on a better all-around Oilers squad in 2019-20.
There is the path to the 2020 Art Ross Trophy for Connor McDavid.
Thoughts? The comments section is yours!

Traditional player and team stats courtesy of nhl.com

Check out these posts...