Three superstars, three sports; one question for all the fantasy managers who have ever had a beer in hand and argued about: Who has produced the most fantasy winning production in their careers?
Patrick Mahomes provided historically great quarterback performances at an elite level. Connor McDavid has provided a decade of league leading scoring numbers. Shohei Ohtani is, depending on how you fill out your roster with your fantasy platform, literally two fantasy players that are included in a single roster spot.
We were able to determine this by developing a cross-sport "Fantasy Hall of Fame Index" (FHFI) that allows us to normalize production from different time frames, different methods of scoring and different roster construction. The FHFI will evaluate each player based on four equally weighted factors: the level of dominance they have shown above baseline (40%), the amount of leverage they have in their best season (30%), the number of games they play (20%) and their ability to be placed in multiple rosters (10%). Here is what the actual numbers show.
How We Normalized Three Different Sports
The core challenge in cross-sport fantasy comparisons is that a "great" quarterback week looks nothing like a "great" center iceman week. To handle this, we mapped each player's per-game fantasy output onto a Normalized Fantasy Value (NFV) scale of 0 to 100, anchored between two poles: the "last comfortably startable" output for the position (baseline) and a practical upper bound observed across modern elite seasons (ceiling).
Formally: NFV = 100 x clamp((FPPG minus Baseline) / (Ceiling minus Baseline), 0, 1)
To account for availability across sports with very different schedule lengths, we then computed a Dominance-Adjusted Season Share (DASS) for each season:
DASS = NFV x (Games Played / Scheduled Season Length)
Summing DASS across a career produces something WAR-like in spirit: how many peak-equivalent seasons above the startable baseline did this player actually deliver, weighted for how often they were on the field or ice?
For scoring style, we used points-league formats for each sport, since those translate more cleanly across sports than multi-category roto does. Mahomes' season lines draw from FantasyPros' historical passing and rushing tables (2018 to 2025). McDavid's year-by-year scoring comes from ESPN's career stats table (2015 to 2026). Ohtani's hitting and pitching lines are anchored by MLB.com player records and confirmed by Reuters reporting on his 2024 pitching absence.
Patrick Mahomes: Two All-Time Peaks and a Position Economics Problem
Mahomes' fantasy Hall case is largely based upon only two seasons, 2018 and 2022. In 2018, Mahomes scored 5,097 passing yards and 50 touchdown passes in his first full year as a starter. Per game Mahomes averaged 26.1 points in standard QB scoring. Our model calculates that is a normal fantasy value (NFV) of approximately 95 out of 100, the highest single season NFV for any player in this evaluation. His 2022 season, with 5,250 passing yards and 41 touchdown passes plus additional running back production, generated a NFV of 76.0 and demonstrates that this was not a one-year anomaly.
However, the challenge facing Mahomes is the band of mediocre to poor seasons bookending these two peaks. In 2020, Mahomes' NFV was 81.9, good but much lower than his 2018 peak. However, his numbers in 2023 and 2024 were also down, and the 2025 season was limited to 14 games. Therefore, the three best seasons by Mahomes averaged 25.2 fantasy points per game, which is elite, however the drop-off in Mahomes' production from his peak to his floor is greater than for either of the other two players.
Some of this drop off is likely a function of the positional environment and not necessarily the actual decline of Mahomes. The larger structural drag on Mahomes' FHFI score is what I will call "position economics". As stated earlier, in standard one-quarterback league formats, the replacement level at QB is significantly higher than at any other premium position. This means that even a mere "good" quarterback can generate startable weekly numbers. Therefore, while Mahomes' career DASS accumulation is important, it is systematically compressed by the baseline compression in the league at the QB position. Therefore, in superflex or two-QB formats, Mahomes' relative scarcity premium increases substantially and his FHFI case moves closer to 76 or 77 out of 100. In standard formats, the model assigns a FHFI score of 70.6.
It is worth noting that this structural cap on Mahomes shows up in real-world fantasy ranking ecosystems too. Independent draft-value systems, including FPTrack’s football player rankings, reflect how quarterbacks are typically slotted behind other positions despite elite raw production. Meanwhile, their most recent fantasy hockey board ranked McDavid at No. 2 for the 2025-26 season. The result: Mahomes ranks below McDavid in their respective sports' fantasy ranking hierarchies, a gap this index corroborates with actual career data.
Connor McDavid: The Cleanest Fantasy Resume of the Three
While Mahomes' case is based upon peaks, McDavid's is based upon something even more rare: consistent elite production over a decade without a bad season. As shown in ESPN's year-by-year table, McDavid's development into a top player began in his first season in the NHL in 2015-16, as he produced 48 points in 45 games as a rookie. Thus, he already possessed better per game production than many of the top forwards in the league. From that point onward, McDavid's trajectory continued upward. He surpassed 100 real points in several seasons, and in 2022-23, he posted the most impressive individual scoring season in the modern era with 153 points. The normalized value in this model for McDavid's 2022-23 season is 96.6, which would be the highest in the dataset, with the exception of Mahomes' 2018 season. To put that in perspective, the next-highest NFL season in this dataset produces a normalized value of approximately 82.
What sets McDavid apart from the others is not simply the 2022-23 peak, but the floors that exist around it. For example, McDavid's shortened 2020-21 season still graded as a normalized 82.6, while his 2019-20 pandemic season graded as a normalized 61.1. In years where McDavid's numbers were lower, he never fell below startable levels. His top-three seasons average 6.11 fantasy points per game in a skater-points model, and his 712 career games played is a strong durability measure in the NHL.
For the purposes of points-based fantasy hockey, goals and assists are the currencies. McDavid's high volume of assists creates a very high floor in fantasy points. Even if McDavid has a poor shooting week, he is unlikely to lose production due to the fact that his ability to make plays for teammates is so consistent. NHL.com ranked McDavid as the #2 player among fantasy forwards in February 2026, even though he was entering his 11th season in the league. This is consistent with what the DASS calculation shows: multiple high plateau seasons, rather than one peak followed by a decline. McDavid's FHFI composite score of 81.7 is far and away the best among the three players, and it is the most stable of the three scores across sensitivity testing.
Shohei Ohtani: The Two-Way Rules Engine
Unlike the other two players, Ohtani's fantasy case is structured differently, and examining it without referencing platform-specific roster construction is effectively impossible. Not only does Ohtani generate elite-level value in one fantasy market (hitting), but in his best seasons, he simultaneously generates elite value in a different fantasy market (pitching).
Ohtani's hitting resume is incredible. In addition to documenting a 2023 season of 44 home runs and a 1.066 OPS, Ohtani also went 10-5 as a pitcher with a 3.14 ERA and 167 strikeouts in 132 innings. Ohtani did not pitch in 2024, and according to Reuters, it was a result of recovering from elbow surgery. However, in 2024, he hit .310/.390/.646 with 54 home runs and 130 RBIs, along with 59 stolen bases. His 2025 return to two way action saw Ohtani produce 55 home runs as a hitter and a 2.87 ERA in 14 starts. That type of performance is the kind of thing that changes the lens through which we view the potential of a single roster slot.
In the model's main scenario, which considers Ohtani as a single two-way player who occupies one roster slot and produces both hitting and pitching points, Ohtani's greatest seasons create a compositional advantage that is very difficult to replicate. His 2023 season graded as a normalized 100 out of 100, which is the model's ceiling, since no other player has been able to generate the unique combination of elite hitter and front line starter in a single slot. Ohtani's top three seasons average 6.91 fantasy points per game in the combined model. Ohtani's composite FHFI score of 78.7 places him in second.
However, the key issue with Ohtani's FHFI score is the availability issues with respect to his pitching. Ohtani did not pitch in 2024. Ohtani also did not pitch for part of the 2019 season, and suffered from injuries that affected his pitching in other seasons. If you evaluate his pitching production as a separate roster entry instead of a bonus from a single slot, Ohtani's pitching DASS drops substantially, and in a "split player" interpretation of Ohtani, the model rates Ohtani as being below Mahomes, at approximately 68.0. The order of McDavid and Ohtani above Mahomes is stable in unified formats, while Ohtani falls to third in split player formats. That format sensitivity is the most critical factor in this analysis.
The Numbers: Index Scores, Trajectory, and Sensitivity
Here is the primary scenario output under unified Ohtani, points-league scoring, and standard weighting:
|
Rank |
Player |
FHFI Score |
Key Driver |
|
1 |
Connor McDavid |
81.7 |
Decade of sustained elite production, multiple peak seasons, strong availability |
|
2 |
Shohei Ohtani |
78.7 |
Unmatched two-way ceiling in unified formats, historic hitter floor |
|
3 |
Patrick Mahomes |
70.6 |
Two all-time QB peaks but compressed by position economics and lower recent output |
The normalized career trajectories illustrate each player's shape well. Mahomes is front loaded: his 2018 season, with an NFV of 94.9, is the highest single season NFV in the dataset, and Mahomes' numbers have trended downward to the low-mid 20s normalized value for every season since his 2018 peak. Ohtani spikes sharply in two-way seasons and then drops down to the 40s in years where he does not pitch at all, reflecting the zero normalized value of Ohtani's 2018-2020 seasons, where he had little-to-no MLB playing time. McDavid's line is the flattest of the three in terms of its variance: Once McDavid established himself in 2019-20, he never fell below the 50s normalized, and his 2022-23 season, with an NFV of 96.6, is only 3.4 points from Mahomes' all-time peak.
The sensitivity analysis shows a few things worth flagging. First, changing to a peak-heavy weighting (50% peak leverage, 20% career dominance) causes Mahomes to jump to second, and causes the difference between Mahomes and McDavid to narrow considerably, as Mahomes' 2018 season is the best single season in the dataset. If "Fantasy Hall of Fame" means "the best single season", Mahomes has a case. If "Fantasy Hall of Fame" means "the best career long asset", the current weighting is more suitable. Second, in hockey formats that emphasize hits, blocked shots, and penalty minutes, McDavid's lead over the competition shrinks, although major fantasy platforms continue to rank McDavid as one of the top values at forward. Finally, in Superflex formats, Mahomes' score moves to the high 70s, and may surpass Ohtani in split player formats.
Final Ranking and What Could Change It
The Fantasy Hall of Fame ordering from this analysis, in primary scenario form:
1. Connor McDavid (81.7) -- The cleanest combination of ceiling, repetition, and position dominance. A decade of elite fantasy hockey production that has never had a genuinely bad season is an extraordinarily rare profile.
2. Shohei Ohtani (78.7) -- The most format-dependent case of the three, but in unified two-way formats the ceiling is genuinely unmatched. His hitter-only resume, even stripped of pitching, is still an elite fantasy career.
3. Patrick Mahomes (70.6) -- Two of the best individual QB fantasy seasons ever recorded, surrounded by a position structure that compresses their relative value against the rest of the field. In Superflex leagues, revisit this ranking.
The clearest path to changing this ordering: move to a peak-first weighting in a Superflex league with split Ohtani, and Mahomes rises to first. Move to a unified Ohtani interpretation with heavy career-dominance weighting, and McDavid leads comfortably with Ohtani second. The Mahomes-to-first scenario requires a very specific set of format conditions. The McDavid-at-first outcome is the most robust finding in this analysis, holding across nearly every tested combination of weights and scoring assumptions.
Yes, we know that this is taking a while!
As many of you know, we at Notinhalloffame.com are slowly generating the top 50 of each major North American sports team. That being said, we maintain and update our existing Top 50 lists annually. As such, we are delighted to present our pre-2025/26 revision of our top 50 Edmonton Oilers.
As for all of our top 50 players in hockey, we look at the following:
1. Advanced Statistics.
2. Traditional statistics and how they finished in the National Hockey League.
3. Playoff accomplishments.
4. Their overall impact on the team and other intangibles that are not reflected in a stat sheet.
Last year, the Oilers had another phenomenal campaign, winning the Western Conference for the second consecutive year. However, in both seasons, they lost to the Florida Panthers in the Stanley Cup Finals. There were no new entrants, but there were multiple elevations.
As always, we present our top five, which saw a slight change.
1. Wayne Gretzky
2. Connor McDavid
3. Mark Messier
4. Leon Draisaitl
5. Jari Kurri
You can find the entire list here.
Connor McDavid was #2 last year, and while he did supplant Gretzky for the top spot, he is getting closer.
Leon Draisaitl, who is a former Hart Trophy winner and runner-up last year, edged up over Jari Kurri for the fourth spot.
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins moved up one rung to #11.
Defenseman Darnell Nurse also climbed up one spot. He is now ranked #14.
Another Defenseman, Evan Bouchard, advanced to #31 from #35.
We thank you for your continued support of our lists on Notinhalloffame.com.
Regular visitors of Notinhalloffame.com know that we are slowly working on the top 50 of every major team in the NHL, NBA, NFL, and MLB. Once that is done, we will examine how each team honors its past players, coaches, and executives. As such, it is important to us that the Erie Otters of the Ontario Hockey League will retire the number 97 of Connor McDavid.
The event will occur on January 10 during Erie’s home game against Saginaw.
Receiving a special exemption (Exceptional Player Status) to enter the OHL Draft at age 15 (only John Tavares and Aaron Ekblad have also done so), McDavid scored 285 Points in three OHL seasons and won multiple individual awards, including the CHL Player of the Year in 2015.
McDavid becomes the third player to have his number retired by the Otters, as he follows Brad Boyes (#16) and Vince Scott (#18).
We here at Notinhalloffame.com would like to congratulate Connor McDavid for his impending honor.
Yes, we know that this is taking a while!
As many of you know, we at Notinhalloffame.com are slowly generating the top 50 of each major North American sports team. That being said, we have existing Top 50 lists and consistently look to update them when necessary and based on necessity. As such, we are delighted to present our post-2023-24 revision of our top 50 Edmonton Oilers.
As for all of our top 50 players in hockey, we look at the following:
1. Advanced Statistics.
2. Traditional statistics and how they finished in the National Hockey League.
3. Playoff accomplishments.
4. Their overall impact on the team and other intangibles that are not reflected in a stat sheet.
Last year, Edmonton made it to the Stanley Cup Finals but could not win it, falling in seven to the Florida Panthers. We had two new entrants to the Top 50 and multiple elevations.
As always, we present our top five, which saw some significant changes:
1. Wayne Gretzky
2. Connor McDavid
3. Mark Messier
4. Jari Kurri
5. Leon Draisaitl
You can find the entire list here.
Regarding the top five, Connor McDavid added the Conn Smythe to his list of trophies. He overtook Mark Messier for the second spot. Leon Draisaitl also enters the top five, by passing Paul Coffey for that spot.
Forward Ryan Nugent-Hopkins moved one spot to #12.
Defenseman Darnell Nurse advanced five spots to #15.
Defenseman Evan Bouchard makes his first appearance at #35.
The second debut was Zach Hyman, who entered at #37.
We thank you for your continued support of our lists on Notinhalloffame.com.
If you are a regular visitor at Notinhalloffame.com, you know that we created the Notinhalloffame NHL Cup, where in every regular season game, we award points (5-4-3-2-1) to the top five performers. This is the third year that we have done this, and Edmonton’s Connor McDavid won the first two.
To keep everyone regularly in the loop this time, we have decided to give regular updates, starting at Thanksgiving, and tell all of you the top ten. We will be doing updates every Thursday.
Here is the tenth current top ten in Notinhalloffame Cup Points:
1. David Pastrnak, Boston Bruins. 102 Cup Points: 50 Games, 33 G, 39 A, 73 P, +16, 9.3 PS. (#1 Last Week)
The Boston Bruins (like last year) have been the best team early in the season, and it is the Czech Republic’s David Pastrnak who has led their offensive threat. He is the league-leader in Shots (251), is third in Points (73), third in Goals (33) fourth in Point Shares (9.3) and ninth in Assists (39) and is Boston’s leading scorer, and is in the top ten in most essential offensive categories. Could he win his first Hart, but if not, maybe his first NIHOF Cup? Notably, leaving the All-Star break (where he went to his fourth), Pastrnak is enjoying his biggest Cup Point lead to date.
2. Nikita Kucherov, Tampa Bay Lightning. 90 Cup Points, 50 Games, 32 G, 54 A, 86 P, +4, 9.9 PS. (#2 Last Week)
Kucherov is in his tenth season in Tampa, and is putting forth a season that could gain him another Hart or Art Ross Trophy. He is leading the NHL in Points (86) and Assists (54) and is second in Point Shares (9.9) and fourth in Goals (32). It is a minor surprise that he is not first in Cup Points, but at one time, he was close.
3. Auston Matthews, Toronto Maple Leafs, 89 Cup Points: 48 Games, 41 G, 20 A, 61 P, +16, 8.7 PS. (#3 Last Week)
The American sniper is back as the league’s top goal-scorer, holding the lead in that (41) and Even-Strength Goals (30), and is also fifth in Point Shares (8.7). If he holds that, Matthews will win his third Rocket Richard Trophy, though Kucherov is closing in fast.
4. Nathan MacKinnon, Colorado Avalanche, 82 Cup Points: 51 Games, 32 G, 53 A, 85 P, +16, 9.8 PS. (#4 Last Week)
MacKinnon remains is second in Assists (53) and Points (85) and is also fourth in Goals (32). He is also second in Shots (235) and third in Point Shares (9.8).
5. Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers, 79 Cup Points: 44 Games, 21 G, 47 A, 68 P, +16, 7.7 PS. (#5 Last Week)
The Edmonton Oilers began the year as a disappointment, but they have been on fire as of late, with a 16-game win streak. McDavid has not been lighting the lamp like he did last year, but he has however been a great playmaker, and is fourth in Assists (47) and Points (67). Can he make it back to the top of the mountain and win the NIHOF Cup again?
6. Artemi Panarin, New York Rangers, 71 Cup Points: 51 Games, 31 G, 36 A, 67 P, -1, 7.9 PS. (#5 Last Week)
Panarin is back where he belongs in the top ten, and let’s see if he falls off again. Currently, he is sixth in Points (67), and Goals (30) and tenth in Assists (36).
7. Filip Forsberg, Nashville Predators, 70 Cup Points: 51 Games, 24 G, 27 A, 51 P, +6, 6.0 PS. (#8 Last Week)
Forsberg also made top ten return and is fourth in Even Strength Goals (21) and Shots (203).
8 (TIE). Mikko Rantanen, Colorado Avalanche, 69 Cup Points: 51 Games, 28 G, 39 A, 67 P, +3, 7.2 PS. (#8 Last Week)
Rantanen is making another run for a 100-Point year and is currently sixth in Points (66) and ninth in Goals (27).
8 TIE). Sam Reinhart, Florida Panthers, 69 Cup Points: 50 Games, 37 G, 25 A, 62 P, +13, 8.7 PS. (#7 Last Week)
Currently having the best year of his life, Reinhart is the current leader in Power Play Goals (20), Game-Winning Goals (9) and Shooting Percentage (27.6), and is also second in Goals (37), fifth in Point Shares (8.6), and ninth in Points (62). Historically a good player, Reinhart has never had a year like this before, and he just enjoyed his first All-Star Game.
8. (TIE). Juuse Saros, Nashville Predators, 68 Cup Points: 40 Games, 19-19-2 Record, 2.94 GAA, .903 Save Percentage, 6.4 PS. (#8 Last Week)
Saros comes back to the top ten, and does so with an even Won/Loss record. A surprise to be here (like he was before), Saros is a workhorse who is second in Minutes Played (2,243) and Saves (1,019) and is eighth in Goalie Point Shares (6.4). He is not the best Goalie this season, but here he is. That is the way Cup Points can work.
8. (TIE). Elias Pettersson, Vancouver Canucks, 68 Cup Points: 50 Games, 27 G, 38 A, 65 P, +16, 7.5 PS. (Not Ranked in the Top Ten Last Week)
Pettersson makes a return to the top ten and is on pace to match or exceed his 102 Points from last year. The current league-leader in Game-Winning Goals (9), just added his fourth All-Star and is eighth in Points (64) and ninth in Goals (27).
Nobody fell out of the top ten.
Our next update will be next Thursday.
If you are a regular visitor at Notinhalloffame.com, you know that we created the Notinhalloffame NHL Cup, where in every regular season game, we award points (5-4-3-2-1) to the top five performers. This is the third year that we have done this, and Edmonton’s Connor McDavid won the first two.
To keep everyone regularly in the loop this time, we have decided to give regular updates, starting at Thanksgiving, and tell all of you the top ten. We will be doing updates every Wednesday.
Here is the seventh current top ten in Notinhalloffame Cup Points:
1. David Pastrnak, Boston Bruins. 93 Cup Points: 46 Games, 30 G, 37 A, 67 P, +12, 8.4 PS. (#1 Last Week)
The Boston Bruins (like last year) have been the best team early in the season, and it is the Czech Republic’s David Pastrnak who has led their offensive threat. He is the league-leader in Shots (233), is third in Points (67), fourth in Goals (30) and Point Shares (8.4) and ninth in Assists (37) and is Boston’s leading scorer, and is in the top ten in most essential offensive categories. Could he win his first Hart, but if not, maybe his first NIHOF Cup?
2. Nikita Kucherov, Tampa Bay Lightning. 84 Cup Points, 47 Games, 31 G, 49 A, 80 P, +1, 9.2 PS. (#2 Last Week)
Kucherov is in his tenth season in Tampa, and is putting forth a season that could gain him another Hart or Art Ross Trophy. He is leading the NHL in Points (80) and is second in Assists (49) and third in Goals (31). It is a minor surprise that he is not first in Cup Points, but he is close.
3. Auston Matthews, Toronto Maple Leafs, 79 Cup Points: 44 Games, 38 G, 18 A, 56 P, +12, 7.8 PS. (#3 Last Week)
The American sniper is back as the league’s top goal-scorer, holding the lead in that (36) and Even-Strength Goals (29). If he holds that, Matthews will win his third Rocket Richard Trophy, though Kucherov is closing in fast.
4. Nathan MacKinnon, Colorado Avalanche, 69 Cup Points: 47 Games, 26 G, 51 A, 77 P, +13, 8.4 PS. (#5 Last Week)
Mackinnon remains the league-leader in Assists (51), is second in Points (77) and ninth in Goals (26). He is also second in Shots (213) and third in Point Shares (8.4).
5 (TIE). Juuse Saros, Nashville Predators, 68 Cup Points: 37 Games, 18-18-1 Record, 2.94 GAA, .904 Save Percentage, 6.0 PS. (Not Ranked in the Top Ten Last Week)
Saros comes back to the top ten, and does so with an even Won/Loss record. A surprise to be here (like he was before), Saros is a workhorse who is third in Minutes Played (2,081) and fourth in Saves (946) and is sixth in Goalie Point Shares. He is not the best Goalie this season, but here he is. That is the way Cup Points can work.
5 (TIE). Artemi Panarin, New York Rangers, 68 Cup Points: 47 Games, 29 G, 34 A, 63 P, -3, 7.4 PS. (Not Ranked in the Top Ten Last Week)
Panarin is back where he belongs in the top ten, and let’s see if he falls off again. Currently, he is fourth in Points (63), fifth in Goals (29) and tenth in Assist (63).
7. Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers, 67 Cup Points: 41 Games, 17 G, 43 A, 60 P, +13, 6.4 PS. (#4 Last Week)
The Edmonton Oilers began the year as a disappointment, but they have been on fire as of late. McDavid has not been lighting the lamp like he did last year, but he has however been a great playmaker, and is fifth in Assists (43) and eighth in Points (60). Can he make it back to the top of the mountain and win the NIHOF Cup again?
8. Sidney Crosby, Pittsburgh Penguins, 67 Cup Points: 44 Games, 27 G, 21 A, 48 P, +18, 6.4 PS. (#5 Last Week)
We have to admit we are happy to see Sidney Crosby in the top ten, as even though “Sid the Kid” is over 35, we are still talking about a legend! Crosby is seventh in Goals (27) and second in Even Strength Goals (21) as of this writing.
9. (TIE). Sam Reinhart, Florida Panthers, 66 Cup Points: 46 Games, 34 G, 24 A, 58 P, +14, 8.0 PS. (#7 Last Week)
Currently having the best year of his life, Reinhart is the current leader in Power Play Goals (17), and Shooting Percentage (26.8), and is also second in Goals (34), fifth in Point Shares (8.0), and tenth in Points (58). Historically a good player, Reinhart has never had a first half like this before.
9 (TIE). Thatcher Demko, Vancouver Canucks, 66 Cup Points: 34 Games, 25-8-1 Record, 2.40 GAA, .922 Save Percentage, 7.8 PS. (Not Ranked in the Top Ten Last Week)
Like Saros, Demko makes his top ten return, and he takes the place of Elias Pettersson to give the Canucks a top ten player. He is the NHL leader in Wins (25) and Shutouts (5), and is sixth in both Goals Against Average (2.40) and Save Percentage (.922).
9 (TIE). Connor Hellebuyck, Winnipeg Jets, 66 Cup Points: 34 Games, 23-8-3 Record, 2.17 GAA, .925 Save Percentage, 7.9 PS. (Not Ranked in the Top Ten Last Week)
Hellebucyk is in the top ten for the first time, and the former Vezina Trophy winner is leading the league in Goalie Point Shares with 7.9. The Winnipeg Jet is second in GAA (2.17) and third in Save Percentage (.925).
Colorado’s Mikko Rantanen, Nashville’s Filip Forsberg and Vancouver’s Elias Pettersson fell out of the top ten.
Our next update will be next Wednesday.
If you are a regular visitor at Notinhalloffame.com, you know that we created the Notinhalloffame NHL Cup, where in every regular season game, we award points (5-4-3-2-1) to the top five performers. This is the third year that we have done this, and Edmonton’s Connor McDavid won the first two.
To keep everyone regularly in the loop this time, we have decided to give regular updates, starting at Thanksgiving, and tell all of you the top ten. We will be doing updates every Wednesday.
Here is the seventh current top ten in Notinhalloffame Cup Points:
1. David Pastrnak, Boston Bruins. 84 Cup Points: 43 Games, 26 G, 35 A, 61 P, +7, 7.4 PS. (#1 Last Week)
The Boston Bruins (like last year) have been the best team early in the season, and it is the Czech Republic’s David Pastrnak who has led their offensive threat. He is the league-leader in Shots (212), is third in Points (61), sixth in Point Shares (7.0) and Goals (26), ninth in Assists (35) and is Boston’s leading scorer, and is in the top ten in most essential offensive categories. Could he win his first Hart, but if not, maybe his first NIHOF Cup?
2. Nikita Kucherov, Tampa Bay Lightning. 78 Cup Points, 43 Games, 28 G, 44 A, 72 P, -3, 8.1 PS. (#2 Last Week)
Kucherov is in his tenth season in Tampa, and is putting forth a season that could gain him another Hart or Art Ross. He is leading the NHL in Points (67) and is second in Goals (28) and third in Assists (39). It is a minor surprise that he is not first in Cup Points, but he is close.
3. Auston Matthews, Toronto Maple Leafs, 70 Cup Points: 41 Games, 34 G, 16 A, 50 P, +6, 6.7 PS. (#3 Last Week)
The American sniper is back as the league’s top goal-scorer, holding the lead in that (34) and Even-Strength Goals (25). If he holds that, Matthews will win his third Rocket Richard Trophy, though Kucherov is closing in fast.
4. Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers, 67 Cup Points: 38 Games, 16 4, 42 A, 58 P, +13, 6.3 PS. (#7 Last Week)
The Edmonton Oilers began the year as a disappointment, but they have been on fire as of late. McDavid has not been lighting the lamp like he did last year, but he has however been a great playmaker, and is third in Assists (42) and sixth in Points (58). Can he make it back to the top of the mountain and win the NIHOF Cup again?
5 (TIE). Filip Forsberg, Nashville Predators, 60 Cup Points: 44 Games, 22 G, 26 A, 48 P, +7, 5.8 PS (#4 Last Week)
Forsberg is off to the best start of his career and should make his second All-Star Game, though other than Even-Strength Goals (3rd with 19) and Game-Winning Goals (3rd with 6), he is not in the top ten in any major offensive category.
5 (TIE). Nathan MacKinnon, Colorado Avalanche, 60 Cup Points: 45 Games, 23 G, 49 A, 72 P, +11, 7.8 PS. (#5 Last Week)
MacKinnon returns to the top ten last week as, Mikko Rantanen fell off, though as we will see below, that was temporary. He took over the league-lead in Assists (49) and is now tied for first in Points (72) with Kucherov. He is also tenth in Goals (23).
5 (TIE). Mikko Rantanen, Colorado Avalanche, 60 Cup Points: 45 Games, 24 G, 34 A, 58 P, +2, 6.2 PS. (Not in the Top Ten Last Week)
Rantanen returns to the top ten joining MacKinnon to give the Avalanche two players in the top ten; the only squad to do so. He is sixth in Points (58) and ninth in Goals (24).
5. (TIE). Sam Reinhart, Florida Panthers, 60 Cup Points: 43 Games, 32 G, 23 A, 55 P, +13, 7.7 PS. (#7 Last Week)
Currently having the best year of his life, Reinhart is the current leader in Power Play Goals (16), Game-Winning Goals (9). and Shooting Percentage (27.8), and is also second in Goals (32), and tenth in Points (55). Historically a good player, Reinhart has never had a first half like this before.
5 (TIE). Sidney Crosby, Pittsburgh Penguins, 60 Cup Points: 42 Games, 26 G, 20 A, 46 P, +19, 6.3 PS. (#9 Last Week)
We have to admit we are happy to see Sidney Crosby in the top ten, as even though “Sid the Kid” is over 35, we are still talking about a legend! Crosby is sixth in Goals (26) and second in Even Strength Goals (20) as of this writing.
5 (TIE). Elias Pettersson, Vancouver Canucks, 60 Cup Points: 44 Games, 23 G, 35 A, 58 P, +19, 6.7 PS. (Not Ranked in the Top Ten Last Week)
The Canucks have returned a player to the top ten and this time it is the former Calder Trophy Winner. Pettersson is sixth in Points (58), ninth in Assists (35) and Goals (23).
New York’s Artemi Panarin and Toronto’s’ William Nylander fell out of the top ten.
Our next update will be next Wednesday.
If you are a regular visitor at Notinhalloffame.com, you know that we created the Notinhalloffame NHL Cup, where in every regular season game, we award points (5-4-3-2-1) to the top five performers. This is the third year that we have done this, and Edmonton’s Connor McDavid won the first two.
To keep everyone regularly in the loop this time, we have decided to give regular updates, starting at Thanksgiving, and tell all of you the top ten. We will be doing updates every Monday.
Here is the sixth current top ten in Notinhalloffame Cup Points:
1. David Pastrnak, Boston Bruins. 78 Cup Points: 38 Games, 24 G, 31 A, 55 P, +11, 6.8 PS. (#1 Last Week)
The Boston Bruins (like last year) have been the best team early in the season, and it is David Pastrnak who has led their offensive threat. He is the league-leader in Shots (189), is third in Points (55), sixth in Goals (24), and is Boston’s leading scorer, and is in the top ten in most essential offensive categories. Could he win his first Hart, but if not, maybe his first NIHOF Cup?
2. Nikita Kucherov, Tampa Bay Lightning. 71 Cup Points, 40 Games, 28 G, 39 A, 67 P, -3, 7.7 PS. (#2 Last Week)
Kucherov is in his tenth season in Tampa, and is putting forth a season that could gain him another Hart or Art Ross. He is leading the NHL in Points (67) and is second in Goals (28) and third in Assists (39). It is a minor surprise that he is not first in Cup Points, but he is close.
3. Auston Matthews, Toronto Maple Leafs, 63 Cup Points: 33 Games, 30 G, 15 A, 45 P, +7, 6.0 PS. (#3 Last Week)
The American sniper is back as the league’s top goal-scorer, holding the lead in that (30) and Even-Strength Goals (22). If he holds that, Matthews will win his third Rocket Richard Trophy, though Kucherov is closing in fast.
4 (TIE). Filip Forsberg, Nashville Predators, 60 Cup Points: 40 Games, 21 G, 24 A, 45 P, +7, 5.4 PS (#4 Last Week)
Forsberg is off to the best start of his career and should make his second All-Star Game, though other than Even-Strength Goals (2nd with 19) and Game-Winning Goals (3rd with 5), he is not in the top ten in any major offensive category.
4 (TIE). Artemi Panarin, New York Rangers. 58 Cup Points, 38 Games, 25 G, 30 A, 55 P, +2, 6.5 PS. (#10 Last Week)
Panarin returns to the top ten, and is strange to think that he fell out of it at all. The Russian Left Wing is third in Points (55), fourth in Goals (25), and tenth in Assists (30), and is poised to have his best goal-scoring campaign to date.
5. Nathan MacKinnon, Colorado Avalanche, 59 Cup Points: 40 Games, 22 G, 43 A, 65 P, +9, 7.1 PS. (Not in the Top Ten Last Week)
MacKinnon returns to the top ten as his teammate, Mikko Rantanen fell off. He took over the league-lead in Assists (43) and is second in Points (65), and eighth in Goals (22).
7 (TIE). Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers, 58 Cup Points: 34 Games, 13 4, 40 A, 54 P, +10, 5.6 PS. (#8 Last Week)
The Edmonton Oilers have been a disappointment thus far, and McDavid has not been lighting the lamp like he did last year, but he has however been a great playmaker, and is second in Assists (40) and fifth in Points (54). Can he make it back to the top of the mountain?
7. (TIE). Sam Reinhart, Florida Panthers, 58 Cup Points: 39 Games, 28 G, 22 A, 50 P, +17, 7.0 PS. (#6 Last Week)
Currently having the best year of his life, Reinhart is the current leader in Power Play Goals (13), Game-Winning Goals (7). and Shooting Percentage (27.7), and is also second in Goals (28), and eighth in Points (50). Historically a good player, Reinhart has never had a first half like this before.
9. Sidney Crosby, Pittsburgh Penguins, 56 Cup Points: 22 Games, 22 G, 19 A, 41 P, +14, 5.4 PS. (Not on the Top Ten Last Week)
We have to admit we are happy to see Sidney Crosby in the top ten, as even though “Sid the Kid” is over 35, but this is a legend! Crosby is eighth in Goals (22) and ninth in Even Strength Goals (16) as of this writing.
10. William Nylander, Toronto Maple Leafs, 55 Cup Points: 37 Games, 21 G, 33 A, 54 P, +5, 5.9 PS. (Not Ranked in the Top Ten Last Week)
Matthews is the star of the Leafs, by Nylander might be the top player this year. He is currently fifth in Points and seventh in Assists (33).
Colorado’s Mikko Rantanen, Nashville’s Juuse Saros and New Jersey’s Jack Hughes fell out of the top ten. Notably, we have no Goalies in the top ten for the first time.
Our next update will be next Monday.
If you are a regular visitor at Notinhalloffame.com, you know that we created the Notinhalloffame NHL Cup, where in every regular season game, we award points (5-4-3-2-1) to the top five performers. This is the third year that we have done this, and Edmonton’s Connor McDavid won the first two.
To keep everyone regularly in the loop this time, we have decided to give regular updates, starting at Thanksgiving, and tell all of you the top ten. We will be doing updates every Monday. (note, with it being New YEars, and only one game scheduled, we waited a day!)
Here is the fifth current top ten in Notinhalloffame Cup Points:
1. David Pastrnak, Boston Bruins. 71 Cup Points: 35 Games, 22 G, 28 A, 50 P, +7, 6.1 PS. (#1 Last Week)
The Boston Bruins (like last year) have been the best team early in the season, and it is David Pastrnak who has led their offensive threat. He is the league-leader in Shots (163), is third in Points (50), sixth in Goals (22), and is Boston’s leading scorer, and is in the top ten in most essential offensive categories. Could he win his first Hart?
2. Nikita Kucherov, Tampa Bay Lightning. 67 Cup Points, 37 Games, 26 G, 35 A, 61 P, +1, 7.0 PS. (#2 Last Week)
Kucherov is in his tenth season in Tampa, and is putting forth a season that could gain him another Hart or Art Ross. He is leading the NHL in Points (61) and is second in both Goals (26) and Assists (35). It is a minor surprise that he is not first in Cup Points, but he is getting closer and closer.
3. Auston Matthews, Toronto Maple Leafs, 58 Cup Points: 33 Games, 29 G, 15 A, 44 P, +5, 5.8 PS. (#3 Last Week)
The American sniper is back as the league’s top goal-scorer, holding the lead in that (29) and Even-Strength Goals (21). If he holds that, Matthews will win his third Rocket Richard Trophy.
4. Filip Forsberg, Nashville Predators, 55 Cup Points: 37 Games, 18 G, 23 A, 41 P, +4, 4.7 PS (#4 Last Week)
Forsberg is off to the best start of his career and should make his second All-Star Game, though other than Even-Strength Goals (3rd with 16) and Game-Winning Goals (6th with 4), he is not in the top ten in any major offensive category.
5. Mikko Rantanen, Colorado Avalanche, 54 Cup Points: 37 Games, 19 G, 26 A, 45 P, +2, 4.8 PS. (#6 Last Week)
Rantanen is currently eighth in Point (45), ninth in Goals (19) and Points (42), and is second in Game-Winning Goals (5).
6. (TIE). Sam Reinhart, Florida Panthers, 53 Cup Points: 36 Games, 23 G, 21 A, 44 P, +15, 5.9 PS. (#6 Last Week)
Reinhart makes his return to the top ten, and is the current leader in Power Play Goals (10). He is also fourth in Goals (23), tenth in Points 44), and the veteran is on pace to finish in the top in those categories for the first time in his ten-year career.
6 (TIE). Jack Hughes, New Jersey Devils, 53 Cup Points: 30 Games, 15 G, 29 A, 44 P, -4, 4.7 PS. (#6 Last Week)
Hughes is currently fourthh in Points per Game (1.47) and is on pace for a third straight All-Star selection.
8 (TIE). Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers, 52 Cup Points: 32 Games, 13 G, 35 A, 48 P, +6, 4.9 PS. (Not in the Top Ten Last Week)
Look who finally arrived! The Edmonton Oilers have been a disappointment thus far, and McDavid has not been lighting the lamp like he did last year. He has however been a great playmaker, and is second in Assists (35) and fifth in Points (48). Can he make it back to the top of the mountain?
8 (TIE). Juuse Saros, Nashville Predators. 52 Cup Points: 27 Games, 15-13-1 Record, .901 Save Percentage, 3.02 GAA, 4.6 GPS. (#5 Last Week)
Saros remains a shock to be the highest ranked Goalie and to be in the top ten in general. How he got here is by being a workhorse. Saros is third in Saves (740), second in Minutes (1,612), and is also fifth in Wins (15) and eighth in Goalie Point Shares (4.6). Saros’ rank means that it is the Predators that are the first squad with two ranked players.
10. Artemi Panarin, New York Rangers. 51 Cup Points, 35 Games, 23 G, 27 A, 50 P, 0, 5.9 PS. (Not in the Top Ten Last Week)
Panarin returns to the top ten, and is strange to think that he fell out of it at all. The Russian Left Wing is third in Points (50) and fourth in Goals (23), and is poised to have his best goal-scoring campaign to date.
Colorado’s Nathan MacKinnon and Vancouver’s Quinn Hughes and Thatcher Demko fell out of the top ten.
Our next update will be next Monday.
Yes, we know that this is taking a while!
As many of you know, we here at Notinhalloffame.com are slowly generating the 50 of each major North American sports team. That being said, we have existing Top 50 lists out and we always consistently look to update them when we can and based on necessity. As such, we are very happy to present our post 2022/23 revision of our top 50 Edmonton Oilers.
As for all of our top 50 players in hockey we look at the following:
1. Advanced Statistics.
2. Traditional statistics and how they finished in the National Hockey League.
3. Playoff accomplishments.
4. Their overall impact on the team and other intangibles not reflected in a stat sheet.
Last year, Edmonton made it to the Second Round of the playoffs where they were knocked out by the eventual champions, Vegas. There are no new entrants on the Top 50, but four players increased their rank.
As always, we present our top five, which saw one change:
2. Mark Messier
4. Jari Kurri
5. Paul Coffey
You can find the entire list here.
Last year, McDavid had the best season of his life, and doesn’t that say something? He won his third Hart, fifth Art Ross, sixth First Team All-Star, first Rocket Richard Award and set personal highs in Goals (64), Assists (89) and Points (153).
Leon Draisaitl continues his climb, moving from #7 to #6.
Fresh off his first 100-Point year, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins advanced to #13 from #16.
Defenseman, Darnell Nurse, moved to #20 from #24.
We welcome your input and comments and as always, we thank you for your support.
It is with great pleasure that we announce the third annual Notinhalloffame NHL Pure Cup, and let us explain how this works:
It is with great pleasure that we announce the third annual Notinhalloffame NHL Regular Season Cup, and let us explain how this works:
If you are a regular visitor at Notinhalloffame.com, you know that we created the Notinhalloffame NHL Cup, where in every regular season game, we award points (5-4-3-2-1) to the top five performers. This is the second year that we have done this, and Edmonton’s Connor McDavid won the first one.
To keep everyone regularly in the loop this time, we have decided to give regular updates, starting at when the first player cracked 40 Points, and tell all of you the top ten. We were going forward with every update as the first player breaches the elevated ten-point threshold afterward, but now that we are in the home stretch, this will be the last update until season’s end.
Here is the current top ten, based on the first player to breach 160 Notinhalloffame Cup Points:
1. Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers. 160 Cup Points: 77 Games, 62 G, 84 A, 146 P, +17, 17.2 PS. (#1 on last update)
What more can we say about McDavid’s 2022/23 Season. He is running away with every major statistical category, and has a commanding lead in Cup Points, that cannot be caught. Last year’s Notinhalloffame NHL Cup winner is extending his lead and he is currently the league-leader in Goals (60), Assists (78), Points (138) and Point Shares (16.3). The Hart, Pearson, Richard and Art Ross are his to lose, and he won’t. Is this the best year of his life? He would agree, but only if the Oilers win it all!
2. David Pastrnak, Boston Bruins. 134 Cup Points: 76 Games, 56 G, 46 A, 102 P, +33, 13.6 PS. (#3 on last update)
Pastrnak is back where he belongs at #2. The top offensive Bruins player is second in Goals (56), fifth in Points (102), seventh in Plus/Minus (+33) and is also leading the NHL in Even Strength Goals (38) and Shots (371).
3. Nathan MacKinnon, Colorado Avalanche, 126 Cup Points: 64 Games, 34 G, 63 A, 97 P, +23, 11.0 PS. (#2 on last update)
MacKinnon is playing phenomenal hockey, is ranked very high in Cup Points considering he played relatively less than the rest of the top ten. He is third in Points per Game (1.52), and sixth in Points (97).
4. Linus Ullmark, Boston Bruins. 116 Cup Points: 46 Games, 37-6-1, 1.88 GAA, .938 Save Percentage, 12.4 PS. (#6 on last update)
Ullmark is the odds-on favorite for the Vezina and is currently the league leader in Wins, GAA and Save Percentage. Our question, is can he do this is the playoffs?
5. Mikko Rantanen, Colorado Avalanche. 114 Cup Points: 75 Games, 49 G, 43 A, 92 P, +10, 11.1 PS. (#4 on last update)
Rantanen slips one spot to #5. He is the current co-leader in Even Strength Goals (38), fourth in Goals (49) and is on a team that could repeat as Stanley Cup Champions.
6. (TIE) Matthew Tkachuk, Florida Panthers, 108 Cup Points: 74 Games, 38 G, 64 A, 102 P, +26, 11.5 PS. (#5 on last update)
Dropping one to #6, Tkachuk is at present is seventh in Assists (64) and fourth in Points (102). He is only two Points away from last year’s total.
6. (TIE) Brady Tkachuk, Ottawa Senators, 108 Cup Points: 76 Games, 34 G, 44 A, 78 P, -9, 8.5 PS. (Not on last update)
Yes, the Tkachuk brothers are tied in Cup Points, although Matthew is clearly having the better year. The younger sibling is a point-per-game player, and has emerged as the top gun for the Senators. He is currently fourth in Shots (324), which is a large part of how he is this high.
8. Elias Pettersson, Vancouver Canucks, 107 Cup Points: 73 Games, 36 G, 60 A, 96 P, +15, 10.2 PS. (#7 on last update)
Pettersson is having his best year to date, albeit on an abysmal Canucks team. He is currently tenth in Assists (60) and ninth in Points (96).
9. Jack Hughes, New Jersey Devils. 106 Cup Points, 72 Games, 40 G, 49 A, 89 P, +7, 10.3 PS. (#9 on last update)
Hughes holds on at #9. The two-time All-Star is ninth in Goals (40), and is the top offensive threat for the Devils.
10. Brayden Point, Tampa Bay Lightning. 105 Cup Points: 77 Games, 48 G, 41 A, 89 P, +7, 10.7 PS. (#8 on last update)
Point is having a good year, and is a point-per-game player, there are still quite a few players with higher point tallies than the Tampa Center, who dropped four spots in our last update. Saying that, Point has been the most clutch player for the Lightning, and is currently fourth in Goals (44).
Dallas’s Jason Robertson, fell off the top ten.
Our next update will the final one.
If you are a regular visitor at Notinhalloffame.com, you know that we created the Notinhalloffame NHL Cup, where in every regular season game, we award points (5-4-3-2-1) to the top five performers. This is the second year that we have done this, and Edmonton’s Connor McDavid won the first one.
To keep everyone regularly in the loop this time, we have decided to give regular updates, starting at when the first player cracked 40 Points, and tell all of you the top ten. We will this going forward with every update as the first player breaches the elevated ten-point threshold afterward.
Here is the current top ten, based on the first player to breach 140 Notinhalloffame Cup Points:
1. Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers. 152 Cup Points: 72 Games, 60 G, 78 A, 138 P, +16, 16.3 PS. (#1 on last update)
What more can we say about McDavid’s 2022/23 Season. He is running away with every major statistical category, and has a commanding lead in Cup Points. Last year’s Notinhalloffame NHL Cup winner is extending his lead and he is currently the league-leader in Goals (60), Assists (78), Points (138) and Point Shares (16.3). The Hart, Pearson, Richard and Art Ross are his to lose, and he won’t. Is this the best year of his life? He would agree, but only if the Oilers win it all!
2. Nathan MacKinnon, Colorado Avalanche, 114 Cup Points: 59 Games, 30 G, 60 A, 90 P, +22, 10.1 PS. (#2 on last update)
MacKinnon is playing phenomenal hockey, is ranked very high in Cup Points considering how few games he has played relatively to the rest of the top ten. He is third in Points per Game (1.53), and sixth in Points (90).
3. David Pastrnak, Boston Bruins. 112 Cup Points: 70 Games, 48 G, 45 A, 93 P, +30, 12.1 PS. (#2 on last update)
Pastrnak falls back to #3. The top offensive Bruins player is second in Goals (45), fifth in Points (86), eighth in Plus/Minus (+30) and is also leading the NHL in Shots (333).
4. Mikko Rantanen, Colorado Avalanche. 102 Cup Points: 70 Games, 47 G, 38 A, 85 P, +9, 10.3 PS. (#5 on last update)
Rantanen moved back up to #4, and it is the Avalanche who are the first team with two ranked players. He is the current leader in Even Strength Goals (36), third in Goals (47) and is on a team that could repeat as Stanley Cup Champions.
5. Matthew Tkachuk, Florida Panthers, 103 Cup Points: 68 Games, 34 G, 62 A, 96 P, +23, 10.7 PS. (#9 on last update)
Tkachuk has been on fire lately, and at present is sixth in Assists (62) an fourth in Points (96). He is only eight Points away from last year’s total.
6. Linus Ullmark, Boston Bruins. 102 Cup Points: 43 Games, 35-5-1, 1.95 GAA, .937 Save Percentage, 11.5 PS. (#6 on last update)
Ullmark is the odds-on favorite for the Vezina and is currently the league leader in Wins, GAA and Save Percentage. Our question, is can he do this is the playoffs?
7. Elias Pettersson, Vancouver Canucks, 100 Cup Points: 68 Games, 33 G, 56 A, 89 P, +13, 9.4 PS. (#7 on last update)
Pettersson is having his best year to date, albeit on an abysmal Canucks team. He is currently tenth in Assists (56) and eighth in Points (89).
8. Brayden Point, Tampa Bay Lightning. 98 Cup Points: 72 Games, 44 G, 38 A, 82 P, +3, 9.7 PS. (#4 on last update)
Point is having a good year, and is a point-per-game player, there are still quite a few players with higher point tallies than the Tampa Center, who dropped four spots in our last update. Saying that, Point has been the most clutch player for the Lightning, and is currently fourth in Goals (44).
9. Jack Hughes, New Jersey Devils. 97 Cup Points, 66 Games, 37 G, 44 A, 81 P, +7, 9.3 PS. (#7 on last update)
For the second update in a row, Hughes fell two spots and has been a bit of a slump. The two-time All-Star has fallen out of the top ten in Goals, but is having the best year of his life.
10. Jason Robertson, Dallas Stars, 94 Cup Points: 71 Games, 41 G, 48 A, 89 P, +30, 11.5 PS. (Not on last update)
Robertson makes an appropriate return to the top ten, as the first-time All-Star is in seventh in Goals (41), eighth in Points (89) and eighth in Plus/Minus (30).
Minnesota’s Kirill Kaprizov, fell off the top ten.
Our next update will occur when the first player breaks 160 Cup Points.
If you are a regular visitor at Notinhalloffame.com, you know that we created the Notinhalloffame NHL Cup, where in every regular season game, we award points (5-4-3-2-1) to the top five performers. This is the second year that we have done this, and Edmonton’s Connor McDavid won the first one.
To keep everyone regularly in the loop this time, we have decided to give regular updates, starting at when the first player cracked 40 Points, and tell all of you the top ten. We will this going forward with every update as the first player breaches the elevated ten-point threshold afterward.
Here is the current top ten, based on the first player to breach 140 Notinhalloffame Cup Points:
1. Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers. 140 Cup Points: 67 Games, 55 G, 72 A, 127 P, +10, 14.9 PS. (#1 on last update)
What more can we say about McDavid’s 2022/23 Season. He is running away with every major statistical category, and has a commanding lead in Cup Points. Last year’s Notinhalloffame NHL Cup winner is extending his lead and he is currently the league-leader in Goals (55), Assists (72), Points (127) and Point Shares (14.9). The Hart, Pearson, Richard and Art Ross are his to lose. Is this the best year of his life? He would agree, but only if the Oilers win it all!
2. David Pastrnak, Boston Bruins. 108 Cup Points: 64 Games, 45 G, 41 A, 86 P, +30, 11.4 PS. (#3 on last update)
Pastrnak returns to the number two spot, and bluntly, we think that is where he belongs. The top offensive Bruins player is second in Goals (45), fifth in Points (86), sixth in Plus/Minus (+30) and is also leading the NHL in Shots (305).
3. Nathan MacKinnon, Colorado Avalanche, 102 Cup Points: 58 Games, 28 G, 51 A, 79 P, +18, 9.0 PS. (#3 on last update)
MacKinnon is playing phenomenal hockey, is ranked very high in Cup Points considering how few games he has played relatively to the rest of the top ten. He is third in Points per Game (1.49).
4. Brayden Point, Tampa Bay Lightning. 98 Cup Points: 66 Games, 43 G, 36 A, 79 P, +0, 9.4 PS. (#7 on last update)
Point is having a good year, and is a point-per-game player, there are still quite a few players with higher point tallies than the Tampa Center. Saying that, Point has been the most clutch player for the Lightning, and is leading the NHL in Game-Winning Goals (9) and is currently third in Goals (43).
5. Mikko Rantanen, Colorado Avalanche. 97 Cup Points: 64 Games, 42 G, 34 A, 76 P, +4, 9.1 PS. (#2 on last update)
Rantanen fell three spots to #5, and is no longer the highest Avalanche in Cup Points, as he is behind MacKinnon. Despite slipping, he is still also fourth in Goals (42) and on a team that could repeat as Stanley Cup Champions.
6. Linus Ullmark, Boston Bruins. 95 Cup Points: 40 Games, 33-4-1, 1.89 GAA, .938 Save Percentage, 10.7 PS. (#7 on last update)
Ullmark is the odds-on favorite for the Vezina and is currently the league leader in Wins, GAA and Save Percentage. Our question, is can he do this is the playoffs?
7. (TIE) Jack Hughes, New Jersey Devils. 92 Cup Points, 61 Games, 36 G, 40 A, 76 P, +8, 9.0 PS. (#3 on last update)
Hughes fell two spots to number #7, and has been a bit of a slump. Still, the two-time All-Star is tenth in Goals (36), and can easily shake it off.
7. (TIE) Elias Pettersson, Vancouver Canucks, 92 Cup Points: 63 Games, 30 G, 52 A, 82 P, +11, 8.6 PS. (Not on last update)
Pettersson is having his best year to date, albeit on an abysmal Canucks team. He is back in the top ten after two updates, and is currently ninth in Assists (52) and tenth in Points (82).
9. (TIE) Matthew Tkachuk, Florida Panthers, 89 Cup Points: 64 Games, 30 G, 57 A, 87 P, +17, 9.4 PS. (Not on last update)
Brady Tkachuk fell off the top ten, but his brother, Matthew, takes his spot. The Panthers Wing is fifth in Assists (57) and fourth in Points (87).
9. (TIE) Kirill Kaprizov, Minnesota Wild, 89 Cup Points: 69 Games, 39 G, 35 A, 74 P, +6, 9.2 PS. (#10 on last update)
The Russian star remains in the top ten and is seventh in Goals (39)
Ottawa’s Brady Tkachuk and Dallas’ Jake Oettinger, fell off the top ten.
Our next update will occur when the first player breaks 140 Cup Points.
If you are a regular visitor at Notinhalloffame.com, you know that we created the Notinhalloffame NHL Cup, where in every regular season game, we award points (5-4-3-2-1) to the top five performers. This is the second year that we have done this, and Edmonton’s Connor McDavid won the first one.
To keep everyone regularly in the loop this time, we have decided to give regular updates, starting at when the first player cracked 40 Points, and tell all of you the top ten. We will this going forward with every update as the first player breaches the elevated ten-point threshold afterward.
Here is the current top ten, based on the first player to breach 130 Notinhalloffame Cup Points:
1. Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers. 132 Cup Points: 62 Games, 52 G, 66 A, 118 P, +11, 14.0 PS. (#1 on last update)
What more can we say about McDavid’s 2022/23 Season. He is running away with every major statistical category, and has a commanding lead in Cup Points. Last year’s Notinhalloffame NHL Cup winner is extending his lead and he is currently the league-leader in Goals (52), Assists (66), Points (118) and Point Shares (11.9). The Hart, Pearson, Richard and Art Ross are his to lose.
2. Mikko Rantanen, Colorado Avalanche. 97 Cup Points: 59 Games, 41 G, 31 A, 72 P, +7, 8.9 PS. (#4 on last update)
Rantanen climbs back up to the runner-up spot, but the gap between #1 and #2 has never been larger. He is also third in Goals (34) and fifth in Points (66).
3. (TIE) David Pastrnak, Boston Bruins. 96 Cup Points: 60 Games, 42 G, 38 A, 80 P, +27, 10.6 PS. (#2 on last update)
Pastrnak drops a spot, but is still having one of his best years to date. He currently is leading the NHL in Shots (285), is second in Goals (42) and fourth in Points (80).
3. (TIE) Nathan MacKinnon, Colorado Avalanche, 96 Cup Points: 48 Games, 24 G, 49 A, 73 P, +23, 8.4 PS. (#5 on last update)
MacKinnon is playing phenomenal hockey, and is the Avs are now the first team (taking over from Boston) to rank two players on a descending list. He is second in Points per Game (1.05).
5. Jack Hughes, New Jersey Devils. 92 Cup Points, 56 Games, 36 G, 38 A, 74 P, +13, 9.1 PS. (#3 on last update)
Hughes fell two spots to number #5, but the two-time All-Star is sixth in Goals (36), tenth in Points (74), and is the offensive leader of what has been a surprisingly good New Jersey squad.
6. Linus Ullmark, Boston Bruins. 91 Cup Points: 38 Games, 31-4-1, 1.88 GAA, .938 Save Percentage, 10.2 PS. (#5 on last update)
Ullmark is the odds-on favorite for the Vezina and is currently the league leader in Wins, GAA and Save Percentage.
7. Brayden Point, Tampa Bay Lightning. 88 Cup Points: 60 Games, 37 G, 33 A, 70 P, +3, 8.2 PS. (#9 on last update)
Point is having a good year, and is a point-per-game player, there are still quite a few players with higher point tallies than the Tampa Center. Saying that, Point has been the most clutch player for the Lightning, and a reason we love this process! He is currently fifth in Goals (37).
8. Brady Tkachuk, Ottawa Senators, 86 Cup Points: 60 Games, 26 G, 37 A, 63 P, -6, 7.0 PS. (#8 on last update)
The Senators continue to load up for the playoffs, despite being currently out of a spot. Tkachuk’s play is the main reason they are going for it, and he is only four Points away from matching last year’s total.
9. Jake Oettinger, Dallas Stars. 85 Cup Points: 46 Games, 25-8-10, 2.29 GAA, .923 Save Percentage, 9.8 PS. (#9 on last update)
In his third season, Oettinger is playing the best hockey of his life and is third in GAA and fourth in the NHL in Save Percentage.
10. Kirill Kaprizov, Minnesota Wild, 84 Cup Points: 61 Games, 37 G, 34 A, 71 P, +3, 8.8 PS. (Not on last update)
The Russian star returns to the top ten and is fifth in Goals (37)
Florida’s Matthew Tkachuk, fell off the top ten.
Our next update will occur when the first player breaks 140 Cup Points.
If you are a regular visitor at Notinhalloffame.com, you know that we created the Notinhalloffame NHL Cup, where in every regular season game, we award points (5-4-3-2-1) to the top five performers. This is the second year that we have done this, and Edmonton’s Connor McDavid won the first one.
To keep everyone regularly in the loop this time, we have decided to give regular updates, starting at when the first player cracked 40 Points, and tell all of you the top ten. We will this going forward with every update as the first player breaches the elevated ten-point threshold afterward.
Here is the current top ten, based on the first player to breach 110 Notinhalloffame Cup Points:
1. Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers. 113 Cup Points: 58 Games, 44 G, 61 A, 105 P, +4, 11.9 PS. (#1 on last update)
Connor McDavid is running away with every major statistical category, and recently became the fifth fastest player to score 800 career Points. Last year’s Notinhalloffame NHL Cup winner is extending his lead and he is currently the league-leader in Goals (44), Assists (61), Points (105) and Point Shares (11.9). The Hart is his to lose.
2. David Pastrnak, Boston Bruins. 96 Cup Points: 56 Games, 41 G, 36 A, 77 P, +27, 10.4 PS. (#3 on last update)
Pastrnak returns to the second hole, but there is a bigger gap between number one and number two than ever before. He currently is leading the NHL in Shots (270), is second in Goals (41) and fifth in Points (77).
3. Jack Hughes, New Jersey Devils. 90 Cup Points, 53 Games, 35 G, 36 A, 71 P, +12, 8.9 PS. (#2 on last update)
Hughes falls one spot, but the two-time All-Star in fifth in Goals (35), ninth in Points (71), and is the offensive leader of what has been a surprisingly good New Jersey squad. Notably, Hughes has not added anu Cup Points since the last update.
4. Mikko Rantanen, Colorado Avalanche. 85 Cup Points: 55 Games, 36 G, 30 A, 66 P, +3, 7.8 PS. (#4 on last update)
Rantanen holds at #4, and is also fifth in Goals (34). Like Hughes, Rantanen, did not add any Cup Points since the last update.
5 (Tie). Linus Ullmark, Boston Bruins. 82 Cup Points: 36 Games, 29-4-1, 1.88 GAA, .937 Save Percentage, 9.3 PS. (Not on last update)
Ullmark returns to where he belongs in the top ten, as he has been the best Goalie this year. He is currently the league leader in Wins, GAA and Save Percentage.
5 (Tie). Nathan Mackinnon, Florida Panthers, 82 Cup Points: 57 Games, 28 G, 50 A, 78 P, +16, 8.6 PS. (#5 on last update)
Tkachuk has been on fire and proving Florida right in their pursuit of the power forward. He is currently sixth in Assists (50) and fourth in Points (78).
5 (Tie). Matthew Tkachuk, Florida Panthers, 82 Cup Points: 57 Games, 28 G, 50 A, 78 P, +16, 8.6 PS. (#5 on last update)
Tkachuk has been on fire and proving Florida right in their pursuit of the power forward. He is currently sixth in Assists (50) and fourth in Points (78).
8 (Tie). Brady Tkachuk, Ottawa Senators, 81 Cup Points: 56 Games, 24 G, 36 A, 60 P, -6, 6.6 PS. (not on last update)
For the first time, the Tkachuk brothers are both in the top ten, and while his Senators have disappointed, he has not.
9 (Tie). Brayden Point, Tampa Bay Lightning. 80 Cup Points: 56 Games, 33 G, 28 A, 61 P, +4, 7.2 PS. (#5 on last update)
Point is having a good year, and is a point-per-game player, there are still quite a few players with higher point tallies than the Tampa Center. Saying that, Point has been the most clutch player for the Lightning, and a reason we love this process! He is currently tenth in Goals (33).
9 (Tie). Jake Oettinger, Dallas Stars. 80 Cup Points: 43 Games, 23-8-9, 2.24 GAA, .925 Save Percentage, 9.4 PS. (#9 on last update)
In his third season, Oettinger is playing the best hockey of his life and is fourth in the NHL in GAA.
Edmonton’s Leon Draisaitl, Vancouver’s Elias Pettersson and Dallas’s Jason Robertson fell off the top ten.
Our next update will occur when the first player breaks 120 Cup Points.
If you are a regular visitor at Notinhalloffame.com, you know that we created the Notinhalloffame NHL Cup, where in every regular season game, we award points (5-4-3-2-1) to the top five performers. This is the second year that we have done this, and Edmonton’s Connor McDavid won the first one.
To keep everyone regularly in the loop this time, we have decided to give regular updates, starting at when the first player cracked 40 Points, and tell all of you the top ten. We will this going forward with every update as the first player breaches the elevated ten-point threshold afterward.
Here is the current top ten, based on the first player to breach 100 Notinhalloffame Cup Points:
1. Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers. 104 Cup Points: 53 Games, 42 G, 55 A, 97 P, +7, 11.4 PS. (#1 on last update)
There are a lot of stories at the near-halfway mark of the 2022/23 NHL Season, with one of the top ones being Connor McDavid running away with every major statistical category. Last year’s Notinhalloffame NHL Cup winner is extending his lead and he is currently the league-leader in Goals (42), Assists (55), Points (97) and Point Shares (11.4). The Hart is his to lose.
2. Jack Hughes, New Jersey Devils. 90 Cup Points, 50 Games, 35 G, 32 A, 67 P, +15, 8.7 PS. (#6 on last update)
Hughes rockets from #6 to #2, and has scored 11 Points in his last five Games. The two-time All-Star in third in Goals (35) and ninth in Points (67) and Point Shares (8.7).
3. David Pastrnak, Boston Bruins. 87 Cup Points: 52 Games, 38 G, 34 A, 72 P, +25, 9.7 PS. (#2 on last update)
The Bruins are one of the NHL’s top teams and Pastrnak is their top scorer. He currently is leading the NHL in Shots (248), is second in Goals (38) and fifth in Points (72).
4. Mikko Rantanen, Colorado Avalanche. 83 Cup Points: 51 Games, 34 G, 29 A, 63 P, +4, 7.6 PS. (#3 on last update)
Rantanen drops a spot, and is also fifth in Goals (34).
5 (Tie). Matthew Tkachuk, Florida Panthers, 80 Cup Points: 52 Games, 27 G, 46 A, 73 P, +16, 8.2 PS. (#9 on last update)
Tkachuk has been on fire and proving Florida right in their pursuit of the power forward. He is currently fifth in Assists (46) and third in Points (73).
5 (Tie). Brayden Point, Tampa Bay Lightning. 80 Cup Points: 52 Games, 32 G, 27 A, 59 P, +8, 7.2 PS. (#5 on last update)
Point is having a good year, and is a point-per-game player, there are still quite a few players with higher point tallies than the Tampa Center. Saying that, Point has been the most clutch player for the Lightning, and a reason we love this process! He is currently eighth in Goals (32).
7. Jake Oettinger, Dallas Stars. 76 Cup Points: 40 Games, 23-7-7, 2.22 GAA, .926 Save Percentage, 8.8 PS. (#10 on last update)
In his third season, Oettinger is playing the best hockey of his life and is second in the NHL in GAA and Save Percentage.
8. Elias Pettersson, Vancouver Canucks. 73 Cup Points: 51 Games, 25 G, 39 A, 64 P, +5, 6.7 PS. (not on last update)
The Canucks have been a disappointment, but Pettersson has emerged as a bright spot as their best player. The fifth-year player and former Calder winner is currently tenth in Points.
9. Jason Robertson, Dallas Stars. 72 Cup Points: 54 Games, 33 G, 36 A, 69 P, +26, 9.4 PS. (#5 on last update)
Robertson is on pace to shatter last season’s 41-38-79 output, and the fourth-year player is now the undeniable top dog of the Stars lineup. He recently went to his first All-Star Game.
10. Leon Draisaitl, Edmonton Oilers, 71 Cup Points: 51 Games, 29 G, 49 A, 78 P, +3, 8.3 PS. (#8 on last update)
The 2020 Hart Trophy winner gives the Oilers two players in the upper-tier and is currently fourth in Assists and second in Points behind his teammate, Connor McDavid.
Toronto’s Auston Matthews and Winnipeg’s Connor Hellebuyck fell off the top ten.
Our next update will occur when the first player breaks 110 Cup Points.
If you are a regular visitor at Notinhalloffame.com, you know that we created the Notinhalloffame NHL Cup, where in every regular season game, we award points (5-4-3-2-1) to the top five performers. This is the second year that we have done this, and Edmonton’s Connor McDavid won the first one.
To keep everyone regularly in the loop this time, we have decided to give regular updates, starting at when the first player cracked 40 Points, and tell all of you the top ten. We will this going forward with every update as the first player breaches the elevated ten-point threshold afterward.
Here is the current top ten, based on the first player to breach 90 Notinhalloffame Cup Points:
1. Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers. 90 Cup Points: 47 Games, 39 G, 47 A, 86 P, +2, 9.9 PS. (#1 on last update)
There are a lot of stories at the near-halfway mark of the 2022/23 NHL Season, with one of the top ones being Connor McDavid running away with every major statistical category. Last year’s Notinhalloffame NHL Cup winner is extending his lead and he is currently the league-leader in Goals (39), Assists (47), Points (86) and Point Shares (9.9).
2. David Pastrnak, Boston Bruins. 79 Cup Points: 45 Games, 35 G, 28 A, 63 P, +25, 8.7 PS. (#2 on last update)
The Bruins are one of the NHL’s top teams and Pastrnak is their top scorer. The Bruins star is averaging 1.40 Points per Game, slightly more than his First Team All-Star campaign in 2019-20. He currently is leading the NHL in Shots (217).
3 (Tie). Mikko Rantanen, Colorado Avalanche. 75 Cup Points: 43 Games, 31 G, 25 A, 56 P, +9, 7.0 PS. (#3 on last update)
Rantanen remains at #3, and is also in the top ten in Goals and Points, while leading the NHL in Even Strength Goals (26). The Avs star has 1.28 PPG, the highest of his career.
3 (Tie). Brayden Point, Tampa Bay Lightning. 75 Cup Points: 44 Games, 27 G, 22 A, 49 P, +7, 5.9 PS. (#6 on last update)
Point is having a good year, and is a point-per-game player, there are still quite a few players with higher point tallies than the Tampa Center. Saying that, Point has been the most clutch player for the Lightning, and a reason we love this process!
5. Jason Robertson, Dallas Stars. 71 Cup Points: 47 Games, 31 G, 32 A, 63 P, +29, 8.8 PS. (#4 on last update)
Robertson is on pace to shatter last season’s 41-38-79 output, and the fourth-year player is now the undeniable top dog of the Stars lineup.
6. Jack Hughes, New Jersey Devils. 70 Cup Points, 45 Games, 29 G, 27 A, 56 P, +14, 7.1 PS. (#5 on last update)
Hughes explodes back into the top ten, ranked higher in Cup Point standings than he has ever been. He is already tied with Points total (56) from last season.
7. Auston Matthews, Toronto Maple Leafs. 68 Cup Points: 44 Games, 24 G, 27 A, 51 P, +20, 6.2 PS. (#7 on last update)
Matthews is the defending Hart winner but he is not on the PPG pace he was last year, though when Toronto wins, the odds are that he was the biggest reason why. Is this season a disappointment so far for Matthews?
8. Leon Draisaitl, Edmonton Oilers, 66 Cup Points: 45 Games, 27 G, 45 A, 72 P, +4, 7.7 PS. (Not on last update)
The 2020 Hart Trophy winner returns to the top ten and gives the Oilers two players in the upper-tier.
9. Matthew Tkachuk, Florida Panthers, 63 Cup Points: 44 Games, 24 G, 34 A, 58 P, +9, 6.5 PS. (not on last update)
Matthew’s brother, Brady was once in the top ten, but this his first time here this season.
10 (Tie). Jake Oettinger, Dallas Stars. 62 Cup Points: 34 Games, 20-7-4, 2.26 GAA, .924 Save Percentage, 7.3 PS. (not on last update)
In his third season, Oettinger is playing the best hockey of his life.
10 (Tie). Connor Hellebuyck, Winnipeg Jets. 62 Cup Points: 35 Games, 22-12-1, 2.43 GAA, .923 Save Percentage, 8.1 PS. (not on last update)
A former Vezina winner, Hellebuyck is a contender for that trophy this year.
Minnesota’s Kirill Kaprisov, Boston’s Linus Ullmark, Pittsburgh’s Sdney Crosby and Washington’s Alex Ovechkin fell off the top ten.
Our next update will occur when the first player breaks 100 Cup Points.
If you are a regular visitor at Notinhalloffame.com, you know that we created the Notinhalloffame NHL Cup, where in every regular season game, we award points (5-4-3-2-1) to the top five performers. This is the second year that we have done this, and Edmonton’s Connor McDavid won the first one.
To keep everyone regularly in the loop this time, we have decided to give regular updates, starting at when the first player cracked 40 Points, and tell all of you the top ten. We will this going forward with every update as the first player breaches the elevated ten-point threshold afterward.
Here is the current top ten, based on the first player to breach 80 Notinhalloffame Cup Points:
1. Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers. 80 Cup Points: 43 Games, 35 G, 44 A, 79 P, +2, 9.0 PS. (#1 on last update)
There are a lot of stories at the near-halfway mark of the 2022/23 NHL Season, with one of the top ones being Connor McDavid running away with every major statistical category. Last year’s Notinhalloffame NHL Cup winner is extending his lead and he is currently the league-leader in Goals (35), Assists (44), Points (79) and Point Shares (9.0).
2. David Pastrnak, Boston Bruins. 74 Cup Points: 40 Games, 32 G, 26 A, 58 P, +20, 7.9 PS. (#3 on last update)
The Bruins are one of the NHL’s top teams and Pastrnak is their top scorer. The Bruins star is averaging 1.39 Points per Game, slightly more than his First Team All-Star campaign in 2019-20.
3 (Tie). Mikko Rantanen, Colorado Avalanche. 68 Cup Points: 39 Games, 27 G, 23 A, 50 P, +6, 6.1 PS. (#3 on last update)
Rantanen remains at #3, and is also in the top ten in Goals and Points, while leading the NHL in Even Strength Goals (22). The Avs star has 1.28 PPG, the highest of his career.
3 (Tie). Jason Robertson, Dallas Stars. 68 Cup Points: 42 Games, 29 G, 29 A, 58 P, +23, 8.1 PS. (#6 on last update)
Robertson is on pace to shatter last season’s 41-38-79 output, and the fourth-year player is now the undeniable top dog of the Stars lineup. He is currently tied for the league-lead in Even Strength Goals (22).
5. Jack Hughes, New Jersey Devils. 63 Cup Points, 41 Games, 26 G, 23 A, 49 P, +14, 6.4 PS. (not on last update)
Hughes explodes back into the top ten, ranked higher in Cup Point standings than he has ever been. He is seven Points away from tying last year’s number.
6. Brayden Point, Tampa Bay Lightning, 62 Cup Points: 39 Games, 23 G, 17 A, 40 P, +2, 4.7 PS. (#2 on last update)
Point drops large from #2, and though he is having a good year, and is a point-per-game player, there are still quite a few players with higher point tallies than the Tampa Center. Saying that, Point has been the most clutch player for the Lightning, and a reason we love this process!
7. Auston Matthews, Toronto Maple Leafs. 60 Cup Points: 41 Games, 20 G, 27 A, 47 P, +17, 5.5 PS. (#7 on last update)
Matthews is the defending Hart winner but he is not on the PPG pace he was last year, though when Toronto wins, the odds are that he was the biggest reason why. Is this season a disappointment so far for Matthews?
8 (Tie). Kirill Kaprizov, Minnesota Wild. 58 Cup Points: 40 Games, 24 G, 25 A, 49 P, -1, 5.6 PS. (#8 on last update)
Kaprizov is easily Minnesota’s best player and if he stays healthy should have his second straight 100-Point year.
8 (Tie). Linus Ullmark, Boston Bruins. 58 Cup Points: 26 Games, 22-1-1, 1.87 GAA, .938 Save Percentage, 6.9 PS. (#8 on last update)
Ullmark is the highest ranked Goalie, and his ascendence to likely All-Star has been colossal for Boston’s rise to the top portion of the standings. Ullmark leads all Goalies in Wins, GAA, Save Percentage and Goalie Point Shares.
10 (Tie). Sidney Crosby, Pittsburgh Penguins, 57 Cup Points: 40 Games, 21 G, 27 A, 48 P, +1, 5.3 PS. (Not on last update)
Crosby is back where he belongs in the top ten, and he has never had a year where he averaged less than a Point per Game.
10 (Tie). Alex Ovechkin, Washington Capitals, 57 Cup Points: 39 Games, 29 G, 19 A, 48 P, 0, 5.9 PS. (#9 on last update)
Ovechkin is closing on Wayne Gretzky’s all-time Goal record, and is tied currently with Sidney Crosby. How perfect is that?
Vancouver’s Elias Pettersson fell off the top ten.
Our next update will occur when the first player breaks 90 Cup Points.