Aaron Rudnicki said:
Dickie Dunn said:
But hey, as long as you're scoring goals and completely ignoring the other end of the ice (and being a complete locker room cancer, but we don't need to get into that any more), all is well in the world.
"completely ignoring" the other end?
the fancy stats seem to suggest otherwise.
Even during his down 2012-13 year, after which he was traded, Boston would’ve seen a boom coming if it checked the analytics. Per
behindthenet.ca, Seguin’s relative Corsi (Corsi relative to the rest of his team) was the eighth-best mark in the NHL.
His 5v5 Corsi that year was 20.6 while Bergeron's was 19.3
His 5v5 Corsi this year is 12.2, which is by far the best in Dallas. FWIW, Bergeron's is 21.5.
Interesting that you also skipped last year's numbers when Seguin was at 8.1 ... which pales in comparison with Bergeron (20.1), Marchand (17.9) and even -- GASP! -- Reilly Smith (13.3) and Loui Eriksson (10.8). All of them were in the top 100 in the league. The numbers are down across the team this season for the most part, but look at some of the injuries and lineup shuffling that has happened. And 25 games hardly is the ideal sample size.
Look, I don't expect many people to agree with me, and that's OK. I have to listen to one of my co-workers (a Bruins diehard) every time Seguin scores a goal. Oddly enough, like you or Brasky pointed out, another co-worker was beating the same drum for Thornton for years and still does. It's an interesting parallel, even if we have the smaller sample size for Seguin.
I will admit, I probably went too far on the "completely ignore" comment. Seguin is not Kessel (another "superstar" who the Bruins "got rid of too early" -- Corsi REL of -0.4 this season, by the way) in that regard, but the Bruins aren't interested in playing fantasy hockey. Some people hate that, I'm OK with it. Different strokes. (What's interesting is that variations of Corsi and Fenwick have been used by the Bruins for years, dating all the way back to Sinden. All in how you value the numbers, I guess.)
Those Corsi stats for Seguin in 2013 are interesting. He had a great regular season, which normally would make his disappearance during the Cup run so much more mystifying. But again, we are led to believe there was fire that was a source of that smoke. Yes, I know, we've been over that as well. Some people don't think that should matter, but obviously it matters to the B's. (And FWIW, I've heard stories that the off-ice stuff went MUCH deeper than what was put out there at the time of the trade, but I've never been able to confirm any of that, so whatever.)
I've got Seguin on my FFA team this year, so keep scoring those goals! Meanwhile, the Bruins have a Stanley Cup, a Finals appearance and a Presidents Trophy in the last five seasons, so they must be doing something right.