Re: Maine Summer 2013 - Pizza Season
*** are you talking about? Corkum played some AHL GMs his first year or two out of college and then played over ten years in the NHL, over 700 games and was never sent down once in that ten year+ period. Montgomery was in and out and a minor leaguer. Let's not reinvent history.
I'll repeat verbatim, just in case you didn't get it the first time around.
Corkum had a marginally better NHL career, but let's face it - his single best year was after he was taken by Anaheim out of the Buffalo organization in the expansion draft. Before then he was a 4th liner at best who also spent a ton of time in the AHL. After that, his most productive stretch was a three year stretch as a 3rd/4th line player on some mediocre Phoenix teams. After that, he finished up his NHL career as a spare part.
One made over 4.5 million in NHL and the other probably collected 250-300k tops. You look stupid pretending their pro careers are even on the same planet. Stupid.
Who are you - Corkum's personal accountant? Monty probably made more than Rocket Richard did over RR's entire NHL career. Based on your figures, Corkum no doubt made more than Bobby Orr and Phil Esposito combined. Relevance??????????
Spare parts like you said corkum was don't play over 700 games and another 75+ in the playoffs and score over 300 pts, not counting playoffs. Montgomery was the spare part always being sent down. Corkhm stated ten+ years straight.
Correction - Corkum scored
exactly 200 points in his 720 game NHL career. That's an average of about 20 points/season. For a forward. That's 4th line standard, no?
After 23 goals in his big breakout year with the expansion Ducks, the rest of his career goal scoring per season after that? 10, 9, 9, 12, 9, 5, 7, 3
And as far as his career in the NHL playoffs, his teams advanced past the first round twice. The 2001 NJ Devils made it to the Finals, but that was a season where Corkum was a spare part who played in 12 of their 25 playoff games, scoring 1 goal and 2 assists.
http://www.hockeydb.com/ihdb/stats/pdisplay.php?pid=1099
I don't mean to belittle Corkum's NHL career, but if you think there is a huge gap in talent between 3rd/4th line players in mediocre organizations, and 4th liners/spare parts in better organizations - especially in the NHL pre-salary cap days - then I think you are chasing meaningless numbers, and are dismissing why organizations are strong (depth in talent) and others are weak.
Again, think back to what was Corkum's big professional break. Expansion draft. And kudos to Corkum, he made the most of it. But you can't say or even infer that Monty "quit" or came up short for lack of trying. If he was a bigger guy like Corkum was, then maybe his NHL teams would have been more patient.
Before you dismiss that last point, consider this for a minute. Stats for the first 3 years of these players' post-NCAA NHL careers (first 4 years for Corkum):
Jim Montgomery: 85 games, 8 goals, 17 assists, 25 points
Martin St. Louis: 69 games; 4 goals, 16 assists, 20 points
Bob Corkum: 96 games, 10 goals, 8 assists, 18 points
None of this is relevant to who will make a better D-1 head coach. Corkum's next game as a D-1 head coach will be his first. Ditto for Monty. We'll see what happens.
