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After a decade of involvement with the IPL, Eoin Morgan has felt the full benefit of being a World Cup-winning captain after landing his biggest payday yet ahead of the 2020 event.

Morgan, who entered this year's IPL auction at a base price of INR 1.5 crore, was snapped up by Kolkata Knight Riders for INR 5.25 crore (£563,000 approx.) - more than twice the figure that Kings XI Punjab paid for him when he last appeared in the event in 2017.

Morgan's acquisition by KKR brings him back to a franchise he represented for three years from 2011 to 2013. There, he will be reunited with his close friend Brendon McCullum, the former New Zealand captain and current franchise head coach, who was instrumental in driving the bidding war, amid close interest from Delhi Capitals.

Morgan has been one of English cricket's most regular attendees at the IPL - he played six matches in the 2010 season, after being bought by Royal Challengers Bangalore for £134,000, and also featured for Sunrisers Hyderabad in 2015, for £100,000.

His overall IPL record has not been especially impressive - 854 runs in 52 matches at 21.35, and a strike-rate of 121.13 - and he went unsold in the 2017 and 2018 auction. However, his stock rose exponentially during the World Cup, where he led England to victory in the final against New Zealand at Lord's, having impressed with the bat along the way.

Against Afghanistan in the group stage of the competition, Morgan slammed a world-record 17 sixes in his 71-ball 148, and he also sealed victory in the semi-final against Australia with 45 not out from 39 balls.

He's been in free-flowing form since the tournament ended too, striking 91 from 41 balls in a T20I victory over New Zealand in Napier last month, before impressing for Delhi Bulls in the Abu Dhabi T10.

However, despite the cool head that Morgan displayed in the crunch moments of England's World Cup campaign - not least in the final itself - he will not be called upon to lead KKR, with Dinesh Karthik already confirmed in the role by McCullum.

"Dinesh is definitely our captain," McCullum told reporters at the IPL auction in Kolkata. "We wanted to get as much experienced leadership as possible and Eoin Morgan is one of the very best leaders going around currently in our game.

"A perfect lieutenant for Dinesh Karthik and he [Morgan] will also fill the gap at No. 4. He is in the form of his life. He is going to be a fine asset coming back to KKR."

Morgan was not the biggest earner among England players, however. Sam Curran, who was bought by Kings XI Punjab for £800,000 in the 2018 auction, attracted another big pay-day as Chennai Super Kings swooped for £590,000.

Jason Roy and Chris Woakes - who went for INR 7.4 crore in the 2017 auction - both met their base prices as they were picked up for £160,000 each. Mark Wood, however, went unsold, having struggled with injury since picking up a side strain in the World Cup final.

NEW YORK -- Kenny Atkinson climbed the stairs of the rostrum in the Barclays Center press room, stepped in front of a black and white backdrop and behind the podium to face five rows of reporters. It was only a matter of time before the question came.

What is the update on Kyrie Irving?

It was Sunday, one hour and 45 minutes before opening tip between the Brooklyn Nets and Philadelphia 76ers, and by this point in the season, the Nets head coach was on auto-pilot when it came to responses about his All-Star point guard.

"No update, no timetable," Atkinson said.

It marked the 15th consecutive game missed for Irving, who continues to be hindered by a right shoulder impingement injury suffered in mid-November. That number will grow to at least 17 games, as Irving did not accompany the team on their road trip to New Orleans and San Antonio this week.

The stretch is tied for the second-longest absence in Irving's career (the longest string of games came in 2015 when he missed 24 games with the Cleveland Cavaliers after having left knee surgery).

When Irving elected to team up with Kevin Durant and sign with Brooklyn, it sent shockwaves throughout the NBA world. Now, the All-Star guard's unclear injury status is raising questions about when he might return to the court.

What has made Irving's injury absence so perplexing? How have the Nets stayed afloat without him? What will become of the red-hot Spencer Dinwiddie when Irving returns?

Let's answer some of the biggest questions around Irving, Dinwiddie and the Nets as Brooklyn eyes a third straight win Thursday night.

OK, so when did everything start for Kyrie?

The first mention of right shoulder discomfort was on Nov. 13, one day after Irving played nearly 37 minutes in the Nets' road loss to the Utah Jazz, dropping a team-high 27 points on 10-of-30 shooting (2-of-12 from the 3-point line).

The next day, Irving was listed as questionable with right shoulder impingement for Brooklyn's road game that night against the Denver Nuggets. Irving would end up playing 35 minutes and scoring 17 points (8-of-20, 1-of-5 from deep). He spoke postgame about the discomfort in his right shoulder and has not done a press conference since.


Let's back up. What exactly is shoulder impingement?

Shoulder impingement refers to any pinching in the shoulder when the arm is elevated away from the body. Difficulty with overhead movements -- i.e. shooting a basketball -- is a common complication that comes with this injury.

"There is a very small space at the top of the shoulder where several structures intersect," ESPN injury analyst Stephania Bell said. "If there is inflammation or tissue damage to any of the structures in the area ... the pinching, or impingement, that results when the arm goes through elevation can cause pain.

"For a basketball player who has this in his dominant arm, the most obvious limitation would occur anytime he elevates his arm to shoot the ball, but it can be equally problematic when trying to play defense or anytime there is even incidental direct contact."

According to Bell, there are likely several issues that need to be addressed by the Nets before Irving could make a return to the court: Eliminating inflammation, restoring normal, pain-free motion and making sure the muscles are stabilized.

"These things can be addressed simultaneously," Bell said. "The trick is to balance the strengthening and returning to activity with proper loading to not trigger a renewed inflammatory response," Bell said.

"While this may sound easy, there is no simple formula."

Early in Irving's absence, Atkinson said that he met with Brooklyn's training staff in order to better understand the intricacies of this type of injury. In the first week after Irving was initially diagnosed, Atkinson said his "hope is that it's a short-term thing."

"I will say this -- just from my personal opinion, shoulders are tough," Atkinson said on Nov. 18. "Those aren't easy to deal with. Listen, I know he's working diligently to get back on the court. I know he wants to be out on the court bad."


How close has Kyrie gotten to a return? Any setbacks?

On Dec. 8, it seemed like Irving was about to turn a corner. After being unable to do any on-court work for weeks, Irving was finally able to complete shooting drills.

At that point, Atkinson said the plan for Irving was to "ramp up individual on-court work" in the coming days and then start "to integrate him in the next week or two into team practices."

But one week later, while the on-court work had increased, Irving had yet to do any of the important "contact work" stressed by Atkinson. Since the injury, Irving has not participated in any team practices.

Atkinson has been adamant that this shouldn't be considered a setback for Irving, adding the recovery process is just slow and murky. Atkinson said Irving and the training staff have to manage Irving's pain and ensure he doesn't have any range of motion issues. But because of the nature of the injury, how much discomfort Irving is in can change from day to day.

"I think the timeline for his recovery is somewhat up to him," Nets GM Sean Marks told Yahoo Sports last week, "but also up to his body and how that progresses. It could happen quickly or it could take some time.

"And where we are at this stage of the season -- and where we are as a team over the next couple years -- there's no point in forcing guys to come back too soon."

For the most part, Nets brass has been notoriously tight-lipped about Irving's injury status.

"I've had my moments of frustration because I want him back so bad," Atkinson said in early December. "You hear our performance staff and then you talk to Kyrie... and then you get your mind to a place, like, 'Okay, this is the smartest thing to do."

Not only has Irving missed well over a dozen games, but he did not even travel to a highly anticipated matchup against the Celtics, his former team, on Nov. 27. Sitting that game out, even though he was injured, opened the all All-Star point guard up to intense scrutiny.


With Kyrie on the mend, how have the Nets been winning?

Brooklyn is 11-5 since Irving went down -- the Nets started the season 4-7 -- and have stayed alive in a suddenly deep group of East contenders.

Dinwiddie has been the prime benefactor of the increased playing time. In fact, he's been a revelation for Brooklyn in Irving's absence, putting up numbers worthy of All-Star consideration in the Eastern Conference: 24.3 points, 7.4 assists and 3.1 rebounds over his past 16 games.

And since moving into the starting lineup on Nov. 16, Dinwiddie's clutch-time numbers (when the score is within five points in the final five minutes of regulation or in overtime) have been eye-opening. Per NBA.com/stats, only Houston Rockets guard James Harden has scored more clutch-time points per game than Dinwiddie's 4.8 since he's been thrust into the starting lineup.

"Right now Spencer is our best player on the court," Nets shooting guard Joe Harris said. "We live and die with him making plays down the stretch."

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Dinwiddie's 31 lead Nets past Pelicans in OT

Spencer Dinwiddie drops 31 points to help the Nets defeat the Pelicans 108-101 in overtime.

The Nets are also without young guard Caris LeVert, who underwent surgery on his right thumb on Nov. 14 and is expected to miss six weeks. When they were healthy, both Irving and LeVert were starting alongside Harris, Taurean Prince and Jarrett Allen, with Dinwiddie in a sixth man role.

In the absence of both LeVert and Irving, Garrett Temple has also been inserted into Brooklyn's starting lineup and is at or near career highs across the board in his 10th season.

Temple was signed largely to be a veteran presence for Brooklyn. In the offseason, Brooklyn lost Ed Davis, DeMarre Carroll and Jared Dudley to free agency. The Nets' injuries have forced Temple to bounce around from role to role.

"That's what they pay me for," Temple said. "Part of the reason I was here was to be a mentor as well as produce on the court. I've been in so many different roles in my entire career.

"Fifteenth guy, to not dressing, to starter playing 40 minutes a game."


So they are better without Kyrie? Got it.

Not so fast.

Yes, Irving had a history of locker room friction in Boston and Cleveland, but he is still one of the most talented superstar guards in the league. The Nets have adamantly disputed any reports that Irving has been anything but a positive force in Brooklyn's locker room.

And before he went down, Kyrie, like Dinwidde is showing now, was a clutch-time monster.

Pre-injury, Irving led the NBA with 51 clutch-time points, per NBA.com/stats, and he still sits at No. 7 in the league despite missing 16 games (that number is aided by the fact that nine of Irving's 11 games this season were within five points in the final five minutes or overtime).

During each of his two years in Boston, Irving ranked fourth in clutch-time points per game among players with at least 30 qualifying games.

That is all a fancy way of saying: Throughout his career, when the games have been tight late, Kyrie will get you buckets.

The biggest difference seen during Irving's absence has been Brooklyn's ball movement. With Irving watching from the bench, the ball just isn't sticking as much.

Per Second Spectrum tracking, the Nets made 252.0 passes per 100 possessions in the 11 games Irving played before his injury. That number has jumped to 284.8 since, as has total assists (21.3 to 24.6) and potential assists (38.6 to 45.2). The Nets were 24th leaguewide in assists per 100 possessions before Irving got hurt; they are 11th since.

Dinwiddie's been great, but what happens to him when Irving returns?

Dinwiddie's play absolutely presents Atkinson with a lineup Rubik's cube to solve when Irving finally does make it back to game action.

Atkinson has repeatedly punted questions about how he plans to structure the starting lineup when Irving is back. "We will cross that bridge when we get there," Atkinson said.

Early on in the season when a healthy Irving was starting, Dinwiddie would come off the bench. Dinwiddie, a former second-round pick who had a long road to Brooklyn that included a G-League stint, said he will accept any role he's asked to take on -- even if that includes going back to a reserve role.

"You just take what's given," Dinwiddie said. "You just try to roll and get as many wins as possible without [Irving] and just understand we will be that much better as a team when he does return."

Aktinson hasn't ruled out the possibility of Dinwiddie sticking in the starting five while Irving gets back up to game speed. It's been a small sample size, but pairing Irving and Dinwiddie in the same backcourt has worked well for Brooklyn's offense this season.

According to ESPN Stats and Information research, when Irving and Dinwiddie have shared the court -- 138 minutes -- the Nets boast a 118.9 offensive rating -- that is the 14th best offensive duo in the league with at least 130 minutes on the court together.

It is likely, though, that Dinwiddie returns to being Brooklyn's sixth man when Irving returns. For Atkinson, it might be a good problem to have -- a proven scorer and ball handler running the second unit as the Nets jockey for playoff positioning.

"You learn how to adapt and be flexible," Atkinson said. "The players are amazing. They are more resilient than the coaches. We will complain, 'This guy is in, this guy is out.' The players look at it as an opportunity.

"They love their teammate, and they know we'd be a better team with him there, but it's also like, man, this is my chance to step up."

The holidays aren't just for spending on gifts, they're for spending on relievers as well. Actually, the rush on bullpen help usually comes soon after New Year's Day. That's when teams figure they can do some bargain shopping, thinking the quantity of available relievers will keep costs down, especially for right-handers -- not exactly an endangered species as veterans including Will Harris, Hector Rondon, Steve Cishek, Daniel Hudson and many others are still looking for jobs.

"Clubs will repeatedly remind the [righty] relief pitchers that they have plenty of options," one prominent agent opined this week. "Those circumstances set the stage for values to fall."

But in this annual cat-and-mouse game, these free-agent pitchers have something stuck in the back of their minds: the early signings, which signaled that there would be money for the middle men, and not just for the high-priced starters who have come off the board.

"Chris Martin's deal is one players see and feel they can get a piece of," another agent said. "Two years is a starting point for many."

Martin signed a two-year, $14 million contract with the Atlanta Braves after a solid 2019 campaign in which he had a 13-to-1 strikeout-to-walk ratio. Also intriguing was non-tender free agent Blake Treinen getting $10 million from the Los Angeles Dodgers. Those deals are giving relievers some choices, at least in their own minds: Get a decent cash grab for one season or look for a two-year, $10 million-plus deal. Or more.

Martin ranked 43rd among relievers in win probability added last season, leaving many pitchers who ranked higher excited by the possibilities. For comparison, new Braves lefty Will Smith ranked first in baseball in that category -- by a wide margin -- hence his three-year, $40 million deal with Atlanta. Sergio Romo, who re-signed with the Minnesota Twins for $5 million this week (with a $5 million option for 2021), is one player who ranked higher than Martin in WPA. One agent indicated Romo, who will be 37 in March, would be the floor for many middle relievers seeking contracts.

Of course, WPA is not the only way to rate relievers, as righty Brandon Kintzler might be licking his chops thanks to his 1.018 WHIP to go along with a 166 ERA-plus, which is the best mark of his career. Likewise, Harris' numbers were off the charts in 2019, when he featured a nifty 1.50 ERA while stranding 81% of his inherited runners.

So are teams going to get the post-holiday bargains they normally expect or are the tea leaves telling pitchers there's still money to go around? Some players are talking to each other about the current landscape.

"I know some of us were hoping we'd see more action at the winter meetings, but traditionally it's been after the holidays," one free-agent reliever said via text message. "I'm not worried."

Another interesting aspect of the market for middle men is the new three-batter-minimum rule. It affects them the most, obviously. Teams always have wanted as many relievers as they could acquire who can get both lefties and righties out -- but now it's essential. And that is a big part of the free-agent conversations in offseason war rooms.

"You have to consider it now," one executive said last week at the winter meetings. "The lefty specialist may still have a role since he can be done after facing one batter to end an inning, but those situations won't always present themselves. We're trying to find any diamond in the rough that can get out both sides of the plate."

With that in mind, several relievers are potential under-the-radar signings based on their 2019 seasons. Sinkerball hurlers aren't always market favorites, but with the rule change, teams might need to do some reevaluating. Here are some names to consider:

Craig Stammen

The righty Stammen's OPS against right-handed hitters was a bit inflated, but his numbers against lefties jump off the page. Stammen, who pitched 82 innings for the Padres, gave up just four home runs in 143 at-bats against lefties and his 4.87 strikeout-to-walk ratio was second best of his career behind the 2018 season. That ratio improved to 6-to-1 versus right-handers, perhaps helping neutralize a home run percentage against righties (1.87 HR/9 IP) that was the highest of his career. Then again, pretty much every pitcher's home run percentage jumped in 2019. In any case, Stammen is a guy who can be counted on against both sides of the plate.

Brandon Kintzler

Kintzler was an even better version of Stammen as lefties hit just .163 off him. He wasn't used by the Cubs in high-leverage situations to begin the season, but that quickly changed once he proved he could get out hitters from both sides of the plate. And in the new three-batter-minimum world, getting the ball on the ground for a double play could be huge, as a reliever can be removed if he finishes a half-inning, no matter how many batters he has faced. Kintzler's 23.4 double play percentage was second best among relievers with a minimum of 30 opportunities. A repeat of that will play in 2020.

Tyler Clippard

With Cleveland, the righty compiled a measly .465 OPS against left-handed hitters last season, which was more than 100 points lower than his career average. A lot of that was achieved while the Indians were trailing -- hence lower-leverage spots -- but his career numbers fit the profile for three-batter outings against both right- and left-handed hitters.

Honorable mention: Francisco Liriano

The former lefty starter is a prime candidate to excel under the new rules as he faced many more righties than lefties last season, holding them to a .246/.329/.401 slash line. Though it feels as if Liriano has been in the majors forever, he is "just" 36, coming off a decent season for the Pittsburgh Pirates, who tanked for most of the summer. That came after he signed a minor league deal last February, the very definition of "under the radar."

League sources say some of the relievers mentioned should come off the board in the next week, and while this offseason has been different from the previous two, one thing may end up being the same: January is for the middle men.

New Sapporo Olympic marathon course announced

Published in Athletics
Thursday, 19 December 2019 05:15

Road events have moved 800km north of Olympic host city Tokyo due to heat concerns

Details of the Sapporo Olympic marathon course have been published following the decision to move the road events 800km north of the host city Tokyo due to heat concerns.

In Sapporo, which was the host city of the 1972 Winter Olympics, temperatures during the Games period are set to be as much as 5-6C cooler during the day than in Tokyo, it is claimed.

The new course features one loop of roughly half-marathon length and a second smaller loop of approximately 10km that will be run twice.

Sapporo Odori Park will be the starting and finishing point for both the marathon and race walk events, with marathoners first running two laps within the park against a backdrop of the Sapporo TV Tower. They will then head south along Sapporo Ekimae-dori Avenue towards the busy station area and cross the Toyohira River before returning north towards Hokkaido University and on to the finish line.

“This course has been designed with athletes’ wellbeing in mind and it will deliver maximum efficiency to the National Olympic Committees and related bodies, who will be looking after the athletes, as well as leave a standing legacy course for any future annual marathon and road events in the city so recreational walkers and runners can follow the footsteps of their heroes,” said the Tokyo Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games.

The race walk courses, which were approved earlier this month, feature 1km and 2km loops for the 20km and 50km distances respectively, along Sapporo Ekimae-dori Avenue.

“Developing courses for the Olympic marathon and race walk events is always an exciting challenge to achieve a balance of athlete welfare, showcasing the city, ensuring technical and broadcast requirements are met and providing a great backdrop for spectators to enjoy the Olympic experience,” said World Athletics (IAAF) technical delegate and council member Sylvia Barlag.

“We have achieved this in Sapporo and want to thank all the stakeholders and, in particular, our athletes, who have come together in a short space of time to help create these courses. We now look forward to the world’s greatest marathon runners and race walkers battling for Olympic gold on the streets of Sapporo.”

The Olympic road events are set to take place on consecutive days between August 6-9, with the women’s marathon having moved from August 2 to August 8 and the men’s marathon taking place on August 9, the last day of the Games.

Britain’s Callum Hawkins will be among those contesting the men’s event, with the Scottish record-holder having this week received pre-selection.

His fellow British marathoner Steph Twell had been among those initially eyeing a 10,000m and marathon double in Tokyo (interview here) but she will be forced to focus on just one event, with the women’s 10,000m final also scheduled for Saturday August 8.

Hitting the pads with Mike Tyson, DJs, dance choreography and karaoke - it's not your standard pre-season for American tennis stars Serena Williams and Coco Gauff.

Coach Patrick Mouratoglou has taken his charges for a training camp with a difference in preparation for the Australian Open in January.

"I wanted to renew with the tradition of organising a team-building camp to prepare for the Australian Open," he said.

"Along with Serena, we brought in a new, crazy-talented generation of players, and even some DJs and fitness gurus."

Twenty-three time Grand Slam singles champion Williams, 15-year-old Gauff and 6ft 7in American Christopher Eubanks are among those being put through their paces in Boca Raton, Florida.

Williams, 38, got the chance to box with former heavyweight champion Tyson, while the group have had choreographed dance lessons and a visit from French DJ Bob Sinclair.

Former world number one Victoria Azarenka even stopped by to join in the karaoke.

Former British number one Laura Robson has had hip surgery for a second time "after months of struggling".

The 25-year-old, who first had hip surgery in June 2018, returned to action in February but has not played since retiring during a match in April.

"A decision was made this week to have another hip surgery & try fix the pain for good," Robson posted on Instagram.

"Very much hope to be back on court soon but in the meantime I can't wait to walk my dog without limping."

Her injury issues echo those of former world number one Andy Murray, who in October won his first singles title since having career-saving hip surgery in January.

Robson reached the fourth round at Wimbledon in 2013 and was ranked world number 27 in the same year, but her career has subsequently been plagued by injury.

She had surgery on her wrist in 2014, which kept her out for 17 months, and has suffered with a hip problem in recent years.

Robson has not revealed whether she has undergone the same procedure again, or how long she is expected to be out of action.

Premiership: Gloucester v Worcester Warriors

Published in Rugby
Thursday, 19 December 2019 04:52

England scrum-half Willi Heinz returns to the Gloucester side after a hamstring injury and is named captain.

Tom Marshall, Chris Harris, Danny Cipriani, Val Rapava Ruskin, Franco Marais, Franco Mostert and Ben Morgan also return to a much-changed side.

Kiwi hooker Matt Moulds starts in place of the injured Niall Annett and is also named Worcester captain.

Ryan Mills comes into the centre after injury while Melani Nanai returns to the wing for Alan Solomons' side.

The Cherry and Whites have won only one of their past seven games, including three straight Premiership defeats - at Leicester and Harlequins and at home to Saracens - to slip to seventh in the table.

Worcester are two points ahead in fourth and have equalled the highest place they have ever occupied at this level.

Warriors, who have won their past two Premiership games - at Harlequins and at home to Sale - have not won three in a row since March 2016.

Victory would take them second, possibly within a point of leaders Northampton.

Gloucester: Marshall; Rees-Zammit, Harris, Atkinson, Thorley; Cipriani, Heinz (c); Rapava Ruskin, Marais, Balmain; Craig, Mostert, Ackermann, Ludlow Morgan

Replacements: Gleave, Hohneck, Ford-Robinson, Grobler, Clarke, Simpson, Twelvetrees, Sharples

Worcester: Pennell; Humphreys, Beck, Mills, Nanai; Weir Hougaard; Black, Moulds (c), Schonert, Bresler, Kitchener, Hill, Lewis, du Preez

Replacements: Taufete'e, Bower, Carey, Fatialofa, van Velze, Heaney, Lance, Shillcock

Scotland captain Laidlaw announces international retirement

Published in Rugby
Thursday, 19 December 2019 04:04

Scotland captain Greig Laidlaw has announced his retirement from international rugby after 76 caps.

The 34-year-old Clermont scrum-half is second on the all-time points list for Scotland with 714.

Laidlaw has led the national team 39 times, more than anyone else, and becomes the third senior player to quit the national team after the World Cup.

"It's probably one of the hardest decisions I've had to make," he told Scottish Rugby.

"I feel it's the right time, for me as a player and a person and us for a family, and for the Scotland team as well.

"It's never going to last forever and I've always been passionate about you only ever getting a certain amount of time in the jersey and you need to give they jersey everything you can. I've done that."

Both flanker John Barclay, who also had a spell as captain, and wing Tommy Seymour have already announced their international retirement this month as a new World Cup cycle begins.

Laidlaw followed in the footsteps of his uncle, Roy Laidlaw, when he made his Scotland debut against New Zealand in 2010 while playing for Edinburgh.

In the nine years since, he has been a mainstay of the squad while also playing club rugby for Gloucester and Clermont, playing in two World Cups.

Also capable of playing as a fly-half, Laidlaw became only the second Scotsman, after Mike Blair, to be nominated for World Rugby's Player of the Year in 2015 as he captained Vern Cotter's Scotland to the quarter-finals of the World Cup in England.

He was also part of the British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand in 2017 but did not earn a Test cap.

As his starting berth for Scotland increasingly came under threat from Glasgow Warriors scrum-half Ali Price, Laidlaw lost the captaincy to Stuart McInally for the World Cup in October but played three of four pool matches, including the crucial decider against Japan, as he reclaimed the armband when McInally was dropped.

However, after Scotland failed to progress, Laidlaw intimated he would consider his international future and joins Barclay and Seymour in calling time on his Scotland career, with Price and Glasgow team-mate George Horne likely to be the scrum-half options for the Six Nations in February.

The top 100 NHL players of the decade

Published in Hockey
Wednesday, 18 December 2019 06:17

Since 2009-10, there have been 2,196 skaters and 229 goaltenders who appeared in at least one National Hockey League game. As this decade comes to a close, it's time to parse the rolls, narrow the field and select the best of the best.

Presenting the top 100 NHL players of the 2010s.

The following list ranks the best of the decade, pitting skaters against defenseman against goaltenders. The order was determined through statistical and analytic comparisons; consideration for postseason success and awards; and good old-fashioned subjectivity. A few factors we weighed in creating the ranking:

  • Longevity was respected but not essential. There are players on the list who compiled points through 10 seasons of play, and players who landed on the list by virtue of dominating for a shorter period of time.

  • Hence, dominant stretches for players can carry weight, even if the seasons surrounding them are just average.

  • Rates are frequently more important than raw numbers, whether it's stats per game or per 60 minutes.

  • Heavy consideration was given to goals and wins above average, as found on the invaluable Evolving Hockey. It's a metric that attempts to assign a total value to each player, which represents how much that player contributed to their team in a single number. It's one of the most effective ways to separate the heavy lifters from the coasters.

  • The list was created through separate rankings for each position that were then contrasted to determine the final order.

A brief word of thanks to everyone who added their expertise to this process, including Luke and Josh of Evolving Wild, Vince Masi of EPSN Stats & Information, ESPN columnist Dimitri Filipovic and many others.

And now, let's count down the top 100 NHL players of the decade. Let the debates begin!

Note: Players are listed as being with the team with which they're most closely associated this decade (which may not be their current team). The majority of the stats listed here are through Dec. 16, and were compiled from sources like NHL.com. Hockey Reference and Evolving Hockey.

100. Alexander Semin, RW, Washington Capitals

It's the ultimate cliché to call a Russian player "enigmatic," but it's applicable for a player who started the decade with 40 goals as a core player for the Capitals, and was out of the NHL at 31 years old following one goal in 15 games with Montreal. In between? Three middling seasons with Carolina.

99. Torey Krug, D, Boston Bruins

A diminutive but elite offensive backliner for the Bruins, who had a higher power-play points-per-game average in his first four seasons than players like Brent Burns and P.K. Subban.

98. Jaromir Jagr, RW, Florida Panthers

In pro wrestling, veteran wrestlers in the sunset of their careers are known to bounce from territory to territory, putting on a show at every stop until the crowd starts chanting "you still got it." To that end, Jaromir Jagr was the Mick Foley or Terry Funk of the NHL this decade. He scored 120 goals and 202 assists for 322 points with (deep breath) the Flyers, Stars, Bruins, Devils, Panthers and Flames from 2011-12 to 2017-18. He lasted only 22 unmemorable games in that last stop before heading to the Czech Republic to play for Kladno, the team he owns. Age finally caught the ageless one.

97. Justin Williams, RW, Carolina Hurricanes

His total of 466 points in 741 games ranks him 46th among forwards for the decade, but it's his playoff reputation as "Mr. Game 7" in the Kings' two Stanley Cup wins that we'll always remember. Well, that and his role in those goofy "Storm Surge" victory celebrations with the Hurricanes.

96. Thomas Vanek, LW, Buffalo Sabres

Vanek entered the decade as one of the NHL's best instant-offense guys, with 228 points in 267 games for the Sabres. The rest of the decade: Four trades, and stints with the Islanders, Wild, Red Wings, Panthers, Canucks, Blue Jackets and then the Red Wings again. In the end, his 529 points ranked him 34th for the decade.

95. John Gibson, G, Anaheim Ducks

Since 2017, Gibson leads all goalies in goals saved (67.3) and wins (12.8) above average. He won the Jennings Trophy in tandem with Frederik Andersen for the 2015-16 season.

94. Mikko Rantanen, RW, Colorado Avalanche

With 171 points over the last two seasons, the 23-year-old Finn is just getting started.

93. Mitch Marner, RW, Toronto Maple Leafs

Marner just edges ahead of Rantanen with 248 points to the Avs forward's 229, including 94 points in his very enriching 2018-19 season.

92. Mark Scheifele, C, Winnipeg Jets

The Jets center ranked 37th in the NHL in points per game for the decade, at 0.84, and ranked 20th in goals above average per 60 minutes (0.616). He ranked eighth in points per game from 2015-16 to 2017-18, the best stretch of his 482-game career.

91. T.J. Oshie, RW, Washington Capitals

You know who had a sneaky great decade? The man who chugged an adult beverage through his jersey at a Stanley Cup parade. Oshie had 505 points in 712 games for the Blues and the Capitals, and was an incredible ninth in goals above average for the decade (138.1).

90. Ryan McDonagh, D, New York Rangers

A steady defenseman whose plus-182 with the Rangers and Lightning ranked him second to Zdeno Chara for the decade. 'Twas a time when his tandem with Dan Girardi was considered the best in the NHL.

89. Mikko Koivu, C, Minnesota Wild

Koivu's 516 points in 719 games ranked him 34th among forwards, but it's his defensive prowess that made him one of the decade's best, though sadly he was never rewarded with much love in Selke Trophy voting.

88. Ilya Kovalchuk, LW, New Jersey Devils

Kovalchuk had 302 points in 352 games this decade, which started with him on the Atlanta Thrashers (RIP). His stint with the New Jersey Devils featured an awesome 19-point performance in their 2012 run to the Stanley Cup Final, as well as a ridiculous 15-year contract that led to his "retirement" and departure to the KHL. The less said about his recent stint with the Kings, the better.

87. Andrei Vasilevskiy, G, Tampa Bay Lightning

Vasilevskiy led the league in wins from 2017 to 2019, finishing third for the Vezina Trophy in 2017-18 and winning it last season. A promising start for a goalie signed through 2028.

86. Marian Gaborik, RW, New York Rangers

The winger had 378 points in 533 games with the Rangers, Blue Jackets (remember that?), Kings and Senators at the end of his career. That included a playoffs-high 14 goals in the Kings' 2014 Stanley Cup win.

85. Jeff Carter, C, Los Angeles Kings

Fifteenth among forwards in goals (262) through 706 games, Carter also had 18 goals in the Kings' two Cup runs.

84. Oliver Ekman-Larsson, D, Arizona Coyotes

With 345 points in 691 games, Ekman-Larsson was a top-20 offensive player among defensemen. He spent the decade with the Coyotes, a team that made one playoff appearance. Probably would have been a Norris finalist without that Arizona blind spot by the voters.

83. Rick Nash, LW, New York Rangers

Four seasons of 30-plus goals for the Rangers and Blue Jackets, although his greatest offensive hits were in the previous decade. His career ended prematurely at 33 years old, due to multiple concussions.

82. Zach Parise, LW, Minnesota Wild

Thanks to injuries, Parise never lived up to the roll on which he entered the 2010s with the Devils. But, his 251 goals in 652 games ranked him 20th for the decade, and gave him a higher goals-per-game average than Jeff Skinner and Jonathan Toews. But the thing that defined his decade: 13 years and $98 million from the Minnesota Wild as a free agent, signing as a package deal with Ryan Suter. Heck, it was the decade for the Wild, too.

81. Patrick Marleau, LW, San Jose Sharks

The forward, in his second stint with the Sharks, didn't miss a game to injury this decade. He started the decade with a 44-goal season, and went on to score 281 of them. His 567 points ranked 26th among all forwards. Also, was a cool uncle to Auston Matthews and Mitch Marner in Toronto.

80. Dustin Byfuglien, D, Winnipeg Jets

Big Buff began the decade as a hulking winger with the Blackhawks and ended it as a hulking defenseman with the Winnipeg Jets. So he was technically third among defensemen at 139 goals for the decade.

79. Gabriel Landeskog, LW, Colorado Avalanche

Landeskog had 425 points in his first 594 games as one of the better left wings of the decade, made even more impressive by having played on some weak Colorado teams.

78. Corey Crawford, G, Chicago Blackhawks

The Blackhawks netminder backstopped them to two Stanley Cups, including a .932 save percentage and a 1.84 goals-against average in 2013. He was also sixth in even-strength save percentage for the decade (.926).

77. Keith Yandle, D, Florida Panthers

No one played more games in the decade than Yandle. Not only did he not miss a single game, he played 84 of them in 2014-15 thanks to a midseason trade from the Coyotes to the Rangers. As a result, he amassed 510 points, third most among defensemen. But he finished top five for the Norris only once.

76. Ryan Ellis, D, Nashville Predators

One of the most underrated defensemen of the decade, with a goals above replacement per 60 minutes (0.59) that's better than any other defenseman. Take it with a grain of salt as always, but Ellis's plus-107 for the decade ranks him sixth. He's never received Norris Trophy support, because he's the guy behind the guy (Roman Josi).

75. Max Pacioretty, LW, Montreal Canadiens

Pacioretty's 0.37 goals per game through 693 contests was tied for 26th in the NHL for the decade. From 2013-14 through 2016-17, he was fourth in the NHL in goals (141 in 316 games).

74. David Krejci, C, Boston Bruins

The steady complement to Patrice Bergeron at center for the Bruins, Krejci hit 73 points twice, and led the playoffs in points in Boston's 2011 and 2013 trips to the Stanley Cup Final.

73. Ben Bishop, G, Dallas Stars

Six feet and seven inches of goalie, Bishop is tied with Pekka Rinne for second in even-strength save percentage for the decade (.927) during stints with the Blues, Senators, Lightning and Stars. Oh, and seven games in L.A. He is fourth in goals saved above average per 60 minutes (0.315).

72. Filip Forsberg, LW, Nashville Predators

Forsberg averaged 0.80 points per game from 2014 on, putting him in the neighborhood of Logan Couture and Ryan O'Reilly, and ahead of linemate Ryan Johansen. All the more reason the 2013 trade that sent him from Washington to Nashville for [checks notes] Martin Erat is one of the most lopsided of the decade.

71. Logan Couture, C, San Jose Sharks

His 537 points in 766 games ranked him in the top 30 among forwards, but his defensive play and 48 playoff goals (second most in the decade) earn him accolades here.

70. Jarome Iginla, RW, Calgary Flames

The final decade of the all-time great's career saw him score 216 goals with the Flames (including 43 In 2010-11), Penguins, Bruins, Avalanche and Kings.

69. Jakub Voracek, RW, Philadelphia Flyers

Between his time with the Flyers and the Blue Jackets, the winger was 24th in both points (450) and power-play points (151).

68. Frederik Andersen, G, Toronto Maple Leafs

One of the most underrated goalies of the decade. Andersen ranked 15th in even-strength save percentage (.924), but he was first in goals saved above average per 60 minutes (.408) and wins above average per 60 (0.077) for the decade. In raw numbers, he was fifth in GSAA (134.5) and fifth in wins above average (25.3).

67. Marian Hossa, RW, Chicago Blackhawks

Hossa scored 324 goals in the previous decade, but the 2010s might be the time when he earned newfound appreciation as a two-way player. He had 48 points combined in the Blackhawks' three Stanley Cup championship runs.

66. Leon Draisaitl, LW, Edmonton Oilers

Draisaitl was drafted third overall in 2014 to be a dominant center for the Oilers. Instead, he ended up being a dominant winger with Connor McDavid, hitting 50 goals last season. He's fifth in points per game (1.11) since the start of calendar 2016.

65. Eric Staal, C, Minnesota Wild

One of the most unpredictable renaissances of the decade: Nine seasons after he last hit 40 goals, Staal scored 42 with the Wild in 2017-18. For the decade, his 262 goals with the Hurricanes, Rangers and Wild ranked him 16th. Remember, that was with some less-than-stellar clubs: Staal appeared in only 15 playoff games this decade.

64. Artemi Panarin, LW, Columbus Blue Jackets

Since he burst onto the scene by winning the Calder Trophy with the Chicago Blackhawks in 2015, and through his years in Columbus, Panarin has the 10th-best points-per-game average (1.02) among all players. A wizard with the puck, and a possession driver.

63. Roman Josi, D, Nashville Predators

Once Ryan Suter left and Shea Weber was traded, Josi took over the legacy as the Predators' homegrown defensive ace. He was sixth among defensemen at 0.63 points per game in 593 games.

62. Blake Wheeler, RW, Winnipeg Jets

The winger was 10th in assists (445) and 12th in points (674) for all players in the decade. Bring it down to just right wings, and only Patrick Kane had more points. (Wheeler's points per game, on the other hand, ranked him 11th.)

61. Alex Pietrangelo, D, St. Louis Blues

The steady defenseman always seemed like he was on the cusp of elite status. By traditional measures, he was really good: tied for 17th among defensemen in points per game (0.59) in 713 games. By advanced stats, he was third in the league for the decade in goals and wins above average.

60. Marc-Edouard Vlasic, D, San Jose Sharks

For a few seasons, "Pickles" was the go-to example of "most underrated defensive defenseman in the NHL." From 2013-14 to 2016-17, he led all defensemen in goals above average per 60 minutes at (0.53) and was tied for third in wins above average (10.8).

59. Tim Thomas, G, Boston Bruins

Thomas won his second Vezina Trophy in 2011, along with the Conn Smythe and the Stanley Cup. He won 70 games from 2010 to 2012, but retired in 2014 after a season split between the Stars and Panthers. Thomas then left the public eye, recently revealing his seclusion was related to post-concussion symptoms.

58. Aleksander Barkov, C, Florida Panthers

One of the top two-way centers in the league, he was 11th among forwards in points per game (1.01) from 2015 onward, including last season's 96-point breakout. He was also top six for the Selke Trophy three times in that span.

57. Henrik Zetterberg, C, Detroit Red Wings

After years as an offensive force -- 468 points from 2005 to 2011 -- Zetterberg settled into his "late-career Steve Yzerman" mode, pairing consistent offensive output with outstanding defensive play. His 555 points in 650 games gave him the 34th highest points per game average (0.85) among all players in the decade.

56. Ryan O'Reilly, C, St. Louis Blues

O'Reilly spent his first six seasons with the Colorado Avalanche, went to the Buffalo Sabres, lost his smile, was traded to the Blues and then won the Stanley Cup, the Conn Smythe and the Selke Trophy in one fell swoop. One of the best defensive players of the decade, he also had 527 points in 766 games.

55. Matt Duchene, C, Colorado Avalanche

Duchene was 25th in the NHL with 568 points in 756 games, but 65th in points per game (0.75) during stints with the Avalanche, Senators, Blue Jackets and Predators. He's perhaps best known this decade for being a mile offside in a game and serving as the catalyst for this scourge of replay reviews.

54. Daniel Sedin, LW, Vancouver Canucks

Daniel finished the decade (and his career) with 579 points in 664 games, good for 26th overall. However, his twin brother was just a little bit better.

53. Henrik Sedin, C, Vancouver Canucks

Henrik won the Hart Trophy in 2010 with a 112-point season -- one in which his brother missed 19 games. In fact, his three-season run to start the decade saw him score more points (287) than any other player.

52. Roberto Luongo, G, Florida Panthers

If this was Top 100 NHL Twitter Feeds of the Decade, Lu is the clear No. 1. The previous decade was his best on the ice, and some of his underlying numbers weren't great this decade, but his first three seasons with Vancouver and his yeoman's work with the Panthers later on earned him this spot.

51. Johnny Gaudreau, LW, Calgary Flames

Johnny Hockey is the third-highest-scoring left winger for the decade, at 0.96 points per game over 428 games, and was 11th in goals above average per 60 for forwards (0.611). The 5-foot-9 dynamo has his defensive deficiencies, but the Flames aren't paying him for defense.

50. Tuukka Rask, G, Boston Bruins

The annual debates among Bruins fans about Rask's abilities quieted considerably in recent seasons, and for good reason: No goaltender had a better even-strength save percentage than Rask (.929) through 510 games. He won the Vezina Trophy in 2014.

49. Jack Eichel, C, Buffalo Sabres

The Sabres star has a 0.96 points per game average in 319 games, ranking him 13th overall for the decade. No one is finishing the decade more emphatically than the No. 2 pick from the 2015 draft.

48. Shea Weber, D, Montreal Canadiens

He's much more than a booming slap shot. Weber was 13th in points per game (0.61) and ninth in goals above average (100) among defensemen for the decade. Although he didn't win one, he was a Norris Trophy finalist three times with the Predators. Injuries late in the decade distract from how great Weber was offensively for the rest of it.

47. Pekka Rinne, G, Nashville Predators

Rinne is tied for second in the decade in even-strength save percentage (.927) and was second in wins (321) through 585 games, but tied for 22nd in goals saved above average per 60 minutes (0.21). But those four nominations for the Vezina Trophy and his win in 2018 loom large.

46. Ryan Suter, D, Minnesota Wild

Is it possible Suter was so overrated he became underrated? That 13-year contract gave him unrealistic expectations. He ended up with 442 points (10th among defensemen for the decade) while skating more per game (26:59) than anyone else. He was fourth in goals above average (110.1) among defensemen.

45. Auston Matthews, C, Toronto Maple Leafs

From the moment Matthews stepped on the ice -- and scored four goals in his first NHL game -- he's been one of the league's elite offensive talents. His 0.53 goals per game ranks behind only Alex Ovechkin since 2016, and is second to Steven Stamkos for centers this decade.

44. David Pastrnak, RW, Boston Bruins

Since 2016, only Alex Ovechkin has scored more goals than Pasta (133) has during one of the more dominant offensive stretches of the decade. He was sixth in goals above average (60.4) during that stretch as well.

43. Tyler Seguin, C, Dallas Stars

Following a Stanley Cup and an ill-fated trade from the Bruins, Seguin blossomed into one of the league's top scorers of the decade at 0.86 points per game (28th). From 2014-15 to 2017-18, he was tied for fifth in goals per game (0.44).

42. Marc-Andre Fleury, G, Vegas Golden Knights

Fleury's decade had more peaks and valleys than the Andes. He struggled after winning his first Stanley Cup in 2009, including first-round playoff losses in four of five seasons. He watched Matt Murray lead the Penguins to the 2016 Cup. Even though he played 15 games in their 2017 Cup win, he was sacrificed to the expansion Vegas Golden Knights ... where he became the masked face of the franchise, led them to the Cup Final in their inaugural season and finished top five for the Vezina Trophy in both seasons in the desert. He's not just a survivor, but a winner: he's notched 340 of them in 585 games, most in the decade.

41. John Carlson, D, Washington Capitals

Oh, you just discovered John Carlson after the Capitals won the Stanley Cup and he started scoring at Bobby Orr levels this season? Where were you when he was amassing the eighth-most points in the decade (448) among defensemen? His defense steadily improved as the decade went on, too.

40. Nathan MacKinnon, C, Colorado Avalanche

After winning the Calder Trophy in 2013-14, it took a few years before MacKinnon found that next level. But when he did ... buckle up. He was third in points per game (1.31) from 2017 on, and finished second for the Hart Trophy in 2017-18.

39. Mark Stone, RW, Ottawa Senators

One of the unique talents of the past decade, Stone finally started getting his due after Ottawa traded him to Vegas. He had five straight seasons of 20-plus goals and was third in the decade for goals scored above average per 60 minutes (0.825). Meanwhile, he had 571 takeaways defensively in just 419 games. Sigh ... if only they gave the Selke Trophy to wingers.

38. Phil Kessel, RW, Pittsburgh Penguins

The decade began with Kessel having been traded to Toronto, where he would spend six seasons, score 181 goals and then get run out of town by local media that spun tales of him visiting local hot dog vendors. The Penguins traded for him in 2015, and he ended up winning two Stanley Cups (with one Conn Smythe-worthy performance). For the decade, Kessel was seventh in goals (298) and ninth in points (716).

37. Joe Thornton, C, San Jose Sharks

One of the best setup men in hockey history rolling through (another) decade. Jumbo's 1.56 assists per 60 minutes ranked him seventh for the decade in 765 games. In total, he was 16th in total points, at 648. He was on the positive side of puck possession every season, and outpaced his teammates in Corsi for percentage in all but one season. While the Sharks are still looking for their first Stanley Cup, Thornton was 24th in points-per-game average (0.78) in the postseason. He scored 148 goals for the decade; much to the disappointment of all hockey fans, never four in the same game.

36. Corey Perry, RW, Anaheim Ducks

Perry's production has fallen so far off in recent seasons that it's hard to picture when he was one of the NHL's preeminent goal-scorers, but from 2009-10 to 2011-12, only Steven Stamkos and Alex Ovechkin scored more goals than Perry's 114. That included a 50-goal campaign that earned him the Hart Trophy for the Ducks in 2011. But since 2018, he's a minus-1.7 in goals scored above average.

35. Ryan Getzlaf, C, Anaheim Ducks

When he was good for the Ducks -- and that frequently meant "healthy" -- he was great. He was above a point-per-game average in five seasons during the decade. He also had three seasons south of 0.60 points per game. From 2010, Getzlaf had the highest playoff points-per-game average (1.06) in 69 games.

34. Jonathan Quick, G, Los Angeles Kings

There's no denying Quick's success. He was fourth in the decade in wins (296), all with the Kings. He led the playoffs in save percentage and goals-against average in capturing the Conn Smythe in their 2012 Cup win, and then backstopped another Cup team in 2014. He was seventh in goals saved above average per 60 minutes (0.293), but he was tied for 24th in even-strength save percentage (.922). He won the Jennings twice and was a Vezina finalist twice. Don't let his recent struggles obscure his dominant decade.

33. Martin St. Louis, RW, Tampa Bay Lightning

He only played through 2014-15, when he retired at 39, but St. Louis reached "ageless wonder" status with the Lightning and Rangers. St. Louis was ninth for the decade in points per game (1.01) in 444 games, having opened it with 94 and 99 points in 2009-10 and 2010-11. He won the scoring title in the lockout-shortened season. His 15 points in 25 games helped spark the Rangers to the Stanley Cup Final in 2014.

32. Taylor Hall, LW, New Jersey Devils

"The trade was one for one." That was Bob McKenzie's famous tweet on the deal that sent Hall -- who had 328 points in 381 games with the Oilers -- to the Devils for Adam Larsson, in one of the most lopsided trades of the decade. Hall had 208 points in his first 211 games with the Devils, including his 39-goal effort in 2018 that earned him the Hart Trophy.

31. Jamie Benn, LW, Dallas Stars

Another player whose recent results -- which have been so underwhelming that the Stars' CEO compared his play to horse excrement in 2018 -- may have obscured a truly dominant stretch in the middle of the decade. From 2012-13 to 2017-18, Benn amassed 436 points, fourth among forwards. He won the scoring title in 2014-15 with 87 points, which is like winning The Masters with a two over par.

30. P.K. Subban, D, Nashville Predators

How boring would this decade have been without P.K. Subban? The cult of personality, the celebrity, the controversy, the charity, the comedy ... oh, and one of the most stunning one-for-one trades in NHL history. On the ice, Subban was 14th in points among defensemen (413), winner of the 2013 Norris Trophy and a finalist three times. A fascinating study in analytics too, as the fancy stats community defended his defensive acumen when pundits attempted to frame him as overrated. Without question, the NHL player with the most appearances on the Nickelodeon Kids' Sports Awards in the decade.

29. John Tavares, C, New York Islanders

Only Alex Ovechkin and Steven Stamkos scored more goals than did Tavares (332) in the decade, and he had a points-per-game average (0.94) that ranked him 16th. A two-time Hart Trophy finalist, Tavares was only 48th in goals above average per 60 minutes (0.442). Without question, he was one of the decade's top centers, which is something even Islanders fans can agree with. Maybe.

28. Braden Holtby, G, Washington Capitals

Holtby's run from 2014-15 to 2017-18 was one of the decade's best for a goalie, with 165 wins, a .927 save percentage and 21 shutouts. He won the Vezina in 2016, finished second for it in 2017 and backstopped the Capitals to their first Stanley Cup in 2018.

27. Brad Marchand, LW, Boston Bruins

Telling someone in 2010 that Marchand would be considered one of the NHL's best all-around players in 2020 is like telling someone in 2011 that Adam Sandler is likely getting an Oscar nomination in 2020 ... but here we are. The Bruins winger's transformation from pest with upside to pest that's a perennial 30-goal scorer and a 100-point player has been one of the decade's most dramatic. Marchand is tied for ninth in goals-per-game average for the decade (0.39).

26. Carey Price, G, Montreal Canadiens

Price's decade highlight is the 2014-15 season, when he became just the eighth goalie in NHL history -- and the first since Jose Theodore in 2002 -- to win the Hart Trophy as league MVP. He also won the Jennings, the Vezina and the Pearson (the NHLPA's player of the year) that season, leading the league in wins, save percentage, goals-against average and an incredible 36.70 goals saved above average. It's arguably the best season for an individual player for the decade. The rest of those years? He's tied for sixth in even-strength save percentage (.926) and is sixth in goals saved above average per 60 (0.304).

25. Vladimir Tarasenko, RW, St. Louis Blues

The Blues' winger is built like a tank and was an offensive engine like few others this decade, ranking sixth in goals per game (0.42) among forwards, and fifth among all players in goals scored above average per 60 minutes (0.653). He was always on the positive side of possession, and with defense that improved as the decade went on. He never received awards love, however.

24. Zdeno Chara, D, Boston Bruins

Chara won his only Norris Trophy right before the decade began, but it was in the last 10 years that his greatness was truly recognized. A dominant defensive presence, he led the decade in plus/minus (plus-216) for all players, and the Bruins had a save percentage with Chara on the ice above .918 in every season but one. His 336 points were 21st among defensemen, and he was nominated for the Norris three times in the decade. A towering achievement by a towering achiever.

23. Kris Letang, D, Pittsburgh Penguins

Few players have as many cheerleaders in both the traditional and fancy stats communities. Letang is third among defensemen with a 0.73 points-per-game average this decade. He's also third in shot attempt differential for the decade, and tied for eighth in goals above average per 60 minutes (0.38). An elite puck-moving defenseman who has excelled with a variety of partners. Health was an issue, which is one reason he had only one Norris Trophy nomination.

22. Nicklas Backstrom, C, Washington Capitals

Who had the fifth-highest points-per-game average for centers in the decade? If you're surprised it's Nicklas Backstrom at 0.98 points per game, that's more supporting evidence for those who say he's one of the most underrated players in hockey -- especially when you factor in his defensive acumen.

21. Sergei Bobrovsky, G, Columbus Blue Jackets

Oh, the irony of the Philadelphia Flyers seeking a solution in goal for most of the decade (and the previous one) and watching Bobrovsky, their former backup, win two Vezina Trophies with the Blue Jackets. He is tied for sixth in even-strength save percentage (.926) and third in goals saved above average per 60 minutes (0.318) for the decade.

20. Joe Pavelski, C, San Jose Sharks

Only five players scored more goals in the decade than Pavelski (304 in 789 games), and arguably none of them scored more off their faces. Great on faceoffs, dominant in possession (54.4 shot attempts percentage for the decade) and was behind only Alex Ovechkin and Steven Stamkos in goals (132) from 2012-13 to 2015-16, one of the best goal-scoring stretches of the decade.

19. Brent Burns, D, San Jose Sharks

No defenseman generated more shots on goal than Burns, who had 2,445 in 752 games. He was first in goals (168) and second in points (553) among defensemen. Despite strong puck possession metrics, Burns was criticized by some as a one-dimensional defenseman. That dimension was good enough to earn him the Norris Trophy in 2017, and finish in the top three another three times.

18. Claude Giroux, C, Philadelphia Flyers

The Flyers center-turned-winger was tied for 16th in the NHL in points-per-game average (0.94) during a tremendous decade, especially when you set aside his underwhelming first two seasons and his 58-point clunker in 2016-17. He was 18th in goals scored above average per 60 minutes (0.50). He didn't get much awards love, but was a Hart Trophy finalist once and fourth in the voting two other times. This is because, as Flyers fans will tell you, Giroux doesn't get his due. Well, he does here.

17. Drew Doughty, D, Los Angeles Kings

Doughty played a ton of tough minutes (26:31 per game, second in the NHL for the decade) and got frequently spectacular results. His 462 points in 806 games ranked fifth among defensemen, and he excelled defensively as one of the Kings' top possession drivers. Doughty was a Norris Trophy finalist four times, winning the thing in 2016.

16. Mark Giordano, D, Calgary Flames

Until last season, Giordano was one of the most underrated performers of the decade. He is 14th in points per game for defensemen (0.58, minimum 500 games) but it's his underlying numbers that are the star here. Giordano led all defensemen in goals (134.5) and wins (25) above average for the decade. His 74 points last season earned him an overdue Norris Trophy and the recognition that comes with it. But no player in our top 20 outkicked his coverage more than Giordano, who was constantly better than his teammates on Flames teams that made the playoffs just three times in the decade.

15. Jonathan Toews, C, Chicago Blackhawks

How good was Jonathan Toews? That's a rhetorical question here, but over the course of the decade it was a raging debate. Nevertheless, his numbers were stellar: 656 points in 761 games, good for 14th among all players. His plus-167 was fifth highest among all players. His 140.3 goals above average was the sixth highest for the decade. His 57.3 faceoff winning percentage was second best, one of the reasons he won the Selke Trophy and was a finalist three other times. Oh, and then there was that Conn Smythe win in 2010. That too. His 0.87 points per game in the playoffs this decade ranked fifth.

14. Nikita Kucherov, RW, Tampa Bay Lightning

The Lightning winger is sixth in points per game for the decade (1.04) and 10th in goals above average per 60 minutes (0.636). His Hart Trophy win last season, when he also captured the scoring title, came during a three-season stretch in which he was second in the NHL in points and goals. The sample was small relative to other top players. His impact wasn't.

13. Anze Kopitar, C, Los Angeles Kings

The Kings center was a possession monster (55.4 shot attempt percentage) as one of the best two-way centers in the NHL, winning the Selke Trophy twice and finishing as a finalist four times in total. He led the playoffs in points in both of the Kings' Stanley Cup wins, and was 16th among all players at 0.89 points per game. He was second in goals above average (153.8) and wins above replacement (28.5) for the decade. How good was Kopitar? They basically created Team Europe so that he could play in the World Cup of Hockey.

12. Victor Hedman, D, Tampa Bay Lightning

Hedman's 0.62 points-per-game rate tied him for eighth in the decade among defensemen, and his goals above average per 60 minutes (0.452) was better than that of Mark Giordano (0.449) and well ahead of Duncan Keith (0.201). One of the most dominating defensive presences in the game, Hedman had a 52.09 expected goals percentage at 5-on-5 for the decade. His three straight Norris nominations, and one win, closed the decade strongly.

11. Pavel Datsyuk, C, Detroit Red Wings

To quote old Ben Kenobi: "Now, that's a name I've not heard in a long time." Datsyuk left for the KHL in 2016 as a 37-year-old, which likely helped his rates for the decade remain so pristine before the decline. In 427 games, Datsyuk had a 0.93 points-per-game average, good for 14th in the decade. He won his last Selke Trophy to start the decade in 2009-10, and was a finalist for the next three straight seasons. But the reason he ranks ahead of other two-way centers with similar numbers: No player in the NHL over the last decade, with a minimum of 300 games played, had a better goals above average per 60 minutes than Pavel Datsyuk (0.901), and he was second overall in wins above average per 60 (0.166) as well. Better than Connor McDavid. Better than Sidney Crosby. What a player.

10. Duncan Keith, D, Chicago Blackhawks

Keith was the backbone of the Blackhawks' success this decade. He averaged 25:16 of ice time per game, scoring 455 points in 755 games (fourth in the NHL). He won two Norris trophies and the 2015 Conn Smythe in what was one of the most dominant postseasons ever for a defenseman: 21 points in 23 games, a 64.29 goals-for percentage and 31:07 average ice time. Alas, his play began to decline soon after that.

9. Patrick Kane, RW, Chicago Blackhawks

Kane will end the 2010s as the decade's leading scorer in total points, although his points-per-game average (1.08) ranks him fourth overall. He's the best right wing of the decade, scoring 20 or more goals every season. His run from 2015-16 to now is one of the best stretches for any scorer in the decade, with a 1.17 points per game average. Kane won the Hart in 2016 and the Conn Smythe in 2013, finishing second in the decade in points-per-game average in the postseason (0.98). On the ice, an all-decade performance, but one that was overshadowed at times off the ice due to a noncriminal disorderly conduct charge that was conditionally discharged after an incident with a cab driver in 2009, and a police investigation into a sexual assault allegation in 2015.

8. Steven Stamkos, C, Tampa Bay Lightning

The second-best goal-scorer of the decade, full stop. In 695 games, Stamkos scored 383 goals, second most for all players. His goals-per-60 minutes average (1.22) was first overall, and he was seventh among forwards in goals above average per 60 minutes (0.656). Stamkos was fifth in the decade at 1.08 points per game. He won the goal-scoring title twice, hitting 60 in 2011-12 to end a three-year run in which Stamkos scored 18 more 5-on-5 goals than any other player in the NHL. The knock on him: nominated only once for the Hart, and his postseason numbers (0.76 points per game) were a significant tick down from his regular-season output.

7. Patrice Bergeron, C, Boston Bruins

Imagine a player who finished in the top five for one award every season for an entire decade. Imagine this wasn't just reputation-based, but earned through undeniable prowess. Nicklas Lidstrom couldn't do it with the Norris nor Martin Brodeur with the Vezina in the 2000s. You'd have to go back to Wayne Gretzky and the Hart Trophy in the 1980s to find a run like Patrice Bergeron had with the Selke this decade, winning it four times. The best two-way center of the decade, Bergeron had a goals-for percentage of 59.9 at 5-on-5, led all players in faceoff percentage (58.5, minimum 500 games) and had a 0.82 points-per-game average. Put it this way: They're not calling it The Perfection Line in Boston for Marchand and Pastrnak.

6. Evgeni Malkin, C, Pittsburgh Penguins

The NHL infamously left Malkin off its "Top 100 players of the league's first 100 years" list, so the least we could do was rank the Russian dynamo in the top 10 here. The Penguins star was third in the decade in points-per-game average (1.15) and ninth in goals scored (284). His 50-goal, 109-point campaign in 2011-12 is as good as you'll find in the decade. He led the Penguins with 28 points in 25 playoff games during their second Cup of the decade. It's fascinating, and a bit depressing, to think that Malkin could be higher on this ranking were it not for injuries.

5. Henrik Lundqvist, G, New York Rangers

The King among goalies for the decade. Lundqvist was tied for the lead in goals saved above average per 60 minutes (0.408), a remarkable feat at 611 games played. In terms of raw numbers, his 242.1 goals saved above average is over 75 more than the next player on the list. He was second in the decade in even-strength save percentage (.927) and third in wins (314) in backstopping the Rangers to seven playoff appearances. Remarkably, he won the Vezina just once (2012) and was a finalist twice. While the general managers who vote for that award didn't appreciate him this decade, we certainly do.

4. Erik Karlsson, D , Ottawa Senators

One of the singular talents the NHL has ever seen on the blue line. Karlsson led all defensemen with 588 points and 569 takeaways for the decade. His a 0.82 points-per-game average ranks ninth all-time for NHL defensemen. He won the Norris Trophy twice and was a finalist four times, despite (tenuous) criticisms that his game was one-dimensional. Injuries in the latter part of the decade slowed him a bit, but his underlying metrics reinforced his stellar play. Between the previous two decades of Nicklas Lidstrom and this decade with Karlsson, it would be nice if the Swedes let someone else take a turn as the definitive defenseman for the next decade.

3. Alex Ovechkin, LW, Washington Capitals

Everyone knows where the puck is going when Ovechkin is on the ice, and where he wants to shoot. It's just that no one can stop it. In 794 games, Ovechkin scored 460 goals, with 177 on the power play. No one else cracked 400. His 1.04 points-per-game average in 794 games makes him one of the decade's most underrated playmakers as well. That carried over to the playoffs, too: The last misbegotten vestiges of "Ovechkin as playoff choker" were rendered futile with his 0.90 points-per-game average in the postseason (ninth in the NHL, minimum 50 playoff games). He won six goal-scoring titles, one Hart Trophy, one NHLPA Player of the Year award and the Conn Smythe in the Capitals' first Stanley Cup championship in franchise history.

As baffling as it seems today, there were times when some questioned whether Ovechkin was washed up when he scored "only" 32 goals, or when Dale Hunter tried to turn him into a shot-blocker, to the point where one columnist claimed the Capitals would have been "blessed" to see him leave for the KHL. Instead, he finishes the decade very much on pace to one day surpass Wayne Gretzky as the greatest goal scorer of all time.

Now, in the interest of equal time, ESPN's Dimitri Filipovic argues that Ovechkin should be higher: "What Ovechkin did this decade really has no comparable. The difference between him and second place in goals (Steven Stamkos) is the same as Stamkos and 15th place (Jonathan Toews). The difference between him and second place in power-play goals (Stamkos again) is the same as Stamkos and 12th place (Patrick Marleau). He has 3,240 shots during that time, and no one else has over 2,500. The sheer volume of what he did and how he was able to stay healthy the entire time is nuts. Plus, he won a Cup as the best player on the team, for those out there that put a lot of significance on that sort of thing."

2. Connor McDavid, C, Edmonton Oilers

As of Dec. 17, McDavid has played 323 NHL games this decade and, thus, for his career. So it's understandable if your reaction to this lofty ranking is to scream "SAMPLE SIZE!" while clutching your Alex Ovechkin bobblehead doll. The same might have been said about Ovechkin at the end of last decade, when he had played 324 games and averaged 1.30 points per game. It was a performance that landed him on the NHL's all-decade first team. McDavid this decade, at 1.33 points per game, has been even better.

In four-plus seasons, McDavid has two scoring titles, a Hart Trophy and another top-three finish for the award. He's done that on Oilers teams that have gone 169-160-36 in that span, with one playoff appearance. McDavid leads the NHL in wins above replacement per 60 minutes (0.168) for the decade. He's actually 30th in the league in wins above replacement (102.9); 26 of the players in front of him have played over 700 games, and none has played fewer than 420. Factor in that he's second in goals above average (0.89) per 60 for the decade, and that's an astonishing impact that one player has had on his team. But that's McDavid.

Then there's the ethereal argument. Simply put, McDavid does things with the puck on his stick that we've never seen before, or at least haven't seen at that velocity. He's a generational talent who had teams strip-mining their rosters in an effort to draft him, and an offensive force that turns NHL defensemen into parodies of one on a single rush. That he hasn't played more than two rounds in the playoffs this decade is negligent to the sport itself. Connor McDavid is the best player in the NHL in the 2010s ... were it not for the existence and performance of that other Canadian-born center.

1. Sidney Crosby, C, Pittsburgh Penguins

It was Sidney Crosby's decade, but you already knew that. You watched him lead the Penguins to back-to-back Stanley Cups, the first time an NHL team had accomplished that feat since the 1996-98 Red Wings. You watched him win back-to-back Conn Smythe trophies, only the third player in NHL history to accomplish that feat and the first since his former landlord Mario Lemieux did it in 1991 and 1992. You watched him amass 836 points in 670 games, which leads the decade. You saw the scoring title, the two times he led the NHL in goals scored, the Hart Trophy and the two NHLPA Player of the Year awards. You probably didn't know he led the NHL in goals (174) and wins (32.3) above average, but you do now.

More than anything, you watched the slowly building respect for Crosby as one of the greatest players to ever step on NHL ice. Remember 2009? The first Stanley Cup? Remember what Sidney Crosby was then, to a lot of people? The guy who complained to the refs? Who complained about how long it took to clean up the hats during that double-hat-trick playoff game against the Capitals? The guy who used to inspire fans to bring pacifiers to the game, as one of the most polarizing players in hockey?

That all, literally, feels like a decade ago now. At 32, Crosby is the most respected player in the NHL by his peers, for his play and his comportment and the way he's constantly working to hone different parts of his game -- the decade saw Crosby become a Selke Trophy-worthy defender, for example. He's silenced his critics, and converted many of them to the Church of Sid.

But his impact goes beyond what happened on the ice. The concussions that he suffered in early 2011 put a renewed focus on player safety and the potentially devastating effects of hits to the head in hockey. Rule 48 was already in place when those hits by David Steckel and Victor Hedman happened; on the first day of the 2011 Stanley Cup Final, Gary Bettman announced the creation of the Department of Player Safety to better police borderline hits.

On and off the ice, this was Sidney Crosby's decade. No matter where his career goes after it, the hockey world should be honored to have watched it.

Fans boo China anthem as row escalates

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 19 December 2019 02:46

Hong Kong football fans booed as the Chinese national anthem was played on Wednesday before their team's 2-0 loss to China in South Korea as the political turmoil that has gripped the former British colony spilled over to the sports world.

The Korea Football Association said it had taken steps to ensure there were no banners bearing political messages at the Busan Asiad Stadium, where nearly 200 Hong Kong fans chanted and banged drums to drown out a tiny pocket of Chinese supporters.

Hong Kong has been rocked by six months of sometimes violent demonstrations, with protesters angered by what they see as Beijing's stifling of freedoms despite a "one country, two systems" promise of autonomy when the city returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

China rejects the suggestion it is interfering in Hong Kong, and blames Western countries for inciting the trouble.

Disrespecting the national anthem is a crime in China. Hong Kong has presented a bill that sets jail terms of up to three years for the same offence, a move critics say raises fresh fears over freedom of expression.

Hong Kong, designated the home side for Wednesday's match in the four-team tournament that also includes hosts South Korea and Japan, were dressed all in red and turned to face their bauhinia flag when the national anthem began.

The Chinese players, dressed in yellow, faced their flag and belted out the anthem as it was being played, while boos rang out from the Hong Kong fans.

After the game ended, the Hong Kong fans sang "Glory to Hong Kong," a song that has become a rallying cry for democracy.

Television coverage of the match in Hong Kong did not show the anthem being played, instead cutting in as the players were shaking hands.

When Chinese player Ji Xiang scored the first goal in the ninth minute, the Hong Kong fans booed and shouted in English: "Let's go Hong Kong, let's go!"

Chinese fans tried make themselves heard in the cavernous 50,000-seater stadium as Hong Kong supporters chanted: "We are Hong Kong" throughout the match.

Hong Kong fans also jeered the country's national anthem during a World Cup qualifier against Iran in September.

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