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    Islanders announcers trash ESPN for snubbing John Tavares on Top 25 list

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    Is John Tavares of the New York Islanders one of the 25 best players in the NHL under the age of 25?

    As of Sunday, he's 12th in the League in scoring with 48 points in 46 games. His career points per game average stands at 0.82. He's 53 percent on faceoffs, and is tied with Michael Grabner with 56 takeaways to lead the Islanders.

    But Neil Greenberg goes deeper than the available stats. He's a columnist for the Washington Post and ESPN.com, analyzing the NHL using advanced statistics and metrics that purport to show the real value and output of a player.

    When I saw Greenberg at a Washington Capitals game recently, he spoke about taking some heat for a list he published on ESPN: The Top 25 NHL Players the Under Age of 25 (sub. required). The pitchforks and torches were understandable: Jeff Skinner and Tyler Seguin were omitted due to sample size. Jamie Benn and Matt Duchene were left off due to Greenberg's analysis, as was Tavares.

    The Islanders broadcast team of Howie Rose and Butch Goring caught wind of the snub, and torched Greenberg on their broadcast on Saturday night — a game against the Carolina Hurricanes that saw Tavares score both goals, including the OT game winner.

    Via KeithLHHockey, this is a bit of Rose and Goring on the snub. (Listen to the whole thing here.)

    ROSE: I don't know if you happened to see an article in a national online publication recently, but someone actually wrote that … there was a list of 25 players under 25 in the National Hockey League. Can you believe that John Tavares was not on that list? Are you kidding me? Now think about that: We're just talking about players that are under 25.

    When he was criticized for that, he came up with some kind of goofball numerical response. I don't know who this house-bound agoraphobe is, but I suggest he open the shades in room, get a little light in there and watch the games and stop playin' around with, you know, computer-based [cross talk] and calculators … give me a break! Open your eyes! You can make a case that John Tavares is among the 25 best players in the league! Nevermind under 25 years of age. That's just dumb.

    GORING: I suggest the guy cover another sport. Clearly he has no idea what this sport is all about.

    ROSE: That's just stupid. There's no other way to put it. Unless there's some kind of personal agenda. If you just want to be controversial. That's why I'm no mentioning his name. I'm not going to give him the satisfaction.

    GORING: Other than stooge. Is that what you're calling him?

    Ouch.

    With Islanders fans, broadcasters and ESPN's own Katie Strang disagreeing with the assessment, Greenberg wrote a piece titled "Why John Tavares is good, not great" (sub. required) that detailed his reasoning, including:

    Zone Starts. Tavares is seen as having an advantage by starting in the offensive zone at even strength more than 56 percent of the time for his career, when the average for all forwards is 27 percent. He scores more because he's given a chance to; it's the same argument frequently made by advanced stats critics about the Sedins.

    Wrote Greenberg:

    "Being fed soft minutes (high offensive zone starts against non-top line competition) is a smart coaching move, one that puts your best players in a position to succeed. However, it is enough context to also keep you off my list in favor of a more seasoned player like Nashville forward Sergei Kostitsyn."

    Clutch Performance. A measurement that Greenberg developed, it rates "how much a player contributes to his team's victories." The bottom line here: "When Tavares is on the ice, more shots are aimed at the Islanders' net than the opposition's. And when he is not with his most frequent linemates (Moulson, Parenteau and Kyle Okposo), it is even worse."

    This argument is like being stuck in a room with Billy Beane's stats guy and his scouts in "Moneyball" — they know talent when they see it based on time-honored standards, and someone is trying to change the way we think about evaluating a player.

    With due respect to advanced statisticians — whose work has certainly changed the way this writer approaches things like the Selke Trophy — the notion that Patrik Berglund, Bryan Little and Sergei Kostitsyn should be ranked ahead of John Tavares on this list or any list is ridiculous. Yet they're all ahead of Tavares on the ESPN list.

    Maybe it's a crusty, old school notion, but there's something to be said for intangibles. Tavares has them, along with effective play on both sides of the puck. And he's only getting better.

    s/t Christian Araos for the audio.

     
    • beuke2394  •  New York, New York  •  4 months ago
      The bottom line is this and some should ask Greenberg - Who would you rather have on your team? Little, Berglund, or anyone else on that list or Tavares?

      ESPN = Ever Seen a Puck? No!
      • Nick 4 months ago
        You ask "Who would you rather have...or anyone else on that list or Tavares?" Toews, Crosby, Malkin for starters...I mean, Tavares should be there and maybe even top 10 but don't pretend he is #1
      • Zach 4 months ago
        Right now I'd take him over Crosby, but I retract that if Crosby ever comes back at even 80%
      • Nick 4 months ago
        Agreed
    • Geno  •  4 months ago
      "Housebound Agoraphobe" = Howie Rose WIN
    • Martin  •  Toronto, Canada  •  4 months ago
      I'm impressed that ESPN managed to spell hockey correctly .
    • Tony  •  4 months ago
      Effin' ridiculous. It's really a great shame that the Isles get trashed in every possible turn, I wish they'd get this thing finally turned around and get the respect back. It's like the ghost of Milbury still hovers around them or something, and the dude is not even dead.
    • greg5897  •  4 months ago
      Hahahahaha ESPN Insider. Hahahahaha paying money for ESPN hahahahahaha.
    • lizzerd  •  North Arlington, New Jersey  •  4 months ago
      Who goes to ESPeoN for hockey news??? I don't even go to them for the scores.
    • Chris Rice  •  Newark, New Jersey  •  4 months ago
      I'm a Rangers fan. I hate the Islanders with an extreme passion. Butch Goring is one of the biggest homer announcers in theleague (He predicted the Isles to finish 6th in the East afterall). But really, Tavares not being on his "list" is a joke.
      • tnt Columbus OH 4 months ago
        When Micheletti was an Isles announcer I thought he was a homer, even worse than Goring is today. Now he's the Rangers' homer supreme. He is and will always be the biggest homer in the league, no matter who he's working for.
      • Jimmy B 4 months ago
        As an Islander fan, Goring is a huge homer and a joke. He has yet to find a player in the league who's name who couldn't stumble over. We miss the days of Jaffe, badly.
      • Adam 4 months ago
        You can't call Goring a homer for predicting the Isles to finish 6th in the East. There were reasons. They were a great team for the second half of the season. Unfortunately, DP came back and screwed everything up. Notice how he goes down for the year and all of a sudden the Islanders are winning games consistently?
    • Jordan  •  Babylon, New York  •  4 months ago
      the average for all forwards isnt 27%, its 27% of forwards receive roughly the same zone start percentage as Tavares. So basically hes receiving the same "extreme" advantage that basically every other teams top line gets. Not to mention the fact that this guy used "Clutch Performance Index", which as a stat he MADE UP HIMSELF
    • rae  •  4 months ago
      Is Tim Thomas a good goaltender? I'm not sure. He has the benefit of playing the entirety of his games in goal. He isn't used nearly as often in the neutral or offensive zones.

      Keep on trollin, ESPN.
      • Mike 4 months ago
        These guys have actually never watched any islander games.
      • Shanaban 4 months ago
        I surprised he didn't try to sneak Ovie & Semin in there.
      • Nick 4 months ago
        Why would anyone watch an islanders game?
    • The Pundit  •  4 months ago
      Espn has scott burnside covering hockey. That shows me their interest and sophistication level of the sport.
    • Kumar  •  Grand Rapids, Michigan  •  4 months ago
      It's ESPN. That's all you need to know. I wouldn't be too offended by anything ESPN has to say about hockey since they hate on it all the time and clearly know nothing about the sport.
      • Grumpy Old SOB 4 months ago
        Totally agree.One of their key guys...Colin Cowmanure....does not seem to know one side of the puck from the other
    • golden  •  Saskatoon, Canada  •  4 months ago
      espn is like kodak...sure you heard of them but who uses them....no one
    • Ben D  •  Yuma, Arizona  •  4 months ago
      this is why caps fans can't stand this guy. he's getting all sorts of publicity with blog posts on the washington post, radio interviews in the DC area, and TV time on comcast. this guy has NO CLUE what he's talking about. not everything is explained by numbers. i hate using this line, but does he even watch the games? john tavares is an exceptional player, and most definitely in the top 25 in the league OVERALL, not just under the age of 25. what a joke this greenberg guy is!
    • canuck  •  4 months ago
      He'll be the best in NHL yrs to come..watch..
    • Wayne  •  London, Canada  •  4 months ago
      Perhaps the guy knows Basketball. Or Baseball or Football. But he sure doesn't know squat about the game of hockey.
      It must be a tough job working for ESPN when they expect you to know something about hockey. At least SI has their bathing suit babes to fall back on when they can't find a hockey writer.
    • Reality Broker  •  Kennesaw, Georgia  •  4 months ago
      We watch a ton of hockey in our home and I've played from mite through semi-P and coached all levels. Tavares is becoming a force. He gets better with every game, he has fire, he's getting stronger on the puck and on his skates. This guy plays from goal-line to goal-line and makes everyone he plays with better. He sees opponents top defensive coverage consistently and still gets it done. Never takes a shift off.
      You can argue anyway you want...if you asked any coach or player in the NHL if they think JT is in the top 25 under 25...it'd be more like top 5.
      Love Howie Rose...always calls it fair. If he lets someone have it...they probably had it coming.
    • Dave W  •  4 months ago
      ESPN should go back to what they're good at - gushing over the NBA. I mean, the NBA lockout got more coverage on ESPN than the active NHL season. That's just ridiculous.
    • West  •  4 months ago
      Why does anyone give a @#*! about what ESPN reports on hockey? They don't know anything about the sport, so why should anyone be surprised by this useless ranking?
    • Diehardnuck  •  4 months ago
      Seems like a lame attempt to grab publicity and 'Insider' subscriptions (sub required).
    • David  •  Verona, New Jersey  •  4 months ago
      Tavares is probably in the top 5 of players under 25 and has been imporving at a pace faster than anyone. His strength on the puck is getting ridiculous and his hand-eye coordination is on the level with Crosby. If he played with better players he would be leading the lead in scoring (as of now he's only 7 points from that). Simply put, the guy is great now and can be the best in the game if he continues on his pace. The guy at ESPN was looking for some controversy, that's all.

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