Homer Jay wrote:Well still to this day think of Gillies as an enforcer who was blessed to play with two of the top 25 offensive players in the history of his game. The need to protect Trottier and Bossy at all time from Bobby Clark and his boys bought him a first line slot instead of third line. I don't think any first line player ever fought as much as Gillies ever did.
And hey I actually like Gillies (I have a framed picture of him squaring off with Spinner Spencer in my rec room), and loathe the Bullies, but he just sets the bar too low in my opinion. Is Dave Semenko next?
I think Forsberg and Lindros are automatic. The players actually wonder about more are Mark Recchi, Dave Andreychuk, and John LeClair. Are they going to make it?
I think calling Gillies an Enforcer who was blessed to play with those guys is a bit of a stretch. A guy might be able to accidentally pop 15-20 that way but Gillies was consistently in the 30-35 range. Plus, he fought when it was needed. Gillies never even hit 100 PIMs in a season. It's not like he was a thug who only had that dimension to offer.
As for the guys you named in that final paragraph, I would say that their chance of getting in (as a percentage) and the reasons for it would be something like:
-Dave Andreychuk: 90%:
Reason: Mostly the 600 goals. Consistency too. So many 20+ goal seasons. Only knock is PPG which is far from impressive.
-Mark Recchi: 100%
Reason: PPG is high and total points is huge. Almost 1000 assists will get people's attention. There are
so many comparables that he trumps that it's impossible not to see him make it.
- John Leclair: 40%
Reason: Pros --Very good goal scorer. Part of one of the more famous lines of the 90s. Cons -- Doesn't have the huge career numbers. PPG is less than great. Wasn't multi-dimensional