In the upcoming weeks, every major outlet will count down the NHL’s best players. Most will be subjective, driven by a hotly debated vote from a panel of staffers or insiders.
With just 51 days until the puck drops on the 2024-25 season, we’re cutting the line.
When I launched Adjusted Hockey two years ago — initially a Hockey Hall of Fame project — one of the goals was to rank every player by position at the end of every season. The idea was to deliver the hockey equivalent of the Official World Golf Rankings. A living timeline of the world’s best players.
Enter the High Noon rankings.
Using adjusted point shares as a proxy for value, we could rate individuals in an equitable way, eliminating reputation and minimizing bias. An example: How good was Phil Kessel at his best?… the #13 forward in the NHL. While an impressive feat, many would not consider it a Hall of Fame-worthy peak. High Noon was designed to help understand a player’s true place in the league’s hierarchy.
But the use of High Noon extends beyond the niche lens of the HHOF. It’s a valuable tool to capture both hockey’s past and the current moment — which is what we’re most interested in today.
Before we get to the rankings, here’s a brief introduction. You can read about High Noon’s mechanics in this original post. In short, it uses a weighted three-year average: 2023-24 represents 50% of a player’s score; 2022-23 gets one-third (33%); 2021-22 gets one-sixth (17%). The split helps take a longer-range view of performance — a brilliant few months on a stacked power play doesn’t make a player one of the game’s best. So, eligibility begins after three seasons (i.e., Connor Bedard will debut in 2026).
Like any method, the High Noon approach has limits. But it delivers results systematically, offering a middle ground between the superficial trappings of the NHL scoring race and nuanced analytics.
Part one of our three-part series: the 50 best forwards in the NHL today…
How to Read these Rankings: Artemi Panarin’s score in the High Noon system is 10.8, making him the #8 forward in the NHL right now. In 2022, he was ranked #7; in 2023, he dropped to #14. The Change column is his increase of +6 spots from #14 to #8 in the last year. Panarin’s peak — his High Noon — is #5, which is the highest spot he’s ever been ranked (2021).
No surprise here. Connor McDavid remains the NHL’s #1 forward. But the gap has shrunk. A year ago, McDavid (15.2) led runner-up Leon Draisaitl (13.0) by 2.2. This year? Nathan MacKinnon’s explosive MVP season launched him to 13.6 — just 0.9 behind McDavid’s 14.5. Despite a 100-assist season, the Oiler captain’s score dropped, largely from his goal count slicing in half (64 to 32). For those expecting scoring champion Nikita Kucherov (#4) to have been McDavid’s biggest threat, it’s a reminder that the rankings incorporate a defensive component and are not a one-season exercise.
That’s five straight years in a row at the top for McDavid — a historically significant run. Among post-expansion forwards, the overall leaders in #1 finishes: Mario Lemieux (10); Wayne Gretzky (7); Phil Esposito (7); Sidney Crosby (6); Guy Lafleur (5). Only Gretzky and Esposito (seven each) have ever had six consecutive years at #1. McDavid will need to fend off the game’s best another year to join the exclusive club.
That makes a perfect 17-for-17 among the league’s top 20 forwards for Sidney Crosby in High Noon. Most public rankings will place him higher on reputation or intangibles than his current #14 slot. But a statistical approach regards his last half-decade more as a franchise player than among the top handful of forwards in the NHL. With Alex Ovechkin finally slipping to #34, Crosby is now the outright leader in top-20 seasons among forwards since expansion: Crosby (17); Ovechkin (16); Joe Sakic (15).
Any big surprises? Players too high? Too low? Excluded entirely? Let us know!
Stay tuned next week for Part Two (Defensemen) and Part Three (Goaltenders)…
Follow @AdjustedHockey on X; Data from Hockey-Reference.com
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