Quote:
Originally Posted by getbak
You've cherry picked to avoid a lot of the awards the Flames have won in that time (Byng, Adams, Leadership, Jennings, Clancy). You include the Ross and Richard, which are counting awards but exclude the Jennings, which is also a counting award.
Using the awards you included, here are the per team award counts since the lockout: - Washington - 19
- Edmonton - 17
- Pittsburgh - 17
- Tampa Bay - 12
- Chicago - 11
- Boston - 9
- Colorado - 7
- Detroit - 6
- Toronto - 6
- Vancouver - 6
- San Jose - 5
- Montreal - 4
- Rangers - 4
- Anaheim - 3
- Columbus - 3
- Los Angeles - 3
- New Jersey - 3
- Buffalo - 2
- Calgary - 2
- Carolina - 2
- Florida - 2
- Nashville - 2
- Ottawa - 2
- Vegas - 2
- Winnipeg - 2
- Dallas - 1
- Minnesota - 1
- Islanders - 1
- Seattle - 1
- St. Louis - 1
- Philadelphia - 0
- Arizona/Utah - 0
Keep in mind that a lot of the repeat winners are the same person winning a lot of awards. Washington's 19 awards are Holtby's one Vezina, and 18 various awards for Ovechkin. Edmonton and Pittsburgh each have 17, but they're all McDavid & Draisaitl and Crosby & Malkin. So, those skew the numbers a lot. Tampa has 6 different players and Chicago has 5.
The Flames are in the middle of the pack, which should be expected. They're a middle of the pack team. There are a lot of good teams without a lot of individual awards too.
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Just a minor quibble, tied for 8th fewest (6th fewest if you exclude recent expansion teams) isn't exactly middle of the pack. If you exclude the recent expansion teams (which have not been in the league enough years that they can be compared), the average number of those awards for each of the remaining 28 teams is 5.4.