"TB is one of the heaviest teams in the league if not the heaviest and all their Defensemen are big. Hence O'Reilly and Acciari to help them play the heavy game in the playoffs. With Muzzin out I can see Dubas making another trade for a big heavy defenseman and have Sandin sit out in the playoffs"
Team | Height (F) | Weight (F) | Height (D) | Weight (D) | Age |
---|
Anaheim Ducks | 73.38 | 202.46 | 73.44 | 199 | 27.22 |
Arizona Coyotes | 74 | 204.83 | 73.36 | 198 | 25.45 |
Boston Bruins | 73.67 | 202.5 | 73.86 | 202.43 | 26.71 |
Buffalo Sabres | 72.87 | 198 | 73.57 | 202.57 | 23.29 |
Calgary Flames | 72.92 | 201.92 | 74.43 | 208 | 26.86 |
Carolina Hurricanes | 72.67 | 191.25 | 74.12 | 205.12 | 28.25 |
Chicago Blackhawks | 72.93 | 196.21 | 75.71 | 211.71 | 27.14 |
Colorado Avalanche | 72.25 | 193 | 73.57 | 202 | 27 |
Columbus Blue Jackets | 73.07 | 193.29 | 73.38 | 196.25 | 24.75 |
Dallas Stars | 73.46 | 200 | 73.43 | 203.57 | 28.57 |
Detroit Red Wings | 73.36 | 197.36 | 73.86 | 201 | 26.29 |
Edmonton Oilers | 72.92 | 198.15 | 73.86 | 203.43 | 26.57 |
Florida Panthers | 72.77 | 191.85 | 73 | 200.22 | 28.89 |
Los Angeles Kings | 72.5 | 202.43 | 73 | 199.29 | 26.71 |
Minnesota Wild | 72.23 | 197.31 | 72.43 | 187.43 | 29.14 |
Montréal Canadiens | 72.33 | 200 | 73 | 201.83 | 26.33 |
Nashville Predators | 73.57 | 203.86 | 73.14 | 200.29 | 29.29 |
New Jersey Devils | 72.19 | 188.38 | 74.71 | 206.29 | 26.43 |
New York Islanders | 72.93 | 202.27 | 74.14 | 204.43 | 25.43 |
New York Rangers | 73.46 | 200.15 | 73.43 | 197.86 | 23.43 |
Ottawa Senators | 72.58 | 192.08 | 73.71 | 197.43 | 27.43 |
Philadelphia Flyers | 72.83 | 194.08 | 73.5 | 197.12 | 27.75 |
Pittsburgh Penguins | 72.38 | 192.23 | 73.62 | 194.88 | 29.88 |
San Jose Sharks | 73.07 | 200.93 | 73.38 | 202.75 | 29.38 |
Seattle Kraken | 72.2 | 188.93 | 75 | 210.29 | 27.29 |
St. Louis Blues | 73.17 | 207.5 | 73.44 | 204.56 | 29.33 |
Tampa Bay Lightning | 72.42 | 195.17 | 75.33 | 224.5 | 27 |
Toronto Maple Leafs | 72.67 | 199.08 | 73.67 | 204.89 | 29.89 |
Vancouver Canucks | 72.47 | 194.27 | 73.22 | 200.11 | 27.22 |
Vegas Golden Knights | 73.07 | 203.4 | 74.5 | 207.5 | 29.83 |
Washington Capitals | 73.47 | 201.24 | 73.43 | 203 | 30.43 |
Winnipeg Jets | 73.93 | 196.27 | 73.56 | 197.89 | 26.44 |
That’s just the means, with age as a bonus extra, but if you want to compare teams: first, the means listed above graphically displayed, and then a set of plots of everyone in the NHL in their team.
Click to see it larger.
What Does All This Mean?
Despite the narratives that will be made around which team is taller or older or bigger, we have zero evidence that team makeup as expressed in this sort of set of measurements means anything at all. Which means we also have zero evidence it doesn’t matter, as well.
Hockey players are not a random sampling of humans. They are a group that goes through many layers of curation by many people. But in general, you don’t play hockey in the NHL unless NHL Central Scouting puts you on a list when you’re 18. And they make lists of younger teenagers before those draft-eligible lists are made. GMs, coaches and scouts select from those lists.
However, it’s hard to look at those charts of height distribution and not see the magic number of six. We’ve all seen people call a player who is 5’11” short, when the player who is 6’1” is considered a big man. If six feet tall is a conscious or subconscious benchmark for scouts, then the players who aren’t ever getting there are weeding themselves out of hockey as children by moving to some other sport, helped along by the junior systems that are ready to show the smaller kids the door. The best we can say is that shorter players tend to be drafted too low — but like all draft analysis this is a lagging indicator that tells us what was happening 10 years ago, and we can only guess if that’s still true today.
Are the scouts and GMs doing a good job of finding the best hockey players? Or are they biased by their emotional reactions to height — the same kind of bias that can be found in many areas of life, and notably hockey fandom. How efficient or inefficient is their choosing? That’s what we don’t know.
Given this unrepresentative sample of humans, it’s not very revealing to take something like height in the NHL and ask if it correlates with success as a way to judge the choosers. We’d only know how that correlation looks within the group of players we have. It’s more useful to ask if shot rate means anything — that’s behavioural and can be changed or coached — height isn’t. Might we discover that poorer quality players skew taller (grading on the NHL scale)? We might, and it doesn’t escape my notice that the two very shortest players in the NHL are very talented players. I believe that if Victor Mete, one of the shortest defenders in the game, was four inches taller, he’d have a guaranteed job. But anecdotes aren’t the answer to: Does size matter? More complex research might provide some clues, though.
Which size, though? I was already leaning towards a belief that weight mattered more for
how a player might play (not how well). Weight is a proxy measurement of strength, speed, acceleration, power, force, etc. It seems to me that the NHL players agree with me. It’s impossible to overstate how outside the norm NHLers are by weight. If you plot their BMI — which is about the only way to compare them to ordinary people — you get an astonishing distribution with an incredibly high density peak and a grouping around the mean so tight, you might as well call them all the same. The NHL has a standard size, and the variation in it, caused to some degree by variation in height, is minimal.
Is there a legitimate lower limit on height in the NHL? Maybe it’s imaginary. Maybe it’s a real factor of the weight that can be achieved at shorter heights, but my biggest takeaway from this is that the difference between a guy who is 5’10 and one who is 6’2” is in our heads, and the smartest thing is to ignore height entirely because even if it matters, it doesn’t matter more than skill, work ethic and luck. If you deeply and utterly believe that size is always important, then I invite you to do a little project of your own. Write down everything you know about Cale Makar and Victor Hedman and then see if they aren’t more alike than they are different.
William Nylander
To win MVP+30000
Most Regular Season Goals+20000
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