Marty Barry

Marty Barry’s Career

  • NHL: 1927-28; 1929-40; 12 seasons, 10 quality[1. By modern PPG standards)]
  • Totals:
    • 195G (11th All Time at his retirement),
    • 192A (4th) for
    • 387P (6th) in
    • 509 games (22nd);
    • 57.6 PS (15th)
  • At his retirement, Barry was 10th All Time in GPG, 4th in APG and 8th in PPG[2. Minimum 300 games]
  • At his retirement, Barry was 8th All Time in Offensive Point Shares
  • Era: Barry is 3rd in Goals and OPS, 2nd in GPG, Points and PPG, 1st in Assists and APG, 5th in PS and 12th in Games[3. Of the 14 players to play in at least 500 games between 1927 and 1940]
  • 82-game average: 31G, 31A for 62P
  • 3-year peak (1934-37): 44 game average of 18G, 20A for 38P
  • Playoffs: 15G, 18A for 33P in 43 games
  • Adjusted:
    • Hockey-Reference:
      • 339G, 445A for 784P
      • Adjusted 82-game average: 55G, 72A for 126P
      • Per Game:
    • VsX:
  • Traded once, left unprotected once.
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Charlie Conacher

Career

  • NHL: 1929-1941; 12 seasons, 10 quality
  • Totals:
    • 225G (6th All Time at his retirement),
    • 173A (15th) for
    • 398P (6th) in
    • 459 games;
    • 66.6 PS (10th)
  • At his retirement, Conacher was 3rd in GPG, 7th in APG and 2nd in PPG[1. Minimum 300 games]
  • At his retirement, Conacher was 5th All Time in Offensive Point Shares
  • Era: Conacher is 1st in Goals, GPG, Points, PPG and OPS, 6th in Assists, 3rd in APG and PS, and 16th in Games[2. Of the 37 players to play in 400 games between 1929 and 1941]
  • 82-game average: 40G, 31A for 71P
  • 3-year peak (1933-36): 48-game average of 33G, 20A for 53P
  • Playoffs: 17G, 18A for 35P in 49 games
  • Conacher briefly shared the record for career playoff goals at the end of the 1939-40 season
  • Conacher held the record for career playoff APG from 1939 until the 1944 playoffs
  • Adjusted: 393G, 399A for 792P
  • Adjusted 82-game average: 70G, 71A for 141P
  • If the qualifier is set at 300 games, Conacher is 10th All Time in Adjusted PPG
  • Traded twice at the end of his career.
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