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Jake Gardiner Makes His Teammates Much Better
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Sep 20, 2016, 11:12 EDTUpdated:
As everybody knows, September is Jake Gardiner Appreciation Month.  I kicked off JGAM by writing about how, contrary to popular opinion, Gardiner is actually very good defensively.  As I discussed in that piece, Jake has had pretty big, positive defensive impacts over the past few seasons, comparable to some of the better defencemen around the league.  This time around I’m going to talk about another area where Gardiner’s impacts are impressive: how he lifts his teammates.

DEFENCEMEN

One of the most impressive things about Jake Gardiner is how virtually every player who spends time with him sees their results improve.  I’ve gathered a list of all the players who have played at least 200 minutes at even strength with Jake over the past three seasons.  I calculated what you could call their “Jake Rel”, which is the difference between their Corsi when they play with Gardiner vs when they’re playing but Jake’s on the bench.  For players who at least one of the last three seasons with the Leafs and at least one with another team, I’ve included only the seasons where they played for the Leafs in their “Without” statistics.  Unfortunately, since Hockey Analysis only does splits by seasons, not by team, for years in which a player was traded mid-season (like Roman Polak this year), I’ve had to include all data for that season (ie. Polak’s “without” numbers include his time in San Jose).
Let’s start by looking at Leafs defencemen.  I’ve coloured players who were at least 1% better with Jake in green, while players who were at least 1% worse in red.  (All data in this post comes from the very useful Hockey Analysis.)
Player
CF% W/
CF% W/out
Jake Rel
Phaneuf
51.0
43.8
7.2
Franson
49.0
46.5
2.5
Rielly
53.7
46.6
7.1
Polak
46.5
48.0
-1.5
Ranger
44.1
41.6
2.5
Holzer
45.5
41.8
3.7
The results are pretty stark.  Of the six defencemen who have played at least 200 minutes with Gardiner over the past three seasons, five of them have seen significant jumps of at least 2.5% in their shot attempt ratio when playing with Gardiner.

FORWARDS

Now let’s take a look at forwards using the same criteria.
Player
CF% W/
CF% W/out
Jake Rel
Kadri
51.6
47.9
3.7
JVR
49.9
44.4
5.5
Bozak
50.4
44.4
6.0
Kessel
48.5
43.4
5.1
Lupul
46.1
42.8
3.3
Holland
49.5
45.0
4.5
Clarkson
48.7
41.5
7.2
Komarov
55.6
48.3
7.3
Raymond
49.3
41.2
8.1
Winnik
50.7
50.5
0.2
Parenteau
52.6
53.9
-1.3
Smith
47.2
42.3
4.9
McClement
44.7
35.7
9.0
Panik
53.6
44.6
9.0
Kulemin
45.0
39.9
5.1
Santorelli
47.3
47.6
-0.3
Booth
54.2
43.5
10.7
Grabner
55.4
47.7
7.7
Matthias
48.3
48.0
0.3
This is where Jake’s impact becomes really clear.  Of the 19 forwards who have played at least 200 minutes with Gardiner over the past three seasons, only one had a Corsi that was worse by over 1% when playing with Gardiner.
Not only are almost all of these players better when playing with Jake, but most of them are much better.  Seven of these players are at least seven percent better, which is an exceptionally large jump, while a few more are at least five percent better.
In my last post on Gardiner I looked at his CA/60 Rel to show how good he is at reducing shot attempts relative to his team-mates.  And while those overall numbers give us a nice snapshot, I think breaking down the impact on a player-by-player basis like this helps make it clear just how big and consistent Gardiner’s impact is. 
Virtually every player who’s spent any significant stretch of ice time paired with Gardiner over the past few seasons has seen their on-ice results improve considerably.  Jake Gardiner makes the players around him better.
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