Article 3FJWG Tale of the tape: How Habs, Preds, Subban, and Weber have fared since the trade

Tale of the tape: How Habs, Preds, Subban, and Weber have fared since the trade

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from on (#3FJWG)
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P.K. Subban and Shea Weber will square off against their former clubs when the Montreal Canadiens host the Nashville Predators on Saturday night.

The franchise defensemen were famously traded for each other in June 2016, and their careers took on different trajectories afterward.

Below, we review how the Predators and Canadiens - along with Subban and Weber - have fared since the blockbuster deal.

Team statistics
Category Predators Canadiens
Overall record73-41-2169-52-15
Winning percentage5450
Goals for406368
Goals against362369
Power-play opportunities443394
Power-play goals9281
Power-play percentage20.720.5
Power-play opportunities against435421
Power-play goals allowed8085
Penalty-kill percentage81.779.9

Upon first glance, it would appear Nashville merely possesses a slight edge over Montreal. However, if you consider the Canadiens flew out of the gate last season to a 13-1-1 mark before their record stabilized, the disparity between the two teams becomes more evident. The Predators ultimately went to the Stanley Cup Final last season and few would be surprised to see them playing again this June with another shot at the title. Meanwhile, the Canadiens have devolved into disarray, toiling near the bottom of the Eastern Conference.

Subban vs. Weber
CategorySubbanWeber
Games played119104
Goals2523
Assists5835
Points8358
Power-play Goals714
Plus-Minus312
Corsi For % (5-on-5)53.6152.18
Points/60 (5-on-5)1.070.85
PDO (5-on-5)100.16100.32

Many wondered why Montreal would trade a younger, healthier defenseman nearing his apex in Subban for a player in the latter stages of his prime in Weber. And Subban has been the far superior player since the deal, although Weber's totals have been inflated by an unsustainable 12 power-play goals he scored in 2016-2017. The tale of the tape appears closer than expected on the surface, but the Predators should still be tried for grand larceny after stealing Subban away - a hypothesis supported by statistics, the eye test, and team performance.

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