The NHL’s Top 10 Snipers

His lightning-quick release and laser-like accuracy keeps goaltenders awake at night. He’s the player they fear facing on a breakaway. He’s the one who wires one into the top corner in the blink of an eye to win a game in overtime. He is the sniper, hockey’s most dynamic goal scorer.

Crunching Numbers

This isn’t a points contest. A sniper has one job: to shoot and score goals. His primary purpose is to light the lamp. This list not only considers goal totals, but shooting percentage and goals-per-game average. It has a heavily-weighted emphasis on the past three seasons. Here’s a look at the NHL’s top snipers in the game today. Note: All stats are accurate through March 12, 2018.

Goals

These are the top 10 goal scorers since the start of the 2015 season:

  • Alex Ovechkin (125)
  • Vladimir Tarasenko (106)
  • Patrik Kane (105)
  • Brad Marchand (105)
  • Nikita Kucherov (104)
  • Sidney Crosby (103)
  • Evgeni Malkin (99)
  • Tyler Seguin (95)
  • John Tavares (92)
  • Jamie Benn (90)

Goals-Per Game Average

There are five players averaging .5 goals per game or better since the start of the 2015 season:

  • Alex Ovechkin (.54)
  • Patrik Laine (.54)
  • Evgeni Malkin (.54)
  • Auston Matthews (.5)
  • Brad Marchand (.5)

There are six players averaging .5 goals per game or better since the start of the 2016 season:

  • Evgeni Malkin (.56)
  • Patrik Laine (.54)
  • Nikita Kucherov (.52)
  • Brad Marchand (.51)
  • Alex Ovechkin (.5)
  • Auston Matthews (.5)

Shooting Percentage

Here’s what the statistics look like for shooting percentage.

The top six players (minimum 150 games, minimum 300 shots taken) since the start of the 2015 season:

  • Patrik Laine (18.7)
  • Artemi Anisimov (18.4)
  • Mark Schiefele (17.9)
  • Evgeni Malkin (17.7.)
  • Brad Marchand (17.0)
Mark Scheifele
Mark Scheifele makes the most of his shots. (Photo by Glenn James/NHLI via Getty Images)

The top six players (minimum 100 games played, minimum 200 shots taken) since the start of the 2016 season:

  • Mark Schiefele (20.1)
  • Artem Anisimov (19.5)
  • Patrik Laine (18.7)
  • Brad Marchand (18.5)
  • Anders Lee (18.4)
  • Evgeni Malkin (18.1)

Honorable Mentions

There is no shortage of snipers in the NHL. The following players are putting the biscuit in the basket at an elite level, but did not crack the intensely competitive top ten list:

Connor McDavid, Rickard Rakell, Tyler Seguin, Joe Pavelski, John Tavares, Anders Lee, David Pastrnak, Mark Scheifele, Jamie Benn and Filip Forsberg.

Connor McDavid Oilers
Connor McDavid missed the 10th spot in the list by percentage points. (Amy Irvin / The Hockey Writers)

10. Steven Stamkos

Stamkos is one of the best natural goal scorers in the league. He has the uncanny ability, as many of the NHL’s greatest goal scorers have, to be just as wise with the puck as without it. In the split second, he can find open ice and bury a puck wherever he chooses. His arsenal includes a potent wrist shot as well as his quintessential knee-drop one timer at the left half-boards.

Steven Stamkos, Tampa Bay Lightning, NHL
Injuries aside, Stamkos has been unstoppable for the Lightning. (Dan Hamilton-USA TODAY Sports)

His statistics speak for themselves. Four seasons with 40-plus goals and counting, including 51 in 2009-10 and a spectacular 60 in 2011-12 (winning the Maurice ‘Rocket’ Richard Trophy those two years). His numbers would be even higher if not for significant time lost due to injuries.

While Stamkos brings fans to their feet, he strikes fear into opposing goaltenders. At 28-years old, the center still has a lot of hockey in front of him.

9. Patrick Kane

Kane’s stickhandling and balance are so good that he kind of skates around opponents. His accuracy is precise and calculating, almost surgical. He has the fifth most goals in the last four years and the fourth most in the last three years.

Patrick Kane, Blackhawks
A pure sniper, Patrick Kane. (Amy Irvin / The Hockey Writers)

In 2016, Kane recorded a hat trick of sorts when it came to season-end awards. First, with 106 points (46 goals, 60 assists), he became the first United States-born player to win the Art Ross Trophy as NHL scoring leader. In games when he scored at least one point, the Blackhawks were a dazzling 45-12-7. He crafted a particularly remarkable binge by earning at least one point in 26 consecutive games, the longest streak in the NHL since Mats Sundin of the Quebec Nordiques had a point in 30 straight in 1992-93. Second, he won the Hart Trophy in a landslide vote. Third, he won the Ted Lindsay Award, given to the League’s most outstanding player as determined by the NHL Players’ Association.

8. Patrik Laine

It’s hard to believe that Laine is only in his second year in the NHL. The 19-year-old winger was drafted second overall in 2016 by the Winnipeg Jets. He’s been an electric goal scorer since entering the league. His shot is lethal, especially on the power play, where he has a little bit more time and space to set up.

Patrik Laine Jets
Patrik Laine is a goal-scoring, sniping machine. (Amy Irvin / The Hockey Writers)

Laine, a right shot, can score from anywhere. That said, he loves to drift into the left circle of the ice, creating an angle for his teammates to set him up for his patented one-timer. The positioning is very similar to Alex Ovechkin and Steven Stamkos. Going into last night, he had netted 16 in the last 12 games.

7. Sidney Crosby

With shelves of hardware and his name engraved on the Stanley Cup three times, Crosby is arguably the best professional hockey player in modern history. He’s a terrific passer with incredible puck control but also has a great shot.

Crosby was the league’s top sniper in its accuracy shooting competition at this year’s All-Star game. He nailed four targets in 10.730, beating Toronto Maple Leafs forward Auston Matthews who held the second-best time at 12.280.

The center from Cole Harbour, Nova Scotia, averages nearly a half a goal a game for his 13-year career. His highest total came in 2009-10 with 51 goals, followed by last season’s 44-goal campaign. He hit the 30-goal mark in eight seasons and has averaged nearly six game-winning goals per season.

According to goaltender Jonathan Quick, Crosby has, “the best backhand shot in the league. I think it might’ve been my first or second year as a pro, and he scored on me from like the hash mark on the wall. Not with a forehand. With a backhand … that beat me far corner. That’s pretty much unheard of. You should stop that 100 out of 100, but he got it off so quick and the puck came in so hot that I didn’t even know it was in the net until his hands were in the air. It was ridiculous.”

“Crosby just does everything so well. When you’re in the locker room before a game, you look at the two or three stars on the other team and you try to figure out how to make them play to their weaknesses. You point to a name on the whiteboard and say, “Alright, he’s not good at X, so let’s force him to do it as much as possible,” said Quick. “There’s not a single part of Crosby’s game that we can take advantage of. He’s simply an all-around unbelievable hockey player.”

6. Auston Matthews

Matthews’ dominant 40-goal season last year set a Maple Leafs’ rookie record. The kid is extremely talented. He’ll notch a goal with a redirection in front of the net, a sleek drag and pull or by launching a laser from the faceoff circle.

His instincts are natural. His shot is both deceptive and accurate. And his skill level is apparent every time he takes the ice, allowing him to stickhandle and keep all 360 degrees around him in play. “He’ll use the back of the wall, he’ll use his feet, he’ll put it in areas and block a guy’s stick. He’s very talented that way, and he’s able to use his range all around him,” said teammate Connor Carrick. “And then when you have his size, it’s hard to reach around and try to poke that puck free.”

Auston Matthews, NHL, Toronto Maple Leafs
Auston Matthews is the clear leader on this Maple Leafs team. (Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports)

Matthews has worked extensively with skills coach Darryl Belfry the last few years, to re-tool his shot and add to his versatility. He’s also worked on his ability to shoot off either foot or in stride. According to teammate Matt Martin, Matthews never shoots the same way twice.

“He can really shoot from any angle in any position. It’s hard for goalies to know what he’s going to do with the puck, because he’s such a good playmaker too that you can’t just play his shot. He never really commits to just shooting. He leaves himself options, and when he does shoot it, it’s pretty accurate.”

5. Vladimir Tarasenko

With 37, 40 and 39 goals the last three season, Tarasenko qualifies as an elite sniper. His 106 goals are second only to Alex Ovechkin (125) over that period.

At only 26-years old, the 2010 16th overall draft pick is now in the prime of his career. It’s no wonder the St. Louis Blues inked him to an eight-year, $60 million contract. He has speed, incredible hands and is one of the league’s great marksmen.

Vladimir Tarasenko St. Louis Blues
Vladimir Tarasenko can score from anuywhere.  (Amy Irvin / The Hockey Writers)

The Russian right winger has been incredibly consistent, putting up near-point-per-game totals since he joined the League. This season he’s on course for his fourth-straight 35- to 40-goal total.

4.  Brad Marchand

The 5-foot-9 “L’il Ball o’ Hate” has evolved into a marksman. The feisty forward often blurs the line of what’s legal, but make no bones about it — he finds a way to be on the scoresheet almost every night. Marchand is tied with Patrick Kane for the most number of goals (105) scored since the start of the 2015 season.

A late third-round pick in 2006, Marchand has come a long way. He started as a fourth-liner and is now a first liner. His best assets are his speed and his shot. He has one of the fastest releases in the game.

Bruins left wing Brad Marchand
Bruins left wing Brad Marchand (Kevin Hoffman-USA TODAY Sports)

His will to win at any cost came from his father. “My dad would always push on me. He always had it and I think I got it from him,” said Marchand. “I think that is just something that I knew, growing up, if I was going to be a smaller player then I had to be aggressive and I had to continue to go in the dirty areas and play against bigger guys and still play hard. It kind of carried on, and I crossed the line, sure, I did a lot when I was younger, too. But it was never addressed when I was younger and I got away with it and it slipped into my game more than it should. But I could never sit here and say that I would change, or go back, because it allowed to get me where I am — especially my first few years in the league, I had to do something to be on a team that was so deep.”

Marchand’s latest suspension is the fifth of his career and the eighth time he’s received supplemental discipline for dangerous, needlessly dirty tactics. No other player in the NHL with his level of offensive talent has as many dings on his record. His consistently selfish, unsportsmanlike penalties prevent him from being mentioned in the company of truly respected elite players, except in lists like this.

Marchand is only the eighth Bruins player to post consecutive 30-goal seasons over the last 35 years. He joins some elite company in Adam Oates, Cam Neely, Rick Middleton, Glen Murray, Barry Pederson, Charlie Simmer and Keith Crowder.

3. Evgeni Malkin

Geno is a threat every time he takes the ice. He has superior stickhandling and puck control skills to go along with laser-like shooting accuracy. He effortlessly weaves around opponents, finding open ice and creating offense.

Malkin has been in the NHL top ten for shooting percentage each of the last three years (eighth in 2015-16, tenth in 2016-17 and ninth this year). He’s a streaky sniper, often scoring in bunches at a red-hot pace. In a recent five-game stretch, he scored nine goals, shooting at 43 percent. When he’s on, he’s on.

Evgeni Malkin is a scoring threat on every shift. (Flickr/FrenchKheldar)

When Crosby has been out due to injury, Malkin consistently elevates his game to a level that makes up for Crosby’s absence. In 117 career games without Crosby, Malkin has 66 goals and 88 assists. That’s an average of 1.32 points per game, a tick up from his average of 1.15 per game with Crosby in the lineup.
He shoots the puck more (3.9 shots per game without Crosby compared to 3.4 per game with him) and, perhaps not coincidentally, the puck goes in the net more – his shooting percentage rises a full point, from 13.4 percent to 14.4 percent when Malkin plays without Crosby.

The charismatic Russian is a three-time Stanley Cups winner and a two-time Art Ross Trophy winner. He’s also taken home a Calder Memorial, Conn Smythe and Hart Trophy as well as a Ted Lindsay Award. It’s tough to rationalize how Malkin was left off the 100 Greatest Players in NHL history last season.

2. Nikita Kucherov

Kucherov is only just getting started. The 2011 second-round pick (58th overall) is just entering his prime years. At 24, the sniper from Moscow, Russia is one of the NHL’s most dangerous offensive threats.

Kucherov’s numbers have improved every year. When the Lightning missed the playoffs for the first time in his tenure with the team, his drive to make a difference multiplied exponentially. “I never want to miss the playoffs again for the rest of my life,” he said. “I’d rather score 30 goals instead of 40 last year, if there was an opportunity for the team to be in the playoffs.”

Nikita Kucherov
Nikita Kucherov (Kim Klement-USA TODAY Sports)

Dedicated to his craft, Kucherov had synthetic ice laid down in his two-car garage to help him build on his wicked shot and release in the summer. That’s where he toils for hours in the heat refining his technique. He’s a perfectionist, constantly tweaking his release and aiming to improve his accuracy.

“Not a lot of guys can shoot it like [he can],” said Steven Stamkos, Kucherov’s linemate and a two-time Rocket Richard Trophy winner. “I don’t even think I have that in the repertoire. He just gets it and uses the little toe-curve that he has and roofs it.”

1. Alexander Ovechkin

Ovechkin has been one of the most dazzling players to watch since coming into the league in 2005. Since the 2005-06 season, no one has scored more than No. 8. The Russian superstar has a whopping seven seasons of 50 or more goals and is on pace this year for yet another. His 65 goals in 2007-08 were a record for a left wing. Today, he’s still going strong, having just scored his 600th goal.

Alex Ovechkin Capitals Getty
Ovechkin poses with the puck commemorating his 600th career goal. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)

The left winger’s skill set is world class and his shot is lethal. He uses a stick that has a lot of flex and a big toe curve on its blade. This combines for a high-velocity shot that goalies often refer to as ‘heavy.’ His quick, yet powerful and accurate release is truly a goalie’s worst nightmare. It’s like a cannonball.

Although the Great 8 has yet to hoist the Stanley Cup, he’s a six-time winner of the Maurice ‘Rocket’ Richard Trophy and is without question one of the best players to ever lace up skates. He’s won nearly every accolade and award-Hart Memorial, Ted Lindsay and Art Ross trophy. Ovi is the top sniper in the NHL today and one of the greatest goal scorers to every play the game. He is perhaps the only player with a realistic shot at catching Gretzky’s record of 894 goals before he retires.

10 thoughts on “The NHL’s Top 10 Snipers”

  1. Matt Moulson should be on there over Seguin, Sharp, and even Ryder and Neal. The guy has three straight 30 goal seasons and is the NHL’s leading goal scorer on the road this year. 

  2. Typo: Kovalchuk did have 30+ in 2009/2010, and it wasn’t injury riddles, you must have made a mistake with his season being listed in two parts since the trade to new jersey, he had 31 goals in Atlanata that year, and another 10 after being traded to NJ. Only year he hasn’t hit 30 goals in his career was his rookie year, and he had 29 in 65 games that year. So realistically, I’d consider him a for sure, never miss 30 goal guy. Plus he’s going to hit 600 goals in his career almost certainly.

    I honestly don’t see how Gaborik ranks ahead of him or Ovechkin, unless you’re going simply based on this season and not overall goal scoring ability, Gaborik has shown inconsistency more than any of the top 5, while Ovechkin has lagged the last two seasons, he’s 2 goals behind Gaborik but has the same G/G, not to mention he has not once missed 30 goals in his young career and has 16 more career goals in nearly 200 less games of work. 

    1. Stamkos
    2. Ovechkin
    3. Kovalchuk
    4. Gaborik
    5. Kessel
    6. Iginla (don’t know how he didn’t get put on here, with nearly no offensive help the guy still hits 500 goals before 35, and scores 30+ for 11 years without fail, think about that, over a friggin’ decade without being below 30 goals)
    7. Eberle (the kids a complete stud, he’s got better hands, especially in tight, than almost every other player on this list, and while his shot might not be as wicked hard or his release not quite as quick, he’s amazingly accurate and creates more goals with simply creativity than anyone in the league right now)
    8. Neal
    9. Segiun (while I think he’ll be a constant 30+ goal threat, I don’t see him being top 3, he’ll never surpass Stamkos or Ovechkin in goal scoring prowess, and there’s other young guys coming up who are going to give him a good run too)
    10. Semin (I guess, two years ago, sure… but now, just doesn’t seem like he can do it anymore)

    • Thanks for clarifying the Kovalchuk bit. That was indeed my mistake. And “Guest” is on the right track: Snipers obviously score goals but, I was trying to show the guys with the most goals, because of their great shots. Obviously Iginla deserves attention (with 500 goals, your shot must be pretty good). But, I think Iginla and Eberle would be at the top of my honorable mention, among others. 

      Thanks for reading, and sharing your opinion too. 

  3. Need to make honorable mention for  Jordan Eberle on this list. 30 goals in his 2nd year, and still has 10 games left.

  4. what about the person second in the league in goals Malkin, i know he more of a playmaker/sniper combo but he does have a good one timer

    • Malkin seemed to be angry about not making the list and scored on that beautiful top-shelf slapper from the top of the circle 2 or 3 days after I posted this.
      Anyway, I left Malkin out because I feel like he’s the kind of player that is just going to power around the defense and beat the goalie from in close. Yes, that one-timer is lethal, and he certainly has some finesse too, but I see Geno as more of a power forward and power finisher.

  5. Thanks for reading guys…Yea, Seguin was a late addition that I took on and off a couple times. Datsyuk is as accurate as anyone, but I felt he’d be better served at #1 on the list of most silky/crafty players. Ryder was sort of a wild card, but he’s having a heck of a season. 

  6. I don’t know about Tyler Seguin (yet) or Michael Ryder being on this list, but I came to make sure Neal & Gaborik were there and was not disappointed. All I have to say in addition is: Pavel Datsyuk. I may be biased, but he can sure snipe.

    • Michael Ryder may not have much – but he’s certainly one of the better shooters in the league (I don’t know about top-ten). As for Seguin, bit of a Boston homer, but the kid is one of the best shooters I’ve ever seen. At nineteen he’s very close to where Kessel was as a shooter when he left Boston. He might not be top-ten in many minds now, but as this article alludes, he’ll be one of the very best in short-order. 

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