McDavid has won the Hart twice, in 2016-17 and last season, and the scoring title three times, in 2016-17, 2017-18 and last season. He's scored 27 points (10 goals, 17 assists) in 14 games this season, second to Draisaitl in the scoring race and tied with teammate Ryan Nugent-Hopkins for the NHL lead in assists. His per-game rates for goals (0.71) and points (1.93) are at NHL-career highs too, and his per-game rate for assists (1.21) isn't far off the high he set last season (1.29).
The most breathtaking thing about McDavid always has been his acceleration, in terms of how he bursts by everyone on the ice with or without the puck. Well, look at how he has accelerated over his NHL career by the numbers too. In goals per game, he has gone from averaging 0.36 to 0.37 to 0.50, to 0.53 for two seasons, then to 0.59 and now to 0.71. In points per game, he has gone from averaging 1.07 to 1.22 to 1.32 to 1.49 to 1.52 to 1.88 to 1.93.
Another way to look at it: McDavid became the sixth-fastest in NHL history to score 600 points when he had a goal and an assist for Nos. 600 and 601 in a 5-4 win against the St. Louis Blues on Sunday. Only Wayne Gretzky (274), Mario Lemieux (323), Peter Stastny (394), Mike Bossy (400) and Jari Kurri (419) took fewer games than McDavid (421) to reach the milestone. McDavid took 92 games to reach 100 points, 82 more to reach 200, 68 more to reach 300, 67 more to reach 400, 64 more to reach 500 and 53 more to reach 600.
Draisaitl is 26 and McDavid 24, so each is in his prime. They have each other, creating matchup nightmares whether they play on separate lines or together. Their supporting cast has gotten stronger, especially over the past 18 months while the Oilers have turned over much of the roster. But it goes beyond offense, and it all comes back to their drive to make the most of their talent.