Gerulaitis
Registered User
- Apr 19, 2024
- 208
- 115
That wins/losses are more of a team stat and not necessarily indicative of a particular goaltender's individual performance?
Well, it's Hasek.
A guy like him doesn't lose often on any team
That wins/losses are more of a team stat and not necessarily indicative of a particular goaltender's individual performance?
Well, it's Hasek.
A guy like him doesn't lose often on any team
Ted Nolan. That year is almost certainly the most challenging year Hasek ever had for chances against, and Buffalo didn't have a roster to outscore defensive problems.Hasek recorded a lot of losses that year.
Or am I missing something?
Ted Nolan. That year is almost certainly the most challenging year Hasek ever had for chances against, and Buffalo didn't have a roster to outscore defensive problems.
Yup, spot on. And you can really see ti on the poor backups that got shelled straight to hell that season.
Carey: 2.26
Kolzig: 3.08 (36% higher)
Hasek: 2.83
not hasek: 3.615 (28% higher)
I am not sure if we can say Hasek dominated his replacement more than Carey that year, wins vs losses result as well.
I think if you look at the difference between the quality of teams Trefilov and Kölzig faced. That would explain why Kölzig looks like a bigger dud.
Trefilov were often in net vs non-playoff teams like the Sharks and Sens. While Kölzig for some reason had to face the Wings, Avs, Rangers and Blues.