1) Sorry but you are just fundamentally wrong here. I wouldn't normally pull rank here, but I'm playing three days a week (incl with recent ex-pros) and goalie coaching two other days. First, yes of course he had the short side post... as you describe "actually set" when the puck was behind the net. That's what you do. Then, when the pass comes out, he has to worry about BOTH sides of the net. If he stays hugged to the short side post, he is giving up the entire far side of the net and isn't square to the shooter or the puck. So he correctly pushes off the post toward the top of the blue paint to cut the angle. From where the shooter was, there is no way to take away all of the daylight on BOTH sides of the net. As Fuhr would say: you gotta give them something. And there wasn't much - it was a perfect shot. Maybe the televised angles are deceiving you, but from where the shooter was and where the net was, Skinner was pretty darn square. The only thing he might have done better on that shot was do a quick shoulder check prior to the pass, so that he knew exactly where the shooter was going to be... that might have let him get further out to cut the angle more, but as it were, at the moment he's turning his head to follow the pass, Ceci is coasting past him, obstructing his view (sidebar: why didn't Ceci go straight for the shooter? that would have helped take away part of the net), so he doesn't push quite as aggressively as he might normally. I would never classify that as an "error".
2) One was great and it was obvious due to his workload, he made two big errors and one small one. His defender saved him on one, he saved himself on the other. The other goalie made one small error and was punished on it, he didn't have the same workload, so of course guys like you will be quick to criticize, but scoring chances are (nearly entirely) independent of each other, so each individual event should be judged on its own ... and yes, Skinner had a couple of close calls on playing the puck (more below)
3) I agree Nurse got caught by surprise and therefore did not have (or lost) body position on the puck. So losing a battle (to a person, either outwitted, or outcompeted, or both) is more forgivable than being sniped by a puck even when you are in the right position? That puck can move faster than you can (which is mathematically true for ALL goalies) and from most shooting positions it is impossible to take away everything.Any goalie will tell you, if a guy makes his shot, he makes his shot... the art is about forcing him to be as perfect as you are. If you are both perfect, he wins... that's just the way the physics works - pucks are faster than reflexes.
4) I'm sorry but this just shows you don't understand goaltending. The whole point of angles is to be central, which in 90++% of positions there will be EQUAL room on both sides of you. That's by definition "centered on the puck". So if that is the goal, then there is no inherent difference in value of a short side vs far side goal -
completely illogical notion. The only time a goalie coach would ever say "take away one side of the net" is when the puck is at or near the goal line. Skinner did that at the appropriate time on this very play, but then the pass came out to the slot... he correctly moved out and centered.
5) There were 8 high danger chances against.
GAME RECAP: Golden Knights 3, Oilers 1 | Edmonton Oilers And they are all independent of each other. You judge them individually.
6) Unless it is a Mike Smith level giveaway (which these weren't) I generally care more about his play between the pipes, but fair point. My mantra here is a bit old school, but basically amounts to "do no harm, or do less". There were a couple of plays where he held the puck longer than I would like before moving it.. but it wasn't like he passed it up the middle, he rang the boards like you are meant to and it didn't connect with a teammate... this happens a few times a night for most goalies (and defenders who have two hands on the stick).