oh i didn’t know this, poor guy
i was nine during his rookie year and we fourth graders LOVED troy gamble although tbf i think most of us weren’t even watching the games until the playoffs because of parental malaise
i dug this up on google: he likely
got that concussion in february. his record when he went down was 13-13-4, 3.38 GAA, .884 SV%. a bottom five starter in the league, looking only at averaging stats.
his stats the rest of the way were even worse: 3.75, .856 in eight starts after a week off. he did have a good playoffs though: two strong starts in essentially one goal losses to gretzky and the kings, one win in a wild 6-5 victory, and a stinker. mclean played the other two games.
but what i am seeing here is it wasn’t the concussion that destroyed his once promising rookie season. he had kind of just turned into a pumpkin at the end of december. from christmas to the concussion game he was horrendous: 4-8-2, 4.36, .861 (tbf, mclean was equally bad in his half of the starts in those two months).
whereas up to christmas, gamble had top five stats: 9-5-2, 2.53 (5th), 907 (4th), one win out of the top ten despite playing on a garbage team and starting 5-10 fewer games than most other starters.
but it is interesting to look at the
stats leaders up to christmas. almost all rookies or guys in their first starting roles:
wins are 1. belfour, 2. cheveldae, 4. terreri
GAA: 1. belfour, 4. gamble, 8. cujo
SV%: 1. richter, 4. belfour, 5. gamble
ie, he was right there with some big boys until he hit his rookie wall
my other thought here is, with all due respect to gamble and his career-destroying injury (who knows if he could have had a long career as a 1A or backup?), it was maybe for the best for mclean to be unopposed in the net. i feel like having a clear pecking order where mclean was 1 and whitmore was a very dependable 2 was useful for mclean to himself get back to an all-star level and hit the heights he hit in 92 and 94. in my memory, he just didn’t seem do well with gamble breathing down his neck.