You're serious aren't you? No one in this thread is comparing Osgood to Roy. The thread is about Patrick Roy and the teams he was on. Even when you brought up Osgood it wasn't in relation to Roy. It was pretty much next time someone says Osgood is overrated I'll say this.
This whole thread is basically about bashing Patrick Roy because his Stanley Cup teams weren't Hasek's Buffalo teams. While Roy was clearly the MVP of his teams in at least 86 and 93 (I didn't think he should have won his third, despite excellent play), those were good teams with good players that played against teams that were not as good as they were.
That's what players like Osgood, or others are often criticized for; they are a "product". Even if they themselves are clearly one of the best players on a very good or great team. Martin Brodeur gets the same treatment, and people bring up "he played behind Stevens and Niedermayer for so long." Yeah... and? In the mid to late 90s, Stevens was finishing anywhere from 5-20 or not at all in Norris voting, and Niedermayer almost never got any votes. At the same time, Brodeur was a regular Vezina finalist. He was the one getting a large number of Hart votes.
The statement that Roy's 86 Habs had good defense is certainly true; they had two of the league's top defensive forwards in Gainey and Carbo, as well as two top defensemen in Robinson and Chelios, and many other players who were decent to good in their own end, especially for the time. But that doesn't mean that Roy himself was not the key to winning the Cup. They were better in the regular season than the other teams they played, save perhaps the Flames (Calgary finished with two more points). But Had Roy put in the same .875 sv% that he did in the regular season, that's an extra 1.2 goals per game that he's giving up. They got out of the first round with a 3-0 sweep of Boston; two of which were won by a goal. The second round was a seven game series against Hartford, with the final game going to OT. If we simply add a goal to Roy's games, we end up with a regulation win for Hartford in games 4 and 7, ending Montreal's run after round 2. If we continue to project the "plus one" to what the games looked like after that, they go to OT in game 1 against the Rangers, lose game 3, and the series is 3-2 after 5 in favor of the team that won game 1. Against Calgary, they lose game 2, and go to OT in games 4 and 5. That makes it L-L-W-?-? for the final round.
I think that's a pretty secure argument that Roy deserved the Smythe. No, he didn't carry them. But it was still "we're picking the goalie because he deserves it, not because we don't know who to pick."