- Aug 24, 2011
- 28,697
- 13,696
Sounds like we’re coming to a similar conclusion regardless. He’s playing in front of a struggling team which isn’t helping him keep pucks out of the net (GAA). His lower SV% suggests he’s letting in more shots than usual. Some of that is him, some of that is the team. (SV%)Which of these is more likely:
1. Saros randomly became a bad goalie after being great for years
2. Saros is just as good as before but his team is playing terrible defense, which causes his numbers to look bad when you're not taking the context into account
It's not that complicated.
Expected goals assume a baseline goaltending. If you're saving more goals than expected, then you're outperforming the baseline goaltending.
Yeah, but when you also add that he's 8th place in goals saved above expected, you could assume that his low SV% is a product of the team allowing more high-danger scoring chances against than average.
What I don't understand is just looking at a small subset of stats, coming to conclusions based on those, and just ignoring other statistics that would bring further context to those numbers.
What’s the baseline we’re using for above/below expected? His previous level of play or a league wide expected rate based on shot location? I’m genuinely curious. Also, I obviously haven’t watched a ton of him this year so it’s tough to say how many bad goals he’s given up.
Just trying to get a better understanding here