Fair point. The best thing they did was leave him in the AHL full time and not bring him up in a platoon role. Maybe he’s just talented and wouldn’t have mattered who drafted him but my point was if you could draw up a development path from draft night to being full time nhl starter, it’s hard to argue a better way to do it. ( obviously there’s outliers and guys who were generationally that started younger like Roy) I’m talking about from Goalie prospect to NHL starter. I’m sure he had his fair share of hiccups in the AHL and he will probably have some more in the NHL. That being said, he’s played many games and has stayed healthy( knock on wood) so he’s what I would call ripened. 23-26 are really important ages for a goalie historically and he’s right there.
Some Flames fans have argued he should have been brought up earlier citing other young and smaller goalies like Saros' beginning as a back up in the NHL as examples of why Wolf should be playing full time earlier. I've argued that his path seems to be reasonable and in fact, perfect for Wolf's situation. Intentionally or unintentionally, IMO the Flames have done a good job balancing his development and giving him a taste of NHL calibre in appropriate doses without burying him or rushing him. I won't argue against the idea that he could have been relatively fine starting to playing full time starting from last years TDL though (Markstrom TDL trade rumors vs off season trade). NHL regular this season has been good and not problematic too.
Looking at a lot of goalies drafted in the year just before Wolf and after, he's honestly on par if not ahead of many of them even against some of their pedigree. I've honestly been kinda holding my breath on him because even though his performance has been good. The Flames have been ultra lousy in drafting and developing goalies for the last 20-30 years and my fingers were crossed they wouldn't wreck him. I'm starting to breathe again and getting excited for Wolf. He's won accolades wherever he goes and IIRC he's been putting his name as a top echelon player in every league he's playing in.
Everyone points at Wolf's size as his biggest hurdle. I say nay. It's his second or possibly third biggest hurdle. The first was pandemic. Second and third was growing up in California/size.
IMO Wolf's biggest developmental hurdle was the pandemic which IMO may have affected all developing players in that period by 0.5-1.5 seasons. I've mentioned in our threads that if Wolf is matching performance at an age matching someone who got most of that D+1 to D+4 development prior to the pandemic, Wolf is actually ahead of them. I've argued that Saros at age 23 had an extra year or more of development than what Wolf has now due to the pandemic shutting things down and limiting opportunities to train effectively. Players still figured it out, but in comparison to Saros, the road was certainly arguable to be rockier. Especially since Saros grew up in region that is somewhat a goalie factory (Finland) and California hasn't historically produced a lot of goalies.
There have been 5 California goalies to play in the NHL. 4 are currently active and only 2 have more than 50 GP. Demko is 1, Delia 2, Wolf is 4th and Cooley 5th. Wolf is the youngest by 4-7 years to the current active goalies. There have been substantially more than five <6'0 goalies playing in the NHL which is why I consider this one of the bigger hurdles. Depending on how things go, Wolf could end up as the 2nd or 3rd all time games play by a California goalie by season end.
All time regular season stats for NHL goalies born in California. Complete list of NHL goalies who were born in California.
www.quanthockey.com
15th all time in wins in the WHL and likely would easily have been 10th all time (2 wins away) had part of the season not been cancelled due to the pandemic. Had a chance to have been 1st if the played an extra season/remaining season of 54 games (17 wins away from 1st all time in WHL wins). Ranked 9th all time in shut outs in a season at 9. That's 4 away from tying the all time record at 13 shut outs... and he got that in a 54 game shortened season.
WHL goalies who hold the all-time record for the most wins in WHL. All-time win leaders for WHL goalies.
www.quanthockey.com
WHL Goalies - Most Shutouts in a Single Season
The Western Hockey League's regular season has come to an end due to the novel coronavirus pandemic.
globalnews.ca
Wanna know what's crazy? It's going to be really crazy for him if Wolf becomes our starter and plays his 399th game as a Flame. Milestone after milestone is just right there for him to grab from a Flames franchise POV.
94 more GP and he will replace Ramo as 13th all time for most goalie GP for the Flames. 113 more GP and he replaces Rittich as 10th all time GP for goalies. Markstrom is 5th all time for us at 213. There's a reason a few of us have been waiting with bated breath on Wolf and fighting hard against the hype train.
EDIT: DOH! Used Wiki GP and that doesn't count this years 10 GP for a total of 28 GP so far. Adjust above calcs by 10.
CGY Records
I'll throw it out there. I'm not trying to hype or pressure Wolf. But if he plays the vast majority of his career here, his 214th GP will make him a top 5 GP goalie in Calgary. He would be one of two successful drafted and developed goalies in Calgary <6'0 (He's closer to 5'11 or 5'10 than 6'0) alongside Mike Veron who is 5'9. At minimum, I really hope Wolf stays with us until at least the 214th game, making 5th all time GP for goalie for the Flames over Markstrom.