HOH Top 60 Goaltenders of All Time (2024 Edition) - Preliminary Discussion Thread

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How many goalies should make the final list?

  • Final list of 60, Round 1 list submission of 80

    Votes: 21 75.0%
  • Final list of 80, Round 1 list submission of 100

    Votes: 7 25.0%

  • Total voters
    28
  • Poll closed .

Michael Farkas

Celebrate 68
Jun 28, 2006
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- Ullmark is a very good goalie. I liked him in Buffalo actually. The Vezina overrated him though. It's not the same situation in Ottawa, so it's gonna hurt his numbers (or he's gonna win the Hart). I just don't think he has the shuffle ability to quite deal with how many loose pucks that hang around Ottawa's puddle. He's a zillion times better than Anton Forsberg at least, so his numbers will probably look good by comparison.

In short, he was underrated in Buffalo; overrated in Boston. That's basically a great example of why I'm scared that we end up "rating teams" instead of goalies.

- Giacomin isn't doing that great for me. But I have very limited views. He'll be a focal point tonight.

- I thought about Sorokin. But I felt he didn't have enough seasons to "qualify". He was basically the litmus test for that.

- Not quite to Lumley yet. I think I liked McNeil.

- I think it was very telling how uniform the last project's list was. Folks aren't sure about goaltending, and rightfully so...it's tough. No stats, completely different game basically, heavy team influence...I think we're going to have a lot of overlap again, relatively speaking...
 
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The Pale King

Go easy on those Mango Giapanes brother...
Sep 24, 2011
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I'm trying to finish up my list but I'm a ways off still. Really been enjoying reading the posts on here and reading about the older goalies.

Unfortunately the timing is really bad for me in terms of free time to devote (don't get me wrong, normally I have an excess). Sept - through mid Oct is going to be tough for me to be super active here.

If I can get a list in by the end of Sunday, I'll try my best to participate in a limited way in the first rounds of voting, but no promises at this point. Looking forward to reading the discussion and learning a bunch either way.
 

Professor What

Registered User
Sep 16, 2020
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I found after 65 I ran out of genuinely good goalies.

My back 15 are all guys with things about their game or career or resume I didn't like.

There's only 40 guys in the HHOF, so I guess that's expected.

Maybe we get an update on Sunday on how many lists we've recieved?
I think the guys I have listed are at least decent. Doesn't mean they're world beaters, but they're not losers either. That said, I think I hit that flawed threshold well before 65. I've got guys in my 40s that I'm not entirely thrilled with.
 

Michael Farkas

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Ugh, some of these goalies are so frustrating...

Tony Esposito is to the butterfly what Eddie Giacomin is to the pad stack. It's so bizarre how they use it. Both are very inefficient players. I knew that Giacomin was renowned for playing the puck, I didn't realize it was at virtually any cost. Good lord, he's like trying to stickhandle from one side of the net (behind) and then employ puck protection techniques.

Not at all surprised that he had some early regular season success, then the rest of his career was wishy washy, and couldn't do diddly poo in the playoffs. Just like Tony O.

Even in the cherrypicked '67 to '71 prime window: 2.45 in the regular season, 2.95 in the playoffs.

Another unsympathetic character after watching the tape more in-depth. He shouldn't be far from Esposito and it should be lower than you, collectively, have him, imo.
 

Sentinel

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May 26, 2009
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Guys like Vernon, Giguere, Richter, Rask are given undeserved boosts based on team production. They were not among the leading team HEROES; to wit, they were solid role players, not difference makers.

Night after night, Rinne was the best player on his team, and it was well known. Rask? Not so often.
This is batshit crazy. If Giguere and Richter aren't "heroes," I don't know who is. 03 Giguere and 96 Richter are the stuff of legends.
 

Michael Farkas

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Giguere isn't close to my list, obviously. Richter is on my weak interest list, and is staving off being crossed out...for now.

@tarheelhockey haven't seen you around very much, not sure if you're participating in this. Hope that you would have.

In this post, Award & All-Star Voting (1912-present) - the 1971 all star voting, I think the goaltender AS voting should be Eddie Johnston, not Ed Johnstone.
 

VanIslander

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Sep 4, 2004
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This is batshit crazy. If Giguere and Richter aren't "heroes," I don't know who is. 03 Giguere and 96 Richter are the stuff of legends.
Of course they had some peaks, most good goalies have their moments. But year after year, looking at careers and relative talents, some goalies were good but not top 3 on their team most nights whereas guys like the Beezer were top stars for thè team for a long time.
 

rmartin65

Registered User
Apr 7, 2011
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I got my list in last night, though I feel very uncertain in several places. I mostly tried to make sure I had people in the right range and didn't worry too much about the minor rankings between individuals, since we'll (hopefully) work those details out in the coming weeks.

It struck me that all the big name early guys- Moran and LeSueur being the best two, but I've seen people throwing around Hern, Nicholson, Paton, Hutton, etc- all come from the East. Is it true that all the best goalies were in the East at this point, or are we looking at geographic bias? I'm leaning towards bias at the moment.

Here are a couple more quotes about some of the early western goalies that I've been really trying to get a handle on over the past ~10 days. I'll continue searching through the weekend since people will be submitting their initial lists and maybe it will influence some people.

The first quote comes from the Toronto Star, 4 March 1905 Page 8. The article is discussing the 1905 Rat Portage team that was being sent East to challenge for the Cup. Rat Portage would ultimately lose the challenge (2 games to 1, scores of 9-3 (RP), 4-2 (OTT), 5-4 (OTT)), though it was one of the best/closest series the Cup had seen to-date.

GIROUX IN GOOD FORM​

GIROUX as a goalkeeper has performed more consistently than any other goaltend in the league with the exception of "Dutchy" Morrison of Portage la Prairie, though Charlie Quinn of the Rowing Club when in shape is the best there is in the Province. Quinn in late games has been off. Giroux was about three-quarters of the defence when with the Marlboros, and he figures largely in the Thistle games.

1905 Manitoba teams and (primary) goalies
Winnipeg Victorias: Mouat Little and Jack Warren
Winnipeg Rowing Club: Charlie Quinn
Rat Portage Thistles: Eddie Giroux
Brandon Wheat City: Claude Temple
Portage la Prairie: Dutchy Morrison

1905 was one of the peak seasons in how the talent was split between various leagues. In addition to the Manitoba league, the East was split into 2... actually 3 top tier leagues in the CAHL, FAHL, and IPHL. So we are looking at really 4 leagues and 21 teams that had a claim to be playing at the highest level.

CAHL teams and (primary) goalies:
Montreal HC: Oliver Waugh
Quebec HC: Paddy Moran
Montreal Westmount: Fred Brophy (the goal-scorer)
Montreal Shamrocks: Mike Kenny
Montreal Victorias: Nathan Frye
Montreal le National: Joseph Cattarinich

FAHL teams and (primary) goalies
Ottawa HC: Dave Finnie
Brockville HC: Kerr
Cornwall HC: Jack Hunter
Montreal Montagnards: Henri Menard
Montreal Wanderers: Bill Baker

IPHL teams and (primary)- Since I haven't been through this league yet I am less sure about if these were indeed the primary goalies, so someone please fact check me if I am wrong
Calumet Miners: Billy Nicholson
Portage Lake HC: Riley Hern
Michigan Soo: Joeseph "Chief" Jones
Pittsburgh Professionals: Jack Winchester
Canadian Soo: Pete Maltman

Maybe its just because I have spent a lot of time in this era over the past 2-ish years, but that is a lot of names that received significant praise, both during the careers and after they ended. Sometimes long after. And it is pretty well split; 3 of the four leagues has 2-3 names that really stand out to me

Manitoba: Morrison, Quinn, Giroux
CAHL: Moran, LeSueur are the big names, and Cattarinich spent some time in the NHA
FAHL: probably the weakest goalie talent here... Finnie, Menard, Baker, and Hunter all had decent careers, but none are what I would call particularly significant in a historical sense
IPHL: Nicholson, Hern, Winchester

I haven't really decided what this all means yet, haha, but I wanted to get some thoughts down. Are we (or just me?) overrating some of these guys? I count 8 names there that I spent some real time on, trying to figure out who/how many should be on my list.

Alright, that is enough of that. The second quote is from The Province (I believe British Columbia... Vancouver?), 20 November 1908 Page 13, though the story is in several papers across Canada.

The Ottawa club, by the way, is hurting to get together a team. Negotiations have practically been completed for the signing of Jack Winchester of Toronto to play goal. Winchester played last year with Winnipeg Maple Leafs and is considered quite up to the standard of Paddy Moran. Winchester was reported signed by Wanderers, but Ottawa got there first.

By November 1908, Ottawa HC had Percy LeSueur and the Wanderers had Riley Hern... and these teams were thinking about replacing those two (big) names with Jack Winchester? Does anybody know if LeSueur or Hern had other offers on the table, or was Winchester considered an upgrade?
 

Michael Farkas

Celebrate 68
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I think Sawchuk is the most vulnerable of the 3 O6 goalies. For all the high praise in the 80s and 90s I can't find any in the 55-65 timeframe. You see praise during the Cup run, then a whole lot of so so praise until way after his retirement.

I don't know when his untouchable reputation starts, but I can't find anything pre 1985.
One of the surprises (to a degree) is Sawchuk holding up so well. On paper, I was sort of against him for the reasons that you outlined. "Five years and what else?" I'll have him over Glenn Hall.

I wouldn't have expected to have Sawchuk over Hall.
I wouldn't have expected to like Parent and not like Vachon.
I wouldn't have expected to like Dryden over Esposito (though that one aligns with canon)

Ya know, also...don't look now...and I'm just generalizing but...

Guys that won often/a lot:
Plante
Bower
Sawchuk
Parent
Smith
Dryden

Guys that famously did not win often/a lot:
Vachon
Giacomin
Esposito
Crozier
Worsley until he was in his late 30's on a wagon Habs team that leaked into the expansion era

Folks that are doing the work here should see a various obvious and interesting pattern...
 

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