HOH Top 60 Goaltenders of All Time (2024 Edition) - Round 2, Vote 1

ContrarianGoaltender

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Again, I'm not in the business of telling anyone coaching doesn't matter. Brodeur's goal numbers were helped by playing for defensive teams. His save percentage probably wasn't. But you ask a great question...was he randomly worse? Do goalies randomly fluctuate this much versus skaters?

Yeah...probably not. Must be a big influence out there and we need to account for it...evaluate the goalie, not the coach, in my opinion.

For your method, you might not need to evaluate the coach. If you think you can fully separate team effects through subjective talent evaluation, then go for it. Even when I disagree with you, I'm always interested to hear your perspective, because at the core we have the same philosophy: Evaluate the individual goalie, not the collective team result. Like you, I am also frustrated at times by some of the evaluation schemes that put a lot of weight on accomplishments, awards voting, top-whatever save percentage finishes, playoff runs where a goalie's team advanced to the Finals by beating two teams 20 points below them in the standings, etc., without appropriate context. I don't care about any of that stuff, all I care about is how well the goalie stopped the puck and how much I think his team helped or hurt him in that endeavour (plus of course any non-save impacts a goalie might be having as well).

The difference in my approach, and why I feel that the coaching impact is actually quite important, is that I'm mainly looking at the stats and working backwards. Therefore, I need to get as good as possible of an estimate of what the team effects were on any given goalie, and then what's left over is the goalie's individual portion.

I think there is something to be said for the actual results, which is why I choose to focus on the objective performance record. If an obviously talented goalie doesn't quite live up to his innate ability, should he really get full credit for that? Maybe another guy has extended success even while nobody understands how. If it's short enough, I completely agree that it could just be a hot streak or an unsustainable run, but at some point it becomes a meaningful impact that is winning his team hockey games (and possibly even championships). Those are the cases where our philosophies are probably going to conflict the most.

I'll let Jiri Holecek explain that basic idea, in his far more colourful way (from Betweeen the Pipes by Randi Druzin):

"I don't understand why people in the NHL are so concerned with the goalie's style rather than his success. Why is it important that a goalie look good in a goal? Why is it so important that he doesn't fall to the ice that often? Because he needs to look good in photographs? They're stupid, those Canadians. Lumberjacks!"

All of your feedback on that last post is perfectly valid, by the way. I agree that rankings can be imprecise, but you can't be overly precise in making a short case like that. That was a quick and dirty way to show that even great goalies have defensive impacts, which we agree is obviously true. And you're right that choosing to not give credit for high-GP seasons means I need to watch out for goalies whose results deteriorated because of that workload. Not sure I have an entirely satisfactory fix to that yet, but it's one of the reasons I rate Miikka Kiprusoff quite a bit higher than I did on my last list, for example. Also, a season like Grant Fuhr in 1987-88 should still be viewed quite highly in my opinion, because he was the best goalie in the world over the first 45 games and very close to the worst goalie in the world over the last 30, and on any other team he's probably just playing that first 45.

As for Brodeur, I'm not entirely sure. His performance didn't seem to drop off in the regular seasons as much, and I still think he had a lower average workload per game than other goalies, plus the Devils also typically had one of the easiest travel schedules of any team. In the 11 playoffs he played in after playing 70 or more regular season games, his team was upset in the first round in 6 of them, which is why I'm not completely convinced he was actually that much more reliable than some of the other goalies coming off of high workloads in the postseason who maybe just didn't have the luxury of 11 tries to get it right. Sure, Brodeur does have 2000, 2001 and 2003, but that 2000/2001 team in particular was a juggernaut. I think it's definitely possible that if he only plays 65 instead of 77, the Devils maybe get through some of those first rounds though, it's definitely something to consider.
 

Michael Farkas

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I think there is something to be said for the actual results, which is why I choose to focus on the objective performance record. If an obviously talented goalie doesn't quite live up to his innate ability, should he really get full credit for that? Maybe another guy has extended success even while nobody understands how. If it's short enough, I completely agree that it could just be a hot streak or an unsustainable run, but at some point it becomes a meaningful impact that is winning his team hockey games (and possibly even championships). Those are the cases where our philosophies are probably going to conflict the most.

I'll let Jiri Holecek explain that basic idea, in his far more colourful way (from Betweeen the Pipes by Randi Druzin):

"I don't understand why people in the NHL are so concerned with the goalie's style rather than his success. Why is it important that a goalie look good in a goal? Why is it so important that he doesn't fall to the ice that often? Because he needs to look good in photographs? They're stupid, those Canadians. Lumberjacks!"
Look, this isn't going to be fun for anyone if we sit around agreeing with each other...you're the numbers guy, I'm the...lumberjack (?) - this is what happens when you skip rehearsal...

No I appreciate where you're coming from on all of this, of course. You're asking the right questions (not that I'm the arbiter of "right", I just mean that I think that they're thought-provoking).

Since there was a lot of agreement going on, I'll turn to the disagreement in the quoted. And I'll answer Holocek directly.

It's not necessarily about the "style" because there's a variety of styles at the top of my list and I think all of our lists.

Roy - butterfly
Hasek - uhhh...him
Brodeur - hybrid, but also kind of his own thing
Plante = Brodeur
Roy = Hall-ish

etc.

The reason why the talent level is important is because the talent is more likely to give you consistent results. The position lends itself to "the percentages" as folks say. Well, having a consistent and meaningful save process is the over-arching "playing the percentages". If you play the game like a clown, you get uneven results, you become unreliable....

Who played like a legit a-hole and had long term success across multiple conditions? Looking at my weak/no interest list...
Tony Esposito maybe....though he famously is the worst playoff goalie this side of Bobrovsky.

I don't know who else really made a career out of being a jester. Sure, we can get a handful of years stuck together or some pop-gun years here and there...but as you slide down that ladder of legitimate talent, consistent save process, fundamentally strong hockey, etc. it's more and more likely that you can't sustain it and/or they figure out how to beat it or whatever.

And averaging stats go a long way to covering that inconsistency up (see: the goalies of record in the 2011 and 2012 Stanley Cup Playoffs, one guy is throwing 20% of his games into the unwinnable column; the other guy, 0%).

So really, you're getting the unreliable right in front of you, but because of the nature of the stats, we fail to pick it up in the "quick and dirty" way.

It's like the no hockey sense, but athletic defenseman that comes into the league...makes it at 19 years old, blows 20 one-timers by unsuspecting goalies on the power play for a couple years, "ah, he'll get better defensively as he matures...don't worry", entry-level contract runs out, big deal..............cap dump.

I'm not saying that player, let's call him, Dion P. - no, that's too obvious...D.Phaneuf...didn't score those goals when he did. I'm not saying he didn't "bam, ka-bam, Double Dion" those guys...but it obviously (to me) wasn't gonna hold because he didn't really have a process because he really didn't have a brain. So, once the league figures him out, he has no place to go adaptability wise, he has no place to go because his athletic prime is running out, and now it's just a guy that's in the league because he was in the league yesterday.

It's the sustainable aspects that need to be cherished - and in the case of this list, rewarded - in my opinion because otherwise you're probably going to scrape too much "team" or "coach" into the goalie list.

It all exists on a spectrum, too.

There's large scale...why couldn't Palmateer keep it up? Why couldn't Ranford repeat 1990?
There's medium scale...why was Richter great in '94, the '96 World Cup, the '97 Playoffs but really quite unreliable all around that and even through that (that is, 1995, the '96 season/playoffs)?
There's small scale...why was Dryden so good for the Canadiens, but underwhelming for Team Canada? Why did Parent really only make it work in Philadelphia, despite all the penalties they took?

Even to Holecek...what's your problem man? You got a ton of starts stolen from you by Vlad Dzurilla...that probably shouldn't have happened. The pure talent gap is large there.

And I agree, we have to give some credit to guys that actually did a thing. At the bottom of my list, I have complete or near-complete buffoons like Gump, Richter, Giacomin, Esposito, etc. because there aren't enough players in this very fragile position. But for all the "objective truthers" out there, we still can't get over the hump on some things - like the Cechmanek conundrum that I posed some weeks ago...which isn't for this thread, of course. We'll probably eventually get to Alec Connell who has the lowest GAA in combined RS and PO history if I recall, yet, there isn't much fanfare for him historically...objectively, he might be the best goalie of all time. But...

So everyone gets to dabble in the "buffet style" of things to some degree...which I think is fine, I'm doing it from the opposite end, so to speak, because I see a clear pattern.
 

ContrarianGoaltender

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To try to look at the issue of coaching impacts on goaltending, I pulled the team save percentage numbers for every coach from every season since 1948-49 (using unofficial numbers to fill in the gaps for 1948-49 to 1954-55). We can adjust all those for league average, to get an expected save percentage for each coach, all the way from Tommy Ivan in first place (0.78) to Steve Kasper at the bottom (1.23). Those numbers are my adjustment factor, which means that in a .900 average environment, Ivan's goalies would put up a .922 while Kasper's would come in around .877.

For partial seasons (where a coach was hired or fired mid-year), I'm just pro-rating results. That's not entirely correct, as a lot of times things turn around under a new coach, but it's way easier from a calculation perspective and will likely wash out mostly for any longer-tenured guys.

I also looked at the average team discipline (i.e. power play opportunities relative to average) for each coach, because that's something that impacts goalies. We also don't want to double-count, i.e. if a team is disciplined but a coach's teams are always disciplined, then it's kind of already "baked in" to their coaching rating.

Lastly, I ran the numbers for backup goalies and calculated their numbers playing with the given goalie, as well as their career numbers while playing for all other teams, which will also give us a backup rating to help add information to the coaching analysis.

Hopefully that all makes sense. If anyone notes any errors I'm happy to make corrections, this was a bit rushed together and may need to be refined based on feedback.

Ken Dryden is the easiest, since he played all of his meaningful regular season career for one coach:

GoalieFromToGPSASv%LgAvgSoSBkp SoSBkp SABkp Sv%Bkp OtherBkp GPCoachGP% w/GCoachBackupCoach DiscTeam Disc
Dryden
1972​
1979​
391​
10872​
0.921​
0.893​
-0.09​
-0.34​
4576​
0.897​
0.885​
314​
Bowman
2141​
18%​
0.91​
0.89​
0.93​
0.89​

Explanation of terms:
SoS is strength of schedule pulled from the outstanding Hockeygoalies.org
Bkp Sv% - save percentage while teammates
Bkp Other - career save percentage adjusted to league average when not playing with that goalie
(If goalies did not have any games on other teams, I just assumed league average)
Bkp GP - weighted average career GP of the backup goalies
% w/G is the percentage of the coach's career that he shared with that goalie
Coach Disc and Team Disc are team discipline ratings using power play opportunities against relative to average
All the averages were weighted using shots faced
For all the ratings, below 1 means easier for the goalie, and above 1 means tougher for the goalie


Notes for Dryden:
- he played a far more difficult strength of schedule compared to backups than any of the other post-expansion goalies
- his backups did far better when playing with Dryden than they did elsewhere
- Bowman is one of the better defensive coaches (unsurprisingly) with a 0.91 rating
- Dryden's backups did even better than they would expect given that they were playing for Bowman (although that should perhaps be expected since they played easier opposition)
- Dryden's teams were more disciplined than Bowman's average (even though Bowman's teams were typically very disciplined)
- In summary, Ken Dryden got an obviously huge team lift from his coach and team defence

Moving on to Patrick Roy:

GoalieFromToGPSASv%LgAvgSoSBkp SoSBkp SABkp Sv%Bkp OtherBkp GPCoachGP% w/GCoachBackupCoach DiscTeam Disc
Roy
1986​
1988​
138​
3640​
0.889​
0.878​
-0.02​
0.00​
2722​
0.887​
0.866​
355​
Perron
287​
48%​
0.95​
0.85​
0.89​
0.87​
Roy
1989​
1992​
217​
5916​
0.910​
0.884​
-0.13​
-0.09​
3032​
0.882​
0.871​
241​
Burns P
1019​
21%​
0.90​
0.92​
0.83​
0.79​
Roy
1993​
1995​
173​
5127​
0.906​
0.893​
0.00​
-0.20​
1445​
0.874​
0.889​
174​
Demers
1007​
17%​
0.99​
1.13​
1.00​
0.95​
Roy
1996​
1996​
39​
1130​
0.907​
0.898​
-0.01​
-0.07​
1983​
0.909​
0.891​
416​
Tremblay
159​
25%​
0.96​
0.83​
0.97​
0.90​
Roy
1996​
1998​
166​
4816​
0.917​
0.904​
-0.12​
-0.10​
2432​
0.905​
0.891​
379​
Crawford
1169​
14%​
1.02​
0.88​
1.03​
1.05​
Roy
1999​
2002​
249​
6455​
0.917​
0.906​
0.00​
-0.06​
2314​
0.912​
0.901​
282​
Hartley
944​
26%​
1.02​
0.89​
0.97​
0.98​
Roy
2003​
2003​
63​
1723​
0.920​
0.909​
0.04​
-0.03​
593​
0.916​
0.912​
214​
Granato T
215​
29%​
0.99​
0.95​
0.98​
0.99​
Total
1986
2003
1045
28807
0.910
0.895
-0.05
-0.09
14521
0.895
0.887
281
All
851
0.98
0.93
0.95
0.93

Notes:
- Patrick Roy likely got a lot of help from his team in the early years as a Hab (1986-1992)
- It's tough to fully rely on the number for Jean Perron here since 48% of his games were with Roy in net, however the backups did outstanding under him relative to what they did on other teams, and those Habs were very disciplined
- I already discussed Pat Burns and Roy in this thread - Burns is one of the best defensive coaches ever, and the backup results fall right in line. Montreal was also an extremely disciplined team during those years.
- Playing for Jacques Demers, on the other hand, was tougher. Coaching numbers say average, backup numbers say even tougher than that. It's not surprising that Roy's relative numbers dropped by a lot over those seasons. Point on the backup numbers though - I'm assuming Andre Racicot is league average since he doesn't have a non-Roy sample, and there's no way Red Light Racicot was actually that good. So the real backup numbers would likely be closer to average.
- Patrick Roy's Colorado years are particularly interesting, because coaching and backup numbers tend to move in tandem for almost every situation, but for Roy in Colorado they diverge wildly
- The numbers for Crawford and Hartley suggest that Roy faced slightly tougher than average shot quality, but his backups did far better playing with Roy in Colorado than they did over the rest of their careers
- You can make your own conclusions on that one, personally I think the backup numbers are likely more accurate (and there were not any major strength of schedule impacts for Roy's playing partners in Colorado)
- Overall: Roy's teams were very disciplined, his backups did great playing playing with him, but his coaching numbers are closer to average (again mostly from the Demers years which seem legit and the Crawford/Hartley results which are more mixed)

Next is Dominik Hasek:

GoalieFromToGPSASv%LgAvgSoSBkp SoSBkp SABkp Sv%Bkp OtherBkp GPCoachGP% w/GCoachBackupCoach DiscTeam Disc
Hasek
1991​
1992​
25​
506​
0.897​
0.888​
0.02​
-0.09​
3728​
0.896​
0.889​
835​
Keenan
1386​
2%​
0.97​
0.93​
1.11​
1.19​
Hasek
1993​
1995​
127​
3493​
0.923​
0.895​
-0.15​
0.00​
3095​
0.885​
0.890​
638​
Muckler
648​
20%​
0.96​
1.04​
1.00​
0.99​
Hasek
1996​
1997​
126​
4188​
0.925​
0.902​
-0.07​
0.06​
1438​
0.901​
0.896​
137​
Nolan
471​
27%​
0.92​
0.95​
1.07​
1.10​
Hasek
1998​
2001​
238​
6689​
0.928​
0.906​
-0.06​
-0.06​
2719​
0.906​
0.906​
489​
Ruff
1774​
13%​
0.99​
0.99​
0.98​
1.04​
Hasek
2002​
2002​
65​
1654​
0.915​
0.908​
0.07​
-0.16​
503​
0.911​
0.912​
365​
Bowman
2141​
3%​
0.91​
1.01​
0.93​
1.01​
Hasek
2004​
2004​
14​
324​
0.907​
0.911​
-0.15​
-0.10​
1821​
0.916​
0.912​
590​
Lewis
251​
6%​
0.99​
0.95​
1.02​
0.91​
Hasek
2006​
2006​
43​
1202​
0.925​
0.901​
-0.06​
-0.11​
1141​
0.900​
0.895​
265​
Murray Bry
1239​
3%​
0.96​
0.95​
0.97​
0.99​
Hasek
2007​
2008​
97​
2164​
0.909​
0.907​
0.00​
0.04​
1777​
0.908​
0.906​
660​
Babcock
1301​
7%​
0.98​
0.97​
0.99​
1.02​
Total
1991
2008
735
20220
0.922
0.903
-0.06
-0.03
16222
0.902
0.901
447
1223
0.96
0.99
1.00
1.04

Notes:

- Under Keenan and Muckler, Hasek was probably facing slightly easier than average shots. The backup numbers aren't great under Muckler, but that might have just been Fuhr being a bit washed up at that point.
- The Ted Nolan years are interesting. Nolan has a very good score, but it is probably a bit inflated by peak Hasek being 27% of it. The backups did pretty well too though.
- Lindy Ruff: 0.99 coach rating with team less disciplined than usual, 0.99 backup rating. About as average as you can get. I have always maintained that there is no evidence to suggest that Hasek was getting any kind of significant team lift during this period, and these numbers strongly back that up.
- Bowman has a great defensive reputation, but I'm not sure how much that was still relevant by 2002. The backups are average, and his teams were much less disciplined than normal.
- For the rest of Hasek's career, he had easier than average under Bryan Murray and a bit easier but close to average under Babcock
- Overall, Hasek's coaching numbers are actually slightly better than Roy's, but the Sabres were less disciplined than those coaches' teams were normally. Also, Hasek's backup results are almost right on league average. Overall, his environment was probably slightly better than league average.

Finally, here's Martin Brodeur:

GoalieFromToGPSASv%LgAvgSoSBkp SoSBkp SABkp Sv%Bkp OtherBkp GPCoachGP% w/GCoachBackupCoach DiscTeam Disc
Brodeur
1994​
1998​
301​
7302​
0.916​
0.901​
-0.06​
-0.07​
2607​
0.903​
0.899​
377​
Lemaire
1262​
24%​
0.91​
0.96​
0.86​
0.78​
Brodeur
1999​
2000​
142​
3525​
0.908​
0.906​
-0.13​
0.05​
593​
0.887​
0.906​
406​
Ftorek
443​
32%​
1.06​
1.20​
0.98​
0.93​
Brodeur
2001​
2002​
145​
3417​
0.906​
0.905​
-0.12​
-0.27​
664​
0.893​
0.908​
485​
Robinson
501​
29%​
0.98​
1.17​
0.92​
0.82​
Brodeur
2003​
2004​
148​
3551​
0.915​
0.910​
-0.08​
-0.51​
375​
0.944​
0.896​
157​
Burns P
1019​
15%​
0.90​
0.54​
0.83​
0.75​
Brodeur
2006​
2006​
73​
2105​
0.911​
0.901​
-0.14​
-0.2​
295​
0.881​
0.889​
191​
Lamoriello
53​
89%​
0.93​
1.07​
0.72​
0.73​
Brodeur
2007​
2007​
78​
2182​
0.922​
0.905​
-0.19​
-0.18​
144​
0.889​
0.894​
191​
Julien
1274​
6%​
0.92​
1.05​
0.94​
0.68​
Brodeur
2008​
2009​
108​
2959​
0.919​
0.909​
-0.12​
-0.03​
1697​
0.916​
0.900​
243​
Sutter Bre
410​
26%​
0.95​
0.84​
0.96​
0.91​
Brodeur
2010​
2011​
133​
3317​
0.911​
0.912​
-0.04​
-0.18​
1040​
0.913​
0.905​
291​
Lemaire
1262​
11%​
0.91​
0.91​
0.86​
0.80​
Brodeur
2012​
2014​
127​
3097​
0.904​
0.914​
-0.02​
-0.01​
2276​
0.913​
0.911​
389​
DeBoer
1179​
11%​
0.98​
0.98​
0.94​
0.99​
Total
1994
2014
1255
31455
0.912
0.906
-0.09
-0.15
9691
0.906
0.901
321
892
0.94
0.96
0.89
0.82

Notes:
- Pretty strong team environment under Jacques Lemaire, to nobody's surprise, although the backup results aren't quite as good as the coach numbers
- Robbie Ftorek wasn't a good defensive coach. This is easily the toughest environment Brodeur had to play in, and very likely the toughest save percentage environment any of these 4 goalies faced in their careers.
- Robinson is around average, but the Devils were much more disciplined under him than on his other teams
- Burns shows up again, with ridiculous backup numbers (in a very small sample size though) and incredible team discipline as usual
- Lamoriello is tough to evaluate since his entire short career is basically just with Brodeur in net. The backup results aren't great in a tiny sample size, but the Devils continue to be super disciplined.
- Claude Julien is another coach that had great defensive results during his career (almost as good as Burns or Lemaire). Again, the backups don't quite track, but it's only 144 shots (running theme for the high-workload Brodeur, we can only really analyze backup results in aggregate).
- the Brent Sutter years and Jacques Lemaire second time around also look pretty favourable
- Deboer looks like right around average
- Overall, coaching results suggest Brodeur had an easier time of it than Roy or Hasek, especially when you factor in his teams being quite a bit more disciplined than they usually were for those coaches. But the backup results lag a bit behind, so maybe there were other impacts.

My quick-and-dirty overall estimates for difficulty of environment in terms of its effects on save percentage:

1. Ken Dryden: 0.91
2. Patrick Roy: 0.95
2. Martin Brodeur: 0.95
4. Dominik Hasek: 0.98

Those are just my guesses. If you think playing in Colorado was actually tougher than average, then you should slide Roy down. I think overall Roy had the worst backups (with Racicot not being fully adjusted for) and Hasek had the best, while Hasek was the only one that had to deal with poor team discipline, and that is also informing my estimates to some degree.

The other major point from this analysis is that Roy's peak under Pat Burns was very likely not close to as good as it looks statistically. If you're someone who focuses heavily on big peak, you should check to make sure you aren't overrating Roy in Montreal.

For the O6 guys, I can't really do a full backup analysis so it's not quite apples to apples, and I don't have full team disicipline numbers going all the way back, but I'll post the simplified coaching numbers in another post and do a quick discussion on those too.
 
Last edited:

Dennis Bonvie

Registered User
Dec 29, 2007
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19,957
Connecticut
Of course this doesn't take team strength into account. Plante's average team during the O6 era fall between 1st and 2nd, Hall's fall between 2nd and 3rd, and Sawchuk's after leaving Detroit the first time are just a hair better than 4th. (Sawchuk got 3 4th place teams to the Finals, while Plante and Hall never played on a 4th place team.)

Of the 24 all-star team goalies from 55-56 to 66-67, only 5 weren't given to a goalie in the top 2 in PTS or GA. Of those 5 2 went to Sawchuk, 2 to Hall, and one to Giacomin.
One thing that stood out to me in Hall's career was that he was the goalie to end the Montreal dynasty in 1961. After 5 straight cups, Chicago defeated the Canadiens in the first round, 4-2. Hall shutout Montreal in games 5 and 6. Also won game 3 in triple OT, 2-1. Hall had a .930 SP for the series, Plante .910.

But the following season, Plante was not only the top goalie, he won the Hart trophy as MVP. But again, in round 1 of the playoffs, Chicago won 4-2. Hall again had a shutout in game 6. With 41 saves in a 2-0 final. Hall's SP was .936 for the series, Plante's .904.

Also find it of interest that Hall had 7 first team all-star selections to Plante and Sawchuk's 3 each. All of Sawchuk's came pre-Hall and Plante. Not sure who voted in those days, but the voters really only had 6 goalies to look at, and they probably saw all of them a lot. So I do put a lot of stock in those selections.
 
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Dennis Bonvie

Registered User
Dec 29, 2007
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And I agree, we have to give some credit to guys that actually did a thing. At the bottom of my list, I have complete or near-complete buffoons like Gump, Richter, Giacomin, Esposito, etc. because there aren't enough players in this very fragile position. But for all the "objective truthers" out there, we still can't get over the hump on some things - like the Cechmanek conundrum that I posed some weeks ago...which isn't for this thread, of course. We'll probably eventually get to Alec Connell who has the lowest GAA in combined RS and PO history if I recall, yet, there isn't much fanfare for him historically...objectively, he might be the best goalie of all time. But...

So everyone gets to dabble in the "buffet style" of things to some degree...which I think is fine, I'm doing it from the opposite end, so to speak, because I see a clear pattern.

So much of what you say must be taken with a grain of salt because of comments like this.

All goalies with impressive NHL careers. Three in the freakin' Hall of Fame!

Goaltending Buffoons? Absurd.
 

Michael Farkas

Celebrate 68
Jun 28, 2006
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So much of what you say must be taken with a grain of salt because of comments like this.

All goalies with impressive NHL careers. Three in the freakin' Hall of Fame!

Goaltending Buffoons? Absurd.
The thing with this kind of stuff is - and you're free to feel this way - but it's very funny to me that when someone agrees with me (and I see this with my channel now a lot), it's "wow, great perspective. No one breaks down the game like this, this is incredible." and when they don't agree, I need "to be taken with a grain of salt" or "I don't know anything about hockey". haha

I'm the one that has one mode (for better or for worse)...it props up some guys and it cuts down others, but it doesn't waver very much. I'm a loveable scamp because Bobby Orr is the best player I've ever seen, but I need to be properly seasoned because of Gump Worsley - a guy sent down to the minors consistently in his prime for poor performance...that's where I'm out of line? haha
 

jigglysquishy

Registered User
Jun 20, 2011
8,181
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Regina, Saskatchewan
Sawchuk GAA
SeasonOct-DecJan-Apr
1950-51​
1.94​
2.00​
1951-52​
1.80​
2.00​
1952-53​
1.97​
1.81​
1953-54​
1.92​
1.94​
1954-55​
1.94​
1.98​
1955-56​
2.83​
2.35​
1956-57​
2.25​
3.00​
1957-58​
2.94​
2.94​
1958-59​
2.51
3.72
1959-60​
2.44
2.92
1960-61​
2.84
3.45
1961-62​
3.14
3.53
1962-63​
2.27
3.08
1963-64​
2.84​
2.47​
1964-65​
2.33​
2.78​
1965-66​
3.08​
3.24​
1966-67​
2.39​
3.26​
1967-68​
3.79​
2.74​

Just looking at the splits in relation to the league. I'm limiting it to 20 GP minimum to weed out backups or injury replacements.

SeasonOct-Dec GAA RankJan-Apr GAA Rank
1950-511st2nd
1951-521st1st
1952-531st1st
1953-542nd1st
1954-552nd1st
1955-565th3rd
1956-575thN/A
1957-586th4th
1958-592nd6th (by quite a bit)
1959-602nd4th
1960-61N/AN/A (6th at 10 GP+)
1961-625thN/A (6th at 10 GP+)
1962-633rdN/A (5th at 10 GP+)
1963-644th3rd
1964-65N/A (3rd ignoring GP)N/A (5th at 10 GP+)
1965-66N/A (8th ignoring GP)N/A (7th at 10 GP+)
1966-67N/A (4th ignoring GP)N/A (8th at 10 GP+)
1967-68N/A (25th ignoring GP)9th (11th at 10 GP+)

Not really what I was suspecting. Even early in his career, usually more dominant after the new year.

Really rough in the back half later on. When you're 6th in GAA in a 6 goalie league. Man. It's not good.

There's a bit in 1958-59 and 1959-60 where he looks good early on, but all these splits are pretty rough.
 

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