MXD
Partying Hard
- Oct 27, 2005
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I mean, here, being the best in the world would just mean being the best of the exact same pool, minus the prior best (Dryden). Same fish, slightly smaller pond.More time as best in the world.
We have lots of goalies that burned bright for a short time. Tretiak burning bright from 1972-1984 is a big plus when Dryden did from 1972-1980. Especially with Tretiak arguably being ahead already before Dryden retired.
Something like the 1981 CC is a plus for me.
(I do agree this doesn't quite take into account the blossoming of whoever between that period, but we also know that nobody who did blossom at that time was better than peak Dryden, unless someone really wants to make an argument in that regards for Liut and Smith)
The same question applies to Frank Brimsek by the way. He almost certainly was the best in the world, despite all the caveats, from 39 to 42. But we're really just saying he was better than Dave Kerr.
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