The Pale King
Go easy on those Mango Giapanes brother...
Edit: I had posted my initial rankings here... rescinding them as I adjust them a bit more. Sorry!
This is a great point. It's easier said than done (and I realize I'm also saying this as a non participant) but the best to avoid this pitfall would be to find-cross era similarities. Otherwise it's too easy to simply compare peers.The idea of era bunching is the most salient point. Perhaps the way to disband it is to find parallels for goalies across eras. For example, when I read of the intelligent demeanor and calm play of Vezina, my mind links him with Plante. A pair of great but flawed goaltenders like Dryden and Durnan seem a match. Brimsek seems really excellent, a goalie's goalie, in a sphere with Kiprusoff, Lundqvist, Price...
???
Well, why would you abandon the "versus peers" part of your thought process for technology? Stick got whippier. Pads got bigger and more adaptable to the prevailing style. Goalies got more mobile with advances in skate technology, pads being lighter but still protective, not absorbing water, etc.You don't think things like the technological advancement in sticks have made the goalies' jobs harder? General improvement in the average NHLer?
I don't think we would be ranking them if this was the case.
I think what I said is consistent with my arguments- just because the goalie position gets easier or harder doesn’t mean the goalies should be considered better or worse. I judge them by relative to their peers first and foremost.Well, why would you abandon the "versus peers" part of your thought process for technology? Stick got whippier. Pads got bigger and more adaptable to the prevailing style. Goalies got more mobile with advances in skate technology, pads being lighter but still protective, not absorbing water, etc.
I guess today’s skaters aren’t that great then, since they can’t beat the goalies cleanly.If goalie pads didn't advance AND shooters could shoot like this now, every game would be 18-16. Save percentage might actually matter haha
Goalies stop ~98% of untipped, unscreened shots. I think they're doing just fine...
If all that matters is representation, then why are we ranking them? We should just put out an unranked list of names saying these 60- in some order- are the 60 greatest of all time.##
I don't understand your response for the second point, respectfully.
Well, that's your claim, right? That every era needs to be represented - more or less. "No era should be ignored" to paraphrase.If all that matters is representation, then why are we ranking them? We should just put out an unranked list of names saying these 60- in some order- are the 60 greatest of all time.
I would love if Tretiak, Vezina, Gardiner, and Brimsek were the four that got in this round. Then everyone with widespread support as the best goalie ever would be in.
Oh, no. My claim isn't that we need to represent every era, but, rather, that we should be considering every era. I guess a follow-on result would be that (mostly) all the eras would be represented, but for me the process is the important part in these projects, not the result.Well, that's your claim, right? That every era needs to be represented - more or less. "No era should be ignored" to paraphrase.
So instead of Vezina being 9th overall, can't his era be represented by him at 27th?
This is a great post and gives me pause.I'm going to make one more post about Durnan and Brimsek. I can understand opinions differ and if the panel ends up putting Brimsek ahead, that's fine. But I'm puzzled by your assessment that has Brimsek with more support for best goalie ever than Durnan. I'd like to unpack this assessment a bit and discuss the evidence we're using.
I'll direct these questions to you because of your post above, but I'm equally interested in hearing from other participants who share the assessments that contemporaries rated Brimsek over Durnan, and that Brimsek had more support than Durnan for greatest of all time
First, why are you not putting more weight on the 1958 Sport Magazine All-Star team? And second, why are you not putting more weight on the seasonal all-star and award voting by writers and coaches?
The 1958 Sport Magazine team
I'm all for researching and posting quotes by writers about who they consider to be the greatest goaltender ever. I've done it too and I appreciate you and others who have done so. But there are also some potential biases in researching these quotes. Most papers aren't archived so you're reading a limited selection of opinions. I know almost all of you are reading English papers only, so you're missing many of the Quebec papers. Is your search methodology unbiased? Even if your method is consistent, are you sure the names of different goalies are equally recognized by your search tools?
Fortunately there's a large repository of opinions, collected in an unbiased manner, that we can go to. I've posted before about the 1958 Sport Magazine all-time all-star hockey team. There was also some discussion of that team here in 2015. They polled 70 writers and broadcasters for their all-time starting six. Bill Durnan received more votes than any other goaltender and was the goalie for their all-time team.
G: Bill Durnan
D: Eddie Shore
D: Doug Harvey
LW: Gordie Howe
C: Howie Morenz
RW: Maurice Richard
Unfortunately we don't know how many votes Durnan received. Maybe it was 40 out of 70, maybe it was 20. It's likely it was fewer votes than the others, as the goalie position had the most players named with votes. Frank Brimsek, Terry Sawchuk, Chuck Gardiner, Turk Broda, Roy Worters, George Hainsworth were named as also receiving votes, which is a pretty wide spread. I don't know if those names are in order, it's possible but not terribly relevant.
What we do know for sure is that in 1958, from a relatively large sample of 70 voters, Durnan received more votes as the best ever than Brimsek did. More than Sawchuk. More than Broda, more than Gardiner, more than any other goalie in history to that point.
If you found one writer in 1958 naming Brimsek as the best of all time, or Durnan as the best of all time, you'd consider it a find, right? If you found ten quotes, that would be amazing. We have 70 votes and Durnan was #1. Shouldn't this result be taken a little more seriously?
I'm a little surprised that Terry Sawchuk wasn't considered #1 at that point. He was only a year younger than Howe, and he had played roughly exactly as many NHL seasons to that point as Bill Durnan had. If you're valuing the opinions of contemporary journalists, aren't you impressed by the fact that more picked Bill Durnan's career than picked the first half of Sawchuk's career, including his incredible five year peak?
Awards voting vs quotes
For that matter, if we're talking about opinions of writers, why aren't we taking their end of season all-star and awards votes more seriously? Bill Durnan was six times voted to the first all-star team as goalie, the most in 20 years of all-star voting. If you found a quote from a writer before the playoffs saying something like "Bill Durnan was the best goalie of the regular season", would you give that any value? If so, you know the league office collected and aggregated those opinions, issued all-star teams and awards based on them, and paid out bonus money to the winners, right? The people you're quoting are the same people who voted for the all-star teams and awards.
I realize single season assessments are less valuable than career assessments. If you don't put any weight on quotes about single seasons, feel free to disregard. But if you do value such quotes, aren't awards votes the same type of thing as a quote about performance in a season? They're both an assessment of the goalie. A vote is lower resolution than a quote, but collected with a larger sample and more systematically.
If you value the assessments of players and coaches over writers, fair enough. Did you know the coaches did the all-star voting for the 1946-47 through 1949-50 seasons? 3 of Durnan's 6 first team all-stars were based on coaches voting. If you found a quote from Frank Boucher in March of 1949 saying Durnan was the best goalie that season, would you value that opinion? If so, fortunately for you, the league office collected his opinion and that of the five other coaches!
Forgive the length. I'm interested to see responses because I have long thought based on my reading that Bill Durnan had substantial support for the greatest of all time well after his retirement, and I don't think his rating in this section has reflected that support.
The people you're quoting are the same people who voted for the all-star teams and awards.
Excellent post. Two possible nitpicks (quite literally because it really is a very nice "grounding" post)...those same writers may not be voters. It was a pretty limited field of writers and we may well be getting opinions from columnists. And I believe coaches could not or did not vote for their own players or at least not for #1 (?), which can cause some unintended results and cloud who actually was the best in a given season. I posted the 47-48 ballot a page or two ago, so if we found that Frank Boucher said, "Rayner was the best this year" and then his ballot is: Brimsek, Durnan, Lumley then we might end up with something to dissect further.Did you know the coaches did the all-star voting for the 1946-47 through 1949-50 seasons? 3 of Durnan's 6 first team all-stars were based on coaches voting.
Would you be more interested in hiring the 4th highest GPA out of Harvard or the best out of Arizona State?In terms of studying HISTORY, ... why isn't the best player of one era heralded over the 4th best of another era?
Would you be more interested in hiring the 4th highest GPA out of Harvard or the best out of Arizona State?
In that case, I read that Vezina would often talk on speaker phone when on public transportation while Brimsek volunteered to tutor salamanders with learning disabilities in the offseason.I'd personally be more interested in hiring whichever of both is the less insufferable prick, because both are, at least for theory, significantly more competent than the average applicant.
Hence the Babe Ruth (100 years ago) and Muhammad Ali (50 years ago) references.Would you be more interested in hiring the 4th highest GPA out of Harvard or the best out of Arizona State?
That doesn't address the topic at all.Hence the Babe Ruth (100 years ago) and Muhammad Ali (50 years ago) references.
“It will be a close battle,” Vezina said. “I can hold them out at my end, Leo, but it will be tough to score against them. The best man is in the other goal, you know.”
This is what I've got so far:
Tretiak
Brimsek
Dryden
Durnan
Gardiner
Vezina
Broda
Belfour
Benedict
Pre 1943 is my biggest hangup on Durnan.Does anyone know why it took Bill Durnan until his age 28 season to win the starting job from*checks notes*... Paul Bibeault and Bert Gardiner? Can anyone shed any light on that?
Does anyone know why it took Bill Durnan until his age 28 season to win the starting job from*checks notes*... Paul Bibeault and Bert Gardiner? Can anyone shed any light on that?
The Punxsutawney Spirit - Dec 26 1934 said:The outstanding goalie in hockey is Roy Worters of the New York Americans. The ace wingman is Harvey Jackson of the Toronto Maple Leafs and the rising star among the defense men is Art Coulter of Chicago...
If you disagree with these finds, you must pick your quarrel with Les Patrick, coach of the New York Rangers and admitted genius of the ice game.
"There are more good goalies today than ever before," said Les. "They outclass the old timers because they have more chance to play, the modern rules favor them and they have better equipment."
"This year there is a scarcity of good defense men...the boys coming up are just as big, fast and strong as their immediate predecessors but they don't seem to have the ability to absorb the fine points of defense. In plainer words, they are big and dumb."
Patrick calls little Worters the goalie without a weakness. Tiny Thompson, Hainsworth and other net minders rank high in his estimation but they lack that little extra touch that is the hall mark of the master.