HOH Top 60 Goaltenders of All Time (2024 Edition) - Round 2, Vote 5

Dr John Carlson

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Dec 21, 2011
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Procedure
  • In this vote, you will be presented with 12 players based on their ranking in the Round 1 aggregate list
  • Players will be listed in alphabetical order to avoid creating bias
  • You will submit ten names in a ranked order, #1 through #10, without ties via PM to both @Dr John Carlson and @Professor What. That means two names out of these twelve will be left unranked on your ballot.
  • Use the same private message thread every week rather than starting a new PM
  • Results of this vote will be posted after each voting cycle, but the individual ballots themselves will remain secret until the completion of this project
  • The top 5 players will be added to the final list (unless a very large break exists at the spot between 4&5 (or 3&4!), or the break between 5&6 is minimal)
  • Lists of players eligible for voting will grow as the project continues
  • Voting threads will continue until we have added 60 names to the list, for a total of 12 voting threads

Eligible Voters

Guidelines
  • Respect each other. No horseplay or sophistry!
  • Please refrain from excessive use of the 'laughing' reaction to indicate disagreement
  • Stay on topic and don't get caught up in talking about non-eligible players
  • Participate, but retain an open mind throughout the discussion
  • Do not speculate who cast any particular ballot. Do not make judgments about the mindset of whoever cast that particular ballot. All individual ballots will be revealed at the end of the project
  • Anybody may participate in the discussion, whether they submitted a list or not

House Rules
  • Any attempts to derail a discussion thread with disrespect to old-time hockey will be met with frontier justice
  • Take a drink when someone mentions the number of hockey registrations in a given era
  • Finish your drink when someone mentions that wins are a team stat

The actual voting period will open up on Friday, November 8th Friday, November 15th at midnight and continue through Sunday, November 10th Sunday, November 17th at 11:59 PM Eastern time. I will release the results of the vote the morning of Monday, November 11th Monday, November 18th, at which point the next voting thread will begin.


Vote 3 Candidates
  • Tony Esposito
  • Grant Fuhr
  • George Hainsworth
  • Connor Hellebuyck
  • Jiri Holecek
  • Hap Holmes
  • Hugh Lehman
  • Harry Lumley
  • Billy Smith
  • Tiny Thompson
  • Gump Worsley
  • Roy Worters
 
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bobholly39

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Mar 10, 2013
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I had Hellebuyck quite low on my initial list and I regretted it afterwards.

He actually has more games played than Vasilevskiy, which feels weird due to all of Vasi's playoff successes, where it feels he's just been around longer.

He has 2 vezina's, and 5 top 4 finishes which is really, really good in today's NHL. That's as many top 4s as Luongo, and 1 less than Lundqvist, for modern day equivalents with really long/consistent careers. And with only 9 games played, he seems on track for another strong season in Winnipeg this year, so he doesn't seem "done" at all at age 31.

I am considering him strongly for #1 in this round - even though his playoffs are not that good.

Also curious to see a Smith vs Fuhr comparison. I'd love to understand's Fuhr's playoffs a bit more - can you swap out any average goalie into Edmonton for those cups, and 0 impact? Or was he really instrumental to success? I tend to think it's the former.
 

jigglysquishy

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Jun 20, 2011
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Very new group this week.

I don't think there's a big gap between Benedict and Lehman. But I see a decent gap between Lehman and Holmes.

If not for playoffs, Hellebucyk would have gone last round. I don't think he deserves the reputation as a terrible playoff goalie. The Jets' poor system defensive and weak defensive depth gets exposed in the playoffs. Last year vs the Avs was a great example of him being left to die all series. Last time the Jets had strong defense he posted a 922 and went to the Conference Finals.

It's definitely time for Holocek.
 

Michael Farkas

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Oh my...

This is an ugly, ugly group...

None of Esposito, Fuhr, Hainsworth, Holmes, Lehman, or Worsley were inside my top 50 (Fuhr was 50th).

That said, I had Lumley higher than everyone I imagine. So that's a nice add here. I guess I'll go to work on him, as I think he should probably be at the top of the ballot at first blush.

Ugh, yuck...my goodness...
 

jigglysquishy

Registered User
Jun 20, 2011
8,470
9,371
Regina, Saskatchewan
Billy Smith in the Stanley Cup Finals

1980 Finals
Islanders beat Flyers 4-3 in OT
Shots: Islanders 36 Flyers 33
Islanders 1 Flyers 0

The Montreal Gazette · ‎May 14, 1980
Seldom has a Stanley Cup game accentuated so many negatives. Where we had expected a thrilling opener... we instead were treated to bad defence from the defencemen, dreadful passing from the forwards, and all-around poor shooting.

Marksmen managed to gum them all up with either the inability to lift the puck or by aiming it directly at the pads of Peeters or Billy Smith.


Flyers win 8-3
Shots: Islanders 23 Flyers 31
Smith is pulled after allowing 6 goals on 26 shots
Islanders 1 Flyers 1

The Saskatoon Star-Phoenix · ‎May 14, 1980
Smith continued to claim his territory was being invaded. "They were in my crease more tonight than they ever have been, so what could I do?" he complained. "I didn't play well and I think I let the guys down. I didn't make a big save all night... I've been playing well and I haven't had a bad game until tonight, so it's out of my system now."


Islanders win 6-2
Shots: Islanders 40 Flyers 32
Phil Myre is in replacement for Pete Peeters and gets shelled
Islanders 2 Flyers 1

The Morning Record and Journal · ‎May 19, 1980
The Islanders went 5-for-5 with a manpower advantage. Smith, however, believes there was another key to the lopsided victory... "I think some people might overlook our penalty killers," the goalie said. "I know we had five power-play goals but we also had a lot of penalties against us and how many did the Flyers get? None. And we also got a short-handed goal. Lorne Henning and Butch Goring and Bourne and the other guys did a super job of killing penalties." Smith, who played a solid game himself, was right on the mark.


Islanders win 5-2
Shots: Islanders 27 Flyers 36
Islanders 3 Flyers 1

The Saskatoon Star-Phoenix · ‎May 20, 1980
"They had us on the run, in the second period, but Smitty came up with some big saved. " said Trottier of the NY goaltender Billy Smith.


Flyers win 6-3
Shots: Islanders 38 Flyers 31
Pete Peeters gets high praise.
Islanders 3 Flyers 2


The Saskatoon Star-Phoenix · ‎May 23, 1980
The Flyers charged out of the gate, only to be foiled on several early chances by Smith.

Rick MacLeish said the Flyers enjoyed better success against Islander goaltender Billy Smith because Philadelphia was taking more shots with their chances, something they hadn't done in earlier games. MacLeish said. "Billy's the kind of guy who sits in the net and really doesn't come out to challenge the shooters."


The Islanders win 5-4 in OT
Shots: Islanders 33 Flyers 25
Islanders 4 Flyers 2

The Calgary Herald · ‎May 26, 1980
"Billy Smith played extremely well," said Bossy. "I don't think I can describe the way Billy played in the series. Although he might not get the recognition, I know that he knows he played very well."


Good, but not great series. Certainly he gets praise from teammates, but media praise is absent. Across the six games, media praises Peeters more than they do Smith. I get the impression games tended towards high-flying low-defence.



1981 Finals
Islanders win 6-3
Shots: Islanders 23 North Stars 26
Islanders 1 North Stars 0

Record-Journal · ‎May 13, 1981
The North Stars came out skating and put early pressure on Smith, but New York's defensemen did an excellent job of planting their bodies between the puck and the net as they blocked several shots.

The North Stars' best opportunity in the first period came on a deft move by Steve Christoff, who skirted around Denis Potvin and bust in alone on Smith. But the Islanders' goalie made a sprawling stick save.


Islanders win 6-3
Shots: Islanders 38 North Stars 28
Islanders 2 North Stars 0

The Calgary Herald · ‎May 15, 1981
Billy Smith was shaken up on Payne's goal, when the Minnesota forward rammed into the Islanders' goalie, hurting his left arm. "I gave up a bad rebound on the first shot by (Tim) Young and Payne got it," said Smith. "I knew I was hurt...and, which I saw the puck in the net, I figured: "Get me out of here."


Islanders win 7-5
Shots: Islanders 28 North Stars 28
Islanders 3 North Stars 0


Observer-Reporter · ‎May 18, 1981
Now only half of that tandem, Billy Smith, remains with the New York Islanders and the full goaltending load in the Stanley Cup playoffs has been placed on his shoulders.
Now only Roland Melanson, a highly regarded rookie who has started only one game in these playoffs, stands behind Smith.
For once, Smith clearly is No.1. In attaining that status, he has had to change his personality on and off the ice. Once the most feared stick-swinger of all NHL goalies, Smith has calmed down considerably.


Stars win 4-2
Shots: Islanders 35 North Stars 34
Islanders 3 North Stars 1

Toledo Blade · ‎May 20, 1981
In a game marked by outstanding performances by goaltenders Don Beaupre of Minnesota and New York's Billy Smith.


Islanders win 5-1
Shots: Islanders 33 North Stars 25
Islanders 4 North Stars 1

The Pittsburgh Press · ‎May 22, 1981
[Referring to second period] Only four of the North Stars' shots got through the New York defense to goalie Billy Smith, who stopped them all. But it was the defending champions' awesome depth, more so than Smith, that spelled the difference in the period.


Overall, Smith isn't getting a lot of praise. Potvin and Bossy get singled out, but depth is kind of the star of the show. One thing is for sure, the Islanders thoroughly outplayed the North Stars for 90% of the series.



1982 Finals
Islanders win 6-5 in OT
Shots: Islanders 36 Canucks 35
Islanders 1 Canucks 0

No relevant Smith comments. Bossy gets high praise


Islanders win 6-4
Shots: Islanders 36 Canucks 30
Tiger Williams got in a tussle with Billy Smith, which all the newspapers focus on
Islanders 2 Canucks 0

The Vancouver Sun · ‎May 12, 1982
Minor quickly tied it with his first playoff goal, on a soft shot that Smith misplayed.


Islanders win 3-0
Shots: Islanders 31 Canucks 23
Islanders 3 Canucks 0


The Saskatoon Star-Phoenix · ‎May 14, 1982
The Islanders played close to error-free hockey, getting a shutout from goaltender Billy Smith and second-period goals from Gillies and Bossy.

Smith was being modest about it all, but his coach and teammates were quick to point to his perfect game as a key to the victory. Smith yielded few rebounds in posting his first playoff shutout in two years.
"That's the best game he's played and the way he controlled his emotions was super," said centre Bryan Trottier.


Islanders win 3-1
Shots: Islanders 28 Canucks 24
Islanders 4 Canucks 0

The Saskatoon Star-Phoenix · ‎May 17, 1982
New York then threw up a wall in front of goaltender Billy Smith in Vancouver and won 3-0 and 3-1.

Brodeur and Smith, both brilliant in the playoffs, finished off in fine style.

Smith's best series so far, but again the Islanders' defence is highly noted. Smith's penchant for bad penalties is noted as are the scoring prowess of Bossy and Trottier.



1983 Finals
Islanders win 2-0
Shots: Islanders 23 Oilers 35
Islanders 1 Oilers 0

The Saskatoon Star-Phoenix · ‎May 11, 1983
It was simply a case of too much Billy Smith, defenceman Kevin Lowe said after his Edmonton Oilers were shut out 2-0 by New York Islanders. "We played an excellent hockey game," Lowe said, "but so did Smith - it was as simple as that."

Islanders coach Al Arbour didn't mince words. "The performance of Billy Smith in goal tonight was extraordinary. He's done this time and time again in the Stanley Cup playoffs and he certainly came up with a great performance tonight."

Glen Sather gave Smith, who now has allowed just one goal in his last three Cup final games, his due as a great goaltender.


Islanders win 6-3
Shots: Islanders 25 Oilers 33
Smith slashes Gretzky at the end of the game and got a 5 minute major and then got speared by Dave Lumley. Smith also slashed Glenn Anderson.
Islanders 2 Oilers 0

Nothing relevant as all the Smith talked is about the violence


Islanders win 5-1
Shots: Islanders 28 Oilers 34
Islanders 3 Oilers 0

Ottawa Citizen · ‎May 16, 1983
Gretzky says he has had his share of opportunities but it has been a post or a bounce the wrong way or Billy Smith: "He has been exceptional."

Billy Smith has to be the No. 1 choice for the Conn Smythe Trophy as the most valuable play in the playoffs. But for him, the champions might well have been trailing the final series two games to one.

Islanders win 4-2
Shots: Islanders 25 Oilers 26
Islanders 4 Oilers 0

The Montreal Gazette · ‎May 18, 1983

Billy Smith, winner of the Conn Smythe, freely admitted last night he faked an injury and drew a five- minute slashing penalty in the final period just as the Oilers were putting extreme heat on the New York Islanders. "When that happens," said Wayne Gretzky, stopped without a goal in the four-game NY sweep, "the whole league looks bush."

Predictably, New York Islanders' goaltender Billy Smith is the winner of the Conn Smythe Trophy.... Smith allowed six goals in the four games against the Oilers, which was the principle reason for his Smythe recognition.



A really strong series by Smith, though it's weird how much his stick-swinging dominates discussion. Holding the Oilers to 1.5 GPG is incredible and there isn't much praise for Islanders team defence.



1984 Finals
Oilers win 1-0
Shots: Islanders 34 Oilers 38
Islanders 0 Oilers 1

The Montreal Gazette · ‎May 11, 1984
The other guy is Islanders goaltender Billy Smith, who stopped 37 shots last night. On any other night, he probably would have been a bloomin' hero for his work, but Fuhr, who came into the game with a 3.04 GAA, stunned everyone with his exceptional work.


Islanders win 6-1
Shots: Islanders 26 Oilers 23
Islanders 1 Oilers 1

The Calgary Herald · ‎May 14, 1984
Smith let in one goal that night, and his team lost by one. He let in one goal Saturday night, and his team won by five. In his last five playoff games, Bill Smith has allowed all of five goals against, one in each game.

"With no slight intended at Mike Bossy, Denis Potvin, or Bryan Trottier, this team wouldn't have won four straight Stanley Cups if if hadn't been for Billy Smith," said Islander forward Bob Bourne.


Oilers in 7-2
Shots: Islanders 25 Oilers 40
Smith is pulled after allowing 6 goals on 31 shots.
Islanders 1 Oilers 2

The Day · ‎May 16, 1984
It took the Edmonton Oilers seven games of Stanley Cup final play before they could solve the riddle of Billy Smith. Now that they have done so they might just be a different team.
"We showed ourselves that maybe Billy Smith isn't invincible after all, "said Edmonton's Mark Messier.

The Oilers didn't need a perfect shot Tuesday night. They got enough sloppy rebounds from Smith to turn matters their way.


Oilers win 7-2
Shots: Islanders 21 Oilers 38
Islanders 1 Oilers 3

The Montreal Gazette · ‎May 18, 1984
They made a mere mortal out of goaltender Billy Smith, who committed several fundamental errors last night, although he received little, if any help, from the people in front of him.

Smith saves brilliantly on Messier, and nobody's around to stop Lindstrom from slipping the rebound into the open net.

Islander Billy Smith is helpless as puck goes into net on Wayne Gretzky breakaway.


Oilers win 5-2
Shots: Islanders 25 Oilers 23
Smith is pulled in second period after allowing 2 goals on 9 shots. Melanson allows 2 on 14 shots.
Islanders 1 Oilers 4

No relevant comments about Smith.


Not as strong as 1983, but his second best series overall. He held to Oilers to 2 goals through 2 games, then got shelled for 15 goals in 2.5 games. I don't think it's fair to blame him either, as the lack of Islanders defence comes up a bit and backup Melanson played terribly.




A mixed bag here. Not a lot of greatness in 1980 or 1981. Some good praise in 1982. Tremendous in 1983 and the first half of 1984. Certainly the Cup winning years there's loads of praise for the Islanders depth and defensive prowess. They routinely are putting up 5+ goals on the opposition so his job is easy. But I really do think he shines against the Oilers in 1983. It's clear the Islanders lost a step in 1984 with Potvin being absent from newspaper praise.


Fuhr has some good games, but Moog looks terrible.
 

MXD

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Oct 27, 2005
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My first reaction was that we're lucky it's a 12-names group because that means at most one of Thompson, Fuhr or Lumley will have been ranked. I'd definitely rather have a 13-names list, but wtv.

I ranked Connor Hellebuyck too low in round 1, but had I known he'd be available one full round ahead of Mikka Kiprusoff, I'd probably have ranked him even lower. Hellebuyck being available at least one round before Kiprusoff (and also Curtis Joseph and John Vanbiesbrouck while we're at it) seems to go against the idea of coming up with the best list as possible. Despite all of that, there's absolutely no way I'm again making the mistake of ranking him below Grant Fuhr, and I'd be extremely surprised if he's below Thompson and Lumley at the end of this process.
 
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frisco

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Not to belabor things, but I was hoping Barrasso would come up this round. Vezina finalists:

Tom Barrasso 1-2-2-2-3
Belfour-1-1-2-3
Lundqvist 1-2-3-3-3
Vasy 1-2-3-3
Luongo 2-3-3
Price 1-3
B.Smith 1
Fuhr 1-2-3-3
Hellebuyck 1-1-2-3

My Best-Carey
 
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frisco

Some people claim that there's a woman to blame...
Sep 14, 2017
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Procedure
  • You will submit ten names in a ranked order, #1 through #10, without ties via PM to both @Dr John Carlson and @Professor What. That means one name out of these twelve will be left unranked on your ballot.

Vote 3 Candidates
  • Tony Esposito
  • Grant Fuhr
  • George Hainsworth
  • Connor Hellebuyck
  • Jiri Holecek
  • Hap Holmes
  • Hugh Lehman
  • Harry Lumley
  • Billy Smith
  • Tiny Thompson
  • Gump Worsley
  • Roy Worters
There is 12 listed. Do we do a Top 10 (two guys left out)? Or Top 11 with one left out?

My Best-Carey
 

Michael Farkas

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Not to belabor things but, I was hoping Barrasso would come up this round. Vezina finalists:

Tom Barrasso 1-2-2-2-3
Belfour-1-1-2-3
Lundqvist 1-2-3-3-3
Vasy 1-2-3-3
Luongo 2-3-3
Price 1-3
B.Smith 1
Fuhr 1-2-3-3
Hellebuyck 1-1-2-3

My Best-Carey
Every era! Every era!

- "Well...not that era, of course."

Not that I want Barrasso here now. Also not top 50 for me. But he'd fit right along with Gretzky's goalie...
 

blogofmike

Registered User
Dec 16, 2010
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Also curious to see a Smith vs Fuhr comparison. I'd love to understand's Fuhr's playoffs a bit more - can you swap out any average goalie into Edmonton for those cups, and 0 impact? Or was he really instrumental to success? I tend to think it's the former.

Swap him out for Andy Moog? Maybe. The 85 and 88 teams were pretty good, so a few goaltenders could still win (much like Billy Smith having an .850 save percentage as a win threshold, as discussed last round, though it's not like Smith posted an .851 and called it a day...)

"Any average goalie" is a reach. In short, Fuhr had to scramble more than other dynasty goalies. As much as they helped him with wins via goal support, the tradeoff is they also create more high danger chances for opponents. In one of the preliminary threads someone posted about Edmonton giving up a high danger chances, but I can't find that now.

Nevertheless, when accounting for era, Fuhr was a big game goalie. @Hockey Outsider found that Fuhr posted solid adjusted save percentages. (Remember these are era-adjusted only - Fuhr still faced a relatively dangerous chances).

And if you don't want to click on the link, their adjusted career save percentages have Brodeur at .911 and Fuhr at .910, Lundqvist at .909, Luongo at .908, and Price at .907.

For individual playoff runs, Fuhr's 88 run is tied with 96 Roy (.921), 85 Fuhr (.920) is tied with Cam Ward 06 and Mike Richter 94, Fuhr 87 is tied wirh Vasilevskiy 20 and Holtby 18 (.916). Fuhr 84 is listed at .920 , but we'll leave it for now (it's .920 but it is pretty far down the list, so maybe there's an error in transcription?)

The other thing about the 88 run is that Fuhr is 16-2-1 (blackout game) and it comes after 75 regular season games, and 9 Canada Cup games that fall. That's 103 meaningful games in 9 months.

The 1987 Canada Cup is a pretty good tournament. It doesn't look great because almost half of his sample is the Soviets, but here's how 1987 Canada Cup goalies did against Team USSR:

1987 Canada Cup Save Percentages vs USSR
Fuhr (4 GP).859
Hasek.851
Lindmark (2 GP).816
Barrasso.815
Takko.811

That leaves him at .914 over 5 games against the Czechoslovakians, Swedes, Finns, and Americans, and .893 overall (4th overall - Hasek and Lindmark were at .894, and Vanbiesbrouck above everybody since Barrasso took the beating from the Soviets for Team USA.)

Fuhr also had the St. Louis renaissance to show he could help out a middling team.

You like a workhorse? He played 79 games behind a low voltage offense, but went down early in Game 2 of Round 1 with a torn ACL and MCL. (For what little time he had in the 96 playoffs, Fuhr was great, but it's only 70 minutes.)

In 1997, he plays 73 games and St. Louis draws the Wings again. According to the Detroit Free Press:

Bowman sought out Fuhr to congratulate him. “I’ve seen him at his best,” Bowman said, “and I don’t think he’s been any better than he was in this series.” Fuhr recorded two shutouts, posted a 2.18 goals-against average and had a .929 save percentage. Vernon didn’t have a shutout but had two more victories, beat Fuhr with a 2.07 goals-against and had a .917 save percentage.

“Mike gives us confidence,” Bowman said. “He’s an experienced goaltender. It’s really tough going against the Grant Fuhrs and Patrick Roy last season. They’ve won so much, they’ve carried teams. There is so much pressure.”

The 1997 Stanley Cup Champions scored 6 even strength goals in 6 games. It's probably the last really good showing against a strong opponent.

In 1998 Fuhr gives you a pedestrian 58 games. In round 1, the Kings (8th in GF) were swept, and Fuhr posted a .929 (avg Kings opponent .897). To my eye, he's less spectacular than in 1997 though, and the Quenneville structure is helping (defensively at least. Still not great at playoff scoring in spite of a #1 GF finish.) The Blues get beaten pretty handily in Round 2 by the Wings.

In 1999 Fuhr is in his last playoff run. Only 39 games as he has his second knee surgery in a year in February 1999, and his third since the Kypreos injury in 1996. He's shaky in Games 2 and 3 against Phoenix, but rallies to come back from a 3-1 series deficit, capped by a 35 save overtime shutout in his last Game 7. The game is on Youtube. Fuhr is solid, (it's a 1-0 shutout after all,) but he's far less dynamic than he was in his first 2 Blues seasons. In Round 2 they get the 99 Stars and lose in 6 (Fuhr .883). The Game 6 OT goal is a little soft, Hull throwing it a Fuhr's feet and Modano poking it in (kind of reminds me of the OT goal Modano/Hull got in the 2000 Finals against NJ.)

If you need a guy to steal you a playoff game, Grant Fuhr is on the list of people who you would ask to do that, and he's higher on the list than a Tony Esposito.
 

jigglysquishy

Registered User
Jun 20, 2011
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Regina, Saskatchewan
Harry Lumley in Stanley Cup Finals

1945 Finals
Leafs win 1-0
Red Wings 0 Leafs 1

Saskatoon Star-Phoenix · ‎April 7, 1945
McCool [Leafs goalie] and Lumley easily stopped the shots.

The crowd gave Lumley a tremendous hand when he stopped another Schriner breakaway.

Leafs win 2-0
Red Wings 0 Leafs 2

No relevant comments, but Toronto goalie Frank McCool gets loads of praise for back-to-back shutouts.


Leafs win 1-0
Red Wings 0 Leafs 3

Again no relevant comments as McCool has a threepeat shutout.


Red Wings win 5-3
Red Wings 1 Leafs 3

Ottawa Citizen · ‎April 16, 1945
Only the fact that McCool hit record-breaking heights kept 18-year-old Lumley out of the hockey spotlight. He yielded no more than four goals in the first three games of the Cup finals.
The Leader-Post · ‎April 16, 1945
Lumley is the most nonchalant 18-year-old we ever did see. He carries himself like Tiny Thompson or a Frankie Brimsek and never leaves his feet. Some day young Mr. Lumley is going to be one high class goalkeeper.


Red Wings win 2-0
Red Wings 2 Leafs 3

The Leader-Post · ‎April 20, 1945
McCool, who blanked Wings three straight as the series opened, looked for a while as if he might edge Harry Lumley in the netminding duel, but on the night's play Lumley handled 22 shots compared with 15 for McCool.


Red Wings win 1-0 in OT
Red Wings 3 Leafs 3

Saskatoon Star-Phoenix · ‎April 23, 1945
Young Harry Lumley in the Detroit nets played a brilliant game.


Leafs win 2-1
Red Wings 3 Leafs 4

Ottawa Citizen · ‎April 24, 1945
[McCool] got as hot as a firecracker in the playoffs, set a goal-tending record, but, when the boys were discussing the championship play after it ended, Harry Lumley's name was on every person's lips.... Lumley's performances, particularly in the sixth game, simply stole the spotlight from Hard-luck McCool.


Lots of praise for Lumley. That he is the bigger goalie star despite McCool getting three shutouts and a Cup win is pretty big.


1948 Finals
Leafs win 5-3
Red Wings 0 Leafs 1

Nothing relevant


Leafs win 4-2
Red Wings 0 Leafs 2

Leafs win 2-0
Red Wings 0 Leafs 3

Games was on Saturday/Sunday and it was still old-timey enough that there wasn't Sunday papers so this is all I got.

Saskatoon Star-Phoenix · ‎April 12, 1948
Harry Lumley turned back 19 Toronto shots as the Leafs were content to play mostly defensive after getting in front and putting the pressure squarely on the Red Wings. Lumley's best stop was on a first period shot Syl Apps blasted at him in the corner.


Leafs win 7-2
Red Wings 0 Leafs 4

The Telegraph · ‎April 15, 1948
Lumley kicked out at least four other shots from surging Toronto players who had broken into the clear. Altogether the Leafs registered exactly one-third of their shots in the playoff wind up as Lumley saved on only 14.


Not a lot of coverage on this series. Lumley gets some praise, but it was a top-to-bottom Leaf domination.



1949 Finals
Leafs win 3-2 in OT
Red Wings 0 Leafs 1

The Leader-Post · ‎April 9, 1949
Bob Dawes fluffed a chance to be the hero when his shot hit the goalpost and trickled on the line before Lumley made a frantic dive to stop it.


Leafs win 3-1
Red Wings 0 Leafs 2

No relevant comments


Leafs win 3-1
Red Wings 0 Leafs 3

The Michigan Daily · ‎April 14, 1949
On Toronto's other two goals, Lumley didn't look so good. Ted Kennedy squeezed a backhander between his pads and the post for what proved to be the deciding tally.

The Leafs pelted the puck at Lumley with regularity. In the final stanza they tested him 13 times and outshot the Wings for the night, 34-23.


Leafs win 3-1
Red Wings 0 Leafs 4

Ottawa Citizen · ‎April 18, 1949
Bentley made victory certain late in the third period with a 15-foot sizzler on which Lumley didn't have a chance.

But, in the last two, the Leafs had a 25-10 shooting margin and only Lumley's stout work kept the score down to three

Red Wings are thoroughly outplayed again. Lumley gets praised, but it's hard to get much when the Leafs are top-to-bottom better.



1950 Finals
Red Wings win 4-1
Shots: Red Wings 26 Rangers 25
Red Wings 1 Rangers 0

The Leader-Post · ‎April 12, 1950
The goal climaxed the Rangers' best drive of the night, in which they blazed four shots at Lumley before one got past him.

Lumley had 24 saves to Rayner's 22, but the New York goalie had the tougher evening as most of the New York shots gave the Red Wing netminder little difficulty.


Red Wings win 3-1
Red Wings 1 Rangers 1

Saskatoon Star-Phoenix · ‎April 14, 1950
A story is making the rounds that Terry Sawchuk, the Winnipeg youngster who this year starred for Indianapolis Caps, will be the Red Wing goalie and that Harry Lumley, current netman for the Wings, will go to Toronto. Detroit cannot keep a goalie of Sawchuk's calibre hidden in the American League for too long.


Red Wings win 4-0
Red Wings 2 Rangers 1

Saskatoon Star-Phoenix · ‎April 17, 1950
The agile Lumley, at 23 a veteran of six seasons in the NHL, blocked 24 New York shots to get his first shutout of the final series.

Although Lumley got the shutout, Rayner was the busier goalie.

What little back-slapping went on in the Detroit hockey dressing room Saturday night all fell on the wide shoulders of goalie Harry Lumley.


Rangers win 4-3 in OT
Red Wings 2 Rangers 2

The Windsor Daily Star · ‎April 19, 1950
Goalie Harry Lumley, who has been the outstanding Detroit performer in this series, just as he was in the semi-final against the Leafs,


Rangers win 2-1 in OT
Red Wings 2 Rangers 3

Edmonton Journal · ‎April 21, 1950
The Rangers appeared more dangerous, as their sallies on Lumley bothered the apple-checked goaltender far more than the long shots directed at Chuck Rayner at the other end.


Red Wings win 5-4
Red Wings 3 Rangers 3

Red Wings win 4-3 in OT
Red Wings 4 Rangers 3

Again, no Sunday paper

The Montreal Gazette · ‎April 24, 1950
"Boy, that was a long time coming," said the apple-cheeked Harry Lumley the stellar goalie.

Lumley turned in his most brilliant showing of the season although he had only 18 saves to 32 for Rayner. [On game 6]

Rayner made 39 saves during the night to 26 for Lumley [On game 7]


High praise throughout the series. Lots of back and forth games with Rangers dominating then the Red Wings dominating. Lindsay gets high praise too.

Interesting that baby Sawchuk is so good that he ousts 23-year-old Cup winning Lumley.
 

overpass

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George Hainsworth is an old-time goalie whose current reputation is very different from his reputation in his time. Our list is going to be considerably lower on him than other goalie rankings, and it's worth documenting why.

Hainsworth was rated #9 all time in the THN Top 100 goalies of all time list. When his name has come up in the past 50 years, it has usually been in reference to his 94 career NHL shutouts, his 22 shutouts in the 44 game 1928-29 season, or his sub-1.00 GAA in that same season.

These accomplishments were also highlighted during Hainsworth's career, and after his retirement, as were his three straight Vezina trophies from 1926-27 through 1928-29 for fewest goals against. But he was also known for a career that was two and a half decades long, and for never missing the playoffs.

What is missing from Hainsworth's long career - and why we're not going to have him top ten, or top twenty - is a peak where he was considered the best goaltender in hockey. Despite the three consecutive Vezina wins pre-forward pass, he was only once voted the best goaltender by coaches or writers, and that very narrowly.

Charlie Gardiner has basically taken Hainsworth's place on our list. Hainsworth had the statistical peak, and those numbers have endured across the generations, but Gardiner was rated more highly during their careers.

Amateur career
Hainsworth was born in 1893 in Kew Gardens, the same Toronto suburb that produced Roy Worters and the Conacher brothers. His family moved to Berlin, Ontario (later renamed Kitchener due to anti-German sentiment during the Great War). Hainsworth played defence in public school hockey in Berlin, and then in the senior ranks of the Berlin City League.

He first played in goal in 1911 at the age of 17 or 18, offering to try his hand at nets when his city league team needed to fill the position, and his team won the league that season. He would remain in goal for the remaining 25 years of his hockey career.

The next season, 1911-12, he played for Berlin's team in the OHA junior league. Hainsworth later gave his date of birth as 1895 or 1898 to obscure his actual age, and he was said to have been a young prodigy in this season, but in fact he was 18 years old, a perfectly normal age to play in this league. He was a first team all-star in the OHA juniors.

Hainsworth then moved up to play goal for the Berlin intermediate team in the OHA. This was the highest amateur team in Berlin, but they played in the intermediate division of the OHA rather than the senior division. He spent the next three seasons in OHA intermediate, from 1912-13 through 1914-15, and won the league championship in 1913-14.

Berlin and Hainsworth moved up to the OHA senior division for the 1915-16 season. Before the 1916-17 season, Hainsworth moved to Toronto. He applied for his amateur card, intending to play for a Toronto club in the OHA, but was denied as he had moved to Toronto too late to be eligible to play for them. He played instead for the Kew Gardens team in the Toronto city league, and won the league championship.

In 1917-18, Hainsworth returned to Kitchener and played for their OHA senior team. That season Kitchener won the OHA and won the Allan Cup. While Hainsworth was often referred to as the best amateur goalie in Canada that spring and the following year, probably thanks to the spotlight he received in the Allan Cup, he remained in Kitchener playing amateur hockey for the next five years, until 1922-23. I'm not sure what his all-star record was in those seasons, but I've seen that Doc Stewart was the OHA first team all star goalie in three of those five seasons.

Professional career
Hainsworth finally turned professional at the age of 30. Newsy Lalonde badly needed a goaltender for the Saskatoon Sheikhs of the WCHL, and wrote to his former coach Leo Dandurand asking for a recommendation. Dandurand recommended Hainsworth of Kitchener and Jack Cameron of the Toronto Granites as the best pro prospects, and suggested Hainsworth was more likely to sign. Lalonde signed Hainsworth, who played the next three seasons in Saskatoon.

Saskatoon improved their goals against quite a bit with Hainsworth, but all-star honours did not immediately follow. Red McCusker and Hap Holmes were the first team WCHL all-star goalies in 1923-24 and 1924-25, and then Hainsworth was named the first team WHL all-star for the 1925-26 season, ahead of Holmes, McCusker, Hugh Lehman, and Hal Winkler.

Montreal Canadiens signed Hainsworth to a big contract after the western league folded in 1926. And they had a huge turnaround, going from last place with goalie Herb Rheaume in 25-26 to second place in 26-27. Credit for the turnaround could be given to the additions of Hainsworth, of veteran defenceman Herb Gardiner who was said to have played every minutes of the season, of coach Cecil Hart, and also to the maturation of the young core of Howie Morenz, Aurel Joliat, Sylvio Mantha, and Pit Lepine.

Hainsworth won the Vezina trophy for fewest goals against in 1926-27, and was also voted as first team all-star goalie in a vote by the league's coaches. He was tied in voting points with Toronto's John Ross Roach, with the tie broken by an edge to Hainsworth in first place votes. Ironically, Toronto had bought Hainsworth's rights from Saskatoon in the offseason but Montreal had beaten them out by signing Hainsworth directly.

Hainsworth then had two incredible statistical regular seasons in 1927-28 and 1928-29, winning the Vezina trophy for fewest goals against, and allowing about a goal per game. However, Roy Worters was the choice of the league's coaches both seasons in postseason all star voting. Hainsworth finished a distant second in voting both seasons.

From 1929-30 on, Hainsworth played another seven seasons and never received any significant number of votes for the postseason all-star position. He did, however, backstop the Montreal Canadiens to two Stanley Cup victories in 1930 and 1931.

In 1933, Hainsworth estimated that he had about 160 shutouts over the course of his amateur and professional career, and had faced about 19,000 shots.

Hainsworth retired in 1936 when the Leafs decided to replace him with Turk Broda, stating that Broda was just as good and 15 years younger. Hainsworth revealed upon retiring that he was actually 43 years old, meaning that Broda was 21 years younger! In his 13 years of professional hockey, his teams had never missed the playoffs. He was a three time Vezina winner (26-27, 27-28, 28-29), a two-time Stanley Cup winner (1930, 1931), was once voted a first team all star in the WCHL (1925-26), and once in the NHL (1926-27).

Hainsworth's major NHL accomplishments all came from 1926-27 to 1930-31. Which lines up very well with Cecil Hart's first coaching stint in Montreal (1926-27 to 1931-32), Howie Morenz's GOAT peak (1924-25 to 1931-32), and also prime seasons for Joliat, Mantha, and Lepine. Your assessment of Hainsworth's contributions to the Canadiens' goals against record in these seasons will be important to your placement of Hainsworth.
 

Michael Farkas

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It is quite remarkable how little contemporary interest there is in Hainsworth (period) and versus his stats, I agree. The very little film on him would agree with the contemporary opinion...

He just shouldn't be available right now.
 

overpass

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Here's a description of the style of play employed by Hap Holmes.

Border Cities Star, Nov 18, 1926
Holmes is unique in that he is one goal-tender who rarely uses his hands or body in stopping shots. He depends mainly on his stick. To one less experienced and clever, this would be dangerous, because a high shot stopped by a stick is always likely to bounce out of reach of the "goalie", possibly into a position which gives an opponent a chance to score. Holmes, however, knows just how to handle that stick. As the puck comes in contact with it, at no matter what height, he twists his stick downward quickly, so that the puck almost invariably falls "dead" right at his feet, from which position he can easily pass it out to one of his own defense men.


Holmes played pro lacrosse for eight years in addition to pro hockey, so I guess he used those stick skills to good effect as a goaltender.

I don't have the link handy, but I've also seen an article saying that Holmes wore smaller, more rounded leg pads than any other goalie, to allow him to move more freely.

It sounds like there was quite a bit of variation in individual style for goaltenders. We have Roy Worters leaping about and deflecting pucks away, Tiny Thompson catching everything with one hand like a first baseman, and now Holmes wielding his stick like a lacrosse player, knocking down shots.
 

Michael Farkas

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I don't want Worters to necessarily get that "leaping" tag...though he was very aggressive and played on his toes, I think leapers have a very negative connotation (Jake Forbes). The same thing with WRs and TEs in football that leap to make every catch, it's actually a sign of poor traits, skills, athleticism, etc.

Though Holmes seems fairly well received contemporarily, I'm surprised that it's not higher regard considering the amount of Cups he won. It would be "easy" to heap praise upon him. Seems like Hugh Lehman is much more well regarded as a goalie, is he not?

Imagining a goalie just standing there knocking pucks down with his stick makes my stomach hurt...
 

overpass

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Though Holmes seems fairly well received contemporarily, I'm surprised that it's not higher regard considering the amount of Cups he won. It would be "easy" to heap praise upon him. Seems like Hugh Lehman is much more well regarded as a goalie, is he not?

Lehman / Holmes strikes me as another Durnan / Broda situation, where Lehman was widely regarded as better, but Holmes got the results in the end.

Except that Holmes won with several different teams, unlike Broda.

That said, Holmes' Cup winning teams had some similarities. For one, Holmes moved from Toronto to Seattle and Victoria together with forwards Frank Foyston and Jack Walker. They were referred to as the Three Musketeers at the time. Both Foyston and Walker could and did play all three forward positions. Foyston was an all-around offensive star and the best playoff scorer of his era, and Walker was a hook-check pioneer and first-class defensive forward. It's worth considering their contributions to the Cup winning teams with Holmes.

Imagining a goalie just standing there knocking pucks down with his stick makes my stomach hurt...

It's breaking my brain a little. I'm not a lacrosse fan but maybe I should watch some clips of lacrosse goalies to help wrap my head around this style.
 

Professor What

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Swap him out for Andy Moog? Maybe. The 85 and 88 teams were pretty good, so a few goaltenders could still win (much like Billy Smith having an .850 save percentage as a win threshold, as discussed last round, though it's not like Smith posted an .851 and called it a day...)

"Any average goalie" is a reach. In short, Fuhr had to scramble more than other dynasty goalies. As much as they helped him with wins via goal support, the tradeoff is they also create more high danger chances for opponents. In one of the preliminary threads someone posted about Edmonton giving up a high danger chances, but I can't find that now.

Nevertheless, when accounting for era, Fuhr was a big game goalie. @Hockey Outsider found that Fuhr posted solid adjusted save percentages. (Remember these are era-adjusted only - Fuhr still faced a relatively dangerous chances).

And if you don't want to click on the link, their adjusted career save percentages have Brodeur at .911 and Fuhr at .910, Lundqvist at .909, Luongo at .908, and Price at .907.

For individual playoff runs, Fuhr's 88 run is tied with 96 Roy (.921), 85 Fuhr (.920) is tied with Cam Ward 06 and Mike Richter 94, Fuhr 87 is tied wirh Vasilevskiy 20 and Holtby 18 (.916). Fuhr 84 is listed at .920 , but we'll leave it for now (it's .920 but it is pretty far down the list, so maybe there's an error in transcription?)

The other thing about the 88 run is that Fuhr is 16-2-1 (blackout game) and it comes after 75 regular season games, and 9 Canada Cup games that fall. That's 103 meaningful games in 9 months.

The 1987 Canada Cup is a pretty good tournament. It doesn't look great because almost half of his sample is the Soviets, but here's how 1987 Canada Cup goalies did against Team USSR:

1987 Canada Cup Save Percentages vs USSR
Fuhr (4 GP).859
Hasek.851
Lindmark (2 GP).816
Barrasso.815
Takko.811

That leaves him at .914 over 5 games against the Czechoslovakians, Swedes, Finns, and Americans, and .893 overall (4th overall - Hasek and Lindmark were at .894, and Vanbiesbrouck above everybody since Barrasso took the beating from the Soviets for Team USA.)

Fuhr also had the St. Louis renaissance to show he could help out a middling team.

You like a workhorse? He played 79 games behind a low voltage offense, but went down early in Game 2 of Round 1 with a torn ACL and MCL. (For what little time he had in the 96 playoffs, Fuhr was great, but it's only 70 minutes.)

In 1997, he plays 73 games and St. Louis draws the Wings again. According to the Detroit Free Press:



The 1997 Stanley Cup Champions scored 6 even strength goals in 6 games. It's probably the last really good showing against a strong opponent.

In 1998 Fuhr gives you a pedestrian 58 games. In round 1, the Kings (8th in GF) were swept, and Fuhr posted a .929 (avg Kings opponent .897). To my eye, he's less spectacular than in 1997 though, and the Quenneville structure is helping (defensively at least. Still not great at playoff scoring in spite of a #1 GF finish.) The Blues get beaten pretty handily in Round 2 by the Wings.

In 1999 Fuhr is in his last playoff run. Only 39 games as he has his second knee surgery in a year in February 1999, and his third since the Kypreos injury in 1996. He's shaky in Games 2 and 3 against Phoenix, but rallies to come back from a 3-1 series deficit, capped by a 35 save overtime shutout in his last Game 7. The game is on Youtube. Fuhr is solid, (it's a 1-0 shutout after all,) but he's far less dynamic than he was in his first 2 Blues seasons. In Round 2 they get the 99 Stars and lose in 6 (Fuhr .883). The Game 6 OT goal is a little soft, Hull throwing it a Fuhr's feet and Modano poking it in (kind of reminds me of the OT goal Modano/Hull got in the 2000 Finals against NJ.)

If you need a guy to steal you a playoff game, Grant Fuhr is on the list of people who you would ask to do that, and he's higher on the list than a Tony Esposito.
I have to say, good case made for Fuhr. I came in pretty low on him, and you're making me rethink that a bit.
 

jigglysquishy

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Every Roy Worters playoff game

1926 Playoffs
Maroons win 3-1 in a two-game total goal series

Maroons thoroughly outplayed the Pirates in the last two periods. No relevant comments on Worters.

Maroons and Pirates tie 3-3
Maroons win total goals 6-4

The Morning Leader · ‎Mar 24, 1926
[Merlyn Phillips]'s goal was the result of a flashing attack down the rink side and a backhand shot at Roy Worters'. The Pittsburgh goalie was not smart enough on the clearing.

The Maroons played a sound defensive game and took advantage of opportunities offered to score, while the Pirates, under a handicap from the first, showed signs of the pressure.


1928 Playoffs
Rangers win 4-0 in a two-game total goal series

The Saskatoon Phoenix · ‎Mar 28, 1928
Both the regular and substitute forward lines kept up a constant bombardment on Roy Worters, who justified his choice as all-star goalie of the league by giving a spectacular display behind a defense which offered slight resistance to the Rangers' speedy attacks.

Worters made several brilliant saves when his defense had been pierced.


Pirates win 4-2
Rangers win total goals 6-4

The Morning Leader · ‎Mar 30, 1928
Worters cleared a warm drive from Boucher and another from Bill Cook Just before the period ended.

Chabot and Worters both received a heavy shelling.

Worters cleared difficult shots from Gray and Bill Cook and two from Bun Cook.



1929 Playoffs
Rangers and Americans tie 0-0 in a two-game total goal series

The Montreal Gazette · ‎Mar 20, 1929
Worters Stars as Rivals Struggle Through 60 Minutes of Hard Hockey

The Rangers made a few more shots, but the stellar goaltending of Roy Worters and the fine defensive play of the entire American team more than offset this advantage.


Rangers win 1-0 in double OT to win the series

The Montreal Gazette · ‎Mar 22, 1929
[The Rangers] made more excursions down towards Worters and were much more dangerous in front of the cage.

The wonderful work of the rival goalies, John Ross Roach and Roy Worters, stood out as the big feature of the rousing sizzling game, the Rangers net guardian making 56 stops against 48 by Worters.

The Rangers kept up a continuous attack, but Worters blocked the way every time.


1936 Playoffs
Americans win 3-0 in a two-game total goal series
Shots: Americans 33 Blackhawks 24


The Montreal Gazette · ‎Mar 25, 1936
So effective was Murray's work on the outer guard and so close was the wing-checking that the vaunted Hawk guns were effectively stilled and Worters didn't have a fair workout.


Blackhawks win 5-4
Americans win series 7-5

The Montreal Gazette · ‎Mar 27, 1936
Worters Is Standout

Goalie Roy Worters, hub of a strong New York defence, was a standout for the Americans, in the playoffs for the first time since 1929. The diminutive goalie kicked out 28 shots, 22 in the first two wild periods as the Hawks frantically tried to pull the series out of the fire


Leafs beat Americans 3-1
Americans 0 Leafs 1

Ottawa Citizen · ‎Mar 30, 1936
They set up a defence system that defied the Leafs. Joe Jerwa, Al Murray and Rookie Jeff Kalbfielsch did the heavy work in front of the brilliant Worters.


Americans win 1-0
Americans 1 Leafs 1

The Leader-Post · ‎Apr 1, 1936
There was handshaking and back-slapping for everyone, but to Worters went the credit for the win, even though curly-headed Joe Jerwa did score the lone goal. Without Worters one goal would not have been enough to halt the Leafs in the third period.

"I never saw anything like Worters in that third period," Smythe declared. "He was wonderful"


Leafs win 3-1 to win series
Americans 1 Leafs 2

Saskatoon Star-Phoenix · ‎Apr 3, 1936
Worters, hero of the American win in New York Tuesday, stopped 30 pucks to Hainsworths' 15, a good indication of how play went.



Not a lot to gleam through it. Worters played on terrible teams throughout his career and only has one meaningful run, at 35 on a team that finished 7th of 8. He looks good and is the best player on the team, but it's still hard to get much of a read with so little to pull from.
 

overpass

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I made this point toward the end of last week with regard to Thompson, and I'll expand on it a bit now. I don't think playoff performances before 1940 should be considered equal with playoff performances since that time.

The modern playoff with multiple seven game series is a place where players are tested by competing at the highest level, with dedicated game plans and repeated matchups and adjustments. I'm all for extra scrutiny of playoff performances by goaltenders like Smith, Esposito, Fuhr, and Hellebucyk to see how they hold up in this environment.

While old-time playoffs were also opportunities for high stakes competition, the brand of hockey was different and often inferior, for several reasons.
  • From 1914-1926, Stanley Cup finals series between the Eastern and Western champs pitted opponents who played under two different sets of rules. The biggest factor in a game was often which team was playing with their familiar rules. See the 1918 Cup finals, in which both Lehman and Holmes played, for a series in which rules were a major factor in each game.
  • Hockey played in spring was often played on poor quality ice. Early artificial ice surfaces and ice resurfacing technologies were not always up to the task, so championships were decided in inferior conditions. See the 1920 Cup finals for a series played with poor ice. And it wasn't common practice to "sprinkle" (i.e. flood) the ice between periods.
  • Short series. In the East-West era, league championships were decided in a two game home-and-home series. Two and three game series were played in early playoff rounds until 1941-42. Which provided more opportunity for randomess and less opportunity for excellence to shine through.
  • Playoff games in the 1930s tended to be very defensive and low-scoring, with long overtime games. And the longer the games went, the worse the ice got. Depth has always been important for successful teams, but the many overtime games of the 30s really pushed this to an extreme. As a result, there was often little correlation between the best regular season teams and the best playoff teams.
Why make the change around 1940-1945? Several reasons.
  • The first seven game series was played in 1938-39. Starting in 1942-43, all series were seven game series, and the three game series was eliminated.
  • Starting in 1938, teams were directed to "sweep" the ice between each period in the playoffs - a pre-Zamboni method of resurfacing using brooms. For 1940-41, the NHL made a rule that the ice surface must be resurfaced between periods. A new method using hand-pushed carts to sprinkle the ice was introduced in the same season. Prior to these changes, many rinks had simply scraped the ice between periods, and only sprinkled the ice before the first and fourth overtime period.
  • Not specific to the playoffs, but the 1943 red line rule was a major change, and is officially considered the start of the NHL's modern era.
  • And the full effects of the red line weren't seen until the many absent NHL players returned from wartime duty in 1946. For that matter, these returning players weren't all up to speed right away.
We've already seen quotes from longtime columnists that the Cup finals in 1946 and 1947 were much faster and better quality than classic playoff hockey of the 1930s. I think it's clear that the rule changes, faster ice, and longer series made for a better brand of playoff hockey, and one that better showcased player and team excellence.

So I wouldn't put too much stock in Holmes having won more Cups than Lehman. Or Thompson not winning for a decade in Boston, or Worters never winning a Cup. Playoff hockey of that era was inferior in some ways and could be pretty random. That said, playoff and finals games often had the best coverage and may contain more information on player performance, so I can understand putting them under extra scrutiny.

(I made the same argument back when planning the HOH top playoff performers list, arguing that it should be explicitly limited to a modern era playoff with a cutoff around 1940 or 1945, and we should do a separate process for a short list of earlier performers. The group didn't agree, but in the end only 3 of 40 players on the list were pre-1940 players - Frank Nighbor, Frank Boucher, and Frank Foyston.)
 

jigglysquishy

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That said, playoff and finals games often had the best coverage and may contain more information on player performance, so I can understand putting them under extra scrutiny.
This is the main reason I find it useful for early guys. Coverage for American teams tends to be poor. The playoffs, and particularly the finals, have substantially more coverage from more writers and in greater detail.

I don't hold it against Worters that his teams sucked. But I do find it relevant when he gets praised.
 

jigglysquishy

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Hainsworth (1895), Worters (1900), and Thompson (1903) are all roughly from the same era. All came up during the pre-forward pass era, but spent the majority of their pro careers in the post-forward pass era. All were out of the league by WW II. Looking at prime years of ~1925-1940 we've already inducted Charlie Gardiner as the clear leader. Alec Connell is the only other goalie from this era likely to come up during the next few rounds. Lorne Chabot and John Ross Roach are the only other ones that will come up during the project. So, in effective, we're picking 2, 3, and 4 of this roughly 15 year window.

Looking at their all-star voting, including the GM votes.

Roy Worters
  • 1st Team All Star (1926) over ? (Charles Stewart was 2nd in Hart voting among goalies)
  • 1st Team All Star (1927) over ?
  • 1st Team All Star (1928) over George Hainsworth and Alec Connell
  • 1st Team All Star (1929) over ?
  • no records for 1930, but Charlie Gardiner led goalies in Hart voting
  • 3rd Team All Star (1931) behind Charlie Gardiner and Tiny Thompson
  • 2nd Team All Star (1932) behind Charlie Gardiner, ahead of George Hainsworth
  • 3rd Team All Star (1933) behind John Ross Roach and Charlie Gardiner
  • 2nd Team All Star (1934) behind Charlie Gardiner, ahead of Tiny Thompson
  • 3rd Team All Star (1935) behind Lorne Chabot and Tiny Thompson

George Hainsworth
  • no records past 1st Team for 1927, but Hainsworth had the lowest GAA
  • 2nd Team All Star (1928), behind Roy Worters, over Alec Connell
  • no records past 1st Team for 1929, but Hainsworth had the lowest GAA
  • no records for 1930, but Charlie Gardiner led goalies in Hart voting
  • 3rd Team All Star (1932) behind Charlie Gardiner and Tiny Thompson
Hainsworth appears to be 4th in All Star voting in 1931 and 1936 and 5th in 1934 and 1935

Tiny Thompson
  • no records for 1930, but Thompson had the lowest GAA as Charlie Gardiner led all goalies in Hart voting
  • 2nd Team All Star (1931) behind Charlie Gardiner, ahead of Roy Worters
  • 3rd Team All Star (1934) behind Charlie Gardiner and Roy Worters
  • 2nd Team All Star (1935) behind Lorne Chabot, ahead of Roy Worters
  • 1st Team All Star (1936) ahead of Wilf Cude and Mike Karakas (Thompson's 3rd Vezina season)
  • 3rd Team All Star (1937) behind Normie Smith and Wilf Cude
  • 1st Team All Star (1938) ahead of Dave Kerr and Wilf Cude (Thompson's 4th Vezina)
In 1933, Thompson won his second Vezina for best GAA but was 4th in All Star voting behind John Ross Roach, Charlie Gardiner, and Roy Worters. Otherwise unheard of in this era.

Roy Worters also had the strongest Hart voting of the trio. Four times he received Hart voting (4th - 1926, 2nd - 1928, 1st - 1929, 5th - 1934). Thompson finished 4th in 1937. Hainsworth never received a vote.

Now, we don't have AS voting before the merger (and spotty GM records until 1931). Hainsworth played three years in the WCHL with Saskatoon that would be missed. He played on a middling team, but does receive high praise.

It's likely he was the best goalie in the WCHL for at least the last season, but maybe all three. I'll point out though that his main competition were very old. In 1923, Lehman was 38. Holmes was 35. Winkler was the only "prime age" goalie at 29.



All in all, I do think Worters was the strongest goalie of the three. I could go either way on Thompson/Hainsworth. That Hainsworth played meaningful hockey from ages 18-43 is impressive. I would love if someone has more info on his OHA amateur stint, as it's where he spent his 20s.
 

overpass

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Looking at their all-star voting, including the GM votes.

See this thread for the coach/manager votes from 1926-27 through 1929-30, before writers voted for the official all-star teams. Worters, Hainsworth, and Thompson dominated these four years of voting.

1926-27: Hainsworth 1st team, Roach 2nd team, Worters 3rd team. No vote totals given but Hainsworth and Roach were tied in voting points, Hainsworth had more first place votes.

1927-28: Worters 1st team (7 1st place, 1 2nd place vote), Hainsworth 2nd team (1-4), Connell 3rd team (1-3).

1928-29: Worters 1st team (7), Hainsworth 2nd team (2), Thompson 3rd team (1)

1929-30: Thompson 1st team (7), Worters 2nd team (1)
 

overpass

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Hainsworth played three years in the WCHL with Saskatoon that would be missed. He played on a middling team, but does receive high praise.

It's likely he was the best goalie in the WCHL for at least the last season, but maybe all three. I'll point out though that his main competition were very old. In 1923, Lehman was 38. Holmes was 35. Winkler was the only "prime age" goalie at 29.

See this post. Hainsworth was the all-star goalie in the WHL for his last season, but not his first two.

WCHL/WHL All-stars

1923-24
1st Team
Hugh McCusker, G

1924-25
1st Team
Hap Holmes G

1925-26
1st Team
George Hainsworth G
 
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