Which makes complete sense, of course, because I think you've made it clear that your opinions are from watching the goalies. I guess I'm really mostly confused why your arguments aren't, "Worsley looks bad on film because xyz", which I'd personally be very interested to listen to, rather than some absolute nonsense-tier argument like "had a losing record on the New York Rangers in the Original Six playoffs".
If you feel like people aren't open to the talent valuation perspective or the video arguments or that you got too much pushback from some voters, please don't worry about it. I think you're significantly underestimating the silent majority at the expense of a few people who seem to be demanding consensus for no good reason. I got accused of bias and manipulating numbers in the last goalie project for stats that passed entirely without comment this time around. Perspectives change.
If this is, in fact, the case...I'd much prefer to do that. It's a much better use of time for me...I don't know if it is for folks in this project, but I guess we'll see what they come back with haha
So, let's use what we already know about goaltending and know about goaltending at the time.
Gump basically spanned the career of Plante. We remember Plante, but if we don't, here's a reminder:
So you look at 2:53 of the video, puck goes behind the net. Watch the puck tracking of Plante. Puck tracking that is fully enabled by excellent skating.
One of the key tenets of great goaltending is anticipation. Anticipation is the driving force. The nets are only so big, you take up X amount of space of that net just by being alive...guys are shooting a 3" x 1" disc at a rate that's really hard to react to. If you can't anticipate, it's gonna be tough. You're gonna always be playing from a deficit. Every shot attempt is a fight uphill.
Can you compensate for that in other ways? Yeah, it's the same thing that skaters do that have limited anticipation skills...
Anticipation reveals itself in aspects of goaltending like puck tracking, shooter tracking (where shooters are, where the biggest threats are, etc.), reading shots off of sticks, reading where to direct rebounds and where to play pucks, etc. - you convert these aspects into things like crease depth, save selection, etc.
It's all part of your save process. Save process remains relatively consistent in your professional years. Sometimes you make the save, sometimes you don't. The key is to have a process though.
If you're a house builder, you don't start with a random part of the house each time. "Today, instead of laying the foundation first, we're gonna start with the door bell"; if you're a chef, you probably don't want to taste your chicken before you put it in the oven.
Now, theoretically, you could start with a door bell and still end up with a successful house. It could depend on what your second step is. But again, if it's sort of random and not technically sound, the results are going to vary considerably more than someone who has a sensible process.
One of the key points of goaltending before the proliferation of the butterfly (Roy-era butterfly) is about keeping your feet. Because if you're lying on the floor, chances are your not in a position to make a save. Contrary to popular belief by people who watch Gretzky and Lemieux lobotomizing minor leaguers on highlight films, there were some legitimately good goalies in this era and the eras before.
But, if you're lying on your back because you can't skate or you have no balance, you probably aren't going to succeed consistently. You certainly aren't going to stop any second shots with regularity. You aren't gonna stop any cross-net-line passes, you're going to be vulnerable on rudimentary lo-hi plays, etc.
Now, of course, excellent teams and/or well coached teams are evaluating this and making appropriate changes (this version of the Tampa Bay Lightning change up their in-zone coverage and PK structure to allow more shots CLOSER to the net at certain angles because Vasilevskiy is better at stopping those than 40 foot wrist shots, especially those that are shot against the flow of the play, for instance).
Moral of the story is, some goalies with pronounced weaknesses can be compensated for by the team around them. Some goalies with the same weaknesses or maybe less of that weakness don't have the team support for that and their stats suffer...stats suffer, award voting suffers...award voting suffers, they don't make the list. Which is why I like the talent evaluation route better because it puts less emphasis on the team.
"Hey, **** for brains, if keeping your feet is so important in this era...what about Glenn Hall? Did you have him 40th on your prelim or something...you idiot?"
No, I had him in my top 10. Because while Hall does drop down quite a bit, he used the butterfly as a common save selection, but not exclusively. His save process is clear and consistent. Was it possibly his downfall sometimes? Sure. But he was technically very good, his save process was scalable, it all adds up. In a world where he's not wearing sponges on his legs, he might win a few more playoff series even.
Hall knew when to keep his feet and knew when to make the butterfly the save selection. Take this clip here for example:
The initial save that he makes here is a standing save, as there is no benefit to going down here. Going down likely exposes the five hole and exposes short side high (goalies of today, take a note). He makes a poised save and doesn't fall on his ass because he can actually skate. The rebound is not amazing, but because he's on his feet, he can get (slight) depth and push into the angle to make a butterfly stop. He remains torso upright and tries to find the puck in a maze of players who did not keep their feet and are generally useless. He slides his right leg to the post just in case a puck some how squirts through while he tries to track from the other side of the pile. This makes sense because there's no Hab around to lift it over his leg. He can just seal that ice and be all right.
Outside of the uncontrolled rebound off of a backhand shot from 8 feet away (life's tough), that's an informed sequence from Hall. He wasn't just dropping and hoping something hit him. There's a clear and sensible save process there.
Let's take a look at some Gump...
We saw guys like Plante and Hall slide effortlessly to their posts and get the seal on the post, get the post integration and setup right away. It's because they're spatially aware and they have full control over their body mechanics as they both can skate. Gump is not those things.
It's all little stuff when you're a goalie pretty much, but it all adds up. In this little sequence, like 2 seconds...puck gets shot to the far right offensive corner. Fairly labored push from Gump, and then he overlaps the post - he goes too far. Then he has to correct, the correction opens him up for a brief second, the correction pulls his stick away from the correct position. Then he finally gets there.
Now, nothing happens right then and there, but he's playing from a deficit.
- Overskate your net -> more net is open than necessary
- Correction -> feet aren't set for any quick shots, so a rebound would be all but a guarantee
- Correction 2 -> Poor skating mechanics means that the upper body is part of the movement of the feet, so shoulder and stick jostling can create issues in terms of readiness to move again with the play, or make a quick pass disruption, or even come out and play the puck to a teammate (see: Plante, all the time)
You let that clip roll past 2:43 and you see Worsley lose track of most things here. But in fairness, that's a tough play.
The very next sequence - where Worsley surrenders a lead in short order to an expansion team in a potential elimination game - is much more telling of what we're working with here...
Blues will round the net at 3:09. Worsley is fine, stick blade isn't the best, but whatever. He appears to check the right point man - a virtual non-threat - but seems unwilling or unable to scan the middle of the ice at all. He has plenty of opportunity to do so as the player emerges from the corner in a very non-threatening way.
Jacques Laperriere (MTL2) helps support my claims about staying upright with that milquetoast defensive effort, but watch Worsley as this pass is made into the slot. A couple things you can read here...
- Worsley has no clue that that player exists, even though that's the biggest threat on the rink.
- Worsley is not a good skater in general (it's not just laterally), as he fails to gain any depth, cut down any angle, and immediately loses his feet here (though, intentional as it may be...more on that in a second).
- This is a soccer style save at best (I'll give credit where its due, Worsley has surprisingly good feet in terms of kicking pucks out...he probably would have been a better soccer goalie) - this just doesn't really work in hockey. Soccer goalie is a lot of guesswork...if you've ever seen penalty kicks, it can look pretty silly at times. Well, that's sort of what we see here, but that doesn't apply to hockey, it's not necessary to do this.
I don't mind him giving up his feet here - I think Hall would have gone butterfly here too - but what I don't like is that he's just guessing. Hall would have tracked that shooter instead of looking out to the point. And Hall would have butterflied into the save with good depth. Worsley actually slides out of the way of this shot because of poor technique.
I made an observation about goalies during this time period in the prelim discussion...
Me said:
Guys that won often/a lot:
Plante
Bower
Sawchuk
Parent
Smith
Dryden
Guys that famously did not win often/a lot:
Hall
Vachon
Giacomin
Esposito
Crozier
Worsley until he was in his late 30's on a wagon Habs team that leaked into the expansion era
If you don't believe me about the keeping your feet, being able to skate, and being well balanced/anchored - well, you're a "results guy", CG...you got standup guys that could skate up top, and you guys that fell all over the floor at the bottom. There's your results.
But the whole thing is a mess...
Here he slides out of the net for this low angle play, I'm not convinced that they couldn't have gone short side high there if they weren't an expansion team. But ok, so he slides like a goof...but it's not slide -> pop up -> get set. Watch him in this sequence, he's just swimming out of the net while play continues. It takes him 3 to 5 business days to even get up. His stick is long gone.
It's a mess.
He was sent to the minors more in the O6 era than he received AS voting. He picks up a 1st in '68 (where he didn't lead in 1H OR 2H voting), he picks up a 2nd in '66 (probably only because Plante went on hiatus)...then there's a couple of 3s in there.
That's a whole lot of nothin' for 20+ years as an
NHLer pro.