Apologies for a late response...
EDIT- I realized that I basically have a good data set already from when I went through the HoF. It isn't necessarily the best players of the birth year brackets, but it is readily available. I'm trying to move quickly, so the final season age column is just final season minus birth year- I'm sure there are a couple spots where I am off by a couple months. I'm largely just using the seasons as according to Wikipedia. I think this artificially inflates Lehman's numbers a bit, because he played his first couple seasons (and, oddly, a later season) in a poor league, but since he is in both data sets it doesn't really matter. I tried to ignore seasons that were clear outliers in terms of games played- mostly just guys who played seasons of 3 or 4 games at the end of their careers. All numbers were (quickly) compiled in good faith. If anyone points out any errors, I'll be glad to fix the tables.
For LeSueur (HoF goalies born 1876-1886):
Name | Career (Years) | Career (Seasons) | Final Season Age |
Paddy Moran | 1902-1917 | 16 | 40 |
Bouse Hutton | 1899-1904 ; 1909 | 7 | 27 ; 32 |
Riley Hern | 1898-1911 | 14 | 34 |
Percy LeSueur | 1904-1916 | 13 | 35 |
Hugh Lehman | 1904-1928 | 24 | 42 |
Average | N/A | 14.8 | 35.6 or 36.6 (Hutton) |
For Holmes (HoF goalies born 1883-1893):
Name | Career (Years) | Career (Seasons) | Final Season Age |
Hugh Lehman | 1904-1928 | 24 | 42 |
Georges Vezina | 1910-1925 | 16 | 38 |
Hap Holmes | 1909-1928 | 19 | 40 |
Clint Benedict | 1910-1931 | 22 | 39 |
George Hainsworth | 1913-1936 | 23 | 43 |
Average | N/A | 20.8 | 40.4 |
Thank you for putting these together. A difference I'd have here is that I'm looking less at just raw seasons and more at meaningful seasons. As in, I don't know how much stock to put into LeSueur's OHA time, since it was not a strong league when he played, nor do I know how much stock to put into his last two years in the NHA with Toronto, when I don't believe he was all that good - though if that's not the correct reading of his performance there then obviously I'm willing to hear otherwise.
Holmes's first meaningful season IMO would be 13-14, and his last 27-28, so 15 years. 9 for LeSueur from 1906-1914. That's more where I'm looking at.
Definitely worse. Again, you aren't exactly breaking my heart here.
I'm not trying to ask 'gotcha' questions here, just trying to contextualize how LeSueur stacked up with contemporaries. So if we include Nicholson in the group above of LeSueur's contemporaries, it probably looks like this for meaningful length of career, right?
Lehman
Nicholson/Moran
Hern/LeSueur
Hutton
And then for Holmes, this is what I'd say it looks like:
Hainsworth
Lehman
Vezina (some grace allowed here for, you know, dying)
Holmes/Benedict (am I underrating pre-NHA Benedict?)
Hmm... looking at it in this way, we have two big outliers in Hutton and Hainsworth, and maybe not so much difference between the rest of the group.
You may be right in that I'm overrating Holmes's longevity here.
Whose career length was more out of the norm, LeSueur, or Kiprusoff?
Good question, and I had to think about it, but you're probably right in implying it's Kiprusoff.
The only thing I'd push back on- and it is a small thing- is why would Lumley being a goalie coach be a mark in his favor? Does Mitch Korn sneak onto our list?
I think that's a point that you could take or leave and I wouldn't be offended either way. To me, it's a mark in his favour because it's tangible proof that teams were willing to pay him to give technical advice, which says that he knew what he was doing technically when he was actually playing. The same reason why I'm interested in how present Jacques Plante was after his playing career was over, the same reason why I put Wilf Cude on my initial list, who was somebody in the 30s/40s that was capable of offering technical feedback on goaltenders in newspapers. You don't want a guy as your goalie coach who, when he played, flopped around and hoped for the best, know what I mean?
"Penalized" and "this late" implies that there's a place that he belongs? But that's not how it should work. THIS is the ranking. Other rankings have no bearing.
I'm not referring to other rankings when I make that statement. What I meant was that Esposito's rep, award voting, statistics, longevity all paint a picture of a guy who should go higher than wherever he's about to end up.