Sure, it isn't a negative.
Going back to some previous players then- how did you feel about Dryden's lack of longevity? Carey Price's relative lack of longevity for the era? If longevity is a positive, wouldn't lack of longevity be a negative?
Longevity hasn't been as important to me overall in this project. I know I've made a few comments along those lines previously. Normally, for positional forward rankings, I try to factor peak less than some others, but for goalies, peak and ability has generally been more important to me. So guys like Price or Dryden ranked high for me as a result. Another reason why I also like Quick here, with his 2012 playoff run which is possibly the best playoff run of any goalie left (minus Giguere).
But - for a few goalies where their longevity is just at an all-time high, I make an exception and find those resumes very attractive. I wanted to try and make a pitch for Brodeur at #1 based on his own incredible longevity, but I couldn't quite get there.
Fleury doesn't just have a bit of longevity, he's #2 all-time for wins. He has what....~18-19 seasons as a #1 goalie in this league? In an era where there's so much volatility among #1 goalies year over year. I just think it's impressive, and something I value at this stage in this project.
Lots of goalies have "elite moments" sprinkled into their career. Barrasso, to use another (former Pens) goalie, similarly had an inconsistent career with some high peaks.
Yes of course. I don't think Fleury's "elite moments" are necessarily the best in this group or anything - I'm just saying, he's not just a compiler/longevity with no elite moments.
He does have some elite moments too, and some significant ones. If all he was was a compiler (ie like a Mike Gartner), I'd like his resume less.
Barasso has nowhere near Fleury's longevity or consistency as a #1 goalie. He might have higher, or comparable peaks though.
Vasilevskiy was the best choice that year, IMO. I think I'd also have taken Hellebuyck, too. I remember Varlamov having a strong year as well.
Maybe you prefer Vasi. I don't think Fleury's Vezina was necessarily one of the strongest ever, but "lifetime achievement" is short-selling it. Lidstrom often gets said to have gotten a "lifetime achievement" Norris at age 40, when he maybe didn't deserve it. i don't think this is the same here. Fleury was 100% a worthy winner, even if you possibly prefered someone else.
2008 was a great run, I agree. But 2009- he's the... 3rd? most important Penguin. 2017- if he was having that strong of a run, he wouldn't have been replaced by Murray. But he was, and the Penguins won the cup. With Fleury on the bench, and a kid who would have maybe another season or two of relevance in net, the Penguins won two Cups after YEARS of failing to do so.
The Penguins literally paid the Golden Knights to take Fleury.
Yeah he was great in 2017 playoffs. The fact that coach opeted to go with Murray is fine, it's more about Pittsburgh having had moved on from Fleury, but it doesn't in anyway reflect on his level of play. He was probably the MVP favorite before they put Murray in (who himself also did great).
Penguins paying Golden Knights to take Fleury has no real bearing here. Since Fleury was obviously fantastic in Vegas, and this isn't a good move from Pittsburgh looking back.
Are you talking 17-18? You are giving credit to MAF for that season? Despite what people thought, the Knights were actually good. Look at their track record, regardless of who has been in goal, they have been a consistently strong team.
They move on from MAF after 20-21, miss the playoffs. Alright, looks good for Fleury, right? However, this can easily be attributed to the injuries that Vegas suffered that year. With a healthy roster, the Knights win the Cup the next year despite a carousel of goalies.
Almost no one expected Vegas to be good in year 1. The hockey world and fans were mostly crticizing the horrible way they ran their expansion draft. It was really a case of a team unexpectedly mcoming together and playing very well.
I think Fleury was a huge part of that success in year 1, and certainly in the playoffs.
Not really factoring in 21-22 and Vegas missing playoffs in anyway for Fleury.
He was a top 10 goalie in a 30-32 team league?! That's the argument now? He was one of the top 30% of goalies? There have to be goalies with better arguments than that.
I'd argue his resume is powered by longevity and team success (sounds a lot like Worsely, honestly, and the group resoundingly rejected Worsely last round).
I feel like you're twisting my words a bit. It's not the top 10 that is hugely commendable, it's the 21 years. Close to 21 years of being a top ~10 goalie.
It's true that Fleury had some "low lows", but never over a full season. He doesn't really have many "bad" seasons. Overall, he's been a consistent and reliable #1 goalie, for longer than almost anyone in history.