rmartin65
Registered User
- Apr 7, 2011
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We absolutely should be taking into account that he was scored on a lot... but I'd argue the context behind those numbers is more important.No, we need to account for everything. We can't just ignore that he gave a ton of goals.
If we aren't applying that context, I'm sure Tom Paton ranked really highly on your preliminary list, right?
Like MAF? Not really. But can you imagine him making the list if he NEVER beat his backup? We compare people to backups all the time.
Ah, sorry, I must have mixed you up with someone else.
But, it would help if you were factually accurate; using the Wiki stats you provided earlier, Moran had a 3.7 GAA while Harry Rochon had a GAA of 8.0. Small sample size, of course, but Moran blew his backup out of the water there.
We compare people to their backups all the time, but again, there is a context required. In 10-22 game seasons, sample sizes are so incredibly small. A bad game has a much more dramatic impact on averaging stats over 10 games than it does over 60 games.
I must have missed that.@seventieslord used an even smaller sample in a Mike Liut playoff post earlier - where were the complaints then?
I'd like to see where I said goals allowed don't matter. I'm merely arguing that starting goalies are statistically outperformed by their backups at times. That doesn't make them any less great, it doesn't make the backups particularly special, it just means that, statistically, wacky things happen over small sample sizes.This is an irrational argument of a point you (possibly) don't support. The argument seems to be going to an unnecessary extreme (goals allowed don't matter at all!) to prop up Moran.
Right... so Moran having a backup outperform him over a massive 1-4 game sample size shouldn't mean that Moran was not a historically great goalie, since just about all the hockey observers of the time considered Moran to be either the best or one of the best goalies of his era. It's literally the argument I am making.No one is saying GAA is precise. A backup having a small advantage over a starter doesn't usually win you the Vezina. All those clever writers and GMs seem to know this based on voting.
Yep- that's my point.Again, showing that someone was marginally ahead of someone else proves nothing. The goalies we like tend to be good at preventing goals. We can and have looked at team situations and accounted for players who had a higher degree of difficulty.
But in the opinions of those who saw him and his contemporaries play, he was. It just goes back to what you trust here- an averaging stat over a small sample size that you even admit has it's flaws, or countless newspaper reports and eyewitness observations?We're not arguing that he didn't belong in the league, just that he isn't more impactful all-time than a lot of great goaltenders.
Where has someone used GAA as the sole reason to denigrate a player's career during this project? It's definitely possible I skimmed over it.Surely we have to account for it. Why is Paddy Moran the one goalie in history for whom we throw out the metrics we use for everyone else?
It's a garbage stat. We should look at it, because it is a data point, but it is something I don't think we should be putting a lot of stock in... for any goalie, not just for Moran.
I'm not sold on Richter, at all. Contemporary opinion does not seem to hold him in near the same regard as Moran was held. Moran makes all star teams, gets called the best goalkeeper in the league over about a decade, later great goalies are compared to Moran, Moran was one of the first 3 living goalies (we'll say Connell counts) inducted into the HoF (Connell, Lehman, and Moran all made it in 1958), etc. Richter has next-to-no Vezina support, no post-season all star teams, and I think he's on the outside looking in when it comes to the HoF.What's your opinion of say, Mike Richter? And if it's low, are you holding him accountable for things Paddy Moran gets a free pass for?
I'm definitely not down on Richter because of his GAA or save percentage or whatever. As I have stated numerous times, I personally don't care for goalie stats.
I highly doubt a comprehensive review of post-game summaries, all star/awards voting, and the opinions of those that played with/against them would give us the impression that Bure was a more impactful player than Gretzky.Or take it all into account. The man gave up a TON of goals relative to his peers. If we didn't have stats and were going by newspaper accounts alone, we might think Pavel Bure was more impactful than Wayne Gretzky.
Anyway, again, no one is saying throw the stat out. All I'm doing is saying it is garbage and shouldn't be valued much.
Wasn't that the case with Benedict for a long while as well? Isn't that part of the myth surrounding Benedict, that he was this pioneering rule-breaker?It was something they had to get away with. Not an approved tool of the trade.
I'm definitely tracking that it was illegal and was eventually made legal. I'm arguing that Benedict wasn't special in this regard, that plenty of goalies dropped to their knees to stop the puck, risking a penalty to do so.Jan. 9: Boucher earns NHL-record fifth straight shutout | NHL.com (EDIT: It's a Today in NHL History thing, it makes sense, I swear!)
Wins is a garbage stat! Just like GAA. Just like save percentage. But hey, if people are posting GAA, why shouldn't we post Cup-deciding games as well? You argued that Moran "wasn't as impactful as he looked when it came to helping a team win"; that table shows that Moran helped his team win the Cup just as much than any other goalie eligible this round, and more than quite a few of them. We have his teams winning. We have quotes of Moran helping his teams win/lose less badly. If we put our hands together...It's a good thing we have a non-garbage stat like Wins to show us what's what. And we're going the (technically correct) way of only counting the Cup games Moran played against the overmatched Maritimes teams and ignoring the games where he played for the "World Championship" and they beat the pants off of him, scoring at a level they couldn't achieve against the New Westminster Royals. That's not ALL on Moran, but we seem to be holding these newspaper accounts up as a significant accomplishment for reasons that escape me.
I sure do- I take game reports and contemporary opinions into account for each and every goalie eligible.But hey, "While he was letting ten go through, there were ten hundred he didn’t let slip in." So long as you use that standard for everyone else too.
Unless you think that everyone else here is gullible enough to believe that Moran faced 1010 shots in the game and stopped 10 of them, I think we can all be trusted enough to recognize hyperbole like this. Have fun throwing this quote around, I don't think it's changing hearts and minds the way you think it is, though.