Player Discussion Linus Ullmark (G)

vandelay

Registered User
Nov 3, 2022
51
45
I did find it strange that green didnt put him back in for last night's game. Forsberg has been better but getting ullmark going would seem to be priority 1 right now...
 
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bicboi64

Registered User
Aug 13, 2020
5,266
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Brampton
Wow, Ullmark brutal in his post game comments after Vegas,

"If we had a capable goalie, we'd have won 4-3"

I like him taking accountability but hope he's not so hard on himself that he messes up his confidence.
Nice to see some real leadership coming from between the pipes (been forever since we've had a keeper with the talent, confidence, and accountability). Hope he bounces back with a shut out
 

Sanderson

Registered User
Sep 10, 2002
5,743
465
Hamburg, Germany
He shouldn’t have suited up for the Czechs in Turin Olympics. We were gonna win the Cup. That’s why Brodeur is better. He’s so good league had to nerf him with the trapezoid.
Brodeur is better because Hasek got injured?

I'll never get why anyone would claim Brodeur to be the best goalie ever. With Roy at least you can point at the 80s and early 90s, with his Conn Smythes and Vezinas, but Brodeur really has no claim at all.

The best ever does not get bested year after year after year during his peak (or prime) by someone else. Yet Hasek absolutely clobbered Brodeur again and again. There was only one season where it was even close. Heck, Brodeur couldn't even get a Vezina when Hasek missed half a season. You have to go all the way up to 06/07 to find a season in which Brodeur actually outperformed Hasek, 03/04 if you want to count the season Hasek barely played in, and Hasek was ancient by that time.

93/94: Hasek (28) wins the Vezina, Brodeur (21) wins the Calder, Hasek has the much better season
94/95: Hasek (29) trounces the entire league (Vezina), Brodeur (22) is very average
95/96: Hasek (30) is the best goalie again, but not quite as dominant, and Buffalo is struggling, so no Vezina for once, Brodeur (23) is doing really well, but is not on Hasek's level
96/97: Hasek (31) wins the Hart, Pearson and Vezina, Brodeur (24) is actually pretty close for once
97/98: Hasek (32) trounces the league again, winning another set of Hart, Pearson and Vezina, Brodeur (25) is among the best of the rest, but far behind Hasek
98/99: Hasek (33) wins another Vezina and probably should have won more, yet another truly dominant season compared to the rest, Brodeur (26) is very average
99/00: Hasek (34) misses half the season, judging by his form later on, it probably would have been another Vezina if he hadn't, Brodeur (27) with another average season
00/01: Hasek (35) with another Vezina, though not as dominant as he used to be. Brodeur (28) again with an average season
01/02: Hasek (36) with a good but not great season in Detroit, as Theodore wins the Vezina and Hart. Brodeur (29) with another average season
02/03: Hasek retires, Brodeur (30) wins his first Vezina, though that seemed based more on his name than performance, as he wasn't even close to the best that year
03/04: Hasek (38) returns but barely plays, Brodeur (31) wins another Vezina, but again it's a rather dubious one
05/06: Hasek (40) on course for another Vezina until an injury ends his season, Brodeur (33) good but not great
06/07: Hasek (41) has a decent season, Brodeur (34) actually deserves his Vezina for once, though voting ends in a very close call against Luongo
07/08: Hasek (42) is all but done, Brodeur (35) wins another Vezina in yet another close call against Nabokov. Though voting seems largely based on them playing all the time, not on how dominant they were, because they weren't.
08/09: Brodeur (36) misses half the season
09/10: Brodeur's (37) last really good season, Vezina finalist.
Afterwards a bunch of very average years to finish his career.

In other words: Brodeur couldn't win a Vezina until Hasek was gone. There were quite a few years were Brodeur was anything but special, and he even missed out on being a Vezina-contender when there was an opening, like in 2000. And unlike Hasek, he never dominanted the other goalies. He either won close calls, or based on playing a ton, not because he performed better in the games he played. In many years he got some Vezina consideration due his high nunber of wins and games played, not because his performance actually matched others. A rather warped way of voting for the best.

Brodeur got lots of wins and shutouts, thanks to playing lots of games every year for a very long time. But that doesn't make you the best when you can never actually beat the best during his prime. It's like suggesting Mark Messier was a better player than Mario Lemieux. Alltime great, among the best ever, sure, but not close to being the best.

It's also wrong to claim they changed the rules because of Brodeur. Brodeur was hardly the only goalie who could play the puck, and at the times they made the change, there was others equal to him (like Marty Turco). The change happened because they needed to do something about defensive schemes, which caused a lot of ineffective dump-ins that got handled by the goalies before any attacker could do anything about it. This happened with basically every goalie, regardless of whether he was good at playing the puck or not. What mattered was that a goalie could be there first.
 
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Tundraman

ModerationIsKey
Feb 13, 2010
11,755
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North
Tough crowd. He’s played 3 games.
That's my point regardless of reasons or excuses there is still an issue. The fact he didn't start the last game when he was healthy is puzzling too. And it makes no sense as someone said that they were saving him for some future game because he might cramp up on the 4 hour flight home. He's been touted as a top NHL goalie so we need to see that soon. Like I said...... so far.... a big disappointment.
 

Boud

Registered User
Dec 27, 2011
13,806
7,359
That's my point regardless of reasons or excuses there is still an issue. The fact he didn't start the last game when he was healthy is puzzling too. And it makes no sense as someone said that they were saving him for some future game because he might cramp up on the 4 hour flight home. He's been touted as a top NHL goalie so we need to see that soon. Like I said...... so far.... a big disappointment.


It’s early. He played relatively well in his first 2 games. We need a good season start from him and the team. If you asked me at the beginning of the year where we would be after 8 games against Panthers, Avs, Kings, Devils, Vegas, Lightning, Utah and Habs I would’ve told you around .500 and possibly less than that.

Overall not very surprised about our record and/or Ullmark so far. We literally just need average to good goaltending to give us a chance to win and I trust he can give us that and more.

As always injuries have plagued this roster. Losing any of our top 4 defensemen or top 9 forwards for an extended period will probably be the difference between us making the playoffs or missing. We are too thin on defence to miss anyone from our top 4.

This team is still very much a bubble team with the additions from the offseason. I don’t expect much more from this group.
 

PlayOn

Registered User
Jun 22, 2010
1,864
2,382
That's my point regardless of reasons or excuses there is still an issue. The fact he didn't start the last game when he was healthy is puzzling too. And it makes no sense as someone said that they were saving him for some future game because he might cramp up on the 4 hour flight home. He's been touted as a top NHL goalie so we need to see that soon. Like I said...... so far.... a big disappointment.
Three games is just not enough for me to feel disappointed in any player’s performance to be honest. But we all agree, he needs to be a difference maker for us.
 

DanyHeatley

Registered User
Dec 6, 2016
1,422
838
Brodeur is better because Hasek got injured?

I'll never get why anyone would claim Brodeur to be the best goalie ever. With Roy at least you can point at the 80s and early 90s, with his Conn Smythes and Vezinas, but Brodeur really has no claim at all.

The best ever does not get bested year after year after year during his peak (or prime) by someone else. Yet Hasek absolutely clobbered Brodeur again and again. There was only one season where it was even close. Heck, Brodeur couldn't even get a Vezina when Hasek missed half a season. You have to go all the way up to 06/07 to find a season in which Brodeur actually outperformed Hasek, 03/04 if you want to count the season Hasek barely played in, and Hasek was ancient by that time.

93/94: Hasek (28) wins the Vezina, Brodeur (21) wins the Calder, Hasek has the much better season
94/95: Hasek (29) trounces the entire league (Vezina), Brodeur (22) is very average
95/96: Hasek (30) is the best goalie again, but not quite as dominant, and Buffalo is struggling, so no Vezina for once, Brodeur (23) is doing really well, but is not on Hasek's level
96/97: Hasek (31) wins the Hart, Pearson and Vezina, Brodeur (24) is actually pretty close for once
97/98: Hasek (32) trounces the league again, winning another set of Hart, Pearson and Vezina, Brodeur (25) is among the best of the rest, but far behind Hasek
98/99: Hasek (33) wins another Vezina and probably should have won more, yet another truly dominant season compared to the rest, Brodeur (26) is very average
99/00: Hasek (34) misses half the season, judging by his form later on, it probably would have been another Vezina if he hadn't, Brodeur (27) with another average season
00/01: Hasek (35) with another Vezina, though not as dominant as he used to be. Brodeur (28) again with an average season
01/02: Hasek (36) with a good but not great season in Detroit, as Theodore wins the Vezina and Hart. Brodeur (29) with another average season
02/03: Hasek retires, Brodeur (30) wins his first Vezina, though that seemed based more on his name than performance, as he wasn't even close to the best that year
03/04: Hasek (38) returns but barely plays, Brodeur (31) wins another Vezina, but again it's a rather dubious one
05/06: Hasek (40) on course for another Vezina until an injury ends his season, Brodeur (33) good but not great
06/07: Hasek (41) has a decent season, Brodeur (34) actually deserves his Vezina for once, though voting ends in a very close call against Luongo
07/08: Hasek (42) is all but done, Brodeur (35) wins another Vezina in yet another close call against Nabokov. Though voting seems largely based on them playing all the time, not on how dominant they were, because they weren't.
08/09: Brodeur (36) misses half the season
09/10: Brodeur's (37) last really good season, Vezina finalist.
Afterwards a bunch of very average years to finish his career.

In other words: Brodeur couldn't win a Vezina until Hasek was gone. There were quite a few years were Brodeur was anything but special, and he even missed out on being a Vezina-contender when there was an opening, like in 2000. And unlike Hasek, he never dominanted the other goalies. He either won close calls, or based on playing a ton, not because he performed better in the games he played. In many years he got some Vezina consideration due his high nunber of wins and games played, not because his performance actually matched others. A rather warped way of voting for the best.

Brodeur got lots of wins and shutouts, thanks to playing lots of games every year for a very long time. But that doesn't make you the best when you can never actually beat the best during his prime. It's like suggesting Mark Messier was a better player than Mario Lemieux. Alltime great, among the best ever, sure, but not close to being the best.

It's also wrong to claim they changed the rules because of Brodeur. Brodeur was hardly the only goalie who could play the puck, and at the times they made the change, there was others equal to him (like Marty Turco). The change happened because they needed to do something about defensive schemes, which caused a lot of ineffective dump-ins that got handled by the goalies before any attacker could do anything about it. This happened with basically every goalie, regardless of whether he was good at playing the puck or not. What mattered was that a goalie could be there first.
Not reading that essay
 

BonHoonLayneCornell

Registered User
Oct 16, 2006
16,645
11,741
Yukon
He has excellent form between the pipes.
When he is on he makes it look easy by his solid positioning in the nets.

Calm. Cool. Collected
You can definitely see the difference in him in there compared to the crew that's run through the last few years. Just looks in control in a way other Ottawa tenders have not.
 
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Tuna99

Registered User
Sep 26, 2009
15,707
7,669
Ullmark save on the Kleven give away, haven’t seen that for out young Dman in years. Such a difference maker for the team.
 

mysens

Registered User
Apr 9, 2013
1,027
887
Love this guys net presence. He has confidence that really shines when he is one on one with a puck shooter. Also, looks like he was teasing Binnington on that mele as he creeped up the ice when Binnington motioned to him...we were dying laughing in our seats as this was playing out after the whistle.
 

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