- Nov 2, 2003
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Martin Brodeur. Excellent all-time goalie. One of the greats, I would have him #5 ahead of Glenn Hall. Clutch goalie, multiple Cup winner, most important player outside of Scott Stevens for those three Cups, best player in franchise history by a long shot and not known as a goalie that "blew" it very often considering he played in a lot of playoff hockey. You want this guy in your net for Game 7 because two things will happen. You may lose but he won't be the guy you are likely to point at about it or he'll come up big with a clutch win to help you win. He will not blow it for you, almost certainly not.
So..........................why on earth did he have such a bad record in playoff overtime? I can't comprehend this at all. I guess it doesn't matter so much, it is nearly a coin flip when you get into overtime and we can still call him an all-time great playoff performer but for whatever reason he didn't win as many playoff overtime games as you would think.
By my count, and I did it manually because I couldn't find another tool to use, he was 16-24 in playoff overtime. That surprises me a bit considering he made it to 5 Cup final appearances. But there were a lot of moments where Brodeur is on the wrong end of an overtime game, even in series that he won, for whatever reason the Devils didn't step up in overtime.
I guess a lot of it has to do with the fact that he didn't have a team that had that classic game breaker. The Devils were not the type of team that jumped out right away and wanted to score in overtime. They'd sit back a bit more, so I think that factors in a lot.
Lastly, we know the guy was clutch, so this record 16-24 is not necessarily something that aligns with his 113-91 playoff record, but the discrepancy alone makes you at least ask why it didn't favour his team a bit more.
Also, Brodeur rarely looked bad in games. He was also the type of goalie who seemed unshaken by overtime goals, and there are so many opportunities where he lost an overtime game but the Devils still won it in 6 games. So maybe it is a moot point, but it does make an interesting conversation as to why the overtime numbers aren't better.
So..........................why on earth did he have such a bad record in playoff overtime? I can't comprehend this at all. I guess it doesn't matter so much, it is nearly a coin flip when you get into overtime and we can still call him an all-time great playoff performer but for whatever reason he didn't win as many playoff overtime games as you would think.
By my count, and I did it manually because I couldn't find another tool to use, he was 16-24 in playoff overtime. That surprises me a bit considering he made it to 5 Cup final appearances. But there were a lot of moments where Brodeur is on the wrong end of an overtime game, even in series that he won, for whatever reason the Devils didn't step up in overtime.
I guess a lot of it has to do with the fact that he didn't have a team that had that classic game breaker. The Devils were not the type of team that jumped out right away and wanted to score in overtime. They'd sit back a bit more, so I think that factors in a lot.
Lastly, we know the guy was clutch, so this record 16-24 is not necessarily something that aligns with his 113-91 playoff record, but the discrepancy alone makes you at least ask why it didn't favour his team a bit more.
Also, Brodeur rarely looked bad in games. He was also the type of goalie who seemed unshaken by overtime goals, and there are so many opportunities where he lost an overtime game but the Devils still won it in 6 games. So maybe it is a moot point, but it does make an interesting conversation as to why the overtime numbers aren't better.