What This Means for You:
Our team is working with Xenforo Cloud to recover data using backups, sitemaps, and other available resources. We know this is frustrating, and we deeply regret the impact on our community. We are taking steps with Xenforo Cloud to ensure this never happens again. This is work in progress. Thank you for your patience and support as we work through this.
In the meantime, feel free to join our Discord ServerThis one's a little tough for me. I voted "too close to call" even though upon thinking about it afterwards, I should have voted for Quick, but the poll doesn't allow for changing your vote. I'm also operating under the assumption that there's a nuanced difference between "peak" and "prime." By how I understand they're generally used, "peak" can be a single season, but "prime" by definition means something in the neighborhood of 5 years. Operating under those definitions, my opinion is that Quick had a better prime. Their peaks are comparable, though Quick's peak (2012) resulted in a cup win.
Same with Kiprusoff's peak (2004) though. :pTheir peaks are comparable, though Quick's peak (2012) resulted in a cup win.
Same with Kiprusoff's peak (2004) though. :p
Bias-ly voting Kiprusoff, but probably too close to call would be fair vote.
Kipper for me. He played on an inferior team. Here’s calgarys cup run roster.
Also has 7 consecutive 70 gp+ seasons
Kipper but both are in the same tier that being the second, or third, tier of goalies(which is not a slight at all).
Kiprusoff is the best goalie of the 00s decade. Not many other goalies are better than him, and Quick is not one
So it's your fault. I've been blaming my niece who was born the day of game 6.It was probably in, but the on-ice ruling was no goal and the video evidence was not sufficient to call it a goal. Them's the breaks.
Was rooting for Calgary that year, but ended up missing games 6 and 7 because I went on a trip overseas. Now I'm married to a Bolts fan.![]()
I think Kiprusoff is one of the best goalies ever. When he was hot, he was as good as any goalie I have seen. As an Oiler fan he was a nightmare. There were some games the Oilers might get 1 goal on him and after that you may as well turn off the TV, it felt like they had no chance to score on him again.
Miika Kiprusoff
Sv% finished
2003-04 NHL .933 (2nd)
2005-06 NHL .923 (3rd)
2006-07 NHL .917 (9th)
2009-10 NHL .920 (10th)
2011-12 NHL .921 (9th)
GSAA
2003-04 NHL 21 (5th)
2005-06 NHL 42 (1st)
2006-07 NHL 27 (3rd)
2009-10 NHL 18 (9th)
2011-12 NHL 14 (8th)
GP
2005-06 NHL 74 (2nd)
2006-07 NHL 74 (3rd)
2007-08 NHL 76 (3rd)
2008-09 NHL 76 (1st)
2009-10 NHL 73 (2nd)
2010-11 NHL 71 (3rd)
2011-12 NHL 70 (3rd)
Shots against
2005-06 NHL 1951 (5th)
2006-07 NHL 2190 (1st)
2007-08 NHL 2096 (3rd)
2008-09 NHL 2155 (1st)
2009-10 NHL 2035 (6th)
2010-11 NHL 1935 (7th)
2011-12 NHL 2040 (4th)
Jonathan Quick
Sv%
2011-12 NHL .929 (5th)
GSAA
2011-12 NHL 28 (3rd)
2017-18 NHL 17 (8th)
GP
2009-10 NHL 72 (4th)
2011-12 NHL 69 (4th)
2014-15 NHL 72 (2nd)
2015-16 NHL 68 (1st)
2017-18 NHL 64 (6th)
Shots against
2009-10 NHL 1927 (9th)
2011-12 NHL 1863 (10th)
2014-15 NHL 1896 (6th)
2015-16 NHL 1820 (5th)
2017-18 NHL 1867 (8th)
Not only did Kiprusoff have better stats that come closest to representing individual play, but he had the consistently harder workload year to year. Playing more games, facing more shots and doing it on generally worse teams. I don't really think this is all that close other than when comparing their best peak season.