AfroThunder396
[citation needed]
Right - there are many factors which influence save percentage at the team level.
But you stated that a "high volume of shots artificially inflates SV% denominator and gives the illusion of great play which may or may not be true."
If that's the case, then there should be a trade-off between shot quality allowed and shot quantity allowed, which would manifest in the form of a positive relationship between save percentage and shot volume against at the team level.
But that doesn't seem to be the case.
When you look at the league as a whole, of course not. There's too much parody and variation. Not every coach subscribes to that philosophy. If a few teams are willing to sacrifice shot quantity to control shot quality it would be unlikely to affect the wholesale results of a 30 team league, especially since there are teams likely employing the exact opposite philosophy.
But in some specific cases - yes, I think that's true.
Even if that's so - and it certainly doesn't seem to be in the case of Florida - citing specific examples doesn't establish anything in the absence of any relationship in the general population.
For example, I could just as easily cite examples of teams that excelled at both shot prevention and save percentage, like the 2011-12 St.Louis Blues, the 2010-14 L.A. Kings, the 2003-06 Calgary Flames, the 1998-2004 Dallas Stars, and so on and so forth.
Which is exactly why you won't see any league-wide trends. Of course there are some goalies of true quality who post legitimately high save percentages due to superb play - but I'd submit there are also quite a few goalies who play at an unremarkable level, yet their save percentage is artificially inflated by extra shots of indeterminate quality. I'd also suggest that goaltenders have their best seasons in years where they face high volumes of shots, and not the other way around.
If you're asking me to provide a hard causation or league-wide supporting evidence, I can't do that at this time.
In the absence of any relationship in the general population, it may well be nothing more than a simple coincidence.
A goalie with ~750 games of ~.910% during the Dead Puck Era suddenly found a second wind at age 35 and became better at stopping pucks after his two Hall of Fame defensemen left the team? I don't buy it.
Isn't it more reasonable that 32 year old Brodeur and 35 year old Brodeur were playing at similar levels, and that the only difference was that one had his stats deflated due to artificial shot dilution? Brodeur was consistently facing 1600-1750 shots a year in the early 2000's, yet after the lockout he started consistently facing 2000-2100 shots a year and his save percentage rose accordingly. I'd say adding 300-400 saves a year did wonders to his save percentage, while his quality of play actually changed little.