well thanks for at least not giving me anything difficult to reply to!
Of course it's relevant. If a goalie had the best GAA, then he let in the fewest goals. If he let in the fewest goals, he helped his team a lot.
It's not like Roy played for the Smythe division in the 80s. His 1st team was mainly noted for its defense-first style; his 2nd team was more balanced but was also solid defensively. Given this situation, I might expect the Best of All-Time at his position to have led in GAA more than 3 times in 18 seasons. I don't think this is invalid at all.
Actually, he can control it -- by stopping the puck more! Of course GAA (like virtually any stat) is not definitive by itself or without considering context, but to say the goalie has "no control over it" is akin to saying the players have no control over who wins the game. Let's give the goalie some agency!
sigh...
the thing that the goalie can't control, is shots against per game. That's completely on his team. I shouldn't have to explain this to you; you should have been able to put this together from what I said earlier.
If a goalie has a 92% save percentage, then they have an 8% error rate. They
can control their error rate and save percentage by stopping more pucks. are you with me so far?
A goalie can have the exact same error rate of 8%, but facing 20, 30 and 40 shots per game can result in a GAA of 1.60, 2.40 and 3.20. This goalie is stopping pucks with the same proficiency in each scenario; the only difference is he's getting more pucks shot at him.
So again, GAA is nothing more than error rate (a derivative of save percentage, which the goalie
does control), times shots against per game, which the goalie
does not control. Therefore, if save percentage is part of the discussion - and it is, rightly so - then there is
absolutely no need for GAA to be part of the discussion. I hope you can see that including it is nothing more than double dipping on save percentage while bastardizing it with meaningless noise.
Is that true when we're discussing the best of all time, though? If we're going to say he's the best of all time and then look at stats, we're bound to judge him by the most demanding standards of all time.
Yes, it's true when we're judging any player. If you try to rank defensemen solely on the basis of the number of norris trophies they won, your list will be terrible. Same if you try to rank forwards solely on the basis of total art ross trophies. It's important to know how close they were to the lead in other seasons, and how often.
As far as Roy is concerned - go look at the list of times he was top-10 in save percentage and compare that to any other goalie; his record is far superior. If your case for Roy being nowhere near the best of all-time is partially based on the fact that he "only" led the league in sv% four times, then it leads to the question - if he's nowhere near the best, then who is?
(Hasek, for example, led six times but was top-5 a total of nine times - just like Roy, and top-10 11 times - four times fewer than Roy)
It's just as silly to judge solely on the basis of instances leading the league, as it would be to judge solely on the basis of top-10s.
So basically you agree with me -- he wasn't the best of all time...?
Actually, that's not your position. Your position in the OP was
"I don't see him as anywhere near the best ever". There's nothing wrong with thinking he wasn't the best of all-time. Roy, Hasek and Plante could be put in any order legitimately, depending on what you value. The reason you're hearing from me is because of your stated position in the OP.
And no, the fact that Hasek, and not Roy, is the most dominant goalie of all-time from a regular season save percentage standpoint does not mean I have to agree he is better or that Roy is not #1. There are obviously other things to consider - such as playoffs.
But this question is still puzzling, because if you expect me to anoint Hasek the best of all-time solely on that basis, then it should follow that you expect me to anoint Roy the 2nd best of all-time since he's the second most dominant by that metric. But that contradicts your stated position that
"I don't see him as anywhere near the best ever". Doesn't it?