The reason the Roy narrative needs to stop is because it's a false premise. As I've shown (above), the Canadiens were a very good defensive team with or without Roy in net, circa 1986-1988. The 'Hasek narrative' is mostly true, which is why there's no irony here. I did a quick study a while ago (it's on another thread that I can't find right now) of how Roy's and Hasek's back-up goaltenders fared in each player's six best seasons. To no one's surprise, Hasek's team dropped off way more when he wasn't in net than Roy's team(s) when he wasn't in. There is a blindingly obvious difference here.Ironic that it then took you less than two paragraphs to say that "[a similar Roy narrative] really needs to stop."
Seriously, post-1982 Canucks, has anybody ever seen a less impressive defence-core than the 1999 Sabres in the Stanley Cup Final? Who are these nobodies?:
Woolley
Zhitnik
Warrener
McKee
Smehlik
Patrick (aged 35)
Shannon