I would like the record to show I was extremely unenthusiastic about Lizotte.
I hate this version of Penguins hockey so much, lol.
Do they have a choice at this point? Someone has to defend. 30th in the league in GA/GP. 3 multi-goal blown leads in a span of 5 games.
Whatever else Lizotte is, he's reliable that way.
At least last year they scraped 13th defensively, and missed by only a few points as a result. With the current course they'll finish bottom-5 in the league, unless the team buy-in to team defending and use personnel who can do it.
If the team in front of the goalie can't trust him because they think any shot has a chance to go in (ie bad goals), they will tend to instinctively play more passively. The best defenses in most sports have guys who know their teammates will be in the right spots and execute their role.
If the team has a winning culture, the players bounce back after a bad goal easily. Happens practically every day. Goaltending in the league is regressing. A lot of greats retired and weren't replaced.
This happened a lot under Bylsma too when Flower let in stinkers, and they still won a ton of games. They had enough faith in their offense to overcome that.
It's more about patterns you're used to as a player than it is if something bad that happens in a particular moment. That will affect their attitude and actions.
If they know that the goalie will stop enough pucks to open the door, they will respond accordingly.
My feeling is that it's not the goalie's job to manage the team psyche. His job is to stop pucks at a rate that gives them a chance to win.
If the goalie let in 2 terrible goals, but no others, it's the responsibility of the offense to generate 2+ themselves and get something out of the game. They are grown men who played hockey their whole lives. They've seen hundreds to thousands of bad goals. They need to man up and overcome mental adversity, focusing on what the team needs from them.