Why aren't there many (or any) ex-NHL sons who play goalie?

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I dont know about recently, but pre hasek era, and even some other goalies still during his era. Played goalie a much different way than is taught today. Stand up goalies used to be the norm but now its all v-style butterfly and size so those skills of what worked tghen arent passed down.

Also size is a major factir now since shootjng technology with sticks has gotten so good that its hard to react so just giving as little space to shoot at seems to be everything now
 
Genetics selects goalies more than it does the other positions nowadays. Your rich daddy and mommy can't buy you the height, elite vision, and crazy reflexes it takes to be one of the 64 best goalies on the planet. Nature decides those things.
 
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Genetics selects goalies more than it does the other positions nowadays. Your rich daddy and mommy can't buy you the height, elite vision, and crazy reflexes it takes to be one of the 64 best goalies on the planet. Nature decides those things.
I don't get the height thing, of course you need to be somewhat tall but Hasek was only 6'1.
 
There is practical math here a little bit though. A lot less goalies overall - there are about 756 players in the NHL and only probably what 70 goalies on rosters (figuring 6 teams keep 3).

So there are a lot less goalies jobs to go around.

To add onto this, the goalies have a very specific skillset, that's likely a factor of genes, upbringing, and mindset. That's likely hard to replicate, especially if you grow up the son of a millionaire.

One of Roy's kid played goal all the way to juniors, but he wasn't good enough to go beyond that:


Jeremy Brodeur is playing in the ECHL:


Christobal Huet's son is playing for the Regina Pats:


Jon Grahame's father was also an NHL goalie:


Brent Johnson's father was Bob Johnson, who played 11 games in the NHL:


So son's attempting to follow in the father's footsteps as a goalie, seems fairly common, it's likely just very hard to do.

Another factor is that a lot of the goalies now aren't from Canada or the USA. That means there's a far less likely chance their fathers would be playing in the NHL pre-1990 when international players were still somewhat rare.
 
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Now that Igor $hesterkin and Jeremy $wayman have reset the goalie market maybe we see that change.

Who would wanna be a goalie?
Because the players hope their sons grow up to productive members of society and not these bat shit crazy people who are willing have 100 mile an hour slap shots aimed at their junk

QFT
 
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