Friday, 23 May 2008
Do great Netminders win teams the Stanley Cup?
Monday, 5 May 2008
Felix Potvin
It wasn't until the 1992-1993 season that Potvin became a regular in the NHL. That season he played 48 games, compiling a 2.50 GAA (1st in the NHL) and a solid .910 save %. The rapid acceleration of his development led the coaching staff to establish him as their #1 goaltender, and prompted the trade of Grant Fuhr to the Buffalo Sabres. That season, Potvin also backstopped the Maple Leafs to the Stanley Cup conference finals, only to lose to a Wayne Gretzky-led Los Angeles Kings in a grueling seven game series. His efforts did not go in vain, however. His dynamic performance made him a finalist for the Calder Trophy.
In the 1993-94 season, Potvin silenced any doubts of a sophomore jinx. He posted 34 wins and a solid 2.89 GAA, including tying Kirk McLean's then NHL record for most wins in October with nine.[1] He was also voted to his first NHL All-Star Game. Felix again brought his team to the conference finals, this time losing to the Vancouver Canucks in five games.
In the 1993-94 playoffs, Potvin recorded 3 shutouts in the first-round series against the Chicago Blackhawks, all by a 1-0 margin, including the final NHL game ever played at the illustrious Chicago Stadium. He also became the first Maple Leafs goaltender to stop a penalty shot in a Stanley Cup Playoff game, when he stopped Chicago's Patrick Poulin.
In the 1995-1996 season, Potvin was selected to his 2nd NHL All-Star Game. However, the Toronto Maple Leafs exited in the first round of the playoffs.
In the 1996-1997 season, with the aging of the defense corps in front of him, Potvin and the Maple Leafs would miss the playoffs. He would set an NHL record for most shots faced in a season, 2,238, later broken by Roberto Luongo during his stint with the Florida Panthers.
In the 1998-1999 season, Toronto signed free agent Curtis Joseph, leaving Potvin expendable. He would play in only 5 games due to a knee injury, before he and a 6th round pick (Fedor Fedorov) were traded to the New York Islanders for defenseman Bryan Berard and a 6th round pick. Despite the new surroundings, Potvin was unable to reclaim the success he had earlier in his career.
In the 1999-2000 season, Potvin, a 2nd round, and 3rd round draft pick were traded to the Vancouver Canucks for Kevin Weekes, Dave Scatchard, and Bill Muckalt. Potvin struggled with the Canucks and in the 2000-2001 season he was dealt to the Los Angeles Kings for future considerations. Immediately, Potvin made an impact in a Kings uniform. He led the Kings to the 7th seed, recording 13 wins and 5 losses, and a remarkable 1.96 GAA and a .919 save %. Potvin led the Kings to a first-round upset of the Detroit Red Wings, and pushed the eventual Stanley Cup Champions, the Colorado Avalanche, to a 7th game, recording 2 shutouts in that series. Potvin again led the Kings to the 2002 playoffs, where they pushed the Colorado Avalanche to seven games in the 1st round.
In September of 2003, Potvin was signed to a 1-year contract by the Boston Bruins. He backed-up Calder Trophy Winner Andrew Raycroft during the 2003-04 season. Coincidentally, Raycroft broke Potvin's record for consecutive games played by a Maple Leafs goalie during the 2006-07 season. Potvin has not played for an NHL team since the 2003-04 season.
Early in the 2005-06 season, the Atlanta Thrashers were in talks with Potvin in hopes of signing him after starting goaltender Kari Lehtonen and backup goaltender Mike Dunham went down with injuries. However, Potvin did not have equipment that conformed to the new NHL standards, nor did he wish to accept the two-way contract that was being offered to him, so the Thrashers instead decided to sign Steve Shields.
The General Manager of the RSL's Lada Togliatti Leonid Vaisfeld confirmed to Togliatti News correspondent Nikita Sukhachev that he's negotiating the deal with Potvin.
Awards
1995-1996 NHL All-Star Team
1993-1994 NHL All-Star Team
1992-1993 NHL All-Rookie Team
1991-1992 AHL Dudley "Red" Garret Memorial Trophy
1991-1992 AHL Baz Bastien Memorial Trophy
1990-1991 CHL Goaltender of the Year
1990-1991 QMJHL Jacques Plante Trophy
1990-1991 QMJHL Guy Lafleur Trophy
1990-1991 QMJHL Hap Emms Trophy
Robert Luongo
Luongo began his major junior hockey career at the age of 16. He joined the QMJHL's Val-d'Or Foreurs in 1995-96, but posted only 6 wins in 23 games. The following season, as the team's starter, he improved to 32 wins, a club record, and was also awarded the Mike Bossy Trophy as the league's best professional prospect. In 1997-98, Luongo established a QMJHL single-season record with 7 shutouts[1] and backstopped the Foreurs to a Memorial Cup appearance. After he was traded to the Acadie-Bathurst Titan for the 1998-99 season, he made his second straight Memorial Cup appearance, but was ousted in the round robin.
During his major junior career, Luongo also made two apperances for Team Canada in 1998 and 1999, winning silver, as well as Best Goaltender and All-Star Team honours in 1999.
New York Islanders
Using the Toronto Maple Leafs' first round pick in the 1997 NHL Entry Draft (acquired in a deal that sent Wendel Clark back to Toronto), the New York Islanders drafted Luongo fourth overall, making him, at the time, the highest drafted goaltender in NHL history.
Although the Islanders returned 18-year-old Luongo to the QMJHL, they had every intention of getting him dressed for a 1998-99 NHL game, but contractual problems changed the plan.[citation needed] In 1999-00, Luongo made his professional debut with the Lowell Lock Monsters, the Islanders' AHL affiliate. Early in the season, Luongo was called up by the Islanders and made his NHL debut on November 28, 1999 stopping 43 shots in a 2-1 win against the Boston Bruins.[2]
However, after just 24 games as an Islander in his rookie season, GM Mike Milbury would trade Luongo to the Florida Panthers on the day of the 2000 NHL Entry Draft along with Olli Jokinen for Mark Parrish and Oleg Kvasha. As both Jokinen and Luongo would eventually develop into superstars with the Panthers, the trade would earn Milbury widespread criticism.
In Luongo's only season with New York, he posted 7 wins with a 3.25 GAA and a .904 save percentage.
Florida Panthers
Atlanta Thrashers forward Peter Bondra scores on Luongo.
In Luongo's first few seasons with Florida, he posted impressive numbers, featuring a consistently high save percentage. However, on a struggling Panthers team, he would not record more than 20 wins in a season until 2003-04 — somewhat of a breakout campaign for Luongo.
In 2003-04, he placed second in voting for the Vezina Trophy after facing the most shots in a single season by an NHL goaltender (2,475), a mark previously held by Felix Potvin.[3] Despite facing an unprecedented amount of shots, Luongo posted a 2.43 GAA and a .931 save percentage, which was first among goalies with 50-plus starts (Luongo had 72). Not surprisingly, Luongo also set an NHL record for most saves in a single season with 2,303 while picking up 7 shutouts, good enough for fifth in the league. Ultimately, Luongo lost out to fellow Montrealer Martin Brodeur for the league's top goalie.
Prior to the announcement of the 2004-05 NHL lockout, Luongo competed for Team Canada in the 2004 World Cup as Brodeur's backup, earning gold. Two years later, he would also play behind Brodeur in the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin.
When the NHL resumed in 2005-06, Luongo posted 35 wins and a career-high 8 shutouts for Florida before being traded away to Vancouver in the off-season.
Because Florida never made the playoffs in Luongo's duration with the team, he was a regular competitor for Team Canada in the World Championships, earning two gold medals (2003, 2004) and one silver (2005).
Vancouver Canucks
Luongo warming up before a game in 2007
Prior to the start of the 2006-07 season, Luongo was in the midst of contract negotiations with Florida, and expected to sign[4] when GM Mike Keenan traded him to the Vancouver Canucks. In a blockbuster deal, Luongo was packaged with defenceman Lukáš Krajíček and a sixth round draft pick in exchange for forward Todd Bertuzzi, defenceman Bryan Allen and goaltender Alex Auld. Immediately following the deal, Vancouver signed Luongo to a four-year, $27-million deal.
Luongo's first season with the Canucks was hugely successful from both individual and team standpoints. Midway through the campaign he made his first All-Star Game appearance as a starter — his second appearance overall — and was named the Skills Competition's top goalie. He led the Canucks to a Northwest Division title, and consequentially, a playoff appearance after they failed to make one the previous season. At the end of the regular season, Luongo had shattered Kirk McLean's franchise record of 38 wins in a season with 47. That same mark would also tie Bernie Parent's thirty-three-year record of wins in a season, although Martin Brodeur would also reach and succeed that mark in the same season (Luongo and Brodeur's achievements are, however, considered to be somewhat skewed, given that it was the first season the NHL made ties obsolete with shootouts, generating more wins than in the past). It was also assumed that Luongo would achieve better statistics than in the past, backstopping a more successful team compared to the Panthers, who had never made the playoffs in Luongo's tenure with them.
Incidentally, the 2007 postseason was Luongo's first playoffs of his career; in his first game, he almost set an NHL record for most saves in a game with 72, en route to a 5-4 quadruple overtime victory over the Dallas Stars. He was just one save shy of tying the mark set by Ron Tugnutt and Kelly Hrudey of 73. Luongo would go on to win his first playoff series in seven games, but would lose to the eventual Stanley Cup champions, the Anaheim Ducks in the second round. Game 5 of the series with Anaheim saw Luongo come close to his previous 72-save performance, stopping 60 of 62 in a losing effort, in which Vancouver was eliminated. Oddly, Luongo had missed the first three minutes of the first overtime, to what was first believed to be an equipment malfunction. However, after the series had ended, it was revealed that Luongo, instead, had an untimely case of diarrhea.[5]
Shortly after the end of the post-season, Luongo was up for three major NHL awards, the Vezina, Pearson and Hart. However, Luongo finished second in voting for all three awards, behind Brodeur for the Vezina and Sidney Crosby for the Hart and Pearson.[6]
After a season of great accomplishments, 2007-08 paled somewhat in comparison. For the most part of his second campaign with the Canucks, Luongo kept pace with his previous season's work and continued to set impressive statistics, most significantly, a three-game shutout streak spanning 210:34 (a Canucks franchise record).[7] Also, although he did not attend in order to be with his pregnant wife, he was also voted in as the 2008 NHL All-Star Game's Western Conference starter for the second consecutive season. However, in Luongo's last eight games, crucial to the Canucks' playoff hopes, he went 1-7 and allowed an uncharacteristic 25 goals in that span. The Canucks, who at several points in the season had the division lead, would end up missing the playoffs.
Awards & achievements
NHL
NHL YoungStars Game - 2002
Named to the NHL Second All-Star Team - 2003, 2007
Mark Messier Leadership Award - March 2007
NHL All-Star Game - 2004, 2007 (starter)
Team
Most Exciting Player Award (Vancouver Canucks) - 2007
Cyclone Taylor Award (Canucks MVP) - 2007, 2008
Molson Cup (Most Canucks three-star selections) - 2007, 2008
International
Best Goalie (World Junior Ice Hockey Championships) - 1999
All-Star Team - (World Junior Ice Hockey Championships) - 1999
Sunday, 4 May 2008
Marc-Andre Fleury
Playing career
Fleury was drafted first overall by the Pittsburgh Penguins in the 2003 NHL Entry Draft and is widely considered to be one of the premier young talents in the league.[2] [3]
He made his debut in 2003-04, and played 21 games. He was rotated regularly and split the season with fellow netminders Jean-Sébastien Aubin and Sebastien Caron. He immediately began to show promising results with a 46 save performance against Los Angeles and 31 saves in a 4-3 win over Dominik Hašek and the Detroit Red Wings.[4] His first NHL shutout came October 30, 2003 in a 1-0 victory over the Chicago Blackhawks.[4] However, as the season progressed, his performance began to sink, largely due to Pittsburgh's poor defense-[4] the team regularly gave up over 30 shots per game, and rarely managed to become an offensive threat.[5]
During the labour dispute, Fleury played for the Penguins' American Hockey League affiliate, the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins, where he posted a 26-19-4 record with a goals against average of 2.52 and a save percentage of 0.901.
In 2005-06, Fleury started the season at the AHL affiliate, but was called up for the fourth game against Buffalo Sabres on October 10 to replace an injured Jocelyn Thibault. Because of management concerns over the payment of an NHL appearance bonus, he continued to move up and down until November 28 when he was called up to play in Pittsburgh for the rest of the season. While his team fared poorly throughout the year, Fleury's statistics remained relatively good. The Penguins finished last in the Eastern Conference and with the worst defense, allowing 316 goals,[6] but Fleury managed to hold a save percentage of 0.898, which was about .020 higher than Sebastien Caron or Jocelyn Thibault.
Despite playing behind a very shaky defense, Fleury was able to impress the team management with his technique and performance. During the summer of 2006, he signed a two-year contract extension worth $2.59 million.[7]
On March 1, 2007 Fleury became the first Penguins goaltender since Tom Barrasso in the 1997-98 NHL season to record thirty wins in a season by defeating the New York Rangers 4-3, in a shootout.
On April 7, 2007 Fleury joined Barrasso as the only Penguin goaltenders to win forty games in a season by beating the Rangers 2-1 in Pittsburgh's regular season finale.
On January 25, 2008 Fleury's #29 was retired by his junior team, the Cape Breton Screaming Eagles.
Friday, 2 May 2008
Martin Brodeur
Brodeur is considered a hybrid style goalie, which differs from the typical butterfly style of his native Quebec. He is best known for his reflexes, especially with his glove hand, his puck handling, and his positional play.[2]
Henrik Lundqvist
Before joining the Rangers, Lundqvist played for Frölunda HC in the Swedish Elitserien. During his years in Sweden, he developed into the league's finest goaltender, winning the Honken Trophy three consecutive seasons; 2003, 2004, and 2005. In 2005 he also won two of the most prestigious awards in Swedish ice hockey, the Golden Puck and the Golden Helmet.
Lundqvist is considered a butterfly style goalie, though unorthodox due to the aggressive way he performs the butterfly.[3] He is best known for his sensational quickness, athleticism, and strong positional play.[4]
Evgeni Nabokov
Playing career
Russia and minor league
San Jose Head Scout Tim Burke saw Nabokov on a advertisement during his trip to Russia while Burke went to scout another player. Taken late in the ninth round, the Sharks had never seen him play; rather, they were more interested in the skill of Nabokov's father, a professional goaltender who played 18 years in Kazakhstan.
San Jose Sharks
After a few years in the AHL, Nabokov played his first NHL game on the first day of the new millennium, stopping his first four shots, all breakaways,when he replaced Steve Shields in a game against the Nashville Predators.
On January 19th, 2000, Nabokov started in his first NHL game, playing against the Colorado Avalanche and famed goalie Patrick Roy. Impressively, Nabokov stopped all 39 shots he faced in a 0-0 tie. In his first four appearances, Nabokov stopped all but one of his first 104 shots, and the one goal he allowed was when Stephane Matteau put the puck into an empty net while Nabokov was skating to the bench on a delayed penalty.
In the second game of the 2001 season, Shields hurt his ankle, leaving San Jose without a number #1 goalie. Instead of giving the job to the very well known Miikka Kiprusoff, whom the Sharks brass considered the "goalie of the future," they left Kiprusoff in the AHL so he could get more experience, and gave the starting position to Nabokov, and he ran away with it, winning the Calder Memorial Trophy as the rookie of the year. Also, he played in the 2001 All-star game and took San Jose to the playoffs.
On March 10, 2002 he became the first netminder in NHL history to score a powerplay goal, doing so against the Vancouver Canucks. He was also the first European goaltender to score a goal.
Nabokov was considered one of the elite goaltenders in the NHL, and is often ranked as one of the top ten, if not top five goaltenders in the NHL by magazines like ESPN The Magazine and The Hockey News. However, the 2005-2006 season was an off year for Nabokov. His save percentage of under .900 was a big concern to the team. More notably, he was relegated to the role of backup goaltender, in deference to a red-hot Vesa Toskala.
Nabokov is known for his excellent positioning and his ability to challenge shooters, but has recently been hampered by a groin injury. During the 2006-07 NHL season, Nabokov has split the starting goaltending duties with Toskala. As of March 18, 2007, the Sharks have played 78 games, with Nabokov starting 45 . Nabokov played all 5 games in the Western Conference Quarterfinals of the 2007 NHL playoffs, helping the Sharks defeat the Nashville Predators in 5 games.
During the first half of the 2007-08 NHL season, Nabokov started the first 43 games for the San Jose Sharks, however on January 13, 2008 in Anaheim he received his first day off when Thomas Greiss started his first NHL game.
Nabokov was recognized as one of the 'Three Stars' for the NHL in the last week of December 2007, along with Alexander Ovechkin of the Washington Capitals and Jaromir Jagr of the New York Rangers. [5] In addition to that honor, Nabokov was named the “Sharks Player of the Month” by Seagate Technology in December. Since the 1996-97 season, Seagate Technology has recognized Sharks players who made contributions to further the team’s accomplishments and makes a donation of $2,500 to The Sharks Foundation on the players’ behalf. Nabokov holds the franchise-record for having won this award nine times.
Nabokov played in his second NHL All-Star Game on January 27, 2008. He stopped all eight shots that came at him in the second period, making it the first time since 2002 that a goalie has played a period where no goals were scored. Nabokov secured the scoreless period when he blocked both of Ilya Kovalchuk’s shots in the last minute of the second period.
Patrick Roy
Patrick Jacques Roy (born October 5, 1965, in Sainte-Foy, Quebec, Canada) is a retired ice hockey goaltender. Nicknamed "St. Patrick", Roy split his professional career between the Montreal Canadiens and Colorado Avalanche of the National Hockey League, winning two Stanley Cups with each franchise. In 2004, Roy was selected as the greatest goaltender in NHL history by a panel of 41 writers, coupled with a simultaneous fan poll.On November 13, 2006, Roy was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame
Chris Osgood
Chris Osgood (born November 26, 1972 in Peace River, Alberta) is a Canadian professional ice hockey goaltender with the Detroit Red Wings of the National Hockey League. He spent the first part of his career with Detroit, and then playing for the New York Islanders and the St. Louis Blues during his 14-year NHL career before returning to Detroit in 2005.
Dominic Hasek
Dominik "The Dominator" Hasek was born on January 29, 1965 in Pardubice, Czech Republic. He began playing hockey in his home country in 1981 and was drafted in the 11th round, 207th overall by the Chicago Blackhawks in 1983. It would be unitl 1990 when Hasek would make his way to North America, playing five games in his first season. He played for Czechoslovakia in the 1991 Canada Cup and in 1992 was traded to the Buffalo Sabres for Stephan Beauregard and a 1993 4th round pick. The move to Buffalo paid dividends in the following season as Dominik Hasek became the first goalie since Bernie Parent to record a goals against average below 2.00, coming in with a stingy 1.95 GAA. Hasek also led the league in shoutouts with seven and was living up to his nickname, "The Dominator".
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