TheJudge
Registered User
- Mar 11, 2007
- 859
- 92
He gave them better than decent goaltending.
2.63 GAA and 0.910 SV% is pretty much the definition of decent imo.
He gave them better than decent goaltending.
It's not that Price is heads and shoulders better than the average great goalie in any given season the way Hasek was. It's that he is consistently great from season to season, so you know you will have a fairly reliable goalie throughout the 6 month regular season.
But we also find that from season to season, different goaltenders emerge who we would not have thought of, who end up just as good as Price for that particular season.
So over an entire career, yes, Price is greater than other goalies. But that doesn't necessarily translate for any single regular season, much less a single playoff run.
Price on Leafs probably makes them a cup favorite regardless of their defensive issues.
I'd say it's incredibly underwhelming, personally.2.63 GAA and 0.910 SV% is pretty much the definition of decent imo.
Would love to see what a team like the Jets could do with world class goaltending.
Not at all. Maybe contender for playoffs. Not for the cup. He is not that much better than another great goalies.I'm just thinking about his contract and if he didn't resign he probably would have been traded at the deadline, if that were to happen would whichever team that gets him be a contender? Would a playoff team even choose to pickup Price for a playoff run so late into the season?
Would love to see what a team like the Jets could do with world class goaltending.
I love debating Carey Price's over-inflated worth in the eyes of many.
Carey Price isn't even close to being in Dominik Hasek's league, no goaltender in the NHL is either and heaven help the other 30 NHL teams should a goalie ever have a run like Hasek had. Over an eight year span, he won six Vezina trophies, two Hart trophies and led the league in SV% six times. Regular season success that every NHL goalie since could only dream of to go along with playoff success and multiple cups.
Dominik Hasek is a legend, Carey Price is not.
I agree, Carey Price is greater than other goalies, like Brian Elliot and Kari Lehtonen for example. His regular season numbers are only slightly better or worse than nearly half of the starting goalies in the NHL today. Rask, Quick, Schneider, Holtby, Bishop, Lundqvist, Crawford, Rinne, Bobrovsky, Luongo, Dubnyk, Varlamov, Howard. All these goalies have a career regular season SV% no worse than +0.05% compared Carey Price's career SV%. Outside of Varlamov(+0.23) and Dubnyk (+0.14), no goalie listed there has more than a +0.09 higher GAA compared to Carey Price's career GAA.
Carey Price's career regular season performance is very comparable to nearly half the starting goaltenders in the league.
The playoffs are where Carey Price truly shows his lack of worth. Lets look at the top 10 active leaders in playoff GP.
Henrik Lundqvist
Marc-Andre Fluery
Corey Crawford
Jonathan Quick
Pekka Rinne
Roberto Luongo
Antti Niemi
Carey Price
Braden Holtby
Tukka Rask
Of the ten names on that list, five have backstopped a team to at least one Stanley Cup championship. Fluery, Crawford, Quick, Niemi and Rask.
Of the five remaining names, Lundqvist, Luongo, Rinne, Price and Holtby, only Carey Price has a worse SV% and GAA in the playoffs than in the regular season and only Price and Holtby have yet to lead a team to a finals appearance.
It should be noted that in Holtby's case, his lack of a deep playoff run to this point could be attributed to being the newest and least experienced goalie on that list. Having only been a starter for the past five years compared to Price's ten years as a starting goalie.
In conclusion, when it comes to the playoffs, no goalie in the NHL today has more experience at being unsuccessful than Carey Price has.
2.63 GAA and 0.910 SV% is pretty much the definition of decent imo.
He gave them better than decent goaltending.
Would love to see what a team like the Jets could do with world class goaltending.
I love debating Carey Price's over-inflated worth in the eyes of many.
Carey Price isn't even close to being in Dominik Hasek's league, no goaltender in the NHL is either and heaven help the other 30 NHL teams should a goalie ever have a run like Hasek had. Over an eight year span, he won six Vezina trophies, two Hart trophies and led the league in SV% six times. Regular season success that every NHL goalie since could only dream of to go along with playoff success and multiple cups.
Dominik Hasek is a legend, Carey Price is not.
I agree, Carey Price is greater than other goalies, like Brian Elliot and Kari Lehtonen for example. His regular season numbers are only slightly better or worse than nearly half of the starting goalies in the NHL today. Rask, Quick, Schneider, Holtby, Bishop, Lundqvist, Crawford, Rinne, Bobrovsky, Luongo, Dubnyk, Varlamov, Howard. All these goalies have a career regular season SV% no worse than +0.05% compared Carey Price's career SV%. Outside of Varlamov(+0.23) and Dubnyk (+0.14), no goalie listed there has more than a +0.09 higher GAA compared to Carey Price's career GAA.
Carey Price's career regular season performance is very comparable to nearly half the starting goaltenders in the league.
The playoffs are where Carey Price truly shows his lack of worth. Lets look at the top 10 active leaders in playoff GP.
Henrik Lundqvist
Marc-Andre Fluery
Corey Crawford
Jonathan Quick
Pekka Rinne
Roberto Luongo
Antti Niemi
Carey Price
Braden Holtby
Tukka Rask
Of the ten names on that list, five have backstopped a team to at least one Stanley Cup championship. Fluery, Crawford, Quick, Niemi and Rask.
Of the five remaining names, Lundqvist, Luongo, Rinne, Price and Holtby, only Carey Price has a worse SV% and GAA in the playoffs than in the regular season and only Price and Holtby have yet to lead a team to a finals appearance.
It should be noted that in Holtby's case, his lack of a deep playoff run to this point could be attributed to being the newest and least experienced goalie on that list. Having only been a starter for the past five years compared to Price's ten years as a starting goalie.
In conclusion, when it comes to the playoffs, no goalie in the NHL today has more experience at being unsuccessful than Carey Price has.
Let's not go there, but yeah
Yup.So they pay andersen the same as price and all they get is a 2nd?
I agree, Carey Price is greater than other goalies, like Brian Elliot and Kari Lehtonen for example. His regular season numbers are only slightly better or worse than nearly half of the starting goalies in the NHL today. Rask, Quick, Schneider, Holtby, Bishop, Lundqvist, Crawford, Rinne, Bobrovsky, Luongo, Dubnyk, Varlamov, Howard. All these goalies have a career regular season SV% no worse than +0.05% compared Carey Price's career SV%. Outside of Varlamov(+0.23) and Dubnyk (+0.14), no goalie listed there has more than a +0.09 higher GAA compared to Carey Price's career GAA.
Carey Price's career regular season performance is very comparable to nearly half the starting goaltenders in the league.
The playoffs are where Carey Price truly shows his lack of worth. Lets look at the top 10 active leaders in playoff GP.
Henrik Lundqvist
Marc-Andre Fluery
Corey Crawford
Jonathan Quick
Pekka Rinne
Roberto Luongo
Antti Niemi
Carey Price
Braden Holtby
Tukka Rask
Of the ten names on that list, five have backstopped a team to at least one Stanley Cup championship. Fluery, Crawford, Quick, Niemi and Rask.
Of the five remaining names, Lundqvist, Luongo, Rinne, Price and Holtby, only Carey Price has a worse SV% and GAA in the playoffs than in the regular season and only Price and Holtby have yet to lead a team to a finals appearance.
It should be noted that in Holtby's case, his lack of a deep playoff run to this point could be attributed to being the newest and least experienced goalie on that list. Having only been a starter for the past five years compared to Price's ten years as a starting goalie.
In conclusion, when it comes to the playoffs, no goalie in the NHL today has more experience at being unsuccessful than Carey Price has.
Rask played a grand total of zero playoff games during the Bruins Stanley Cup run. He didn't backstop anyone to a Stanley Cup championship.
You're right, that was Tim Thomas, my mistake. Rask did however backstop the Bruins to the 2012-13 cup finals while posting a .940 SV% and a 1.88 GAA. Rask is also the leader in both career SV% and GAA among active NHL goalies in the regular season.
Obviously not. He's been on a playoff in Montreal and they don't come close to being a contender even with him on the team.
Price and Holtby haven't even got out of the second round.
Correction: Price with Tokarski did it one year but he never managed it on his own.
Price is soooo overrated...geeesh
Price did...he was injured in the conference finals against NY Tokarski wasnt even the backup until Price got hurt. Is the whole proccess of spending a second to double check to make sure that youre actually even right before you post something as a fact a dead practice here?