No, I think he played for the Blues in between. I barely remember, think we sent a top prospect to get him.Wasn;t Don Awry traded to Montreal from Boston?
Dryden's lack of votes is a reflection of the age of board members here. Oh, and I remember Vachon, and I'm under 60 (although I'm sneaking up on that number). I remember Rogie more for his time with the Kings, though.For me it was a tough call between Patrick Roy and Ken Dryden. I was fortunate to follow both of their careers. Dryden won 6 Stanley Cups, but he was also fronted by the Big 3 (Savard, Robinson, and Lapointe) the best trio of defenders I've ever seen play. Those teams weren't too shabby on offense either.
St. Patrick only won 2 cups with the Habs (plus two more with the Avalanche) but at times he could put fair-to-good teams on his shoulders and will them to victory.
Roy, by the diameter of a puck.
I'm surprised that Dryden didn't get more votes in this poll, and doubly surprised that Price beat Ken out for second place. I like Carey but I wouldn't even think of voting for a goalie who hadn't won a Stanley Cup for the Habs.
Which calls for a trivia question; who was the last goalie not named Roy or Dryden in the nets for a Canadiens Stanley-Cup clinching game?
Rogie Vachon, in the 1969 sweep of the St. Louis Blues. The opposing goalie? Jacques Plante, who won 6 Stanley Cups with Montreal from 1953-1963. (Vachon won 2 Cups before giving way to Dryden in 1971.)
Anyone who remembers Vachon or Plante is over 65, so I can see why those two men aren't on the list.
13 saves in a span of about 3 minutes.In 86 he was a rookie and basically stole the series against the Rangers, remember all of the saves in MSG in overtime? They should have won in 89 but the hockey Gods were smiling on Lanny Macdonald. I am not referring to Colorado, we never had anything like Sakic, Forsberg and company.
Paul me and my father watched that game and it was the day that Roy became a God in my young eyes, his head ducking back and forth like a chicken between saves and whistles but cool as a cucumber as the Rangers rained top quality shots at him and the then great Bob Cole doing the Play by play. He carried us that night and many after, I don't think I want the man as a GM but he was a hell of a goalie.13 saves in a span of about 3 minutes.
Paul me and my father watched that game and it was the day that Roy became a God in my young eyes, his head ducking back and forth like a chicken between saves and whistles but cool as a cucumber as the Rangers rained top quality shots at him and the then great Bob Cole doing the Play by play. He carried us that night and many after, I don't think I want the man as a GM but he was a hell of a goalie.
My dad grew up watching Ken Dryden and one of my best friends is also named after him. I grew up watching Price, but I think Dryden still gets the edge for me. Most underrated goalie in history except for maybe Tretiak
How right you are Tyson.Dryden for his exploits in 70-71. Six NHL games of experience. Al McNeil had lost confidence in Rogie Vachon.
Dryden was up against a Orr led Bruins team that lost 13 games that year and scored 399 goals. Dryden beat them and a legend was born!
Those who say he was a good goalie on a great team are wrong. He was as great as any Habs great from that era. Look how far the Habs dropped the year he sat out...
Look at the gear that goalies of today wear, it's like shooting at a 6 foot 3 couch standing in the crease.Maybe I shouldn't open my mouth and ruin our luck but it's always nice to see a historical thread that isn't overrun with morons telling us that prime Roy or Dryden wouldn't be able to stop a beachball against today's superhuman cyborgs.
Some of the discussions on the NHL main board make my blood boil.
Paul me and my father watched that game and it was the day that Roy became a God in my young eyes, his head ducking back and forth like a chicken between saves and whistles but cool as a cucumber as the Rangers rained top quality shots at him and the then great Bob Cole doing the Play by play. He carried us that night and many after, I don't think I want the man as a GM but he was a hell of a goalie.
Look at the gear that goalies of today wear, it's like shooting at a 6 foot 3 couch standing in the crease.
We never knew anything about him, internet was kind of slow in 86 and my father keep reminding me that the habs were not afraid to try a new young goalie in the playoffs, it was a magic night for me as a kid.Epic game. Fact that you watched it with your dad and became an instant Roy fan that night. Just Awesome.
I remember meeting Marc Andre Fleury when he was a world junior goalie and man he was tiny but on the ice he looked massive. The goalie gear has prolonged many a career and that is in no way a shot at Fleury, a hell of a modern era goalie.Lacrosse goalies.
Indeed.We never knew anything about him, internet was kind of slow in 86 and my father keep reminding me that the habs were not afraid to try a new young goalie in the playoffs, it was a magic night for me as a kid.