Save Percentage in the NHL

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nino33
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Save Percentage in the NHL

Post by nino33 »

Greetings!

I'm just posting to share some information/data that I think is interesting...maybe others will too, maybe it'll result in some interesting discussion and/or shared memories..

I'm an ex-goalie, and when I started playing hockey in the mid 1970s I was a fan of many NHL goalies of the era. I loved the way they looked. Over the years it seemed to me that the goaltenders I first learned about and first watched as a kid were much maligned...save percentage was the modern stat that has changed so much over the years - the modern goaltender was considered far superior because of their far superior save percentage numbers.

And the data seemed to prove what they were saying

League Average Save % [/tr]
Year SV%
2013-14 0.914
2012-13 0.912
2011-12 0.914
2010-11 0.913
2009-10 0.911
2008-09 0.908
2007-08 0.909
2006-07 0.905
2005-06 0.901
2003-04 0.911
2002-03 0.909
2001-02 0.908
2000-01 0.903



League Average Save % [/tr]
Year SV%
1999-00 0.904
1998-99 0.908
1997-98 0.906
1996-97 0.905
1995-96 0.898
1994-95 0.901
1993-94 0.895
1992-93 0.885



League Average Save % [/tr]
Year SV%
1987-88 0.879
1986-87 0.880
1985-86 0.874
1984-85 0.875
1983-84 0.873
1982-83 0.875
Clearly goaltenders were getting better at their job since 1982-83 (when the NHL first began keeping track of SV%), and since the NHL expanded to the current 30 teams in 2000 no NHL season has seen a League SV% lower than 0.901 - so what I've always wondered was, what about the goalies I grew up with? The goalies I read about and watched? It seemed like they were better before I started watching hockey, and when I started watching (the 1970s) then they were in the 1980s - but there was no "proof" available! The stats weren't available...until now!

Actually the data that is available has been available since 2001, published in "The Hockey Compendium" by Klein & Reif. Someone named Edward Yuen compiled complete NHL SV% data that covered 1954-1967 as well as a few seasons in the 70s (thank you Edward Yuen!)...I thought I'd post some of the data
Last edited by nino33 on Wed May 29, 2019 7:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Save Percentage in the NHL

Post by nino33 »

First (for reference) I thought I'd post the current and recent years top rated goalies in SV%
.


2013-14 SV% Leaders [/tr]
Goalie GP SV%
Ben Scrivens 25 0.937
Ben Bishop 44 0.933
Josh Harding 29 0.933
Tuuka Rask 43 0.928
Jonathan Bernier 44 0.927


2012-13 SV% Leaders [/tr]
Goalie GP SV%
Craig Anderson 24 0.941
Sergei Bobrovsky 38 0.932
Tuuka Rask 36 0.929
Cory Schneider 30 0.927
Henrik Lundqvist 43 0.926


2011-12 SV% Leaders [/tr]
Goalie GP SV%
Brian Elliot 38 0.940
Cory Schneider 33 0.937
Henrik Lundqvist 62 0.930
Mike Smith 67 0.930
Jonathan Quick 69 0.929


2010-11 SV% Leaders [/tr]
Goalie GP SV%
Tim Thomas 57 0.938
Pekka Rinne 64 0.930
Cory Schneider 25 0.929
Robero Luongo 60 0.928
Jonas Hiller 49 0.924
Last edited by nino33 on Wed May 29, 2019 7:21 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Save Percentage in the NHL

Post by nino33 »

And now some data from the past....


1954-55 SV% [/tr]
Goalie GP SV%
Harry Lumley 69 0.929
Jacques Plante 52 0.926
Terry Sawchuk 68 0.926
Gump Worsley 65 0.916
League Average - 0.915


1960-61 SV% [/tr]
Goalie GP SV%
Johnny Bower 58 0.923
Glen Hall 70 0.920
Charlie Hodge 30 0.916
Gump Worsley 59 0.912
League Average - 0.908


1964-65 SV% [/tr]
Goalie GP SV%
Johnny Bower 34 0.924
Glen Hall 41 0.922
Denis DeJordy 30 0.914
Terry Sawchuk 36 0.914
League Average - 0.908


1970-71 SV% [/tr]
Goalie GP SV%
Jacques Plante 40 0.942
Ed Giacomin 45 0.921
Gilles Villemure 34 0.920
Tony Esposito 57 0.920
Gerry Cheevers 40 0.918
Glen Hall 32 0.916
Doug Favell 44 0.915
League Average - 0.904


1974-75 SV% [/tr]
Goalie GP SV%
Rogie Vachon 54 0.926
Bernie Parent 68 0.918
Dan Bouchard 40 0.914
Phil Myre 40 0.909
Ken Dryden 56 0.906
Tony Esposito 71 0.905
League Average - 0.890


1975-76 SV% [/tr]
Goalie GP SV%
Ken Dryden 62 0.928
Glenn Resch 44 0.928
Dan Bouchard 47 0.911
Billy Smith 39 0.908
Tony Esposito 68 0.905
League Average - 0.890

I found it interesting (and pleasing) to see that the top goaltenders I grew up with had some pretty good SV% numbers! Jacque Plante's 0.942 SV% in 1970-71 is the highest ever recorded!

Maybe I'll post some more at another time (it's getting late now, and I need to get some sleep before the Sweden/Finland game in less than 5 hours).
I thought it might be interesting to look at more seasons from the 50s and I wanted to check the 1980s data to see how many/if any goaltenders had a SV% above 0.900
Last edited by nino33 on Wed May 29, 2019 7:21 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Save Percentage in the NHL

Post by CJ »

Really interesting! :-) Nice one nino! :thup: Some stats from the 80's & 90's to compare with!? :-)
nino33 wrote:[/b] Jacque Plante's 0.942 SV% in 1970-71 is the highest ever recorded!
Holy hell! That's pretty sick. In the 70's that kinda record!! 8-)
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Re: Save Percentage in the NHL

Post by Primis »

What I've always wished is that there was a way to *really* weigh Save somehow based on actual quality of chance.

If a goalie gives up 2 goals, makes 25 saves, but 5 of them were say, Henrik Zetterberg weakly flipping the puck on goal from the blueline as he enters the zone (something he goes through periods of maddeningly doing for no reason)... that's 5, or 1/5 of them, that weren't real scoring chances. So do/should those count, instead of 25/27 (.926), should it be 20/22 (.909)? The shot was on goal technically but never an actual scoring threat (Cloutier and Toskala jokes aside). I actually began thinking about this sort of thing when I was citing Jimmy Howard's team all-time ranks compared to some others, because of how many blind shots he faces that past Wings goalies probably didn't.

Watching old film, there was a lot less blind shooting in the 80's and on back, most shots would have been reasonable enough chances ( correct me if I'm wrong on thinking that, but it seems there aren't so many blasts from the blueline, and fewer bad-angle shots that are almost just a guy throwing the puck to the front.... and more shots by someone roaring up the wing at a still-reasonable angle). I don't know that Save is very relevant anymore for modern goalies though, because of this. Maybe there needs to be an Adjusted Save stat or something. That might help compare modern goalies better to those in the past.
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Re: Save Percentage in the NHL

Post by nino33 »

I believe there are some "advanced stats style calculations" and some actual "advanced stats" that have been made that might help. I haven't looked closely at them yet. Maybe at some point in the future when I do so I'll post in this thread anything I find that seems interesting


I think a big factor in the different style of play (i.e. less shooting from further out nowadays) is the size of goalies and especially the (ridiculously excessive IMO) size of modern goalie equipment. In addition, modern equipment is incredibly light compared to the days of leather, felt, and deer hair.

In "the old days" goaltenders tried to stop the puck with just their gloves, stick or (leg) pads because the puck hurt A LOT if you made a save taking the puck in the stomach or on the arms. Here's some pictures looking at arm/shoulder/chest protection over the last 50 years...


Glen Hall in the 1960s
Image


Ken Dryden and Bernie Parent in the 1970s
ImageImage


Ron Hextall in the late 1980s (I remember when I went from felt and leather to the foam/nylon/plastic...I remember being more protected, but struggling with the bulkiness as a kid...I was a stand-up old school goaltender, I used to make skate saves! The skate save no longer exists HaHa)
Image


Martin Brodeur recently/currently (notice the extra shoulder/arm "padding" to make the shoulders and arms bigger)
Image


Wiki has an article called "Ice Hockey Goaltending Equipment" that notes - starting around 2000 the "box" style of pads became popular as goaltender technique evolved to a blocking style versus the reacting style of the past." I have more to say on goaltenders/goaltending, but for now I'll conclude with this "blocking style" of goaltending doesn't appeal to me, doesn't impress me, I don't think goaltenders "look cool" like I did as a kid (if I was a kid today I don't think I would have been interested in playing goal like I was back in the 1970s)




jhcjobpb wrote:Some stats from the 80's & 90's to compare with!?
nino33 wrote:I thought it might be interesting to look at more seasons from the 50s and I wanted to check the 1980s data to see how many/if any goaltenders had a SV% above 0.900
Coming soon! :-)
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Re: Save Percentage in the NHL

Post by nino33 »

This is a good pic of the chest/arm protection I remember from the 1970s (I'm pretty sure I wore the exact style that's pictured at one point HaHa Getting hit in the crook of the elbow was the worst!)
Image
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Re: Save Percentage in the NHL

Post by batdad »

Training and equipment are the differences. Skaters are trained at a higher level, their gear is better now too (well sticks actually are questionable, they can shoot the puck harder BUT...the balance and skill of the sticks is nowhere near what kind of feel a wood stick provides...even in the show and Olympics passes are missed because of the sticks....pass it short because the stick bounces the puck, and the composite style of stick does not allow for soft touch receiving a pass..pucks bounce off all the time)

So in some cases the players gear helps the goalies as well. (Cross ice pass plays not as clean as would be with wood)

Goalie gear is huge. BUT the biggest thing is how goalies are trained now. There is so much more focus on it. Coaches hardly ever say "just stop the puck" except for the head guys. The goalie coaches are all over the form and technique and mental parts of the game now. That is a BIG step up from old days.

Fact remains...I do not think you can compare the stats of hockey from the old days to now in any way shape or form. Sorry Nino, I know you are really heavily invested in it. but the game has just changed too much in too many ways.

The same way I cannot say Gordie Howe would still be a superstar today, and Crosby still would have been in the old days...I cannot say Rogie Vachon would not be a star today, or would be....and that Rinne would have been a star in the past, or would not be.

Too many variables in too many things...to compare anything. Cross generational scoring numbers mean nothing in terms of the individual talents of the players of the different eras. All they do is tell you the differences in the way the game is played etc over the different generations.

You cannot legitimately evaluate a goalie from the 50s compared to a goalie from the 00s. Just not a fair comparison, because absolutely everything has improved over time.

Training, skating, physical condition, gear, shot power. There is literally NOTHING that is not at least 20x better now than in the 70s even. And the changes cannot really be quantified in any way because of intangibles.

I love seeing those raw numbers, but really all they tell me is that the guys we thought were the best goalies in the 70s were the best goalies in the 70s. it does not tell me if better or worse or the same.

The shots were weaker, yet you still saw tons of goals from the blueline unscreened on a rush...because the gear was worse or the training or both was worse. But the shot was worse too. (so thinking of the Lafleur goal vs Boston here)

ANd even when I say tells me who the better goalies were, it is still the case that it does not necessarily tell me that for say Vachon. What was strength of his schedule playing in the West vs expansion teams. How would he have fared having to play the Original 6 teams more often? On the other side would someone like say Ed Giacomin come out much better if he played in the west all the time instead of the east. ETc etc.

Too many variables to just use stats in any way to determine if goalies from the past fared as well as goalies now. Cannot compare eras. Just cannot.
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Re: Save Percentage in the NHL

Post by nino33 »

batdad wrote:I love seeing those raw numbers, but really all they tell me is that the guys we thought were the best goalies in the 70s were the best goalies in the 70s.
Exactly! That's what I was saying when I said I was pleased

batdad wrote:Fact remains...I do not think you can compare the stats of hockey from the old days to now in any way shape or form.
I think you kinda can. I provided League Averages so you could "compare" players based not on how they stack up against each other in different eras, but rather how they stack up against their peers in the same era. Of course such a comparison is far from perfect, but it's not nothing.

IMO current/modern goaltenders are nowhere near as important as they were in the past. IMO teams regularly reach the Semis and Finals with less than HOF goaltending...because a HOF goalie would have to stand out from his peers right? Wouldn't they have to be considered substantially better than their peers? I think Hasek's might be the last one we've had...the recent/current crop of goalies reminds me a bit of the 1980s actually. Some decent/good goalies, but no one that stands out from their peers THROUGHOUT their career (seems to me top goalies now have 1-3 years at the top above their peers, rather than 5+)



batdad wrote:Sorry Nino, I know you are really heavily invested in it. but the game has just changed too much in too many ways.
Not trying to HaHa I just like data, thought it might be worth sharing

I'm really not trying to turn back time. As I said, I'm just sharing some data, but maybe what comes through is why I don't have the same interest/passion as I did (because how cool the goalies looked was a big part of it to me...the "michelin man sumo wrestler suit with mattresses on his legs" modern goalie doesn't impress me much...I think they look comical, and I think the better training/equipment has leveled out the playing field (as the old stats show...look how far ahead the top 1970s goalies were than their peers, that's the difference I noticed right away)...Of course modern hockey has changed a ton and I'm not saying it's bad or wrong, just that it interests me a lot less.


I would have never considered such thoughts growing up, but now if I was asked about making the ice bigger I'd say yes, but make the nets bigger too. Make them however much bigger they need to be to account for the difference in goaltender size and equipment size. And don't make it just wider, make it a bit longer too. And stop the excessive number of TV time outs, and (maybe most importantly) reduce the number of teams! HaHa

And... :rant:

Oops, sorry...


While of course it seems like none of this will ever happen, I remember thinking in the 1980s that we'd never again see low scoring, defensive hockey :-D
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Re: Save Percentage in the NHL

Post by batdad »

LOL at the last bit. AWesome. I am the same way save for making the ice bigger at all. No thanks.

And yeah I knew you were not really comparing then and now, but had to say it for those who would think you were.

I think goaltending is just as important, just that the goalies who are middle of the road have so much training and gear that they are more likley to be enough to backstop a decent team to the final 4 (than they were in the past... :-D See what I Did there?)

Plus in general those teams with middling or not elite goaltending are always amazing in the other areas of the game. But a rubbish goalie on a fantastic team still does not get there. Witness all those big $ Ranger teams, the CAnucks of the Cloutier era,

Ranford, Moog and Fuhr in particular were considered fair to middling goalies alot of their careers. All got alot of credit EVENTUALLY for what they did...but they managed to get to the Finals a few times, and none of them really fared as well with their other teams as with that Oiler team.

Goalies get hot...even the craptastic ones. Some get hot at the right time, and unlike the John Druce's and Chris Kontos type players of the world...that can make more of a difference.

I remember thinking in the 80s that SOMEONE was going to come up with a way to beat the Oilers and it was not going to be a guy who thought "Hey lets beat em 15-14." I kind of knew that their would be alot of work to stop that dynasty. They were hated around the league for their cockyness and arrgoance. :-D
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Re: Save Percentage in the NHL

Post by nino33 »

batdad wrote:Goalies get hot...even the craptastic ones. Some get hot at the right time, and unlike the John Druce's and Chris Kontos type players of the world...that can make more of a difference.
TOTALLY agree!

batdad wrote:Ranford, Moog and Fuhr in particular were considered fair to middling goalies alot of their careers. All got alot of credit EVENTUALLY for what they did...but they managed to get to the Finals a few times, and none of them really fared as well with their other teams as with that Oiler team.
I think Fuhr was special, big save/shut the door (got hot) when needed with the Oilers (but maybe I'm partial to Fuhr now because I was a "rink rat" in Victoria when he played for the Cougars...I also remember we'd have Sunday morning games from 10-12 at the Memorial Arena (with the Ivy growing up the side) and then Fuhr and the Cougars practiced at noon...Victoria and Portland (and Calgary and Regina) had some great battles back then

Victoria Memorial Arena (demolished in 2003)
Image


I was never a Moog fan...but nobody could make a save look as good as Ranford! :-D The Gilles Gilbert/Mike Palmateer of his generation HaHa


I remember playing street hockey with friends, and by your stance and style you could be recognizable as Parent or Dryden or Tretiak or Liut or Peeters (or Don Edwards, one of my style favourites), or Palmateer or Fuhr or Riggin or Esposito, etc...IMO nowadays the vast majority of goalie all play the same style (and those that are "a bit different" like Quick just play a more acrobatic form of the same style)


Can't play goalie charades with modern goalies! HaHa
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Re: Save Percentage in the NHL

Post by CJ »

I might not be so young after all as I remember Ranford/Fuhr/Moog. :-D I still have hockey cards I gathered as a kid of those guys. 8-)
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Re: Save Percentage in the NHL

Post by batdad »

My fave of all time...Ron Lowe. Used to just howl about him with my buds. Love his stats from his days in Washington.

Riggin was awesome! That cage....made me think of Tretiak and Myshkin.
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Save Percentage in the NHL

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batdad wrote:My fave of all time...Ron Lowe. Used to just howl about him with my buds. Love his stats from his days in Washington.
Ah yes, Ron Low (8 wins in 48 games with a 5.45 GAA in 1974-75 and then 6 wins in 43 games with a 5.45 GAA in 1975-76 before his "good year" with the Capitals in 1976-77 where he 16 wins in 54 games with a 3.87 GAA)
Image


batdad wrote:Riggin was awesome! That cage....made me think of Tretiak and Myshkin.
I really liked Riggin's playing style
Image.






Here some SV% data/leaders from the 1980s...

1982-83 SV% [/tr]
Goalie GP SV%
Rollie Melanson 44 0.909
Billy Smith 41 0.906
Pete Petters 62 0.904
Murray Bannerman 41 0.901
Andy Moog 50 0.891
Pelle Lindbergh 40 0.890
John Garrett 34 0.889
Glen Hanlon 35 0.888
Reggie Lemelin 39 0.888
League Average - 0.875


1983-84 SV% [/tr]
Goalie GP SV%
Rollie Melanson 37 0.902
Billy Smith 42 0.896
Reggie Lemelin 51 0.893
Tom Barrasso 42 0.893
Glen Hanlon 50 0.890
League Average - 0.873


1984-85 SV% [/tr]
Goalie GP SV%
Pelle Lindbergh 65 0.899
Andy Moog 39 0.894
Mike Liut 44 0.889
Reggie Lemelin 56 0.888
Tom Barrasso 54 0.887
Kelly Hrudey 41 0.886
Pat Riggin 57 0.886
League Average - 0.874


1985-86 SV% [/tr]
Goalie GP SV%
Bob Froese 51 0.909
Kelly Hrudey 45 0.906
Clint Malarchuk 46 0.895
Rick Wamsley 42 0.894
Don Beaupre 52 0.892
Grant Fuhr 40 0.890
League Average - 0.874


1986-87 SV% [/tr]
Goalie GP SV%
Ron Hextall 66 0.902
Bob Sauve 46 0.894
Glen Hanlon 36 0.893
Brian Hayward 37 0.893
Bill Ranford 41 0.891
Patrick Roy 46 0.891
League Average - 0.880


1987-88 SV% [/tr]
Goalie GP SV%
Patrick Roy 45 0.900
Pete Petters 35 0.898
Kelly Hrudey 47 0.896
Tom Barrasso 54 0.896
Greg Stefan 33 0.896
Brian Hayward 39 0.896
Billy Smith 38 0.894
Glen Hanlon 47 0.891
League Average - 0.879


1988-89 SV% [/tr]
Goalie GP SV%
Patrick Roy 48 0.908
Jon Casey 55 0.900
Kari Takko 32 0.899
Mike Vernon 52 0.897
Steve Weeks 35 0.892
Kirk McLean 42 0.891
Ron Hextall 64 0.891
League Average - 0.879


1989-90 SV% [/tr]
Goalie GP SV%
Patrick Roy 54 0.912
Mike Liut 37 0.905
Daren Puppa 56 0.903
Mark Fitzpatrick 47 0.898
Jon Casey 61 0.896
Glenn Healy 39 0.894
Andy Moog 46 0.893
Reggie Lemelin 43 0.892
League Average - 0.881
Last edited by nino33 on Wed May 29, 2019 7:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Save Percentage in the NHL

Post by batdad »

Oh you know those are wrong. Rollie the goalie LOL. Lindbergh, Froese, Hextall....wow. Those were the days.
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Re: Save Percentage in the NHL

Post by nino33 »

I had never looked closely at save percentage in the 80s before, I just knew it was bad...with the recent realization that goaltenders from the 50s through to the 70s had save percentages above 0.900 had me more interested in taking a closer look at the 1980s goaltenders

I was kinda surprised anyone had a save percentage above 0.900 HaHa

Only 12 goaltenders over 9 years had a save percentage above 0.900...the high scoring 80s, when Gretzky and Lemieux shone so brightly, had the worst goaltenders (by save percentage) seen in the last 60 years



batdad wrote:Rollie the goalie LOL.
Rollie the Goalie (Billy Smith's backup) wasn't really considered "elite" HaHa
Image


batdad wrote:Lindbergh, Froese, Hextall....wow. Those were the days.
Yes they were!...
Image
Image
Image



When it came to playing style, I liked Liut and Hanlon...
Image
Image



Peeters, Ranford and Fuhr were OK too!
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Re: Save Percentage in the NHL

Post by CJ »

Soon you'll probably upload the Dominators sick stats. :-D
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Re: Save Percentage in the NHL

Post by XenHL »

Man looking at those pictures brings back lots of memories. It was so much fun to watch hockey back then!
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