Triumph Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 90-95% of the blame for last night's game is on the 18 guys in red who weren't skating in a small crease. The other 5-10% is on the guy in red stopping pucks between the crease. The only thing I am trying to convey here is that, for 15-20 years Brodeur pitched shutout after shutout on his way to breaking the all time NHL record in career regular season shutouts. He did so in times when we needed him to win games 1-0 because he played on a defensive-minded team that couldn't score goals. We needed Cory to win one of those for us last night. He didn't deliver. So the whole "the season is Brodeur's fault" stuff should just stop. It wasn't his fault. If you want to say he was "terribad", ok, fine. I'll say he wasn't good. But to suggest that if he played less games that the season would be different and we would be in the playoffs is just garbage and like I said if you or anyone else wants to think otherwise, well then you're just set in your ways I guess and there's no sense trying to show you otherwise. Hopefully the team we have now isn't the same team that suits up in 2014-15, but you put this same team out there next year and give Cory 65 starts, the result will be the same. I wish/hope I'm wrong, but I won't be (we probably won't see it anyway because, hopefully, the team isn't even the same anyway, but you get the point) So basically goaltending doesn't matter. Cory Schneider has started 42 games. In those 42 games, he has received 83 goals worth of goal support. I defy you to find one season that Martin Brodeur received less than 2 goals a game of goal support. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
devilsrule33 Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 (edited) 90-95% of the blame for last night's game is on the 18 guys in red who weren't skating in a small crease. The other 5-10% is on the guy in red stopping pucks between the crease. The only thing I am trying to convey here is that, for 15-20 years Brodeur pitched shutout after shutout on his way to breaking the all time NHL record in career regular season shutouts. He did so in times when we needed him to win games 1-0 because he played on a defensive-minded team that couldn't score goals. We needed Cory to win one of those for us last night. He didn't deliver. So the whole "the season is Brodeur's fault" stuff should just stop. It wasn't his fault. If you want to say he was "terribad", ok, fine. I'll say he wasn't good. But to suggest that if he played less games that the season would be different and we would be in the playoffs is just garbage and like I said if you or anyone else wants to think otherwise, well then you're just set in your ways I guess and there's no sense trying to show you otherwise. Hopefully the team we have now isn't the same team that suits up in 2014-15, but you put this same team out there next year and give Cory 65 starts, the result will be the same. I wish/hope I'm wrong, but I won't be (we probably won't see it anyway because, hopefully, the team isn't even the same anyway, but you get the point) Your memory is way off. The Devils were never a bad scoring team when they made it far in the playoffs. In fact from 99-01, they were either 1st or 2nd in scoring. Defensive minded sure, but not a struggling offense. They were a powerhouse. The Devils had a terrible offense in 06-07 and 07-08, and made the playoffs because of how good Brodeur was. Arguably his two best seasons in the NHL. And that is the point about this team. If Schneider played as many or close to as many games as Brodeur did back in 06-08, and if Brodeur played an amount of games close to the amount Clemmensen and Weekes did in those years, the Devils could very well be a playoff team. Edited April 8, 2014 by devilsrule33 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Devils Pride 26 Posted April 8, 2014 Author Share Posted April 8, 2014 This is not a "the sole reason were not in the playoffs is Brodeur" thread. This is, the "Brodeur is the biggest of many reasons were not in the playoffs" thread. Did anyone bother reading the first post? Two teams score *gasp* less than us but are sitting rather comfortably in playoff positions because of their goaltending. Schneider, Quick, and Harding/Bryz all have very similar numbers. The difference is who has been stopping pucks for them the other 40 games. LA has had phenomenal guys, Minnesota has been pretty good, and we've had one of the worst in the league Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Colorado Rockies 1976 Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 (edited) 90-95% of the blame for last night's game is on the 18 guys in red who weren't skating in a small crease. The other 5-10% is on the guy in red stopping pucks between the crease. The only thing I am trying to convey here is that, for 15-20 years Brodeur pitched shutout after shutout on his way to breaking the all time NHL record in career regular season shutouts. He did so in times when we needed him to win games 1-0 because he played on a defensive-minded team that couldn't score goals. We needed Cory to win one of those for us last night. He didn't deliver. So the whole "the season is Brodeur's fault" stuff should just stop. It wasn't his fault. If you want to say he was "terribad", ok, fine. I'll say he wasn't good. But to suggest that if he played less games that the season would be different and we would be in the playoffs is just garbage and like I said if you or anyone else wants to think otherwise, well then you're just set in your ways I guess and there's no sense trying to show you otherwise. Hopefully the team we have now isn't the same team that suits up in 2014-15, but you put this same team out there next year and give Cory 65 starts, the result will be the same. I wish/hope I'm wrong, but I won't be (we probably won't see it anyway because, hopefully, the team isn't even the same anyway, but you get the point) The bolded is a big-time myth. A lot of Devils teams could score a lot more than they were given credit for. The '95 team struggled during the regular season, but found its scoring groove during the playoffs. Anyway, here's where the Devils ranked in offense in his career (EDIT: made corrections based on dr33's feedback): 93-94: 2nd 95: T13th 95-96: 25th 96-97: 16th 97-98: 9th 98-99: 2nd 99-00: 2nd 00-01: 1st 01-02: T20th 02-03: 14th 03-04: 14th 05-06: 21st 06-07: T24th 07-08: 26th 08-09: 15th 09-10: T19th 10-11: 30th 11-12: 11th I bolded some years because those are the seasons that I think Marty actually played some of his best hockey, outside of his three Cup-winning playoff runs (he was outstanding in all of them). The bolded are the years where Marty truly did carry them to the playoffs...the goal differentials bear that out (they were very low for the records they were putting up)...he needed to be great a lot in those years, and he often was. But for the most part, before 05-06, the Devils were solidly in the top half in scoring, and sometimes even Top 5. Edited April 8, 2014 by Colorado Rockies 1976 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Devilsfan118 Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 The bolded is a big-time myth. A lot of Devils teams could score a lot more than they were given credit for. The '95 team struggled during the regular season, but found its scoring groove during the playoffs. Anyway, here's where the Devils ranked in offense in his career: 93-94: 2nd 95: T11th 95-96: 25th 96-97: 16th 97-98: 9th 98-99: T4th 99-00: 2nd 00-01: 1st 01-02: T20th 02-03: 13th 03-04: 13th 05-06: T20th 06-07: 23rd 07-08: 25th 08-09: 15th 09-10: T19th 10-11: 30th 11-12: 11th Man we as fans had it good for loooooong run there. Good offensive, stupidly sound defensively, great goaltending. Mmm. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
devilsrule33 Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 The bolded is a big-time myth. A lot of Devils teams could score a lot more than they were given credit for. The '95 team struggled during the regular season, but found its scoring groove during the playoffs. Anyway, here's where the Devils ranked in offense in his career: 93-94: 2nd 95: T11th 95-96: 25th 96-97: 16th 97-98: 9th 98-99: T4th 99-00: 2nd 00-01: 1st 01-02: T20th 02-03: 13th 03-04: 13th 05-06: T20th 06-07: 23rd 07-08: 25th 08-09: 15th 09-10: T19th 10-11: 30th 11-12: 11th I bolded some years because those are the seasons that I think Marty actually played some of his best hockey, outside of his three Cup-winning playoff runs (he was outstanding in all of them). The bolded are the years where Marty truly did carry them to the playoffs...the goal differentials bear that out (they were very low for the records they were putting up)...he needed to be great a lot in those years, and he often was. But for the most part, before 05-06, the Devils were solidly in the top half in scoring, and sometimes even Top 5. Where did you get those numbers. Either your numbers are wrong or NHL.com numbers are wrong. But most years seem slightly off. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
msweet Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 How many times were the Devils up two goals in the 3rd this year and blew the lead? Once (in Edmonton)? Any other game? It's funny how many fans were upset about the Devils playing too passive of a 3rd period when their opponents tied the game with the net empty 3 games in a row, but you feel it was the opposite? Each group wants to blame the coach, but no one can get on the same page with the strategy in the 3rd period. I think this is a perfect example of the Brodeur fanboys, and there are a ton of them out there. Saying Brodeur was not part of the reason the Devils missed the playoffs is a way bigger stretch than saying he was the reason. I am not a boy, not a Brodeur fanboy and since I have mod privileges I am going to take exactly 0% personal insults, even by sideways reference before you get nixed. Please address each and everyone of my posts respectfully if you want to post here. You are confused and reading things into my post that are not there for reasons I am unclear on. ..Just like you did with my Jagr is worn-out post (which is now seems to be turning out to be true) We have given up several 2 goal leads, not only in the 3rd period. We have blown way too many 3rd period leads for a defense first team. I didn't say Marty was not at fault, but the idea of laying the blame squarely on him is silly. And people keep wondering why we score more goals for Marty. I could argue that when your goalie handles the puck as well as Marty it changes the confidence level and offensive side of your game in many ways. And then there's the extrapolating Corey's stats over Marty's games and saying we would have given up 40 less goals. That's just theoretical nonsense. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
devilsrule33 Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 (edited) I am not a boy, not a Brodeur fanboy and since I have mod privileges I am going to take exactly 0% personal insults, even by sideways reference before you get nixed. Please address each and everyone of my posts respectfully if you want to post here. You are confused and reading things into my post that are not there for reasons I am unclear on. ..Just like you did with my Jagr is worn-out post (which is now seems to be turning out to be true) We have given up several 2 goal leads, not only in the 3rd period. We have blown way too many 3rd period leads for a defense first team. I didn't say Marty was not at fault, but the idea of laying the blame squarely on him is silly. And people keep wondering why we score more goals for Marty. I could argue that when your goalie handles the puck as well as Marty it changes the confidence level and offensive side of your game in many ways. And then there's the extrapolating Corey's stats over Marty's games and saying we would have given up 40 less goals. That's just theoretical nonsense. Please don't threaten me with your mod privileges. I didn't insult you. I said this post reminds me of Brodeur fanboys. If you want to nix me, that be a shame, but go for it it, sir. I'll disagree again and say Jagr is not worn out or anymore worn out than any other player on the team. He's healthy. At the very least that's way more than almost half the forwards. He continues to lead the Devils in shots on goal. He was fine last night. You could argue Brodeur is the reason that the Devils score more goals when Marty is in net, power to you. I'll disagree with that as well, though. Just a fluke coincidence that would would see the gap shrink if more games were played. I think Marshall had crunched some numbers, and the Devils don't have much of an advantage in offensive zone time or shots directed in nets with either goalie in net. But sure you could come up with some "theoretical nonsense" as well. Edited April 8, 2014 by devilsrule33 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Colorado Rockies 1976 Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 Where did you get those numbers. Either your numbers are wrong or NHL.com numbers are wrong. But most years seem slightly off. Went through wikipedia season-by-season and did countdown rankings while trying to work. If you have better and more accurate rankings, by all means put them up and correct mine. But even if mine are slightly off, the general jist is the same...the Devils weren't constantly a bottom-five team offense propped up throughout Marty's career. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Daniel Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 I am not a boy, not a Brodeur fanboy and since I have mod privileges I am going to take exactly 0% personal insults, even by sideways reference before you get nixed. Please address each and everyone of my posts respectfully if you want to post here. You are confused and reading things into my post that are not there for reasons I am unclear on. ..Just like you did with my Jagr is worn-out post (which is now seems to be turning out to be true) We have given up several 2 goal leads, not only in the 3rd period. We have blown way too many 3rd period leads for a defense first team. I didn't say Marty was not at fault, but the idea of laying the blame squarely on him is silly. And people keep wondering why we score more goals for Marty. I could argue that when your goalie handles the puck as well as Marty it changes the confidence level and offensive side of your game in many ways. And then there's the extrapolating Corey's stats over Marty's games and saying we would have given up 40 less goals. That's just theoretical nonsense. I'm not a fan of the idea that you can calculate x number of wins that one goalie gets you versus another, which, so far as I can tell, is done using save percentage. But, even if you think save percentage is not the end all-be all, it's not hard to conclude that giving the goalie that stops a much greater percentage of shots, say 60 to 65 randomly assigned games as opposed to the 48-50 he'll end up with, would have probably been good enough for a second wild card playoff berth. And to be fair to Marty, it's not purely because he's so bad. It's that the other goalie is probably one of the best in the league no matter how you want to slice it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NJDevs4978 Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 There is no way Marty's puckhandling is a goal a game difference, or whatever the difference is in goal support between Marty and Cory per game now. Not when it's 'never' been that kind of a split at any point in Marty's career with other goalies (Hedberg, Clemmensen, etc) that are just as suspect handling the puck as Cory. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mfitz804 Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 46 games decided by one goal. Sure, its all Marty's fault. Not the fact that we can't score. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
msweet Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 Please don't threaten me with your mod privileges. I didn't insult you. I said this post reminds me of Brodeur fanboys. If you want to nix me, that be a shame, but go for it it, sir. "I think this is a perfect example of the Brodeur fanboys" That is a direct reference and it is insulting. Respectful is what I am insisting on. Thanks for your cooperation. I'm not a fan of the idea that you can calculate x number of wins that one goalie gets you versus another, which, so far as I can tell, is done using save percentage. But, even if you think save percentage is not the end all-be all, it's not hard to conclude that giving the goalie that stops a much greater percentage of shots, say 60 to 65 randomly assigned games as opposed to the 48-50 he'll end up with, would have probably been good enough for a second wild card playoff berth. And to be fair to Marty, it's not purely because he's so bad. It's that the other goalie is probably one of the best in the league no matter how you want to slice it. Basically this 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NJDfan1711 Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 No, if the most basic fundamental principle of a team getting a win is to score more than your opponent, Schneider isn't even 1% "to blame for the loss" considering 0 goals were scored. I was being facetious with the percentages, but we agree on the fundamentals. Yet people (possibly you, but I won't put words in your mouth) don't want to apply that to Brodeur. That's what's frustrating and annoying. Yesterday is actually a perfect example the more I think about it... you can argue that if you put Brodeur in net last night, or any of the other games this season, that the score is 3-0 or 4-0 instead of 1-0, but the simple fact of the matter is exactly as you stated, if you don't score, you lose, plain and simple. THAT is where the blame lies this year. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ATLL765 Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 I am not a boy, not a Brodeur fanboy and since I have mod privileges I am going to take exactly 0% personal insults, even by sideways reference before you get nixed. Please address each and everyone of my posts respectfully if you want to post here. You are confused and reading things into my post that are not there for reasons I am unclear on. ..Just like you did with my Jagr is worn-out post (which is now seems to be turning out to be true) We have given up several 2 goal leads, not only in the 3rd period. We have blown way too many 3rd period leads for a defense first team. I didn't say Marty was not at fault, but the idea of laying the blame squarely on him is silly. And people keep wondering why we score more goals for Marty. I could argue that when your goalie handles the puck as well as Marty it changes the confidence level and offensive side of your game in many ways. And then there's the extrapolating Corey's stats over Marty's games and saying we would have given up 40 less goals. That's just theoretical nonsense. It's not theoretical nonsense. It's not exact measurements, but it's as close as you're going to get. Cory's stats show he is by FAR the better goalie. It's absolutely unequivocal that if Marty played about 20 less games, we'd be in. I'd put $1M on it if I had it. Is he the only reason we missed? No, but he's a LARGE part of it and the puck handling creating more offense is total baloney. I'd say maybe Marty helped the offense more at the start of the season, but I'd chalk that up to adjustments to Cory rather than anything Marty was doing. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NJDfan1711 Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 The bolded is a big-time myth. A lot of Devils teams could score a lot more than they were given credit for. The '95 team struggled during the regular season, but found its scoring groove during the playoffs. Anyway, here's where the Devils ranked in offense in his career: 93-94: 2nd 95: T11th 95-96: 25th 96-97: 16th 97-98: 9th 98-99: T4th 99-00: 2nd 00-01: 1st 01-02: T20th 02-03: 13th 03-04: 13th 05-06: T20th 06-07: 23rd 07-08: 25th 08-09: 15th 09-10: T19th 10-11: 30th 11-12: 11th I bolded some years because those are the seasons that I think Marty actually played some of his best hockey, outside of his three Cup-winning playoff runs (he was outstanding in all of them). The bolded are the years where Marty truly did carry them to the playoffs...the goal differentials bear that out (they were very low for the records they were putting up)...he needed to be great a lot in those years, and he often was. But for the most part, before 05-06, the Devils were solidly in the top half in scoring, and sometimes even Top 5. Sooooo...we were only in the top 30% (I use that number to be generous, I am not saying we have to be the top 5-10% all the time) FIVE times in that 18 year stretch. That's 27%. So 73% of Brodeur's career he's had a poor offensive team, one that was offensively-challenged. More often than not, those numbers are in the 20s, which is the BOTTOM 30% in scoring. Glad you did that research. Man we as fans had it good for loooooong run there. Good offensive, stupidly sound defensively, great goaltending. Mmm. Definitely did, and the fact that we had sound defense and great goaltending masked the fact that we were "good" at offense for some of the years (i.e. the Cup seasons), and pretty putrid and bottom feeders most other seasons. People shouldn't be surprised, but we've exposed. We didn't get perfect goaltending from Cory like we did from Brodeur, and that's why we're a fringe playoff team now instead of a sure-thing. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PWW Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 Anyone blaming Cory for even 1% of this team's problems this year is delusional. Marty was a big problem, especially since we can control whether or not we start him. Lack of scoring, blowing leads, and shootouts were also clearly a problem. Subtract any single one of those from the equation and we're in the playoffs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
msweet Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 Anyone blaming Cory for even 1% of this team's problems this year is delusional. Marty was a big problem, especially since we can control whether or not we start him. Lack of scoring, blowing leads, and shootouts were also clearly a problem. Subtract any single one of those from the equation and we're in the playoffs. exactly my point Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NJDevs4978 Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 Went through wikipedia season-by-season and did countdown rankings while trying to work. If you have better and more accurate rankings, by all means put them up and correct mine. But even if mine are slightly off, the general jist is the same...the Devils weren't constantly a bottom-five team offense propped up throughout Marty's career. I used hockeydb, just went to the yearly standings and clicked GF...not sure if shootout goals are counted here though (probably are) '93-94 2nd '94-95 T-13th with four other teams '95-96 25th (out of 26 teams) '96-97 16th '97-98 9th '98-99 2nd '99-00 2nd '00-01 1st (wow three straight years at 1 or 2) '01-02 T-20th (yikes what a fall) '02-03 14th '03-04 14th '05-06 21st '06-07 T-24th '07-08 26th '08-09 15th '09-10 T-19th (tied with the Rangers and the Isles at 222 apiece) '10-11 30th '11-12 T-11th '13 T-28th '13-14 27th so far Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
devilsrule33 Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 (edited) exactly my point Hard for me to get there because you didn't say that. You said blaming Brodeur is non-sense, and then listed the 3 things that caused the Devils to miss the playoffs. You never listed Brodeur at all. So how could anyone possibly know that you thought Brodeur was an issue. No insult here, but what PWW said was not even close to exactly being your point. Edited April 8, 2014 by devilsrule33 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
msweet Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 Hahaha. Blame Brodeur is nonense, but the inability to protect leads is on the coach, and has nothing to do with the goalie. Well, now I've seen everything. When did I say it has nothing to do with the goalie? 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
msweet Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 Hard for me to get there because you didn't say that. You said blaming Brodeur is non-sense, and then listed the 3 things that caused the Devils to miss the playoffs. You never listed Brodeur at all. So how could anyone possibly know that you thought Brodeur was an issue. No insult here, but what PWW said was not even close to exactly being your point. Of course you could blame 5-on-5 scoring for missing the playoffs. But i It was exactly my point (minus the Schneider reference). Why would I have listed Brodeur again? That is what the thread is about. It is the thread that is wrong it in its slant which infers that Marty is the main cause. I listed 3 things that come BEFORE we blame Marty. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Devils Pride 26 Posted April 8, 2014 Author Share Posted April 8, 2014 This year, the Devils have average 2.42 goals per game. Not good, 25th in the league. However, the Devils have had plenty of years where they have had low scoring teams and been successful. Minnesota and LA both average 2.39 goals per game and seem to have no trouble making the playoffs. The difference, has been goaltending. This is from the original post and the main point of the thread. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Colorado Rockies 1976 Posted April 8, 2014 Share Posted April 8, 2014 Sooooo...we were only in the top 30% (I use that number to be generous, I am not saying we have to be the top 5-10% all the time) FIVE times in that 18 year stretch. That's 27%. So 73% of Brodeur's career he's had a poor offensive team, one that was offensively-challenged. More often than not, those numbers are in the 20s, which is the BOTTOM 30% in scoring. Glad you did that research. Sooooo...basically because you were proven wrong about something and now don't want to admit it (your implication that Marty was constantly playing on bad offensive teams), you're lumping middle-of-the-pack offensive teams in with poor ones to try to make your (faulty) point and making sh!t up. The teams that you can rightly list as poor offensively during Brodeur's prime (I think it fully ended with the conclusion of the 2012 playoffs): '95-'96, '01-'02, '05-'06, '06-'07, '07-'08, '09-'10, '10-'11. The rest were middle-of-the-pack or higher. So 11 out of 18 teams were at least average offensively, and 6 out of those 18 teams were ranked 20th or worse...which I hate to break it to you, is NOT "more often than not". Don't make things up, especially when the numbers are right there that shows that's exactly what you're doing. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Devils Pride 26 Posted April 8, 2014 Author Share Posted April 8, 2014 We have given up several 2 goal leads, not only in the 3rd period. We have blown way too many 3rd period leads for a defense first team. I didn't say Marty was not at fault, but the idea of laying the blame squarely on him is silly Funny, cause so do I. Him playing is the biggest factor, however and I stand by that. I sat down this morning and said "I wonder what is a bigger difference, the lack of scoring, or the goaltending?" Right away, Minny and LA jump out and show it's possible to score less than us and make the playoffs. Then I looked at save percentage. No goalie in the league comes close to a save percentage as bad as Brodeur's on a playoff team. The first goalie who played a significant amount of games and his headed to the playoffs in Gustavsson and he had a .910 save percentage. Then I looked at GAA, not a perfect stat, but comparing two goalies on the same team playing in front of the same group, I'd say it tells a pretty good story. Run Brodeur's 2.52 GAA out there for a team that averages 2.42 goals for over 82 games and that is a recipe for lottery pick bad. Run Schneider's 2.00 out there for a team averaging 2.42 goals a game, that's almost certain playoffs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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