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The Weakest Link
alt
Robert Cleave
Jul 27, 2011, 02:08 EDTUpdated: Jul 26, 2011, 23:52 EDT
             
I’ll confess a certain level of amusement over the handwringing going on in the comments here, when it’s blatantly obvious that the biggest impediment to the Flames reaching the playoffs last season was a player that has received no mention at all. It’s a bit odd, really, that people are willing to agonize over the mediocre play of middling types like Stajan while never, ever discussing the elephant in the room. 
The primary reason the Calgary Flames watched the playoffs from the comfort of their homes was the substandard play of their number one goaltender, full stop. Miikka Kiprusoff seems to get an astonishing amount of slack from the local media and fans, but even a cursory examination of his 5v5 work last year should have given people the hint. The Flames were one of the stingiest teams in the league 5v5, allowing shots at a rate of 27.5 per 60, 4th best overall, and yet somehow finished 16th in 5v5 goals against. 
I’ve collected a wide range of data from Hockey Analysis to show just how badly served the skaters on the Flames were by their alleged elite goalie last year. First, here are the 5v5 shots for/against percentages for the regular goalies in the league when they were in net. I’ve included everyone that played at least 1500 minutes at 5v5 in 2011/12, covering 32 goalies, with the major starters and 1A types captured.
  Shots %  Shots %
1
ELLIS, DAN
0.539
17
BRYZGALOV, ILYA
0.497
2
CRAWFORD, COREY
0.533
18
LUNDQVIST, HENRIK
0.493
3
BRODEUR, MARTIN
0.532
19
ELLIOTT, BRIAN
0.492
4
NIEMI, ANTTI
0.529
20
RINNE, PEKKA
0.490
5
FLEURY, MARC-ANDRE
0.528
21
ROLOSON, DWAYNE
0.488
6
KIPRUSOFF, MIIKKA
0.524
22
BUDAJ, PETER
0.485
7
HOWARD, JIMMY
0.519
23
PAVELEC, ONDREJ
0.484
8
LUONGO, ROBERTO
0.514
24
VOKOUN, TOMAS
0.484
9
PRICE, CAREY
0.514
25
ANDERSON, CRAIG
0.480
10
MILLER, RYAN
0.513
26
WARD, CAM
0.472
11
HALAK, JAROSLAV
0.512
27
LEHTONEN, KARI
0.466
12
NEUVIRTH, MICHAL
0.507
28
DUBNYK, DEVAN
0.462
13
QUICK, JONATHAN
0.506
29
REIMER, JAMES
0.460
14
BOBROVSKY, SERGEI
0.504
30
KHABIBULIN, NIKOLAI
0.459
15
THOMAS, TIM
0.500
31
HILLER, JONAS
0.452
16
MASON, STEVE
0.498
32
BACKSTROM, NIKLAS
0.433
 
 
When Kiprusoff was in net, the Flames were outshooting their opposition by a fairly healthy rate, which runs contrary to the myth of a goalie battling insumountable odds. In other words, Kipper wasn’t exactly bombarded compared to his brethren. With that sort of shots ratio, the club should have been in pretty good shape 5v5.
 
So, what went wrong? The answer to that might be found in our man’s 5v5 save percentage:
 
  
  5v5 SV%  5v5 SV%
1
THOMAS, TIM
.949
17
MILLER, RYAN
.926
2
RINNE, PEKKA
.935
18
QUICK, JONATHAN
.925
3
LUONGO, ROBERTO
.934
19
ROLOSON, DWAYNE
.924
4
REIMER, JAMES
.933
20
ANDERSON, CRAIG
.921
5
BRYZGALOV, ILYA
.933
21
DUBNYK, DEVAN
.921
6
NIEMI, ANTTI
.931
22
VOKOUN, TOMAS
.920
7
BACKSTROM, NIKLAS
.931
23
NEUVIRTH, MICHAL
.919
8
PRICE, CAREY
.930
24
HALAK, JAROSLAV
.918
9
HILLER, JONAS
.930
25
KIPRUSOFF, MIIKKA
.917
10
WARD, CAM
.929
26
HOWARD, JIMMY
.915
11
LUNDQVIST, HENRIK
.929
27
BUDAJ, PETER
.914
12
LEHTONEN, KARI
.929
28
MASON, STEVE
.912
13
PAVELEC, ONDREJ
.928
29
BRODEUR, MARTIN
.911
14
CRAWFORD, COREY
.928
30
ELLIS, DAN
.907
15
BOBROVSKY, SERGEI
.927
31
KHABIBULIN, NIKOLAI
.901
16
FLEURY, MARC-ANDRE
.927
32
ELLIOTT, BRIAN
.900
 
That really isn’t up to snuff for a goalie that’s carrying the 5th highest cap hit amongst goalies, at least in my view. As an aside, a drop of one percent is likely worth about 12-15 goals against 5v5 for a regular goalie, since most of the main guys face between 1200-1500 5v5 shots.
Now, one of the common refrains is that the Flames ran up shot totals when they were chasing the game. With that noted, here are the shots for/against % when the game was tied for the same approximate cohort of goalies. For these next two tables, I’m using the filter of 750 5v5 tied minutes played during 2011/12 on Hockey Analysis, which gives me 27 goalies in total:
  Shots %  Shots %
1
HOWARD, JIMMY
0.547
15
ELLIOTT, BRIAN
0.503
2
BRODEUR, MARTIN
0.544
16
QUICK, JONATHAN
0.501
3
CRAWFORD, COREY
0.544
17
BRYZGALOV, ILYA
0.499
4
BOBROVSKY, SERGEI
0.537
18
PAVELEC, ONDREJ
0.492
5
FLEURY, MARC-ANDRE
0.532
19
VOKOUN, TOMAS
0.491
6
KIPRUSOFF, MIIKKA
0.530
20
LUNDQVIST, HENRIK
0.490
7
NIEMI, ANTTI
0.529
21
ROLOSON, DWAYNE
0.489
8
THOMAS, TIM
0.526
22
NEUVIRTH, MICHAL
0.478
9
RINNE, PEKKA
0.525
23
ANDERSON, CRAIG
0.465
10
LUONGO, ROBERTO
0.518
24
HILLER, JONAS
0.462
11
MILLER, RYAN
0.513
25
WARD, CAM
0.460
12
MASON, STEVE
0.506
26
LEHTONEN, KARI
0.454
13
PRICE, CAREY
0.506
27
BACKSTROM, NIKLAS
0.424
14
HALAK, JAROSLAV
0.505
 
 
 
Again, Miikka wasn’t all that hard done by. The Flames actually controlled more of the shots when the game was tied than overall, and Kipper had the 6th best support of his peer group. Honestly, if your team is sporting a 53% shots for/against ratio when the game is tied, average goaltending should do the trick unless you have a season like New Jersey where nothing was going in the other team’s net for the first two months. At any rate, here are the SV% numbers in that game state for the same crew of goalies:
  5v5 tiedSV %  5v5 tied SV %
1
NIEMI, ANTTI
.944
15
QUICK, JONATHAN
.930
2
RINNE, PEKKA
.944
16
BACKSTROM, NIKLAS
.927
3
WARD, CAM
.940
17
MILLER, RYAN
.926
4
HILLER, JONAS
.940
18
FLEURY, MARC-ANDRE
.924
5
THOMAS, TIM
.939
19
BRODEUR, MARTIN
.923
6
ROLOSON, DWAYNE
.938
20
HOWARD, JIMMY
.923
7
ANDERSON, CRAIG
.936
21
LEHTONEN, KARI
.923
8
PAVELEC, ONDREJ
.936
22
PRICE, CAREY
.921
9
HALAK, JAROSLAV
.935
23
VOKOUN, TOMAS
.921
10
BRYZGALOV, ILYA
.935
24
MASON, STEVE
.917
11
CRAWFORD, COREY
.935
25
NEUVIRTH, MICHAL
.911
12
BOBROVSKY, SERGEI
.934
26
KIPRUSOFF, MIIKKA
.910
13
LUONGO, ROBERTO
.933
27
ELLIOTT, BRIAN
.906
14
LUNDQVIST, HENRIK
.930
 
 
 
Oy. When the game was tied, as his team helped him more, he gave them less. The Flames were a middle of the pack SH% team at 5v5 overall and tied, by the way. Kipper had the 14th best SH% support overall and 13th best when the game was tied, so I have a hard time accepting any sort of argument that his team shot nothing but muffins while he faced unstoppable bullets. 
What should worry people the most is that Miikka Kiprusoff has been underwhelming for several years running by that last metric. I ran a four year composite of SV% for goalies that had played at least 3000 EV tied minutes since 2007/08. There are 19 goalies that met that threshold: 
  07/08 to 10/11 5v5 tied SV% 
1
RINNE, PEKKA
                             .941
 
2
THOMAS, TIM
                             .937
 
3
BRODEUR, MARTIN
                             .935
 
4
WARD, CAM
                             .934
 
5
LUONGO, ROBERTO
                             .933
 
6
QUICK, JONATHAN
                             .931
 
7
VOKOUN, TOMAS
                             .930
 
8
ROLOSON, DWAYNE
                             .929
 
9
BACKSTROM, NIKLAS
                             .929
 
10
MASON, CHRIS
                             .928
 
11
NABOKOV, EVGENI
                             .928
 
12
BRYZGALOV, ILYA
                             .928
 
13
MILLER, RYAN
                             .926
 
14
FLEURY, MARC-ANDRE
                             .925
 
15
LUNDQVIST, HENRIK
                             .925
 
16
MASON, STEVE
                             .924
 
17
KIPRUSOFF, MIIKKA
                             .919
 
18
PRICE, CAREY
                             .919
 
19
TURCO, MARTY
                             .913
 
Please note that included in that run was a .935 number in 09/10, which was 6th best amongst his peer group. As well, Kipper had the 5th best shots for/against ratio of those 19 goalies working in his favour, as well as the 5th highest team SH% in front of him during that 4 year run, so again, the team was giving him a reasonable amount of support in terms of shots and shooting percentage. 
 
There’s no nice way to put this, really. Miikka Kiprusoff has been at the heart of the failures of the Flames since 06/07. I’ll be the first to acknowledge that he had a very good 09/10 in the midst of this bad run, but that season is looking more and more as if it were an outlier rather than a bounce back year after being freed of the Iron One.
 
I have no problem in presuming Mr. Azevedo’s reportage from rookie camp is on the level, which suggests that Jay Feaster might not have been completely sincere in his past professions of belief that his number one stopper was of elite status. That’s the correct approach in my view, because no matter what people want to believe or what his cheerleaders might care to suggest, Miikka Kiprusoff hasn’t been within hailing distance of elite during the last several seasons.
 
That leaves the club with a fairly intractable problem for this year, since they weren’t able to move Kipper and they haven’t yet begun the dismantling of the club that next summer might well bring. Absent him pulling out a season from the depths of time, his recent work strongly hints that Miikka Kiprusoff will hinder whatever good the Flames’ skaters are capable of achieving in 2011/12.