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NCAA Goalie Starts, Quality Starts and Really Bad Starts

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  • NCAA Goalie Starts, Quality Starts and Really Bad Starts

    A month ago I posted in the BU thread that I was looking into quality starts vs really bad starts for BU goalies. To do that I needed all goalie stats for each NCAA season to determine the mean save percentage for each season. collegehockeystats.com had that information from the 2003-04 season forward, allowing me to find the actual mean save percentage for those seasons. For 1999-00 through 2002-03 I was able to come up with solid numbers, although they are missing some (2001-02 & 2003) or all (1999-2000 & 2000-01) CCHA goalie data. From 1973-74 through 1984-85 I used tops goalie (by GAA) stats, so well solid, the actual mean save percentage is certainly lower than the number I have used.

    However, I was unable to come up with many goalie stats for 1985-86 & 1986-87 and 1988-89 through 1998-99, so I posted a request for help. As no one sent me any stats, I ended up extrapolating goals and saves for 1992-93, 1993-94 & 1994-95 and for the other seasons I used what limited sources I have or was able to find to create rough mean save percentages. After comparing them to other metrics I am confident that they are relatively accurate numbers for each season, but I would still appreciate goal and save information for CCHA goalies before 2002 and for almost all goalies before 1999.

    Looking at the actual and estimated mean save percentages since the 1973-74 season shows the overall rise from around 89% for the top goalies to a high of just under 91.4% for all goalies in the 2014-15 season. However, last season it dipped slightly and so far this season it is down again, to just under 90.5%. That is down almost 0.9% from 2014-15 and is the lowest it’s been since 2006-07.

    After compiling BU goalie stats from 1973-74 (partial through 1983-84) forward I got sidetracked by the idea of quality starts so I also compiled game-by-game goalie stats for every game this season. I then looked at every goalie's number of starts, quality starts, really bad starts, and W-L-T for quality starts for the season through 12/18/2016.

    In looking at all goalies by class freshmen are leading the way this season in starts and quality start percentage, with juniors just behind in both categories. Sophomores are third in starts, but last in quality start percentage, while seniors are last in starts, but ahead of sophomores in quality start percentage. In really bad starts juniors lead with just 12.8%, freshmen trail with 18.3%, sophomores have 22.0% and seniors 22.4%.

    Freshmen also have the best mean save percentage and best starting goalie save percentage, both at 0.912. Juniors are again just behind them at 0.910 overall and 0.911 for starting goalies. Seniors are at 0.901 for both, while Sophomores come in last at 0.894 for both.

    However, for the most part, freshmen have not been handed the starting job. Nine goalies have started every game, none a freshman. In fact the top 18 goalies in starting percentage include no freshman (4 seniors, 11 juniors, 3 sophomores), with BU’s Jack Oettinger and Miami’s Ryan Larkin both tied at 19th with 2 other goalies. However, 5 of the next 6 goalies in starting percentage are freshmen (all above 80%) and another 7 freshman goalies have started between 60% and 80% of their team’s games.

    I have uploaded a NCAA Goalies spreadsheet if anyone is interested in looking at it. The first sheet has a list of definitions and abbreviations used on the other sheets. The second sheet has every game appearance for every goalie (or almost every appearance – I may have missed a few relief appearances). The third sheet has every goalie's number of starts, starting percentage, quality starts, really bad starts and quality starts winning percentage. The fourth sheet has the mean save percentage for every season starting with 1973-74 and what each is based on. The fifth sheet shows game save percentage vs winning percentage for every decision earned by a starting goalie.

    Sean
    Women's Hockey East Champions 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2010
    Men's NCAA Champions 2009, 1995, 1978, 1972, 1971

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  • #2
    Re: NCAA Goalie Starts, Quality Starts and Really Bad Starts

    Nice work! Thanks!

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: NCAA Goalie Starts, Quality Starts and Really Bad Starts

      Very interesting stuff! I wanted to come up with a new goalie stat in which i term GAF or Goalie At Fault. This stat would take into consideration goals that no matter what the goalie could have done it would have been a goal anyways (such as a deflection that went opposite direction into top corner etc). Basically, it would strip out goals that goalies had no chance on to give a better idea of GAA and save percentage. Of course it would be subjective just as a hit or error are in baseball but it would give some clearer stats for goalies in my opinion as they aren't punished for goals they had no chance on.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: NCAA Goalie Starts, Quality Starts and Really Bad Starts

        Originally posted by Lemonade View Post
        Very interesting stuff! I wanted to come up with a new goalie stat in which i term GAF or Goalie At Fault. This stat would take into consideration goals that no matter what the goalie could have done it would have been a goal anyways (such as a deflection that went opposite direction into top corner etc). Basically, it would strip out goals that goalies had no chance on to give a better idea of GAA and save percentage. Of course it would be subjective just as a hit or error are in baseball but it would give some clearer stats for goalies in my opinion as they aren't punished for goals they had no chance on.
        Of course to create that stat you need to get the hockey stats people on board as categorizing whether or not a goalie was at fault for a goal is something that most likely would need to be determined at the time of the goal.

        Sean
        Women's Hockey East Champions 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2010
        Men's NCAA Champions 2009, 1995, 1978, 1972, 1971

        BU Hockey Games
        BU Hockey highlights and extras
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        I need a kidney; looking for a donor

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: NCAA Goalie Starts, Quality Starts and Really Bad Starts

          Originally posted by Lemonade View Post
          Very interesting stuff! I wanted to come up with a new goalie stat in which i term GAF or Goalie At Fault. This stat would take into consideration goals that no matter what the goalie could have done it would have been a goal anyways (such as a deflection that went opposite direction into top corner etc). Basically, it would strip out goals that goalies had no chance on to give a better idea of GAA and save percentage. Of course it would be subjective just as a hit or error are in baseball but it would give some clearer stats for goalies in my opinion as they aren't punished for goals they had no chance on.
          I also don't think it would actually change a goalie's stats noticeably over a full season. I suppose you could try to quantify your GAF stats vs overall stats if you have access to archived videos of every game a goalie played over a full season and you watched every goal to determine what category to place each one in.

          Sean
          Women's Hockey East Champions 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2010
          Men's NCAA Champions 2009, 1995, 1978, 1972, 1971

          BU Hockey Games
          BU Hockey highlights and extras
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          I need a kidney; looking for a donor

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          • #6
            Re: NCAA Goalie Starts, Quality Starts and Really Bad Starts

            I have to look, but a guess would be that Kevin McCabe (Brown) got the shaft in the 1976 AA vote.
            CCT '77 & '78
            4 kids
            5 grandsons (BCA 7/09, CJA 5/14, JDL 8/14, JFL 6/16, PJL 7/18)
            1 granddaughter (EML 4/18)

            ”Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both.”
            - Benjamin Franklin

            Banned from the St. Lawrence University Facebook page - March 2016 (But I got better).

            I want to live forever. So far, so good.

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            • #7
              Re: NCAA Goalie Starts, Quality Starts and Really Bad Starts

              Really interesting info.

              Just shows how much a solid goalie has to do with a teams actual success. Redmond for Tech has the highest QS % of goalies that have played a fair amount. Look at the difference in Tech's record before he played and after he took over. He's the single biggest reason they turned their season around. Bitzer the same for BSU, giving them a QS almost every night.

              No accident those two teams are at the top of the WCHA when you look at the goaltending they have gotten.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: NCAA Goalie Starts, Quality Starts and Really Bad Starts

                Originally posted by bravohankins View Post
                Really interesting info.

                Just shows how much a solid goalie has to do with a teams actual success. Redmond for Tech has the highest QS % of goalies that have played a fair amount. Look at the difference in Tech's record before he played and after he took over. He's the single biggest reason they turned their season around.
                Redmond reminds me of John Curry at BU, except Curry had to wait until the start of his sophomore season to get his chance. Also, Curry was a walk on. What's Redmond's story? Was he expected to get playing time this season?

                Sean
                Women's Hockey East Champions 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2010
                Men's NCAA Champions 2009, 1995, 1978, 1972, 1971

                BU Hockey Games
                BU Hockey highlights and extras
                NCAA Hockey Financials
                Women's Division I Longest Hockey Games
                I need a kidney; looking for a donor

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                • #9
                  Re: NCAA Goalie Starts, Quality Starts and Really Bad Starts

                  I finished updating my 2016-17 NCAA Goalies spreadsheet with full season stats for all goalies for 2016-17. I have also made some changes to the spreadsheet, adding Quality Start vs Quality Start (when both starting goalies had a quality start) and Other (all games not a quality or really bad start). I also added W-L-T records for each category to give an idea how successful a goalie was when having a quality start, quality start vs quality start, really bad start and other start.

                  Since quality starts are determined by the mean save percentage for a season I will start with it. When I uploaded the first version of the spreadsheet in December this season’s mean save percentage was about 90.5%, while the final mean save percentage was 90.822%. Still, that’s the lowest it’s been since the 2009-10 season (and just a tad higher than 2010-11’s 90.818%), 0.4% lower than 2015-16’s 91.22% and 0.55% lower than 2014-15’s all-time high mean save percentage of 91.37%. The decrease in save percentage correlates to a rise in goal scoring, up 506 goals from 2014-15 and 213 goals from 2015-16.

                  The mean quality start percentage was 55.3% for all goalies and 57.5% for goalies identified as their team’s starting goalie(s). I identified 48 teams as having one starting goalie, 11 having a 2-goalie rotation and one team (Michigan) using a 3-goalie rotation. For teams’ starting goalies the percentage ranges from a high of 82.9% to a low of 26.1%. The higher the percentage the better, but you also want to see a really low Really Bad Starts percentage as well. And that is what we see with the top 2 starting goalies in quality starts, 2 of the 3 lowest really bad starts percentages. That makes them the most consistent starting goalies for the season.

                  I added W-L-T because I was interested in seeing how well a goalie did when having a quality start vs other goalies that also had a quality start. Overall Quality Starts vs Quality Starts should total to have equal wins and losses since when one goalie wins one goalie loses. In 2016-17 there are 3 more wins than losses because 2 loses by SNHU goalies are not included (they are DII) and Collin Delia had a no decision in a game he played just under 50 minutes in that I gave him a quality start and his relief got the loss (see note 1).

                  Looking at quality vs quality starts shows what goalies had the most, which makes it harder for them to have as good a record as goalies that didn’t have to face as good opponent goaltending. The goalies with the most quality vs quality starts were Providence’s Hayden Hawkey and Bemidji Michael Bitzer, each with 18. Army’s Parker Gahagen was 3rd with 17 and Denver’s Tanner Jaillet was 4th with 16. The goalie with the most wins was Bitzer, with 11, followed by Air Force’s Shane Starrett, Penn State’s Peyton Jones and Hawkey with 9 each. Starrett was almost perfect when having a quality start vs a quality start, going 9-0-1, with Jones 2nd, going 9-1-0.

                  When you widen out to also look at quality starts you see that Bitzer had 28 quality starts and went 21-4-3 (0.804) in those games, with 18 of them against quality starts by the other goalies in which he went 11-4-3 (0.694). Jaillet had 31 quality starts and went 22-5-4 (0.774), with 16 of them QvQ starts in which he went 7-5-4 (0.563). Gahagen had 29 quality starts and went 16-10-3 (0.603), with 17 QvQ starts were he was 4-10-3 (0.324). Starrett was almost perfect in quality starts, going 21-0-3 (0.938) in 24 games, but only had 10 QvQ starts, in which he was the aforesaid 9-0-1 (0.950). In fact , 230 of the 241 loses (95.4%) by starting goalies having quality starts were QvQ games, so a goalie that was able to win most of them did very well.

                  I also showed how often a goalie with a quality start faced another goalie that had a quality start. For starting goalies it ranges from Colorado College’s Alex Leclerc’s 92.9% (13 of 14 quality starts) to UMass Lowell’s Tyler Wall’s 20.8% (5 of 24 quality starts). For the top 19 goalies with 20 or more quality starts it ranges from Providence’s Hawkey’s 75.0% (18 of 24) to Wall’s 20.8%.

                  Looking at quality starts and quality start percentage, freshman lead in starts, but were edged out in percentage by juniors, with sophomore and seniors remaining in the same places. Looking at the mean save percentages, from December to the end of the season freshman dropped off slightly, from 0.912 to 0.909, while juniors improved slightly from 0.910/0/911 to 0.911/0.912. However seniors improved from 0.901 to 0.909 and sophomores improved, from 0.894 to 0.901/0.902.

                  Five goalies ended up starting every game for their team, down from nine in mid-December. The leading freshman was Hunter Miska, who was 15th in games started percentage, one of 6 freshmen in the top 25. Of the 48 teams using primarily a single goalie 15 were freshmen, 10 sophomores, 15 juniors and 8 seniors.

                  Overall, of the 989 games won by a starting goalie 783 (79.2%) of them were won by a goalie who had a quality start, so the importance of having a goalie who can have consistent quality starts is extremely important.

                  Sean
                  Last edited by Sean Pickett; 05-24-2017, 05:15 PM.
                  Women's Hockey East Champions 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2010
                  Men's NCAA Champions 2009, 1995, 1978, 1972, 1971

                  BU Hockey Games
                  BU Hockey highlights and extras
                  NCAA Hockey Financials
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                  • #10
                    Re: NCAA Goalie Starts, Quality Starts and Really Bad Starts

                    Sean,

                    Where can I find this spreadsheet? I would like to view your information.

                    Thank You

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: NCAA Goalie Starts, Quality Starts and Really Bad Starts

                      Originally posted by Hockeyplayer82 View Post
                      Sean,

                      Where can I find this spreadsheet? I would like to view your information.

                      Thank You
                      Click on "NCAA Goalies" in his last paragraph. (Not linking directly since I'm not sure if there was a reason he did it that way or not)
                      LSSU Alumni & Fan.

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                      • #12
                        Re: NCAA Goalie Starts, Quality Starts and Really Bad Starts

                        Originally posted by Deman View Post
                        Click on "NCAA Goalies" in his last paragraph. (Not linking directly since I'm not sure if there was a reason he did it that way or not)
                        I just like to use hyperlinks as intended.

                        Sean
                        Women's Hockey East Champions 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2010
                        Men's NCAA Champions 2009, 1995, 1978, 1972, 1971

                        BU Hockey Games
                        BU Hockey highlights and extras
                        NCAA Hockey Financials
                        Women's Division I Longest Hockey Games
                        I need a kidney; looking for a donor

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: NCAA Goalie Starts, Quality Starts and Really Bad Starts

                          Originally posted by Hockeyplayer82 View Post
                          Sean,

                          Where can I find this spreadsheet? I would like to view your information.

                          Thank You
                          I hope you find it interesting.

                          Sean
                          Women's Hockey East Champions 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2010
                          Men's NCAA Champions 2009, 1995, 1978, 1972, 1971

                          BU Hockey Games
                          BU Hockey highlights and extras
                          NCAA Hockey Financials
                          Women's Division I Longest Hockey Games
                          I need a kidney; looking for a donor

                          Comment

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