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    Why Rangers goalie Henrik Lundqvist should be a Hart Trophy front-runner

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    The decision to give a goaltender the Hart Trophy, like awarding a pitcher the MVP trophy in baseball, rests on whether or not you're a member of one of two camps.

    You either believe that goaltenders and pitchers have their individual MVP awards in the Vezina Trophy and Cy Young Award and therefore shouldn't be in consideration for the league MVP; or your definition of "valuable" includes goalies and pitchers, no matter the fact that they don't play every game.

    This debate doesn't happen every year, but when it does, both sides truly stick to their beliefs barring a sensational year by a player.

    Not every year is there a goaltender worthy of even being thrown into the Hart Trophy mix, but this season Henrik Lundqvist of the New York Rangers isn't just in the conversation, one could easily make the case he's the front-runner.

    Phil Kessel of the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Claude Giroux of the Philadelphia Flyers dominated the Hart talk earlier this season. But both have since slowed their paces a bit allowing Lundqvist and Pittsburgh Penguins forward Evgeni Malkin, who skyrocketed in favorite status with a 12-goal, 16-point January, to move into pole position.

    This is the season that Lundqvist and the Rangers have slowly been building toward since his rookie year of 2005-06, which saw 30 wins, a gold medal with Sweden at the Torino Olympics and a playoff appearance after seven years of no postseason berths for the franchise. Since then, King Henrik hasn't posted a season with less than 30 wins and he's been a consistent strength of the Rangers throughout his career.

    As the Rangers sit pretty atop the Eastern Conference, Lundqvist has been the backbone of a New York team looking for their first Stanley Cup since 1994. In 42 starts, Lundqvist has posted 27 wins, a 1.77 goals-against average, .941 save-percentage, and seven shutouts.

    Only six goaltenders have won the Hart Trophy (Dominik Hasek won it twice), so you better be having a pretty damned good season if you're making hockey writers consider you're more valuable than a skater putting up 40 goals and 100 points.

    The last two modern goaltenders to win the MVP — Hasek and Jose Theodore — posted numbers that were tremendous for backstops, but should Lundqvist keep up his pace over the Rangers' final 26 games, he'll blow their stats out of the water.

    Here are the Hart Trophy-winning stats of Hasek and Theodore:

    Hasek
    1996-97 37 wins, 2.27 GAA, .930 SV%, 5 SO
    1997-98 33 wins, 2.09 GAA, .932 SV%, 13 SO

    Theodore
    2001-02 30 wins, 2.11 GAA, .931 SV%, 7 SO

    There's no reason to believe that the Rangers and Lundqvist will suddenly crash down the Eastern Conference standings, and given the 29-year old's consistency, he has a chance to finish with his first sub-2.00 GAA season and destroy his previous personal best of 2.23 set in 2007-08, and post a career-high save-percentage.

    Consider the way the Rangers have taken a strangle-hold of both the Atlantic Division and Eastern Conference, they should have things wrapped up in the near future, meaning Lundqvist will get to rest and stay fresh heading into the postseason.

    He's always been a workhorse playing 68, 73, 70, 72, and 70 games in the past five seasons, but the plan since last year has been to give Marty Biron a decent amount of starts. (That plan went off the rails last year when Biron broke a collarbone in February.)

    With 26 games left and Lundqvist at 42 starts, he should finish with his lowest number of starts in his career, which is a good thing for both he and the Rangers once April begins. It also means his Hart-worthy numbers have a very good chance of maintaining their ridiculousness, the key factor for a goaltender to be in the MVP mix.

    Right now, as the NHL enters the final month and a half of regular season play, the Hart Trophy race is down to Lundqvist and Malkin.

    There's still time for someone to break into the competition (Is another Corey Perry second-half surge upon us?), but should Lundqvist's numbers remain as stunning as they are, there's no reason to believe he won't be among the final three heading to Las Vegas at the end of June -- if not becoming the first goalie in a decade to take home the award.

    Follow Sean Leahy on Twitter at @Sean_Leahy

     
    • Rob  •  Scranton, Pennsylvania  •  3 months ago
      this just in bryzgalov is voting for lundqvist for the hart and vezina
      • Shuvaxu 3 months ago
        "Why do I heff to be bad?"
      • eva unit zero 3 months ago
        That's ridiculous. Bryzgalov would vote for himself, we all know that.
    • Chris L  •  3 months ago
      Having a pitcher in baseball win the MVP isn't a good analogy to a goaltender wining the Hart in the NHL... In baseball a starting pitcher will start 30-35 of 162 games where as a goaltender will play 60-70 of 82 games in the regular season... in short a goaltender plays a minimum of 80% of the regular season games where as in baseball a starting pitcher will plays 25-35% of the MLB regular season
      • T-Ray 3 months ago
        Yeah, not to mention that a goalie plays 60+ minutes per game, whereas even the most worked d-men play less than half that.
      • Andy 3 months ago
        A pitcher in baseball may only play 30-35 games but in those 30-35 games he will have more impact on the outcome of the game than a position player will all year. A pitcher will face 800+ batters in a year. The league leader in plate appearances usually doesnt break 700.

        Having said that, i dont think pitchers should win the MVP or goalies win the Hart.
    • buggs.crosby  •  3 months ago
      As a Flyers fan i say Henry has it lock stock and barrel right now....Dude is incredible when he is on.....and this season he is on....Love Giroux and mad props to Maklin but at this point it aint even close
      • markm 3 months ago
        Great post FLyer fan. Giroux is a stud, and I think will one day lead the league in scoring. He is scary good.
    • Dave W  •  3 months ago
      The problem with a lot of these posts is very few of these people have actually watched Rangers games this season. Lundqvist is directly responsible for keeping the Rangers in these games instead of getting blown out. He literally makes up for their shortcomings, which, being a Rangers fan, it's easy to admit they have quite a few. Nothing like watching entire periods played in your own zone because everyone else can't get anything going.

      Here's a scenario. Put Henrik on the Blue Jackets. I guarantee they'd be in a playoff spot. Can you say that for Geno or Dats? That's the value which at the least necessitates consideration for the Hart.
    • Marcin  •  Warsaw, Poland  •  3 months ago
      @Dmitry F: please, Malkin has not been consistent? The only time this year he didn't produce was the very beginning of the season, when he was injured.
      A straightforward comparison of Lundqvist's numbers to Hasek and Theodore's is pointless as goalies post now by far better numbers than 20-15 years ago (which is evidenced by less skaters being able to crack a century mark). In late 80s there were hardly any goalies exceeding 90% SvP. You have to add some background to those figures.
      Nevertheless, as far as my opinion is concerned, both Lundqvist and Malkin deserve it this year. Giroux should be nominated, too, but he's a 3rd choice at this point.
      • JR 3 months ago
        I would put Datsyuk as the third choice. Giroux has been too much up and down for a one dimensional offensive player. Datsyuk while also having a great offensive season is also one of the best defensive players - of which Giroux can not say.
      • Michael Gordon 3 months ago
        No way on Giroux for me, he is a minus player and I don't think he will remain second in scoring until the end of the season either. I would rather see someone like Datsyuk or the Sedins who are not far behind in points but have much better plus minus as they are better defensive (all around) players than Giroux.
      • Mike 3 months ago
        Hasek and Theodore both won in the clutch and grab era, not the free-wheeling 80s. There were fewer goals per game in Theodore's MVP year than this year (5.14 in 01-02 to 5.33 for the most recent I could find this year)... Hasek's MVP years were 5.75 and 5.2. There's hardly any difference. What was impressive was the team Hasek did it behind, and how deep he carried them in the playoffs without any marquee offensive talent.
    • Brian  •  3 months ago
      As an Islander fan, I really hate to say this: But Lundqvist is deserving of the Hart. He is the primary reason the Rangers have the best record in the Eastern Conference, and when a goalie is playing this well, it does great things for everyone on the team. I think the people who are claiming an "east coast bias" actually just have a "west coast bias" themselves. Howard and Kipper are playing great, but I do not think either is as valuable to their team as Lundqvist. Kipper is valuable though, but Henrick is ahead of him right now.
    • M A  •  3 months ago
      Im surprised that nobody has mentioned the fact that the starting goalie of a team plays the most minutes of any player on the team during the season. That sort of blows up the whole starting pitcher analogy BS.
    • Tom  •  3 months ago
      Put Pekka Rinne in New York, and you have a similar story. Pekka plays in the west, has no offense in front of him to speak of (again), and once again the Preds are in the playoff picture. Let's see hendrik take on the likes of Detroit, Vancouver, Chicago, and St. Louis every night and see what the numbers look like.
      • markm 3 months ago
        Let's see...he takes on Philly, Pittsburgh, Boston, etc. His numbers speak for themselves Tom.
      • Stephanie T 3 months ago
        Welcome to Hank's world every season but this one. The NYR have been anemic at scoring, at best, the past few years. This is the first year we have 2 balanced scoring lines.
    • Alex  •  3 months ago
      Bryzgalov looks shaky and uncomfortable on some of the easiest saves. Lundqvist is the opposite: always in control of everything, never looks shaky, always in position.
    • ClayMeow  •  Hicksville, New York  •  3 months ago
      Goaltenders vying for the Hart Trophy and pitchers vying for MVP are not even close to the same thing. Yes, they both have their individual awards, but starting goalies actually play in a majority of a team's games, unlike pitchers (sorry, i don't buy the innings played argument). A starting goalie is way more crucial to a team's success than one starting pitcher in a four to five-man rotation.

      I'm all for goalies being eligible for the Hart Trophy.

      I'm against starting pitchers being eligible for the MVP.

      As for Lundqvist, he definitely deserves to be in the conversation, especially if the Rangers end atop the East.
    • Fireman  •  Milwaukee, Wisconsin  •  3 months ago
      lundy doesnt care about the regular season MVP he wants the stanley cup
    • Vange9435  •  3 months ago
      Whether or not he wins the trophy over the likes of Malkin, Kessel etc. remains to be seen. He absolutely deserves consideration though, he's played in another stratosphere this season. I've watched him throughout his entire career, and never has Hank looked more focused or locked in than he does right now. He will have to remain as consistent as he's been over the next month or so, but consistency has defined his career to this point.

      LONG LIVE THE KING and LET'S GO RANGERS!!!!!!!
    • Backhanded  •  London, United Kingdom  •  3 months ago
      If the QB position in the NFL is considered open for the MVP then MVP of any league should be open to all players. It's not a goalie's fault that backstopping has its own individual awards but that said so does defense and all skating positions. There is no arguement as far as I am concerned. Most Vaulable Player is just that, there is no bracket stating exceptions for goalies.
    • Ray-Ray  •  Nanaimo, Canada  •  3 months ago
      You can't compare goalies and pitchers. Good goalies will play 75% of their teams games. A good picture will play around 20% of their teams games. Goalies should be able to win, as skaters have awards as well. Goalies yes and pitchers no.
    • A-Dub  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  3 months ago
      Just because there is the Vezina it shouldn't prevent goalies from winning the Hart. The Hart is the most valuable PLAYER award, NOT the most valuable SKATER award! And unlike pitchers who only play every fifth game, workhorse goalies, like Henrik, are in there for almost every game with an occasional day off (just like every other player on the team who misses games for one reason or another).
      There's no reason that if he keeps up these numbers that he shouldn't win BOTH the Vezina and the Hart. Just like Verlander won the Cy Young and MVP this past MLB season.
    • Arsy91.5  •  Mississauga, Canada  •  3 months ago
      If it weren't for Lundqvist, the Rangers would be a mid table team. I'm a huge fan of Geno, but I think Lundqvist should take it.
    • Stephanie T  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
      He's amazing and finally has a well balanced team in front of him. I've been a NYR fan my whole life and this guy is the real deal! Best goalie we've had since I've been watching. Barring a freak injury and if they improve their power play, this NYR team is a real cup contender.
    • shaggyscotsman  •  3 months ago
      I'm all for a goalie winning the Hart, and Hank is having a fantastic season, but that is in large part, IMO, because of the system the Rangers play. They, the entire team, blocks shots like there are points for it, and it's not like they have guys consistently flying their own end for breakaways. They're maybe the best neutral zone team right now and are by far the best defensive zone team right now. Yes, Hank has a part in that, but I believe that his success, just like the success of Tim Thomas last year and two years prior, has a lot to do with the system that their team plays within.
      If he was on a team that was clueless in their own end and neutral zone, then I'd say he should win it hands down, but their success and his success is the sum of all of their parts, not just his effort/play
    • JAY  •  3 months ago
      he's LUND-believable !
    • b.venti  •  Downey, California  •  3 months ago
      I don't understand the goalie vs pitcher comparison...pitchers play 1/5 of their teams games, a franchise goalie can easily play 3/4 or even 9/10 (look at Quick in LA) of the teams games...my point is that a great goalie should ABSOLUTELY be considered for the Hart trophy.

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