Goalie Rankings Peg Ward Near The Bottom
Maybe it’s for the best, because the last time Cam Ward had low expectations tagged to him, he turned around the Hurricanes’ first-round playoff series and eventually led Carolina to the Stanley Cup, along the way earning himself a Conn Smythe Trophy.
See, back then at the beginning of the 2005-06 season, Ward was a rookie backup goalie. Some predicted he had a bright future, but the idea that he could lead a team to the promised land as a fresh-faced 21-year-old would have been considered absurd at best. Then No. 30 turned in a playoff performance for the ages, earning comparisons to Patrick Roy and Ken Dryden, the two other goalies to earn playoff MVP honors in their first NHL season.
But after two years of stories about how hard Ward had worked to become an established No. 1 netminder, how he dropped weight to be more explosive and in shape — and the disappointment of two missed postseasons — expectations are lower for Ward this year. All the stories have been about the acquisition of defenseman Joni Pitkanen (coupled with the departure of Erik Cole), the injury recoveries of captain Rod Brind’Amour, Justin Williams and Matt Cullen, new alternate jerseys, Eric Staal’s blockbuster contract extension, and even the security of Peter Laviolette’s job as head coach.
So when a couple media outlets recently released goaltender rankings for all the teams in the NHL, I wasn’t surprised to see Ward near the bottom.
First, The Hockey News ranked Carolina’s goaltender tandem as the league’s 26th best (using a scoring system called the Goalie Confidence Index, or GCI, that is based on statistical information). The statement on Ward was predictable:
“Sure, Cam Ward won a Stanley Cup and the Conn Smythe Trophy, but hockey’s all about what you’ve done lately. And lately, Ward has been pitching mediocre numbers …”
For the most part, the rankings seem reliable and close to accurate. Montreal’s position at No. 1 could be argued all day by many — including me — but having San Jose, Detroit, Anaheim, New Jersey, Dallas and the Rangers all in the top eight seems to be a fair assessment. The rankings aren’t perfect. Roberto Luongo, penalized by the Canucks’ 2007-08 depleted defense and inability to score, checks in at No. 13. And Edmonton (18th), Tampa Bay (20th) and Calgary (21st) are clearly too high for the first two, too low for the last.
But fair enough — Carolina’s defensive numbers, and thus Ward’s results, haven’t been up to snuff. It wasn’t surprising that a statistical analysis of goalies led to Ward being near the bottom. Laviolette’s high-flying offensive style will never be confused for the New Jersey and Minnesota lock-down defenses.
Then, Sportsnet.ca’s Chris Nichols rated the goalies for fantasy hockey purposes, ordering and lumping them into five categories: Blue Chippers, High-End, Quality Merchandise, Sale-Priced and Diamonds In The Rough. Ward fared a little better in Nichols’ opinion-based rankings than he did in THN, coming in at No. 21 under the “Sale-Priced” heading. Nichols writes that Ward “can move up in the rankings if team follows up on improved D pledge,” and that the back-up threat (Michael Leighton) is “not gonna happen.”
So it’s safe to say Ward is flying under the radar heading into the 2008-09 campaign, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t pressure on him to perform. Another season out of the playoffs would likely shine a bright light on Ward’s play and put into question his ability to lead a team over an 82-game schedule. Also, he will earn $2.5 million this season and $3.5 million in 2009-10 before reaching restricted free agent status. If he cannot return to the playoffs the next two seasons, Carolina GM Jim Rutherford will have to think long and hard about whether or not Ward will deserve a long-term deal to be the Canes’ No. 1 netminder.
This is a lot of doom and gloom, for sure — but it’s exactly what Ward needs to succeed this year. The focus this season has been shifted to the rebuilt defense, and the expectations on Ward have been pinned to that group’s success. With the Canadian media lowering — and even writing off — any chance that Ward could return to his magnificent 2006 playoff form, Ward will have the opportunity to prove to anyone and everyone that he’s the future in net for the Canes without having to justify why all offseason with paragraph after paragraph of talk about his weight, flexibility, maturity and ability.
It’s hard to remember that Ward is still just 24 — the third-youngest starter in the league behind Carey Price and Marc-Andre Fleury — probably because of his past glories. He has done things many of the league’s top goalies have never experienced, like dropping into the splits and flashing out a pad to stop a potential game-tying goal in Game 7 of a Stanley Cup Final. He knows what it takes — understands the commitment, the even-tempered attitude and ability to let you instincts take over — to be one of the league’s best.
And if Carolina can return to the playoffs, I guarantee the players looking at him from the opposing bench and the goalie seeing his steely glare from across the rink will remember what Cam is capable of — and he won’t be at the bottom of their lists.






Mateo | Sep 17, 2008 | Reply
It goes without saying that our defense was not up to par the past two seasons. But I think it would also be good to point out that Cam didn’t really have anyone “waiting in the wings” to take his job from him either. In the ‘05-’06 season Cam had to fight for every minute he spent in the net because Gerber was there and it was good competition for both of them.. I don’t mean any disrespect to John Graham, but he didn’t really push Cam Ward to do any better because the job was always Cams…. There was never any question… and most people tend to work harder to get something than they do to keep it once it’s theirs…
Cam will be great this year… I have a feeling.
Bubba | Sep 17, 2008 | Reply
I agree with you Cory, in that you really can’t argue with those rankings. They are what they are. Ward has looked stellar at times, but inconsistent at other times.
Mateo, I think the situation is different from goalie to goalie. Some like to be pushed, some can’t handle the pressure. What I think hurt Ward last year more so than being pushed, was the lack of overall confidence in Grahame, so much so that they didn’t even play him anymore. Ward had to play several games in a row, (20-25?), without a break. He even had to play the back to backs. I think the inability to take a game or two off really hurt him at the end of the season.
Mateo | Sep 17, 2008 | Reply
Good point…
I think it can be said with a great amount of certainty that our goal tending situation should be much better this coming season…
Swenk | Sep 17, 2008 | Reply
Sometimes I feel like that Conn Smythe is a weight on Cam. To quote the Grateful Dead, “Maybe you had too much, too fast.”
Still he is young, JR didn’t project Cam to be a starter until he was 24-25 years old. Plus, playing that many games in a row is hard to do unless your name is Broduer, or Irbe to lesser success.
Swenk | Sep 17, 2008 | Reply
The other thing is ….that ‘06 squad had shot blockers up and down the roster…Kevyn Adams, Wesley, Hedi, Aaron Ward…..
Mateo | Sep 17, 2008 | Reply
Ok.. Wrong blog… But I just went over to the team web site… and not to send everyone into an uproar… but Justin Williams is having surgery and will be out 4 to 6 months?!?!?!
So much for STAYING healthy this season… geez…
Brian | Sep 17, 2008 | Reply
For what it’s worth, Goalies’ World does statistical rankings at the end of each season that use a mythical “proprietary formula” that is supposed to downplay the influence of team defense on said rankings. Cam was 16th in the ‘07-08 GW rankings.
Jim | Sep 24, 2008 | Reply
The problem with these ranking formulas is that a goaltender’s numbers are directly related to the defense in front of him, particularly killing penalties. You really can’t downplay the influence of team defense because it’s part of the game. When I was growing up, people considered Grant Fuhr one of the best goalies of all time. His GAA was way too high for an elite goalie, but if you followed the game you knew that he faced 10-15 odd-man rushes every night because the team’s approach was “I don’t mind if we give up 5 goals because I know we’re scoring 6 or 7.” Nowadays, people praise Brodeur, but his great stats are just as much a function of NJ’s defense first system.
With Ward, I’m not going to totally absolve him because he was a component of the problem last year, but to blunt about it, Carolina’s PK stunk! There was a stretch in December-January when it seemed every Hurricane penalty resulted in a goal against. With a decent PK (I can’t even be nice and call what they had last year decent), the Canes would have opened the playoffs at the RBC Center instead of on the first tee.