Jets star Connor Hellebuyck delivered one of the most dominant regular seasons by a goaltender in recent NHL history, and now he's got two trophies to show for it. But for the doubters, it might not be enough. His postseason struggles, critiqued and used as a stick to beat him over the head with, will be the black cloud over his head despite his awards.
TOP NEWS
Jets' Connor Hellebuyck Wins Historic 2024-25 Hart Trophy, 5th to Win NHL MVP, Vezina
Connor Hellebuyck Wins 2nd Straight Vezina Trophy as NHL's Best Goaltender in 2024-25
Leon Draisaitl Lifts Oilers to OT Win vs. Panthers as Fans Hype Epic Stanley Cup Final
I'm here to tell you that's a load of nonsense. Hellebuyck won the most coveted individual award in the NHL: The Hart Trophy, awarded by the Professional Hockey Writers Association to the most valuable player to his team, becoming only the fourth goalie in the expansion era to win the award and the third American to capture the prestigious honor. He also won the Vezina Trophy for best goalie in the league as voted on by NHL general managers, beating out Los Angeles' Darcy Kuemper and Tampa Bay's Andrei Vasilevskiy. It's the 32-year-old's second consecutive and third overall Vezina win, making him the fourth goaltender to capture the award at least three times under its current format (since 1981-82). And yet, despite the success in the regular season, despite the honors of a truly historic campaign, all the haters will talk about are his mediocre postseason performances. When we talk about Hellebuyck, his playoff shortcomings loom over the conversation. This postseason was no different, as a few out-of-control games from the typically sturdy net-minder contributed to a second-round exit for the best team in the regular season. But as the Oilers and Panthers showed us by dominating each opponent on the way to the Cup, you need to have more than a goaltender -- even a Hart Trophy-winning goaltender -- to win a Cup these days. You need to have a complete team, and although Hellebuyck had obvious struggles in multiple games that contributed to losses, he needs a more complete playoff-caliber roster around him when the postseason rolls around. And if you look at the numbers, it's truly awe-inspiring to see how much he carried Winnipeg this season, just to even get to where they ended up finishing. Hellebuyck was at the heart of a historic regular season for the Jets in which they won the Presidents' Trophy, with the netminder contributing 47 wins in 63 starts to the team's 56-win season. Forty-seven wins were the most by any Jets goalie in a season, and Hellebuyck was only one win away from tying Brayden Holtby and Martin Brodeur’s NHL record of 48 wins, all while playing fewer games. Hellebuyck is just the fifth goaltender in NHL history -- the first since Carey Price in 2014-15 — to capture the Hart and the Vezina in the same year. Only seven different goalies have won the Hart Trophy at all, and only eight times (Dominik Hasek did it twice). He was miles ahead of any other goaltender in the 2024-25 regular season, with a 2.00 goals-against-average, a .925 save percentage and eight shutouts. He won his second consecutive William Jennings Trophy as the goaltender (min. 25 GP) on the team allowing the fewest regular season goals and he has also been named a Vezina Trophy finalist for the fifth time in the last eight seasons. To win the Hart Trophy, Hellebuyck couldn't just be better than his positional peers -- he had to provide more to his team than any player in any position in the league. He beat out Tampa Bay's Nikita Kucherov, the Art Ross Trophy winner who led all scorers with 122 points this season, and Leon Draisaitl, the Rocket Richard Trophy recipient for scoring a league-high 52 goals. Those two were crucial in their teams' success, but when you think about the defense-first machine the Jets were as the winningest team in the 2024-25 regular season, Hellebuyck for Hart was a no-brainer. No individual player was more important to his team's success, nobody better embodied the brand of hockey that makes his team successful, and objectively, no team in the league was more successful in the regular season than the Jets. The Lightning and the Oilers would've struggled without Kucherov and Draisaitl, but the Jets would've been nowhere near their historic season of winning without Hellebuyck. He is the textbook example of "your goalie is the most important player on the ice," and he deserves all of the recognition for what he was able to do this regular season.
CONTINUE READING