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Inside the NHL: Richter greatest American goaltender
Sunday, September 07, 2003 By Dejan Kovacevic, Post-Gazette Sports Writer
The unfortunate, early close to the career of Mike Richter this week is sure to open debate in hockey circles as to whether or not he was the United States' greatest goaltender.
It should not.
It should be an open-and-shut case in Richter's favor.
When Richter announced Thursday in New York that concussions are forcing him out of the game at age 36, the Rangers, his only NHL employer in 15 seasons, let it be known that his No. 35 will be retired and hung from the rafters of Madison Square Garden. It was an appropriate gesture for someone who was the winningest goaltender in franchise history and, more important to New Yorkers, the driving force behind the 1994 Stanley Cup title which erased 54 years of failure.
But he is deserving of much more.
Just as Herb Brooks was aptly feted for his role in establishing the United States on the international hockey scene for his work as coach and public figure, so, too, should Richter be known as the most important American hockey player to date. At any position.
Arguments could be made for forwards Mike Modano, Pat LaFontaine, Joe Mullen and Jeremy Roenick. Or defensemen Brian Leetch, Chris Chelios and Derian Hatcher. But none was as responsible for the nation's permanent ascent into the global elite.
In the 1996 World Cup of Hockey, Richter led the U.S. to a surprising championship against Canada, the nation's most important hockey victory other than the 1980 Miracle on Ice. He made 35 saves in the final and was named most valuable player of the tournament.
In 1998, the first year the Olympics officially allowed professionals, he again was the starter.
And at the 2002 Olympics, Richter again was in net and led the U.S. to a silver medal in the strongest field for any tournament in the sport's history.
Every time America needed a goaltender in the past decade, it called upon Richter. In fact, each time, no other goaltender even received serious consideration.
Which is precisely why no American rivals Richter, especially not in goal.
Not John Vanbiesbrouck, who has the best overall numbers of any American in net but lacks the rings to enter the discussion.
Not Frank Brimsek, who had 40 shutouts in 1939-50 but was the beneficiary of a no-offense era.
And Tom Barrasso?
He has an edge in some statistics: 368 victories to Richter's 301, 37 shutouts to Richter's 34. Barrasso also has one more Vezina Trophy and one more Stanley Cup than Richter, having won the Vezina as a rookie in 1984 and the Cup with the Penguins in 1991 and 1992. But Richter has a better goals-against average, 2.89 to 3.24, and a better save percentage, .904 to .892.
All of that plays out as fairly even, but there is one whopper of a tiebreaker: Barrasso represented the U.S. once, in 2002 as a third-stringer, and played a round-robin game against Germany, while Richter was the national goaltender for a generation.
It will not help Barrasso in this debate that he was surly with the media and others he encountered throughout his career. Richter, by contrast, was bright and friendly even in pressure-filled situations. When Barrasso retired this summer, a press release was issued. When Richter retired, tears were shed openly by Rangers officials, players and fans.
But personality issues should not color anyone's view.
The only relevant colors here are red, white and blue.
Icy chips
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