The Hamilton Spectator

The incredible shrinking goalie project continues

After reducing size of pads and pants, this year it’s chest protectors

- JOSHUA CLIPPERTON AND JUDY OWEN

Connor Hellebuyck recently stopped a puck up high near his collarbone — a shot that, in years past, he might not have thought about twice.

In this instance, however, it hurt. “Didn’t feel very good,” Hellebuyck said.

The goalie for the Winnipeg Jets, like all NHL netminders, will be sporting a smaller chest protector this season as the league continues the process of shrinking equipment, following recent size reductions for pads and pants.

The aim, like the other streamline­d goalie gear, is to boost scoring while at the same time rewarding athletic ability in the crease by eliminatin­g unnecessar­y padding that wasn’t protecting goalies, but instead simply helping them block pucks.

In short, a 190-pound goalie and a 240-pound goalie will no longer cut the same figure on the ice.

“Three or four years ago, talking to some of the best goalies in hockey ... they wanted us to try to find a way to make goalies look closer to the size they were,” NHL vice-president of hockey operations Kay Whitmore said. “The biggest complaint was, ‘If I weigh 50 pounds more than another guy, why do we look the same?’”

The focus of the league, in conjunctio­n with the NHL Players’ Associatio­n, on chest protectors has been reducing the size of the shoulders by roughly an inch to make them less boxy and more form-fitting. The same goes for the padding on a goalie’s arms.

“When you buy a suit, everyone wears different sizes,” Whitmore said. “That was our challenge — adding different sizes to encompass all goalies.”

Getting the new equipment, which is scanned using 3D imaging before being inspected prior to approval, has taken longer than anyone wanted because of delays with manufactur­ers. But despite grumblings in some goalie circles this summer and into the pre-season, Whitmore said they’re close to what will become the “new normal.”

“We wanted to get it right once and for all,” he said. “It was a more complicate­d piece of equipment than when we introduced the new pants or pads. We can ask companies to make changes, but things didn’t move very fast until we created a standard, gave them specifics and asked them to build to it.”

Whitmore, who played the position for 155 games with four NHL teams in his 15-year pro career, added that despite some hiccups, safety has been top of mind.

“There’s no expectatio­n that a goalie should have to do his job getting bruised daily,” he said. “We’re having to work through some deficienci­es from a manufactur­ing side.

“I don’t want to see guys go on the ice fearful of getting hit with pucks, because that’s what they do for a living.”

Mathieu Schneider, special assistant to NHL Players’ Associatio­n executive director Donald Fehr, said the personal nature of chest protectors — some goalies had worn their old ones for a decade or more — has been a challenge, and a feeling-out process should be expected as redesigned equipment is introduced.

“The irony is each time we’ve made equipment smaller, it’s gotten lighter and goalies have gotten better,” said the former NHL defenceman. “It’s not like this snuck up on us.”

Until the recent changes, equipment had been ballooning for nearly two decades. Netminders looked more like football offensive linemen than the skinny-by-comparison goalies of previous generation­s.

“They were huge,” recalled Toronto Maple Leafs winger Patrick Marleau, who entered the league in 1997, of the puck stoppers early in his career. “They had the long jerseys so shots would get stuck, they had an extra pad in the five-hole.”

Whitmore said he’s spent countless hours trying to help quell concerns from current goalies about new gear that might not quite fit or rides up at times, potentiall­y leaving a part of the body uncovered.

“One guy might think the unit’s perfect, another guy might get hit somewhere,” Whitmore said. “We’ve tried to work with each goalie, whether it’s a piece added, some extra foam.”

Leafs netminder Frederik Andersen said he is fine with what’s being done, adding that an inch of missing shoulder coverage shouldn’t make a big difference in terms of results if he’s on his game.

“It’s about being square,” Andersen said. “If I’m relying on that extra inch, I’m in trouble already.”

Like the rest of the goaltendin­g fraternity, Anderson said his overwhelmi­ng concern is player safety.

“Definitely had it a few times where a shot might have hurt a little bit more than it would have last year,” he said. “But I have no problem with the way Kay’s been handling it and having a dialogue.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Winnipeg Jets goalie Connor Hellebuyck, like all NHL netminders, will be sporting a smaller chest protector this season as the league continues the process of shrinking equipment.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Winnipeg Jets goalie Connor Hellebuyck, like all NHL netminders, will be sporting a smaller chest protector this season as the league continues the process of shrinking equipment.
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