Gaa Goals Against Average Calculator
Calculate gaa goals against average with our free tool. See your stats, compare against averages, and track progress over time.
Formula
GAA = (Goals Against / Minutes Played) x Regulation Minutes
Goals Against Average divides the total goals allowed by total minutes played, then multiplies by the regulation game length (60 minutes in NHL hockey) to express the result as goals per full game.
Worked Examples
Example 1: NHL Starter GAA Calculation
Problem: A goaltender has allowed 68 goals in 2,160 minutes played across 36 games in an NHL season.
Solution: GAA = (Goals Against / Minutes Played) x 60\nGAA = (68 / 2160) x 60\nGAA = 0.03148 x 60\nGAA = 1.89\nGoals per game = 68 / 36 = 1.89\nAvg minutes per game = 2160 / 36 = 60.0
Result: GAA = 1.89 (Elite level performance)
Example 2: Backup Goalie with Partial Games
Problem: A backup goaltender has allowed 32 goals in 920 minutes played across 18 games (some relief appearances).
Solution: GAA = (Goals Against / Minutes Played) x 60\nGAA = (32 / 920) x 60\nGAA = 0.03478 x 60\nGAA = 2.09\nAvg minutes per game = 920 / 18 = 51.1 minutes\nGoals per 20 min = (32 / 920) x 20 = 0.70
Result: GAA = 2.09 (Excellent, but avg 51.1 min/game suggests relief appearances)
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Goals Against Average (GAA) in hockey?
Goals Against Average (GAA) is a fundamental goaltending statistic in hockey that measures the average number of goals a goaltender allows per regulation game. It is calculated by dividing the total goals against by the total minutes played, then multiplying by the length of a regulation game (typically 60 minutes in the NHL). GAA has been used for decades as a primary measure of goaltender performance and remains one of the most widely recognized and easily understood goalie statistics. A lower GAA indicates better goaltending performance, as it means the goalie is allowing fewer goals per full game played.
How is GAA calculated and what is the formula?
The GAA formula is straightforward: GAA = (Goals Against / Minutes Played) multiplied by regulation game length (usually 60 minutes). For example, if a goalie allows 45 goals in 1800 minutes of play, the calculation is (45 / 1800) times 60, which equals 1.50 GAA. The formula normalizes goals allowed to a per-game basis regardless of how many actual minutes the goaltender has played. This makes it possible to compare goalies who have played different amounts of time. It is important to use total minutes played rather than games played because goalies are sometimes pulled mid-game or enter as relief goalies.
What is considered a good GAA in the NHL?
In the modern NHL, a GAA below 2.50 is generally considered excellent and puts a goaltender among the league leaders. A GAA between 2.50 and 2.80 is above average, while 2.80 to 3.20 is roughly league average. Anything above 3.20 is considered below average for an NHL starter. These benchmarks have shifted over time as the league has gone through different scoring eras. In the high-scoring 1980s, a 3.50 GAA was respectable, while in the dead-puck era of the early 2000s, elite goalies posted GAAs below 2.00. The current era falls somewhere in between, with league average typically around 2.90 to 3.10.
Why is GAA sometimes considered a misleading statistic?
GAA can be misleading because it does not account for the quality or quantity of shots a goaltender faces. A goalie behind a strong defensive team may post a low GAA simply because opponents generate few high-quality scoring chances, while an equally skilled goalie on a weaker team might have a higher GAA despite making more difficult saves. GAA also does not differentiate between even-strength goals, power-play goals, and empty-net goals against. Additionally, GAA is affected by factors beyond the goaltender control, such as defensive breakdowns, deflections, and unlucky bounces. This is why modern analytics prefer save percentage as a more goalie-specific metric.
How does GAA differ between different levels of hockey?
GAA benchmarks vary significantly across different levels of hockey due to differences in shooting accuracy, defensive systems, and game pace. In the NHL, elite GAAs are below 2.50, while in college hockey (NCAA), competitive GAAs might range from 2.00 to 3.00 depending on the conference. In junior hockey leagues like the OHL, QMJHL, and WHL, scoring tends to be higher, so GAAs of 3.00 to 3.50 can still be respectable. Youth hockey GAAs can vary wildly due to skill disparities. European professional leagues like the KHL and SHL generally have slightly lower scoring than the NHL, so their GAA standards are somewhat different as well.
How does overtime and shootout play affect GAA calculations?
Overtime goals count against a goaltender GAA because the extra minutes are included in both the minutes played and goals against totals. However, shootout goals do not count toward GAA in the NHL, as the league treats the shootout as a separate skills competition rather than part of the game. This means a goalie who allows an overtime goal will see their GAA increase, but allowing the decisive shootout goal does not affect it. The five-minute overtime period adds to the minutes played total, which actually slightly decreases GAA per goal allowed since the denominator grows. This distinction is important for accurate GAA tracking.