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Goalie Gaa Calculator

Our hockey calculator computes goalie gaa+ instantly. Get accurate stats with historical comparisons and benchmarks.

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Formula

GAA+ = (League Average GAA / Goalie GAA) x 100

GAA+ expresses a goaltender Goals Against Average relative to the league average. A value of 100 means exactly average, above 100 is better than average. GSAA = (League Avg GAA - Goalie GAA) / 60 x Minutes Played.

Worked Examples

Example 1: Elite NHL Goaltender GAA+

Problem: A goaltender has a 2.15 GAA while the league average is 3.02. Calculate their GAA+ and goals saved above average over 2,400 minutes.

Solution: GAA+ = (League Avg GAA / Goalie GAA) x 100\nGAA+ = (3.02 / 2.15) x 100\nGAA+ = 1.4047 x 100 = 140.5\nGSAA = (3.02 - 2.15) / 60 x 2400\nGSAA = 0.87 / 60 x 2400 = 34.8 goals saved

Result: GAA+ = 140.5 (Elite) | 34.8 goals saved above average

Example 2: Average Goaltender Comparison

Problem: Goalie A has a 2.90 GAA in a league averaging 2.95. Goalie B has a 3.40 GAA in a league averaging 3.80.

Solution: Goalie A GAA+ = (2.95 / 2.90) x 100 = 101.7\nGoalie B GAA+ = (3.80 / 3.40) x 100 = 111.8\nDespite Goalie A having a lower raw GAA,\nGoalie B is performing better relative to their league.

Result: Goalie A GAA+ = 101.7 | Goalie B GAA+ = 111.8 (Goalie B is relatively better)

Frequently Asked Questions

What is GAA+ and how does it improve on standard GAA?

GAA+ (GAA Plus) is a league-adjusted version of Goals Against Average that expresses a goaltender performance relative to the league average. The formula is (League Average GAA / Goalie GAA) multiplied by 100, so a GAA+ of 110 means the goalie is 10% better than league average. This metric solves a major problem with raw GAA by accounting for the scoring environment of each era and league. A goaltender with a 2.80 GAA in a high-scoring era might actually be performing better than one with a 2.50 GAA in a low-scoring era, and GAA+ captures this distinction effectively.

How do you interpret GAA+ values and what numbers are considered good?

GAA+ uses 100 as the baseline, representing exactly league-average performance. Values above 100 indicate better-than-average goaltending, while values below 100 indicate worse-than-average performance. A GAA+ of 115 to 120 is considered excellent and typically places a goaltender among the top starters in the league. Elite Vezina Trophy contenders often post GAA+ values of 125 or higher during their best seasons. Values between 105 and 115 represent solid above-average goaltending, while 95 to 105 is roughly average. Below 90 generally indicates a goaltender who is struggling significantly compared to their peers.

Why is league-adjusted GAA better than raw GAA for comparing goalies?

League-adjusted GAA (GAA+) provides superior comparisons because the scoring environment in hockey changes dramatically over time and between leagues. In the 1980s, NHL goalies routinely had GAAs above 3.50, while in the early 2000s dead-puck era, even average goalies posted sub-2.50 GAAs. Raw GAA makes it impossible to compare Patrick Roy in 1986 to Carey Price in 2015 fairly. GAA+ normalizes for these differences by measuring each goalie relative to their own league average. This same principle applies when comparing goalies between the NHL, AHL, KHL, and other leagues that have different scoring rates.

How does team defense affect GAA+ and how can you account for it?

Team defense significantly influences GAA+ because a goaltender behind a strong defensive team faces fewer and lower-quality shots, which naturally leads to a lower GAA and higher GAA+. Conversely, goalies on weak defensive teams face more shots from dangerous areas, inflating their GAA and deflating their GAA+. To account for this, analysts often combine GAA+ with other metrics like Goals Saved Above Expected (GSAx), which adjusts for shot quality using expected goals models. Some advanced models also use situation-adjusted GAA+ that focuses on even-strength play and removes empty-net goals from the calculation for a purer evaluation.

How many games should a goalie play before GAA+ becomes reliable?

GAA+ generally becomes a reliable indicator of goaltender quality after approximately 20 to 25 games or around 1,200 minutes of play. Before this threshold, the metric can be heavily influenced by a few exceptionally good or bad games. For example, a goalie who posts two shutouts in their first three starts might have an outstanding GAA+ that is unsustainable. Most statistical analyses of goaltender performance require a minimum of 1,000 minutes played to include a goalie in any rankings or comparisons. For full-season evaluations, having at least 40 starts provides the most stable and meaningful GAA+ readings.

What is the relationship between GAA+ and other adjusted goaltending metrics?

GAA+ belongs to a family of league-adjusted statistics that includes Save Percentage Plus (SV%+), Quality Starts Percentage, and Goals Saved Above Expected (GSAx). While GAA+ adjusts raw GAA for the league scoring environment, SV%+ does the same for save percentage. GSAx goes further by incorporating expected goals models based on shot location, shot type, and game situation. These metrics complement each other because GAA+ captures the overall defensive result, SV%+ isolates shot-stopping ability, and GSAx measures performance against shot quality. Together, they provide a comprehensive picture of goaltender value.

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