Goalies With the Most Playoff Wins Ever
Patrick Roy sits nearly 40 wins ahead of everyone else. Martin Brodeur's 113 playoff victories backstopped three Devils championships. Grant Fuhr and Marc-Andre Fleury tied at 92 wins prove dynasty success creates goaltending records. Playoff wins are the purest goaltending currency in spring hockey, and the all-time leaderboard reads like a Hall of Fame short list.

All-Time Playoff Wins Leaders
The goalies who won most when it mattered:
#1. Patrick Roy: 151 Playoff Wins
Teams: Montreal Canadiens, Colorado Avalanche
Stats:
- 151 wins in 247 playoff games
- Four Stanley Cups
- Three Conn Smythe Trophies
- Three Vezina Trophies
The Clutch Master: Roy's playoff resume includes legendary performances in 1993 and 2001 Conn Smythe runs. Known for Game 7 dominance and overtime heroics.
Why He's Untouchable: Roy's 151 wins sit nearly 40 ahead of second place. His combination of sustained excellence across two teams and two decades makes this record virtually unbreakable.
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#2. Martin Brodeur: 113 Playoff Wins
Teams: New Jersey Devils, St. Louis Blues
Stats:
- 113 wins in 205 playoff games
- Three Stanley Cups
- Four Vezina Trophies
- NHL-record 24 playoff shutouts
Trap Era Dominance: Brodeur was backbone of New Jersey's defensive trap system. His 24 playoff shutouts remain NHL record.
2002-03 Playoff Run: Posted seven shutouts in single playoff (NHL record), allowing just 43 goals in 24 games en route to third Cup.
#3 (Tie). Grant Fuhr: 92 Playoff Wins
Teams: Edmonton Oilers, Buffalo Sabres, St. Louis Blues
Stats:
- 92 wins in 150 playoff games
- Five Stanley Cups
- 0.613 playoff winning percentage
Dynasty Backbone: Fuhr backstopped Edmonton's high-octane offense through five championships. Known for allowing some goals but making huge saves when needed.
Clutch Saves: Fuhr's ability to make critical saves behind Edmonton's run-and-gun style defined his playoff success.
#3 (Tie). Marc-Andre Fleury: 92 Playoff Wins (Active)
Teams: Pittsburgh Penguins, Vegas Golden Knights, Minnesota Wild
Stats:
- 92 wins in 167 playoff games
- Three Stanley Cups
- Active playoff wins leader
Three-Time Champion: Won three Cups as Pittsburgh starter/1A (2009, 2016, 2017), plus Finals run with Vegas (2018).
Still Adding: Only active goalie near top three all-time, though retirement may come before challenging Brodeur's 113 wins.
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#5 (Tie). Billy Smith: 88 Playoff Wins
Team: New York Islanders
Stats:
- 88 wins in 132 playoff games
- Four Stanley Cups
- Conn Smythe Trophy (1983)
Dynasty Starter: Smith backstopped Islanders' four consecutive Cups (1980-1983), facing minimal competition for starting role throughout dynasty.
#5 (Tie). Ed Belfour: 88 Playoff Wins
Teams: Chicago Blackhawks, Dallas Stars, Toronto Maple Leafs
Stats:
- 88 wins in 161 playoff games
- Stanley Cup champion (1999)
- Vezina Trophy winner
1999 Championship: Belfour's Dallas Cup run featured elite goaltending throughout playoffs, culminating in controversial Cup-winning goal.
Active Goalies Chasing History
Current netminders climbing all-time lists:
Marc-Andre Fleury: 92 Wins
Tied for third all-time but likely retired or close to retirement. Won't challenge Brodeur's 113.
Andrei Vasilevskiy: 65+ Wins
Stats:
- 65+ playoff wins already
- Two Stanley Cups (2020, 2021)
- Two Conn Smythe Trophies
- Still in prime (age 30)
Projection: If Vasilevskiy plays 10+ more playoff runs with Tampa, could reach 110-120 wins, challenging Brodeur for second all-time.
Connor Hellebuyck: 30+ Wins
Stats:
- 30+ playoff wins
- Three Vezina Trophies
- Elite regular season goalie
Challenge: Winnipeg needs sustained playoff success for Hellebuyck to climb top 10 all-time.
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Era Context and Team Dependence
Why some goalies accumulate wins:
Dynasty Advantage: Roy (Canadiens/Avalanche), Brodeur (Devils), Fuhr (Oilers), Smith (Islanders) all backstopped multiple championship runs.
Lower-Scoring Eras: Roy and Brodeur played in defensive-focused eras, making wins easier to accumulate than modern high-scoring games.
Team Dependence: Wins require team offense. Henrik Lundqvist (61 playoff wins) had elite save percentages but fewer wins due to Rangers' offensive struggles.
Modern Tandems: Salary cap era features goalie tandems more often, splitting playoff starts and limiting individual win totals.
Goalies With Elite Win Percentages
Among goalies with 50+ playoff games:
Grant Fuhr: 0.613 Winning Percentage
- 92 wins in 150 games
- Edmonton's offense supported elite win rate
Billy Smith: 0.667 Winning Percentage
- 88 wins in 132 games
- Islanders dynasty created best win rate
Patrick Roy: 0.611 Winning Percentage
- 151 wins in 247 games
- Volume and efficiency combined
High win percentages show team success more than individual performance, but elite goalies elevate teams.
Cup Wins vs. Playoff Wins
Correlation between championships and victory totals:
Four-Cup Winners:
- Patrick Roy: 151 wins
- Grant Fuhr: 92 wins
- Billy Smith: 88 wins
Three-Cup Winners:
- Martin Brodeur: 113 wins
- Marc-Andre Fleury: 92 wins
One-Cup Winners:
- Ed Belfour: 88 wins
Multiple Cups directly correlate with high win totals, showing sustained playoff success necessary for top rankings.
Modern Challenges to Records
Why Roy's 151 wins may stand forever:
Shorter Playoff Formats: Modern playoffs still require 16 wins per Cup but fewer total opportunities due to earlier career starts/ends.
Goalie Tandems: Teams split playoff starts more often, limiting individual win accumulation.
Injury Management: Modern load management means fewer consecutive playoff starts.
Parity: Salary cap creates competitive balance, preventing dynasties that allowed Roy/Brodeur to accumulate wins.
Goalies Who Never Won Despite Deep Runs
Elite netminders with fewer wins due to team limitations:
Henrik Lundqvist: 61 Playoff Wins
- 0 Stanley Cups
- Elite save percentages
- Rangers' offense limited win totals
Roberto Luongo: 54 Playoff Wins
- 0 Stanley Cups
- Two Finals appearances
- Strong teams but no championships
Curtis Joseph: 63 Playoff Wins
- 0 Stanley Cups
- Multiple deep runs
- Never had elite team around him
These goalies prove wins are team-dependent statistic despite individual excellence.
The Verdict
Patrick Roy's 151 playoff wins represent goaltending dominance nearly 40 wins ahead of second place. Martin Brodeur's 113 wins backstopped three Devils championships with NHL-record 24 playoff shutouts.
Grant Fuhr and Marc-Andre Fleury tied at 92 wins show dynasty success (Fuhr's five Oilers Cups) versus sustained excellence (Fleury's three Penguins Cups).
Andrei Vasilevskiy (65+ wins, age 30) represents best chance to challenge Brodeur for second all-time if Tampa maintains elite status next decade.
Read more: NHL Betting: The Ultimate Guide for the 2025/2026 Hockey Season
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