"You can talk about it from a team standpoint and an individual standpoint all you want. When you have dominant players, then you have to take lots of shots. If you take it in history - and I've been through lots where you say, well, 'you're a shot-volume team.' Well, you're a shot-volume team if you don't have a lot of star, goal-scoring players. If you take, for example, the Calgary Flames last year, the three players that led the team in scoring, you look at their volume of shots and their quality of shots. They scored 40 goals. There's players that scored 30 or 35 or whatever it was, well, they had a high shooting percentage. That's why they scored 35. Doesn't matter how many shots they took.
"Most of the year, high-quality shots come from me to the light (on top of the camera in front of him). Right there. Either on a breakaway, an odd-man rush or a rebound. That player's getting that shot, doesn't matter how many you got. You can score three on 20 if one was a breakaway, one was an odd-man rush and one was just me and the goalie. Really, when they call them high-danger shots, that's what a high-danger shot is. It's the player and the goalie. It's not through the team."