Martin Brodeur and his father, Denis, on March 14, 2009 following the goalie's 551st regular-season win, tying him with Patrick Roy for No. 1 spot on the NHL's all-time list.
With each shutout, Brodeur was growing closer to a ghost. Sawchuk had succumbed to internal injuries at age 40, a month after a tussle with Rangers teammate Ron Stewart, having carved out a career that places him in every discussion about hockey's greatest goalies of all time.
Sawchuk was a member of four Stanley Cup champions, winning with the Red Wings in 1952, 1954 and 1955 and the Toronto Maple Leafs in 1967. He won the Vezina Trophy four times, the 1950-51 Calder Trophy as the NHL's top rookie, and played in 11 NHL All-Star Games during a 21-season career from 1949-70 that saw him also play for the Boston Bruins and Los Angeles Kings. He retired with 445 wins, a League record that stood for three decades until he was passed by Patrick Roy on Oct. 14, 2000; he ranks eighth today, with Brodeur at No. 1 with 691.
The Winnipeg native was a large goalie for his day, 195 pounds on his 5-foot-11 frame. He would explode out of a deep crouch, peering through a forest of legs in front of him and relying much more on quick reflexes than playing the angles to make the first save.