"I remember both games were against Marty (Brodeur)," Lundqvist said during a visit to Montreal in November. "My first year was a surreal feeling, living my dream. The Rangers opened the door for me, I got my foot in and I started playing. I don't remember details of the first win, but I remember playing at the Garden and being welcomed very warmly by the crowd."
Lundqvist has no clue where he'll be on the wins list when he hangs up his pads, but he figures Brodeur's total of 691 is on another level altogether.
"I think that's out of reach," the 36-year-old said with a laugh. "Marty was extremely consistent for so many years, on a competitive team for so many years. There are so many things you need to help you, a lot of things that go into reaching a number like that. Marty did a great job.
"I think you're going to see a lot of guys come up around the 400-win range now. You have (regular-season) overtime and the shootout. It's impossible to know where the goalies of the past would have been if they'd had those. At the same time, the game itself evolves."
Lundqvist has blazed an impressive trail with the Rangers, passing Dominik Hasek (No. 14 with 389 wins) to become the winningest Europe-born NHL goalie. He was the fastest to reach 400 wins, doing so in 727 games, eight fewer than Brodeur. (Hasek played 13 of his 16 NHL seasons before the shootout was adopted in 2005-06, Brodeur 12 of 22; each played his entire NHL career with regular-season overtime, which was adopted for 1983-84.)