Miller may have gotten off easy. Minnesota Wild goaltender Devan Dubnyk also wears three after he learned in junior that even a goalie double cup is sometimes not enough protection.
"I took one in training camp and I thought I was going to die," said Dubnyk, who also wears a tight fitting "girdle" under the player cup to keep everything in place. "I'll never forget that day. A guy just walked into a slap shot and I as went down, the cup flipped up and it hit me straight on. I remember watching the rebound go out and then the pain kicked in, and it was gloves off and I didn't know what to do. I didn't know if I should get up, if I should stay down, if I needed to get off the ice, if I should just not move. I just didn't know what to do. For the next three days I had to walk around with my hands in my pockets to hold my pants out and away from me."
Dubnyk glances over at his playing partner, Darcy Kuemper, when asked what he thinks about goalies who don't bother with the extra layer underneath a goalie cup, but Minnesota's 26-year-old backup at least wears a double cup - "a big one," he said - and insists it fits well. Like Dubnyk, Kuemper learned the hard way in junior that one cup isn't enough.
"I was on crutches for three days because I couldn't walk," Kuemper said. "I couldn't get off the couch for three days. I couldn't even stand up."
Despite stories like that, there are still a few NHL goalies wearing an older model goalie cup that has plenty of extra padding, but just one plastic cup.
Two of them played for the Detroit Red Wings, much to the chagrin of goalie coach Jeff Salajko.
"Sal thought I was crazy for only wearing one cup," Jared Coreau said. "A few guys have told me that."