Not fair, Nick getting to go first!
My temptation is to go counter-intuitive here, because who wants to read the same name over and over again? Seriously, if you look at the resumes of the eight remaining goalies, the only other one you could consider to win one Game 7 would be Murray who, in his time as Fleury's protege, merely won two Stanley Cups championships in two years. Murray can be up-and-down from night to night, but he would be your runner-up.
But how can you not choose Fleury?
In theory, what a goalie has accomplished in the past has no bearing on what he's doing in the present, and goaltenders, even at the top end, can occasionally run hot and cold. Fleury, though, is red hot right now, on top of his game. In Vegas' first five playoff games, Fleury surrendered three goals -- and had these crazy low numbers: 0.54 goals-against average, .987 save percentage. He played pretty well in the 4-3 double-overtime loss in Game 2 against the Sharks. In Vegas' 5-4 overtime win in Game 3 on Monday, he saved the day with a highlight-reel stop against Logan Couture in overtime. That's what money goalies do -- give their teams a chance to win games that maybe they shouldn't. That's what Fleury does.