Greaves has stopped 38 of 39 high-danger shots faced (.974 high-danger save percentage), as well as 35 of 36 midrange shots faced (.972 midrange save percentage), over the Blue Jackets’ four wins over the past six days. He ranks first among all NHL goalies in high-danger saves and midrange saves over that span.
Although longtime starter Elvis Merzlikins is tied for 16th in wins (26 in 53 games) and 17th in start volume (52) this season, his underlying save percentage metrics are not nearly as strong compared to Greaves; Merzlikins ranks in the 72nd percentile on save percentage from high-danger areas (.816) and below the 50th percentile from midrange areas (.854). In terms of team save percentage, the Blue Jackets rank tied for 20th out of 32 teams (.890) with the trio of Merzlikins, Daniil Tarasov and Greaves this season.
While it may not be a fair comparison given Merzlikins’ heavy workload and the Blue Jackets’ average shots on goal allowed (29.8 per game; sixth most in NHL), Greaves certainly gives them an in-house option to turn to more often in the years ahead. Greaves is in the first season of a two-year, two-way contract that ends after next season (2025-26), while Merzlikins has two more years left on his contract (ends after 2026-27 season).
With a potent core of 25-and-under forwards including Adam Fantilli, Kirill Marchenko, Kent Johnson, Dmitri Voronkov and Yegor Chinakhov, along with 27-year-old defenseman Zach Werenski being one of the top contenders for the Norris Trophy, the Blue Jackets are riding the hot hand with Greaves and giving him a chance to parlay his success into next season.
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More EDGE stats for Greaves | CBJ