Three-Time Champion Jonathan Quick Retires After 19 Seasons
The guys who show up when the lights are brightest — those are the ones you don’t really forget.
Jonathan Quick’s going to be one of those names for a long time.
And for a lot of people, that memory starts in 2012. The Kings barely get in, then suddenly they’re running through the West with a goalie who just wouldn’t give anything away. Teams got looks. Good ones. Didn’t matter.
The numbers started stacking up after that — 410 wins, 65 shutouts, three Cups, a Conn Smythe, Olympic silver, the winningest American-born player ever.
But that’s never really been the point with Quick.
It’s the feel of it. The scrambling, never-out-of-it style. The second and third saves that don’t seem possible. The sense that even when things broke down, he’d find a way to keep the game from getting away.
The Stretch That Turned Him Into a Legend
If you’re talking about Jonathan Quick’s place in hockey history, you start with 2012. There’s really no way around it.
That run still holds up. An eight seed ended up rolling through the West and beating teams that were much better than them on paper. Quick was at the center of it all. He posts a 1.41 goals-against average with a .946 save percentage, and takes home the Conn Smythe as the backbone of the Kings’ first Cup. That’s not just “hot goalie” stuff. That’s control over two straight months of playoff hockey.
You didn’t just have to beat him once. You usually had to beat him twice on the same play. Even then, it still didn’t always get past him.
And they needed every bit of it. That Kings team wasn’t lighting up scoreboards. They finished near the bottom of the league in goals during the regular season. Quick was already doing the heavy lifting just to get them in — a league-leading 10 shutouts, sixth-highest save percentage, and he never came off the ice. He played over 4,000 minutes that year. And then, somehow, he raised it to another level once the lights got brighter.
That’s the part that sticks with you when you look back on it. Not just that he was great, but when it mattered most, he got better.
And it didn’t look like the textbook version of elite goaltending either. It wasn’t calm and quiet all the time. It was reactive, aggressive, a lot of second efforts — but it worked. Over and over.
More Than One Great Run
Quick didn't stop there. He helped the Kings win again in 2014. It wasn’t the same “out of nowhere” run as 2012 — it was harder, heavier, more of a grind — and he was still right in the middle of it. That whole era of Kings hockey had a very specific feel: low-scoring games, a ton of puck battles, teams getting worn down over 60 minutes… and then trying to get the puck past Quick when they were finally able to get it down there. That’s a tough night.
That’s where he really became one of the faces of that team. Not just a guy backstopping it, but part of the identity. L.A. was built to make you uncomfortable, and Quick was the final piece of that. You could do a lot right in those games and still walk away with nothing.
Then there’s the longevity piece, which gets overlooked more than it should.
More than 800 regular-season games playing that style is not normal. It’s hard on the body, and you could see that over time. The explosiveness, the way he played — it’s not built for that many miles. But even as things started to level out, he didn’t just disappear.
The end of the Kings run was messy, and honestly felt wrong when it all went down. But even after that, he still found a way to add something. He lands in Vegas, ends up getting another Cup out of it, then goes to New York and settles into a completely different role.
And that’s probably the most underrated part of the back half of his career — he adjusted. He wasn’t the same guy anymore, but he still found ways to contribute and gave teams something they could rely on.
Not everyone does that at the end. He did.
Now You Start Asking Bigger Questions
You can make the Hall of Fame case with him pretty quick — and it’s not one you really have to stretch for either.
Three Cups. A Conn Smythe. Winningest American-born goalie ever. Most shutouts by an American. And one of the best playoff peaks the position’s seen in a long time. That’s a Hall of Fame resume.
And once you narrow it down to American-born goalies, it gets even more interesting.
You can bring up other names, and you should. Ryan Miller’s always going to be in that conversation. Tom Barrasso’s already in the Hall. But Quick’s playoff runs really stand out in that group. When you’re the guy in net for multiple Cup runs and the one driving a historic one like 2012, that carries a different kind of weight.
Zoom it out a little, and he’s right there with the most impactful goalies of his era. Maybe not the cleanest technically. Maybe not the guy coaches would use in a teaching clinic. But that’s not what this is about.
It’s about impact. It’s about whether teams felt like they had a real edge because he was back there.
For a long stretch, the Kings absolutely did.
All stats courtesy of NHL.com.
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