Tuukka Rask
Finnish ice hockey goaltender

Tuukka Rask

The basics
Quick facts
Intro
Finnish ice hockey goaltender
Gender:
Male
Places:
Work field:
Birth:
10 March 1987(Savonlinna, Southern Savonia, Eastern Finland Regional State Administrative Agency, Finland)
Star sign:
Family:
Siblings:
Biography menu
Menu

Jump to

Introduction Playing career International play Off the ice Career statistics Awards, honors and records
The details
Biography

Introduction

Tuukka Mikael Rask (born 10 March 1987) is a Finnish professional ice hockey goaltender who is currently an unrestricted free agent. He previously played for the Boston Bruins of the National Hockey League (NHL). Rask was drafted 21st overall in the 2005 NHL Entry Draft by the Toronto Maple Leafs before being traded to the Bruins.

One of the most gifted Finnish goaltenders, Rask won the Stanley Cup with the Bruins in 2011, Won the Vezina Trophy as the league's top goaltender during the 2013–14 season, and the William M. Jennings Trophy along with goaltender Jaroslav Halak in the 2019-20 season. He is the older brother of Joonas Rask, who plays professionally as a forward with Örebro HK in the SHL.

Playing career

Finland

Rask started his career in the youth teams of his hometown club SaPKo in Savonlinna, Finland. He then played in 28 games for the Tampere-based Ilves Jr. in the Finnish Junior League. His goals against average (GAA) was 1.86 with two shutouts and a .935 save percentage. He was the top ranked European goaltender in the 2005 NHL Entry Draft.

Rask played his last European ice hockey season as the number one goaltender for the Ilves senior team in the Finnish top-flight SM-liiga.

The Toronto Maple Leafs drafted Rask in the first round, 21st overall, in the 2005 NHL Entry Draft. However, before playing a regular season game for Toronto, he was traded to the Boston Bruins in exchange for former Calder Memorial Trophy-winning goaltender Andrew Raycroft. Toronto management had deemed Justin Pogge their potential goaltender of the future, rendering Rask expendable. It was later revealed the Bruins intended to release Raycroft, which would have made him available to Toronto without having to give up Rask.

The trade has since been examined as one of the worst trades in Maple Leafs franchise history; Rask would experience many seasons of success with the Bruins, eventually winning the Stanley Cup and Vezina Trophy, while Raycroft would only play two seasons for Toronto, recording disappointing statistics in the process.

Boston Bruins (2007-2021)

Backup and emergence (2007–2012)

Rask with the Providence Bruins during the 2008–09 AHL season.

On 5 May 2007, Rask signed a three-year contract with the Boston Bruins and was in attendance to observe the Providence Bruins' 2006–07 playoff run for the American Hockey League (AHL)'s Calder Cup championship. The Providence team did not make it past the second round of the Calder Cup against the Manchester Monarchs, but nonetheless Rask practiced with the Providence team.

On 5 November 2007, Rask was called up to the Boston Bruins for the first time. Just two weeks later, on 20 November, he recorded his first NHL win, a 4–2 victory on the road against his former team, the Toronto Maple Leafs. On 3 October 2008, the Bruins reassigned Rask to Providence. Rask had the best save percentage (.952) among the goalies in pre-season play, followed by teammates Manny Fernandez (.875), Tim Thomas (.869) and Kevin Regan (.857). Despite this, the team opted to go with the two veteran goaltenders, Thomas and Fernandez, for the 2008–09 season.

With nagging back spasms keeping Fernandez from play shortly after the All-Star Game break, Rask was once again called up to serve as a second goaltender, and on 31 January 2009, he played his first (and only) game with the Bruins in the 2008–09 season, and earned his first ever NHL shutout, a 1–0 home effort against the New York Rangers, with Marc Savard scoring the only Bruins goal.

Not long after the beginning of the 2009–10 season, Rask, who had been named the backup goaltender to Thomas, signed a two-year extension to his contract with the Bruins on 5 November that kept him under contract through to the 2011–12 season.

In the 2009–10 regular season, Rask was the only goaltender in the NHL with a GAA of less than 2.00 and the only goaltender with a save percentage over .930. Despite having been the only qualifying rookie in NHL history to lead the league with a sub-2.00 GAA, as well as lead the league in save percentage, and having supplanted the Vezina Trophy winner Tim Thomas as the starter, Rask was not named as a finalist for the rookie of the year award. In the 2010–11 season, Thomas returned to form, effectively relegating Rask once again to the backup role. With the Bruins winning the Stanley Cup in 2011, Rask became only the second Finnish goaltender to do so, after Antti Niemi of the Chicago Blackhawks accomplished the feat the previous year.

Starter and Vezina trophy season (2012–2014)

On 28 June 2012, Rask re-signed with the Bruins to a one-year, $3.5 million contract. Prior to the declaration of the 2012–13 lockout, Rask was named as the starting goaltender for the Bruins, replacing Tim Thomas, who would eventually be traded to the New York Islanders on 7 February 2013. During the lockout, which ended on 6 January 2013, Rask played for HC Plzeň, which won the Czech Extraliga that year. After the NHL resumed play, Rask led the Bruins to their second Stanley Cup finals in three years in the 2013 playoffs. In the third round against the Pittsburgh Penguins, Rask faced 136 shots in four games played, allowing two goals while making 134 saves for a 0.50 GAA and a .985 save percentage. In the Stanley Cup finals, the Bruins were defeated in six games by the Chicago Blackhawks, as Rask registered a .932 save percentage.

Rask with the Boston Bruins during the 2013–14 NHL season.

On 10 July 2013, the Bruins re-signed Rask to an eight-year, $56 million contract. Following the conclusion of the 2013–14 season, Rask was awarded the NHL's Vezina Trophy, awarded to the "goalkeeper adjudged to be the best at his position". He posted a 36–15–6 record, highlighted by a career-best ten-game points-won streak from 20 to 30 March, going 9–0–1, as the Bruins captured their first Presidents' Trophy since 1990 and led the Eastern Conference in team defence (2.08 goals allowed per game).

Post-Vezina slump and injury (2014–2017)

Early in the 2016–17 regular season, Rask sustained a groin injury that somewhat hampered his abilities much of the season following a successful October campaign, starting the 2016–17 season with 12 wins and a .938 save percentage in 17 games. He was likely used more often than usual, with the Bruins suffering from "backup goaltender" challenges early in the season, but not enough of a hindrance to help lead the Bruins to the 2017 playoffs, the Bruins' first in three seasons. Following a six-game quarterfinal series with the Bruins losing to the Ottawa Senators four games to two, Rask successfully underwent groin surgery on 9 May 2017. In mid-August, Rask said he expected to be ready for the Bruins' training camp for the 2017–18 season.

Career milestones (2017–2021)

In the 2017–18 season, from 26 November 2017 to 10 February 2018, Rask had a career-high 21-game point streak. Rask and the Bruins ended up finishing the season with 50 wins and 112 points, their best season since their 2013–14 Presidents' Trophy-winning season. He played only 54 games, his lowest since that same 2013–14 season, posting a 34–14–5 record with a 2.36 GAA and a .917 save percentage. In the 2018 playoffs, the Bruins were defeated in the second round in five games by the Tampa Bay Lightning, with Rask playing 12 games total in the playoffs and posting a 2.88 GAA and .903 save percentage, his lowest since his first postseason in 2010.

On 1 January 2019, during the 2019 NHL Winter Classic, Rask set a new record for games played by a Bruins goaltender with his 469th game, surpassing Tiny Thompson's record set in the 1938–39 NHL season. However, Rask was later placed on injured reserve by the Bruins on 28 January after sustaining a concussion. At the time of his injury, Rask had a 14–8–3 record in 25 starts. Rask returned to the Bruins lineup on 31 January in a 3–2 overtime loss to the Philadelphia Flyers. It was his first start in a game since 19 January. On 3 February 2019 against the Washington Capitals, Rask recorded a shutout to become the career leader for wins by a goaltender in Bruins history, again surpassing Tiny Thompson.

Rask helped the Bruins to the 2019 Stanley Cup Finals, though they ultimately lost in seven games to the St. Louis Blues. Rask recorded a 15–9 record with a 2.02 goals against average and a .934 save percentage during the 2019 Stanley Cup playoffs.

Rask played his 500th game in the NHL on 22 October 2019, a 4–2 Bruins victory over the Maple Leafs. On 10 March 2020, his 33rd birthday, Rask recorded the 50th shutout of his career, against the Philadelphia Flyers. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic the season was paused and when the NHL announced it’s return to play plan Rask would automatically win the William M. Jennings Trophy along with Jaroslav Halak. On 15 August, during the NHL's Return to Play program, Rask opted to leave the playoffs, exit the "bubble" in Toronto in which teams were quarantined, and return to his family after playing five games in the "bubble", which included two games against the Carolina Hurricanes in the 2020 Stanley Cup playoffs. After the playoffs, he revealed that the reason he left was his daughter going through an undisclosed medical emergency.

On 15 April 2021, Rask would return from an upper-body injury, where he recorded his 300th NHL win against the Islanders. He became the 37th goaltender and the fourth Finnish goaltender to achieve the milestone. Rask also became the fifth-fastest player to reach the milestone, which he achieved in his 552nd NHL game, and also became the first Bruins goaltender to reach the mark. On 21 May, Rask passed Gerry Cheevers for the most postseason wins by a goalie in Bruins history, after Rask won his 54th postseason game against the Washington Capitals in the 2021 Stanley Cup playoffs. Following the Game 6 exit of the Bruins from the playoffs, Rask revealed he had been dealing with an early-season injury to an acetabular labrum in one of his hips, necessitating surgery during the summer and a likely return to play for the team by December 2021 to February 2022. Even with his upcoming free-agency resulting in UFA status by the upcoming season, Rask indicated he has no plans to play as a goaltender for any other team but the Bruins, going forward.

International play

Rask played in four of Finland's six games en route to the bronze medal at the 2014 Winter Olympics, including a 3–1 defeat of host nation Russia in the quarter-finals, and a shut-out of the United States in the bronze medal game. He was unable to play in the semifinal against Sweden due to flu, which cost Finland a spot in the final. Sweden defeated Finland 2–1.

On 2 March 2016, it was revealed that Rask was to be the starting goaltender for Finland in the 2016 World Cup of Hockey, ahead of Pekka Rinne. Rask played in two out of three tournament games and in one out of three pre-tournament games.

Off the ice

In 2015, a recently discovered species of wasp in Kenya was named Thaumatodryinus tuukkaraski as a direct reference to Rask. The reasoning given by the authors was, "This species is named after the acrobatic goaltender for the Finnish National ice hockey team and the Boston Bruins, whose glove hand is as tenacious as the raptorial fore tarsus of this dryinid species."

Career statistics

Rask in 2008.

Regular season and playoffs

Regular season Playoffs
Season Team League GP W L T/OT MIN GA SO GAA SV% GP W L MIN GA SO GAA SV%
2004–05 Ilves SM-l 4 0 1 1 202 15 0 4.46 .875
2005–06 Ilves SM-l 30 12 7 8 1,724 60 2 2.09 .926 3 0 3 180 7 0 2.33 .924
2006–07 Ilves SM-l 49 18 18 10 2,872 114 3 2.38 .928 7 2 5 397 20 0 3.02 .924
2007–08 Providence Bruins AHL 45 27 13 2 2,570 100 1 2.33 .905 10 6 4 605 22 2 2.18 .908
2007–08 Boston Bruins NHL 4 2 1 1 184 10 0 3.25 .886
2008–09 Providence Bruins AHL 57 33 20 4 3,340 139 4 2.50 .915 16 9 7 977 36 0 2.21 .930
2008–09 Boston Bruins NHL 1 1 0 0 60 0 1 0.00 1.000
2009–10 Boston Bruins NHL 45 22 12 5 2,562 84 5 1.97 .931 13 7 6 829 36 0 2.61 .910
2010–11 Boston Bruins NHL 29 11 14 2 1,594 71 2 2.67 .918
2011–12 Boston Bruins NHL 23 11 8 3 1,289 44 3 2.05 .929
2012–13 HC Plzeň ELH 17 12 5 0 993 35 1 2.11 .924
2012–13 Boston Bruins NHL 36 19 10 5 2,104 70 5 2.00 .929 22 14 8 1,466 46 3 1.88 .940
2013–14 Boston Bruins NHL 58 36 15 6 3,386 115 7 2.04 .930 12 7 5 753 25 2 1.99 .928
2014–15 Boston Bruins NHL 70 34 21 13 4,063 156 3 2.30 .922
2015–16 Boston Bruins NHL 64 31 22 8 3,679 157 4 2.56 .915
2016–17 Boston Bruins NHL 65 37 20 5 3,680 137 8 2.23 .915 6 2 4 403 15 0 2.24 .920
2017–18 Boston Bruins NHL 54 34 14 5 3,173 125 3 2.36 .917 12 5 7 687 33 0 2.88 .903
2018–19 Boston Bruins NHL 46 27 13 5 2,635 109 4 2.48 .912 24 15 9 1,459 49 2 2.02 .934
2019–20 Boston Bruins NHL 41 26 8 6 2,402 85 5 2.12 .929 4 1 3 257 11 0 2.57 .904
2020–21 Boston Bruins NHL 24 15 5 2 1,397 53 2 2.28 .913 11 6 4 688 27 0 2.36 .919
NHL totals 560 306 163 66 32,208 1,216 52 2.27 .921 104 57 46 6,541 242 7 2.22 .925

International

Year Team Event Result GP W L T/OTL MIN GA SO GAA SV%
2004 Finland WJC18 7th 5 1 1 3 299 8 1 1.61 .927
2005 Finland WJC18 7th 5 2 3 0 278 14 0 3.02 .910
2005 Finland WJC 5th 5 2 3 0 243 12 0 2.96 .902
2006 Finland WJC 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 6 4 2 0 369 13 1 2.11 .940
2007 Finland WJC 6th 6 2 4 0 332 17 1 3.43 .887
2014 Finland OG 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 4 3 1 0 243 7 1 1.73 .937
2016 Finland WCH 8th 2 0 2 0 119 4 0 2.02 .920
Junior totals 27 11 13 3 1521 64 3 2.63 .913
Senior totals 6 3 3 0 362 11 1 1.87 .928

Awards, honors and records

Rask during the Bruins' 2011 Stanley Cup victory parade
Rask and the Bruins are awarded the Prince of Wales Trophy following their Eastern Conference Finals series sweep over the Pittsburgh Penguins in the 2013 Stanley Cup playoffs.
Awards Year
AHL
AHL All-Star Game 2008
NHL
Stanley Cup champion 2011
Vezina Trophy 2014
NHL First All-Star Team 2014
NHL All-Star Game 2017, 2020
William M. Jennings Trophy 2020
NHL Second All-Star Team 2020
International
IIHF World U20 Championship bronze medal 2006
IIHF World U20 Championship best goaltender 2006
IIHF World U20 Championship All-Star Team 2006
Finnish ice hockey player of the year 2013
Winter Olympic bronze medal 2014
Boston Bruins
Seventh Player Award 2010
John P. Bucyk Award 2014
Elizabeth C. Dufresne Trophy 2015
Bruins Three Stars Awards 2010, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2020

Records

  • Most games played by a goaltender in Boston Bruins history.
  • Most wins by a goaltender in franchise history.
  • Most shutouts in playoff series-clinching games in franchise history.
  • Longest season-opening home point streak in Boston Bruins history.
  • Most playoff wins by a goaltender in franchise history.

In addition to the above, a newly discovered wasp species, Thaumatodryinus tuukkaraski, was named in Rask's honor in 2015.