Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
Sports

'A Unique Canadian Problem:' Goalie Rental Apps Connect Teams With Netminders

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Dec, 2017 12:07 PM
    MONTREAL — His netminding skills may not rival those of the Montreal Canadiens' Carey Price, but Jacques Gravel has saved many a hockey game.
     
    And at about $40 a game, Gravel comes considerably cheaper than Price, who commands an eight-year, $84 million contract.
     
    Gravel is one of the growing number of goaltenders offering his services on GoalieUp — a website and app that connects local goaltenders with hockey teams looking for a last-minute fill-in ahead of game time.
     
    The 51-year-old says renting himself out as a goalie helped to keep him afloat during a nine-month bout of unemployment a few years ago.
     
    "I was running from one rink to the next, averaging a game or two every single day," he said.
     
    "During that period it was something that kept me going."
     
    But while the extra money can come in handy, Gravel says his love of the game and a desire to help other players out are by far the biggest motivator.
     
    "I love to play and I've never met a bad bunch of hockey players," he said.
     
    "When the goalie shows up in the dressing room, they're thrilled — you're the star of the team and very much appreciated."
     
    The app was created by Montreal-area goalie Mark Manning, who got the idea of renting himself out as a substitute goaltender when he was an unemployed student.
     
    What began as a texting service for Montreal goalies seven years ago has now grown into an app that includes about 2,000 netminders across Canada and beyond, including 700 to 800 in the Montreal area.
     
    While many leagues keep lists of available goaltenders, entrepreneurs such as Manning are using technology to create a convenient solution to one of the game's perpetual problems.
     
    Manning said many leagues face goaltender shortages, largely because of the physical and mental challenges that come with the role.
     
    "It's not just standing in front of a puck," he said in a phone interview. "You have to be mobile, to be flexible, there's a whole bunch of things, including the cost of equipment."
     
    Teams who use the app are charged $40 for the first hour, which includes a booking fee and a cash payment to the goalie.
     
    Netminders are paid more if the game goes longer, plus an extra $10 for a late-night or last-minute request.
     
    While most of the requests are for beer league games, Manning says he's provided goalies for a private backyard tournament and even an event at Montreal's swanky Queen Elizabeth Hotel, where two goalies were asked to take shots from businessmen at a corporate event.
     
    Niki Sawni, who runs another goalie rental app out of Toronto, says the demand for goalies stretches all across Canada.
     
    Puck App, which he founded in 2015, books goalies for between 200 and 250 games a month across Canada, with Ottawa the biggest market.
     
    Both GoalieUp and Puck App take requests from teams and send notifications to appropriately skilled goalies in the area, who respond to say whether they're interested.
     
    While Manning prefers to assign the goalies himself to ensure a fair rotation, Puck App gives goalies who have received positive user feedback the first chance to play, and then automatically assigns them on a first-come basis.
     
    Puck App also has slightly different pricing for different cities, which reflects the higher price of parking and ice time rental in some cities, according to its founder.
     
    Sawni believes the goaltender shortage is unique to Canada's national sport, largely because of the specialized skills required of those who stand between the pipes and face down speeding rubber pucks.
     
    "It doesn't really work in other sports, in other sports anyone can play any position," he said.
     
    "It's definitely a unique Canadian problem."

    MORE Sports ARTICLES

    Disappointing Loss On Home Soil As Canada Loses Rugby Sevens Quarter-finals

    Disappointing Loss On Home Soil As Canada Loses Rugby Sevens Quarter-finals
    LANGFORD, B.C. — Canada lost 12-5 to England in the Cup quarter-finals Sunday at the World Rugby's Women's Series, meaning the home side will finish out of the top four.

    Disappointing Loss On Home Soil As Canada Loses Rugby Sevens Quarter-finals

    New Zealand Rugby Captain Sarah Goss Excels Off The Field At Sheep-shearing

    New Zealand Rugby Captain Sarah Goss Excels Off The Field At Sheep-shearing
    LANGFORD, B.C. — Elite rugby player and competitive sheep-shearer. New Zealand's Sarah Goss has a resume unlike few others.

    New Zealand Rugby Captain Sarah Goss Excels Off The Field At Sheep-shearing

    Canadian Women Go Unbeaten On Day 1 Of World Sevens Series Rugby Event

    Canadian Women Go Unbeaten On Day 1 Of World Sevens Series Rugby Event
    LANGFORD, B.C. — Ahead of its first tournament at home, the Canadian women's sevens rugby team tried to stay true to its routine on the road.

    Canadian Women Go Unbeaten On Day 1 Of World Sevens Series Rugby Event

    Flames Fall In Game 2, Return Home To Start Best-of-five Series Against Canucks

    Flames Fall In Game 2, Return Home To Start Best-of-five Series Against Canucks
    VANCOUVER — The Calgary Flames are heading home battered and bruised, but feeling positive about splitting the first two games of their Western Conference quarter-final with Vancouver.

    Flames Fall In Game 2, Return Home To Start Best-of-five Series Against Canucks

    Whitecaps Looking For First-ever Road Win Against Real Salt Lake

    VANCOUVER — The Vancouver Whitecaps hope to find a new midfield maestro when they visit Real Salt Lake on Saturday.

    Whitecaps Looking For First-ever Road Win Against Real Salt Lake

    Canucks Head Coach Says He'll Continue Using Four Lines Against Flames

    Canucks Head Coach Says He'll Continue Using Four Lines Against Flames
    Vancouver Canucks head coach Willie Desjardins rolled four lines for much of the regular season and he doesn't plan on changing that philosophy in the playoffs.

    Canucks Head Coach Says He'll Continue Using Four Lines Against Flames