While both the goalie and the team will earn a loss in the OT (overtime/shootout loss) column, the goalie will be awarded with the shutout. Furthermore, the opposing goalie will have also earned the shutout on top of the win.
Even if a backup goalie comes in after 65 minutes for the shootout, the goalie to allow no goals during all regulation minutes will be credited with the shutout. In the case of a 0-0 tie after 65 minutes of regulation and overtime, both goalies, if they played all minutes, will be awarded a shutout.
In ice hockey, a shutout (SO) is credited to a goaltender who successfully stops the other team from scoring during the entire game. A shutout may be shared between two goaltenders, but will not be listed in either of their individual statistics.
(ʃʌtaʊt ) also shut-out. Word forms: shutouts. countable noun. In sports such as football and hockey, a shutout is a game or part of a game in which one of the teams wins and prevents the opposing team from scoring.
In the four seasons prior to the lockout, NHL goalies posted shutouts in an average of 14 percent of the games played. It was not that uncommon for a standout goalie to record 10 or more shutouts in a season.
Still going strong at 44 years young, Brady's last shutout came when he was 29-years-old in a New England Patriots loss to the Miami Dolphins on Week 14 of the 2006 season, per NFL Research. The first shutout of Brady's career came to be on Week 1 of the 2003 season against the host Buffalo Bills.
Surprisingly, no team has ever been shutout in Super Bowl history, while the most points ever given up in a Super Bowl is 55.
shut•out (shut′out′), n. an act or instance of shutting out.
1 : exclude. 2 : to prevent (an opponent) from scoring in a game or contest. 3 : to forestall the bidding of (bridge opponents) by making a high or preemptive bid.
While both the goalie and the team will earn a loss in the OT (overtime/shootout loss) column, the goalie will be awarded with the shutout. Furthermore, the opposing goalie will have also earned the shutout on top of the win.
Definition. A starting pitcher is credited with a shutout when he pitches the entire game for a team and does not allow the opposition to score. By definition, any pitcher who throws a shutout is also awarded a win.
If two goaltenders combine for a shutout, neither receives credit for the shutout. Instead it is recorded as a Club shutout.
The National Hockey League (NHL) modern record for most shutouts by a goalie in a season is 15 shutouts by Tony Esposito (Canada) playing for the Chicago Blackhawks (USA) in the 1969-70 season.
Tom Brady has 9 shutouts in his career.
How many times has Tom Brady been regular-season shut out?
Since 1966, the Pittsburgh Steelers have the most shutouts by a team in a season, with 5 shutouts in 1976.
In Major League Baseball, a shutout (denoted statistically as ShO or SHO) refers to the act by which a single pitcher pitches a complete game and does not allow the opposing team to score a run.
Definition of shut-in
(Entry 1 of 3) 1 : a person who is confined to home, a room, or bed because of illness or incapacity. 2 : a narrow gorge-shaped part of an otherwise wide valley. 3 : available oil or gas which is not being produced from an existing well.
3. verb To isolate someone from oneself or others. In this usage, a noun or pronoun can be used between "shut" and "out." Please don't shut me out—I just want to help! The group of friends shut him out because of his political opinions.
Shutout definition
The act of preventing the opposing team from scoring in a game.
or shout·out
Informal. a quick public expression of thanks, admiration, etc.: I'd like to give a big shout-out to my mom who's in the audience tonight.
Words Related to shut out. blackball, blacklist, excommunicate, ostracize.
Shutout is a verb and can also act as a noun. A noun is a type of word the meaning of which determines reality. Nouns provide the names for all things: people, objects, sensations, feelings, etc. The verb is the part of the sentence that is conjugated and expresses action and state of being.
The Houston Oilers have the ball the most by a team in a game, with 48:34 of possession against the Cowboys on November 10, 1991.
1. Super Bowl XXIV: San Francisco 49ers 55, Denver Broncos 10. Not Denver again! The largest margin in Super Bowl history was this 45-point laugher, where Joe Montana (22-for-29, 297 yards, five touchdowns, and zero interceptions) outclassed John Elway (10-for-26, 108 yards, zero touchdowns, and two interceptions).