Brodeur was born in the St Leonard district of Montreal, the same neighborhood of NHL goalie Roberto Luongo. Roy, who retired in 2003 and is coach and general manager of Quebec of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League, was born in Quebec City.
Brodeur had a connection to the Canadiens growing up: his father, Denis, was Montreal's photographer.
"Year in and year out, [Roy] was always performing so well, and that's one of the things I wanted to do," Brodeur said. "I wanted to be consistent in my career and not have an off year. I wanted to play well and be on top of things.
"You don't always have to be the best, but give your team a chance to win every single time you go out there, and that's what Patrick did, and that's one of the reasons why I kind of looked up to him early on."
Brodeur, who played 21 of his 22 NHL seasons for the Devils, is the NHL leader in regular-season wins (691; Roy is second with 551), shutouts (125; Terry Sawchuk is second with 103), games played (1,266; Luongo is second with 1,044); and minutes played (74,438; Roy is second, 60,214). In the Stanley Cup Playoffs, Brodeur ranks first in shutouts (24; Roy is second with 23) and second in wins (113; Roy is first with 151). Brodeur signed with the St. Louis Blues on Dec. 2, 2014 and played seven games for them before retiring.