Thanks guys. I guess I'm a better goalie coach than I knew, because I had her doing most of this stuff already.
Her two biggest problems are basic stamina and pure laziness. Like most teams with a few dads volunteering to coach, we don't have a legit goalie coach, and rarely does anyone think about the goalie when designing drills. We do lots of drills where players skate out with a puck, go through cones, or around the circle, come in and shoot... The goalie is either getting rapid fire shots, or is waiting a while between shots. On the ones where she's waiting around, I have been making her drop into butterflies, right, left, and then both legs. After a few she's totally spent and pretends to have a pulled muscle (groin pulls changed sides twice in one practice), or be hurt by a weak shot that clearly hit a pad. I've knelt behind the net and watched where she's leaving open and where she makes saves. It's revealed a very interesting point: When she keeps moving (ie, doing the butterfly sets) she's actually really good. But if she's set in position when the shooter comes in she barely moves a muscle in a save attempt! I mean feet stay rooted like an oak, and gloves barely move! It's like she's a statue if she's set up. Her positioning is pretty good (angles), but that doesn't mean you go stone! I had a long chat with her, including asking if she wants to be a goalie or her parents signed her up for it... Says she wants to be.
So goalies, how do I convince her to keep moving during games?
PS- I got Francois Allaire's Hockey Goalie's Complete Guide. Now I just need to find time to read it.
And thanks for the help! I appreciate it.