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Post-Game: Flames Get Frozen Out By Avs

Ryan Pike
10 years ago
 
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The Colorado Avalanche came into Calgary smarting after an 8-2 whuppin’ up north in Edmonton on Thursday night. The Calgary Flames were riding high after a pair of wins over Los Angeles and Phoenix. With the Flames rested up and riding momentum, you’d expect a simple grind-em-out home win for Calgary.
But you’d probably be wrong. With the Flames missing Joe Colborne (flu) and Brian McGrattan (lower-body) and replacing them with Derek Smith and Lane MacDermid, the Flames were riding a short bench and seemed to play it like a road game. After eking out a lead, the Flames fell by a 3-2 score, despite a pretty decent attempt at a comeback late in the third.

THE RUNDOWN

The first period was mostly Flames-driven, with the locals pushing the pace to take advantage of Colorado. The Avs had some momentum late, but the Flames generally were able to neutralize their opportunities or block them. Calgary opened the scoring via their power-play. With Lee Stempniak parked in front of J.S Giguere, Kris Russell’s point shot found the net. Assists went to Sven Baertschi and Mikael Backlund, both gradually playing their way out of Bob Hartley’s doghouse. J.S. Giguere complained about goalie interference to no avail, and even got an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty for his protests. The Flames could not capitalize on their subsequent power-play chance, and the Avalanche even came back a bit late in the period. The Flames led the period in shots (11-6), shot attempts (21-14), face-offs (12-7) and, of course, goals.
The second period was not all-Avalanche, but it was mostly Avalanche. As the period wore on, the teams spent more and more sustained time in the Calgary zone. Finally the proverbial floodgates opened, and not because of a Colorado dangle, but because of a puck-handling miscue. A soft pass behind the net by Karri Ramo was intercepted by John Mitchell, who fed Max Talbot out front for his first goal with the Avs. 54 seconds later, the Avalanche scored again, with Paul Byron unable to stop P.A. Parenteau from getting a pass in the slot. Suddenly, it was 2-1. In the middle frame the Avalanche led in shots (13-7), shot attempts (31-14) and goals, but the Flames maintained a face-off edge by a 13-8 margin.
You’d hope the Flames would play a desperate game in the third period, but the Avalanche began the period by continuing to push the pace. After a bit of back-and-forth action, Matt Stajan stole the puck on a line-change. He fed Lee Stempniak, whose stick exploded. This led to a Nathan MacKinnon-led 3-on-2. Karri Ramo made the initial save off Gabriel Landeskog, but the rebound went right to MacKinnon, who made it 3-1 Colorado. The Flames did push back after that goal, and with three minutes left they pulled the goal and got some results. The Flames battled in the offensive zone and Cammalleri found Stajan out front, tapping home a marker to make it 3-2. Jiri Hudler got his 19th assist of the season on that goal. With the net empty the Flames continued to press for the tying goal, but they just couldn’t capitalize and 3-2 was your final. Calgary had a narrow lead in shots (10-6) and attempts (19-17) in the third, but the Avalanche held a narrow face-off advantage (10-9) and skated away with the road win.

WHY THE FLAMES LOST

They failed to take advantage of a tired Colorado Avalanche team during the first when they were struggling to find their legs, and then they failed to adjust when Colorado found their legs. Standing around watching a talented Colorado top-six play with the puck is rarely a recipe for success.
In addition, taking two penalties that nullified power-plays completely derailed chances to regain momentum in the third period. Twice.

SCORING CHANCES

 
TeamPeriodTimeNoteHomeAwayState
Home117:26Smith tip317272831551624355558615v5
Home113:59Cammalleri PP451324315425243555 5v4
Home113:20Giordano PP451324315425243555 5v4
Home113:12Stempniak rebound PP47112231471116253561 5v4
Home111:03Stajan PP417181931445693592 5v4
Home12:34Backlund rebound51124314454515162635925v5
Away219:12Duchene4713182231916293561925v5
Away219:07Landeskog4713182231916293561925v5
Home216:10Butler324313244541516263561905v5
Home215:38Cammalleri 2on1313182231445692935925v5
Away215:30Duchene313182231445692935925v5
Home214:56Stempniak47131822315692935925v5
Away212:40O’Reilly511243144541516263561905v5
Away28:25Landeskog317272831555692935925v5
Away26:41Mitchell PP37171831 4791535924v5
Away26:22Stastny PP518223144 267935924v5
Away25:30Tip3243132545556112425355v5
Away22:52Landeskog3193132444769293561925v5
Away22:01Talbot goal47172728312471125355v5
Away21:06Parenteau goal47131822311516263561905v5
Away317:33MacKinnon goal47131822315692935925v5
Home316:22Byron317193132552471125355v5
Home314:52Backlund47112431471516263561905v5
Home39:08scramble57111731542492935925v5
Home39:06Giordano57111731542492935925v5
Home38:49Jones57111731542492935925v5
Home37:28Butler322243144 1516263561 4v4
Home37:23Hudler322243144 1516263561 4v4
Away36:21McGinn4571131325691135925v5
Home31:56Stajan goal471318245424152635905v5
#PlayerEV  PP  SH  
3SMID, LADISLAV15:276400:000002:0001
4RUSSELL, KRIS20:073604:174000:0600
5GIORDANO, MARK17:144205:062002:0101
7BRODIE, TJ19:246601:391001:5301
11BACKLUND, MIKAEL15:295202:031001:5500
13CAMMALLERI, MIKE17:053503:232000:0000
17BOUMA, LANCE07:315200:101001:5301
18STAJAN, MATT18:423500:101001:2202
19JONES, BLAIR12:091100:101000:3900
22STEMPNIAK, LEE15:164502:031001:3101
24HUDLER, JIRI18:036203:232000:1700
27SMITH, DEREK03:221200:000000:0000
28MACDERMID, LANE04:081200:000000:0000
31RAMO, KARRI 1211 40 02
32BYRON, PAUL12:342300:000000:3900
44BUTLER, CHRIS17:265300:101002:1601
47BAERTSCHI, SVEN12:441102:031000:0000
54JONES, DAVID12:596203:232000:0000
55O’BRIEN, SHANE10:442200:000000:0000
PeriodTotalsEVPP5v3 PPSH5v3 SH
1602040000000
23113900000200
3828200000000

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RED WARRIOR

Let’s go with Matt Stajan. Matty Franchise had a late goal to make the game close. In a game where the Flames weren’t great 5-on-5 he had a goal, wasn’t a minus player and won 75% of his face-offs. In a rare game where the NHL’s worst face-off team won most of their draws, Stajan was a big factor.

SUM IT UP

The Flames had their two-game winning string snapped by the Avalanche tonight, but they’re back in action tomorrow evening. As per tradition, it’s the late (8pm MT) game on Hockey Night in Canada, as they head up the road to Shelbyville to face off against their hated rivals, the Edmonton Oilers.
Don’t you dare miss it!
(Unless you have already made plans. It’d be rude to break plans to watch the NHL’s fourth-worst team play the fifth worst-team.)

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