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Post-Game: Low Event

10 years ago
 

 
 Via the NHL
Tonight’s Flames game against Minnesota was simply a continuation of the type of play that led to Sunday’s overtime win in Chicago – for the first, oh, 47.5 minutes.
Things came off the rails after that, though, and the end result was an ugly 5-1 loss to a very good Minnesota team.

The Rundown

Like all of the games against the Triumvirate of Bore™, this one was slow to start. Two scoring chances were all that were managed before Jiri Hudler continued his sublime season, scoring off a nice pass from Lance “Top-6” Bouma. The Wild would answer back quickly, as Mikko Koivu scored less than 4 minutes later with a nice display of hand-eye co-ordination. Koivu’s second chance of the period resulted in a particularly nice stop from Reto Berra, as the goalie had to come all the way across the net to make the save on the streaking centre. Shots were 8-7 Calgary, all at EV. Chances were 4-4, all at EV.
The second period was somehow even lower event than the first. A couple of penalties were called in the period, but there wasn’t much action aside from that and a PP goal from Zach Parise to put the Wild up 2-1. Brodie allowed Parise to sneak in behind him while working the box, and Parise caught a great pass from Ryan Suter. Berra almost had it – he made the first stop on Parise – but the second whack sent the puck behind the net. The rest of the period was sleep-inducing. Shots were 9-8 Calgary, 7-4 Calgary at EV. Chances were 3-2 Minnesota, 4-1 Minnesota at EV.
The third actually started off with a huge block by Chris Butler on a 5-on-2 early on after a horrific change by Jiri Hudler and Sean Monahan. Perhaps that was a sign of the apocalypse to come, as the Wild scored three goals off of the sticks of Justin Fontaine, Zach Parise (again, ugh) and Zenon Konopka (yeah, I know!) in quick succession. Redonk play from Koivu on the second Parise goal, drawing Wideman away from his man. It’s hard to see what Wideman was doing on the play, as Koivu was clearly Backlund’s man. The Flames didn’t really manage anything offensively in the 2nd half of the period. Shots were 9-8 for Minnesota, 8-7 Minnesota at EV. Chances were 5-2 Wild, all at EV.

Why The Flames Lost

A pisspoor second half of the third period. Despite being marginally outplayed and down a goal, the Flames were in it until the Wild decided to play like the team they are with about 10 minutes left. The Flames had no counter.

Scoring Chances

Wild in Red, Flames in Blue
TeamPeriodTimeNoteHomeAwayState
Away116:37Glencross20222529376447182029545v5
Away116:18Cammalleri391120253778132939445v5
Away114:37Hudler (Goal)2415172837617232429555v5
Home110:56Parise2349113778132939445v5
Home110:53Koivu (Goal)24151728371115162941555v5
Away14:07Cammalleri311202537 68132955 4v4
Home12:43Koivu2915202237720232944545v5
Home10:56Parise3911202537718202944545v5
Home215:05Pominville20242529376446111516295v5
Home213:32Parise (Goal)6152237466446152324295v5
Home29:16Heatley1517202528371820294154555v5
Away26:15Russell20212225293746111329395v5
Away25:00Hudler2491137 46132024294v5
Away317:53Hudler2422293764715232429445v5
Away314:33Jones2415172837611182954555v5
Home313:14Koivu39112025374681329395v5
Home311:56Fontaine (Goal)614212437461523242941555v5
Home36:47Parise (Goal)911202537 46111829 4v4
Home36:35Spurgeon629374664 78132944 4v4
Home36:05Granlund629374664 78132944 
4v4
 
#PlayerEV  PP  SH  
4RUSSELL, KRIS17:572404:281000:5500
6WIDEMAN, DENNIS18:504404:171001:0700
7BRODIE, TJ22:003501:330002:0000
8COLBORNE, JOE16:482401:280000:0000
11BACKLUND, MIKAEL10:362301:070000:3600
13CAMMALLERI, MIKE16:183404:091000:3100
15JACKMAN, TIM09:541400:000000:0000
16MCGRATTAN, BRIAN07:310200:110000:0000
17BOUMA, LANCE09:561000:000000:3800
18STAJAN, MATT15:162300:060002:0400
20GLENCROSS, CURTIS09:161301:501001:1700
23MONAHAN, SEAN12:422301:350000:0000
24HUDLER, JIRI12:112204:221000:2700
29BERRA, RETO 712 10 00
39GALIARDI, TJ14:482200:280000:4100
41BILLINS, CHAD10:300300:300000:0000
44BUTLER, CHRIS20:512500:030002:1200
54JONES, DAVID14:262302:170000:0000
55O’BRIEN, SHANE12:013300:000000:0000
 
PeriodTotalsEVPP5v3 PPSH5v3 SH
1444400000000
2231310000000
3252500000000

Red Warrior

I’m going to go with Jiri Hudler, who is driving the offensive bus for the Flames in pretty much every way right now. It would be great if this could hold up till the trade deadline.

Sum It Up

The Flames really did play okay for the majority of the game. Minnesota is a really good team and they ran into the buzzsaw that is Josh Harding: .969 EVSV% in 12 games, which is essentially impossible. (No, seriously, it is. Only 6 goals on 186 shots? Holy hell.) They just couldn’t hold onto the rope. In a vaccum? Poor game, with only 7 EV scoring chances generated. However, they only gave up 12 against a much superiour team, so…
A rather ugly loss will have to be flushed from memory (not really, they should probably study it) as it doesn’t get any easier for the Flames as they travel to St. Louis for their next game. Puck drop is at 6 on Thursday.

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