FlamesNation has no direct affiliation to the Calgary Flames, Calgary Sports and Entertainment, NHL, or NHLPA
Post-Game: Flames blanked by Stars
alt
Photo credit: Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports
Ryan Pike
Feb 27, 2018, 23:31 ESTUpdated: Feb 28, 2018, 00:23 EST
Man, Ben Bishop was really good tonight.
That’s the main takeaway from a game where the Calgary Flames did 90% of things correctly. Sure, their power play could’ve done a lot more with six chances. But the Dallas Stars performed reasonably well and rode a hot goaltending performance by Bishop to a 2-0 shutout victory over the Flames in a tight-checking game between two teams that both needed the two points in a jam-packed Western Conference playoff race.

The Rundown

There were only two goals in this game, so we’ll eschew the “normal” format and just look at how this game swung.
Dallas scored twice. Once late in the first period on a weird play. The Flames broke up a Dallas zone entry but couldn’t corral the puck, and it found its way to the stick of Devin Shore in front of the net. Dougie Hamilton slid to attempt a block, and Jon Gillies seemed to think Shore was going to pass the puck to his left. Shore instead went to Gillies’ right and buried a wrister to make it 1-0.
In the second Dallas made it 2-0 on the power play on another odd play. The puck was dumped in and rimmed around the back boards to the far corner. Travis Hamonic went to play the puck and got bear-hugged by a Dallas player, which allowed the puck to go to Jamie Benn, who fed Tyler Seguin for a wrister that beat Gillies high. Glen Gulutzan was livid on the non-call on the bear-hug.
The first period was pretty even, with Dallas having a slight shot edge (9-8) and chance edge (7-5). From there on, the Flames were very good at even strength. Shots were 17-7 in the second and 13-8 in the third for the visitors. Scoring chances were 4-1 in the second and 9-4 in the third for the visitors. But the Flames could not score a goal because Ben Bishop was in the zone.

Why The Flames Lost

They couldn’t generate enough dangerous chances on the power play. And when they generated scoring chances of any kind during the game, Bishop swallowed them up. He was the difference-maker tonight.
Here’s what the Flames generated in 1:55 of a five-on-three advantage: shot, miss, miss, shot, miss, miss, miss. That’s not good enough.

Red Warrior

Giordano was excellent tonight, with blocks, shots, scoring chances and monstrous possession numbers.

The Turning Point

The Flames went down 2-0 and instead of having some even strength pressure to get their momentum back, their coach takes an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty by losing his cool at a crucial time of the game.

The Numbers

(Percentage stats are 5-on-5, data via Corsica.hockey)
Player
Corsi
For%
O-Zone
Start%
Game
Score
Tkachuk
82.4
0.0
0.935
Giordano
77.8
50.0
1.525
Hamilton
75.0
53.9
1.100
Frolik
75.0
0.0
0.675
Bennett
72.7
85.7
0.475
Hathaway
71.4
50.0
0.250
Jankowski
71.4
100
0.365
Backlund
70.6
0.0
0.300
Lazar
69.2
37.5
0.110
Stajan
66.7
25.0
0.445
Brouwer
66.7
28.6
0.415
Kulak
56.3
100
0.100
Hamonic
52.4
33.3
0.325
Gaudreau
50.0
87.5
0.150
Monahan
50.0
87.5
0.265
Stone
45.0
50.0
-0.075
Brodie
40.0
33.3
-0.150
Stewart
35.7
60.0
-0.475
Gillies
0.900
Rittich

This and That

This was the fifth time this season that the Flames have been shut out.

The Drive to 96 (Points)

The Flames now have 73 points with 18 games remaining. They need 23 points over their remaining schedule – the equivalent of a 11-6-1 record to hit the 96 point mark that’ll probably be the playoff cut-off.

Up Next

The Flames (32-23-9) head to Denver tonight. They cap off their short road trip tomorrow when they play the Colorado Avalanche.