#Flames haven't out-shot the Stars yet this series which is led 3-2 by Dallas: 26(CGY)-26(DAL): Flames 3-2 win 26(CGY)-36(DAL): Dallas 5-4 win 23(CGY)-35(DAL): Flames 2-0 win 62(DAL)-40(CGY): Dallas 5-4 OT win 32(DAL)-29(CGY): Dallas 2-1 win
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Quips and Quotes: Flames lose to Dallas 2-1 in Game 5

Photo credit: Candice Ward-USA TODAY Sports
The Calgary Flames lost to the Dallas Stars by a 2-1 score in Game 5 on Tuesday night, pushing them to a 3-2 series deficit and onto the brink of playoff elimination.
Here’s what was discussed in the post-game zoom chats.
Stymied by a slow start
The Flames were not good in the first period. Interim coach Geoff Ward thought their start was a little slow.
“It’s really the first time I’ve seen our team a little bit nervous,” said Ward. “But it’s understandable: it’s the first time we’ve been in a 2-2 situation going into a Game 5 where you know the winner has an upper hand in terms of not having to play an elimination game in Game 6. So, I thought our guys were a little nervous in the first. This is really the first time I’ve seen us with a case of nerves all playoffs long so far.”
Mikael Backlund characterized their first period as “passive,” but noted their breakouts improved later on.
“We obviously need a better start to our games,” said Andrew Mangiapane. “That’s going to be big coming up here for our next game. Get a good start, get more pucks to the net, get more traffic to the net, maybe we score a couple early ones early on.”
Out shot, once again
Speaking of pucks to the net…
No matter how you slice it, the Flames have been out-played by Dallas.
Here’s a quick rundown of players who have a positive shot differential against Dallas:
- Shots, five on five: Erik Gustafsson
- Scoring chances, five on five: Gustafsson
- High-danger scoring chances, five on five: nobody
You can really see the impact of missing Matthew Tkachuk: he was the team’s leading scorer, arguably their best player, and definitively his team’s heart and soul. The coaching staff has mentioned throughout the past seasons that he drags his teammates into the muck and in such a tight-checking series, he could’ve been a big difference-maker. Through three games, his absence has been felt.
Need one good game
If there was a common refrain from the Flames players, it was this: they need to have one good game in Game 6, win, and then go from there. They can’t win the series on Thursday, but they can lose it if they get off the rails again.
#Flames LW Andrew Mangiapane: “We know our backs are up against the wall right now, but we have to go out and just play one good game and go from there. I still think we have more than what we’re kind of showing.”
Heading into what could be the team’s last game of the 2020 playoffs – and who knows, perhaps his last game behind the Flames bench? – Ward had a couple excellent lines that shone some light on his mindset heading into Thursday:
“The series isn’t over until you lose four times, and we haven’t lost four times yet so we’ve got to make sure we come and do everything that we can do in Game 6 to get a win.”
“The only sin, really, coming up in Game 6 is not to show up. If you come in and you play hard, you play a good game, you can be fine with it. Right now, we’ve got to prepare ourselves to come out and play that game.”
Breaking News
- The Wranglers are nearly done their mammoth road trip
- Recap: Justin Kirkland gave the Wranglers a chance to win on Wednesday but they fall in a shootout
- A pair of Flames college prospects won weekly awards
- Recap: Wranglers go-ahead goal in the last 31 seconds secures the win in Abbotsford
- Beyond the Boxscore: Flames run out of gas as Nashville takes the win 5-1.
