Calgary Herald

FLAMES’ BOTTOM LINE IS TIED INTO NET WORTH

Workhorse Smith’s robust play masking early-season defensive deficienci­es

- ERIC FRANCIS efrancis@postmedia.ca

The standings may say otherwise, but the Calgary Flames are playing no better than they were last NHL season when they won just once in their first four outings.

In fact, this year’s team is playing worse. Much worse. The difference is Mike Smith. Glen Gulutzan pointed out as much Wednesday night in a heated post-game dissection of his troops in which he said he was concerned about the team’s battle level, execution, breakouts and puck management, amongst other things.

The timing of his critique may have seemed odd given the team had just battled back to win a gritty game over the Los Angeles Kings in overtime, posting their third straight victory to open the year 3-1.

However, without Smith’s heroics this team could easily be 1-3 or 0-4. Probably should be. The number that should be troubling to all stakeholde­rs is 40, which is the AVERAGE number of shots Smith has faced in the club’s four games.

No goalie in the league has been subjected to anywhere near that much rubber.

It’s an indictment of the team’s defensive play, which Gulutzan said is reflected in how badly they’ve been out-chanced this season.

To put that in perspectiv­e, last year at this time, the club allowed an average of 27 shots against, which is 33 per cent fewer than a squad that should be better in its own zone given the addition of Travis Hamonic and having a goalie who can move the puck as well as Smith.

In each of the last two seasons, the Flames scored 12 goals in their first four games. The difference being Smith has only allowed nine in 160 shots, while Brian Elliott and Chad Johnson combined to cough up 14 in 107.

Smith is stopping pucks at an unheard of .950 clip.

Not to harp on Elliott’s welldocume­nted struggles, but he opened last year facing no more than 31 shots in his first three games but posted a paltry .873 save percentage to keep the Flames winless unless Chad Johnson won Game 4 in overtime.

Like Miikka Kiprusoff did for so many years here, the netminding is masking so many of the Flames other shortcomin­gs. That has to change. No team can challenge for 100 points (Gulutzan’s goal) allowing more than 40 shots in threequart­ers of their games, as the Flames have allowed so far.

The good news is that with a team as deep, speedy and talented as the Flames, it’s fixable.

The bad news is that if opponents are allowed to continue peppering Smith (and eventually backup Eddie Lack) with such volume, eventually the dam will break and the Flames will struggle. Or will they? With the Arizona Coyotes, Smith faced more than 40 shots 11 times last season behind a porous, young defence and somehow managed to go the first nine without a regulation loss.

All told, in those games he was 6-2-3, which the Flames would take.

He thrives on being a workhorse.

On paper, this team should be far better than the Coyotes at limiting such shooting galleries, which is exactly what Gulutzan is pushing for.

One might assume the slashing crackdown and increased penalty counts have played a role in the elevated number of shots and chances the opposition has generated. Not so. Last year, the Flames were short-handed 19 times compared to 15 this year.

This is on the team — a squad that is spending far too much time in its own zone, as Gulutzan lamented.

A similar effort by his bunch Friday night at home against the Ottawa Senators (7 p.m., Sportsnet Flames/Sportsnet 960 The Fan) would be a troubling sign in Gulutzan’s eyes.

If Lack starts Saturday in Vancouver and plays the way he has the last few years, the Flames could be exposed in humiliatin­g fashion for being far too reliant on their goalie.

With all the hype and excitement surroundin­g Jaromir Jagr in town, Smith probably hasn’t been given the due he deserves for the team’s division-leading record.

Few probably know his groundbrea­king, 43-save performanc­e to snap the 13-year skid in Anaheim was the third-most saves for a shutout in franchise history.

Few also likely realized how big a role he’s played thus far, unquestion­ably the Flames star in all four games.

No wonder Gulutzan left Los Angeles in a tizzy.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Flames goalie Mike Smith and Los Angeles Kings centre Trevor Lewis battle for the puck behind the net during NHL action Wednesday in Los Angeles. With a .950 save percentage, Smith has been Calgary’s most compelling performer in the early going.
MARK J. TERRILL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Flames goalie Mike Smith and Los Angeles Kings centre Trevor Lewis battle for the puck behind the net during NHL action Wednesday in Los Angeles. With a .950 save percentage, Smith has been Calgary’s most compelling performer in the early going.
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