Calgary Herald

Flames goalie sharp as team takes lead in Pacific

Calgary netminder stops 28 of 29 shots in Arizona to seal first victory since Nov. 1

- KRISTEN ANDERSON kanderson@postmedia.com twitter.com/KDotAnders­on

Pick a storyline, any storyline.

There were many to choose from in the Calgary Flames’ 6-1 victory over the Arizona Coyotes.

Let’s start with the fact the visitors shook off Friday’s 2-0 loss to the Vegas Golden Knights to take sole possession of the Pacific Division with a 14-9-1 record. The Flames have also scored 19 goals in their last four games despite the aforementi­oned shutout.

Against a struggling Coyotes squad, losers of four straight, they scored three short-handed goals with one in the first period (Noah Hanifin) and two in the third (TJ Brodie and Mark Jankowski) on the same power play. It was the first time since March 9, 1991, the Flames have scored a trio of shorties, when Theoren Fleury was credited for all of them.

Hanifin also netted his first two goals since joining the Flames from the Carolina Hurricanes in the off-season with the other coming on a man advantage in the second period.

James Neal’s memorable marker — his 500th career point — was a big relief after going pointless in the previous nine games. On Sunday, he had three shots on net in 15:13 of ice time.

No. 500, however, is impressive.

“Five-hundred points, that’s a big number, a great career to this point and there’s more to come,” Flames head coach Bill Peters said.

Then there was netminder Mike Smith, who turned aside 28 of 29 shots to seal his first victory since Nov. 1. The win comes as a huge relief after dropping his last three starts and backing up David Rittich in the four games before Sunday.

“I thought it was a good effort all the way around,” Peters said. "I thought we bounced back good from the first game on this trip. I thought Smitty was real excellent in net, very calm and composed. I thought we got contributi­ons throughout the lineup. We obviously ended up with three shorthande­d goals, but the penalty killing itself was good.

“A good way to end the trip.” Sean Monahan opened the scoring at 7:27, netting his 13th of the season, and Hanifin’s shorthande­d marker came at the end of the first while Austin Czarnik was off for hooking. Hanifin built on the Flames’ lead on a second-period power play, while Jankowski added the Flames’ fourth. Brodie and Jankowski rounded out the scoring in the third.

Hanifin became the third Flames defenceman to score a power-play goal and a shorthande­d goal in the same game. Mark Giordano did so on Dec. 23, 2006, versus Vancouver, while Al MacInnis did it on March 26, 1988, also against Vancouver.

Meanwhile, Smith was en route to his second shutout of the season when Flames defender Travis Hamonic coughed up the puck to the Coyotes’ leading scorer Clayton Keller, who made no mistake.

Hamonic let out his frustratio­ns by breaking his stick over the crossbar.

“Yeah, I threw a nice pizza there at the end,” Hamonic said. “(Smith) played well. Unfortunat­ely, I made a stupid play at the end there. I didn’t see the guy, obviously.”

ALBERTA TOUGH

Early in the second period, an errant clearing attempt from Brad Richardson flew toward the bench and struck Peters directly on his left jaw. The impact startled the patrons at Gila River Arena and had everyone worried when the 52-year-old bench boss dropped to the ground. Flames trainer Kent Kobelka immediatel­y turned his attention to Peters.

After a few minutes, Peters was helped off the bench with a towel draped over his face while assistant coach Martin Gelinas was given the lineup card and took over the bench.

Peters was given eight stitches and came back on the bench with five minutes left in the second period.

“I think it’s going to hurt more (Monday),” he said with a chuckle. “There’s not a lot of room out there and you have to be paying attention ... got stitched up and back to work.”

It wasn’t the first time Peters has been clipped with a puck.

“It happened a few years ago (with Carolina). He got hit with the puck (and) Hammer (Travis Hamonic) actually shot it,” said Hanifin with a chuckle. “We were playing the Islanders and it hit him. But it’s always scary when you see your coach get hit in the head like that. I’m glad he’s all right.”

Peters shrugged it off.

“I hope it’s the last time, but probably not,” he said.

SEEING RED

If you were wondering why the Flames were wearing their home red jerseys for both road games, you weren’t alone.

It was the Golden Knights’ fault. They wanted to wear their road white sweaters for a home game and asked the Flames if they’d co-operate. So to save them from bringing both sets of jerseys, general manager Brad Treliving asked if the Coyotes would mind wearing their road black jerseys Sunday.

AROUND THE BOARDS

The Flames scratched D Dalton Prout (conditioni­ng assignment), while D Juuso Valimaki was out with a lower-body injury, as was LW Ryan Lomberg, who was recalled Friday from the Stockton Heat ... D Oliver Kylington drew in for Valimaki, playing his first NHL game since his debut on April 9, 2016 . ... After Coyotes G Antti Raanta was yanked in the third period after allowing six goals on 26 shots, call-up Adin Hill drew in. Hill played his minor hockey in Calgary for the Bisons and Buffaloes before graduating to the Alberta Junior Hockey League’s Canucks. The 22-year-old, who was born in Comox, B.C., played his Western Hockey League days in Portland.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Calgary Flames goalie Mike Smith stopped 28 of 29 shots in Arizona after a 2-0 loss in Vegas.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Calgary Flames goalie Mike Smith stopped 28 of 29 shots in Arizona after a 2-0 loss in Vegas.
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