Regina Leader-Post

FLAMES PREP FOR MCDAVID CHALLENGE

- WES GILBERTSON wgilbertso­n@postmedia.com

CALGARY Stopping Edmonton’s No. 97 has gotta be a group effort, and Calgary’s captain Mark Giordano, his usual defence partner TJ Brodie and shutdown centre Mikael Backlund will be among those focused on Mission: Minimize Mcdavid during Saturday’s latest instalment of the Battle of Alberta. Good luck, gents.

Connor Mcdavid, the Oilers wunderkind, is right in the thick of the NHL’S scoring race with 10 tallies and 26 points already in 18 outings this fall.

Here are five things to watch for on Saturday in Calgary:

RIVALRY RENEWED

Saturday marks the first of four instalment­s this season of the NHL’S Battle of Alberta. The Flames have notched back-to-back victories over their provincial foes, a sigh of relief for the southerner­s after the Oilers had rolled to seven straight triumphs in these rivalry matchups. The neighbouri­ng clubs are also cosy in the Pacific Division standings — currently separated by just two points — so that should only crank up the intensity in Saturday’s showdown.

BATTLE OF BACKUPS

Geography isn’t the only thing these squads have in common — both are trying to snap their go-to goalies out of their current slumps. After starter Mike Smith surrendere­d a tiebreakin­g, back-breaking softie — Artturi Lehkonen’s wrister through the wickets — in Tuesday ’s 3-2 home loss to the Montreal Canadiens, the Flames will lean on David Rittich against the Oilers. At the other end will be Mikko Koskinen, who earns a third straight start in favour of Cam Talbot.

TOGETHER AGAIN

Anxious to end a four-game los- ing skid, the Oilers reunited the dangerous duo of Connor Mcdavid and Leon Draisaitl and the payoff was immediate, with that pair combining for six points in Tuesday’s 6-2 trouncing of the Habs at Rogers Place.

SWITCHING SIDES

Glen Gulutzan had to return his keys to the Saddledome last spring, but the former Flames bench boss returns to his old stomping grounds Saturday. Gulutzan was fired by the Flames in April — and replaced less than a week later by Bill Peters — and eventually moved a few hours up the road to Edmonton, where he is now an assistant on Todd Mclellan’s staff.

THIS’N’THAT

The Oilers and New York Rangers swapped struggling forwards Friday, with Ryan Spooner on the move to Edmonton and Ryan Strome going the other way. Spooner mustered one goal, one assist and a minus-5 rating in 16 appearance­s with the Rangers this fall.

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