Toronto Star

Blowout lit fuse for Flames

On ride to first place since blow to their pride in their home space

- DONNA SPENCER

The Calgary Flames bounced from humiliatio­n into first place in their division in a few short weeks.

Since a 9-1loss at home Oct. 25 to the Pittsburgh Penguins, the Flames have gone 15-5-2. A 32point haul in that span is second only to the Tampa Bay Lightning (36).

Giving up eight unanswered goals and getting booed at Scotiabank Saddledome is arguably the best thing that happened to the Flames in the first third of this season.

“That was a long night,” head coach Bill Peters recalled Friday. “You never want go through that as a player, as a coach and as an organizati­on and to go through it at home is even worse probably.

“I think it was a real good wake-up call for our guys. I’d rather lose that game and go on a good positive streak than win and go 50-50, lose one and win one and lose one.”

Not including Friday’s results, Calgary (20-10-2) tops the Pacific Division and is tussling with the Nashville Predators (2110-1) and Winnipeg Jets (209-2) for first in the Western Conference.

This Flames team under Peters, in his first season behind their bench, bear a resemblanc­e to the 2014-15 edition feared for its third-period comebacks under Bob Hartley.

The 2015 Flames won a total of 10 games with third-period rallies and overall earned 24 of 97 points when trailing after two. The current Flames won a seventh game trailing after 40 minutes, scoring twice in the final 68 seconds and again in overtime, in Wednesday’s 6-5 win over the Philadelph­ia Flyers.

While the Flames have turned the puck over more than any other NHL team in their last 20 games, Calgary is almost at good as stealing it.

“Obviously scoring goals in the NHL is fun, but … I think we still have to tighten up defensivel­y,” centre Sean Monahan observed. “We’re giving up a lot of chances, but still generating a lot. We’ve got to clean that up.”

Calgary maintained its momentum into December despite Michael Frolik (lower body), defencemen Mike Stone (blood clot) and Juusu Valimaki (lower body) out of the lineup for the last 10 games, and centre Mikael Backlund (upper body) sidelined the last three. Peters thought it possible Backland could return to the lineup for either Saturday’s game in Minnesota or Sunday’s in St. Louis.

The top line of Monahan, Johnny Gaudreau and off-season acquisitio­n Elias Lindholm has produced 25 goals in Calgary’s last 14 games.

“This is definitely the best line that I’ve been a part of,” Monahan said.

The Flames have limited shots on the goalies since the Pittsburgh debacle with the secondlowe­st total in the NHL and an average of 25.7 per game.

“We all felt we were embarrasse­d as a group,” captain Mark Giordano recalled. “At the time it sucked, but looking back, it made us realize we can’t not defend and win.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada