Las Vegas Review-Journal

Golden Knights seek payback vs. Calgary

Tuch: ‘We owe them’ for whipping on road

- By Adam Hill Las Vegas Review-journal

At least the Golden Knights didn’t have to wait long to seek revenge for the thumping they took Monday from the Calgary Flames.

The teams meet again at 3 p.m. on Friday at T-mobile Arena.

“We owe them,” forward Alex Tuch said of the 7-2 loss at Calgary in which the Knights gave up the most goals they had all season. “It’s good (to play again so soon). They took it to us. It was a really good game by them.”

The Knights (10-12-1) did have the benefit of regaining some confidence between the meetings as they went on the road to Arizona and beat the Coyotes 3-2 in overtime on Wednesday night.

Now they can turn their attention back to the Pacific Division-leading

KNIGHTS

Flames.

“It was an embarrassi­ng one for us and it was all on us,” defenseman Brayden Mcnabb said after the Knights practiced Thursday. “The effort wasn’t there, and obviously our play wasn’t there. We’re ready. We definitely owe them, but they’re a good team.”

The Flames (13-8-1) certainly deserve credit for what they were able to do Monday.

They outskated and outworked the Knights, generating scoring opportunit­ies seemingly at will for the first 40 minutes.

Tuch said he talked to members of the Flames who said it was their best performanc­e in a long time. He also was wary of the Knights focusing too much on the last meeting.

“We can’t worry too much about what happened last game,” Tuch said. “We have to worry about us in this locker room.”

The Knights hope they picked up a few things strategica­lly that will help slow down the Flames, though coach Gerard Gallant declined to give specifics.

“I’m not going to tell you, but I hope it works,” he joked. “I think it’s great (to play them again so soon). You get beat like that you want to get back at it. We got back at it in Arizona last night and played a real good game. But it will be good to play Calgary again. It’s fresh in our minds, so hopefully, we’re ready to respond and play real good.”

Marc-andre Fleury is expected back in net after sitting out the loss in Calgary.

Fleury had to watch his backup Malcolm Subban endure an onslaught of high-danger shots.

“It’s good to get a chance to play them again right away,” Fleury said. “We can put that last one behind us and get a little confidence against them. They’re a good team though. They did the same thing to Winnipeg (on Wednesday).

They have a lot of guys with skill who can score, so we have to be ready.”

Subban was far from the team’s biggest problem in the loss. The Knights made it far too easy on Calgary’s skilled forwards to skate and let players set up in dangerous areas without much challenge.

They can’t allow that to happen no matter who’s in net.

“I think we were a little bit too lackadaisi­cal and we just weren’t making the hard plays we needed to,” Tuch said. “It wasn’t like we were turning pucks over left and right, but they were making the smart plays, we weren’t covering well and we took some bad penalties that led to goals. They were feeling it, obviously.”

There is some precedent to the Knights responding well to a bad November loss. Last season, they followed an 8-3 November road loss to the Oilers with five straight wins.

Contact Adam Hill at ahill@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-277-8028. Follow @Adamhilllv­rj on Twitter.

 ?? Jeff Mcintosh ?? The Associated Press Mark Jankowski of the Flames and Alex Tuch, right, of the Golden Knights jostle for position in the third period of Calgary’s 7-2 victory Monday night.
Jeff Mcintosh The Associated Press Mark Jankowski of the Flames and Alex Tuch, right, of the Golden Knights jostle for position in the third period of Calgary’s 7-2 victory Monday night.
 ??  ?? Las Vegas Review-journal file UNR running back James Butler paints the Fremont Cannon blue after the Wolf Pack beat UNLV 45-10 on Thanksgivi­ng weekend in 2016 at Sam Boyd Stadium. The rivalry game drew an announced crowd of just 23,569.
Las Vegas Review-journal file UNR running back James Butler paints the Fremont Cannon blue after the Wolf Pack beat UNLV 45-10 on Thanksgivi­ng weekend in 2016 at Sam Boyd Stadium. The rivalry game drew an announced crowd of just 23,569.

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