Los Angeles Times

Ducks’ hot home streak doused

- By Jack Harris

For the first time this season, fans filed out of Honda Center silently.

They had been anything but for most of the final minutes on Sunday, roaring as the Ducks put the Calgary Flames’ net under siege in search of a game-tying goal. Over the final 20 minutes, the Ducks fired 11 shots on net. They created chances off of rushes, on the power play, and with the goalie pulled.

But, for the first time in five home games, they couldn’t break through. After Calgary’s Mikael Backlund buried a go-ahead goal with 11:03 remaining, goalie Cam Talbot shut the door. Despite dominating down the stretch, the Ducks lost 2-1.

“I liked our resiliency,” coach Dallas Eakins said. “I thought we had numerous chances to not only tie it but probably go ahead by a couple. We just couldn’t get it in the net.”

Leading up to the Flames’ eventual game-winning goal, the Ducks had seemed to be on the verge of a go-ahead tally of their own. One mistake, however, proved fatal.

Just shy of the nine-minute mark, Sam Steel had a bouncing puck poked off his stick in the neutral zone, sending the Flames on a two-on-one chance the other way. Matthew Tkachuk fed Backlund with a cross-ice pass. Goalie John Gibson had little chance at a diving glove save.

“We just want to bat that thing ahead,” Eakins said of the Ducks’ neutral-zone turnover. “We got caught up in both trying to make a play and being a little too aggressive with the jump. But that’s going to happen right now. We’re encouragin­g our guys to make plays, encouragin­g our guys to get up in the play. That’s where we’ll have to find a balance.”

The loss dropped the Ducks to 6-3-0, still good enough to keep them in second place in the Pacific Division through the opening three weeks.

“Tough not getting the points we wanted tonight,” forward Jakob Silfverber­g said. “But definitely a lot of positives out of the game.”

After falling behind in the third, the Ducks turned up the pressure. Talbot didn’t crack.

During a power play with less than 10 minutes remaining, Max Comtois couldn’t bury back-to-back tries from close range. After play returned to even strength, Nick Ritchie was also robbed trying to one-time a backdoor pass.

Their last gasp came with 11 seconds left, after Rickard Rakell slipped a centering feed to Ritchie. Again, Talbot turned the puck aside. In all, the Flames goaltender stopped 29 of the 30 shots he faced, becoming just the second netminder this year to hold the Ducks to one goal.

“I thought we had a lot of good looks,” defenseman Josh Manson said. “It just somehow hit the goalie, or maybe a little bit missed the net or hit the post.”

The Ducks scored first, taking the lead 12 seconds into the second period. Hampus Lindholm received the puck near the top of the circles and slid a backhanded feed that Silfverber­g buried past Talbot’s blocker.

 ?? Marcio Jose Sanchez Associated Press ?? CALGARY GOALIE Cam Talbot stops the Ducks’ Jakob Silfverber­g for one of his 29 saves.
Marcio Jose Sanchez Associated Press CALGARY GOALIE Cam Talbot stops the Ducks’ Jakob Silfverber­g for one of his 29 saves.

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