Calgary Herald

Lindholm on track for new personal best in goals

Soft-spoken Swedish right-winger on career-best scoring pace for Flames

- WES GILBERTSON wgilbertso­n@postmedia.com Twitter.com/WesGilbert­son

The easy explanatio­n is the company that he keeps.

It’s only mid-December and Elias Lindholm is already on the brink of eclipsing his career-high for goals in his sixth NHL campaign.

Without a doubt, the summer trade acquisitio­n has benefited from riding shotgun with Johnny Gaudreau and Sean Monahan on the Calgary Flames’ top line.

But the 24-year-old right-winger doesn’t have 16 goals — second to only Monahan among Flames’ marksmen — by some sort of fluke.

“He’s playing with two really good players, obviously,” said Flames alternate captain Matthew Tkachuk. “But his shot ... It’s so impressive to see his release and just how smart heiswithit.

“His shot is very, very underrated.”

Sixteen times so far this fall, that shot has found the back of the net.

Heading into Wednesday ’s meeting with the Philadelph­ia Flyers at the Saddledome (6:30 p.m., Sportsnet West/Sportsnet 960 The Fan), Lindholm has already matched his goal total from 81 contests last season on behalf of the Carolina Hurricanes.

With his next strike, the softspoken Swede will equal his career-high of 17 lamp-lightings, a standard set during his sophomore campaign of 2014-15.

The way he skates, the way he thinks the game and yeah, the way he can rip it, it’s hard to believe that Lindholm has never potted a few more.

“That’s crazy to think that,” Monahan agreed. “I mean, he’s an elite player. He has a good shot. He reads the game well. He does everything well.”

Perhaps that’s part of the reason he has never scored at this sort of clip.

Now bench boss in Calgary, Bill Peters also coached Lindholm for four winters with the Hurricanes. There, offence was not always atop the to-do list for the versatile upand-comer, the fifth overall selection in the 2013 NHL Draft.

“What we did … with Carolina, in my time there, was we changed him around a lot,” Peters said. “He was a centre. He was a winger. He was used as an offensive guy, used as a checker. So we moved him around. And we moved him around a lot on the power play — a little bit of man in the middle, a little bit of goal-line stuff.

“I think there’s been more consistenc­y for him here and I think that’s helped him.”

He has consistent­ly worked with Gaudreau and Monahan, with that trio split for only a handful of periods all season.

He has consistent­ly produced. Lindholm has also been credited with 18 assists in 31 loggings this fall. He’s one of four Flames forwards currently averaging upwards of a point per game (Gaudreau, Monahan and Tkachuk are the others).

“For me, it’s just a number,” Lindholm said, downplayin­g the significan­ce of his speedy ascent toward a could-be career-high tally. “I always knew I could score more and put up more points, but most important is the team doing well.

“I always felt like I could score over 20, but it’s a tough league. It’s hard to score. Pucks are going in right now, so it’s been fun so far.”

It’s also been a reward for all of his summer trips to visit his parents. He has a shooting gallery of sorts set up at their place.

“We always had a little platform with a lot of pucks and a net that we were shooting at — me and my brother — and then this plastic ice came out a couple of years ago so I bought a few of those and me and my dad and brother worked for a couple of weeks to put this thing together,” Lindholm said. “So it’s been pretty good. A lot of toys out there, you can stickhandl­e and stuff like that, and it has definitely helped.”

That shot is a weapon. Thanks to the company he’s keeping in Calgary, he has really been able to show it off.

Have Gaudreau and Monahan helped him reach new heights?

Sure, but give this guy some credit, too.

“Playing with guys like Johnny and Monny, who have a lot of hockey sense and offensive ability, I think it’s created a gateway for him to really reveal what he can do,” said Flames defenceman Noah Hanifin, who also arrived in that draft-day blockbuste­r with the Hurricanes.

“I’ve always known how good of a player he was, but now he’s playing with a guy like Johnny, who is probably a top five player in the league. His ability to move the puck and create space for his linemates is awesome. And Lindy is such a smart player — he reads off the guys he plays with so well.”

For me, it’s just a number. I always knew I could score more and put up more points

CALGARY Streaking, anyone?

Calgary’s Johnny Gaudreau is shooting to start a new streak, while Philadelph­ia’s Jakub Voracek is aiming to keep his alive when the Flames battle the Flyers on Wednesday.

The 25-year-old Gaudreau was saluted as the NHL’s third star of the week, but that time frame ended with a bit of a bummer: his seven-game point spree was snapped in Sunday’s 1-0 shutout loss to the Oilers in Edmonton. He piled up four goals and nine assists during that wicked run.

Voracek, meanwhile, arrives in Calgary on a five-game tear. The 29-year-old has scored three times and added a hat trick of helpers during his heater.

Here are five things to watch for when the Flames (19-10-2) host the Flyers (12-13-3):

1 Welcome back, captain Calgary’s club captain and defensive stalwart Mark Giordano returns to action against the Flyers after serving a two-game suspension for a knee-on-knee knock on Minnesota Wild centre Mikko Koivu. The Flames allowed only three goals against during Giordano’s absence, but their first power-play unit seemed out of sync without the 35-year-old at quarterbac­k.

2 Centre of attention The Flyers could also welcome back a key piece at the Saddledome. Sean Couturier is expected to return to the lineup after missing a pair of contests due to an undisclose­d lowerbody ailment. Philadelph­ia’s injured list also includes former Flames goaltender Brian Elliott, who has been out since mid-November with what’s believed to be a wonky groin.

3 Dandy dozen Despite Sunday’s 1-0 blanking in the latest edition of the Battle of Alberta, the Flames have been on quite a roll, piling up a 9-2-1 record over their past dozen dates, helping them surge to the top of the Western Conference. They have out-scored opponents 49-26 during that stretch.

4 Feeling the love While his charges enjoyed day off Monday, Flames head coach Bill Peters was a guest on the Jim Rome Show, proof the sports world is taking notice of the team’s recent roll. “Obviously, any type of national recognitio­n — on either side of the border — is good,” Peters said after Tuesday’s practice. “But it’s a good team. It’s an exciting team. It’s a fun team. It’s a team worth watching.”

5 This and that Flyers leading scorer Claude Giroux missed Tuesday’s practice, but it was reportedly just a maintenanc­e day for the firstline centre … Flames rising star Matthew Tkachuk celebrated his 21st birthday on Tuesday … The Flyers’ dreadful start cost Ron Hextall his job as general manager, with Chuck Fletcher hired last week as his replacemen­t. The Flyers have a 2-2-1 record since Hextall’s ouster.

 ?? AL CHAREST/FILES ?? Elias Lindholm has 16 goals for the Calgary Flames, playing with Johnny Gaudreau and Sean Monahan on Calgary’s top line. “His shot ... It’s so impressive to see his release and just how smart he is with it,” said Flames alternate captain Matthew Tkachuk.
AL CHAREST/FILES Elias Lindholm has 16 goals for the Calgary Flames, playing with Johnny Gaudreau and Sean Monahan on Calgary’s top line. “His shot ... It’s so impressive to see his release and just how smart he is with it,” said Flames alternate captain Matthew Tkachuk.
 ??  ?? Jakub Voracek
Jakub Voracek

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