Connect with us

Calgary Flames

Flames Throttle Blues 7-1 in Best Performance of 2021-22 So Far

Calgary scored seven unanswered goals in the blowout win

Published

on

Calgary Flames 7 – St. Louis Blues 1



Complete Stats

Scoring

First Period

Second Period

Third Period

The Calgary Flames (and their fans for that matter) were a pissed off bunch heading into Monday nightโ€™s tilt against the St. Louis Blues. The Flames were coming off of an extremely frustrating 5-3 loss to their provincial rivals on Saturday night in Edmonton despite having played what was a very strong game and being extremely unlucky to leave without even a point.

They managed to channel that energy into a productive performance tonight to the tune of a 7-1 crushing of the Blues. The win snapped a four game losing streak to St. Louis, dating back all the way to December 2018. It was also their first win over the Blues in five tries at the Saddledome.

Despite the final scoreline, it was actually the Blues who opened the scoring in this one after their fourth line generated a turnover and made a few nice passes leading to Tyler Bozak being alone at putting a puck into a yawning cage.

Calgary struck back just 51 seconds later though as a seemingly harmless play led to Nikita Zadorov wiring home a perfect wrist shot from the right side of Jordan Binnington. The goal was his third of the season and was our first look at the elite goal song chosen for Zadorov.

The Flames jumped ahead six minutes later when Johnny Gaudreau made an outstanding play on a rush into the offensive zone, outwaiting the Blues and finding the trailing Chris Tanev in the slot who had no problem beating Binnington for his second of the year. It was one of those plays that you probably want to keep in the Gaudreau vault for down the road.

The lead was extended late in the period on the powerplay as St. Louis attempted to get a 3-on-1 while shorthanded, but a bad pass gave the Flames a rush the other way. Robert Bortuzzo for some reason slid into Binnington while trying to break up a pass, and it gave Elias Lindholm an open net for his 13th of the season and a 3-1 lead.

From that point onwards it was all Flames as they dominated in the second period, outshooting the Blues by a whopping 18-2 margin. They got goals from Sean Monahan, Blake Coleman, Adam Ruzicka, and Johnny Gaudreau in the second to widen the gap to a staggering 7-1 scoreline.

In the third period the Flames more or less coasted their way to a victory but Jacob Markstrom was far busier, facing and stopping 12 shots compared to the 9 shots he faced in the first 40 minutes. He made a number of very impressive saves in that stretch as well to end his night with a 20/21 statline, good for a .952 SV%.

With the win the Flames move to 19-12-6 on the year and move back into a playoff position on actual points with 44. They still sit 2nd in the division on points percentage though and have anywhere from 5-7 games in hand on the teams they are trailing.

Final Thoughts

Flame of the Game

Literally Everyone: I really struggled to isolate just one player for Flame of the Game tonight as everything was clicking for the team, or conversely nothing was clicking for St. Louis. Particular shoutouts go to Gaudreau, Tkachuk, Zadorov, and Ruzicka.

by Michael MacGillivray