The Colorado Avalanche didn't waste time dwelling on the past. One night after an 8-2 drubbing by the Edmonton Oilers, the Avalanche bounced back to hold off the Calgary Flames 3-2 at Scotiabank Saddledome on Friday night. Maxime Talbot, PA Parenteau and Nathan MacKinnon scored, and Jean-Sebastien Giguere made 26 saves for the Avalanche (20-7-0), who improved to 17-0-0 when leading after two periods.
"It was very important," Giguere
said. "We needed to respond the right way, show everybody
that we're human, the same as anyone else. We might lose some games
where we didn't play well but we're able to bounce back the next
game. I thought we played a terrific game tonight."
Kris
Russell and Matt
Stajan had goals for the Flames, who entered the game with
back-to-back victories but couldn't string together three consecutive
wins for the first time this season. Colorado trailed 1-0 late in the
second period but scored twice in the final two minutes to erase the
deficit. Karri
Ramo, who had allowed one goal in each of the two victories,
opened the door for the Avalanche. He tried to clear the puck off the
boards but had his attempt picked off by John Mitchell, who quickly
fed Talbot for his second of the season and first as a member of the
Avalanche at the 18-minute mark.
"It's about time," Talbot said.
"I've waited a lot of games for this as an Av and I felt right
after the goal, you've got 50 pounds off your shoulders. Your head is
a little higher and the play slows down for you. My game is not about
scoring goals all the time but it's nice to participate in the
offense of this team."
Ramo said he should have played the puck
differently."I just played it to the wrong side. I should
have played it to the backhand. They got momentum and scored three
goals, so it was a big game-changing moment there. It's hockey.
Mistakes cost goals. My overall game was all right, but those
mistakes are what counts and I have to avoid those."
Defenseman Ladislav
Smid didn't pin the error on Ramo."He has been amazing
for us, I thought, the last few games. Colorado had so many other
chances and he was really, really good for us. He doesn't have to
blame himself. There's another five players that have to help him."
On the same shift, Talbot retrieved a dump-in and
found Parenteau alone in the slot, and he beat Ramo 54 seconds later
for his second in as many games and a 2-1 lead.
"I had good legs tonight," Talbot
said. "We were even at the end of a shift but I felt good and
[Mitchell] made a good dump and forechecked well and attacked the
net. I saw PA coming in the slot. I felt it, that shift. It was
definitely a good goal by PA."
MacKinnon extended the lead to 3-1 at 2:28 of the
third. The first player taken in the 2013 NHL Draft gained the
Calgary zone before dropping a pass to Gabriel
Landeskog. He then circled behind the net, picked up his
linemate's rebound and buried it behind Ramo. The Flames tried to
claw their way back in it with less than 10 minutes remaining. With a
delayed penalty coming to Landeskog, former Colorado forward David
Jones took a centering pass from Mikael
Backlund but couldn't beat Giguere from in close. The ensuing
penalty was quickly erased by Nate
Guenin, who was tripped by Mark
Giordano on a partial breakaway. The Flames kept coming and cut
the margin to one with 1:55 left in regulation and Ramo on the bench
in favor of a sixth attacker. Mike
Cammalleri fed Stajan for a cross-crease tap-in to cut Colorado's
lead to one. But Calgary couldn't connect again on a second try with
the empty net. After their beating in Edmonton, the Avalanche came
out flat in the first period and paid the price. With Mitchell
serving a holding penalty, Russell's slap shot found its way through
traffic before hitting the back of the net at 7:01 to give the Flames
a 1-0 lead. Lee
Stempniak bumped into Giguere moments before Russell's shot snuck
by, drawing the ire of both the Avalanche goaltender and coach
Patrick Roy. Giguere flipped the net in protest and was assessed an
additional minor for unsportsmanlike conduct.
"I thought [I was bumped] a little bit,"
Giguere said. "I didn't like my reaction after. I acted like
a 2-year-old. I thought we responded pretty well after that. We
killed that penalty and then I thought we started playing a little
bit better after that."
Giguere and the Avalanche kept Calgary at bay the
rest of the period, but the Flames still took a lead into the second
period for just the fifth time in 28 games this season.
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