NHL

Colorado Avalanche at Calgary Flames

· National Hockey League
Final
2 - 1

Colorado beats Calgary 2-1 in clash of West division leaders

“Gutsy win by our group,” Avalanche coach Jared Bednar said. “I thought our team was highly committed on the defensive side of things.

“Power play steps up at the end gets us a big win.”

Central Division-leading Colorado (47-14-6) won the season series 2-1. The Avalanche did so without Nathan MacKinnon (lower body), their leading scorer who was hurt in a third-period fight with Minnesota’s Matt Dumba on Sunday.

Nazem Kadri took MacKinnon’s spot on the Avs’ top line with Nichuskin and Mikko Rantanen. After going winless in his two previous starts, Kuemper improved to 31-9-3.

“Definitely a credit to the depth of the team,” Kuemper said. “The willingness and ability for guys to step up their game and make up for the guys that are missing.”

Tyler Toffoli scored for Pacific Division-leading Calgary (40-18-8). Jacob Markstrom (31-13-7) stopped 28 shots. The Flames are 2-2-0 on a six-game homestand that continues Thursday against Los Angeles. The Kings are second in the Pacific, seven points behind the Flames.

With the score tied 1-1, Colorado capitalized on a tripping penalty to Elias Lindholm halfway through the third period. Mikko Rantanen spotted Nichushkin in front and sent a perfect pass across the slot that Nichushkin steered behind Markstrom.

Colorado’s power play has been lethal of late. The unit converted 2 of 3 chances and moved to 15 for 36 over the Avalanche’s last 12 games (41.7%).

“Power play, we need them to step up,” Bednar said. “It’s going to be tight.

“That’s how it works down the stretch and into the playoffs. It’s hard to find space and create scoring chances 5 on 5 and when you get one or two (power plays), you’ve got to try to capitalize on them.”

Calgary’s penalty kill struggled for a second straight game. The Flames have surrendered five power-play goals in their last two games.

“That’s two games with very soft, individual mistakes,” Flames coach Darryl Sutter said. “First one tonight, puck should go down the ice, forwards had two cracks at it.

“The second is just a straight read by the defenseman. Those are mental mistakes. Very simple.”

Mikael Backlund, part of the Flames' top penalty-kill pairing up front, said it’s up to Calgary to rebound next game.

“We know it can be better,” he said. “And we know we’ve been really solid all year.

”We’ve had one or two games during the year where similar to this, we let too many in, and we rebounded and we play really solid after that.”

Chris Tanev said the Flames must get back to working harder.

“We were killing well until obviously letting three goals in a period against Edmonton and tonight was all special teams and they got two and we got one and that was the difference in the game,” Tanev said. “We’ve got to bear down on our clears, on our entries, and back to outworking PPs that are out there.”

Calgary entered the game 4 for 12 with a man advantage in the previous four games. But the Flames could only convert one of six chances against Colorado, including two opportunities in seven minutes of the third, both on Kadri penalties. The latter came with 16 seconds remaining.

The Flames opened the scoring at 9:31 of the second, capitalizing on a two-man advantage. They secured the 5-on-3 when Nichushkin got his stick into the hands of Rasmus Andersson 18 seconds into the first power play.

The Flames controlled possession, but weren’t able to generate any good chances initially. But eventually Andersson sent a pass across that Toffoli one-timed inside the goalpost from 30 feet.

Matthew Tkachuk also assisted on the goal, giving him 12 points (four goals, eight assists) during a five-game point streak.

The lead lasted less than five minutes as the Avalanche responded with a power-play goal. With Milan Lucic off for interference, Colorado tied it at 13:46 when Cale Makar’s shot deflected in off Nichushkin, who was screening Markstrom.

Game notes
Sean Monahan returned to the lineup for Calgary after being a healthy scratch the last two games. ... Trade deadline acquisition Arturri Lehkonen made his debut for the Avs. He centered a line with Andre Burakovsky and Alex Newhook. ... Colorado D Samuel Girard (lower body) missed his ninth game. He is back skating now.

UP NEXT

Colorado: Host San Jose Sharks on Thursday.

Calgary: Host Los Angeles Kings on Thursday.

Regular Season Series

COL wins series 2-1

Scoring Summary

Goal 2nd Period 9:31
Goal 2nd Period 13:46
Goal 3rd Period 10:52

Statistics

https://a.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=/i/teamlogos/nhl/500/col.png&h=100&scale=crop&w=100&location=originCOL https://a.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=/i/teamlogos/nhl/500/cgy.png&h=100&scale=crop&w=100&location=originCGY
10 Blocked Shots 12
25 Hits 18
3 Takeaways 6
30 Shots 45
2 Power Play Goals 1
3 Power Play Opportunities 5
66.7 Power Play Percentage 20.0
0 Short Handed Goals 0
0 Shootout Goals 0
23 Faceoffs Won 49
31.9 Faceoff Win Percent 68.1
8 Giveaways 17
6 Total Penalties 4
12 Penalty Minutes 8
Calgary Flames Calgary Flames Injuries
NAME, POS STATUS DATE
Jonathan Huberdeau, LW Injured Reserve Feb 21
Cullen Potter, LW Out Jan 21
Colorado Avalanche Colorado Avalanche Injuries
NAME, POS STATUS DATE
Artturi Lehkonen, LW Out Mar 3
Joel Kiviranta, LW Out Feb 28

Game Information

Scotiabank Saddledome

Location: Calgary, AB
Attendance: 16,543 | Capacity:

2025-26 Central Division Standings

TEAM W L PTS OTL
Colorado 41 10 91 9
Dallas 38 14 85 9
Minnesota 36 16 82 10
Utah 32 25 68 4
Nashville 27 26 62 8
Winnipeg 24 26 58 10
Chicago 23 28 56 10
St. Louis 23 29 55 9

2025-26 Pacific Division Standings

TEAM W L PTS OTL
Vegas 29 19 72 14
Anaheim 34 24 71 3
Edmonton 30 24 68 8
Seattle 29 23 67 9
San Jose 30 25 64 4
Los Angeles 24 22 62 14
Calgary 24 29 55 7
Vancouver 18 36 43 7
Full Standings