NHL

Calgary Flames at Dallas Stars

· West 1st Round - Game 4
Final
4 - 1

Flames get even in series with 4-1 win over Stars in Game 4

It helped that they also got to play a lot of 5-on-5 hockey, though Andersson did score Calgary's first power-play goal since early in the playoff opener, as the Flames beat the Dallas Stars 4-1 in Game 4 on Monday night.

“We had a lot of long shifts in their zone and overall a good game, a good 60 minutes,” said Andersson, who had only two of Calgary's 54 shots. “We didn’t take too many penalties tonight too, so we get to play 5 on 5, and that’s that’s what we were, a really good team.”

Gaudreau converted a penalty shot with 12:13 left in the game to make it 2-0 Calgary, and later assisted on Elias Lindholm's third goal of the series as the Pacific Division champions regained home-ice advantage over the wild-card Stars. Mikael Backlund added an empty-netter in the final minute.

It was the first goal of the series for Gaudreau, who in Game 3 was rejected by Jake Oettinger on a late breakaway that would have tied that game.

The Flames forward, a 100-point scorer, was on another breakaway Monday night when John Klingberg was penalized for hooking. Gaudreau made a nifty move on the penalty shot to push the puck through the legs of Jake Oettinger, the 23-year-old goalie who had 50 saves.

“I feel like since Game 1 I've been playing well, playing hard against this team," Gaudreau said. “Last game had a breakaway .... tonight a little different story, found the net. That's the way hockey is"

Game 5 is Wednesday night in Calgary, where the teams traded shutouts in the first two games while combining for only three total goals — one of those an empty-netter at the end of the Stars’ 2-0 win in Game 2. The series returns to Dallas on Friday night for the sixth game in the best-of-seven series.

“We were off a little bit, and when we’re off a little bit against a top-tier team like that, a big favorite in this league ... they’re going to make you pay, and they made us pay tonight,” said Tyler Seguin, who had a late power-play goal for the Stars.

That was the only shot to get past Jacob Markstrom, who had 34 saves.

The Flames were just more than a minute into a 5-on-3 opportunity midway through the second period when Matthew Tkachuk before his shot from the top of the slot made it 1-0.

“It was a solid game for us," Calgary coach Daryl Sutter said. “The strength of our team is 5 on 5. Our special teams function from what we do 5 on 5.”

Calgary had failed to convert on 13 consecutive power-play attempts before that, including two earlier in the game, since scoring five seconds into their first power play of the series. That was five minutes into Game 1, and the only goal in that 1-0 win.

Before Calgary had a two-man advantage, that power play opened on a split save by Oettinger, who had his right leg fully extended against the post when he pushed away a shot by Andersson.

The Stars have also struggled on the power play, going 0 for 4 with a man advantage in Game 4 before Seguin scored with 4:57 left to get the Stars within 3-1.

Both teams are 2 for 17 on power plays in the series.

“As badly as we played, there was times that we had a chance to give us some momentum, and we didn’t, we didn't capitalize,” Stars coach Rick Bowness said.

Oettinger has faced plenty of shots in his first four NHL playoff starts. He had 25 saves in the opener, 29 in his shutout win and then 39 more in Game 3.

Midway through the first period Monday, after being peppered with a sequence of shots and unable to secure a loose puck, Oettinger made a impressive save when he reached back while falling down to snag the puck with his glove to deny Tyler Toffoli.

That was only a couple of minutes after Stars defenseman Miro Heiskanen hit the crossbar with a shot.

"Thought we started well, thought our first period was good," Andersson said. “We stuck with it. We got a big power play good there, and then obviously got the second one and the third one. So overall, it was a good game and you know, it all started with a good start in the first.”

Regular Season Series

CGY wins series 2-1

Scoring Summary

Goal 2nd Period 10:03
Goal 3rd Period 7:47
Goal 3rd Period 11:53
Goal 3rd Period 15:03
Goal 3rd Period 19:38

Statistics

https://a.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=/i/teamlogos/nhl/500/cgy.png&h=100&scale=crop&w=100&location=originCGY https://a.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=/i/teamlogos/nhl/500/dal.png&h=100&scale=crop&w=100&location=originDAL
12 Blocked Shots 25
29 Hits 29
4 Takeaways 5
54 Shots 35
1 Power Play Goals 1
5 Power Play Opportunities 6
20.0 Power Play Percentage 16.7
0 Short Handed Goals 0
0 Shootout Goals 0
36 Faceoffs Won 28
56.3 Faceoff Win Percent 43.8
11 Giveaways 13
7 Total Penalties 6
14 Penalty Minutes 12
Dallas Stars Dallas Stars Injuries
NAME, POS STATUS DATE
Roope Hintz, C Out Mar 7
Mikko Rantanen, RW Injured Reserve Mar 6
Radek Faksa, C Injured Reserve Mar 6
Tyler Seguin, C Injured Reserve Feb 27
Calgary Flames Calgary Flames Injuries
NAME, POS STATUS DATE
Joel Hanley, D Day-To-Day Mar 8
Zach Whitecloud, D Day-To-Day Mar 7
Jonathan Huberdeau, LW Injured Reserve Feb 21
Cullen Potter, LW Out Jan 21

Game Information

American Airlines Center

Location: Dallas, TX
Attendance: 18,532 | Capacity:

2025-26 Pacific Division Standings

TEAM W L PTS OTL
Anaheim 35 25 73 3
Vegas 29 21 72 14
Edmonton 31 25 70 8
Seattle 29 24 67 9
San Jose 30 25 66 6
Los Angeles 25 23 64 14
Calgary 25 30 57 7
Vancouver 19 36 46 8

2025-26 Central Division Standings

TEAM W L PTS OTL
Colorado 43 10 95 9
Dallas 39 14 88 10
Minnesota 37 16 85 11
Utah 34 25 72 4
Nashville 28 27 64 8
Winnipeg 26 26 62 10
St. Louis 25 29 59 9
Chicago 23 29 57 11
Full Standings