The Calgary Flames were mathematically eliminated from qualification for the Stanley Cup playoffs on Monday night, a product of a 3-2 shootout loss to the Nashville Predators. But broadly speaking, the loss to the Predators didn’t cause the club to miss the post-season, it was merely the last straw in a season that was derailed by many small errors.
The Flames’ playoff elimination was the product of death by a thousand tiny cuts.
The Nashville loss was fairly representative of the entire season:
If you want to argue “Hey, the Flames missed the playoffs because Nick Ritchie was selected in the shootout,” I disagree. That’s one of the reasons they lost this particular game.
But the game reached the shootout because the Flames could not turn puck possession into dangerous possession. The team’s challenges on the power play may be the proverbial canary in the coal mine; they had a lot of talented players on the ice on special teams throughout this season, but they ended up being less than the sum of their parts and weren’t able to translate possession and zone time into enough strong chances or goals.
So, why did the Flames miss the playoffs?
The Flames were good at a good many things, but they were bad enough at the things they were bad at – at the wrong times, too – to wipe out the advantages that the good parts of their game provided.
If the Flames were a less talented team, a team that frequently was out-shot, out-played and out-performed – a team that wasn’t regularly in their games – you could point at the Ritchie shootout decision and curse the heavens. But the Flames were in a position where Ritchie being selected for the shootout (and not scoring) could cause their elimination from playoff contention because of the many, many small things that went wrong before that point.
This year’s Flames were not a bad hockey club. They were very good at puck possession and, at times, showed flashes of brilliance in different aspects of their game. But while the shape of their game was sound, the details simply weren’t good enough, consistently enough, for the Flames to find a regular home in the win column. And their disappointing lacking of strong details at key times resulted in them having zero cushion in the standings to overcome the occasional bad penalties, bad bounces, bad goaltending performances or bad power plays. When you have good details, you can overcome a lot; when you don’t have them, it makes life extremely challenging.
The recipe for the Flames just wasn’t right this season, as reflected in how the details of their game failed to consistently manifest. And now the hockey club faces a lengthy, pivotal off-season with a lot of very big decisions ahead of them.
The Flames complete their 2022-23 season on Wednesday when they host the Sharks.
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