Skip to content
michaelcachuela.com

Disappointed Flames come up short in bid for playoffs

CALGARY — Despite coming from behind to win yet again on Tuesday night, the red-hot Calgary Flames have been eliminated from playoff contention.
d0f61df13ab7d94bf11a624f089d4c46640b69b611ef5f011e5f45eb4d476add

Calgary Flames' Morgan Frost (16) celebrates his game-winning goal with teammates during overtime shootout NHL hockey action against the Vegas Golden Knights in Calgary on Tuesday, April 15, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

CALGARY — Despite coming from behind to win yet again on Tuesday night, the red-hot Calgary Flames have been eliminated from playoff contention.

Calgary's thrilling 5-4 shootout victory over the Vegas Golden Knights was not good enough as their fate was sealed earlier in the evening when both the Minnesota Wild and St. Louis Blues won to lock down the two wild-card playoff berths in the Western Conference.

Four weeks ago, the Flames were two points out of a playoff spot, but had two games in hand on St. Louis. Calgary has gone 10-2-3 since then, but failed to make up any ground as the Blues compiled an 11-2-1 record to maintain that two-point cushion.

“Felt like we've been rolling, playing some good hockey, just unfortunately, we couldn't get any help,” said Nazem Kadri, who scored his 33rd goal, setting a career high.

While Calgary has one game remaining, St. Louis owns the tiebreaker so that lead is enough to leave the Flames on the outside of the post-season.

“I'm disappointed, a little bit sad for our players,” said Flames coach Ryan Huska. “They worked hard over the course of year to get themselves to this spot and I felt like they probably deserved better than where they ended up.

“You have to give a lot of credit to St Louis, too. Not a lot of teams go on the run that they went on to get themselves into the playoffs. If they wouldn't have had that type of run, we're probably where we want to be right now.”

Five of Calgary's 10 wins in their furious late-season push came in games in which they trailed after two periods.

“Character guys, good group of guys," said Kadri. “We could have been out of this thing a month ago, but it shows (our) pesky attitude. And I felt if we could have squeaked in, there might have been something there because we've had a lot of momentum and we've played some great hockey against some great hockey teams.”

It's the third straight season the Flames will miss the playoffs.

“You feel for the older guys, right? That's really what it comes down to,” said Kadri, 34. “I'm sure the young players are going to have long careers and be doing this a while, but it's the older guys you feel for.”

The oldest player on the team is 36-year-old captain Mikael Backlund.

“Just a lot of emotions right now,” said Backlund, whose 14th goal was the second of two goals in 32 seconds, tying the game 3-3 in the third. “Fought really hard all season long and to fall short in the end, it's hard.”

With the league's second-lowest team salary and having traded away veterans such as Jacob Markstrom, Elias Lindholm, Chris Tanev and Noah Hanifin from last year's team, not much was expected from the Flames going into this season, but they defied the skeptics.

“No one believed in us, but we believed in ourselves from day one, starting in training camp, and right away, you got a sense that everyone was buying in and was believing and when everyone buys in and believes, you can achieve some big things,” said Backlund. “Unfortunately, we didn't make it to playoffs, but we battled all the way until the end and we were so resilient all year.”

For MacKenzie Weegar, his prevailing emotion post-game was pride.

“I'm proud of this group. The perseverance and the leadership from everybody, the belief, everybody bought in and it says a lot,” said the veteran defenceman. “Everybody came to work for one another this year and I think that's the most important thing. So credit to this team. And we really did fight with all we had.

At the end of the game, the crowd of 19,055 rose to their feet and saluted the team with a thunderous ovation, which the players stayed on the ice to acknowledge.

“I said at the beginning of the year, the people in Calgary, they want to see hard work,” said Huska. “They really do. And they appreciated what the guys did all year. So it's just unfortunate that we're not able to keep going.”

Also scoring for Calgary was Morgan Frost, ending a 25-game goalless drought. He also scored the deciding goal in the shootout. Adam Klapka had the other goal.

Rookie Dustin Wolf, making his eighth straight start, was stellar once again making 38 stops to improve to 29-16-8.

Brandon Saad, Nicolas Roy, Tomas Hertl and Pavel Dorofeyev scored for the Golden Knights who are heading to the Stanley Cup playoffs for the seventh time in eight seasons. They will meet the Minnesota Wild in the first round.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 15, 2025.

Darren Haynes, The Canadian Press

No thanks