Beyond the Boxscore: Canadiens youth dominates Flames veterans in 4-1 loss

From the moment the puck hit the ice the Calgary Flames were out-matched in every aspect of the game in a sure-fire 4-1 loss to the Montreal Canadiens.

CF% – 45.55%|| SCF% – 33.13%|| HDCF% – 19.88%|| xGF% – 26.28%

It’s a Team Game –
Once again the Flames offence sputtered, but this one was a bit different. It’s not like both teams were close in their high danger chances like the last two games. No, this time the Flames got destroyed across the board. This includes an unmotivated third which felt like the team itself had enough through the first 40 minutes. Montreal’s speed overwhelmed them at every turn, forced the defence into coughing up turnovers, and stifled any serious attempts at a counterattack. It was the polar opposite of what the Flames attempt to do on a nightly basis – and it worked. Montreal went to the cup final, realized where they were at after the fact, restocked with some fine young assets via trade and drafting, and are already back on the rise with a serious shot at some playoff success in the East. The Flames even gave them one of the high picks for taking on the Sean Monahan contract. If this – paired with the two previous losses – is not enough of a sign to ownership and upper management (aka not Conroy) of what is needed I’m not sure what is.

Corsi King – Let’s get some positives out of the way because the last two reviews were pretty down in the dumps. Joel Farabee (67.73 per cent) was his consistent north-south self, and he finally got a goal to show for it. Yes, Fowler will want that one back, but it was more than just the goal from him. He makes smart plays on the boards inside his own zone to make sure the puck gets out, gets the puck in deep if pressed, and takes space in the attacking zone if given it. Once he gets on the attack he lacks consistency, but seeing as the whole roster is in that boat I do have suspicions there’s more to him than what we see. Hunter Brzustewicz (55.26 per cent) got back in the lineup and earned his first NHL point on Farabee’s goal. He can’t be as sheltered on the road as he is at home, so it was good to see that despite everyone else faltering around him he had a positive outing.

Under Pressure –

G43_SP_@MTL_26.png


Taken By Chance – So I’ve ranted about Jonathan Huberdeau (34.39 SCF% // 0 HDCF%) this week, as well as Yegor Sharangovich (29.17 per cent // 41.51 per cent). Now it’s time for Morgan Frost (15.26 per cent // 0 per cent) who has looked anything but suitable to consistently play as a top 6 centre in this league. He’s got 75 games in since coming over from the Flyers and has amassed 11 goals and 20 assists for 31 points in that time. It’s third line production at best and is simply not going to be someone to keep a spot from anyone. There’s not a lot pf physicality to his game and he can’t move the puck from defensive zone through the neutral zone – with possession – effectively at all. The change of scenery has not worked and at 26 years old I’m not thinking it’s going to. If management finally gets into sell mode he’s a piece someone could possibly want – but absolutely not one the Flames need. Yes, I know they are short on centres, but in a pinch you can end the season running both Connor Zary (30.70 per cent // 31.77 per cent) and Sharangovich up the middle of the ice. You could also give Rory Kerins the rightful shot he is due as well. If it goes that way the goal is no longer highly competitive – it’s learn to play at the speed and pace of the NHL while living with the growing pains that come with that choice.

xG Breakdown –

G43_xG1_@MTL_26.png
G43_xG2_@MTL_26.png


xGF% – I understand not moving players because you are waiting for someone to call with a serious offer, but maybe there should be a bit more aggression in calling other teams and negotiating a deal. That opinion is a clear assumption based on what insiders are saying on the Rasmus Andersson (19.56 per cent) front. It makes zero sense for the team to assume the risk of him playing for Team Sweden and then getting nothing back in return for a bona fide top 4 point producing defenceman should he get injured. Despite having a brutal night, they still have MacKenzie Weegar (20.77 per cent) and are committed to growing his young partners game in Yan Kuznetsov (27.00 per cent). We have Brzustewicz (36.15 per cent) showing he can play up here and be just fine and also have Zayne Parekh to develop. Nights like this one are what they fear would happen if they got rid of their veterans and yet here it happened anyways.

If they do switch to development mode, I highly doubt that comes with a sudden outburst of offence. If it doesn’t they need to look beyond just the roster for the reason they can’t score – it’s certainly not entirely their fault.

Game Flow –

G42_GF_@MTL_26.png


Game Score –

G43_HSC_@MTL_26.png


Shot Heatmap –

G43_SH_@MTL_26.png


In The Crease – To his credit I thought Dustin Wolf was okay. He can’t stop the turnovers from happening directly in front of him. They better quit fooling around before they waste this guy’s prime. They’ve started getting younger on the back-end, but outside of what Parekh could maybe become they are starving for some offensive play drivers up front. Wolf will be his crazy athletic self for as long as he can be, and will keep this team in more games than they ever deserve, but without some high end skill being truly competitive for consecutive seasons will always be out of reach. 3.64 expected goals against at 5v5 with 4 getting behind him.

Player Spotlight – William Stromgren – Lost in all of this was the debut of a new player up front. It was well deserved as Stromgren had seen his play improve year over year with the Wranglers. He drew two penalties in some limited action. Frequent readers know we don’t usually judge rookies on their first games – it’s quite a competitive jump coming to the NHL mid-season. I do believe Stromgren will continue to grow. If he can get some confidence to use some physicality he could establish himself as a baseline bottom 6 player with some upside. I’m excited to see where the former 2nd rounder grows next.

The Goals –

🔥FLAMES GOAL🔥

Joel Farabee, the only dangerous Flame tonight, gets Calgary on the board.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/5008KQB8RO

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 8, 2026

Flash’s 3 Stars –

1) Joel Farabee

2) Hunter Brzustewicz

3) Dustin Wolf


(Stats compiled from Naturalstattrick.com // Game Score from Hockeystatcards.com // xG and Under Pressure charts from HockeyViz.com // Game Flow and Shot Heatmap from NaturalStatTrick.com)

This article is presented by Bon Ton Meat Market​


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Source: https://flamesnation.ca/news/beyond...s-youth-dominates-flames-veterans-in-4-1-loss
 
Instant Reaction: Flames can’t withstand Bruins’ attack in Boston

Welcome to Instant Reaction, where we give you our instant reaction to tonight’s Calgary Flames game and ask our readers to do the same in the comments section below!

The Calgary Flames headed to TD Garden to face the Boston Bruins on Thursday night, playing for the second evening in a row (with travel). The Bruins looked poised, structured and capitalized on some Flames defensive lapses at key times. The Flames? Well, they were chasing for much of the evening.

The Flames’ losing streak was extended to four games via a 4-1 road loss to Boston.

The rundown​


The Bruins carried play for the balance of the opening period, generating more chances than the Flames (and better ones) throughout the period.

Midway through the period, 9:48 in, the Bruins lit the lamp first. The Flames changed lines and got everybody in place, but Tanner Jeannot entered the zone off the rush with speed and everyone seemed to follow him for a moment. That allowed him to pass the puck back to Sean Kuraly, who had a clear lane to walk to the slot and fire a shot. It may have glanced off Joel Hanley, but either way it beat Dustin Wolf to give the Bruins a 1-0 lead.

Boston takes an early 1-0 lead.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/FLN5gV45Nk

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 9, 2026

A few minutes later, the Bruins scored again. This time, it was another rush chance, with the Bruins executing a really nice sequence of passes after entering the Flames zone, ending with David Pastrnak passing to Elias Lindholm for a one-timer that beat Wolf to give the Bruins a 2-0 lead.

We could be in for a long night…

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/w2nx4X0j6V

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 9, 2026

First period shots were 13-7 Bruins. Via Natural Stat Trick, 5v5 scoring chances were 12-5 Bruins and high-danger scoring chances were 4-3 Flames.

The second period was more even, with the Flames pressing and the Bruins, possibly realizing they had a two goal lead, sat back a bit and seemed to wait for the Flames to make mistakes. The Flames pressed hard, but eventually the Bruins scored again.

With just under six minutes left in the period, the Bruins cycled around in the Flames zone. Mason Lohrei got the puck at the left point, patiently toe-dragged around a sliding block attempt from Adam Klapka, then shot the puck past Wolf to make it 3-0 Boston.

The Flames can't score at one end. Boston scores at the other.

It's 3-0 Bruins.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/maixyxNQCz

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 9, 2026

With 2:01 left in the period, the Bruins scored again. This time, Casey Middelstadt fired the puck on net. Wolf made the initial save, but Mittelstadt rushed in before any player in a white jersey could grab the rebound, and instead Mittelstadt fired the puck past Wolf to make it 4-0 Bruins.

4-0 Bruins.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/GBthelCfiC

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 9, 2026

But 46 seconds later, the Flames got on the board. A Kevin Bahl point shot was deflected wide of the Bruins net by Morgan Frost. Connor Zary retrieved the puck behind the net, wheeled around to the front and decided to shoot, beating Joonas Korpisalo top-corner to cut Boston’s lead to 4-1.

🔥FLAMES GOAL🔥

Connor Zary scores a beautiful goal to get Calgary on the board!

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/kT2kyxV7c8

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 9, 2026

Second period shots were 10-9 Bruins. 5v5 scoring chances were 14-8 Bruins and high-danger scoring chances were 5-4 Bruins.

The third period was fairly even, as the Bruins were perfectly content to play a smart, structured game and run out the clock. The Flames had some decent looks in the offensive zone, but they didn’t amount to much.

The Bruins held on for a 4-1 win.

Third period shots were 12-8 Flames. 5v5 scoring chances were 9-7 Bruins and high-danger scoring chances were 7-1 Bruins.

Why the Flames lost​


Just like in Montreal, the Flames’ in-zone defensive coverage had some big gaps at bad times. A few too many times, their coverage got bunched up in one area of the zone, leaving big gaps and tons of space for the Bruins’ skill players to do things with the puck. And while the Flames did have the puck a lot later on in the game, the Bruins did a great job of clogging up the middle of the ice and the Flames just couldn’t do enough to counter that.

Red Warrior​


Connor Zary’s goal was really nice. We’ll give him the nod by default.

Turning point​


The Flames were on the heels for the bulk of the first period, and Elias Lindholm’s goal to go up 2-0 really seemed to deflate their group for the remainder of the period.

This and that​


Dustin Wolf started for the eighth consecutive game. As noted on social media by Sportsnet’s Pat Steinberg, Devin Cooley is still not 100% after missing Monday’s game with an illness, so that likely contributed to the goaltender deployments over the last three games this week.

Blake Coleman left the game in the second period with an apparent injury, came back to the game, then left again (for good) early in the third period.

The Flames are 0-4-0 in 2026.

After Burner​


Join Mike Gould and myself right after the game for After Burner!

Up next​


The Flames (18-22-4) are off to Pittsburgh. They face the Penguins in a matinee game on Saturday.

This article is brought to you by Platinum Mitsubishi​


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Source: https://flamesnation.ca/news/instant-reaction-flames-cant-withstand-bruins-attack-in-boston
 
Flames injury news: National team believes Martin Pospisil will be ready for Olympics

Gang, the 2026 Winter Olympics start in about a month in scenic Italy, and we’ve seen a flurry of national teams announce their rosters for the men’s hockey tournament.

On Thursday, Slovakia unveiled their roster, featuring seven National Hockey League players, including Montreal’s Juraj Slafkovsky, Tampa Bay’s Erik Cernak and New Jersey’s Simon Nemec. Conspicuous on the roster was Calgary Flames forward Martin Pospisil, despite having played zero NHL games this season due to injury. (He had originally been named to the Olympic roster in June.)

On the Slovak national team’s website, here’s how Pospisil’s situation was framed: (via Google Translate)

There were several question marks hanging over the finalization of the 25-man roster. One of them was the health of Calgary Flames forward Martin Pospíšil, who has not yet played in a competitive match this season. “Martin was an important player for the team at the 2024 World Cup in Ostrava. We have been monitoring his situation closely. His start date has been postponed several times, I believe that he will play in the next few days and play a few games before he comes to the Olympics,” said Miroslav Šatan.

(Editor’s Note: Miroslav Satan is the general manager of the national team.)

Pospisil last played in a pre-season game on Oct. 1, leaving early after getting clipped in the face area during a post-whistle scrum. He participated in a practice shortly afterwards, but left early after taking contact and hasn’t been part of a practice since. He’s been working his way back, to the point where he’s skating alone and has a stall in the Flames locker room again. Recently, when discussing Devin Cooley’s contract, Flames GM Craig Conroy indicated that Pospisil wouldn’t go on the club’s eastern road trip so he could continue skating on his own, with the hope that he could rejoin team practices when they return from the trip.

We’ll see if Pospisil can keep progressing in his injury recovery and have the opportunity to play for Slovakia at the Olympics.

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Source: https://flamesnation.ca/news/flames...es-martin-pospisil-will-be-ready-for-olympics
 
The Flames will be sending two players to the 2026 Winter Olympics (probably)

Pals, we’re about a month out from the 2026 Winter Olympics, which will take place in Italy from Feb. 6-22.

The 2026 Olympics will see National Hockey League affiliated players return to their men’s hockey tournament for the first time since 2014. When the 2025-26 season began, the thought process was that the Calgary Flames could potentially send as many as six players to the Olympics.

They’ll probably end up sending two, and it could potentially be less than that.

Who’s going?​


Forward Martin Pospisil was one of the first six players named to Slovakia’s men’s national team back in June.

Defenceman Rasmus Andersson was named to Sweden’s men’s national team at the end of December.

Who’s not going?​


Sam Honzek was having a great start to the season and, given Slovakia’s limited NHL options, seemed like a great bet to make their national team. Unfortunately he was hurt on a fluke collision with Flames captain Mikael Backlund back in November and required surgery that will keep him out for several months.

MacKenzie Weegar (Canada) attended the national team’s summer orientation, but didn’t do enough early in the season to dislodge anybody from the established 4 Nations Face-Off blueline. Mikael Backlund (Sweden) and Adam Klapka (Czechia) have both had good seasons thus far, but both fell short of making their respective rosters.

Could that number go up?​


Yes. While the reserve lists of potential injury replacement players haven’t been publicly disclosed by the various national teams, it’s likely that Weegar, Backlund and Klapka are all on their respective countries’ lists. Heck, Weegar has already confirmed it to the media. If somebody gets hurt, one of these guys could go.

Could that number go down?​


Yes, on two fronts.

Pospisil has played zero games this season due to an injury suffered during training camp. He’s back skating, but there’s no guarantee that he’s back in game action before the Olympics.

Andersson is a pending unrestricted free agent and a frequent topic of trade speculation. He’s in a similar situation as Elias Lindholm was two seasons ago; Lindholm ended up being named to the NHL All-Star Game… and then getting traded by the Flames to Vancouver during the All-Star Break. While there’s a roster freeze in effect during the Olympic break itself, we can’t rule out the very real possibility that Andersson’s NHL rights could change hands before the Olympics.

In other words, it’s completely possible that the Flames could end up having zero players at the Olympics.

We’ll see what happens between now and early February.

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Source: https://flamesnation.ca/news/the-fl...-players-to-the-2026-winter-olympics-probably
 
Series Preview: Wranglers head to Abbotsford for their first road series of 2026

The Calgary Wranglers are headed west for a short road trip to Abbotsford, BC. They had a jam packed schedule out of the Christmas break and finally had this week to catch their breath and recover before returning to game action. They play a back-to-back weekend series for their first road trip of 2026.

Last game’s lines​


Calgary

William Stromgren (inactive) – Rory Kerins – Dryden Hunt

Matvei Gridin – Clark Bishop – Martin Frk

Carter King – Sam Morton – Parker Bell

Alex Gallant – David Silye – Lucas Ciona

Turner Ottenbreit – Daniil Miromanov

Nick Cicek – Artem Grushnikov

Simon Mack – Etienne Morin

Arsenii Sergeev (starter)

Owen Say

Abbotsford

Lukas Reichel – Nils Aman – Josh Bloom

Vilmer Alriksson – Ty Mueller – Dino Kambeitz

Anri Ravinskis – Chase Wouters – Cooper Walker

Jackson Kunz – Nick Poisson – Zach Okabe

Jimmy Schuldt – Victor -Mancini

Nikolai Knyzhov – Jett Woo

Joe Arntsen – Philp Waugh

Jiri Patera (starter)

Nikita Tolopilo

Leaders​


Calgary

Rory Kerins – 33GP, 13G, 20A

Martin Frk – 36GP, 14G, 17A

William Stromgren – 33GP, 6G, 23A (inactive on NHL call-up)

Abbotsford

Ben Berard – 31GP, 8G, 9A

Nils Aman – 25GP, 2G, 15A

Sawyer Mynio – 31GP, 3G, 10A

Notes and expectations​


This week was a big one for Wrangler, William Stromgren. It was announced by the Flames on Monday that he was called up for the first time in his professional career. He told the media he found out this news after the Wranglers’ game on Sunday and officially made his NHL debut on Wednesday against the Montreal Canadiens, but was scratched the next night against the Boston Bruins. Owen Say also got a look at the NHL but just from the bench. On Monday, he was recalled to the Flames on an emergency basis to cover for Devin Cooley, who was sick. Say didn’t see any ice time and has since returned to the AHL.

The rest of the Wranglers squad got a much lighter week than what they were subject to after the Christmas break. They had five days between games and finally got some time to refine things at practice in their home buildings. After Sunday’s loss to the Roadrunners, Head Coach Brett Sutter talked about the break between games after playing six in nine days. He said:

“Yeah, you know what? It’s going to be nice to get some practice time. Really. We haven’t had a stretch of practice in two months now being on the road and travelling and coming home and playing every second day. So that’s going to be huge for us. Just work on some of the details in our game, some of the structure stuff that we have to clean up and even getting some conditioning in and that sort of thing and letting guys heal up. Really important few weeks for us and we’re going to get some work in for sure.”

On the other end of the ice, Abbotsford is not as fresh as Calgary is coming into this series, as they played a back-to-back against the Bakersfield Condors back on Tuesday and Wednesday. Tuesday’s game resulted in a 5-3 loss for the Canucks and Thursday’s resulted in a 4-1 loss. Both the Wranglers and Canucks are going to be looking to get back in the win column in this series.

This series kicks off on Saturday night for an 8:00 p.m. MT puck drop. They’ll play game two the following afternoon at 4:00 p.m. MT. You can stream the games for a fee on Flo Hockey and FlamesNation contributors Ryan Pike and I will have updates on X (formerly Twitter).

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Source: https://flamesnation.ca/news/series...bbotsford-for-their-first-road-series-of-2026
 
Instant Reaction: Flames youngsters drive the offence in win over Penguins

Welcome to Instant Reaction, where we give you our instant reaction to tonight’s Calgary Flames game and ask our readers to do the same in the comments section below!

The Calgary Flames continued their eastern road trip on Saturday afternoon as they visited the Pittsburgh Penguins. After a few outings where they looked out of sorts, the Flames looked pretty much like themselves – the good version of themselves – as they scored first and never trailed in a pretty strong road outing.

The Flames snapped their four game losing streak with a 2-1 road win in Pittsburgh.

The rundown​


The Flames played a pretty good road period in the first, generally managing their game well.

Just 2:33 into the opening period, the Flames got on the scoresheet. Connor Zary made a nice play in his own end, intercepting an errant Penguins pass and racing up ice. On his own, Zary made a nice shot, beating Arturs Silovs to give the Flames a 1-0 lead.

🔥FLAMES GOAL🔥

Connor Zary picks off a pass and buries a shot on a breakaway! It's good to see him scoring some nice goals again.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/jqSJq5n2T2

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 10, 2026

From there, the period was pretty even but the Flames managed their lead well.

First period shots were 9-6 Flames. Via Natural Stat Trick, 5v5 scoring chances were 7-6 Penguins and high-danger scoring chances were 2-1 Flames.

The Penguins made a big push throughout the second period to draw even.

During that push, Brayden Pachal made a big hit, cutting across the high slot in the Flames zone and crushing Yegor Chinakhov with his shoulder.

WHAT A HIT BY BRAYDEN PACHAL

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/uGBA5b3OaS

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 10, 2026

Later in the period, the Flames had a power play but couldn’t cash in. Shortly after the Penguins penalty expired, the Flames turned the puck over and the Penguins got an odd-man rush. Evgeni Malkin fed Chinakhov and he blasted a one-timer past Devin Cooley to tie the game at 1-1.

Pittsburgh ties this game up with a nice goal.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/6wmKgCiWEP

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 10, 2026

Zary got decked by Malkin on his way to the Penguins goal celebration. Malkin was given a minor penalty for that, though the ensuing power play was wiped out after 1:10 after the Flames took a too many men bench minor.

Second period shots were 11-6 Penguins. 5v5 scoring chances were 10-2 Penguins and high-danger scoring chances were 7-0 Penguins.

42 seconds into the third period, the Flames grabbed the lead again. This time, Rasmus Andersson led a rush into the offensive zone and dropped the puck back to Matt Coronato. Andersson drove across the slot area, and Coronato fired the puck past Silovs to give the Flames a 2-1 edge.

🔥FLAMES GOAL🔥

That's a classic Matt Coronato goal. What a shot.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/hMykkTGwAb

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 10, 2026

The Penguins tried to battle back, but the Flames did a pretty good job of managing the game. (The Penguins thought they scored in the latter stages of the period, but the goal was immediately waved off due to Sidney Crosby knocking Cooley down before the goal was scored.)

Silovs was pulled late for the extra attacker. The Penguins got a few strong looks but the Flames and Cooley stood tall, holding on for a 2-1 win.

Third period shots were 12-11 Penguins.

Why the Flames won​


The Flames weren’t perfect in this game. I would point to some of their neutral zone puck management in terms of things they need to improve. But give them credit: the Flames battled and they managed to dig their heels in at key moments where the Penguins were threatening to take over this game.

Red Warrior​


Connor Zary had a really nice goal and drew three penalties. He was quite good in this contest.

Honourable mention to Devin Cooley, who was really sharp throughout this game.

Turning point​


The Flames entered the third period with a chance to win the game. They took the lead 42 seconds into the period.

This and that​


Devin Cooley started for the first time since Dec. 20. Blake Coleman missed this game with an upper body injury.

After Burner​


Join Kent Wilson and myself right after the game for After Burner!

Up next​


The Flames (19-22-4) are headed to Columbus. They face the Blue Jackets on Tuesday night.

This article is brought to you by Platinum Mitsubishi​


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Source: https://flamesnation.ca/news/instan...gsters-drive-the-offence-in-win-over-penguins
 
Recap: Wranglers pick up point in energetic shootout loss against Canucks

The Calgary Wranglers kicked off their first road series of 2026 against the Abbotsford Canucks. This was the freshest the Wranglers were for quite a few weeks, as they didn’t have any midweek games this week. Their energy showed and it was a very competitive game. The Wranglers fell behind 2-0 early in the second and managed to score the next three goals to put themselves right back in it. The Canucks tied the game again and this match up needed a shootout, which Abbotsford picked up the win in. The Wranglers earned a point but fell by a final score of 4-3.

Lineup notes​


Since the last time the Wranglers played, William Stromgren was called up to the Flames. This, combined with Aydar Suniev being healthy again after missing nearly a month with an upper body injury, jumbled the lines a bit. Sam Morton and Matvei Gridin got a promotion up to the top line and David Silye also moved up a line to skate with Clark Bishop and Carter King. From the last game, Lucas Ciona and Etienne Morin were scratched, and Carter Wilkie and Jeremie Poirier came in.

Wranglers lines​


Dryden Hunt – Sam Morton – Matvei Gridin

Aydar Suniev – Rory Kerins – Martin Frk

Carter King – Clark Bishop – David Silye

Alex Gallant – Carter Wilkie – Parker Bell

Artem Grushnikov – Daniil Miromanov

Nick Cicek – Jeremie Poirier

Turner Ottenbreit – Simon Mack

Owen Say

Game at a glance​


The Wranglers started Owen Say for this game and Arsenii Sergeev backed him up. Still no sign of Ivan Prosvetov, who remains out with a lower body injury. For the Canucks, they started Jiri Patera. The Canucks wasted no time and scored on their first shift. Jonathan Lekkerimaki cut into the corner in the Wranglers zone and shot a backhand from a sharp angle and put it past Say. This was the first shot of the game and the Canucks took an early 1-0 lead just 18 seconds in.

At 1:58, the Wranglers were awarded the first power play of the game after the Canucks were called for cross-checking. Calgary managed their first few shots on this man advantage but could not quite even things up. Around seven and a half minutes into the period, the Wranglers gave up a breakaway as Lukas Reichel was alone in the zone. Owen Say was able to turn this one away to prevent further damage.

After a 20 second start the Wranglers would like back, they pretty well led the charge for the first period. They nearly doubled up the Canucks in shots, though the first with a 13-7 edge but were down one by the end of the period. Early in the second period, the Canucks added to their lead with a goal from Cooper Walker 3:27 into the frame. Walker’s initial shot missed the net and deflected back in front of the net off the end boards. Say made a scramble save but may have hurt himself on this play. The positioning of his lower body was a little awkward and he may have tweaked his knee or pulled his groin.

Say remained in the game for the time being and just over a minute after the Canucks’ second goal, Sam Morton put the Wranglers on the board. Artem Grushnikov came into the zone with quite a bit of speed and went for a behind the back pass to Matvei Gridin. Gridin corralled the puck behind the net and set up Morton for the one-timer. This goal came at 4:52.

Great pace on this shift by Artem Grushnikov. He and Matvei Gridin assist on Sam Morton's goal pic.twitter.com/5lZskHgz80

— Paige Siewert (@thathockeygirly) January 11, 2026

At the next media timeout, Say took himself out of the game and Arsenii Sergeev came in at 6:26. 35 seconds later, Dryden Hunt looked for Matvei Gridin to score off the one-timer and managed to get the rebound back and score on practically an empty net as Patera was still down on the ice from the save. His goal was unassisted as the puck came back to him on a turnover.

Robbed on the one-timer but Dryden Hunt still drives the rebound home! pic.twitter.com/rMLHacbs5t

— Paige Siewert (@thathockeygirly) January 11, 2026

A few minutes after this goal, the Wranglers were on a power play when Victor Mancini was called for slashing at 11:04. Jeremie Poirier registered the only shot on goal on this opportunity, then Artem Grushnikov had one of the best chances of the period shortly after. The Wranglers were penalty killing at 15:03 when Dryden Hunt was called for hooking. They managed to kill this off with no shots against then Dryden Hunt and Sam Morton were in the zone alone at 17:45 and tried a passing play for a scoring chance, but couldn’t finish it.

At the end of the second period, the Wranglers and Canucks were tied 2-2 and shots in the middle frame were 10-6 Calgary. Early in the third, it was mostly Calgary with the chances to try and find that go-ahead goal. At 5:31, Carter King gave Calgary their first lead of the year with his third of the season. David Silye got the one-timer pass up to King and he elevated it over Patera to find the back of the net. Nick Cicek picked up the secondary assist on this goal.

The Canucks had some pushback and at 11:13, Nils Aman tied the game again. Jonathan Lekkerimaki took a shot from the point and Aman deflected it past Sergeev. Not too much the Wranglers netminder could’ve done on that redirection. It was mostly Abbotsford pushing for the next go-ahead goal through the back half of the third with the Wranglers unable to register a shot for many minutes after this goal. At 18:27, Aydar Suniev was called for tripping and the Wranglers managed to kill off this penalty enough to force at least overtime.

At the end of regulation, the Wranglers and Canucks were tied 3-3 and shots in the third were 11-5 for Abbotsford. In overtime, it was primarily a goaltending battle. The Wranglers killed off the remaining time of Suniev’s penalty and skated mostly four-on-four for the extra frame as there weren’t any earlier whistles. Both teams had a couple really good looks in overtime and were denied. Rory Kerins and Artem Grushnikov were the ones who almost ended the game on Calgary’s end. In the last 37 seconds of overtime, they got a whistle and played out the rest of the time on the traditional three-on-three.

Overtime didn’t bring a winner so this game went into a shootout. Jonathan Lekkerimaki shot first for the Canucks and scored. Matvei Gridin and Jeremie Poirier didn’t score on their attempts and Sergeev stopped the other attempts from Abbotsford. Aydar Suniev was the third shooter to keep it alive and scored in his first AHL shootout attempt to force at least a fourth round.

Aydar Suniev scores in his first AHL shootout appearance. He was the only Wrangler to do so in the five round shootout loss. pic.twitter.com/cYgzNAwxnh

— Paige Siewert (@thathockeygirly) January 11, 2026

Rory Kerins and Martin Frk were stopped on the next two rounds and Vilmer Alriksson scored in the fifth round to win the game for the Canucks. The final score was 4-3 and shots finished 30-27 for Calgary.

Scoring stat summary​


Dryden Hunt – 1G, 1A

Matvei Gridin – 1A

David Silye – 1A

Nick Cicek – 1A

Carter King – 1G

Sam Morton – 1G

Next up​


If Owen Say is unable to at least back up Sergeev on Sunday, the Wranglers may be scrambling for a backup. Connor Murphy is the usual preferred call up from the Rapid City Rush but with it being such a quick turnaround, that may not be possible. He also played on Saturday night in the Rapid City Rush’s 4-2 win over the Indy Fuel and faced 46 shots. The back half of this back-to-back series between Abbotsford and Calgary is an earlier game and takes place on Sunday afternoon at 4:00 p.m. MT.

Sponsored by bet365:

Source: https://flamesnation.ca/news/recap-...nt-in-energetic-shootout-loss-against-canucks
 
A Flame From the Past: Walker Duehr

Do you remember Walker Duehr?

Every once in a while, we take a look at a player who once played for the Calgary Flames in a series called “A Flame From the Past”. This player has to have played a significant number of games for the Flames. I’ll put every Flames’ season into a Wheel of Names, and this time, it landed on the 2022-23 season. In this article, we’ll take a look at Walker Duehr.

Duehr was born in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, on Nov. 23, 1997. At the junior level, he played the 2014-15 season with the Sioux City Musketeers, scoring two goals and seven points in 49 games. His 2015-16 season was spent with the Tri-City Storm, as he scored 10 goals and 23 points in 38 games, along with a goal and four points in 11 post-season games as they went on to win the Clark Cup.

His 2016-17 season was split between the Chicago Steel and Bloomington Thunder. With the Steel, the right-winger scored 12 goals and 27 points in 43 games, then three goals and seven points in 15 games with the Thunder. Duehr didn’t play in the post-season that year.

He began his collegiate career in 2017-18 with Minnesota State University – Mankato, scoring two goals and three points in eight games. The following season saw Duehr score a career-high 10 goals and 16 points in 34 games, before dropping to three goals and 15 points in 32 games in 2019-20. Duehr’s final collegiate season saw him match his career-high in goal with 10, while adding seven assists for a career-best 17 points.

On Apr. 11, Duehr became the first player born in South Dakota, signing his entry-level contract with the Flames and joining the American Hockey League’s Stockton Heat, where he was held pointless in five games. If you’re curious, Fern Headley was the first North Dakotan to play in the National Hockey League, doing so with the Boston Bruins and Montréal Canadiens in 1924-25.

Most of Duehr’s 2021-22 season was spent with the Heat, scoring 11 goals and 23 points in 59 games, with five goals and six points in 13 post-season games. However, Duehr became the first South Dakotan to play in the NHL that season, playing a game where he was pointless.. That leaves Arkansas, Hawaii, Kansas, Kentucky, New Mexico, Tennessee, West Virginia, and Wyoming as the only states without a player to play in the NHL.

Duehr became more of a regular in 2022-23, scoring seven goals and 11 points 27 games, but most of his season was spent with the Flames’ relocated AHL team, the Calgary Wranglers. He scored 15 goals and 26 points in 41 games in the AHL in 2022-23, along with five assists in nine playoff games.

In 2023-24, Duehr played 40 NHL games, scoring two goals and seven points as he was regularly a healthy scratch. He played two AHL games that season. In 2024-25, Duehr picked up an assist in 16 NHL games, with 11 goals and 19 points in 20 AHL games, but was placed on waivers and claimed by the San Jose Sharks.

He played eight NHL games with the Sharks in 2024-25, scoring two goals, and added another five goals and nine points in 16 games with the Sharks’ AHL team. During the off-season, Duehr joined the Winnipeg Jets’ organization, and has appeared in 31 games for the Manitoba Moose of the AHL, scoring nine goals and 19 points.



Ryley Delaney is a Nation Network writer for FlamesNation, Oilersnation, and Blue Jays Nation. She can be followed on Twitter @Ryley__Delaney.

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Source: https://flamesnation.ca/news/a-flame-from-the-past-walker-duehr
 
The Flames need to rebuild: an Oilers fan’s prospective

The Calgary Flames need to rebuild.

Every Flames fan knows that it’s time, but I have something to admit: I didn’t grow up a Flames fan, in fact, I’ve rooted for the Edmonton Oilers since I was about nine years old (2008). But growing up in Ottawa, I also didn’t have the same hatred that most fans of either Albertan teams have, and I’ve always attempted to stay professional when writing about both teams.

Since starting at FlamesNation two years ago, this team has really started to grow on me, as sacrilegious as that is. Watching this team last season was honestly the most fun I’ve had watching hockey in a really long time, and that includes the Oilers heading to back-to-back Stanley Cup Finals.

There’s something about an underdog team that makes sports fun. Look no further than what the Toronto Blue Jays did in 2025. So when the Flames missed out on the playoffs due to a tiebreaker, I was gutted, both as a FlamesNation writer and Oilers fan.

While I had never “cheered” for the Flames before starting this job, I’ve always wanted them to do well. If there’s one thing an Oiler fan and a Flames fan can agree on, is that when the Battle of Alberta is hot and both teams are good at the same time, it’s one of the best rivalries in sports. But watching this team in 2025-26, they aren’t good, which is a shame.

Following Saturday afternoon’s win against the Pittsburgh Penguins, the Flames have an 19-22-4 record with 42 points, around the bottom of the league. They had a strong December, but have lost their last four of their last five games, with their losses to the Montréal Canadiens and Boston Bruins not even being close.. Things will only get worse when they inevitably trade Rasmus Andersson ahead of Mar. 6’s trade deadline.

See, the Flames have been stuck in the “mushy middle” since the 2021-22 season. They missed the 2023 post-season by two points, had a mess of a season in 2023-24, but then missed out on the 2025 post-season due to the aforementioned tiebreaker. Sure, making the playoffs is fun and all, but how far would they realistically get? For the long-term future of the team, it’s best that they bottom out for a couple of years.

The good news is that this upcoming draft class is pretty stacked, probably the best draft since the 2015 draft. There are at least three draft prospects who may be able to quickly turn around a team’s fortune, as Gavin McKenna, Keaton Verhoeff, and Ivar Stenberg look to be the next superstars of the league.

They don’t even need to bottom out for long. Take a look at the New York Islanders, who had just a 3.5% chance of winning the 2025 draft lottery. They were able to take Matthew Schaefer first overall, and the left-shot defenceman has 12 goals and 29 points in 44 games on the Islanders’ back end. It has propelled them to second in the Metropolitan Division, and this was after trading Brock Nelson before last season’s trade deadline and Noah Dobson before the 2025 draft.

Being able to add a player like Gavin McKenna, and maybe even potentially a top prospect in the 2027 draft, would make this Flames’ team competitive as Scotia Place is set to open at the start of the 2027-28 season. Another aspect of getting a star player in the draft is that free agents will want to come, which is one way the Flames can replace Blake Coleman, Nazem Kadri, and other veterans if they’re traded.

The Flames also have the right man for the job. Craig Conroy has done a great job at the helm of the team since taking over after the 2022-23 season, especially in the draft department. One of my favourite series to write for any of the three sites is the weekly prospect roundup, where we look at how each junior/college/overseas player performs.

I can tell you that this is a farm system. Zayne Parekh is going to be a game-changer, but they’ve also found late-round finds like Ethan Wyttenbach, who reached the 30-point plateau in the NCAA on Friday. Cole Reschny and Cullen Potter, the Flames’ two first round picks in 2025, started slow but have gotten hot as of late. Eric Jamieson and Hunter Laing are two sixth-round picks in the 2024 draft who have exceeded expectations as well. Don’t even get me started on their Russian netminders.

The Flames are in a strong position already, with a cornerstone defenceman, a Vezina-calibre netminder, and legitimate top six forward prospects. They have young talent on the roster like Matt Coronato and Connor Zary, while also having a top-four defenceman in Kevin Bahl. Trading players like Kadri, Coleman, and Andersson will net the Flames a haul that’ll only help their future as it’s currently a sellers market. The Flames should probably keep MacKenzie Weegar though, he’s so clearly their next captain.

Bottoming out for this season and next year is well worth it for the Flames, because there’s a strong possibility they can quickly rebuild and be a contender a few seasons after the new arena opens.



Ryley Delaney is a Nation Network writer for FlamesNation, Oilersnation, and Blue Jays Nation. She can be followed on Twitter @Ryley__Delaney.

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Source: https://flamesnation.ca/news/the-flames-need-to-rebuild-an-oilers-fans-prospective
 
The Flames are getting ‘more aggressive’ in Rasmus Andersson trade talks: Friedman

It sounds like we have a new update on the Rasmus Andersson trade saga. During Monday’s edition of 32 Thoughts, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman shared some insight regarding the 29-year-old’s status within the trade market.

“It does seem like Calgary is getting a little more aggressive in trying to do something. It sounds like there’s a desire for them to do it before the Olympics, and teams know that. Now, there’s been stops and starts with this before, so I’m always careful, but there are times it seems more active than other times, and one of those times is now.”

It’s no coincidence that Andersson’s name is resurfacing now, with the league set to enter into an 18-day roster freeze while the Olympic Games are underway. After the freeze takes effect at 1 p.m. MT on Feb. 4, teams are barred from making any roster moves, including trades, until the night of Feb. 22, when the Olympics are set to conclude.

Inherent in this roster freeze, and Andersson’s participation in the Olympics for Team Sweden, is the fear that he may suffer an injury that could derail his trade value. According to Friedman, there is a sense that the Flames may want to finalize a deal before the Olympics, as if to avoid any risk of injury.

“This is a guy playing a lot of minutes, and he’s gonna play big minutes for Sweden at the Olympics. But like I said, I’ve heard that there’s been some increased activity around him, and I think teams know the Flames are in a window where they would like to act potentially before the Olympic Games.”

Andersson is in the final year of the six-year, $4.55 million AAV contract he signed back in 2020. He’s also in the midst of his best campaign on record, his 28 points are the second-most on the team, and he’s played consistently well since opening night. As a result, he’s drawn plenty of trade interest from potential suitors. In December, it was reported that Calgary’s asking price for Andersson is the equivalent of two first-round picks.

However, predicting where Rasmus will end up is merely a guessing game at this point.

“There was a report on social on the weekend that there was something with Detroit. I don’t know, the one thing about that is we talked about with Quinn Hughes… The Red Wings were one of the teams (Hughes) was interested in, but Steve Yzerman wasn’t doing that without an extension, so I would have to think Detroit would have to know what Andersson would sign for before they would do that.”
“I do think there are teams that would be interested in extending Andersson, but I don’t get the sense anybody has permission yet to talk to him about it, but the noise is there, the noise has definitely picked up. Obviously, there’s been a lot of interest in Andersson in the past, the Kings have it, and I still think Vegas is looking for another defenceman.”

It’s worth noting that Andersson’s contract includes a modified six-team no-trade list.

Drafted by the Flames 53rd overall in 2015, Andersson has spent his entire career with the organization, totalling 259 points in 581 games.

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Source: https://flamesnation.ca/news/the-fl...sive-in-rasmus-andersson-trade-talks-friedman
 
Flames place forward Blake Coleman on injury reserve list

The Calgary Flames have made a second injury-related move on Tuesday morning. On the heels of sending forward Martin Pospisil to the Calgary Wranglers of the American Hockey League on a long-term injury conditioning stint, the club announced that they’ve placed forward Blake Coleman on the injury reserve list.

Placement on the injury reserve list opens up a roster spot, but carries with it no cap relief.

Coleman was originally injured in Thursday night’s game against the Boston Bruins, likely suffering his upper body injury while wrestling with Bruins defender Mason Lohrei at the end of the first period. The duo toppled to the ice, with Coleman landing on the bottom. Coleman played a bit in the second and third periods, but left the game two shifts into the third and didn’t return to the game.

An injury reserve stint means that a player has to be unavailable for seven days dating back to the injury, so this means that Coleman won’t be eligible to return to the active roster until (at least) Friday, meaning he’ll be unavailable to the Flames for Tuesday’s game in Columbus and Thursday’s game in Chicago.

Coleman joins – deep breath – Sam Honzek (upper body), Martin Pospisil (undisclosed), John Beecher (upper body) and Jake Bean (undisclosed) on the injury reserve list. Zayne Parekh remains day-to-day with an upper body injury, as he got banged up a bit during his bronze medal-winning performance at the 2026 IIHF World Junior Championship with Team Canada, and he remains on the active roster.

As of this writing, the Flames’ active roster now contains 22 players: two goaltenders, eight defencemen and 12 forwards. Coleman’s IR placement gives the Flames the option to bring up a 13th forward from the Wranglers as an insurance policy in case somebody gets sick or hurt during warm-up or practice while on the road trip.

The Flames are back in action on Tuesday night when they visit the Columbus Blue Jackets.

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Source: https://flamesnation.ca/news/flames-place-forward-blake-coleman-on-injury-reserve-list
 
Instant Reaction: Flames let one get way in Columbus

Welcome to Instant Reaction, where we give you our instant reaction to tonight’s Calgary Flames game and ask our readers to do the same in the comments section below!

The Calgary Flames headed to Ohio to face the Columbus Blue Jackets on Tuesday night. The Flames got behind early, then rallied back – twice – to tie the game. Then, unfortunately, they allowed the game-winning goal off a turnover with less than two minutes left in regulation.

The Flames let one slip away in a 5-3 loss to Columbus.

The rundown​


The Blue Jackets opened the scoring 3:57 into the first period. The Flames got hemmed in their own zone and couldn’t recover the puck, and Columbus cycled the puck back to the point and a Dante Fabbro point shot beat Dustin Wolf to make it 1-0 Columbus.

Dante Fabbro plays it perfectly 🚨 pic.twitter.com/oxizSY5kps

— Sportsnet (@Sportsnet) January 14, 2026

The home side doubled their lead after the midway mark of the first period. Columbus made some nice passes in the Flames’ zone, ending with Jake Christiansen making a nice cross-zone pass to Charlie Coyle, who beat Wolf high to give the Blue Jackets a 2-0 lead.

TOP CHEESE FOR #3 🚨

CBJ x @FanaticsBook pic.twitter.com/mAWl37dsiY

— Columbus Blue Jackets (@BlueJacketsNHL) January 14, 2026

First period shots were 10-8 Blue Jackets. Via Natural Stat Trick, 5v5 scoring chances were 10-8 Blue Jackets and high-danger scoring chances were 4-2 Blue Jackets.

The Flames were on their heels for much of the first chunk of the second period, getting out-shot 9-1 at one point. They seemed to wake up a bit after Rasmus Andersson fought Boone Jenner midway through the period.

Rasmus Andersson drops the gloves with Boone Jenner.

He's trying to get some energy going for his team as they have been awful in this game.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/NxjOzPgt4k

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 14, 2026

A little later, Adam Klapka drew a penalty. On the resulting power, pretty late in the advantage actually, the Flames got on the board. Mikael Backlund made a pass from deep in the zone to Morgan Frost, parked around the blue paint, and Frost beat Jet Greaves to cut the lead to 2-1.

🔥FLAMES GOAL🔥

Morgan Frost scores on the power play to get Calgary back in this game.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/Ob7DdVheKt

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 14, 2026

Near the end of the period, the Flames got another power play after the Blue Jackets were called for too many men. The Flames won the face-off and Andersson blasted a point shot past Greaves to tie the game at 2-2.

🔥FLAMES GOAL🔥

Rasmus Andersson rips a one timer to the back of the net! He is an assist shy of a Gordie Howe Hat Trick

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/Oep19inMLG

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 14, 2026

Second period shots were 14-7 Blue Jackets. 5v5 scoring chances were 6-2 Blue Jackets and high-danger scoring chances were 2-1 Blue Jackets.

Early in the third period, Yegor Sharangovich and Yan Kuznetsov took back-to-back penalties. On the resulting two-man advantage, Werenski took advantage of time, space and a Coyle screen to beat Wolf to give Columbus a 3-2 lead.

Zach Werenski scores on the power play. It's 3-2 Blue Jackets.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/lVnEj9Uctj

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 14, 2026

But a little later, Nazem Kadri drew a minor penalty and on the resulting power play, the Flames scored their third special teams goal of the game. This time, Frost fired the puck on net. Backlund got the rebound and then jammed in the loose rebound from his own scoring chance to tie the game at 3-3.

🔥FLAMES GOAL🔥

Mikael Backlund scores on the power play. That's 3 power play goals for the Flames tonight.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/qXU7kNpy97

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 14, 2026

Late in regulation, though, Columbus retook the lead. MacKenzie Weegar went to play a bouncing puck and couldn’t quite clear it – his attempt to chuck it up the wall hit a Columbus player’s skates – and Jenner collected the loose puck, skated in and sniped a shot past Wolf to give the home side a 4-3 lead. (Weegar was left all alone with the puck and really didn’t have any good options.)

Columbus takes a 4-3 lead late in the 3rd period.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/Ka9KCgs2q5

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 14, 2026

Coyle added an empty-netter to give Columbus a 5-3 win.

Third period shots were 19-17 Blue Jackets.

Why the Flames lost​


The good? The Flames were pretty strong on special teams, five-on-three penalty kill notwithstanding. When you out-score the opposition 3-1 on special teams, that’s a good special teams night.

But man, they needed to be better at five-on-five. They were out-scored 3-0 at even strength. They also didn’t generate a ton of dangerous chances when things were even, and they got sloppy with their discipline at bad moments. The Flames’ penalty kill has been really good lately, but taking back-to-back penalties after you’ve clawed back even on the road is a bad, bad thing to do.

Red Warrior​


Man, Rasmus Andersson had a good second and third periods. Between the fight and his goal, he was strong.

We’ll also give props to Morgan Frost, Yegor Sharangovich and Mikael Backlund.

Turning point​


Columbus scored the game-winning goal with 94 seconds left in regulation off a turnover.

Oof.

This and that​


This was the first time since Mar. 30, 2024 that the Flames have scored three power play goals in a single game.

This was Rick Bowness’ debut as Columbus head coach after being hired on Monday, replacing the outgoing Dean Evason.

After Burner​


Join Cami Kepke and Mike Gould right after the game for After Burner!

Up next​


The Flames (19-23-4) are headed to Chicago, where they’ll close out their road trip on Thursday night.

This article is brought to you by Platinum Mitsubishi​


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Source: https://flamesnation.ca/news/instant-reaction-flames-let-one-get-way-in-columbus
 
The Flames have added first-round picks in eight past trades

Friends, it certainly appears that we’re nearing the end of Rasmus Andersson’s distinguished tenure with the Calgary Flames. Given his status as a pending unrestricted free agent, his age, his likely compensation and where the Flames are in their developmental arc, there just doesn’t seem to be a fit for a new long-term contract for Andersson in Calgary.

That means, gang, that it seems increasingly likely that we shall see a major trade involving Andersson departing Calgary and some significant assets heading back to Alberta. Recently, our pal Pat Steinberg discussed the Flames’ asking price for Andersson’s services during the Sportsnet TV intermission panel and labelled it as “the equivalent of two first-round picks.”

Over the 53-year history of the Flames franchise, they’ve had a net gain of first-round draft picks in just eight trades. Here are the drafts where the Flames ended up having multiple picks as a result of such major swaps.

(A disclaimer: We’re not including the 2008 NHL Draft. Yes, the Flames gained a first-round pick from Montreal in exchange for Alex Tanguay, but they had previously sent their own first-rounder to Los Angeles for Mike Cammalleri, so during the course of that day they went from one first-rounder to zero to one again, never owning multiple picks. We’ve also excluded trade conditions on draft picks for simplicity.)

1976 NHL Draft​


The Flames briefly owned three first-rounders in 1976.

On Oct. 1, 1975, the Flames sent their first-ever player, forward Jacques Richard, to Buffalo in exchange for blueliner Larry Carriere, cash, and Buffalo’s 1976 first-round pick.

On Jan. 20, 1976, the Flames traded minor-league goaltender Curt Ridley to Vancouver in exchange for Vancouver’s first-round pick.

Two days later, on Jan. 222, 1976, the Flames traded Buffalo’s first-rounder, along with blueliner Jean Lemieux and forward Gerry Meehan, to Washington in exchange for forward Bill Clement. (Yes, that Bill Clement.)

The Flames ended up picking twice in the first round in 1976, using their own pick (10th overall, Harold Philipoff) and Vancouver’s (eighth overall, Dave Shand).

2013 NHL Draft​


37 years later, the Flames had multiple first-round picks in the 2013 NHL Draft. And like in 1976, they had three first-rounders. And unlike 1976, they ended up using all three of them!

On Mar. 28, 2013, the Flames traded forward Jarome Iginla to Pittsburgh in exchange for college forwards Ken Agostino and Ben Hanowski, and Pittsburgh’s 2013 first-round pick. The Flames used that pick, 28th overall, to draft Morgan Klimchuk. This trade was essentially the beginning of the team’s first – and perhaps, only – real rebuild.

On Apr. 1, 2013, the Flames traded defender Jay Bouwmeester to St. Louis in exchange for goaltender Reto Berra, defender Marc Cundari, and St. Louis’ 2013 first-rounder. They used that pick, 22nd overall, to draft Emile Poirier.

The Flames used their own pick, sixth overall, to draft Sean Monahan.

2024 NHL Draft​


11 years later, the Flames had multiple first-round picks again.

On Jan. 31, 2024, the Flames traded forward Elias Lindholm to Vancouver in exchange for forward Andrei Kuzmenko, defencemen Hunter Brzustewicz and Joni Jurmo, Vancouver’s 2024’s first-round pick and New Jersey’s 2024 fourth-round pick. The Flames used Vancouver’s first, 28th overall, to select Matvei Gridin.

The Flames used their own pick, ninth overall, to select Zayne Parekh.

2025 NHL Draft​


The following year, the Flames had multiple picks again.

The Flames’ own pick, 16th overall, ended up going to Montreal as part of what we would call absurdly complex conditions stemming from (a) the Aug. 18, 2022 trade that sent Sean Monahan to Montreal, the Jul. 22, 2022 trade that sent Matthew Tkachuk to Florida and (c) the Mar. 19, 2022 trade that sent Claude Giroux from Philadelphia to Florida. The Montreal traded ended up being Sean Monahan and Calgary’s 2025 first-round pick to the Canadiens in exchange for future considerations.

As mentioned, on Jul. 22, 2022, the Flames traded Matthew Tkachuk and a 2025 fourth-round pick to Florida in exchange for Jonathan Huberdeau, MacKenzie Weegar, Cole Schwindt and Florida’s 2025 first-round pick. That pick, 32nd overall, was used to select Cullen Potter.

On Jun. 19, 2024, the Flames traded Jacob Markstrom (with 31.25% of his cap hit retained) to New Jersey in exchange for Kevin Bahl and New Jersey’s 2025 first-round pick. That pick, 18th overall, was used to select Cole Reschny.

2026 NHL Draft​


This coming draft, the Flames currently own two picks: their own and Vegas’.

On Mar. 6, 2024, the Flames sent Noah Hanifin (with 50% of his cap hit retained) to Vegas as part of a three-way trade also involving Philadelphia in exchange for Daniil Miromanov, Vegas’ 2026 first-round pick and Vegas’ 2024 third-round pick.

We’ll see if the Flames can obtain even more picks for this year’s draft, or future ones, before this year’s trade deadline on Mar. 6.

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Source: https://flamesnation.ca/news/the-flames-have-added-first-round-picks-in-eight-past-trades
 
Look, I gotta be honest here - as an Oilers fan writing for FlamesNation, that's a pretty wild situation but I respect the hustle. And you know what? The analysis ain't wrong.

The Flames are stuck in that brutal no-man's-land where you're not good enough to compete for a Cup but not bad enough to land a franchise-changing talent. That 19-23-4 record tells the whole story. Missing the playoffs on a TIEBREAKER last year? That's gotta sting worse than actually being bad.

That said, Craig Conroy has done some solid work building up that prospect pool. Parekh looks like he's gonna be a stud, and having multiple first-rounders in recent drafts is exactly how you dig yourself out of mediocrity. The Andersson trade is basically inevitable at this point - dude's having a career year on an expiring deal, and getting "the equivalent of two first-round picks" would be robbery in a good way.

Here's what gets me though - the Battle of Alberta NEEDS both teams to be competitive. When the Flames are good and we're good, that rivalry is absolutely ELECTRIC. Some of the best hockey you'll ever watch. Right now it's just us dunking on a rebuilding team and that ain't as fun.

The 2026 and 2027 drafts look absolutely STACKED. If Calgary can bottom out properly (not this wishy-washy stuff), grab a McKenna or someone similar, they could be back in contention right when that new arena opens. Smart timing if they can pull it off.

But let's be real - tanking is easier said than done. You still gotta develop your young guys, keep Wolf sharp, and not completely destroy the culture. It's a tightrope walk.
 
Flames trade rumours: What could a Rasmus Andersson trade with the Detroit Red Wings look like?

Stay calm, everyone. We may finally be on the brink of a Rasmus Andersson trade, potentially ending multiple years of rumours and speculation and everything that comes with the process. However, since a deal hasn’t been completed yet, there’s still time to continue exploring different scenarios of what an Andersson trade could look like for the Calgary Flames.

That brings us to the Detroit Red Wings.

Detroit has openly been in the market for a top-four defenceman for some time now. They’re looking for a reliable presence who can help lead their young defensive core and bring some relief to Moritz Seider.

The Red Wings were reportedly in on former Vancouver Canucks defenceman Quinn Hughes, but when extension-related issues arose, they pulled out of the race. Hughes eventually landed with the Minnesota Wild.

As a result, Detroit remains in the market for a defenceman and is expected to become increasingly aggressive as the trade deadline approaches and the club looks to make a deep playoff run.

There are other names available that Detroit could pursue, including Dougie Hamilton or Erik Karlsson, but Andersson appears to be an ideal fit — especially if the Red Wings can lock him up with an extension.

With that in mind, let’s dive into a couple of potential trade scenarios between Detroit and Calgary.

Scenario #1​


Let’s start with the most obvious option, one that’s been circulating in the rumour mill of late.

To Calgary:
– Nate Danielson
– 2026 first-round pick

To Detroit:
– Rasmus Andersson (50 per cent salary retained)

This would be a dream scenario for the Flames. They would land a high-end, right-shot centre prospect along with a first-round pick in an upcoming draft. That aligns with the Flames’ reported desire for a return equivalent to two first-round picks, considering Danielson was selected ninth overall in the 2023 NHL draft.

The 21-year old Edmonton native began his first NHL season with the Red Wings this year. In 28 games, Danielson recorded two goals and five assists before it was determined he needed more time to develop his game. He was subsequently assigned to the AHL, where he has matched that production in seven games with the Bakersfield Condors.

Calgary would almost certainly need to retain salary in this scenario to lower Andersson’s cap hit and make the deal more appealing to Red Wings general manager Steve Yzerman. 50% seems like a good place to start – making Andersson cap hit just $2.275 million.

You’d also have to assume Yzerman would only agree to this trade if an extension with Andersson was already in place or close to being finalized.

While reports later suggested this scenario was baseless (or at the very least, very speculative), it still represents a deal that checks boxes for both sides — and for Calgary, it could be the best possible offer available.

Scenario #2​


To Calgary:
– Carter Mazur
– Michael Rasmussen
– 2026 second-round pick

To Detroit:
– Rasmus Andersson

When the deadline pressure ramps up, the Flames may ultimately have to take the best offer on the table — and it could look something like this.

In this scenario, Calgary would acquire Detroit’s No. 8-ranked prospect in Mazur. The 23-year old winger has spent the entire season in the AHL but has appeared in just five games after suffering a lower-body injury early on. In his five games, he’s impressed with four goals and two assists.

The Flames would also receive a reliable NHL player in Rasmussen. His inclusion would largely be for cap purposes, but Calgary could either slot him into the lineup as a dependable penalty killer who can contribute offensively, or flip him to another team to recoup additional assets.

Then there’s the draft pick. This type of deal feels more like a deadline-day outcome — the best offer available at the time. Yzerman is unlikely to move a first-round pick without certainty on an Andersson extension. If that is the case a second rounder may be the best they can get.

Calgary likely wouldn’t need to retain much salary here, as taking on Rasmussen and Mazur would mean absorbing more money than they’re sending out. That said, the Flames have the cap flexibility to retain a small portion if it helps get the deal done or if it inclines Yzerman to upgrade the second round pick to a first.

What do you think? Does Detroit have the best assets in a potential Andersson trade? Let us know in the comments!

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Source: https://flamesnation.ca/news/flames...on-trade-with-the-detroit-red-wings-look-like
 
Flames Game Day 47: Closing out the road trip in Chicago (6:30pm MT, SNW)

After being on the road since last week, the only thing between the Calgary Flames (19-23-4, 42 points) and sleeping in their own beds is 60 minutes (or more) of hockey against the Chicago Blackhawks (19-20-7, 45 points). And a plane ride home. Well, the Flames will look to finish off their five game road trip on a winning note against Chicago, a team that has run their show so far this season.

Today’s broadcast begins at 6:30 p.m. MT on Sportsnet West and Sportsnet 960 The Fan.

The Flames​


Projected lines via Daily Faceoff (and Sportsnet’s Derek Wills):

Connor Zary – Nazem Kadri – Adam Klapka
Jonathan Huberdeau – Morgan Frost – Joel Farabee
Yegor Sharangovich – Mikael Backlund – Matt Coronato
Ryan Lomberg – Justin Kirkland – Dryden Hunt

Kevin Bahl – Rasmus Andersson
Yan Kuznetsov – MacKenzie Weegar
Joel Hanley – Hunter Brzustewicz

Based on Wills’ intel from morning skate, it sounds like Devin Cooley starts in net, backed up by Dustin Wolf. The healthy extras for the Flames are William Stromgren and Brayden Pachal. Dryden Hunt comes into the lineup after being called up on Wednesday. And there’s been a swap of centres, with Nazem Kadri and Morgan Frost switching lines.

It’s been a rough road trip for the Flames, continuing a rough start to 2026. They’re 1-3-0 on the road trip, with their lone win being a low-scoring grind of a game in Pittsburgh. In this calendar year, they’re 1-5-0 and have been out-scored 23-11 in the process. Only two Flames have scored more than one goal in 2026: Connor Zary and Rasmus Andersson, and the team has struggled to generate a lot offensively.

Simply put: the Flames need to find ways to score goals, and fast, if they want their playoff hopes to remain a possibility.

The Blackhawks​


Projected lines via Daily Faceoff:

Ryan Greene – Connor Bedard – Andre Burakovsky
Tyler Bertuzzi – Jason Dickinson – Ilya Mikheyev
Ryan Donato – Oliver Moore – Nick Lardis
Nick Foligno – Colton Dach – Landon Slaggert

Alex Vlasic – Louis Crevier
Wyatt Kaiser – Artyom Levshunov
Matt Grzelcyk – Connor Murphy

We’re projecting Spencer Knight to start in net, backed up by Arvid Soderblom. Chicago’s lone healthy extra is Sam Lafferty. (Chicago’s had a flu bug go through their room recently.)

Chicago is 5-2-0 in 2026. And even better, they’ve recently gotten Connor Bedard back in their lineup a couple games ago. (Then he missed a game with the flu, but we digress…) In two games against the Flames this season, Bedard has a casual four goals and seven points. Chicago’s scored nine times against the Flames this season, and Bedard has a hand in seven of those goals. So, uh, watch that guy.

Unavailable players​


The Flames are without Martin Pospisil, Sam Honzek, Jake Bean, John Beecher, Zayne Parekh and Blake Coleman.

The Blackhawks are without Shea Weber, Ryan Ellis, Frank Nazar and Teuvo Teravainen.

The numbers​

FlamesBlackhawks
19Wins19
42 (.457)Points (%)45 (.489)
49.7%
(17th)
xGF%45.1%
(30th)
15.4%
(29th)
PP%22.9%
(7th)
82.0%
(9th)
PK%85.2%
(2nd)

Head to head​


This is the third and final meeting between these teams this season. The Blackhawks won both earlier games by a combined 9-2 score.

This article is brought to you by Platinum Mitsubishi​


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This article is a presentation of Platinum Mitsubishi, family owned and operated by lifelong Calgarians. Home of the industry-leading 10-year, 160,000-kilometre powertrain warranty. Check out their showroom at 2720 Barlow Trail NE or online at www.mitsu.ca.

Source: https://flamesnation.ca/news/flames-game-day-47-closing-out-the-road-trip-in-chicago-630pm-mt-snw
 
Instant Reaction: Flames close out road trip with victory in Chicago

Welcome to Instant Reaction, where we give you our instant reaction to tonight’s Calgary Flames game and ask our readers to do the same in the comments section below!

The Calgary Flames closed out their five game road trip on Thursday night with a visit to the United Center to face the Chicago Blackhawks. Chicago scored early, but the Flames locked things down and controlled much of the flow of the game from there on out.

The Flames beat Chicago by a 3-1 score.

The rundown​


The Blackhawks opened the scoring 2:38 into the game, scoring on their second shot of the game. Off the rush, Colton Dach found some space and then found Nick Foligno in the slot area, and Foligno fired the puck past Devin Cooley to give Chicago a 1-0 lead.

Nick Foligno opens the scoring for Chicago.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/k3x7HRexk0

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 16, 2026

Just after that goal, Nazem Kadri drew a minor. On the resulting power play, Connor Zary drove the net with the puck. He didn’t score but the chaos created by his net drive led to a Yegor Sharangovich goal on the scramble in front to tie the game at 1-1 (and give the Flames their fourth power play goal in two games).

🔥FLAMES GOAL🔥

The power play remains hot for the Flames! Yegor Sharangovich ties this game up on the man advantage.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/flOSr3Ed6h

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 16, 2026

Just after that, MacKenzie Weegar took a penalty. On the resulting power play… Calgary scored again! This time, Mikael Backlund made an astute poke check in the neutral zone, stealing the puck away from Andre Burakovsky and then racing into the Chicago zone, making a quick deke and firing the puck past Spencer Knight to give the Flames a 2-1 lead.

🔥FLAMES GOAL🔥

Mikael Backlund scores a short handed beauty! He is playing some of the best hockey of his career.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/pITObw7iCg

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 16, 2026

First period shots were 9-6 Blackhawks. Via Natural Stat Trick, 5v5 scoring chances were 5-3 Blackhawks and high-danger scoring chances were 3-0 Blackhawks.

Neither team scored in the second period. The period was fairly even, though also fairly low event.

The highlights of the frame were some big hits and some post-whistle extra-curriculars.

Joel Farabee drops the gloves with Connor Murphy 🥊

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/ZpI7xmi5QO

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 16, 2026

Kevin Bahl lays out Oliver Moore with a huge hit!

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/Rx5dqpfBXc

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 16, 2026

Second period shots were 11-9 Flames. 5v5 scoring chances were 8-7 Flames and high-danger scoring chances were 5-3 Flames.

The Blackhawks pressed in the third period, but the Flames did a really nice job avoiding getting hemmed into their own end.

Matt Coronato scored an empty-netter late to give the Flames a 3-1 victory.

Third period shots were 6-5 Flames.

Why the Flames won​


How do we say this politely? Uh, the Flames suckered Chicago into playing their style of game. This was a low-event, tight-checking game of hockey. You could argue that it was also a fairly dull 60 minutes of hockey too. This was the type of game the Flames needed during a stretch where they haven’t been scoring a ton, especially on the road.

And when your special teams out-score the other teams by a 2-0 margin, that’s usually a recipe for a win.

Red Warrior​


Mikael Backlund had a couple points in the first chunk of this game, and generally played very well.

Turning point​


Let’s give it to the Flames scoring back-to-back special teams goals in the first period. The Flames got down early and you could be forgiven if you had uttered the phrase “Here we go again…” But the Flames grabbed the lead before those words could probably be uttered.

This and that​


Devin Cooley, now seemingly recovered his illness-fuelled week, started for the second time on this road trip.

Mikael Backlund assisted on Yegor Sharangovich’s first period goal, which gave him his 366th assist with the Flames, putting him past Mark Giordano into sixth place on the franchise’s all-time leaderboard.

Mikael Backlund factored on both goals in the opening frame, and collected his 367th career assist to pass Mark Giordano (366) for the sixth most in @NHLFlames history. #NHLStats

Tune in 🌎: https://t.co/dT34F4MhkC pic.twitter.com/1MIdvBiSAp

— NHL Public Relations (@NHLPR) January 16, 2026

After Burner​


Join Mike Gould and myself right after the game for After Burner!

Up next​


The Flames (20-23-4) are headed home. They host the New York Islanders on Saturday afternoon to kick off a five game homestand.

This article is brought to you by Platinum Mitsubishi​


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This article is a Presentation of Platinum Mitsubishi, family owned and operated by lifelong Calgarians. Home of the best warranty in the business with ten year warranties available. Check out the showroom at 2720 Barlow Trail NE or online at www.mitsu.ca

Source: https://flamesnation.ca/news/instant-reaction-flames-close-out-road-trip-with-victory-in-chicago
 
Series preview: Wranglers host the Condors for the battle of the AHL’s best rookies

The Calgary Wranglers kick off a four game homestand on Friday and are looking for a big push through the second half of the season. The Flames’ AHL squad has faced some challenges over the past few weeks and are struggling to get things done in regulation. As conversations around the playoff picture start to loom, they need some improvement to guarantee they qualify. The Wranglers only have two wins in their last 10 games but have been picking up points outside of regulation. Their record is creeping below .500 with a 15-14-7-2 season record and a sixth place spot in the Pacific Division standings.

Last game’s lines​


Calgary

Dryden Hunt (inactive) – Sam Morton – Matvei Gridin

Aydar Suniev – Rory Kerins – Martin Frk

Carter King – Clark Bishop – David Silye

Alex Gallant – Parker Bell

Artem Grushnikov – Daniil Miromanov

Nick Cicek – Jeremie Poirier

Turner Ottenbreit – Simon Mack

Etienne Morin

Arsenii Sergeev (starter)

Connor Murphy

Bakersfield

James Stefan (inactive) – Viljami Marjala – Seth Griffith

Daniel D’Amato – James Hamblin – Quinn Hutson

Brady Stonehouse – Sam Poulin – Rem Pitlick

Matthew Brown – Matt Copponi (inactive) – Ethan Keppen

Damien Carfagna – Beau Akey

Riley Stillman – Josh Brown

Mason Millman – Tyson Feist

Connor Ungar (starter)

Matt Tomkins

Leaders​


Calgary

Rory Kerins – 35GP, 13G, 20A

Martin Frk – 38GP, 14G, 17A

Dryden Hunt – 26GP, 11G, 20A

Bakersfield

Quinn Hutson – 30GP, 23G, 15A

Seth Griffith – 35GP, 11G, 25A

Viljami Marjala – 35GP, 10G, 22A

Notes and expectations​


There was a little bit of roster action this week for the Wranglers. On Tuesday, it was announced that Martin Pospisil was ready to return from the injury that has kept him away from game action at any level this season so far. He joined the Wranglers on a conditioning loan and practiced with the team this week. He is expected to play in one or both games. Also assigned to the team on Tuesday was Xavier Bernard from the Rapid City Rush. Bernard is a left-shot defenceman with 12 points in 33 games with the Rush this season.

On Wednesday, Dryden Hunt was called up to the Flames again, leaving Carter Wilkie and Lucas Ciona as other remaining forward options currently on the roster. Connor Murphy is also still with Calgary after Owen Say took himself out about halfway through his game in Abbotsford last Saturday. Say’s status is a lower body injury with no timeline attached to it yet.

For the roster that remains, good news came out this week for rookie, Matvei Gridin. On Thursday, he was announced as the Wranglers representative for the AHL All-Star game. This year’s event is hosted by the Rockford IceHogs in Rockford, IL and will be on Feb. 10 and 11. Gridin is third in scoring by active Wranglers with 10 goals and 18 assists in 32 games. Despite missing some time to start the season with the Flames and a minor injury last month, he still stands at second in rookie scoring in the league. He’s 10 points behind Quinn Huston, who will be Bakersfield’s All-Star selection and on the ice against Calgary this weekend.

This home series for Calgary starts on Friday at 7:00 p.m. MT and wraps up on Sunday for a 1:00 p.m. matinee game. Tickets are still available to catch the AHL’s battle between the Flames and Oilers affiliates and streaming options are available for a fee on FloHockey. FlamesNation contributors Ryan Pike and I will have updates on X (formerly Twitter).

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Flashback Friday: Looking back at the Noah Hanifin trade

It seems like sooner rather than later, the Calgary Flames will trade Rasmus Andersson.

The last time they were sellers ahead of a trade deadline was back in 2023-24. They traded two defencemen at the deadline, Noah Hanifin to the Vegas Golden Knights and Chris Tanev to the Dallas Stars. The latter turned out to be a light return, while the former is what we’ll look at in this edition of Flashback Friday.

Andersson is in a similar situation to Hanifin. Ahead of the 2024 deadline, Hanifin was in the final season of his contract, but in the age range where any trade probably includes a long-term extension. On Mar. 6, the Flames found a trade for the Boston native, sending him to the Golden Knights for their 2026 first-round pick, a 2024 third-round pick, and Daniil Miromanov.

There were some additional conditions to the trade. The first was originally the 2025 first rounder, but the Golden Knights traded that pick for Tomáš Hertl around the same time, pushing the pick the Flames got to 2026. Hanifin also had 75% of his contract retained, 50% by the Flames and 25% by the Philadelphia Flyers. The left-shot defenceman also signed an eight-year, $7.35 million extension later that season.

Prior to the trade, Hanifin had scored 11 goals and 35 points in 11 games, with a plus/minus of +13. Funnily enough, Andersson has similar numbers, scoring 10 goals and 29 points in just 47 games with the Flames this year. Anyway, after the trade, Hanifin added two goals and 12 points in 19 games. In the seven-game first round series against the Tanev and the Stars, Hanfiin scored twice and had five points.

Last season, he scored 10 goals and 39 points in 80 games, then added a goal and five points in 11 post-season games. Through 36 games this season, Hanifin has two goals and 19 points. It’s been a pretty solid get for the Golden Knights, as they continue to contend for first in the Pacific Division.

Okay, but what about what the Flames received? Well, the first will be settled in June, with the pick likely being in the 24-32 range. Miromanov is still with the Flames’ organization, playing 32 games with their American Hockey League team where he has five goals and 15 points in 32 games. Once Andersson is traded, a logical replacement would be Miromanov.

Additionally, the third round pick in 2024 was used to select Russian netminder Kirill Zarubin. This season with Mikhailov Academy, a team in Russia’s junior league, the 20-year-old has a .929 save percentage and 2.10 goals against average.

It’s also worth noting that the Hanifin trade is part of the larger and ongoing Curtis Glencross trade tree. After trading him for a 2015 second-rounder, the Flames use that pick to acquire Dougie Hamiton, who was traded with Adam Fox and Michael Ferland to the Carolina Hurricanes for Hanifin and Elias Lindholm.

Like Hanifin, Lindholm was traded ahead of the 2024 trade deadline for Hunter Bruzstewicz, Joni Jurmo, Andrei Kuzmenko, a 2024 first (Matvei Gridin), and a fourth-rounder. That fourth-rounder was traded for a fifth and sixth, with the Flames selecting Luke Misa and Eric Jamieson respectively.

On Jan. 31, 2025, the Flames sent Kuzmenko to the Flyers for Morgan Frost and Joel Farabee. That means there are eight players currently in the Flames system involved in the Glencross trade tree, not including the 2026 first or Joni Jurmo.

The upcoming Andersson trade is part of an entirely different tree stemming from trading Sven Baertschi, but the Hanifin trade is a potential comparison for the what the Flames could get for Andersson.



Ryley Delaney is a Nation Network writer for FlamesNation, Oilersnation, and Blue Jays Nation. She can be followed on Twitter @Ryley__Delaney.

This article is brought to you by Platinum Mitsubishi​


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This article is a presentation of Platinum Mitsubishi, family owned and operated by lifelong Calgarians. Home of the industry-leading 10-year, 160,000-kilometre powertrain warranty. Check out their showroom at 2720 Barlow Trail NE or online at www.mitsu.ca.

Source: https://flamesnation.ca/news/flashback-friday-looking-back-at-the-noah-hanifin-trade
 
Flames roster news: Matvei Gridin recalled from AHL’s Wranglers, William Stromgren returned to AHL

In advance of their match-up on Saturday afternoon against their expansion cousins, the New York Islanders, the Calgary Flames have made a pair of roster moves – in addition to the simultaneously-announced conditioning stint for Zayne Parekh. The club has announced that they’ve recalled forward Matvei Gridin from the American Hockey League’s Calgary Wranglers and, in a corresponding move, they’ve assigned forward William Stromgren back to the Wranglers.

Both Gridin and Stromgren are waiver exempt this season, so they can be moved freely between the NHL and AHL.

Gridin, 19, was a first-round selection by the Flames back in 2024. He’s in his first year of pro hockey and actually made the Flames’ roster out of training camp, scoring his first career NHL goal on opening night – his pass to the slot, intended for Matt Coronato, bonked into the Edmonton net off Noah Philp’s skate. Gridin played six games and had one goal, playing in the Flames’ top nine. He went down to the Wranglers in mid-October and has had a ton of success, posting 10 goals and 28 points over 32 games. He was named to the AHL’s All-Star Classic earlier this week.

Stromgren, 22, was a second-round selection by the Flames in 2021. He’s in his third year of North American pro hockey. He was called up by the Flames back on Jan. 5. He’s played on the fourth line and has been okay, but his underlyings have been pretty rough. In three NHL games, he has zero points. In 33 games with the Wranglers, he posted six goals and 29 points.

Here’s how the Flames’ 23-man active roster looks right now, after this swap:

  • Goaltenders [2]: Dustin Wolf and Devin Cooley
  • Defencemen [8]: Rasmus Andersson, Kevin Bahl, Yan Kuznetsov, MacKenzie Weegar, Joel Hanley, Brayden Pachal, Hunter Brzustewicz and Zayne Parekh (in AHL on conditioning stint)
  • Forwards [13]: Connor Zary, Nazem Kadri, Adam Klapka, Jonathan Huberdeau, Morgan Frost, Joel Farabee, Yegor Sharangovich, Mikael Backlund, Matt Coronato, Ryan Lomberg, Justin Kirkland, Dryden Hunt and Matvei Gridin
  • Injury Reserve List [5]: Sam Honzek, Blake Coleman, Jake Bean, John Beecher and Martin Pospisil (in AHL on long-term injury conditioning stint)

Of the players on the active roster, Brzustewicz, Hunt and Gridin all do not currently require waivers and can be swapped to and from the AHL as needed.

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Source: https://flamesnation.ca/news/flames...s-wranglers-william-stromgren-returned-to-ahl
 
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