Well, they certainly did plenty of that.
Here's how it broke down, with the Tkachuk-Backlund-Mangiapane crew matched up against McDavid, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Jesse Puljujarvi:
The 'MMA' line accounted for 87.50% (14-2) of the shot attempts, 87.50% (7-1) of the scoring chances, 75.00% (3-1) of the high-danger looks, and 76.20% of the expected goals, 5-on-5.
Most impressively, they did it all without a single offensive-zone start.
"There's a lot of confidence and chemistry there," Mangiapane said of his line. "We played together last year for quite some time. Those are two great players and I think, for us three, we've gelled together pretty well.
"Last night, it would have been nice to score maybe a goal or two early on - we had some great chances - but hopefully, if we're playing together again tonight, we can score a couple."
Oilers coach Dave Tippett tried to shake the matchup throughout the evening with changes on the fly - so, roughly half of McDavid's even-strength ice time came away from that dominant trio, briefly freeing him from the 'Backlund Effect.'
But that underscores the adjustments needed for the return engagement tonight at Rogers Place. As the visiting team, the Flames will not have the last change, and will be forced to adapt to whatever matchups the Oilers choose to employ off faceoffs.
While Friday's effort was, indeed, a "step in the right direction," it wasn't enough, according to the players and their coach. And as the Flames now begin a critical, six-game road trip, they need to be better in a vast number of areas.
"If we start taking the positives out of losses, we're going the wrong way," said Tkachuk, who was particularly candid during his Saturday morning media session and put the focus on himself tonight. "Losing isn't fun. Do you take a couple things out of it that we were successful with? Yeah, definitely. But to sit here and take positives out of a game that we lost …
"It's time to get wins."