The Islanders offensive momentum, which produced six goals against the Vancouver Canucks and 38 shots against the Edmonton Oilers, had a harder time turning over on Saturday night against a Flames team that averaged the fewest goals and shots against at the Saddledome.
The Islanders finished the game with 21 shots, but went long stretches without a puck on net, notably going 12:39 into the second period without a credited shot. The 21-shot final didn't include a few shots off the post.
While the Islanders were able to somewhat contain Calgary's top line of Johnny Gaudreau, Elias Lindholm and Matthew Tkachuk - the trio came together in the final five minutes with the game effectively over - the Flames active D factored into three of Calgary's five goals. Rasmus Andersson pinched off the blueline, circled and net and fed Ruzicka for the opening tally at 9:58, while Tanev beat Sorokin with a long-range wrister that took a slight deflection off Zach Parise's stick. Tanev's goal came 61 seconds after a power-play goal from Dobson.
"They broke out well. Their D are always active, so that makes it tough," Mathew Barzal said. "It felt like we had a lot of 2 on 3s, 3 on 4s, never any advantage on the ice. That's a good hockey team over there, big, fast, good D that move and a nice system. That's a good squad. We had them 1-1 and then fell off a little bit."