"He's been our MVP throughout this whole run," Flames captain Mark Giordano said.
Indeed.
After finishing 30th in the League defensively a season ago, the Flames scoured the goalie market and came up with two new faces -- Elliott, acquired in a draft-day trade with the St. Louis Blues, and Chad Johnson, signed as a free agent, who had a lot of early success.
But Elliott eventually took over as the de facto No. 1, and is 15-2-1 in his past 18 decisions. Elliott led the NHL in goals-against average last season, so his ability to find a niche in Calgary is probably no surprise, though it did take some time for him to find his groove.
The Sharks lost for the fifth time in six decisions and goalie Martin Jones was replaced for the start of the third period by Aaron Dell.
"[Elliott] was fantastic," Calgary coach Glen Gulutzan said. "He's the reason we got these two points. Huge saves. Even at the end with six minutes left, a big save after their goal.
"No question he was the guy that got us the two points."
Johnny Gaudreau and Sean Monahan scored to give Calgary a 2-0 lead. Matt Stajan, Alex Chiasson and Sam Bennett, who had an empty-net goal, also scored. Twelve Flames have reached double-digits in goals this season, led by Monahan's 27.
The Sharks and Flames have been on opposite runs of late. On Jan. 24, San Jose was 31-16-2 and comfortably atop the Pacific Division. The Flames were 24-24-3 and had lost four games in a row when the normally mild-mannered Gulutzan went off on his team, criticizing their play after a 5-1 loss at Montreal.
On the post-game train ride from Montreal to Ottawa, the players talked it out and played with renewed purpose in the next game, a 3-2 win against the Senators on Jan. 26.