"They scored a 4-on-4 goal, 5-on-4 goal, 5-on-4 goal for us, shorthanded goal for them," the Flames coach said following the 5-3 loss that evened the best-of-7 series. "So if you're not playing 5-on-5, that's definitely to their team's advantage."
Game 2 marked the second time in as many games that the Flames squandered a lead. Although they were able to recover for a 9-6 win after blowing a 6-2 lead in Game 1 on Wednesday, the 3-1 advantage they held in the second period of Game 2 got away from them.
Calgary will attempt to put an end to that trend in Game 3 at Rogers Place in Edmonton on Sunday (8 p.m. ET; ESPN2, CBC, SN, TVAS).
Playing 5-on-5 as much as possible is a mantra the Flames have uttered throughout the Stanley Cup Playoffs, but against the Oilers, it may be even that much more important. Their "individual skill set," Sutter said regarding the Oilers' top players, including center Connor McDavid and forward Leon Draisaitl, did some of their best work in Game 2 outside of 5-on-5.
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McDavid scored his sixth goal of the playoffs at 4-on-4, and forward Zach Hyman scored what would prove to be the game-winning goal while shorthanded. Add in defenseman Evan Bouchard's power-play goal in the second period, and three of Edmonton's five goals came while not at 5-on-5.
"Since I've been here, we've done a really good job of playing our type of hockey," Calgary forward Tyler Toffoli said. "The past two games here, we haven't really been playing to our foundation. Obviously, it's been getting away from us, giving up too many scoring chances. [Jacob Markstrom] played great tonight, kept us in the game."