Since the Jan. 11 game, Edmonton coach Dave Tippett has been preaching results and a team-first mentality. He was particularly focused Wednesday on how the Oilers will play coming out of the NHL All-Star Break and the League-mandated five-day break. The Oilers, who haven't played since Jan. 18, are 6-1-1 since losing to the Flames on Dec. 27, with the only regulation loss in that span at Calgary on Jan. 11.
"I understand the hype and everything but for us, it's an important game that we need to come out of the break and play well," Tippett said. "We've talked about coming out of our break and this is our playoff stretch. We're a month ahead of what normally people would talk about a playoff stretch, but you just look at the standings, every point is so important.
"Our players understand the urgency of continuing to get points."
Calgary is coming off a 5-4 shootout loss at home to the St. Louis Blues on Monday, and coach Geoff Ward spoke of a similar focus.
"We've all been through these situations before," Ward said. "The danger is that you get tied up in the hype so much that you don't play. And the bottom line for both teams is that right now we're in a playoff race.
"[So] don't get focused on all the stuff on the outside. The most important thing is the two points. And to be honest with you, I can't even remember all the stuff that's been said in the last three weeks."
Flames forward Milan Lucic, who played for the Oilers for three seasons before being traded to Calgary for forward James Neal and a conditional third-round pick in the 2020 NHL Draft on July 19, said wins are the only thing that matters but that there's nothing wrong with emotion in the rivalry.
"The emotion is going to be there naturally," Lucic said. "Fans are going to be into it. Both teams are going to be into it. All the players are definitely going to be extra revved up for this one. So it's about managing your emotion and worrying about the game plan.