Hockey

Stauber shines in 2nd career start, backstops Chicago to commanding win over Flames

Rookie goaltender Jaxson Stauber made it two wins in as many career starts by making 34 stops on Thursday to help Chicago to a 5-1 victory over the Calgary Flames.

Chicago's rookie goaltender stops 34 of 35 shots in 5-1 road victory in Calgary

Two hockey players battle for possession of the puck in front of a goaltender down in a butterfly.
Chicago goaltender Jaxson Stauber looks on during play in a 5-1 victory over the Flames in Calgary on Thursday. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

Chicago rookie goalie Jaxson Stauber is playing like a veteran even though he's just two games into his NHL career.

Stauber made 34 stops for his second straight win and 13 different players contributed a point as Chicago beat the Calgary Flames 5-1 on Thursday.

"Looks really solid and calm in there," said Chicago coach Luke Richardson. "They're a big team and they get to the net and they're trying to get secondary chances. He just makes a save and even if there's some scrambling going on, he doesn't look scrambly."

With Alex Stalock (concussion) injured, Stauber and veteran Petr Mrazek are left to tend the net for Chicago. Stauber made his NHL debut on Saturday in a 5-3 win in St. Louis.

"He's had two really good showings here. Hopefully he just gets more comfortable as he goes," said Richardson.

The undrafted 23-year-old is in his first pro season after signing with Chicago as a free agent last March. He spent two years with Providence College in the NCAA and began this season with AHL Rockford.

"He was calm, cool, collected. He's been like that ever since he got called up," said Chicago forward Colin Blackwell. "You can tell he's just locked in all the time. His routine from right when he gets on the bus, he's pretty dialled in."

WATCH | Flames fizzle against Chicago in final game of homestand:

Chicago's Dickinson, Kane connect for pretty goal in win over Flames

2 years ago
Duration 0:52
Calgary falls to Chicago 5-1 and finish its four-game homestand with a 2-2-0 record.

Tied 1-1 after 20 minutes, Chicago seized control in the second period with three unanswered goals.

Boris Katchouk's one-timer of a Luke Philp pass put Chicago back into the lead.

The visitors made it a two-goal lead at 15:37 when both Flames defencemen Nikita Zadorov and MacKenzie Weeger went to Patrick Kane, leaving the middle of the ice open. Kane's pass sent Jason Dickinson in alone and he beat Jacob Markstrom over his shoulder.

Dickinson bumped up from third-line winger to first-line centre for the game due to captain Jonathan Toews (non-COVID illness) being unable to play. That meant centring Kane and Andreas Athanasiou.

"You've got to understand that [Kane] is going to be a lot more patient with the puck and poised and make some plays you probably wouldn't think were there," Dickinson said. "He sees the ice extremely well and he makes some unbelievable passes. "

Just 32 seconds later, another defensive miscue from the Flames resulted in a two-on-one rush with Blackwell setting up Sam Lafferty for his eighth goal of the season.

Taylor Raddysh and Connor Murphy, into an empty net, also scored for Chicago (15-28-4), which entered the game last in the NHL's overall standings. Max Domi had an assist to extend his point streak to four games (one goal, three assists).

Jonathan Huberdeau had the lone goal for Calgary (23-17-9). The Flames sit outside of a playoff spot in the Western Conference after finishing atop the Pacific Division last season.

All-star break nears

The Flames are back in action Friday night when they take on the division-leading Kraken in Seattle in their last game before the all-star break.

"It's a big game to start with and now it's an even bigger game for us," said Flames centre Mikael Backlund. "We want to finish off well before the break and feel a little better about ourselves, especially after the way things went tonight."

Markstrom had 24 stops for the Flames. His record fell to 13-13-5. On 10 occasions this season, Markstrom has received one or no goals for support.

"Obviously it's unacceptable," said Huberdeau. "The way we came out and the way we played, too many odd-man rushes. They had so many chances. I feel bad for [Markstrom] because he's been playing [well] lately and we're not playing good in front of him."

The scattered booing from disgruntled fans throughout the third period was at its loudest at the final buzzer as Calgary players left the ice.

"We made some glaring errors on the back end that cost us goals against," said Flames coach Darryl Sutter. "You've got some defencemen that even though they're younger guys, they also have to take some leadership in it too in terms of direction and poise."

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