Calgary Flames 2-0 San Jose Sharks - NHL Game Recap | IHM News

Calgary Flames 2-0 San Jose Sharks – NHL Game Recap | IHM News

Calgary Flames 2-0 San Jose Sharks

Date: November 14, 2025  |  Author: IHM News

Calgary leaned on structure and volume shooting to grind out a 2-0 home win over San Jose, outshooting the Sharks 36-15 and closing the night with a clean sheet on the scoreboard.

This felt like a classic Flames home game: controlled pace, heavy board work and very little room between the blue lines. Calgary steadily tilted the ice with layer-over-layer pressure, forcing the Sharks to chip pucks out rather than attack with speed. With both teams struggling to finish early, it was always going to be about who stayed patient longer and who blinked first under forecheck pressure.

The hosts generated most of their looks from extended zone time, rolling three effective forechecking units and using the low cycle to tire out San Jose’s defense. San Jose tried to answer with quick-strike rushes off turnovers, but they were limited to one-and-done entries and a small shot total. Calgary’s defensive box stayed compact in front of the net, clearing second chances and allowing their goaltender to see almost everything cleanly.

Special teams did not swing the scoreboard, but they did help Calgary manage momentum. The Flames’ penalty kill stayed aggressive at both blue lines, forcing the Sharks to regroup repeatedly and chewing up clock. On the other side, Calgary’s power play focused on puck possession and low-risk entries, even without finding a goal. The overall effect was the same: San Jose never really built a sustained wave in the offensive zone.

Game Flow

The first period was a feeling-out frame with very little open ice. Calgary owned the puck but could not solve San Jose’s shot lanes, while the Sharks’ best looks came from point shots through traffic that were handled calmly. Both teams went to the intermission scoreless, but the shot count already hinted at where the territorial edge was heading.

Early in the second, Calgary finally broke through. After another long offensive-zone shift, the Flames worked the puck low-to-high and then back into the slot, where Blake Coleman found space in front and snapped home the 1-0 goal. From there Calgary kept their foot on the gas, outshooting the Sharks comfortably in the frame and forcing San Jose to collapse even deeper around their crease.

The third period was all about game management from the home side. Calgary continued to finish checks, protect the middle of the ice and change smartly to avoid long shifts. San Jose pushed late with the goalie pulled, but a strong wall battle and quick outlet set up Samuel Honzek to slide the puck into the empty net for 2-0 in the final minute, sealing a workmanlike victory.

Numbers Box

  • Shots on goal: Calgary 36, San Jose 16
  • Blocked shots: Calgary 25, San Jose 13
  • Goaltending: Calgary starter turned aside every shot faced; San Jose’s netminder carried a heavy workload against 36 attempts
  • Penalties/PIM: Calgary 2 minors (4 PIM), San Jose 3 minors (6 PIM)
  • Key scorers: Coleman (GWG), Honzek (EN insurance)

Team Notes

Calgary’s top six forwards drove most of the possession, repeatedly winning races to loose pucks and forcing turnovers on the forecheck. On the back end, the Flames’ defense kept tight gaps in the neutral zone, denying San Jose clean entries and funneling play to the outside. For the Sharks, the positive note is how their penalty kill held up under pressure, but they will look at the shot chart and know they left too much offensive potential on the table.

Coach Mark comment

Calgary played a very mature home game. They did not chase offence, they trusted their structure and let the shot volume wear San Jose down. When your team limits the opponent to 16 shots and scores at key moments, that is the kind of blueprint that travels well through a long season.

Questions & Answers | IHM Performance Metrics

  • Q: What was the biggest tactical edge for Calgary in this game?
    A: Their layered forecheck and tight neutral-zone gap control. The Flames consistently denied San Jose controlled entries, which kept the Sharks from building any multi-chance shifts.
  • Q: How did the Flames manage the low-scoring nature of the night?
    A: They stayed patient, trusted their defensive shell and avoided forcing plays through the middle. Once they had the 1-0 lead, every shift focused on winning the next battle and keeping pucks below the San Jose goal line.
  • Q: What does this result say about Calgary’s defensive structure?
    A: Holding an NHL opponent to 15 shots usually means your layers are in sync. Calgary’s wingers tracked back hard, the defense held the dotted-line area and the goaltender saw clean looks with minimal rebounds.
  • Q: Where can San Jose find adjustments after this loss?
    A: They need more controlled exits and entries. Too many possessions ended with chips off the glass or hopeful dumps that Calgary handled easily, which limited any chance to attack with numbers.

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