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The Calgary Flames are in a clump of Western Conference teams gearing up for a second-half push to the NHL’s postseason via their division or a conference wild-card berth.Sergei Belski

The Calgary Flames may be in playoff contention nearing the halfway point of their regular season, but they have lots of company.

The Flames (19-16-4) are in a clump of Western Conference teams gearing up for a second-half push to the NHL's postseason via their division or a conference wild-card berth.

No more than five points separated the Flames, Chicago Blackhawks, Colorado Avalanche, Minnesota Wild, Anaheim Ducks, Dallas Stars and San Jose Sharks from one another on Wednesday.

Those seven clubs are in the conference's second tier behind front-runners Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Winnipeg, St. Louis and Nashville.

"It's really tight this year," Flames captain Mark Giordano said on Wednesday. "Feels like there's a lot more teams in the mix than years past.

"With how tight it is, you've got to start, I think, really start paying attention to who is around you, the standings and all that sort of stuff. Teams are moving up quick, teams are getting points every night, so we've got to move up."

Calgary earned just 10 out of a possible 20 points against conference opponents in December, allowing San Jose, Anaheim, Colorado and Minnesota to pull ahead of the Flames in the standings.

The Flames need victories over the Kings (24-11-5) on Thursday and Ducks (19-14-8) on Saturday to equal the 21 wins Calgary owned at the halfway mark last season.

"These next two games are big," centre Sean Monahan said. "They're on home ice and they're against two rivals. We've got to create energy for ourselves."

A power-play that ranks 20th in the league (18.6 per cent) and a penalty kill at No. 25 (78 per cent) has been the biggest drag on Calgary's game.

"I think we could have a lot better record if our specialty teams were better," head coach Glen Gulutzan said.

Mike Smith (15-13-3) was a busy man in Calgary's net in the first half facing 1,028 shots. Only New York's Henrik Lundqvist (1,045) and Toronto's Frederik Andersen (1,125) faced more rubber among NHL starters.

Calgary's average shots against began dropping in December.

Goalie protection, however, was projected to be the team's strength out of training camp with Giordano, Dougie Hamilton, T.J. Brodie, Travis Hamonic and Mike Stone the top five defencemen.

Up front, left winger Johnny Gaudreau is on pace for a career season in production at 1.1 points a game (13 goals, 30 assists.)

Monahan has delivered as a top-line centre should with six game-winning goals, a pair of overtime winners and seven power-play goals this season.

Recent absences of veteran forwards Kris Versteeg (hip surgery) and Michael Frolik (broken jaw) put a damper on Calgary's secondary scoring.

Jaromir Jagr, 45, has been in and out of the lineup with a lower-body injury and has scored once in 22 games.

Giordano scored the OT winner Sunday in a 4-3 win over Chicago to get Calgary's home record to 10-11-0.

Former Maple Leafs captain Darryl Sittler says Johnny Bower left a “lasting impression” on everyone he met. Some of hockey's biggest names gathered in Toronto on Wednesday to pay tribute to the Hall of Fame goaltender.

The Canadian Press

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