The Colorado Avalanche head to Scotiabank Saddledome on April 14 as one of the most dominant road teams in hockey this season, squaring off against a Calgary Flames squad that has long been eliminated from playoff contention. Colorado, with 115 points and a Presidents’ Trophy candidacy still in play, brings a plus-94 goal differential — the best in the entire NHL — into a building where they beat the Flames just five days ago. With the Avs looking to cement their legacy as the top seed in the Western Conference and possibly the whole league, this is a must-watch game for hockey fans even if only one team has something to play for.
Colorado is installed as a -160 moneyline favorite, with Calgary available at +145. On the puck line, the Avs are available at +145 on the -1.5, while Calgary is -166 to cover the 1.5 spread as the home team. The over/under is set at 6.5. The odds are interesting because Colorado is a road favorite by a significant margin — which tells you everything you need to know about how the market views the talent gap between these two teams, even accounting for the Flames’ solid home record of 22-12-5.
Colorado’s 52-16-11 record is extraordinary, and their road mark of 27-7-5 is the kind of number that belongs in a different dimension. The Avalanche have won games in virtually every building in the league this season, and their plus-94 goal differential is a testament to a team that simply does not lose close games — they win big. They defeated Calgary 3-1 on April 9 in Denver, which was just five days ago, and there is no reason to believe the result will be dramatically different tonight.
The big caveat for Colorado is the injury and rest management situation. Cale Makar, the best defenseman in hockey, is listed as questionable and may be resting for the playoffs. Nazem Kadri is out with a finger injury. Artturi Lehkonen is out with an undisclosed issue, and Josh Manson is also unavailable with an upper-body problem. On any other team, losing four players of that caliber would be disqualifying. For the Avalanche, who have spent the entire second half of the season with a deep and healthy roster, the question is whether the absences create an opening for Calgary to keep things close — or potentially steal a win at home.
The Flames are playing for nothing in the standings at 33-38-9, but they have been decent at home, going 22-12-5 in their building this season. Their players will be fresh and motivated to end the home schedule on a positive note in front of their fans. Calgary has its own question marks on the injury front, with Kevin Bahl, Yan Kuznetsov, and Matvei Gridin all listed as questionable on the blue line and wing. Both teams may be operating at reduced capacity, but Colorado’s depth still dramatically outpaces what the Flames can put on the ice.
The matchup is instructive in another way: the Avalanche’s regular season dominance does not evaporate just because they are resting a few players. Their system is built to generate offense at even strength and on special teams, and their remaining lineup still features elite talent throughout. Calgary, for all the competitive pride they bring, does not have the personnel to keep up with Colorado’s top unit for a full 60 minutes.
Colorado has dominated the Western Conference all season and did so against this same Calgary team less than a week ago. Even with Makar potentially sitting and a few other key pieces absent, the Avalanche are still a significantly better team than the Flames on paper. Calgary will push and play hard for their fans, and the home ice creates a slight bump in their competitive level — but this is not a game where the result feels genuinely in doubt. The Avs are the class of the West and should win this one going away.
The Avalanche moneyline at -160 reflects the genuine gap in talent between these rosters. Even resting key pieces, Colorado has enough to get the job done against a last-place Flames team at home. The road dominance this season has been historically good, and one game is not going to change that pattern.
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