Numberoneline

It takes a complete team effort to win hockey games.
Over the course of their seven-game winning streak, the Flames have had that and more.

The goaltending and defence have been outstanding, limiting the opposition to three goals or fewer in all seven wins, while depth through the forward ranks have provided crucial secondary scoring.
But it's the biggest stars that have shone brightest during the Flames climb to second in the Pacific Division.
The trio of Johnny Gaudreau, Sean Monahan and Micheal Ferland have combined for a whopping 32 points during the team's seven-game run that began on New Year's Eve against Chicago.
They'll look to build on those totals when the Flames try for their eighth straight win when they welcome the Winnipeg Jets to the Scotiabank Saddledome Saturday at 1 p.m. (TV: HNIC, Radio: Sportsnet960 The FAN).
"We keep building chemistry together, we feel good playing together on the ice" Gaudreau said. "We're friends off the ice; we like hanging out with each other off the ice as well so it builds a lot of chemistry."
Gaudreau, with 13 of those 32 points (2G, 11A), Ferland (4G, 5A) and Monahan (4G, 5A) - who missed Calgary's last game due to illness - have solidified themselves this campaign as one of the top lines in the league.
"I think to start the season we knew how we could play as a line," said Gaudreau. "You go through ups and downs throughout the season, I've said that before. December was kind of tough for us, but we played well and just couldn't find the net and we're getting rewarded this month."
Calgary's first line was red-hot for much of October and November before cooling off slightly with 21 points (11G, 10A) in 16 games from Nov. 25 to Dec. 29 before catching fire again.
"I think this time they're finishing on their chances more than anything else," said head coach Glen Gulutzan. "I don't see a whole lot changed in their game other than now they're converting - and they've made some really high-end plays - but they're converting more than they have in the past."