The Avalanche used it timeout after the third unlucky goal and even got the score back to within one, but the hockey gods were once again cruel. Backlund got credit for his second of the game after a scramble in front of the Colorado net resulted in another tally off a player's boot.
"We were better. We had some moments there," head coach Jared Bednar said of his team's play after the timeout. "Then they went down there and got another one. They poked at the goalie and it went off our skate and went in. That was kind of deflating, but you could tell that at least we had a handful of guys digging in there and trying to do the right things after the timeout."
It's hard to place all the blame on Pickard, as he had little to no chance of stopping many of the pucks that got past him.
That fact doesn't seem to matter to the netminder. At the end of the day, he gave up six goals.
"There isn't a whole lot you can do on some of them, but they still count the same as any other goal," Pickard said. "And you really have to bear down if you're a [victim] of one of those bounces. I was the [victim] of a few of them tonight. I'm not going to sit here and make excuses. I let in six goals, and they all count the same, so it's definitely tough."
After the contest, Bednar took aim at the players in front of his goalie for not playing the way they're capable of in consecutive games.
The Avalanche was coming off one of its better performances of the season in Thursday's 2-1 overtime win at the Chicago Blackhawks but couldn't duplicate that effort against the Flames.
"We didn't do things tonight that we just did four nights ago in Chicago," Bednar said. "To me, there is an expectation until we buy in and get committed to play the way we can play, we're just flipping a coin and losing 50 percent of the time because we're not buying in and playing the right way all the time. You leave games to chance and that's what happens. If you don't do things the right way, you're not going to win."