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Looking for Calgary Flames tickets?  We offer premium and value seating for all Calgary Flames tour dates.  Click on the Calgary Flames concert schedule below to find great deals on every ticket.  Buy Calgary Flames tickets now because they are selling quickly.  Grab some friends or a sweetheart and order your tickets today!


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All Calgary Flames tickets are side by side unless noted directly below the section and row of the specific tickets (very rare when seats are noted as not side by side). Ticket groups can be broken down into any quantity listed in the drop-down menu. Single tickets may not be available for groups of 2 or 4.

Calgary Flames tickets will be sent via FedEx once confirmed by the broker. A FedEx tracking number will be provided to you once the tickets ship.

 

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Results

    Babcock keeps pushing Red Wings in perhaps his best coaching job ever (Yahoo! Sports)

    Detroit's head coach is all about pushing everyone around him to achieve their best results.

     

    What We Learned: Complaining about NHL officiating? Time to fine these sore losers (Puck Daddy)

    Hello, this is a feature that will run through the entire season and aims to recap the weekend’s events and boils those events down to one admittedly superficial fact or stupid opinion about each team. Feel free to complain about it. No one is ever going to be totally happy with the ways in which the NHL's referees or officials make their decisions. We can all agree on that. If there's a game in which neither team is whistled for a penalty, both will likely complain that the refs missed calls on the other. If there's a game in which both teams receive 10 power plays, both will complain that the referees were overly harsh in doling out discipline. No one is ever especially happy with calls that go in between those two extremes, either, because unless you win, you aren't happy. And sometimes, even when you do win, you aren't happy. It's tough to know what, exactly, brought all this to a head in these playoffs. Alex Ovechkin complaining about a league-wide conspiracy in Game 6 after the end of Game 7; Jonathan Toews stamping his feet when his team got clobbered on home ice by its archrival; Sidney Crosby saying the league needs to institute video review for puck-over-the-glass calls; Jonathan Quick abusing officials because the Kings gave the Sharks a two-man advantage in overtime. Doesn't it strike anyone as being a bit much? No one likes to lose in October, let alone in the second round of the playoffs, and you might even say that the refs have made a bit of a spectacle of themselves in the last few games. The best thing a ref can do, the old saying goes, is not be noticeable, and things have admittedly gotten a bit out of hand in some instances. But nonetheless, can you imagine the eye-rolling or outright mockery in Chicago if Henrik Zetterberg had said the same things Toews did after they got creamed in Game 1? Or the uproar if Ryan Callahan of the lionized New York Rangers had complained about a conspiracy to push the series longer? Or the furor if Joe Thornton had done what Quick did after the Sharks gave up a similar late-game 5-on-3 advantage that allowed the Kings to tie Game 1? What it boils down to is being a sore loser.

     

    NHL-National Hockey League roundup (Reuters)

    May 13 (The Sports Xchange) - Former NHL coach Mike Keenan signed a contract to coach in Russia. Keenan, currently an analyst for the MSG Network, announced via Twitter from the Ural Mountains on Monday morning that he will coach Metallurg Magnitogorsk of the KHL. Keenan coached the Philadelphia Flyers, Chicago Blackhawks, New York Rangers, St. Louis Blues, Vancouver Canucks, Boston Bruins, Florida Panthers and Calgary Flames from 1984-2009. He won a Stanley Cup during his one season with the Rangers in 1994. ...

     

    NHL roundup: Keenan to coach in Russia (The SportsXchange)

    Former NHL coach Mike Keenan signed a contract to coach in Russia.

     

    EA Sports NHL 14 cover vote down to 8; Pavel Datsyuk, Martin Brodeur alive (Puck Daddy)

    One of these eight players will be the cover model for EA Sports’ NHL 14: From EA Sports: The Round of 16 featured some extraordinarily close matchups and included some notable upsets: The Battle of Pennsylvania: For the second year in a row, Evgeni Malkin has been defeated by a Philadelphia Flyers player. Last year, Malkin lost to NHL 13 Cover Athlete Claude Giroux in the semifinals. This year, Flyers forward Wayne Simmonds unseeded Malkin. As Close as they Come: At final tally, less than 100 votes separated winner Taylor Hall and his opponent Matt Duchene in this round. Two Maple Leafs Advance: against Original SixTM Rivals: A strong Game Six performance may have helped Joffrey Lupul and James van Riemsdyk overcome their opponents, P.K. Subban and Tyler Seguin, respectively. Voting for this round is now live and fans can vote an unlimited number of times at NHL.com/CoverVote . The round closes on May 19 at 11:59pm ET.

     

    "Iron Mike" Keenan to coach Russia's Metallurg (Reuters)

    MOSCOW (Reuters) - Mike Keenan, who coached the New York Rangers to Stanley Cup glory in 1994, will take charge of Metallurg Magnitogorsk after signing a two-year contract with the Russian club on Monday. "On May 13 an agreement was signed between Metallurg Magnitogorsk and the Canadian specialist Mike Keenan," the Continental Hockey League (KHL) team said on their website (www.metallurg.ru). Keenan, 63, replaces fellow Canadian Paul Maurice who quit last month following one season in charge after the team were knocked out of the KHL playoffs in the first round. ...

     

    Mike Keenan hired as coach of Russian hockey club (The Associated Press)

    MAGNITOGORSK, Russia (AP) -- Veteran NHL coach Mike Keenan has signed a two-year contract to coach the Russian club Metallurg Magnitogorsk.

     

    Ice hockey-"Iron Mike" Keenan to coach Russia's Metallurg (Reuters)

    MOSCOW, May 13 (Reuters) - Mike Keenan, who coached the New York Rangers to Stanley Cup glory in 1994, will take charge of Metallurg Magnitogorsk after signing a two-year contract with the Russian club on Monday. "On May 13 an agreement was signed between Metallurg Magnitogorsk and the Canadian specialist Mike Keenan," the Continental Hockey League (KHL) team said on their website (www.metallurg.ru). Keenan, 63, replaces fellow Canadian Paul Maurice who quit last month following one season in charge after the team were knocked out of the KHL playoffs in the first round. ...

     

    Keenan to coach Russian team (The SportsXchange)

    Former NHL coach Mike Keenan signed a contract to coach in Russia.

     

    Mike Keenan will coach Metallurg Magnitogorsk, according to hilariously intense KHL video (Puck Daddy)

    Legendary NHL coach Mike Keenan has signed a 2-year contract to coach Metallurg Magnitogorsk of the KHL. We’ll just go ahead and assume it’s to launch a thousand “Iron Curtain Mike” jokes. From Metallurg’s press release, about the “Canadian Specialist”: May 13 an agreement was signed between Magnitogorsk "Metallurg" and the Canadian specialist Mike Keenan. The agreement is for two years. Mike Keenan was born in October 21, 1949 in Baumanvill, Ontario, Canada. A professional hockey player. From season 1979/80 years starting coaching. Since the season 1984/85 started working as a head coach in the National Hockey League, coached eight teams: Philadelphia Flyers, Chicago Blackhawks, New York Rangers, St. Louis Blues, Vancouver Canucks, Boston Bruins, Florida Panthers and Calgary Flames. In 1987 and 1991, the position of head coach national team Canada wins Canada Cup. With the club New York Rangers Mike Keenan won the Stanley Cup in 1993/94, in addition, three went to the finals of the NHL playoffs. The team announced Keenan’s hiring with the single greatest introduction video we’ve ever seen: OK, second-greatest, behind this one . Keenan isn’t the first North American coach to take over Metallurg. Dave King coached them from 2005-06, and Paul Maurice was the team’s coach last season. Now comes the most difficult part for the KHL team: Hiring a translator that can capture Keenan’s unique brand of whimsy, and meeting Jeremy Roenick’s asking price when he comes out of retirement to play for Keenan again (we assume).