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    PA Stats Inc
    Nov 2, 2008, 04:45

    LOS ANGELES (Ticker) -- The reeling Calgary Flames needed a

    spark, so Miikka Kiprusoff took matters into his own hands.

    Kiprusoff made 36 saves and Mike Cammalleri scored a power-play

    goal in the first period as the Flames blanked the Los Angeles

    Kings, 2-0, on Thursday.

    Rene Bourque added an empty-netter late in the third for

    Calgary, which had lost five of six (1-4-1).

    The 32-year-old Kiprusoff turned aside 12 shots in the first

    session, 13 in the second and 11 in the third to secure his

    fourth shutout of the season and 30th career.

    "We left him out to hang again," Cammalleri said. "We can't put

    that much pressure on our goaltender. It just shows you how

    good he is."

    Rookie Jonathan Quick stopped 18 shots for the Kings, whose

    four-game winning streak was halted.

    "We just needed that extra little push, that extra effort to get

    to the net and get more pucks there," Los Angeles' Jarret Stoll

    said. "We had a lot of shots, but against a goaltender like

    that, you've got to get them the dirty way."

    Los Angeles has dropped four of its last five home meetings with

    Calgary, falling to 1-9-0 in the overall series since December

    19, 2006.

    By notching his league-leading 32nd win of the season, the Finn

    is just 16 away from tying New Jersey Devils netminder Martin

    Brodeur's single-season record of 48 set in 2006-07. The Flames

    have 27 regular-season games remaining.

    "He was excellent," Calgary coach Mike Keenan said. "He's a

    focused goalie right now. When he's on his game, he's one of

    the best. We did well on the penalty kill. We used a lot of

    players, and they all worked hard."

    "We know they have been playing so well lately," Kiprusoff said.

    "We knew we had to play well to beat them. Most of the shots I

    saw, and our defense took care of the rest."

    Kiprusoff got all the help he needed at 8:58 of the first

    period, when Cammalleri - a former King - received a

    cross-crease pass from Todd Bertuzzi and beat Quick from the

    doorstep for his team-leading 29th goal of the season and a 1-0

    edge.

    Cammalleri, who was acquired from Los Angeles this past June, is

    five goals shy of his career high set with the Kings in 2006-07.

    "When I got booed, I don't think people understand the fact that

    I got traded," Cammalleri said. "I didn't leave. There's a

    difference."

    Bourque sealed the win, depositing the puck into an empty net

    with 36 seconds remaining in the third for his 19th tally.

    "Those are games that you have to find a way to win," said Los

    Angeles coach Terry Murray, whose team was coming off a

    five-game road trip (4-1-0). "You're making a push to make the

    playoffs, and a win puts you one point back of getting over that

    threshold and getting into that top group. You have to find a

    way to do it.

    "We played hard. Historically, the first home game is a very

    difficult one after a road trip. But when you have a goaltender

    that's as good as Kiprusoff is, you have to make life more

    difficult for him."

    The Kings, who have surrendered two or fewer goals in 23 games

    this season, stayed strong on the defensive end but were unable

    to avoid being shut out for the eighth time this campaign and

    sixth time at home.

    "We must find a way to score," Murray said. "We have to figure

    that out. When you are coming home and playing well, you have

    to find a way to keep it going. If you don't, it can get away

    from you in a hurry."

    "We have to find a way to win those type of games," added Kings

    center Anze Kopitar, whose three-game points streak was snapped.

    "We have to put goals on the board. We are struggling there

    with the power play."

    Los Angeles went 0-for-6 with the man advantage.

    "When you have that many chances, you have to score," Kopitar

    said. "They capitalized on one of their power plays. We have

    to do the same."