The 2025 calendar year has officially come to a close, perhaps mercifully for the Calgary Flames. It was a year of ups and downs for the Flames, and the stats back that up. The organization experienced a heartbreaking end to the 2024-25 season, missing the playoffs by a single tiebreaker, and then experienced the worst start in franchise history in 2025-26.
So after a wild 12 months in Calgary, here’s how the Flames’ stats look from January 1st to December 31st.
Team stats
First up, let’s take a look at how the Flames performed in 2025 as a team. We’ll be looking at every game played from January 1st to December 31st. Overall, the Flames played 84 games in 2025, all in the regular season, of course.
Overall record
| Stat | Calgary Flames in 2025 | NHL rank |
|---|---|---|
| Points | 93 (41-33-11) | 20th |
| Wins | 41 | 21st |
| Reg. Losses | 33 | 15th |
| O.T. Losses | 11 | 12th |
| Points % | .547 | 20th |
The Flames’ ranks here aren’t too surprising. This is a team that was middle of the pack all season last year, and has been at the bottom this season. That leads to a team finishing in the bottom half of the league in terms of points and wins in 2025, but not in the bottom 10. Is anything more Flamesy than that?
Overall, the Flames won 41 of their 85 games in 2025, losing 44 times. 20 of 31 teams had more wins than Calgary in 2025, while 19 of 31 teams had a better points percentage than Calgary. Not terrible or among the worst in the league when it comes to winning hockey games, but certainly not good either. Again, is anything more Flamesy than finishing 2025 with an overall record of 41 wins and 44 losses?
One category that stands out is the Flames’ losing the 12th most games in overtime/shootouts in 2025. This has been a trend with this team for years now, as they consistently struggled to pick up extra points in overtime ever since Johnny Gaudreau left the team.
Team numbers
Next, let’s examine the Flames’ overall team numbers in special teams, scoring, defence, and goaltending.
| Stat | Calgary Flames in 2025 | NHL rank |
|---|---|---|
| PP% | 18.1% | 26th |
| PK% | 80.6% | 7th |
| GF/GP | 2.68 | 31st |
| GA/GP | 2.84 | 9th |
| Save Percentage | .901 | 8th |
These numbers tell a pretty clear story right away. The Flames are absolutely horrific offensively under Ryan Huska, but they are very solid on defence and in goal. The Flames finished the 2025 calendar year with the 26th-ranked ranked powerplay in the NHL, better than only seven other teams. Conversely, their penalty kill was the seventh-best in the NHL. It’s not hard to see where this team and their coaching staff excel.
When it comes to scoring goals at one end and preventing them at the other, the story is very similar. The Flames’ offence was horrendous in 2025, finishing as the second-worst offence in the entire NHL at just 2.68 goals per game. The Flames were one of only three teams in the league to finish under 2.7 goals per game. For reference, the Colorado Avalanche scored 3.64 goals per game in 2025, almost an entire goal more than the Flames.
Defensively, however, the Flames were incredibly strong, allowing just 2.84 goals against per game. That total was the ninth best in the league. Funny enough, all eight teams that ranked ahead of the Flames when it comes to goals against featured in the 2024-25 playoffs, and seven of eight are currently in playoff spots.
Individual stats
Next, let’s take a look at the Flames’ individual stats in 2025, from who scored the most goals to who threw the most hits.
Offensive stats
The Flames’ offence was dreadful last year, but that doesn’t mean there weren’t some standout performances from individual players.
| Stat | Team Leader in 2025 | 2025 Total |
|---|---|---|
| Points | Nazem Kadri | 73 |
| Goals | Nazem Kadri | 29 |
| Assists | Nazem Kadri | 44 |
| Shots | Nazem Kadri | 273 |
| PP Points | Nazem Kadri | 27 |
I think Nazem Kadri may be the Flames’ best forward, just a hunch. The veteran centre dominated the Flames’ stat lines in 2025, leading in every single major offensive category. Maybe Don Maloney is on to something? Not really, but even the most devout team tank members can’t deny just how much of a dawg Kadri is to be posting these kinds of numbers on the NHL’s worst offence.
The next closest Flame when it comes to points was Jonathan Huberdeau, who was a whopping 20 points short of Kadri’s total, finishing 2025 with just 53 points. When it comes to assists, Kadri was nine higher than the next closest Flame, with MacKenzie Weegar finishing 2025 with 35 assists. Goals were the only category in which Kadri was in danger of finishing second, with youngster Matt Coronato finishing 25 with 26, just three short of Kadri.
Defensive stats
Next, let’s review the top defensive contributors for the Flames in 2025 when it comes to stats like hits, blocks, and overall time on ice.
| Stat | Team Leader in 2025 | 2025 Total |
|---|---|---|
| Hits | Adam Klapka | 23 |
| Blocks | MacKenzie Weegar | 191 |
| TOI/GP | MacKenzie Weegar | 24:15 |
| Takeaways | MacKenzie Weegar | 43 |
Much like offensively, there was one Flame who carried the load on defence. To no one’s surprise, that player is MacKenzie Weegar. The veteran defenceman is by far the team’s best defender, and the numbers back it up. He led the team in blocks, overall time on ice, and takeaways in 2025. He also finished with 219 hits, just four behind team leader Adam Klapka.
No other Flame averaged over 24 minutes a night in 2025, with Rasmus Andersson finishing in second with 23:49 minutes per game. Weegar is clearly the team’s workhorse on defence, and even with a slow start to the 2025-26 season, he finished the calendar year as the team’s top choice for all things defence at even strength.
A year to forget
The 2025 calendar year was one to forget for the Flames, with the team failing to make the playoffs in the spring, doing almost nothing in the summer, and then losing the most games in franchise history in the fall. Needless to say, 2026 couldn’t have come at a better time.