(Pregame warmup photo - Sean O'Brien)
Introductions
Travis
Konecny's upper-body injury made the Philadelphia
Flyers (30-20-7, 67 points)
task more challenging heading into the afternoon tilt versus the
Eastern Division-leading New
York Rangers (38-16-3, 79 points),
who enter on a nine-game winning streak. The choice of both goalies
implies that their head coaches want to win, as each team also plays
tomorrow.
Flyers'
head coach, John Tortorella, tapped Sam Ersson to play in the net.
Peter Laviolette, who led Philadelphia to its last Stanley Cup
appearance in 2010, picked one of the top goalies in the League, Igor
Shesterkin.
This
was a nationally televised game on ABC. It was originally scheduled
as a streaming-only ESPN+ contest but was elevated to broadcast
level.
As
a side note – Today's game marks my one-hundredth, with
approximately half of those games coming since the 2010-11 season
when I received my first credential approval. The organization has
always been and remains first-class, which a freelancer like me
appreciates.
First
period
An
early “Let's go Rangers” chant elicited bad memories among the
Flyers' faithful. Two seasons ago, an overwhelming number of Rangers'
fans, more than was ever known to have been present in Philadelphia,
dominated the Wells Fargo atmosphere. That 3-2 overtime Rangers' win
on March 1, 2023, was seen as the bottoming-out of the pre-Danny
Briere-Keith Jones era that began after that 2022-23 season was
buried.
A
classic, 1970's 1970s-style fight took place three minutes into the
period as Nick Deslauriers and Matt Rempe (who had six inches on his
opponent, standing at 6' 7”) fought for an extended period.
Deslauriers eventually knocked Rempe down after his shirt was caught
on his head—five minutes in the box for each.
A
lot of back-and-forth action. There were some chances, but none that
were successful.
Shots:
Philadelphia – 18 New York - 9
Score:
Philadelphia – 0 New York – 0
Intermission:
The Mites on Ice entertained, as usual. It's always enjoyable to see
young players on the half-ice.
Second
period
Garnet
Hathaway received a double minor for high sticking at 8:47. The play
was under review, but the analysis did not change the initial ruling.
With
1:10 left on the penalty, Artemi Panarin was called for holding. But
Alexis Lafreeniere (17th goal) wristed a shot past Ersson at
11:56. Assists to Vincent Trocheck and K'Andre Miller. Rangers' fans
erupted but were drowned out by the faithful. An ear-estimate and
with a view of various blue jerseys in the stands, which was hardly
scientific, put the boisterous Rangers fans in the mid-single digit
thousands.
Shots:
Philadelphia – 5 (23) New York – 10 (19)
Score:
Philadelphia – 0 New York – 1
Intermission:
A chess-like game through two periods. This is a good test for
Tortorella's team. Building culture and rebuilding an iconic
franchise is bolstered through winning and learning how to respond to
losses.
Third
period
Tyson
Foerster (11th goal) tied the game because he was positioned in
front of the net and had his stick on the ice at 2:36. The work for
this goal was done by Scott Laughton, who fought his way to supply a
wrap-around assist from behind the net—a secondary assist by Travis
Sanheim.
Ersson
was screened and could not see a wrist shot that was thrown to the
net by Barclay Goodrow (2nd goal). It appeared that Rempe tipped
the puck in as he was stationed in front of the net and was seen
receiving congratulations on the bench from his teammates. Assists
Braden Schneider and Chris Kreider. (It was later switched to Rempe,
who had his first goal in the National Hockey League.)
Sanheim
led a breakaway while Sean Couturier was in the penalty box with
slightly over nine minutes to play. Laughton trailed him on the
two-on-none-play. But Sanheim could not tie the game. Arguably, a
forward might have succeeded better or used the trailer to set up a
higher percentage play or rebound attempt.
Philadelphia
was given a chance to tie the game when Miller took a high-sticking
penalty at 15:57. Tortorella pulled Ersson. At the same time, the
Flyers had approximately 17 seconds left on the power play. After a
stoppage, a timeout was taken at 17:42, with 15 seconds remaining on
the man-advantage.
There were a few
scoring chances, including one puck across the goal crease with
seconds remaining, but no dice. The Rangers won a solid game by
playing good defense and getting a savvy performance from
Shesterkin.
Shots:
Philadelphia – 17 (40) New York – 5 (24)
Score:
Philadelphia – 1 New York – 2
The
game had a playoff feel. The Flyers played a competitive game and
play the Pittsburgh Penguins on the road tomorrow, starting at 3:30
PM.