What began as a promising five-game homestand ended in heartbreak Saturday afternoon.
The Flyers (9-9-2) dropped their season-high third straight game with a 6-5 overtime loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning at the Wells Fargo Center to finish the homestand 2-2-1.
Anthony Cirelli scored the game-winner at 1:41 in overtime.
Tampa temporarily moves atop the NHL standings. The Eastern Conference-leading Bolts are 14-5-1 with 29 points. The Predators (27 points) host the Kings tonight.
• The big difference between this Flyers team and the one that left Philly on Oct. 27 after a 6-1 clunker to the Islanders is its fight. Tampa went up 5-1 and things were getting ugly. But the Flyers fought back with four straight goals and forced overtime. The Flyers rung off four goals on eight shots in a span of 6:04. Travis Konecny had two and both Sean Couturier and Wayne Simmonds had one.
They lost and it was an unsuccessful homestand, but they didn’t lay down like they did three weeks ago. This was really an effort in which you’re happy with a point.
• This is a story about an unstoppable force meeting a very movable object, and well, you know the result. It was not pretty.
The Flyers’ 30th-ranked penalty kill surrendered three power-play goals. The Flyers now have allowed an NHL-worst 22 power-play goals. They have allowed three power-play goals two times and multiple power-play goals five times. They have gone just five games without allowing a PPG. The Flyers played with the NHL’s fifth-best power play and were electrocuted. Tampa was 3 for 4 on the power play.
You cannot win in the NHL with a penalty kill this ineffective.
• Finally, the Flyers’ power play struck twine Saturday. In fact, it recorded a hat trick. James van Riemsdyk ended an 0-for-15 drought in the second period and Konecny and Couturier added two in the third period.
The Flyers’ PP is now 6 for its last 48 opportunities since Oct. 13 and has just six goals at home. Really, special teams have been the Flyers’ biggest wart, and it hurt them again Saturday. As bad as the PK has been, the PP has been equally feeble.
But Saturday’s development was a huge positive.
• Claude Giroux, after two pointless games, picked up an assist on JVR’s PPG for his 700th career point as a Flyer (see story).
With another helper in the third period, Giroux became tied with Brian Propp for second on the franchise’s all-time assists list (480) and is 149 points from passing Propp for third on the team’s all-time scoring list.
Giroux now has 24 points in 20 games this season and is on pace for 98.4 points. He is an all-time Flyer and somehow, he’s still underappreciated by a good portion of the fan base.
• Calvin Pickard’s stat line Saturday doesn’t read well: six goals on 26 shots. But it’s hard to fault him. He wasn’t bad. Tampa’s second goal was a bit leaky but its others don’t fall on Pickard. With Brian Elliott out two weeks, the Flyers will need Pickard to raise his level of play. He mostly did that Saturday.
• The Flyers came out ready to play with a strong first period, outshooting the Lightning, 18-7, and had 21 shot attempts at 5-on-5. The biggest takeaway was how the Flyers were attacking Tampa. The forwards went to high-danger areas and the defense had just six shot attempts at 5-on-5. That’s usually a successful formula for scoring, but goalie Louis Domingue was the Lightning’s best player despite some shaky moments.
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