The Flyers’ rebuild is about to meet the Stanley Cup Playoffs.
Rick Tocchet’s club capped off a concerted climb in the standings with a thrilling 3-2 shootout win Monday night over the Hurricanes at Xfinity Mobile Arena.
Tyson Foerster won it for the Flyers in the skills competition. Dan Vladar was magnificent.
The victory snapped the organization’s five-year postseason drought. In Year 1 under Tocchet as head coach and Year 3 of Danny Briere’s tenure as general manager, the Flyers made the playoffs for the first time since 2019-20.
They went 17-6-1 since Feb. 26 to clinch third place, the final berth in the Metropolitan Division. They entered Monday night needing two points over their final two games to punch their ticket. They won’t have to worry about an all-important Game 82.
The Flyers (42-27-12) overcame a 2-0 deficit at first intermission and eventually capitalized on a stripped-down Carolina lineup. The Eastern Conference-leading Hurricanes sat Sebastian Aho, Andrei Svechnikov, Jaccob Slavin, Seth Jarvis, Shayne Gostisbehere and Jordan Staal.
Matvei Michkov screamed to the crowd in the second period when he drew the Flyers to within 2-1. At that point, the building was about to erupt. Trevor Zegras sent it into a frenzy 2:33 minutes later with a game-tying power play goal.
The Flyers went 1-0-3 in their regular-season series with the Hurricanes (52-22-7).
• Tocchet, Briere and president of hockey operations Keith Jones deserve a ton of credit.
Last season, the Flyers finished tied with the Bruins for the Eastern Conference’s worst record. They went 33-39-10 as their rebuild went into another gear.
This season, after Briere and Jones landed their handpicked head coach, the Flyers have 96 points. The front office made critical offseason additions in Zegras, Dan Vladar and Christian Dvorak. All three have had career seasons.
Tocchet has done a quality job maximizing some key players and incorporating youth down the stretch.
“To me, it was the development of the team,” the head coach said Monday morning. “Obviously the players are a part of it. It’s not about coming every day worrying about one player and developing that guy. Yeah, he’s a part of the process, but it’s how we do things around here and I really wanted the identity of a Flyer. It’s something that we’ve built on every day and we’re getting there. Long way to go, but it’s starting to come around.”
The Flyers will face the rival Penguins in the first round. The NHL playoffs kick off Saturday. We’ll see if that’s when the Flyers and Penguins get underway in Pittsburgh. The schedule has not yet been announced.
• Vladar converted 24 saves on 26 shots.
He has been the Flyers’ most valuable player this season and gave them another strong effort. The 28-year-old was perfect over the final two periods and overtime, with some timely and difficult saves.
He didn’t crack in the shootout, celebrating with his hands in the air after the final stop.
The Flyers have been significantly better defensively compared to last season. Vladar has been a big reason why. The Flyers also made some important changes at the Olympic break that spurred their push.
Brandon Bussi, a 27-year-old in his first NHL season, stopped 18 of the Flyers’ 20 shots.
The Flyers had a few chances to take an early lead. Michkov found Sean Couturier for a good look, but the Flyers’ captain was denied. Barkey was turned away after Noah Cates found him streaking to the net.
Carolina then pounced on a couple of mistakes by the Flyers. There was a defensive breakdown on Bradly Nadeau’s game-opening goal and Christian Dvorak committed an uncharacteristic penalty that led to Nikolaj Ehlers’ power play goal.
But the Flyers rallied like they have often this season.
• The Flyers wrap up the regular season Tuesday when they welcome the Canadiens (7 p.m. ET/NBCSP).
Discover more from USA NEWS
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.