Posted: Friday, April 17, 2009, 11:44 PM | 47 comments |
 
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PITTSBURGH -- You can look at this 3-2 overtime loss two ways. One is that the Flyers were thisclose to tying this series and gaining home-ice advantage. The other is that the Flyers were thisclose to tying this series and gaining home-ice advantage.

It was an opportunity missed. It was a confidence builder.

Really it all depends on how the next two games play out.

The Flyers’ third-period lead hinged on two shots: One that should not have been stopped and another that should have been. Matt Cooke’s cross-slot pass found Jordan Staal with a whole net in front of him. Hounded by Braydon Coburn, he pushed the puck back towards Biron’s sliding skate. Moments later, on a bouncing-puck rush, Cluadde Giroux nudged a puck onto the stick of Darren Powe, who found the net from a wide angle inside of the right faceoff circle.

It was an uncharacteristically soft goal surrendered by Fleury, who later in the period stopped both Joffrey Lupul and then Jeff Carter on a 2-on-1 that would have all but sealed the win.

Despite the low goal total, much of the game was played at a breakneck pace, and this time the Flyers kept up. The game’s first stoppage did not come until seven minutes had elapsed. There were times when an entire set of players on both sides hit the ice between whistles.

Biron was spectacular throughout, using his glove to snap point blank shots from above the circle. The alleged shakiness of Game 1 was not present, at least partly because the Pens didn’t get to set up camp in the Flyers zone with anywhere near the frequency of Game 1.

The Penguins didn’t come out with near the intensity of their first period Wednesday, and the Flyers played possibly their most determined first period since swamping Toronto with five early goals on April 3. Stylistically though, it more resembled their 3-1 victory here on March 22, clogging the middle of the ice, chipping pucks and measuring risk. Two big saves by Marc-Andre Fleury on Jeff Carter and Arron Asham kept the Flyers from expanding that lead.

Two first-period numbers stood out. They were penalized once, scored on one of their power plays, and applied great pressure on the other. And they won nine of 17 faceoffs.

That flipped the following period, especially early, as the Penguins swamped Philadelphia in the early going, but could not crack Biron. When they finally did, it began as an innocent breakout play, but finished with Evgeni Malkin running a puck through Simon Gagne to Bill Guerin, he wrested into the high corner over Biron’s blocker shoulder.

Game 3 is Sunday at the Wachovia Center.

Posted by Sam Donnellon @ 11:44 PM  Permalink | 47 comments
47
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  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:06 AM, 04/18/2009
    Confidence builder? Losing because you take 2 stupid penalties in the space of 40 seconds doesn't give me a ton of confidence.
    JSaq
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:33 AM, 04/18/2009
    yeah..i'm confident the series is over tuesday...losers
    rothstein12
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:38 AM, 04/18/2009
    When is the last time this team won anything? I am tired of hearing about our tradition... Win something.
    Theo1980
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:56 AM, 04/18/2009
    I still can't believe the refs switched Carter's stick with a foam stick, so that when he shot at that completely open net, he missed the shot. The refs ruined the whole game. The fix is in.
    AreaMan
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:13 AM, 04/18/2009
    Who would be more effective in goal: Biron or a tutor shooter? Tutor shooter definitely stops both Guerin goals tonight. Edge: tutor shooter.
    toccheyhockey
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:18 AM, 04/18/2009
    I don't get the confidence builder. They lost! Lorain County Court Records Stark County Court Records
    johnhuger
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:12 AM, 04/18/2009
    the flyers played a much more determined game. they could have won. you couldnt say that wednesday. at the very least, i can spend my weekend thinking they have a shot at winning sunday. that's an improvement from this morning. don't tell me a win would have been better...no sh*t. but, this was the best game they've played in weeks.
    beetle
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:20 AM, 04/18/2009
    It's safe to say nobody sees a confidence builder coming out of last nights Flyers game. Although certain players, certain lines, and the team as a unit played better (at times) than they did in game 1, all you need to do is go back and watch any of the three "life-less" periods of game 1 for you to label their play in game 2 as "confidence-building." I respect your writing, and your opinions on the pulse of the Philadelphia Sports fan-I'd say I tend to agree with you 9 times out of 10. But as a philly sports fan, and more importantly at this point-A Flyers fan- if our confidence builds in response to DARRELL POWE rewarding us with a third period lead, only to watch it vanish as a result of stupid, senseless, SELFISH penalties-THE ONE area the hockey club spent time reassuring the fans and media it would improve and discipline themselves on-cost them a 2nd straight playoff game. The key word there being playoffs. It's amazing that this team still doesn't get it at playoff time. It didn't hit me until tonight, but I realized that this team-who seems to make the playoffs almost every year for the past decade or so, but creates their own obstacles preventing them from winning a championship, acts just as foolish if not more foolish than another team in this town who makes the playoffs year in and year out but is criticized far more often for not winning a championship than the Flyers are. The Eagles make the NFC championship game, EVEN AFTER BEING WRITTEN OFF, and don't get the amount of respect they probably deserve. But somehow the Flyers, in and out of the playoffs without the ultimate goal for quite some time, somehow receive the respect of "moral victories" and "confidence builders" during PLAYOFF TIME when none of that should count. The fact that they are losing the way they are, digging their own graves, yet gaining respect and confidence, rather than being criticized and second-guessed much like the Eagles are for similar output is a joke.
    BLoftus99
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:38 AM, 04/18/2009
    Stop already with the false hope, they're not winning any playoff series with this club - too many voids. Get playoff experience for everyone, and work towards next year.
    Liberty4All
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:46 AM, 04/18/2009
    "Really it all depends on how the next two games play out" Thanks for the keen insight.
    Matt88
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 7:10 AM, 04/18/2009
    Wow...another Flyers team knocking on the door of an early exit? Shocking...Good thing Snider got his cups 30+ years ago...that way he can still fill the building with sheep everynight...
    bvl390
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 7:19 AM, 04/18/2009
    They played better and still lost. What does that tell you? Pitt is 4
    JamesJ
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 7:22 AM, 04/18/2009
    I trace all of the unraveling of this season to the silly trade made for Carcillo (Upshall). The beginning of the end - and that was Holmgren's classic "Clarke-like" blunder. Way to go, Homer.
    mebphila
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 7:27 AM, 04/18/2009
    carter needs to bury that, enough said!
    eagles2010
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 7:43 AM, 04/18/2009
    Please explain to me how going down two games to none is a confidence builder.
    rmw38


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About Sam Donnellon
Donnellon's career began in Biddeford, Me., in 1981, and has included stops in Wilkes-Barre, Norfolk, and New York, where he worked as a national writer for the short-lived but highly acclaimed National Sports Daily. He has received state and national awards at each stop and since joining the Daily News in 1992 has been honored by the Associated Press Sports Editors, the National Sportswriters and Sportscasters Association, the National Association of Black Journalists, the Associated Press Managing Editors of Pennsylvania and the Keystone Awards. He and his wife of 26 years have raised three fine children, none of whom are even the least bit impressed with the above. E-mail Sam at donnels@phillynews.com
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