| Image courtesy of AP |
They did it again.
Led by Claude Giroux and rookie Sean Couturier, the
Philadelphia Flyers beat the Pittsburgh Penguins 8-5 in Game 2 of the Eastern
Conference Quarterfinals to take a 2-0 series lead.
After the Penguins repeated Wednesday’s start, going up
2-0 less than 10 minutes into the opening period, the fans in Pittsburgh’s
Consol Energy Center were ecstatic. Surely they couldn’t repeat their opening
game gaffe… or could they?
The Flyers came back once more, winning this offense-heavy
game. Coming back from deficits of 3-1, 4-3 and 5-4, there was nothing the
Penguins could do to keep the Flyers down. Coach Peter Laviolette called a
timeout after going down 2-0 and, after Max Talbot scored a shorthanded goal
three minutes later, the Penguins scored again 17.2 seconds before the end of
the period, angering the Flyers coach even more. He must’ve given a heck of an
intermission speech because the Flyers outscored Pittsburgh 7-2 the rest of the
way.
“When you’re able to come back in a game like that again,
I think it speaks volumes about the character in the room, not only from the
veteran players but the younger players as well,” said Laviolette.
Goaltender Ilya Bryzgalov referred to his team’s “never
give up” attitude, describing the team’s mentality when trailing in a game.
“You have two choices,” he remarked. “Just quit and say ‘ok,
we’re down’ or fight to the end [because you] never know what’s going to
happen.”
Couturier recorded the first hat trick of his young
career, tying the game at 4 with 2.8 seconds left in the second period, tying
it at 5 just 17 seconds after Tyler Kennedy gave the Pens a lead and giving his
team some breathing room down the stretch, making it a 7-5 game with 1:49 to
go.
“It feels great helping the team win offensively,” said
Couturier, but he didn’t want to take full credit. “The whole team had a great
effort in the second and third period. That’s what’s important.”
Meanwhile, Claude Giroux had the first six-point game of
his career, recording three assists and scoring three goals, one of them
shorthanded. But afterwards, he didn’t get excited.
“We can’t get comfortable because [the Penguins] are the
best team in the league… we just got to stay focused,” he said.
It was the first time two players recorded hat tricks in
the same game since Tony Granato and Tomas Sandstrom did it for the LA Kings in
a 12-4 win over the Flames in 1990.
It was only fitting that, minus Giroux and Couturier,
former Penguins Max Talbot and Jaromir Jagr scored the team’s two other goals.
Jagr scored the go-ahead goal with 10:47 in the game and, with it, the Flyers
were playing with a lead for the first time in the series.
The game’s 8-5 score might scream “bad goaltending” but,
even though there were many goals given up, the goaltending was an integral
part of tonight’s Flyers victory. Bryzgalov saved just 23 of 28 shots, but he
had a handful of highlight saves, the most spectacular being the glove save on
Kris Letang in the middle of the second period.
“That was the save of the year,” Jagr assessed. “He kept
us in the game.”
A small recap of the Flyers night: 8 goals, two of them
shorthanded… two hat tricks… coming back not once, not twice, but three times… and
beating Pittsburgh in their new arena for the seventh time in eight games. I’d
say the team should be pretty happy with their performance.
Much of the hockey world didn’t think the Penguins would
take Wednesday’s loss lightly and they expected the team to come back strong
and tie up the series heading into Philly. The Flyers knew they did their job
winning Wednesday. Had they lost tonight, it wouldn’t have killed their
spirits. But they won and now the Penguins are facing a seemingly impossible
task, down 2-0 against the Flyers, who have never blown a 2-0 series lead in
their team’s history.
I don’t know if Philadelphia can win the Cup by going
down in each game and that’s a problem that needs to be solved, but right now
it’s got the team’s and the city’s adrenaline high. The series will most likely
come back to Pittsburgh, but the Flyers have a golden opportunity to shut down
a Stanley Cup favorite’s run at the trophy. It’s just up to them to capitalize.
Great article Parth!
ReplyDeleteThe Flyers are the strongest that I have seen them in years. I think they were heavily underrated coming into this series. It's great to be able to come back to Philly with a 2 games to none lead. Keep in mind the Flyers are 17-0 all time in playoff series where they lead 2-0.
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