Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Memories still fresh from last Pens clash

- By Rob Parent rparent@21st-centurymed­ia.com @ReluctantS­E on Twitter

VOORHEES, N.J. » They’re ready to party at the bar in the Marriott across the street, all adorned in their bumble-bee-colored clothes, trying to sneak their beers outside so that they can cross the street. There they can stand on the sidewalk with a good view of the projector-screen TV the team likes to set up outside the arena, a perk for regular Joe and Mary Penguins fan who didn’t spend that week’s paychecks for a pair of tickets.

Welcome to hockey fandom in Pittsburgh, a place that long ago grew accustomed to cheering for a winning team, a favorite Fifth Ave. pasttime that only multiplies in glee whenever the Flyers are the chosen Schmoes.

There was always a bit of a rivalry between the teams, stemming from early decades of the Flyers beating up the inept Pens, then having it shift almost the other way when hockey lord and future franchise savior Mario Lemieux alighted. He still oversees this success story that he kept in town a decade or so ago, and with Sidney Crosby as his golden idol, the Penguins have become an institutio­n, bolstered the past two years by a pair of Stanley Cup championsh­ips.

Their black-and-goldclad convoy of fans, who hit a bump with a 2012 Flyers playoff victory, had used that experience only to ramp up their support for a team that also used it as motivation to get better. And better the Penguins became.

Now they try to become the first team in nearly four decades to win a third consecutiv­e Stanley Cup title, with Crosby and his crafty braintrust of Evgeni Malkin, Phil Kessel and perhaps a stronger supporting cast than ever before, relishing their luck ... because what better opponent for the first round than those same Flyers they’ve spent the past few years beating and rebeating?

“They’ve got four lines that can play against anybody,” Flyers captain Claude Giroux said Monday. “Them getting (Derick) Brassard as a third-line center, I mean, he’s not a third-line center on any other team. They have all the pieces on paper. They’re a really good team, and in playoffs, they always find a way. So for us it’s a challenge ... it should be a fun series.”

It certainly was fun six years ago, Giroux then 24 years old and coming into his own as an elite player. Crosby had been the best No. 1 pick of that time, thought by many to be the league’s best player. But Giroux and the Flyers took a three games to none lead. Then came a 10-3 shocker of a Penguins win at Wells Fargo Center. They carried that momentum home and came away with a 3-2 victory in Game 5, bringing the series to a near-boiling point as it went back to Philadelph­ia ... where the Flyers responded.

“I think we were prepared for that Game 6,” Jake Voracek said. They were indeed, winning 5-1 in a game that essentiall­y began and ended with Giroux clocking Crosby with a clean check that sent him flying and rendered him generally ineffectiv­e.

The Flyers couldn’t have envisioned that the Devils were going to knock them off so easily in five games in the second round. Yet that firstround win in 2012 remains fresh, since it elevated thenfirst year Flyers Voracek and Wayne Simmonds into mainstays in the eyes of fans.

It also elevated Giroux into a star, but it would be the last playoff series won by their team. Six long years ago. “Yeah, that was a crazy series,” said Sean Couturier, a teen-aged checkingli­ne rookie who specialize­d in getting under Malkin’s skin. “It was probably not like any other series, where usually it’s tight and defensive. But there were a lot of goals scored in that series (56 total in the six games), a lot of offense. A lot of momentum swings on both sides.”

It was also a series that featured a lovely 309 penalty minutes, casting away the notion that fighting was for the regular season only.

Yet the game has changed dramatical­ly since, and the physical manifestat­ions of the relationsh­ip between these players has dwindled. There are five Flyers remaining from that 2012 team (Giroux, Voracek, Simmonds, Couturier and Matt Read), while only three Penguins (Crosby, Malkin, Kris Letang) are still around.

Yet as different as these teams are from six years ago, their offensive nature remains, and it’s seen primarily in their respective approaches on power plays. Especially so for Pittsburgh, with Crosby, Malkin and Letang still creating havoc, along with Kessel and Patric Hornqvist (15 power-play goals) adding vast measures of marksmansh­ip.

It is one special unit. The frequently injured Letang is healthy this go-round, quarterbac­king the NHL’s best power play. It has clicked along at a league-best 26.2 percent success rate. Kessel (42), Malkin (38) and Crosby (38) rank first and tied for third, respective­ly, in league power-play points.

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? There’s no love lost between the Penguins and Flyers, as this crease confab between Pittsburgh forward Jake Guentzel and Flyers goalie Alex Lyon in a March 25 game attests.
GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS There’s no love lost between the Penguins and Flyers, as this crease confab between Pittsburgh forward Jake Guentzel and Flyers goalie Alex Lyon in a March 25 game attests.

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