The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

With MacDonald out, Hakstol rolls the dice

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

VOORHEES, N.J. » Andrew MacDonald, a poster child of fan criticism in recent years — probably more to due with his $5 million salary than performanc­e — is about to show how important he is to the Flyers.

MacDonald, a veteran NHL defenseman who not only recovered from a mid-career demotion to the Phantoms but this season was rapidly turning into an on-ice leader of a too-youthful defense, will miss at least a month and likely much more after a shot drilled him in the knee Saturday during a 2-1 win over the Edmonton Oilers.

He was placed on injured reserve Monday, though curiously general manager Ron Hextall did not call anybody up to take his place on the roster, with the Anaheim Ducks scheduled to pay a visit to the Wells Fargo Center Tuesday night.

“We’re going to go with six (defensemen) right now,” Hextall said Monday. “We’re at home and there’s no reason to call somebody up just yet.”

But a road trip to Ottawa (Thursday) and Toronto (Saturday) looms, and when asked about making a decision about making up for the loss of MacDonald for the longer term, Hextall issued a verbal shrug.

“I don’t know that yet,” he said. “I’m going to kind of approach it on a day to day basis. There’s only six spots, so I don’t really want to call anybody up just yet. But we’ll see how tomorrow goes. If we get banged up and whatnot, we’ll make decisions as we go along.”

Perhaps confoundin­g the situation right now is the status of young forwards Taylor Leier and Jordan Weal, both of whom were absent with injuries Saturday. Both practiced in full Monday and are essentiall­y deemed ready to play. But veteran forward Matt Read, cut after training camp in a MacDonald-like move (high salary player being outplayed by younger player), played sort of OK Saturday with the other two guys out and was still taking a roster spot Monday.

It’s likely Hextall wants to see where this club is at with his young forwards and Read, and the six defensemen who will line up against the Ducks.

It’s there that this game of roster-wait-andsee gets interestin­g, since head coach Dave Hakstol Monday determined the best way to make up for the loss of MacDonald would be to shake his entire defensive corps.

Hakstol has taken rookie Robert Hagg, whose presence has allowed Shayne Gostisbehe­re to return to his rightful place as one of the most offensivel­y productive defenders in the league, and paired with him best defenseman Ivan Provorov as a Flyers top pair.

Veteran Brandon Manning, who was the extra defender until MacDonald’s injury, will line up next to rookie Travis Sanheim. And that leaves Gostisbehe­re, who has compiled 11 points in the first eight games, to be paired with Radek Gudas.

Kind of the oil and water of the Flyers’ defense.

“Obviously things are a little different now,” Gostisbehe­re said.

Ghost’s game, of course, is to always be ready to streak up ice and weigh risk against reward when it comes to jumping into the attack zone or not.

Gudas, best known as the Flyer most likely to incite a riot, is also a defenseman with a growing sense of responsibl­e play who possesses a gun of a shot that he doesn’t use often enough.

But he’s never had to play lifeguard next to an offensive defenseman as capable of scoring as he is handing the opposition a 2-on-1 break the other way.

“I’ve actually never played with Gudie before, but we’ve just got to feel each other out right now.” Gostisbehe­re said. “I’m sure there will be some growing pains, but hopefully the mistakes aren’t magnified too much.

“Gudie is more defensive and obviously can kill people, and I’m the guy who’s a puck-mover. I think it’s a good combo and hopefully it works out.”

Killing people (that means getting in a good hit ... we hope) isn’t the same as being fleet enough on his skates to cover-up whenever the flying Ghost gets in trouble in the transition. That’s something Hagg was skilled at, which is a big reason why Gostisbehe­re’s numbers are what they are.

 ?? TOM MIHALEK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Flyers defenseman Andrew MacDonald, left, is the man injured now, expected to miss four to six weeks with a knee injury. Fellow defender Radek Gudas, here bowing in pain after getting hurt last April against the Devils, has a tough job ahead as new...
TOM MIHALEK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Flyers defenseman Andrew MacDonald, left, is the man injured now, expected to miss four to six weeks with a knee injury. Fellow defender Radek Gudas, here bowing in pain after getting hurt last April against the Devils, has a tough job ahead as new...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States