The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Konecny, Giroux lead Flyers past Canadiens

- By Aaron Bracy

PHILADELPH­IA » Claude Giroux didn’t like the way he was playing, so the Philadelph­ia captain called himself out. And he responded in a big way.

Two days after saying he needed to “step up and bring more for the team,” Giroux had a goal and two assists to help the Flyers to a 5-3 victory over the Montreal Canadiens on Thursday night.

“When it’s not going your way, you have to challenge yourself,” Giroux said.

Giroux had been pointless in two of his previous three contests. Philadelph­ia survived his turnover in overtime Tuesday night in a 2-1 victory over Carolina when Brian Elliott made a spectacula­r stick save. That came one game after another Giroux turnover cost the Flyers a goal in a 4-3 shootout home loss to Ottawa.

Giroux bounced back with his fifth three-point game of the season.

“He’s pretty hard on himself, maybe overly so, but he felt like he could play better and he did that,” Flyers coach Dave Hakstol said. “He expects a lot of his teammates, but he puts himself at the head of the line.”

Travis Konecny scored twice, Jakub Voracek and Ivan Provorov also scored, and Shayne Gostisbehe­re had three assists. The Flyers kept their hold on a playoff spot in a crowded race in the Eastern Conference. Philadelph­ia entered in seventh place, but just one point ahead of Columbus and the New York Islanders, and only four in front of 10th-placed Carolina.

Brian Elliott made 25 saves in his second game back from a lower body injury after missing four games.

“Keep packing on two points and we’ll put ourselves in a good spot,” Elliott said.

Logan Shaw, Artturi Lehkonen and Brendan Gallagher scored for Montreal.

The game ended a historic day in Philadelph­ia that featured the victory parade for the Eagles’ first Super Bowl championsh­ip. The Flyers congratula­ted the Eagles on the video board and played highlights from the parade to the delight of the crowd, which unleashed a loud “E-A-GL-E-S! E-A-G-L-E-S!” chant.

Hakstol watched some of the parade festivitie­s on television.

“It’s hard not to be excited,” he said. “It’s pretty inspiratio­nal for the entire city. What an awesome sight. Their organizati­on did such a good job from top to bottom the entire year. That’s their just rewards.”

The parade also altered both teams’ normal routines. The Flyers held their morning skate at their practice facility in Voorhees, New Jersey rather than on their home ice in Philadelph­ia. They also had players who live in Philadelph­ia stay at a hotel in South Jersey on Wednesday night to ensure they could make the morning skate.

The Canadiens switched hotels from their normal spot in downtown Philadelph­ia to a place near the airport to avoid the crowds while also canceling their morning skate.

Montreal could’ve used the extra work to practice its penalty kill.

“Those penalties hurt,” Montreal coach Claude Julien said. “Their power play was going good and our penalty kill wasn’t good enough.”

Voracek broke a 2-all tie and made amends for an earlier turnover that led to a Canadiens goal 27 seconds into the third period when he roofed a wrist shot over Carey Price’s left shoulder for Philadelph­ia’s second power play goal of the contest.

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