The Morning Call (Sunday)

Slump continues with a meltdown on their own ice

- By Wayne Fish flyingfish.com Wayne Fish is a freelance writer. Follow him at flyingfish­hockey.com.

PHILADELPH­IA — It’s back to the drawing board for the slumping Flyers.

Friday night’s 5-2 loss to the last-place Montreal Canadiens leaves them with a 1-5-1 mark over the past seven games and makes that 7-1 stretch in January seem like an even more distant memory.

Unlike Tuesday night’s 4-2 competitiv­e setback in Edmonton, the Flyers were never in this one against the Atlantic Division cellar-dwellers.

Strange, because the Flyers had not played since the Oilers game, so fatigue was an unlikely factor.

Coach John Tortorella sounded as if he couldn’t really put a finger on the lack of energy.

This was the third time in the last six games the Flyers have come out and laid an egg.

“Sometimes those road trips (the recently completed 1-3 trek through the West) work against you,” Tortorella said. “Coming across the time zones, that first game back is a tough one.

“It’s hard to pinpoint an answer. As a group we were sluggish right on through.”

Montreal, coming off a recent win over Metro Division powerhouse New Jersey, skated around and through a lax Flyers defense at the Wells Fargo Center.

“The biggest glare for me tonight was how many pucks we were beaten to,” Tortorella said. “[Montreal] is a quick team. They were quicker to pucks.

“That’s why we got stuck in our end zone. The biggest concern was the lack of quickness.

“There are two or three guys I have concerns about. It’s so hard when your whole team looks sluggish to really pinpoint something. Is it a concern? Absolutely. Tonight was not a full group effort.”

The Canadiens picked up a pair of goals in the first period from David Savard and Chris Tierney, plus a third goal by Nick Suzuki in the second period. They added two more goals in the third.

Carter Hart was OK in goal for the Flyers but didn’t get much support from his teammates.

Playing without leading scorer Travis Konecny (upper-body injury), the Flyers failed to mount any consistent pressure on Canadiens goalie Jake Allen.

A goal by Owen Tippett just nine seconds into the third period gave the Flyers some life, but the rally fizzled.

Montreal got a goal from Jesse Ylonen at 6 minutes, 26 seconds to put to rest any notion of a comeback by Philadelph­ia. Josh Anderson added a goal at 12:12, and the Flyers got one back from Ivan Provorov with 1:28 to play.

Scott Laughton was perplexed by the Flyers’ lack of fire throughout the 60 minutes.

“Come home from a long road trip and don’t play the way we’re supposed to,” Laughton said. “We have to be way more connected with the puck. Make things happen for ourselves.

“It’s mostly one and done. You spend a lot of time in your D-zone. I just think we were off tonight. They played with the puck and we watched.”

Tippett finished with a seasonhigh eight shots and probably was the only Flyer with consistent push in his game.

“Sometimes come off a hard road trip, the time change can mess with you,” he said. “We didn’t start off the way we wanted to and it just wasn’t our night.”

Faceoff woes

One thing the Flyers really need to work on is their faceoff execution. They are winning only 45.5% of their draws, which ranks 30th in the NHL. When a team continues to lose critical faceoffs in its defensive zone, it’s only trouble.

Short shots

The Flyers finished up a backto-back in New Jersey on Saturday night. Goalie Sam Ersson was looking to extend his career-starting winning streak to a seventh game.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM/AP ?? Goaltender Carter Hart was just OK Friday night as the Philadelph­ia Flyers continue to struggle.
MATT SLOCUM/AP Goaltender Carter Hart was just OK Friday night as the Philadelph­ia Flyers continue to struggle.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States