The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

As season begins, Flyers face questions

- By Jack McCaffery jmccaffery @21st-centurymed­ia.com @JackMcCaff­ery on Twitter

Younger and faster, deeper through the middle, different in goal, the 2017-2018 Flyers will resume their never-ending search for NHL fulfillmen­t Wednesday night in San Jose.

In 82 games, and not a shift earlier, the only answer that matters will be revealed. In 82 games, it will be revealed if his three-year project has yielded Dave Hakstol’s best NHL team.

“That,” the Flyers’ coach said, “remains to be seen.” And his opinion? “That,” the Flyers’ coach said, “remains to be seen.”

That kind of being how sports work, it’s true: The Flyers will have their strengths or flaws revealed only in ice rinks, not in printed projection­s, betting lines or general hockey chit-chat. But as he completed his third NHL preseason over the weekend, Hakstol was OK with sharing at least one view of what’s next. And there is something about his team that causes him excitement.

“Absolutely,” he said. “It’s nothing in particular. I love the level of camp. I like the demeanor of our players. And thus far, the work level has been good.”

Hakstol has had one team good enough to reach the playoffs and another inconsiste­nt enough to reach exasperati­on. But it was that upheaval, and the resulting training-camp dynamic, that can straighten the Flyers’ crooked path.

Five rookies were in the Flyers’ traveling party to California, including three first-year defensemen and 19-year-old center Nolan Patrick, the No. 2 player selected overall in the last draft. That was an indicator of roster upheaval, but also a reflection of a newer, important injection of in-house competitio­n.

“I think I see a renewed energy there that maybe wasn’t there during times last year,” Hakstol said. “So I think competitio­n, young people, young players have a way of bringing out the best in competitiv­e people. And I think that’s the case.”

That will serve as the Flyers’ stump speech at least until they can be defined by a record. And considerin­g that they often looked talented last season, but just as often looked tired and disinteres­ted, it will be a workable, reasonable position.

Enough of the core that made them a 2016 playoff team has remained that it can all benefit from the injection of youth two years later.

“I think we have a boatload of skill from the first line to the fourth line, whoever is in on any given night,” Wayne Simmonds said. “I obviously don’t know what’s going to happen. We are confident in here and in every single guy we have had dress. We are going to be ready to go. Our plan is to come in and play hard and do what we can do.”

With the standard anticipati­on of shift-to-shift fluctuatio­ns, here is how the Flyers will attack the NHL, at least beginning at 10:30 Wednesday night:

• Sean Couturier will center Jake Voracek and captain Claude Giroux, who will make a sharp turn from center to the left wing.

• Patrick, who did not score a goal but was hardly out of place in the preseason, will center Jordan Weal and Simmonds.

• Valtteri Filppula, who arrived from Tampa Bay late last season to provide depth at center, will be surrounded by Dale Weise and Travis Konecny.

• Scott Laughton, who displayed some exhibition-season spark, will be between Michael Raffl and rookie Taylor Leier.

Rookie defensemen Robert Hagg, Samuel Morin and Travis Sanheim will be on the early roster, the Flyers carrying eight defensemen. That includes Shayne Gostisbehe­re, who left their final preseason game early with an upper-body situation.

Ivan Provorov and Andrew MacDonald will be a defensive paring, as will Brandon Manning and Radko Gudas. When healthy, Gostisbehe­re will work with Hagg.

Giroux, Voracek, Simmonds and Gostisbehe­re will return to their top power-play unit spots, with Filppula replacing Schenn. But the second power-play crowd of Weal, Patrick, Couturier, Provorov and Konecny was the more impressive of the units in the preseason.

The goaltendin­g will be split between Michal Neuvirth and Brian Elliott, who arrived as a free agent from Calgary. At age 32, Elliott is more reasonably cap-priced and less likely to stress over sharing a job than the departed Steve Mason.

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