The Prince George Citizen

Senators ground Flyers with third-period rally

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PHILADELPH­IA — The Philadelph­ia Flyers trudged off the ice to the familiar refrain of boos from the few thousand fans that stuck around to witness a collapse that capped one of the more arduous 48 hours in franchise history.

Ron Hextall: Fired as general manager after four-and-a-half middling seasons.

Dave Hakstol: On a white-hot seat and his uncertain coaching fate in the hands of the new GM.

And then a breakdown that has become too familiar for the Flyers: Blowing a twogoal lead in the third period to Ottawa in front of a fed-up crowd.

“Everything we touch, it just doesn’t work,” Flyers forward Jake Voracek said.

Brady Tkachuk had the magic tough for the Senators.

Tkachuk scored twice in the third period and Matt Duchene scored the eventual winner with 2:59 left, lifting the Senators to a 4-3 win over Philadelph­ia on Tuesday night in the Flyers’ first game since Hextall was fired.

The Flyers showed why Hextall is out of work and Hakstol’s job is in jeopardy. They coughed up a 3-1 lead over the final sixand-a-half minutes of the third period and lost for the sixth time in seven games.

“As soon as they got that second goal we kind of got scared. You can’t do that,” Voracek said.

Tkachuk made it 3-2 late in the third and he tied it on a tip-in with 6:31 remaining. The Flyers turned it over in their end and Duchene batted the puck past Anthony Stolarz for a 4-3 lead.

“It felt like it was the only time I touched the puck all night,” Duchene said.

Voracek, Radko Gudas and Travis Konecny scored for the Flyers in front of scores of empty seats inside a home arena once among the most imposing in the NHL. Flyers fans have turned away in droves and tickets were selling on the secondary market for $6 in the mezzanine level, a minorleagu­e price for a franchise that traditiona­lly averaged 19,000 fans a game.

Hakstol knows he’s in a precarious position with Hextall, who hired the coach with no NHL experience out of North Dakota in 2015, gone. Flyers President Paul Holmgren said the next general manager would decide Hakstol’s fate.

“Given the scenario we are in, that’s a pretty reasonable process,” Hakstol said. “Whoever that is, he will come in and evaluate me as head coach and whether or not he likes what he sees and I’m the right guy to work with him.”

Hakstol, in his fourth season, has led the Flyers to pair of playoff berths and his job appeared to be on the line after the Flyers lost 6-0 to Toronto on Saturday. Instead, it was Hextall who was fired with the Flyers (11-11-2) mired in mediocrity and fighting for a playoff spot in the Eastern Conference. But it was more than the sagging record that sent Hextall packing; Holmgren said the former GM was “unyielding” in his philosophi­cal approach of building the Flyers into winners through the draft and a lone-wolf style of management. Hextall had tuned out input from other decision makers in the organizati­on and had yet to make a big splash with the type of trade that could transform the Flyers into instant contenders.

Holmgren said the Flyers would like to hire a new GM within weeks.

They need a win sooner than that. Konecny scored his seventh goal of the season just 4:23 in the game for the usually slow-starting Flyers.

“I think the main thing for us is getting in the offensive zone and even if it’s not your ‘A’ game, as long as we’re cycling the puck and doing the right things down low then we are going to get opportunit­ies,” Konecny said.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Philadelph­ia Flyers coach Dave Hakstol yells to his team during Tuesday’s home game against the Ottawa Senators.
AP PHOTO Philadelph­ia Flyers coach Dave Hakstol yells to his team during Tuesday’s home game against the Ottawa Senators.

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