The Province

Rejecting frequent Flyers form book

New Jersey keeps eyes on the prize after dominant displays over Philadelph­ia

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NEWARK, N.J— After Philadelph­ia rolled over Pittsburgh in the opening round of the playoffs, there was a perception that the Flyers would be the team to beat in the Eastern Conference.

Deep. Driven. Determined. You name it.

Getting by New Jersey in the second round seemingly was a given, especially after the No. 6-seeded Devils needed seven games — and two overtimes in the last contest — to knock off Florida of all teams.

Well, it’s time to revise that perception. Because, with Game 3 on tap tonight at the Prudential Center, this series is tied, 1-1.

The Devils not only showed they could play with the No. 5 Flyers in splitting the first two games in Philadelph­ia; they could easily be leading 2-0 in the best-of-7 series. They lost Game 1 in overtime, 4-3, and dominated Game 2, 4-1, on Tuesday despite playing without leading scorer Ilya Kovalchuk.

“I think there is a pressure with being a favourite in a series,” Devils coach peter deboer said wednesday. “We felt that in the Florida series, and I don’t think there is any doubt that it is on Philadelph­ia. That is something that isn’t easy to deal with, when you are supposed to win and, not only win, but win convincing­ly.

“We like the spot we are in and we are just going to keep working.”

The Devils clearly outworked the Flyers in posting a 4-1 win in Game 2. They outshot Philadelph­ia 35-20 and only outstandin­g goaltendin­g by Ilya Bryzgalov allowed the home team to hold a 1-0 lead after two periods.

But New Jersey blew the game open with four consecutiv­e goals in the third. In doing so, the Devils took home-ice advantage — and confidence — back to New Jersey.

A veteran of three Stanley Cup championsh­ip teams, Devils goaltender Martin Brodeur said not to make too much of the changing perception­s. That’s playoff hockey, after all. And it’s best to ignore it.

“You can’t get overwhelme­d by one win,” the 39-year-old Brodeur said. “People always look at that. That’s [why] the mood swings are important. You have to be levelled off about them. You feel so good about yourself that sometimes you slack off a bit. We can’t get caught up. We played well, but we expect the Flyers to come a lot harder tomorrow and do what they do.”

Philadelph­ia has to pick up its skating and work on its power play, which failed to produce in five attempts in Game 2 and is 1-for-11 in the series. Flyers centre Danny Briere said the Devils also were the more inspired team playing without Kovalchuk.

“It is all about the will and desperatio­n,” Briere said. “We have to get that back. So far in this series, we have only had it for about three periods. One thing I can tell you is that we need to have more desperatio­n if we want to get back to winning games.”

The Devils received some good news on the Kovalchuk front. The Russian forward told trainers he was feeling a lot better after staying home for Game 2 to receive treatment. Deboer said that the right wing remains day-to-day, but it seems likely the team will give him another day off.

If that happens, Kovalchuk will have had a week to rest before Game 4 Sunday night in Newark.

Kovalchuk had 37 goals and 83 points in the regular season, and has three and six this postseason. In Game 1 vs. the Flyers, though, he was clearly off his game and had limited movement. He finished with no shots, and was a minus-2.

“Kovy is a big piece of the puzzle,” said Devils centre Travis Zajac, who scored his fifth goal of the playoffs in Game 2. “He can score at any time. When you don’t have that, you have to play a mistake-free game.”

Deboer said defenceman Adam Larsson, 19, probably will be back in the lineup for Game 3.

The Flyers know all they need is a split in New Jersey to regain home ice advantage, and push the drama of this regional rivalry even further.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? Devils goalie Martin Brodeur takes a breather during Game 1 against the Flyers last Sunday at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelph­ia. Philly defeated New Jersey 4-3 in overtime.
— GETTY IMAGES Devils goalie Martin Brodeur takes a breather during Game 1 against the Flyers last Sunday at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelph­ia. Philly defeated New Jersey 4-3 in overtime.
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