The Province

Flyers’ Ron Hextall dismisses losing to get in McDavid derby

- STEPHEN WHYNO THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — A veteran of six playoff runs and a Stanley Cup winner, Vincent Lecavalier doesn’t buy the tanking philosophy.

“I don’t think it comes to mind in this business, in this game,” the Philadelph­ia Flyers forward said. “You don’t try to lose games. I don’t think anybody’s trying to do that, any GM’s trying to do that, any organizati­on’s trying to do that.”

One thing’s for sure: Flyers general manager Ron Hextall isn’t trying to do that. It may be a lost season in Philadelph­ia, but getting into the derby for projected No. 1 pick Connor McDavid or No. 2 Jack Eichel isn’t in the organizati­on’s plans.

“We’re not going that direction,” Hextall said on the weekend in Buffalo. “You can’t sit and say, ‘OK, we’ll not win any games and we’ll get McDavid or Eichel.’ It’s not the way it works. ... You don’t dictate necessaril­y where you finish because you owe it to your fans, you owe it to hockey, to try to win every game.”

Hextall talked about the organizati­onal “credibilit­y” and that the Flyers don’t stand for bottoming out. They’ve finished with the fewest points in the NHL only once in the past 19 seasons and made the playoffs 17 other times.

Through Sunday’s games, the Flyers found themselves 11 points out of the final wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference.

“It is a lot, but it’s been done before,” all-star Jakub Voracek said Saturday when the deficit was 13 points. “We’ve just got to find that consistenc­y and be patient with it.”

Consistenc­y has been hard to find this season, the first in a long time without No. 1 defenceman Kimmo Timonen, whose career may be over because of blood clots. Voracek leads the league in scoring and linemate Claude Giroux is fifth, but injuries to goaltender Steve Mason and others have stunted the team’s progress.

But as the Buffalo Sabres and Edmonton Oilers lead the race for the top pick in June’s draft, the Flyers also aren’t bad enough to give themselves a good chance at landing McDavid. If they remain the seventh-worst team, they’d have a 6.5 per cent chance of drafting first.

If the standings hold as they are, the Sabres would have a 20 per cent chance, the Oilers 13.5, the Carolina Hurricanes 11.5, Arizona Coyotes 9.5, New Jersey Devils 8.5 and Columbus Blue Jackets 7.5.

“I think it’s a better system,” Hextall said. “I don’t think teams should be directly paid for ineptness. If we finish last, should we have the first pick in the draft? No, I don’t think we should. I think we should have a chance at it.

“If Carolina or Buffalo or (Arizona) or any other team ... that’s towards the bottom right now finishes last, they shouldn’t have a direct line to the first pick.”

The NHL adjusted the odds this season to make it less of a direct line. In previous seasons the team with the fewest points had a 25 per cent chance of picking first, though the 2006-07 Flyers lost that lottery — and Patrick Kane — to the Chicago Blackhawks.

Beginning next season, the first three spots will be up for grabs in the lottery. But for now, whoever is last knows it will wind up with either McDavid or Eichel.

That’s an intriguing idea for the teams at the very bottom of the standings like the Sabres, Oilers, Hurricanes and Coyotes. If nothing else, it’s a silver lining for a lot of losing.

Buffalo goes into the all-star break having lost 11 in a row in regulation, a franchise record. Sunday night the Sabres blew a 3-0 lead at the Detroit Red Wings to lose 6-4.

“You owe it to your fans, you owe it to hockey, to try to win every game”

— Flyers GM Ron Hextall

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Junior phenom Connor McDavid of the Erie Otters in the Ontario Hockey League will be the reward for one of the NHL’s bottom feeders in this year’s draft. The runner-up prize is Jack Eichel who is thought to be almost as good.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES Junior phenom Connor McDavid of the Erie Otters in the Ontario Hockey League will be the reward for one of the NHL’s bottom feeders in this year’s draft. The runner-up prize is Jack Eichel who is thought to be almost as good.

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