After Briere addresses Michkov situation, Flyers answer slump with win over Caps originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
The Flyers showed some resolve Tuesday night after relinquishing a 2-0 lead.
They didn’t unravel and went on to beat the Capitals, 4-2, at Xfinity Mobile Arena.
Owen Tippett, Carl Grundstrom, Jamie Drysdale and Rasmus Ristolainen provided the Flyers’ goals. Drysdale’s marker came on the power play and was the game-winner with 5:23 minutes left in the third period.
Ristolainen iced the game with an empty-netter.
The Flyers (25-20-10) snapped a four-game losing streak and stopped the bleeding from a stretch in which they had dropped 11 of 13 games (2-8-3).
Rick Tocchet said the Flyers had a “really good practice” Monday. He was hoping it would translate to Tuesday night. Prior to that practice, the Flyers closed out January with 10 games — seven on the road — in 18 days.
“A lot of young guys, when they don’t get practice time, it’s tough,” Tocchet said at morning skate. “Veteran teams, you don’t have to practice as much. But I always felt with the younger guys, they need the touches, they need to actually touch it and feel it. Video can only do so much.”
It looks like the practice paid off for the Flyers, who were in dire need of a win.
This was the first of four matchups this season between the Flyers and Capitals (28-23-7).
• About 25 minutes before puck drop, Danny Briere threw some cold water on the smoke surrounding his head coach and prized youngster.
Some noise had heightened recently about Tocchet’s handling of Matvei Michkov’s development, as well as the 21-year-old winger’s conditioning coming into training camp. Michkov’s scoring and minutes are down from last season, when he had a dynamic rookie year.
“One thing I can tell you, first of all, is Matvei Michkov is not going anywhere,” Briere said. “Let’s make that clear. Matvei is going to be here for a long time, he’s going to be a good player here for the Flyers. What he’s going through right now is all part of the learning process.”
The Flyers’ general manager expressed confidence in this all working long term.
“I talk to Rick Tocchet on a daily basis, he wants Matvei to succeed,” Briere said. “He wants to develop him to be the best player he can be. Along the way, there are tough lessons that come with that.
“Him and Matvei, they have a good relationship. Sometimes they’re fiery, sometimes when you’re not winning, things are done and said, but they always come back to the table and they want the best for this team, and Rick wants the best for Matvei.”
Not even six minutes into the game, Michkov executed an excellent read and pass to notch a secondary assist on Tippett’s goal, which opened the scoring.
Michkov finished with 15:54 minutes after playing a season-low 10:21 three days ago.
• With just one game left before the Olympic break, the Flyers now have a little bit of momentum.
They came into Tuesday with a 11.1 percent chance to make the playoffs, according to Hockey-Reference.com’s probabilities report. They’re seven points back of the third-place Islanders in a tight Metropolitan Division.
Tocchet’s club has played fewer games than New York and Washington, two of the teams it’s chasing.
• Dan Vladar spoke like a leader after the Flyers’ 3-2 overtime loss last Saturday afternoon to the Kings.
And he played like a leader Tuesday night. He converted 26 saves on 28 shots and carried the Flyers through some dicey moments with a number of key stops.
Just 2:40 minutes into the third period, the Capitals tied the game at 2-2. The Flyers got stuck in their own end and Anthony Beauvillier scored off a rebound right in front. The initial shot was sent through traffic.
Clay Stevenson, playing both games of Washington’s back-to-back set, stopped 18 of the Flyers’ 21 shots.
Grundstrom’s goal came on a funky bounce and handed the Flyers a 2-0 lead 4:45 minutes into the second period.
Not long after that, the Flyers had a golden opportunity to take total control on their power play. Instead, though, they surrendered a shorthanded goal as a deflected shot whipped around the boards and turned into a 2-on-1 rush for the Capitals.
• The Flyers are back in action Thursday when they host the Senators (7 p.m. ET/NBCSP).
The club then goes 19 days without a game because of the NHL’s participation in the Winter Olympics.