Flyers rip Jets, have chance to end playoff drought with massive home games originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
The Flyers will come home with an opportunity to snap their five-year playoff drought.
They steamrolled the Jets, 7-1, Saturday night at Canada Life Centre.
Sean Couturier had a two-goal effort, while Porter Martone, Matvei Michkov, Travis Sanheim, Noah Cates and Nick Seeler also found the back of the net.
The club’s fourth line of Couturier, Garnet Hathaway and Luke Glendening was highly effective.
The Flyers (41-27-12), in a loud way, rebounded from their sloppy 6-3 loss Thursday night to the Red Wings.
Rick Tocchet’s club has lost consecutive games just once since Feb. 26. The Flyers have gone 16-6-1 over that span and have allowed just 2.39 goals per game.
With two games to go (both at home), the Flyers have a chance to nail down their first playoff berth since the 2019-20 season (more on the race below).
The Flyers have won in their last four trips to Canada Life Centre while outscoring Winnipeg an astounding 14-2.
They split their two-game regular-season series with the Jets (35-32-12). Back in mid-October, they lost to Winnipeg, 5-2, at Xfinity Mobile Arena.
• Ever since they took over a playoff spot last Sunday, the Flyers have stayed in the driver’s seat.
They hold the final playoff spot (third place) in the Metropolitan Division.
The Blue Jackets beat the Canadiens, 5-2, so the Flyers remained two points ahead of Columbus. The Flyers are three points up on both the Capitals and Islanders. They gained ground on New York, which was blanked by the Senators, 3-0. Washington kept pace by beating a stripped-down Penguins team, 6-3.
And get ready for some more scoreboard watching Sunday. The Blue Jackets, Capitals and Islanders are all in action.
If Columbus wins, the Flyers will have the tiebreaker for now because they’ll have played one fewer game. The Flyers, though, don’t want to finish even with any of the three teams chasing them because they’ll fall short in the tiebreaker of regulation wins.
• Dan Vladar put his previous start firmly in the past by denying 27 of 28 shots against the Jets.
He was pulled Thursday night in the second period after giving up four goals on eight shots. The Flyers didn’t help him much with penalties and allowing a shorthanded breakaway.
On Saturday night, Vladar looked so much more like himself and the Flyers played a cleaner game. The 28-year-old added to his career high in victories with No. 28. His career high coming into the season was 14.
Connor Hellebuyck, last season’s Hart Trophy winner as the league’s MVP, surrendered five goals on 20 shots.
The Flyers stunned the Winnipeg netminder with three goals in the first period. It was a 5-1 game at second intermission after Cates scored a shorthanded goal late in the middle stanza.
Eric Comrie took over for Hellebuyck at the start of the third period and made one save on three shots.
• The Flyers really took advantage of a weaker Western Conference this season.
They went 21-7-4 against teams in the West. But they didn’t just pick on the bottom-feeders. They recorded four wins over the conference’s top three teams. They beat the Avalanche on the road, the Stars at home and swept the Wild.
How about this? If the Flyers played in the Pacific Division, they’d be a first-place team.
• Sanheim has given the Flyers a bona-fide No. 1 defenseman down the stretch.
Over the last 17 games, Sanheim has recorded five goals, six assists and a plus-13 rating. Rasmus Ristolainen, Sanheim’s defensive partner, has eight assists and a plus-16 rating in that span.
Sanheim’s goal Saturday night was his career-high 11th.
• The Flyers return home to wrap up the regular season with a back-to-back set. They host the Hurricanes on Monday (7 p.m. ET/NBCSP) and Canadiens on Tuesday (7 p.m. ET/NBCSP).
Carolina is 52-22-6 and trying to clinch the Eastern Conference’s top seed. Montreal is 47-23-10 and in a battle for the Atlantic Division crown.