Flyers survive Rangers in OT thanks to ‘dead’ Jake Voracek, pull within a point of playoff spot
Voracek ended a long shift and scored the overtime winner at Madison Square Garden to give the Flyers the 5-4 edge.
Carter Hart got his first start in the last three games Monday as the Flyers began a four-game road trip that, they hope, straightens out their struggling 22-year-old goaltender and improves their position in the playoff race.
Well, Hart played fairly well as the Flyers outlasted the Rangers in overtime, 5-4, and moved to within a point of a playoff spot.
Jake Voracek was even better.
Voracek ended a long shift and scored the winner with 1:13 left in overtime at Madison Square Garden. Voracek went in alone and easily beat goalie Keith Kincaid, who had stopped him on a breakaway in the third period.
“I was dead,” Voracek said of his last shift, which lasted a staggering 1:51. “... But I knew (Artemi) Panarin was tired, too. Fortunately, Kinkaid bit on the move.”
Voracek had a goal and two assists as the Flyers ended a two-game losing streak and improved to 2-0-1 against the Rangers this season.
“We found a way to get it done on a great play by Jakey,” coach Alain Vigneault said.
Hart stopped 20 of 24 shots, many of them high-quality chances.
“I definitely feel better, but there’s still a lot of areas I have to keep working at,” Hart said after just his second victory in his last seven starts. “It was just nice to get back in the win column. That was a huge win for our group.”
The Flyers’ revived power play went 2 for 5 and scored for the fourth straight game. (The Rangers went 0 for 3.)
“Right now, we have two units that are running pretty well and moving the puck well,” said captain Claude Giroux, who had a goal and an assist while winning 71% of his faceoffs. “When you have two units like that, you’re going to get on the ice fresh.”
Kevin Hayes appeared to give the Flyers the lead with a power-play tally with 3:04 left in regulation, but the goal was nullified after the Rangers challenged the play and the replay showed Sean Couturier was offside.
Giroux was hit with a high stick that drew a four-minute penalty, then scored a backdoor goal on the ensuing power play -- Voracek set him up nicely -- to tie the game at 4-4 with 14:27 remaining.
Kinkaid stopped Scott Laughton and Voracek on breakaways in the last six-plus minutes of regulation.
Earlier in the third, Hart made a sensational save to rob an all-alone Chris Kreider on the doorstep while the Rangers were on a power play. About two minutes later, Hart was beaten to the glove side by unguarded fourth-liner Kevin Rooney to give New York a brief 4-3 lead with 17:04 to go.
After dominating the opening 20 minutes, the Flyers sleepwalked through most of the second period, one in which they were outscored, 3-1, and didn’t get their first shot until 8:55 remained in the stanza.
The Rangers overcame a 2-0 deficit with second-period goals from Panarin (left-circle blast), Colin Blackwell (finishing a two-on-one), and Julien Gauthier, who burst past Shayne Gostsibehere (minus-3, three blocked shots), went in alone, and beat Hart with backhander up high.
“We were going on the forecheck in the first period, but not the second,” Voracek said. “We chased the game a little too much tonight.”
Joel Farabee (two points, plus-2 in 22:34) tied it at 3-3 with a power-play goal with 1:24 left in the second, scoring on a left-circle one-timer after a feed from the ever-present Giroux as he maneuvered behind the net.
James van Riemsdyk and Ivan Provorov scored 78 seconds apart early in the first period to give the Flyers a 2-0 lead, one they held the rest of the stanza. In their previous seven games, they had been outscored in the opening period, 12-5, so this seemed like a step in the right direction.
Van Riemsdyk, who collected his team-leading 13th goal, finished off a slick passing play with Farabee and Couturier, who also assisted and screened Kinkaid on Provorov’s score. Van Riemsdyk put a backhander through Kinkaid’s legs.
“We got some good, quick ups and we created some odd-man rushes,” said Couturier, who has points in 14 of his 16 games this season.
» READ MORE: Finally healthy, right-winger Wade Allison could make push to join Flyers later this season
The Rangers were missing two of their top players – defenseman Adam Fox and winger Pavel Buchnevich (team-high 22 points), who were placed on the COVID-19 protocol list Monday.
The Flyers were coming off a 5-4 loss to Washington, which made it somewhat surprising that Vigneault went with the same six defensemen Monday.
“We felt it was one of our better five-on-five games so far this year,” Vigneault said before the game. “We tracked scoring chances and we only gave up seven in that game, so we felt the D group had done a pretty good job against one of the best teams in the NHL.”
Well, if they only allowed seven quality chances, the Capitals scored on five of them against goalies Brian Elliott and Hart, who both played in that loss.
Both Flyers goaltenders have slumped lately. Coupled with defensive breakdowns, it’s the main reason the Flyers entered Monday with four losses in their last five games.
“At the beginning of the year, our goaltenders might have been bailing us out a little bit,” Vigneault said. The rest of the team wasn’t playing as well, he added. “We needed to improve, especially our five-on-five game. We have improved our game. (But) our goaltending is not at the same level it was initially. Both of those guys, Brian and Carter, have proven they’re very good goaltenders in the NHL, and Carter’s getting an opportunity (Monday).”
In the last few days, Hart did more work with goaltender coach Kim Dillabaugh in an attempt to regain his form.
“Just working to compete on pucks ... and fight through traffic” Hart said after the win, after Voracek saved the night for a team that couldn’t afford to start the trip with a loss.
» READ MORE: More fans will be allowed into Flyers, 76ers home games next month if city follows state’s plan