The Philadelphia Goons and Pittsburgh Penguins could play in the first round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs. The Flyers have to like that possibility a bit more after the past two days. Philadelphia completed a weekend sweep of the Penguins with a 4-3 win at Consol Energy Center on Sunday. After facing 12 shots through the first two periods, Philadelphia goaltender Steve Mason made 11 saves in the third to preserve the Flyers' one-goal lead. Penguins captain Sidney Crosby had a chance to tie the game with 31 seconds remaining, but Mason stopped Crosby's wrist shot. Another Crosby shot hit the post just before the end of regulation. Mason said he wasn't worried about Crosby scoring because "[The post] is all I gave him" and that his team wouldn't shy from playing Pittsburgh in the postseason.
"I know the boys in this locker room love
playing against them," Mason said. "Whether we're in
their head or not, we don't really care. We get amped up to play
against them. It's a fun game to be a part of."
Pittsburgh was without forwards Chris
Kunitz (lower body) and James
Neal (concussion) for the second consecutive game, but Penguins
coach Dan Bylsma said their absence cannot be used as an excuse for
the loss Sunday. Philadelphia won 4-0 at Wells Fargo Center on
Saturday.
"There's not been a point at any time this
season we've looked at injuries or a loss of a player as any
indication in our play or what we're doing out there,"
Bylsma said. "We don't make a list of the players that aren't
in our lineup going into this game. We feel totally capable with the
guys that we have."
After trailing by three goals in the first period,
the Penguins pulled to within a goal twice in the second. Forward Joe
Vitale charged through the Philadelphia defense after sending the
puck into the Flyers zone and gained possession before passing to Rob
Scuderi at the blue line with the defense out of position.
Penguins defenseman Matt
Niskanen took a pass from Scuderi and slapped a shot past Mason
to cut the Philadelphia lead to 3-2 with his 10th goal of the season
5:50 into the period. But Flyers forward Matt
Read scored his second shorthanded goal of the weekend, deciding
to keep the puck on a 2-on-1 before he took a wrist shot past
Penguins goalie Jeff
Zatkoff, and Philadelphia regained a two-goal lead with 7:49
remaining in the second.
"They have the No. 1 power play in the
League," Read said. "It's just about taking time and
space away from them, and getting in the right lanes and putting your
sticks in the right positions. And I think our team, our whole
penalty-kill unit, did a good job this weekend."
It took 4:09 for the Penguins to answer. Forward
Jayson Megna
joined Brian
Gibbons on a 2-on-1 and received a pass around defenseman Kimmo
Timmonen, who committed to blocking the pass early and slid between
the Pittsburgh forwards. Megna tapped the pass behind Mason to send
the game into the third period with a 4-3 Flyers lead. Crosby said he
thought Pittsburgh played better than it did Saturday, but didn't
think it should be a consolation.
"It's what we're supposed to do though,"
Crosby said. "I don't know if that's asking a lot. You have
to compete for 60 minutes and we didn't do a very good job of that in
the first, but that's the expectation, to go out there and play hard
for 60 minutes. I don't see the positive in only playing 40."
The Flyers held a two-goal lead in the first
period for the second time against Pittsburgh this weekend, chasing
goalie Marc-Andre
Fleury from the game. Fleury made a sprawling glove save on Wayne
Simmonds after Vincent
Lecavalier sent a pass past a sliding Olli
Maatta through the Penguins crease, but Fleury couldn't secure
the puck and it bounced out to Flyers forward Brayden
Schenn, who backhanded it past Fleury for the first goal 2:06
into the game. After scoring one power-play and one shorthanded goal
Saturday, the Flyers' special teams continued to create problems for
Pittsburgh by scoring on two of their three first-period power plays.
With Penguins defenseman Robert
Bortuzzo in the penalty box for interference, Simmonds deflected
a slap shot past Fleury for a 2-0 Flyers lead at 6:47 of the first.
Simmonds scored another power-play goal 6:54 later by battling for
the puck in the crease before flipping it over Fleury's right pad to
extend the lead to 3-0. Fleury was replaced by Zatkoff after allowing
three goals on 15 shots.
"I think our team will get confidence from
this," Goons coach Craig Berube said. "Anytime you
come in and you can beat Pittsburgh twice, it's a big boost. It's a
very good team over there, very well coached. They play hard, they
have great players."
Pittsburgh received a spark moments before the end
of the period when Brooks
Orpik slapped a shot by Mason for the Penguins' first goal of the
weekend with 2:27 left in the first.
The sad thing is even in victory the Philadelphia goons keep whining. They continue to call Crosby a cry baby, really, its getting so old now. In fact reading his post match comments he was speaking factually, that the Pens performances this weekend were not good enough, and he is right. Its a sad world we live in if that is deemed whinging.
If your the captain of a prominent NHL team and also the greatest player of your generation, continually being asked questions post-game is always going to happen. I mean what is he supposed to say? 'we played great'.
Here's a novel idea, Cryers fans, enjoy your victory against an injury hit team, while you scuttle off back to the ass-end of Pennsylvania.
There was even some moronic comments along the lines that the officials called penalties in Pittsburgh's favour. Are you frickin kidding me or what? it seemed the whole of the opening period the Philly goons were on the power play. The most ridiculous one being when Scott Hartnell tried to injure a Pens player, so Robert Bortuzzo rightly took exception to the hit. Having seen the incompetency of the non-call he went after Hartnell and delivered a softer hit than the Philly bum had originally delivered, yet the referee called that penalty.
I'm pretty sure the referees were not siding with the Pens given the amount of power plays the Cryers were given and seemed to me like Philly got all the calls. But what do I know? I only love this sport to be played fairly with attractive offensive play rewarded, not see a bunch of class-less, skill-less goons, bully their way around the ice.
This isn't new territory for Philly though is it? Their two Stanley Cup successes came by gooning things up, then we had the years of Eric 'Captain Concussion' Lindros and Todd the Dork (who was surely the worst so called enforcer to skate in an NHL game) during the turn of the millennium. This latest band of cretins seem to be worse though. I still have never forgotten their goon-tactics from the 2012 play-offs, Claude Giroux and Scott Hartnell being at the forefront of it, but Wayne Simmonds is probably the vilest one of the lot, he has a face you could enjoy punching repeatedly, and yet he was made to look like a superstar yesterday, and remains a bitter pill to swallow.
It seems almost inevitable the Pens and the Goons will meet again in the play-offs this season, and I can only hope that Pittsburgh wake up before then and make it a close series. That being said, with half a team out injured and no major deals being completed by the trade deadline I have already resigned myself to the fact the Pens are done for the season.
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