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The Flyers did just enough offensively to rally for a 2-1 overtime win Saturday night over the Wild at Xfinity Mobile Arena.
Noah Cates buried the winner in OT.
Owen Tippett tied the game in the final stanza with his third marker of the season. From under the goal line, Tippett banked a low shot off Minnesota netminder Jesper Wallstedt.
“We knew we were in the game all along,” Tippett said. “Low-event game, low-shot game and we were just waiting for one to break through.”
After that goal, Rick Tocchet moved Tippett up to Matvei Michkov’s spot on Sean Couturier’s line. Tippett was rolling and Tocchet shortened his bench a good bit.
“We just needed some energy,” Tocchet said. … “I went with the nine [forwards], I thought we started to come. That’s what happens sometimes.”
The Flyers needed a jolt offensively and Tippett provided it with his powerful skating. Tocchet called Tippett the Flyers’ most dynamic play-driver so far.
“He’s the fastest skater ever,” Trevor Zegras said. “It’s awesome. I’ve never played with a guy that has that much speed. He does some wild stuff sometimes. I think he did like a spin-o-rama in the third period. I was just like, ‘Oh my God.’ Somebody so big that skates that fast. It’s fun to watch.”
Through five games, the Flyers (2-2-1) have scored 13 goals, two of which have come on an empty net. But they’ve defended and have gotten some quality goaltending.
The Wild (2-3-1) didn’t have the benefit of a day off like the Flyers did Friday. Minnesota played last night on the road against the Capitals and lost, 5-1, in a game that it was outshot 45-14.
“We had a day off yesterday, so we were not tired,” Zegras said. “We knew that this was a back-to-back for them, so we tried to stick to the game plan and make it as hard for them as possible.”
Noah Cates scored his first career overtime winner in the Flyers’ 2-1 decision Saturday night over the Wild.
• Everyone knew this opening stretch would be tough for the Flyers when the schedule came out in July.
The Flyers faced the two-time defending champion Panthers twice, a Hurricanes team that has made the playoffs in seven straight seasons, a Jets team that won the Presidents’ Trophy last season and a Wild team that went to the playoffs last season.
Tocchet’s club was able to pick up at least a point in three of those five games.
• Dan Vladar continued his promising start to the season, converting 15 saves on 16 shots.
“I thought tonight we were structurally good and obviously Vladdy was fantastic,” Nick Seeler said. “I think those are things to build on.”
The free-agent addition has denied 71 of 76 shots through three games with the Flyers.
“Just a real confident, solid goalie,” Tocchet said. “He comes by the bench, cheers the guys on. He has really done a nice job for us.”
Vladimir Tarasenko opened the scoring Saturday night by blasting one past Vladar early in the second period. The Flyers used a coach’s challenge on the goal, claiming Minnesota was offside. But Tocchet and his staff came up empty, which put the Flyers at shorthanded.
Thirty-nine seconds after the Flyers killed off the penalty, Tippett was whistled for tripping. The Flyers killed that one off, too, but the penalties really stalled them offensively as they were forced to defend a lot.
“I thought we did a good job, that’s a good hockey team over there,” Seeler said. “It’s nice to hold them to that many shots and play good defensively.”
Wallstedt stopped 19 of the Flyers’ 21 shots.
• Tocchet didn’t like his team’s start two nights ago when the Flyers were flat in a 5-2 loss to the Jets.
“Arriving on time with your identity, which we didn’t,” the head coach said Saturday morning. “So that’s going to be a work in progress.
“We’ve got to get to our game right from after the national anthem; not after 20 minutes.”
The Flyers had a better first period against the Wild. They dictated play more, but didn’t have anything to show for it. However, Minnesota had just three shots.
The Flyers, though, followed it up with a poor second period. They were outshot 8-5 in the middle stanza.
“We fought in the third and fought in OT,” Cates said. “If we just stay consistent and play north, we can take down a lot of good teams.”
• Nicolas Deslauriers and Marcus Foligno dropped the gloves 1:56 minutes into the action.
Two former teammates that can chuck ’em.
Nicolas Deslauriers and Marcus Foligno dropped the gloves in a heavyweight fight during the first period of the Flyers vs. Wild game.
• Tocchet went with a more experienced look up front as Deslauriers and Rodrigo Abols drew into the lineup for Nikita Grebenkin and Jett Luchanko.
On the back end, Egor Zamula played in place of Adam Ginning, who sat for the first time this season.
• The Flyers wrap up their four-game homestand Monday when they welcome the Kraken (7 p.m. ET/NBCSP).
Wednesday brings a jam-packed night of NHL action highlighted by several marquee matchups including a clash between a proven powerhouse and an up-and-coming contender. The two-time defending Stanley Cup Champion Florida Panthers will take on the surging Detroit Red Wings in what promises to be a high-energy showdown.
Florida aims to bounce back from its first loss of the season to the Flyers on Monday and extend its dominant 23-4-1 record against Detroit over their last 28 meetings. Meanwhile, the Red Wings return home riding the momentum of back-to-back victories over the Maple Leafs.
With a full slate of games and plenty of opportunities to cash in, Wednesday’s action should deliver excitement across the board. We’re looking to carry our early-season success forward building on last year’s strong player prop performances in Mitch Marner, Mark Scheifele, Wyatt Johnston, Rasmus Dahlin, Teuvo Teravainen and Connor Hellebuyck.
All betting lines are from BetMGM Sportsbook and are subject to change. Hockey is a difficult sport to predict so please gamble responsibly.
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Bedard, Kyrou Back Offense in High-Scoring Hawks-Blues MatchupChicago’s Connor Bedard and St. Louis’ Jordan Kyrou headline Best Bets options for Wednesday’s marquee matchup between the Hawks and Blues.
Detroit Red Wings vs Florida Panthers Best Bets
Under 5.5 Goals (+105)
Red Wings +1.5 (-200) Parlay Add
Sam Bennett Under 0.5 Points (Pending Odds)
The Red Wings and Panthers rarely push their offensive limits when facing off as they normally see defensive showdowns with five or fewer goals in 16 of their last 23 matchups with the under hitting in three consecutive matchups when playing in Detroit. This has been held up mainly by Florida’s Sergei Bobrovsky, who has a otherworldly record against the Red Wings with a 28-7-2 record, a 1.85 goals against average and a .935 save percentage in 38 appearances.
To combat this, Detroit is expected to turn to their former all-star netminder in John Gibson. The former longtime Ducks goaltender had a troubling debut with the Red Wings, allowing five goals and being pulled at the end of the second period. We can expect a much better response out of the 32-year-old Pittsburgh native as he will need to keep up with Bobrovsky if he wants to give his team a chance.
Gibson’s numbers in this matchup aren’t as impressive with a 4-8-3 record and a 3.29 goals-against average but those numbers are likely a reflection of the Ducks’ struggles during his tenure. Despite that, his individual performance stood out, as he recorded a solid .918 save percentage over 16 games against the Panthers. He’ll look to build on that success this Wednesday.
He’ll look to styme a Panthers offense that is without Aleksander Barkov and Matthew Tkachuk as well as their active players like Sam Bennett struggling to start the season with one point through four games. Bennett also has no points in three straight meetings and managing points in only four of his last 11 games versus Detroit since joining the Panthers. Playoff healthy scratches like Mackie Samoskevich and Evan Rodrigues have been carrying the load for the Panthers early on in the season and should mean a low-scoring affair.
Canadiens Emerging as Smart Stanley Cup Sleeper PickReports indicate the Canadiens are expected to be active this offseason, making their long Stanley Cup odds an intriguing value for bettors.