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Flyers ECSF Gameday: Game 7 vs. NYI (9/5/20)

September 5, 2020, 7:55 AM ET [731 Comments]
Bill Meltzer
Philadelphia Flyers Blogger •NHL.com • RSSArchiveCONTACT
Gameday Preview: Flyers vs. Islanders

In the seventh and final game of their Eastern Conference Semifinal series, Alain Vigneault's Philadelphia will take on Barry Trotz's New York Islanders at Scotiabank Arena in Toronto on Saturday night. The game will be nationally televised on NBC. Game time is 7:30 p.m. ET.

The winner of this game will take on the Tampa Bay Lightning in the Eastern Conference Final. Tampa closed out their second round series against the Boston Bruins on Monday with a 3-2 win in double OT.

The Flyers are the designated home team for Game 7. The Flyers will have last line change.

Series Progression

GAME 1: In Game 1 of this series, the Islanders dominated the first period and took a 1-0 lead to intermission. It easy could have been 4-0 or 4-1 but for the stellar play of Carter Hart. Andy Greene scored a point shot goal at 6:06 through layers of screening traffic for the period's only goal. On Philadelphia's best chance, Kevin Hayes was unable to score on a breakaway.

The tide turned in the second period. The Flyers dominated territorial possession, and generated a couple high quality looks at the net as well as several Grade B chances. Many of the better chances were blocked by the Islanders or Semyon Varlamov was in perfect position to stop. Overall, though, the Flyers largely had to settle for low-to-high plays with point shot attempts; many of which were blocked or there was insufficient traffic to cause Varlamov trouble. Shots were 15-7 in the Flyers favor, but they still trailed, 1-0.

A lost 2-on-2 battle behind the net by Travis Sanheim and Phil Myers and a rare attention-to-detail lapse by a struggling Sean Couturier (who abandoned protecting the front of the net with both D behind the net, and tried to join them) left J-G Pageau wide open in point blank range to take a pass-out from Leo Komarov. From the dead slot, Pageau quickly finished the play for a 2-0 lead at 2:54 of the third period.

Now the Flyers were in dire straights, as the Islanders continued to take away the coveted areas below and between the dots and to block Philadelphia shot attempts. Another killer mistake followed on an attempted forecheck. Joel Farabee got on the wrong side of the puck as Jordan Eberle slipped past him. That started a 3-on-2 rush for the Islanders. Matt Niskanen came over from his right defense position to the left side, trying to pressure puck carrier Matthew Barzal. Instead, Barzal made a gorgeous pass to a wide open Anders Lee, who had lots of net open with Hart having been positioned to play a shot by Barzal. Lee made no mistake and scored at 8:50.

In desperation, Vigneault pulled Hart very, very early for a 6-on-5 attack and it blew up in his face as Devon Toews scored a long-distance empty net goal to make it 4-0 at 12:21. The rest of the game was academic at that point.

Special teams were not a factor in Game 1. The Islanders were unable to do anything with a late first-period power play that carried over into the second. Philly got momentum from the emphatic kill. The Flyers had a latter third period power play, trailing 4-0, and spun their wheels.

Varlamov went on to record a 29-save shutout. Hart stopped 25 of 28 shots.

GAME 2: The Philadelphia Flyers saw a three-goal lead slip away before rescuing a 4-3 win in overtime against the New York Islanders in Game 2 of their Second Round series at Scotiabank Arena in Toronto on Wednesday afternoon. Phil Myers ended the game with a point shot goal at 2:40 of OT.

A pair of Kevin Hayes goals off the rush staked the Flyers to an early 2-0 lead. Sean Couturier then ended his postseason-long scoring drought with another goal off the rush, prompting a goalie change for the Islanders. Anders Lee scored a power play tip-in goal midway through the second period, cutting New York's deficit to 3-1. Anthony Beavillier made it 3-2 midway through the third period. Then an attempted exit pass from Travis Sanheim became a turnover and J-G Pageau tied the game before Myers knotted the series at 2:40 of overtime.

Carter Hart stopped 31 of 33 shots to earn the win.

Semyon Varlamov lasted just 15:09 from the opening faceoff, getting beaten three times on 10 shots. Thomas Greiss relieved him and stopped 20 of 21 shots. Greiss wasn't tested much untl overtime.

Two saves on the same shift by Hart on Anthony Beauvillier loomed big early for the Flyers. Both of Hayes' first period goals were scored high to the short-side from the left circle; one from above the dot, the other from the bottom of the circle. Everything was going the Islanders' way for the first few shifts of the game. The Flyers were hemmed in and Hart was tested right off the bat.

Then Claude Giroux won a defensive zone faceoff. Travis Konecny made a good pass to Hayes and the Flyers' second-line center beat Varlamov short-side high from the top of the left circle at 1:57. The goal was a huge lift for the Flyers, and they got better and better as the opening period progressed to build a three-goal lead.

The latter goal, scored at 9:43, started with a high flip out of the defensive zone by Phil Myers, and Joel Farabee poking the puck to Farabee in the neutral zone. Myers also made a good stick-on-puck defensive play earlier in the period.

Coming off a performance in Game 1 that was far below his usual standards, Couturier came out like gangbusters in Game 2. First, off an Islanders turnover, he attacked the net, and created the game's first power play. Later, he finally scored his long-awaited first goal of the playoffs, beating Nick Leddy, going wide on Varlamov and scoring from the left side.

Giroux, meanwhile, had a hand in the first and third Flyers first-period goals: winning the faceoff that started the first Hayes goal sequence and taking a defenseman with him to create room for Hayes, and then making a perfect pass to Couturier (after an initial breakout pass from Travis Sanheim) on the third goal of the first period.

First period shots were 11-7 in the Flyers' favor.

As with the second Hayes goal, the Flyers found success by using the high flip to exit the D zone at the start of the middle period. Ross Johnston took a silly penalty on a sequence where he gave Hart a snow shower and the cross-checked Phil Myers. Philly did not capitalize on it, and it was a lift for the Islanders. Matt Niskanen later rocked Johnston with a big hit.

Play was fairly even until the latter half of the period, which the Islanders controlled on the forecheck. Hart had no chance on an Anders Lee re-direct of a Mathew Barzal feed on the power play at 11:45 after an automatic delay of game penalty on Jakub Voracek.

Immediately after the goal, Hart had to make an outstanding save on Casey Cizikas. Hart then made a save on a left circle shot by Beauvillier after a turnover by Robert Hagg.

With 36 seconds left in the second period, Couturier was penalized for a stick slash on Barzal -- an accurate call but one that came after numerous stick slashes by both teams had been let go all game. The Flyers survived the remaining second period time but New York took 1:24 of carryover time into the third period.

Philadelphia opened the third period with a strong kill of the remaining Couturier penalty time. The Islanders took some chances on a very aggressive forecheck. Finally, at 11:11, Beauvillier scored on a give-and-go with Josh Bailey, beating Hart under the arm to the near side. Hart subsequently had to make a couple of close-range saves to prevent a tying goal. That only lasted until the 17:51 mark.

An attempted Sanheim breakout pass to Sean Couturier went off his skate and was held by Pelech. Then Pageau scored from the center slot. The Flyers challenged the goal for an offside on Brock Nelson. The goal was upheld on replay, and the Flyers were penalized for delay of game. The Islanders were unable to score on the power play and the game went to OT. Third period shots were 15-8 in New York's favor.

The Flyers came out attacking in OT and had three of the four shots. Myers' right point shot was tipped by New York's Lee and skittered into the net at 2:40 of the extra frame. Couturier, who had a great scoring chance in close moments earlier, got the lone assist. The eventual goal started with a faceoff win by Giroux.

GAME 3: The third game of the series started out well for the Flyers, who registered five of the night's first six shots on goal, and grabbed an early 1-0 lead on a seeing-eye goal through traffic by Tyler Pitlick (2nd) of the playoffs. Shortly thereafter, the Islanders took over the game, and road it more or less the rest of the way.

Matt Martin tied the game and Leo Komarov put New York ahead in the waning seconds of the second period. Anders Lee extended the lead to 3-1 with an early third period power play goal.

Carter Hart stopped 26 of 29 shots in a losing cause. Semyon Varlamov denied 26 of 27 Flyers shots.

he Flyers made one lineup change in Game 3, scratching Michael Raffl and dressing Scott Laughton. Laughton was moved back from left wing to center, with James van Riemsdyk and Tyler Pitlick on his wings. That moved worked out on Saturday, as the trio was the Flyers' most effective line. That was especially true in the first period.

Beyond that, not much went right for the Flyers after their early momentum. The Sean Couturier and Kevin Hayes lines, after stepping up in Game 2 on Wednesday, both struggled as the Islanders took over the game. As a team, killer turnovers, including multi-turnover sequences, directly played into the first and second Islanders goals.

The Flyers didn't have their feet moving, lost most of the battles and got swarmed by New York's forecheck. Finally, neutral zone and own-zone turnovers by the Flyers and a Mathew Barzal pass-out to a wide open Martin at the doorstep produced a 1-1 tie game at 7:12 as Hart got most of Barzal's shot but not quite enough.

Philadelphia was thoroughly outplayed in the second period but could still see their way to intermission tied at 1-1. That is, until bad turnover by Ivan Provorov over the middle was barely kept in onside. Then, moments later, Matt Niskanen was taken off the puck behind the net. Provorov attempted to block Komarov's backhand shot in front but it beat Hart with 5.1 seconds left in the second period. Once again, Hart got a piece of the puck but not enough.

Early in the third period, a stick slashing penalty on Robert Hägg created a must-kill 4-on-5. Instead, Lee set up in his office near the net and directed a Jordan Eberle feed off the inside of Hart's stick and into the net to put the Islanders ahead by two goals. Hart mis-angled his stick and actually deflected the puck into his own net.

The Flyers generated very little pressure on Varlamov until late in the game. Finally, they had a point-blank scoring chance for Joel Farabee and a four-shot power play (6-on-4 with Hart pulled) that produced two scrambles in close to the net but no goal.

The Islanders made one lineup change for Game 3. Ross Johnston, who was effective in Game 1 but more of a liability than an asset in Game 2, was scratched. Derick Brassard dressed for the first time in the series.

The Islanders' have used their size advantage and heavy forechecking pressure to their benefit in the series. All four of their forward lines have played well, and the teamwide commitment to shot-blocking and gap control has been evident throughout. The Flyers found some success in the first and early second period of Game 2 by using high-flips and neutral zone retrieval pressure to exit the defensive zone and generate some counterattack opportunities. That dried up on the Flyers as Game 3 progressed.

Overall, the Islanders have been the better team in six of the nine regulation periods played in the series to date: the first and third periods of Game 1, the second and third periods of Game 2, and the second to mid-third periods of Game 3.

Varlamov, pulled in the first period of Game 2 after giving up three goals (two short-siders) on 10 shots, really was not forced to make many difficult saves in Saturday's game. His toughest tests came late in the game when the Flyers were desperately pressing to get back within a goal.

GAME 4: Overall, Game 4 was the Flyers best extended performance of the series but a series of self-inflicted wounds proved fatal in a 3-2 loss.

After a scoreless first period most notable for a 9-shot Islanders power play, Brock Nelson and Sean Couturier traded off goals in a second period dominated by the Flyers.

Two Greiss saves -- one on Claude Giroux, one on Travis Konecny -- were closely followed by two Islanders goals on counterattacks. Matt Niskanen got caught up ice on both. Ivan Provorov played the latter, a 2-on-1, poorly. That turned a 1-1 game into an Islanders stranglehold on the game.

In the third period, J.G. Pageau untied the game on a transition rush and Nelson scored again to make it 3-1. Ivan Provorov got a goal back on a 6-on-5 attack with 1:05 left on the clock. The Flyers were unable to find an equalizer.

Brian Elliott stopped 30 of 33 shots in a losing cause. Thomas Greiss made 36 saves for the winning side.

The Flyers had a good start to the first period with five of the first six shots. The Islanders turned over three pucks within the first few shifts, but Philly was unable to capitalize. Other than one near-miss chance for James van Riemsdyk off a Jakub Voracek feed, the Flyers didn't get much of anything going.

The Isles dominated - Elliott had to make no fewer than a half dozen tough saves on the Islanders' first power play. Travis Konecny had a late period scoring chance for the Flyers. In all, Elliott made 18 saves. Greiss made 7.

The Flyers dominated the second period to the tune of a 17-3 shot edge. For the first time in the game, Philly was able multiple times to string together several productive shifts in a row. First though, the Flyers had to overcome some fresh adversity.

Two turnovers on the same shift in the D-zone -- the first by Scott Laughton and the second a dreadful one under no pressure by Phil Myers with the forwards exiting the zone -- came back to bite the Flyers. From prime range inside the right circle, Nelson took a pass from Josh Bailey and beat Elliott upstairs at 6:52. Finally, after a solid possession shift by the Kevin Hayes line, the Couturier line followed with another and got a payoff as Couturier tipped up a Justin Braun shot after switching sides on a low-to-high play. Robert Hagg got the secondary assist at 15:19.

* Both teams traded chances off the hop in the third period. Unfortunately, after a dominating shift by the Flyers' first line, and a great save by Greiss on Giroux, the third line got scored against on a transitional rush. Pageau got behind Niskanen, who took a pass from Scott Mayfield and whose shot trickled in through Elliott's pads. After Travis Konecny was denied on a Joel Farabee rebound, Niskanen got caught up ice again on a 2-on-1 and the Islanders completed two passes against Ivan Provorov (who took away neither the passing nor shooting lane) before Nelson had a tap in on a Beauvillier pass.

The Flyers made a decent late push, capped by Provorov's late 6-on-5 goal through traffic, but the Islanders killed off the rest of the clock in a lengthy battle along the boards.

GAME 5: After a scoreless first period, a controversial Mathew Barzal power play goal at 1:20 of the second period gave the Islanders a 1-0 lead. Later, a Claude Giroux deflection at 15:45 and a James van Riemsdyk goal on a 3-on-1 rush at 18:18 sent the Flyers to the second intermission leading 2-1. Matt Niskanen added an early third period insurance goal but late goals by Brock Nelson scored from distance at 15:46 and Derick Brassard from the doorstep at 17:19 forced overtime.

Carter Hart earned the win with 29 saves on 32 shots. Semyon Varlamov took the loss with 28 saves on 32 shots.

The Flyers played a strong first period overall: aggressive on the forecheck, sound in their own zone. Philly generated 11 shots on goal on 26 shot attempts, and had multiple good scoring chances. None were better that Sean Couturier's rebound opportunity off a Claude Giroux shot; he had a lot of net at which to shoot, but hit the left post. Kevin Hayes had a good jam-in opportunity stepping out from behind the net and a follow-up opportunity. Giroux had one in the near slot as well as a shot through a screen from the left circle.

The Islanders blocked 10 Flyers shot attempts in the first period. They also had a pair of odd-man rushes. The latter of the two forced Cart Hart to make a good skate save on J-G Pageau; the toughest of his four saves in the first period. The Flyers took a pair of neutral zone penalties. The latter, a tripping penalty on Derek Grant, carried over 1:25 into the second period.

Philadelphia's challenge for goaltender interference on Matt Barzal on his power play goal at 1:20 of the second period was unsuccessful. Tyler Pitlick pushed Barzal into the net, although Barzal also made no effort whatsoever to vacate the crease (and held Ivan Provorov's stick for good measure). Josh Bailey and Jordan Eberle got the assists after the puck banked in off Barzal. The Flyers killed off the subsequent delay of game penalty for the failed challenge. Overall, the Flyers went 3-for-4 on the penalty kill, 0-for-2 on the power play.

The Islanders started to take over the game for about five minutes until the Flyers top line had strong puck possession shifts on both ends of a TV timeout. Finally, after multiple low-to-high plays, the Flyers got a payoff on Giroux's high tip of a Phil Myers point shot. Couturier got the secondary assist at 15:45.

The Flyers haven't had many odd-man rushes in this series, and struggled to finish the few they've got but JVR scored on his goal set up by Scott Laughton and Travis Konecny at 18:18.

Philadelphia nearly had a third goal near the end of the second period as the puck disappeared under Varlamov's pad near his skate. Replays were inclusive on whether the puck crossed the goal line before Tyler Pitlick jammed Varlamov's pad and skate into the net. Second period shots ended up 11-9 in the Flyers' favor.

With Couturier unable to return for the third period, the Flyers killed off a Scott Laughton interference penalty. At 4:32, after Hayes kept the puck in the offensive zone and Konecny made a perfect cross-ice pass, a wide open Niskanen was able to step into a heavy shot that beat Varlamov for a 3-1 lead.

The Islanders generated 10 of the next 11 shots, and Nelson's long range shot may be been deflected a bit by Joel Farabee but was stoppable for Hart. With 2:41 left, Clutterbuck won a battle with Nate Thompson passed beyond Hagg to Brassard, who had a slam dunk to tie the game at 3-3. Shots were 12-6 Islanders.

There were multiple Grade A chances for both teams in OT. Hart had to make 7 saves, several of which were tough, including a point-blank chance for the wide-open Nelson. After Matt Martin tripped up Hagg behind the Flyers' net, the Flyers got just their second power play of the game but Philadelphia was unable to do much with it.

On the Flyers' fourth shot on goal in OT, Laughton's tip of Provorov's shot ended the game at 12:20.

GAME 6: New York controlled puck possession for the majority of the game but the Flyers were resilient and battled hard, especially in the absence of top-line center Sean Couturier. It was a bend-but-don't-break night for the Flyers, who saw an early 2-0 lead slip away and then battled back from deficits of 3-2 and 4-3. After Philadelphia got outshot and outchanced for a fourth straight period in OT (despite a pair of Flyers power plays), the Flyers were the better team in the second overtime and went on to win, 5-4.

Counterattacking goals by Kevin Hayes at 10:16 and James van Riemsdyk at 11:52 gave the Flyers a 2-0 lead in the first period. Derick Brassard got one back at 16:33 on a re-direct right after an Islanders power play expired.

At 1:24 of the second period, Matt Martin tied the game on a counterattack off a blocked shot. A failed challenge for goalie interference on the play resulted in an Anders Lee power play goal at 3:06 to give New York a 3-2 lead. At 13:21, Michael Raffl knotted the game at 3-3. With 30 seconds left in the period, Mathew Barzal used Travis Sanheim as a screen to restore a one-goal to the Islanders at 4-3.

In the third period, the Flyers followed up a successful penalty kill shortly thereafter with a Scott Laughton breakaway goal to knot the score at 4-4. The Islanders, who outshot and outchanced the Flyers in all three regulation periods and the first OT period (despite two Flyers power plays), had numerous chances to put the game away.

The Flyers controlled most of the second OT after getting a lift from a start-of-period penalty kill, and took advantage of a broken Scott Mayfield stick to ultimately win the game. Ivan Provorov scored from high over the middle to end the game at 15:03 of the second overtime.

Carter Hart authored 49 saves on 53 shots, including numerous season-saving stops. Semyon Varlamov took the loss with 26 saves on 31 shots.

The Flyers went 0-for-4 on the power play to fall to 0-for-11 in the series. New York went 1-for-6 and are 4-for-17 overall. New York's first goal of Game 6 was scored right after a Nicolas Aube-Kubel penalty expired.

Flyers Outlook

Carter Hart was the biggest difference-maker in Game 6. He was under siege all night.

The 22-year-old netminder had little chance on three of the four goals that he allowed and the other -- shot through the legs of an accidentally screening Travis Sanheim on Barzal's goal late in the second period -- would have been a tough stop. If there's one quibble with Hart's play in the series, it's that three of the goals New York scored were on plays where Hart's stick positioning/use was less than ideal.

In the absence of Sean Couturier, Kevin Hayes and Claude Giroux stepped up big along with Scott Laughton (subbing as the top line center). Couturier's availability for Game 7 is unknown as he deals with a suspected right knee injury suffered in the second period of Game 6. If he possibly play, he will.

In both the immediate sense and in the long-range picture, the biggest story from Game 6 was Oskar Lindblom's return to the lineup. It had only been eight months after being diagnosed with Ewing's Sarcoma in his ribcage and two months after being diagnosed in remission after undergoing chemotherapy and rib resection surgery. Originally, the plan was for Lindblom to target a Game 1 return for the Eastern Conference Final if the Flyers made it to the Edmonton bubble.

Vigneault said that Lindblom's availability for Game 7 will depend on how he is feeling two nights after playing in a double-OT game. The player told him the morning after the game that he felt fine.

The status of rookie left winger Joel Farabee is also unknown. He sustained a potential concussion on a third period check by the Islanders' Adam Pelech in Game 5. Just as Farabee exited the lineup with an injury, Michael Raffl was ready to return. Raffl not only scored a vital goal in the second period of Game 6 (his 4th of the playoffs in just eight games played), he also played a very strong off-puck game on the forecheck and the defensive zone.

With 15 postseason games played to date, Travis Konecny is still looking for his first goal of the playoffs. He's had some scoring chances in recent games but no payoff. However, he does have three assists over the last two games.

Entering Game 7 of this season, Hayes leads the Flyers in playoff scoring with 13 points (four goals, nine assists). He is followed by Laughton (five goals among his nine points, including tallies in back-to-back games), Jakub Voracek (four goals, five assists), Couturier (two goals in this series among his nine postseason points), Ivan Provorov (three goals, five assists), and Sanheim (one goal, six assists).

After excelling early in the playoffs, the Flyers second defense pairing of Sanheim and Phil Myers (three goals, four points) has had problems in this series with turnovers. Some have been under heavy pressure, others have been unforced. Veterans Matt Niskanen and Justin Braun have had their ups and downs during the playoffs, too, but Niskanen has stepped up big in each of the last two games and was stellar in overtime during Game 6. Meanwhile, the oft-maligned-by-fans Robert Hagg played perhaps the best playoff game of his NHL career to date in Game 6.

Mired at 0-for-11 on the power play in the series, and just 13-for-17 (76.5 percent) on the penalty kill in the series, the Flyers need to have a game where they win the special teams battle. Philly was better than the Islanders at both ends of special teams during the regular season but it has not translated at all during the playoffs.

For the Flyers, it's been a post-season long struggle on the power play. They are a miserable 4-for-50 (8%). Take away a 3-for-7 outburst (in a losing cause) in Game 5 against Montreal, and the Flyers are 1-for-43 (2.3%).

Islanders Outlook

Barzal narrowly avoided a potential serious injury in Game 5 when, during the third period, Giroux's stick caught Barzal under the visor on the follow-through of a shot. He missed the rest of that game but returned to post a dominant performance in Game 6.

In many of the periods during the series, the Flyers have struggled to contain the Islanders' top three lines -- Anders Lee, Jordan Eberle, Brock Nelson, playmaker Josh Bailey, third liners J-G Pageau and Derick Brassard have all been tough to deal with, along with the speed of Anthony Beauvillier. The fourth line centered by Casey Cizikas has also played well, and wingers Matt Martin and Cal Clutterbuck have been very physical and agitating.

The Islanders have been without top-pairing defenseman Johnny Boychuk (suspected head injury) for all but one playoff game to date. He's participated in warmups but has not played. In a Game 7 scenario, it's quite plausible that he will play if at all able to. If Boychuk comes back, someone such as Scott Mayfield could be scratched.

The Islanders are not as fearsome on the blueline as they are up front. They are also a team that will turn over some pucks (New York led the NHL in charged giveaways this season). The Islanders have taken much better care of the puck overall in the playoffs than they did before the NHL pause, especially in the struggling weeks leading up to the leaguewide stoppage for the Covid-19 pandemic. However, they've been bitten by the turnover bug several key times in the last two games, as neutral zone and own-zone turnovers have ended up in their net a few times.

The single biggest decision facing Trotz heading into Game 7 is whether to go with Semyon Varlamov or Thomas Greiss in net with the season on the line. Varlamov recorded a shutout in Game 1 in a game where he really wasn't test much. He wasn't sharp in Game 2, especially on a pair of early short-side goals by Hayes and was pulled early with Greiss coming in to go the rest of the way. In Games 3, 5, and especially Game 6, Varlamov did not play poorly by any means but also did not play quite to the level he did during the First Round series against Boston leading into his Game 1 shutout in this series.

For the series, Varlamov has an .899 save percentage across his five starts. He's still at a very strong .921 overall for the playoffs.

Greiss, meanwhile, got his lone start of the playoffs in Game 4 of this series but was spectacular in a game where he was severely tested multiple times. He finished with 36 saves on 38 shots. Greiss wasn't really tested much -- until overtime -- in relieving Varlamov in Game 2 but stopped each of the first 20 shots he saw before Myers' scored the game-winner on a partially deflected shot that found the net through traffic. Overall, Greiss has stopped 56 of 59 shots in the series for a .949 save percentage.


PROJECTED LINEUPS (primary Game 6 lines, subject to change)

FLYERS
 
28 Claude Giroux- 21 Scott Laughton - 93 Jake Voracek
25 James van Riemsdyk - 13 Kevin Hayes- 11 Travis Konecny
23 Oskar Lindblom - 38 Derek Grant - 18 Tyler Pitlick
12 Michael Raffl - 44 Nate Thompson - 62 Nicolas Aube-Kubel

9 Ivan Provorov - 15 Matt Niskanen
6 Travis Sanheim - 5 Phil Myers
8 Robert Hagg - 61 Justin Braun

79 Carter Hart
[37 Brian Elliott]

ISLANDERS

27 Anders Lee - 13 Mathew Barzal - 7 Jordan Eberle
18 Anthony Beauvillier - 29 Brock Nelson - 12 Josh Bailey
10 Derick Brassard - 44 Jean-Gabriel Pageau - 47 Leo Komarov
17 Matt Martin - 53 Casey Cizikas - 15 Cal Clutterbuck

3 Adam Pelech - 6 Ryan Pulock
25 Devon Toews - 24 Scott Mayfield
2 Nick Leddy - 4 Andy Greene
55 Johnny Boychuk ???

40 Semyon Varlamov
[1 Thomas Greiss]


Comparative Team Stats (League ranking, via NHL.com and Natural Stat Trick)

GPG: PHI 3.29 (7th), NYI 2.78 (22nd)
GAA: PHI 2.77(T-7th), NYI 2.79 (9th)
5-on-5: PHI +18 (153-135), NYI -10 (121-131)
Power Play: PHI 20.8% (14th), NYI 17.3% (T-24th)
Penalty Kill: PHI 81.8% (11th), NYI  80.7% (15th)
Special Teams Index: PHI 102.6, NYI 98.0
SHG: PHI 8 (T-6th), NYI 6 (T-10th)
SHGA: PHI 6 (T-14th), NYI 5 (T-7th)
Average Shots: PHI 31.4 (16th), NYI 29.6 (28th)
Shots Against: PHI 28.7 (1st), NYI 31.2 (T-13th)
Corsi: PHI 51.02% (9th), NYI 46.45% (29th)
Scoring chances: PHI 50.91% (13th), NYI 47.91% (15th)
High-danger chances: PHI 50.83% (12th), NYI 50.08% (18th)
Expected goal differential: PHI 50.64 (14th), NYI 48.84% (20th)
Faceoffs: PHI 54.6% (1st), NYI 49.9% (T-17th)
Credited Hits/60: PHI 21.4 (17th), NYI 27.7 (1st)
Blocked Shots/60: PHI 12.02 (28th), NYI 16.61 (1st)
Giveaways/60: PHI 8.93 (13th), NYI 12.96 (31st)
Takeways/60:  PHI 6.29 (24th), NYI 7.02 (18th)

Series Schedule

Mon, Aug 24 -- Islanders 4 - Flyers 0
Wed,  Aug 26 -- Flyers 4 - Islanders 3 (OT)
Sat, Aug. 29 -- Islanders 3 - Flyers 1
Sun, Aug. 30 -- Islanders 3 - Flyers 2
Tue, Sept. 1 -- Flyers 4 - Islanders 3 (OT)
Thu, Sept. 3 -- Flyers 5 - Islanders 4 (2OT)
*Sat, Sept. 5: 7:30 p.m. NBC

* If necessary
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