Flyers need 1 more rally


Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA

His Flyers were dominated from the faceoff to the closing seconds. He yanked his goalie, his top defender suddenly went soft, and his star forward took a brutal stick to the eye.

If coach Peter Laviolette believed Philadelphia’s loss to Chicago in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup finals was a true reflection of how the Flyers play in crucial postseason games, he might have made them come to the ice Monday for practice or an extra video session.

Instead, Laviolette told them to stay home. Relax and regroup. Save the work for today.

Laviolette sent his team away with a message: Wednesday’s Game 6 is only the next chapter before Game 7.

The Flyers believe they aren’t finished with their postseason stuffed with thrilling comebacks.

“If any team gets it, this team gets it because we’ve been here so many times,” Laviolette said. “Again, to have our back against the wall, we’ll be comfortable with this. I have no question that our team will respond in a manner in which it should so that we can be successful.”

This Flyers team has mastered the art of the comeback, starting all the way back on the last day of the regular season when a shootout win clinched a playoff spot. It became the third team in NHL history to win a series after losing the first three games when it eliminated Boston in the Eastern Conference semifinals, and evened the Stanley Cup at 2-all after losing the first two games at Chicago.

The Flyers have one more edge — Game 6 is in Philly — huge in a series where the home team has won every game and where the Flyers are 9-1 this postseason.

They couldn’t wait to escape Chicago after Sunday night’s 7-4 loss.

“They came out harder,” Flyers goalie Michael Leighton said. “For some reason, we weren’t ready to play and it cost us the game.”

It might cost Leighton his starting spot.

Laviolette has decided which goalie will start Game 6. He just won’t say if it’s Leighton or Brian Boucher.

Leighton has started every game for the Flyers since Game 6 of the Eastern Conference semifinals, but he’s been yanked twice during the finals — in Game 1 and Game 5.