Skip to content

Flyers vs. Oilers: Shootout win over Connor McDavid and Edmonton

  • by

The Flyers picked up a hard-working, well-earned, 2-1 shootout win Thursday night over the Oilers at the Wells Fargo Center.

Morgan Frost and James van Riemsdyk found the back of the net to lift the Flyers in the skills competition.

Kevin Hayes scored in regulation for the Flyers (22-22-9), who are 1-1-0 on their four-game homestand to open a decisive month of February.

Travis Konecny ​​predicted a much better game from his team after its 2-1 loss Monday to the Islanders, a game in which New York was the clear aggressor.

“Tonight, I think you’ll see a better style of play from our team,” Konecny ​​said Thursday morning.

John Tortorella’s club is now 2-9 after regulation, 1-1 in the shootout and 5-4-8 when it enters the third period in a tied game.

Tortorella had a key coach’s challenge in the third period, which had Zach Hyman’s go-ahead goal overturned for goalie interference. Tortorella, with the guidance of the club’s video crew, has gone 4 for 4 on his challenges this season.

The Flyers’ 30th-ranked power play went 0 for 3. However, the Flyers stayed out of the box the entire game to keep high-powered Edmonton at bay.

In 12 days, the Flyers face the Oilers (29-18-5) again with a matchup at Rogers Place.

• The world class duo of Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl was held in check by the Flyers.

“I don’t think it’s so much trying to just focus on [McDavid],” Konecny ​​said Thursday morning. “It’s trying to focus on how we can play our game and take the game to them. If you can get on those guys and try to play them hard, maybe just frustrate them and try to get them to shut down and wait for another night.

“In saying that, he’s the best player in the world. So he’s going to create havoc out there, you’ve just got to limit the mistakes.”

McDavid, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, had one assist. He already has 41 goals and 94 points this season.

Draisaitl, also the owner of a Hart Trophy, was kept scoreless. He came in as the NHL’s second-leading scorer at 76 points.

Despite going 2 for 12 in the faceoff circle, Noah Cates was impressive against McDavid. The 24-year-old rookie tied him up a couple of times to quell a McDavid threat.

Cates was playing college hockey for the majority of last season before signing his entry-level deal and making his NHL debut.

• Carter Hart was fantastic, recording 34 saves.

The 24-year-old held the league’s highest-scoring team to one goal. He denied McDavid twice in OT.

The Oilers drew even early in the second period when McDavid left a drop pass for Evander Kane, who got enough on the shot to beat Hart.

Edmonton netminder Stuart Skinner stopped 35 of the Flyers’ 36 shots.

• Entering Thursday, Travis Sanheim had just one point (an assist) in 17 games since the holiday break.

He went into the break looking like he had turned a corner with his offensive game, putting up 12 points (four goals, eight assists) in his previous 18 games.

The Flyers want to see Sanheim push the envelope offensively. He has too much ability with his size and skill.

“As I always say, when you show me that amount of time that you can be that player, we need to see it more,” Tortorella said Thursday morning. “He’s another one that I think we need to get back into playing at a level he needs to be at.”

Sanheim showed another level Thursday night. He assisted Hayes’ first-period goal and was active offensively.

• Konecny ​​has gone 11 straight games without a goal. More on that here. He played 24-plus minutes Thursday and was very involved.

• Tanner Laczynski was on the ice Thursday morning prior to the team’s optional skate. There has been no update on his status, but taking the ice has to at least be a positive development in his recovery from a lower-body injury.

The 25-year-old center was placed on injured reserve in early December.

• The Flyers placed Linus Hogberg, a 2016 fifth-round draft pick, on unconditional waivers Thursday for the purpose of terminating his contract.

The 24-year-old defenseman will return to his native Sweden. Hogberg made his NHL debut last season and finished with a pair of assists over five games for the Flyers.

He had played just 19 games for AHL affiliate Lehigh Valley this season.

• The second half of the homestand comes this weekend with a back-to-back set. The Flyers host the Predators on Saturday (12:30 pm ET/NBCSP), followed by a matchup with the Kraken on Sunday (1 pm ET/NBCSP).

Subscribe to and rate Flyers Talk

Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Art19 | YouTube