PITTSBURGH -- This series was expected to be easy, painfully easy, for
the Philadelphia Flyers, who supposedly had too much toughness, too much size,
just plain too much for the Pittsburgh Penguins.
At least that's what everybody in Philadelphia was telling them.
Now, as they limp into Pittsburgh down 2-0 in an Eastern Conference
semifinal series that has defied all forecasts, the Flyers must be wondering if
the very assets expected to sway this series actually are liabilities.
Their size? It's of no help when the Penguins' faster, sleeker European
skaters are flying by them, creating goals and turnovers and making the less
mobile Flyers look like they're skating in slush.
Their toughness? The Penguins laughed at the Flyers when forward Rick
Tocchet precipitated a brawl late in Pittsburgh's 4-1 victory in Game 2
Saturday that, rather than enhancing the Flyers' tough-guy image, only
highlighted their frustration.
"This isn't about fighting, this is about winning hockey games," Penguins
defenseman Darius Kasparaitis said. "I don't know what those guys are
thinking. This is 2000, not 1960. I don't know what they're trying to prove,
but they don't scare us."
The Flyers have stubbornly stuck with the same roster formula for years --
signing rugged, no-nonsense North American players who can muck and grind, dump
and chase, agitate and frustrate -- with remarkable success.
But, so far in this series, they have been upstaged by the Penguins' stable
of full-of-finesse European fly guys. Jaromir Jagr has three goals in two
games, Robert Lang has two more, Martin Straka has a goal and seems to be
assisting on every Penguins goal. Jan Hrdina is ably serving as Jagr's setup
man.
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| Things will be just as heated as Game 2 between the Flyers and Penguins.(Allsport) | |
So far, the series has been like a plodding, oversized Monster truck trying
to outrace a well-tuned European sports car. And it's not just because the
Penguins have more European players than any other team in a league that is
quickly transitioning to Europeans for its scorers and its stars.
Then there's goaltender Ron Tugnutt, who, by stopping 72 of 73 shots, has
been just as instrumental as Jagr in setting the tone for the series -- and, if
the Penguins win it, setting the Flyers up for yet another huge playoff
disappointment. They lost in the first round the last two seasons.
"We're still confident we can win Game 3 (Tuesday)," Flyers center Keith
Primeau said. "We've just got to find a way to score. Who would have thought
we would have a tougher time with Ronnie than we did with Dominik (Hasek of
Buffalo)?"
Still, the Penguins are trying not to get too comfortable with a 2-0 lead
that virtually no one predicted. They understand that one bad bounce, one goal
off a skate blade could swing the momentum back to the Flyers, who still have
two home games left if the series goes to seven games.
But the longer the Flyers go without beating Tugnutt more frequently, the
closer they come to elimination. Tugnutt has the reputation of a goalie who can
play well for long stretches when his confidence is up, and this series is
growing shorter with each Penguins victory.
"We have to get to him, we have to get some goals, once we get some goals,
guys will start feeling good about themselves and maybe we can break his
confidence," Flyers goalie Brian Boucher said.
Another factor: The Flyers have come back to win only one playoff series
they trailed 2-0, in 1977 against Toronto. The Penguins have blown only one 2-0
lead, in 1975 against the New York Islanders.
"But it's far from over," Penguins defenseman Bob Boughner said. "The
last thing you want to do is mess up at home and give them life."
Especially since the Flyers are 3-14-5 in their last 22 games in Pittsburgh,
despite a 1-0-1 record there this season.
"It's a pretty tough place to win," Boucher said. "But they came in here
(Philadelphia) and won. This adversity is going to prove how close a group we
really are."
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