Flyers Work Overtime to Get Back Into Series
- Share via
PITTSBURGH — The Philadelphia Flyers’ desperation overcame Jaromir Jagr’s domination.
Jagr rallied the Penguins from a two-goal deficit before the Flyers came back on the road to do what they couldn’t do at home, winning, 4-3, on Andy Delmore’s overtime goal Tuesday night.
Delmore, a rookie defenseman, scored his first two playoff goals, the second at 11:01 of overtime to overcome a brilliant game by Jagr, who had two goals and an assist.
The road team won for the third consecutive game in the Eastern Conference semifinal series.
The No. 7-seeded Penguins take a 2-1 lead into Game 4 Thursday night.
“If had we lost this game, the series would have been all but over,” said the Flyers’ Keith Jones, who had a goal and two assists.
The No. 1-seeded Flyers outshot the Penguins, 11-1, in the overtime and 44-18 overall, with Delmore wristing a shot from the slot past Ron Tugnutt off passes by Jones and Jody Hull.
“I let Jody Hull know how open I was. He made a drop pass to Keith Jones and he made a shovel pass to me,” Delmore said. “I was lucky enough to shift from by backhand to my forehand and make the shot.”
Said Jones: “Delmore was yelling for the puck loud enough that the people up top could hear him. He scored a fantastic goal.”
Jagr scored his fourth and fifth goals of the series and had a hand in every Penguin goal as Pittsburgh rallied from deficits of 2-0 and 3-2 before the Flyers ended an eight-game playoff overtime losing streak.
The Flyers hadn’t won a playoff overtime game since Eric Lindros’ goal beat the New Jersey Devils on June 7, 1995.
The Flyers, who never led in either game at Philadelphia, opened a 2-0 lead in a frenetically played first period, lost it as Jagr’s line scored twice in the second period, then regained it on John LeClair’s goal at 7:27 of the third.
The Flyers are one of the NHL’s best teams with a lead. But that means nothing when Jagr is on the ice--and that probably seemed to the Flyers like virtually every shift.
“He [Jagr] was unbelievable,” Penguin forward Matthew Barnaby said. “That’s one of the best games I’ve ever seen anyone play.”
More to Read
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.