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Blazes Torch Flyers, 4-0, In Final Game Of The Western Canada Road Trip 

CALGARY, Alberta — The finish of three games in four evenings on a western Canada excursion: A ton of languid Flyers hockey. 

The Flyers watched unwell unpleasantly while falling, 4-0, to the Flames, who broadened their intensely hot series of wins to six games. The Flames wouldn't give the Flyers existence with the puck, restricting them to 20 shots for the game. 

"They're playing an incredibly close, checking hockey game where there's not a ton of room on the ice," Flyers lead trainer Alain Vigneault said. "At the point when the group plays that way, all things considered, you must make plays unpalatably. Your execution must be at its best and clearly, they removed that from us this evening." 

Up until their misfortune to the Flames, the Flyers had been bouncing on the score sheet early. They enlisted the main objective in five of their seven games this season preceding Saturday night and went 4-0-1 when they did. In any case, the Flyers attempted to produce scoring possibilities 토토사이트 and when they figured out how to come down on net, Flames goalie Jacob Markström was in ideal situation to answer the call and secure the shutout. In his last four beginnings, Markström has halted 125 of 126 shots. 

Avoiding the pattern 

For the initial two rounds of the western excursion, the Flyers came prepared to play and outscored rivals in the primary time frame. Against the Edmonton Oilers, the Flyers drove, 3-2, after the initial 20 minutes and against the Vancouver Canucks, the Flyers pulled ahead 2-1. Notwithstanding, against the Flames, they battled to come down on Markström after a scoreless first period. They were outshot, 8-4, and just had one high-risk scoring opportunity to the Flames' five. 

The Flyers conveyed their hostile misfortunes into the subsequent period, figuring out how to put just five shots on objective. The top line of Claude Giroux, Sean Couturier, and Travis Konecny consolidated for six shots through 40 minutes, while the remainder of the Flyers skaters just enlisted three. The third period saw little improvement for the Flyers, who neglected to gain by two strategic maneuvers. 

"We simply didn't come out and execute the strategy," Konecny said. "We were committing errors. I'm not getting down on anyone. Simply beginning with myself. It simply was anything but a perfect game." 

Punishment party 

Albeit the Flyers' punishment kill has found achievement right on time through the initial six rounds of the period (84%), they have been taking up residency in the punishment box too oftentimes. Heading into their confrontation against the Flames, the Flyers positioned second in the NHL in punishment minutes per game (14.5). 

The Flyers battled to avoid the punishment box against the Flames, particularly in the subsequent period. In spite of invalidating the initial two man-benefits of the game, keeping a 7-for-7 punishment killing streak tracing all the way back to the beginning of the Canucks game, the Flames profited by their third strategic maneuver of the game. In the third time frame, the Flyers neglected to remain trained. After winger Zack MacEwen was called for snaring partially through the period, the Flames made the Flyers pay. Winger Matthew Tkachuk scored on a spasm tac-toe objective to put the Flames up, 2-0. 

Altogether, the Flyers got done with 12 punishment minutes and went on the punishment kill multiple times. 

Carter begins: 100 NHL games version 

The Flyers' misfortune to the Flames stamped goalie Carter Hart's 100th NHL start, and he stood tall by and large. The Flames had five high-peril scoring chances after the principal time frame, including focus Dillon Dube's endeavored underhanded shot off a bounce back. Hart slid across the wrinkle and made a toe save, ransacking Dube from tracking down the rear of the net. 

Hart looked splendid again in the subsequent period and permitted just a single objective — focus Sean Monahan's strategic maneuver tip-in objective off a focusing pass from defenseman Rasmus Andersson to put the Flames up, 1-0. Be that as it may, Hart stoned Monahan some other time when Tkachuk endeavored to tee Monahan up with an underhanded pass from behind the Flyers' net. In spite of a for the most part solid game, Hart was beat by winger Johnny Gaudreau inside the last two minutes of the third time frame after the Flames had scored on a void netter. Hart got done with 31 saves money on 34 shots, useful for a .912 save rate. 

"It's disillusioning when the group invests an energy like that before Hartsy when all things considered, he's the main explanation it wound up the score it was," Konecny said. "That is to say, he made some mind blowing saves. Clearly, we attempt to help him however much we can, yet this evening we didn't help him by any means, and he kept us in the game."