Saturday, February 24, 2018

A month unlike any other in Philadelphia sports

The Eagles winning the Super Bowl would have been enough for quite a while. After the Super Bowl, there’s not much on the sports calendar for the rest of February. But, when your team wins the Super Bowl, then who cares about the rest of the month? I’m sure that’s how plenty of Philadelphia sports fans felt following the evening of February 4.

But, what has followed with the two teams that reside at Wells Fargo Center lends credence to the old cliché “Winning is contagious.” After each team won today, the Flyers and Sixers are a combined 16-0-1 since that memorable Sunday night for the Eagles in Minneapolis.  When you think about where all three of these teams were at the beginning of February in 2017 and look at where they are now, it’s night and day.

The Eagles had finished last in the NFC East and both the short-term and long-term futures of the organization were difficult to decipher. Granted, it was the first year of a new regime, but there was much more unknown than known when it came to Philadelphia’s football team last February. The Flyers were on their way to becoming the first team in NHL history to miss the playoffs in a season in which they had a 10-game winning streak. There were many more questions than answers surrounding head coach Dave Hakstol, whose team had clearly regressed after making the playoffs in his first season.

                                                     Mitchell Leff/Getty Images
Ben Simmons and Joel Embiid have the current and future
states of the Sixers looking very fruitful.
The Sixers had just lost Joel Embiid for the rest of the year to a torn meniscus after it was later revealed he played with the bad knee in what would be his final game of 2016-17. The game was televised on ESPN and the optics of the situation were that the ownership group wanted their best player in front of the national audience despite his injury. Only a couple weeks after Embiid’s final game of the season, the Sixers announced the first overall pick of the 2016 NBA Draft, Ben Simmons, would be held out for the rest of the year with a foot injury. Fans would have to wait until the fall to see the two prized possessions of “The Process” take the floor together. 


Fast forward to the end of February one year later and the Eagles have won the Super Bowl, the Flyers may well win the NHL’s Metropolitan division and the Sixers could host a playoff series in the first round. The writing was on the wall for all the professional teams in Philadelphia to improve, but certainly not this quickly. In one year, the Eagles went from last place to Super Bowl Champions, the Flyers went from out of the playoffs to perhaps winning the NHL’s deepest division and the Sixers went from non-playoff team to potential top four seed in the Eastern Conference. If this month has been any indication of what the rest of 2018 may hold for Philadelphia sports, the Phillies are due for a sharp increase in wins in what figures to be a wide-open NL East after the preseason favorite Washington Nationals.


                                               Bill Streicher/USA Today Sports
Young defensemen Shayne Gostisbehere and Ivan Provorov
are at the forefront of the Flyers' success this season.
The most encouraging thing about all of this is that none of it appears to be a fluke and the teams in Philadelphia are positioned well for the long-term future. All four teams are rife with young talent. While there’s never a guarantee that bad teams are going to be able to stockpile draft picks and prospects and turn things around, the futures for all four teams in the City of Brotherly Love are bright. Before this year, the Eagles had not won a playoff game in nine years. The Flyers had missed the playoffs in three of the previous five seasons. The Sixers were trapped in the middle of the NBA for a decade and the Phillies lost the most games out of any team in Major League Baseball since the start of 2013. All four teams went through coaching changes and front office makeovers. It’s nice to have those last five years for all four teams in the rear-view mirror now. Time to enjoy a new era. A
winning era.


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