Sunday, April 29, 2018

Flyers and Hextall entering pivotal offseason


At this time one week ago, Flyers fans were buzzing in Wells Fargo Center for game six of the team’s first round playoff series with the hated Pittsburgh Penguins. After a promising start that saw Flyers hold a 4-2 lead in the second period, a game 7 back in Pittsburgh was looking more like a reality than a dream. But, a dreadful end to the second period followed by an equally as dreadful start to the third period resulted in five unanswered goals for the Penguins to lead 7-4. Pittsburgh would go on to win 8-5 and the season was over.

The knee-jerk reaction was a lot of “same old Flyers” in reference to the franchise’s inconsistent goaltending and defensive woes that plagued them in all four of their losses in the six-game series. But, it’s easy to see that the Flyers are ready to turn the corner. General Manager Ron Hextall inherited an old and flawed roster in the spring of 2014 when he took over. The organization had an abundance of burdensome contracts on the books to go with a shallow prospect pool. Losing in the first round to the New York Rangers felt like the ceiling of the 2013-14 team. External options to improve the team in free agency were limited thanks to the dead weight that any cap-strapped team had to deal with getting rid of first. They weren’t deep enough to shake things up with a trade and expect better results. There weren’t many internal options either as the team lacked young blood to promote to the NHL roster.

                                                       David Maialetti/Philly.com
Hextall has gotten the Flyers out of salary cap hell.
Now he must get them into cup contention.
In short, the Flyers were stuck. It’s what lead to Hextall taking over for Paul Holmgren in the first place. For years, the organization always had an ultra-aggressive approach to each season and it wasn’t leading to better results, save for a magical run to the Stanley Cup Final in 2010 in a season in which it took a shootout in the final game of the regular season just to make the playoffs. Hextall logically decided to peel the bandage off. The focus became finding takers for bad contracts, even if it meant retaining salary, accumulating draft picks and building up a legitimate core of prospects. It’s difficult to do all of that, and also remain competitive. Naturally, the Flyers missed the playoffs in 2014-15 and coach Craig Berube was let go.


This led to Hextall hiring Dave Hakstol out of the University of North Dakota to stand behind the bench. It was an outside-the-box hire but it was easy to see Hextall’s thought process. There was an obvious emphasis placed on player development and getting younger, so why not bring in a coach who dealt with young players on a regular basis given his experience was in the college ranks? In a mild surprise, the Flyers returned to the playoffs in 2015-16, Hakstol’s first year. But, the team was clearly outmatched by the Washington Capitals and still in the middle of a transition.

The following season was as disappointing as 2015-16 was surprising. In 2016-17, the Flyers became the first team in NHL history to win 10 games in a row and miss the playoffs. However, this ended up being a blessing in disguise for the franchise as the team got some lottery luck after the season and jumped up 11 spots in the 2017 NHL Draft order and ultimately drafted Nolan Patrick second overall last year. With Patrick making the NHL roster last fall, 2016 is now the only draft out of Hextall’s four as GM, that at least one player does not have NHL experience. One of Hextall’s picks in 2016, was goalie Carter Hart in the second round. After two years in the WHL, Hart will graduate from junior hockey and will likely be in the AHL with the Lehigh Valley Phantoms come fall. Many believe he is the long-awaited answer to the organization’s goaltending problems.

Even without Hart, who seems destined for Lehigh Valley barring a miraculous training camp, the Flyers can take a step forward in 2018-19 with the right moves this summer. Thanks to Hextall’s wheeling and dealing, the Flyers finally have some serious cap space to play with in the offseason. Regardless of how good he drafts and develops talent, there will almost certainly come a time when an outside acquisition will be necessary to push the team into contention. One of several advantages to having prospects and draft picks is the flexibility to explore trades that would improve the NHL roster, since there's not going to be space for all the prospects anyway. After a 98-point season that saw the Flyers finish third in the Metropolitan division behind only the two-time defending Stanley Cup Champion Pittsburgh Penguins and regular season juggernaut Washington Capitals, this summer would appear to be a good time to attempt to narrow the gap.

Captain Claude Giroux just posted a 102-point season. Jakub Voracek produced at a point per game level. These two players are some of the veterans that have stuck around through Hextall’s rebuild and this season proved they are not yet coming out of their primes after down seasons last year. We haven’t seen Hextall as an aggressive executive looking to add to the roster in an offseason or as a buyer at the trade deadline. For as warranted as some of the concerns with Hakstol’s coaching ability can be, in three years, the team has performed to expectations for the most part. In all three seasons under Hakstol, the Flyers have been that borderline playoff team many pundits expected them to be and they got in the playoffs in two of those three seasons.

All you had to do is watch the games this year to know that the Flyers bottom six forward group was not good enough and they had no defensive depth. Fixing one of both of those things will likely result in a step forward next year regardless of who is in net. Hextall must now prove he knows the time is right to improve the NHL roster and how successful he is at doing it will determine if the Flyers can launch themselves into Stanley Cup contention.


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