Flyers' Laviolette Earns High Marks

Laviolette coached youth league just before taking Flyers' job

A championship coach not long before, Peter Laviolette was assisting his 11-year-old son's team when the underachieving Philadelphia Flyers called.

Now, how's this for a resurrection? From youth league assistant to head coach of the Eastern Conference champions, Laviolette has come a long way the past seven months.

So have the Flyers.

Between the high expectations and a coaching change, injuries and general inconsistency, and then an epic postseason comeback, Philadelphia didn't take the easy road to get to the Stanley Cup finals. Yet there were the Flyers as the series began on Saturday, staring at the Chicago Blackhawks in a matchup between championship-starved franchises.

And just like Laviolette, the coach in the other box --Joel Quenneville -- knows a thing or two about taking over a talented but struggling team.

“They're both very good teachers of the game,” said the Flyers' Chris Pronger, who played for Quenneville in St. Louis.

“They both are intense behind the bench and push their players to play to the best of their abilities.”

And they both have their teams in position to win it all for the first time in decades.

The Flyers' last championship came in 1975, when the Broad Street Bullies fought their way to their second straight title. The Blackhawks' last hoisted the Stanley Cup in 1961, when Bobby Hull and Stan Mikita were starring on Madison Street.

For Laviolette, this is familiar territory. He coached Carolina to the championship in 2006 but got fired after two straight playoff misses and a 12-11 start last season. Overall, he's 272-212-64 in parts of eight seasons, including two with the New York Islanders.

“When you're out, you wonder if you'll ever get back in,” he said. “When you do get back in, you certainly are appreciative of the opportunity.”

Laviolette was working for TSN in Canada and wondering if he'd get another chance when the call came from general manager Paul Holmgren in early December.

With one win in seven games and a disappointing 13-11-1 record, the Flyers weren't meeting their high expectations after adding goalie Ray Emery and Pronger. So John Stevens got fired after three-plus seasons with a run to the conference finals, and Laviolette replaced him.

“I know guys felt guilty when Johnny got fired,” enforcer Riley Cote said.

The adjustment took time.

There were changes in the neutral zone and the approach to forechecks. There were also high marks for the new coach.

Players could see the progress after a few weeks even though the Flyers never really shook their inconsistency.

They still needed a shootout victory against the New York Rangers in the final regular-season game just to make the playoffs, and, it took a monstrous comeback against Boston in the conference semifinals to keep this run going. They went from trailing 3-0 in the series to falling behind 3-0 in Game 7 but pulled it out -- just when it seemed they were out of magic -- on a power-play goal by Simon Gagne.

Gagne had returned from a broken toe to win Game 4 with an overtime goal.

They've also dealt with injuries to goalie Brian Boucher (knees) and right wing Ian Laperriere, who missed 10 games with a brain contusion and mild concussion, during this playoff run, not to mention the broken right foot Jeff Carter sustained last month.

Yet for all the twists, for all the wild turns, they're playing for a championship.

“Once the playoffs rolled around, we'd been through so much, understood what we needed to do night in and night out to be successful. We're kind of seeing the rewards of that,” Pronger said.

Cote praised Laviolette's attention to detail, particularly his ability to break down turnovers “to a science.”

“He's a very prepared person,” said Cote, who had not played in the postseason.

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