Difficult to See Now, But Remember: Flyers' Window Just Starting to Open

They can't win away from the Wells Fargo Center. They've seen a nine-point cushion in the wild-card standings vanish and when they resume play, they'll be out of the playoff picture.

The Flyers are who we thought they were. A fringe playoff team lacking in too many areas to be considered a serious contender, despite the overachievement of last season.

When the Flyers entered their bye week, they sat one point ahead of Carolina for the final wild-card spot and two points ahead of Florida and Ottawa. They are 3-8-3 in 14 games since their 10-game winning streak was snapped, and were blown out in back-to-back games in Boston and Washington by a combined score of 11-3.

Yet, they're still on the brink of the postseason - for now. Perhaps it's time for a trade from the front office to send a shockwave through the locker room? Not so fast.

"If we can make our team better, we will," Flyers general manager Ron Hextall said last week at Flyers Skate Zone in Voorhees, New Jersey. "But we're staying on course.

"I don't care if we win every game the rest of the year or lose every game, we're staying on course. We set out on a course two and a half years ago - we're not deviating from what we planned. I'm not going to make a trade to send a message."

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It's easy to get carried away in win streaks and unexpected playoff appearances, especially in Philadelphia, where the four major sports teams are rebuilding. It's even easier to scream for a team to go for it when it shows a glimpse into its full potential.

That is what makes sports fun. It's what makes for good sports debate programs and entertaining talking heads. But it's not how organizations should run their operations.

It's certainly not how Hextall runs his regime with the Flyers. Hextall has a clear vision, and time and time again has shown no signs of expediting his plan for immediate help. He has made it a purpose to build through the draft. We have to remember that, and realize that the Flyers' front office is playing the long game here, not the short game.

"Right now, we're gonna stick with what we've got here and move forward," Hextall said Sunday in Washington. "But on a day-to-day basis, I always look at how we can make our club better, and if there's something that we think makes our club better, we'll do it.

"The worst thing you can do is overreact when things aren't going right and that's not gonna happen. But if we can find a way to make ourselves better, we will."

Let's take a step back and make some sense of the Flyers' current state. They are seventh in the Eastern Conference with 50 points as of Tuesday morning. They are 8-12-3 on the road, with nine straight defeats away from South Philadelphia. They are a top-10 scoring team, with 127 goals, but have allowed a league-high 144 goals against.

Steve Mason's confidence is completely shook. Michal Neuvirth hasn't been much better, if at all. Claude Giroux hasn't scored a goal in 11 games and has just one marker in his last 17 games. (To be fair, he does have seven assists in his last eight games.)

Shayne Gostisbehere has been a healthy scratch twice this season, with his latest coming last Saturday in Boston. He's struggled with his gap defense, among other areas, and is enduring growing pains in his second NHL season - as expected.

While the Flyers' defense has scored 102 points, second most in the NHL, it struggles with gaps, turnovers and has too many breakdowns. Ivan Provorov, 20, has been the lone bright spot among the group of eight defensemen.

Head coach Dave Hakstol has juggled his lines and defensive pairs in attempts to find something that works. Some of the moves have worked, others have not. Questioning some of Hakstol's lineup decisions is fair, but there's no question his systems work.

There is only so much Hakstol can do with what he has to work with. Part of the blame can be placed on Hextall because this team, as currently constructed, is not there yet. It is, however, unfair to put every decision Hakstol makes under a microscope.

"Hak has tried a lot of things," Hextall said. "In the end, it's a group and we win together, we lose together. We have to react as a group better when something doesn't go our way. That's bottom line. … Line changes, different D combinations, flipping Mase, Neuvy. Everything that's there, Hak has tried. In the end it comes down to our whole group just being better and not reacting the way we do when something negative happens."

One of the reasons Hextall opted to hire Hakstol, who came directly from college with no prior NHL coaching experience, is development. Growth takes time, and there is rhyme or reason behind each Hakstol benching, whether we see it or not.

The Flyers' play the last few weeks has been dumbfounding because a lot of the same mistakes that plagued the team in the beginning of the season - lax team defensive coverage, bad decisions with the puck, letting opponents enter the zone too easily, among others - are reappearing and that's a fair criticism on the current coaching staff.

But, when we put things in perspective, there are positives. Provorov has proven he's the real deal before he turned 20 last Friday. Travis Konecny is here, and while he's been the victim of a Hakstol benching, he's shown glimpses of what's to come. Jakub Voracek (41 points) has bounced back, Wayne Simmonds is an All-Star and added penalty kill to his résumé. Brayden Schenn leads the NHL in power-play goals with 11, though his 5-on-5 scoring could improve. And there's a lot of upside on the farm system, with the potential of seeing an influx of kids joining the Flyers as early as next season. 

"The window is actually starting to open, the way I see it," Hextall said last week. "The kids we have on our team. The kids we have coming. There's things happening here that are good. We're going to get better here. We're not going to get worse."

And Hextall is right - the window is just opening and will only open wider. Patience remains key here, and don't trust the process with the Flyers. Just enjoy the course.

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