It was a game up for grabs for the most part, especially when the Ducks were able to cut a two-goal deficit in half late in the second period, but a costly turnover in the third led to an insurance marker for the Flyers early in the third. With the loss, the Ducks fell to 14-16-4 (32 points). The Flyers, meanwhile, improved to 18-11-5 (41 points) overall and 11-2-4 at home.
"Some tough breakdowns," said Ducks forward Jakob Silfverberg, who assisted on the team's lone goal. "All in all, I think we're doing some good stuff out there. Over the course of 60 minutes, we didn't play good enough. Any time you score one goal, it's going to be tough to win."
The Ducks didn't come away unscathed. In the closing minutes of the second period, Troy Terry had to be helped off the ice after taking a knee-on-knee hit from Flyers forward Nicolas Aube-Kubel. Terry didn't return for the third.
It was a battle of the Kase brothers tonight, as Ondrej and younger brother David faced each other for the first time at the NHL level. David made his NHL debut with the Flyers last week and scored his first career NHL goal tonight in front of mom and dad. His goal gave the Flyers a 2-0 lead after Claude Giroux opened the scoring just 55 seconds into the second period.
The Ducks got on the board at the 16:33 mark of the second period when Rickard Rakell got a piece of Hampus Lindholm's point shot on the power play for his 10th goal of the season. It also marked the fourth straight game in which the Ducks have scored with the man advantage. The goal gave Rakell four points in his past two games after coming off a career-tying three-assist performance on Saturday against the New York Rangers, and put him in sole possession of ninth on the club's all-time power-play goals list. Rakell entered tonight's game tied with Chris Kunitz (26) for ninth all-time.