"It's big. We know how close the standings are," Hamilton said. "We know how important these points are at this point in the season."
2. … But Need Better
But, the Hurricanes are also cognizant of the fact that they need to be better.
"We've got to play better than we did, but those are big points," Hamilton said. "We've got to really bear down and make sure we're playing better."
"We've got to get back to playing our identity," Warren Foegele said. "That's playing fast and hard and making the right decisions at the right time."
It took the Flyers just 37 seconds to strike first, with All-Star Travis Konecny slipping one through James Reimer's blocker arm. About eight minutes later, the Canes failed to clear the zone, and Michael Raffl scored to make it a 2-0 game.
"It was a tough start, obviously. A couple of weird goals," head coach Rod Brind'Amour said. "I give the guys credit, though. Nobody on the bench were hanging their heads or anything. We were just talking about getting it back."
After the Canes rallied to score four in a row and take a two-goal lead, the Flyers got one back in the second period when Nicolas Aube-Kubel snuck a puck through Reimer. And, with 4:11 remaining in regulation, Travis Sanheim skated out from behind the net and into the slot before firing one five-hole to tie the game and force overtime.
"It was sloppy for us. You're going to get scored on, but you always want to make the other team really earn their goals. It didn't feel that way. A lot of turnovers and just kind of a little bit of sloppy coverage. It's not how we want it to be done," Brind'Amour said. "Not that we were bad tonight, but we need to be better, for sure."
3. Dougie Wins It
Just give it to the All-Star and let him go to work.
In overtime, Sebastian Aho dished the puck off to Dougie Hamilton near the far point. Not being pressured, Hamilton coasted with it to the near side, where he then spotted Sanheim defending in the slot without a stick. Hamilton faked the shot, drew closer to Sanheim and fired a shot through two pairs of legs - first Sanheim and then Brian Elliott.