Why Flyers eliminated 3.31

The Philadelphia Flyers failed to make the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the fourth time in seven seasons.

The Flyers (37-34-8) were eliminated from playoff contention when they lost to the Carolina Hurricanes on Saturday.
Here is a look at what happened in the 2018-19 season for the Flyers and why things could be better next season:

The Skinny

Potential UFAs:Corban Knight, F; Phil Varone, F; Cam Talbot, G; Brian Elliott, G; Michal Neuvirth, G
Potential RFAs: Scott Laughton, F; Ryan Hartman, F; Travis Konecny, F; Justin Bailey, F; Ivan Provorov, D; Travis Sanheim, D
Potential 2019 NHL Draft picks:10

What went wrong

The ever-spinning goalie carousel: The Flyers used an NHL-record eight goalies during the season, including six before Christmas. They weren't able to find stability at the position until 20-year-old rookie Carter Hart was called up from Lehigh Valley of the American Hockey League on Dec. 17. But by then the Flyers were near the bottom of the NHL standings.

McKenna to be seventh different goalie for the Flyers

Not-so-special teams:The power play and penalty kill each ranked in the bottom 10 in the League for most of the season. The penalty kill improved after Scott Gordon replaced Dave Hakstol as coach on Dec. 17, but the power play has remained inconsistent despite changes in formation and players on each unit; six times they Flyers went at least four consecutive games without a power-play goal, including at least seven games twice.
Another slow start:The Flyers were 9-10-2 by Thanksgiving, placing them 14th in the Eastern Conference. It was the fourth straight season they were under .500 at Thanksgiving. In two of Hakstol's first three seasons, the Flyers rallied to make the playoffs. Philadelphia went 28-24-6 after Nov. 22, an 89-point pace if it played that way all season.

Reasons for optimism

Carter Hart:The Flyers appear to have found a young goalie to build around. Hart's poise brought a new level of confidence to the rest of the roster. The Flyers are 25-18-4 since Hart's debut, which is tied for the ninth-best record in the League in that timeframe. Hart is 16-12-1 with a 2.77 goals-against average and .919 save percentage in 29 games, and he tied an NHL record for the longest winning streak before a goalie's 21st birthday when he won eight straight from Jan. 14-Feb. 9.

Youthful emergences: Gordon's hiring led to further development of a number of young players. Defenseman Travis Sanheim averaged 16:07 of ice time in 31 games under Hakstol, mostly on the third pair. The 22-year-old was moved to the top pair with Ivan Provorov when Gordon took over, and has 21 points (six goals, 15 assists) and has averaged 21:30 of ice time in 45 games. Forward Oskar Lindblom was a bottom-six forward with four goals in 30 games under Hakstol; the 22-year-old has emerged as a top-six forward with nine goals in 45 games under Gordon. Philippe Myers, a 22-year-old defenseman, has looked impressive as an NHL regular since making his NHL debut Feb. 17. Forward Nolan Patrick recently has been centering the top line and has 20 points (eight goals, 12 assists) in 40 games under Gordon after the 20-year-old mostly centered the third line and had 10 points (five goals, five assists) under Hakstol. Forward Travis Konecny, 22, has 27 points (13 goals, 14 assists) in 45 games under Gordon after he had 19 points (nine goals, 10 assists) in his first 31 games.
Coaching change: The Flyers are 25-19-4 under Gordon, the seventh-best record in the Eastern Conference; they were 12-15-4 and 28th in the League standings when he took over. He instituted a few structural changes, most notably installing a 1-3-1 forecheck that helped the Flyers lower their goals-against per game to 3.00, from 3.74 under Hakstol, and turn to an even scoring differential after they were a minus-24. Gordon also helped tweak a penalty kill that is fifth in the NHL at 84.3 percent since he took over, compared to 30th in the League at 73.5 percent prior to his arrival. Gordon was promised the job for the remainder of the season, but he's done enough to receive strong consideration to remain behind the bench.