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High degree of difficulty doesn't impede Flyers' one-season 180

 

In a past life, the Philadelphia Flyers were called the Broad Street Bullies for introducing a take-no-prisoners style of play that helped define a new era for the NHL.

More than three decades later the Flyers are Bullies-lite at best. Yet for reasons that have more to do with brains than brawn, Philadelphia could end up having a similarly lasting impact thanks to the bold blueprint it created for rebuilding a team without going through any of the requisite growing pains.

Daniel Briere has delivered in the playoffs. (US Presswire)  
Daniel Briere has delivered in the playoffs. (US Presswire)  
This is, after all, an insular world where success breeds nothing if not imitation. And the Flyers have managed a turnaround that has been nothing short of miraculous in the space of one season, going from last place overall to being just four wins away from a chance at competing for the Stanley Cup.

"I'm absolutely thrilled -- and surprised," admitted Flyers owner Ed Snider. "I didn't know how far we could go; I was just hoping to make the playoffs. Now I'm getting greedy."

Might as well. The Flyers used the franchise's worst season ever last year to dismantle the team and recast it in a way that took full advantage of the salary cap contained in the most recent collective bargaining agreement. The irony is that while the cap was designed to create parity by putting every team on a level playing field, it also removed the inherent advantages deep-pocketed organizations like Philadelphia had.

It just didn't matter.

"It's even and this is the way it should be," Snider said. "Personally I like it because it should be up to the GM to push the right buttons."

In Philadelphia's case, that's exactly what Paul Holmgren has done. He took over as general manager from Bob Clarke just three weeks into the 2006-07 season, after it became apparent the Flyers were going nowhere with a lineup that was poorly constructed for the newer, faster-paced NHL. Holmgren brought rookie coach John Stevens with him to replace Ken Hitchcock, but there was little Holmgren could do to salvage the season, even at that early stage.

Instead, he put together a plan that enabled him to take advantage of desperate contenders and start an overhaul that would be massive in scale.

In the space of a couple of weeks around the trade deadline, the Flyers shipped off expensive veterans Peter Forsberg and Alexei Zhitnik and some draft picks, landing a No. 1-caliber goalie in Martin Biron; a couple of highly touted young defensemen, including Braydon Coburn, who now plays on the top unit; and most important, the salary cap room to make several critical changes over the summer.

The budget space allowed the Flyers to become major players in the free-agent market, and they came back with a bounty that included quality veteran defensemen Kimmo Timonen and Jason Smith along with young forwards Scott Hartnell and Joffrey Lupul.

And there was an even bigger prize in forward Daniel Briere, who signed an eight-year, $52 million deal after playing a key role in turning Buffalo into one of the league's post-lockout elites. Briere had some rough spots during the regular season, but he ended up as the Flyers' second-leading scorer and has more points than any Flyer in these playoffs.

"This organization wasn't going to sit back and just wait to rebuild," said Biron. "They were going to go strong and they knew exactly what they were going to look for. They went and brought in some very good character people and guys that had ties in the locker room, so they felt right a home from the beginning, which worked out pretty good."

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Talk Back
Reputation:98
Level:Superstar
Since:Aug 19, 2006

May 6, 2008 10:46 pm
Is that Buffalo is the source for Philly's success because they supplied Biron and Briere. As much as I love the Sabres, losing both players was an absolutely awful move. Larry Quinn (who is almost solely responsible for losing Briere and Drury) needs to be fired or completely reevaluate his negotiating strategy.
Reputation:98
Level:Superstar
Since:Nov 5, 2007

May 7, 2008 12:46 am
Its been 30+ years since this team was the "Broad ST Bullies."

I love the history of the team, but my God, is this really a relevant nickname anymore?????

Am I the only one tired of this reference? To me, the use of the phrase only underlines the fact that sports writers who cover hockey don't really know the identity of the team, or about hockey in general
...(more)
Reputation:90
Level:All-Star
Since:Sep 15, 2006

May 6, 2008 7:00 pm

Yes, GM Paul Holmgren has made some really impressive trades and free agent signings, astutely grabbing young, talented players last year and also capitalizing on Nashville's fire sale over the summer. However, some of the absolute cornerstones of this team are players that have been drafted and developed from within the organization: ...(more)

Reputation:95
Level:Superstar
Since:Feb 19, 2008

May 7, 2008 12:01 pm

I do not care if anyone agrees or disagrees with this article. But reading it is getting me so pumped for this series vs. Pitt. I cant wait till Friday, when i watch the FLY GUYS take Game 1 at Pitt and slap Crosby and the rest of that gang around. I love the underdog attitude.

 

 

Go Flyers

Reputation:90
Level:All-Star
Since:Jan 18, 2007

May 6, 2008 4:59 pm

Made you look! 

Anyway, I think that the Flyers are awesome.  They've pulled off a remarkable turnaround...too bad that Gagne's been injured (one of my favorite players).  I don't expect Philadelphia to win this series, but I bet that every game will be tight.

Reputation:94
Level:All-Star
Since:Jul 18, 2007

May 7, 2008 8:42 am

They managed to rebuild without growing pains? But they finished dead last in 06-07?

Finishing dead last doesn't qualify as growing pains? Buying free agent contracts is not rebuilding. Briere is like 31 years old, Biron has been a career backup (which ought to surface here in the Pens series).

And cut the Broad Street Bullies BS. These guys aren't half as tough as those ...(more)

Reputation:89
Level:All-Star
Since:Feb 13, 2007

May 7, 2008 1:06 pm

To begin to understand the culture of professional ice hockey players, consider the cases of Terrell Owens and Derian Hatcher. <o:p> </o:p>

...(more)