A low-scoring game with two waived-off overtime goals, a post-horn fight, and a shootout. Yeah, the Keystone State Rivalry is back.

The Philadelphia Flyers came out of a chaotic overtime with a 3-2 shootout win over the Pittsburgh Penguins on Tuesday. Philadelphia’s record improved to 5-3-1 through nine games this season.

Bobby Brink started the scoring for the Flyers and scored the shootout-winner. Travis Konecny got a much-needed goal, which also happened to be No. 200 in his career.

For the second straight game, 60 minutes were not enough to decide a winner, leading to a chaotic overtime.

Here is how the game reached its final score.

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1st Period

Not much is going on. Brutal Michkov turnover early in the first. Later in the shift, he had a two-on-one with Zegras, and Michkov took the shot, but no goal.

The Flyers avoid a disaster eight minutes in. Ersson loses his stick, Ben Kindel barely gets the puck past him, but a falling Tommy Novak with Noah Juulsen pushing behind him lands on the puck, stopping the motion. The whistle blew, the puck never crossed the goal line, and the game remained scoreless.

Michkov made a nice cross-crease feed to Nick Seeler, but Arturs Silovs was all over the shot, not leaving an opening for Seeler.

With 9:41 remaining in the first period, Justin Brazeau blew past the Flyers’ defense and snuck the puck past Sam Ersson, low on the short side. Pittsburgh jumped out to a 1-0 lead and got a good chance to add on to the momentum.

Exactly a minute later, Garnet Hathaway went to the box for slashing, drawn by Erik Karlsson. The Penguins’ power play came out strong early, but the Flyers’ penalty killers settled in and dominated the rest of the power play.

Not much momentum came in the following minutes of the Flyers’ penalty kill, but moments after a Matt Dumba interference penalty, the Flyers would get right back in the game.

Bobby Brink (3) cashed in on great passing from Noah Cates (4) and Trevor Zegras (7), and evened the score with the power-play goal. The Flyers picked up some momentum and came close to scoring once more after Cam York rang the crossbar in the final seconds, but the game would go into the first intermission tied 1-1.

2nd Period

Early in the second period, Brink finds himself in the penalty box after he was called for a hooking penalty on Sidney Crosby.

Much like the Penguins’ first attempt with the man-advantage, the Flyers’ penalty kill settled in and killed off the penalty. Out of the box, the Flyers had Brink on the breakaway, but the pass was not strong enough, and Brink had to move back.

He settled the play down, found Sean Couturier, who then found Travis Konecny at the top of the right-side circle. Konecny (2) buried the shot on the far side, with assists from Couturier (7) and Brink (4). It was Konecny’s 200th career NHL goal.

The Flyers had momentum building in the second period.

It seemed like something was bound to find the back of the net for the Flyers.

Zegras made a really nice play on the zone entry to set up a fantastic chance for Michkov, but he could not convert. The Flyers had to go on the penalty kill yet again after Crosby drew a high-stick from Cam York, but dominated the PK, shutting down another Penguins’ chance on power play.

Later on in the period, Foerster had a great chance generated by himself, but again, it was a great save from Artus Silovs, who kept this game close for the Penguins in the second period.

The Flyers had their chances, but the game would go into the second intermission with Philadelphia up 2-1.

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3rd Period

Philly kept its momentum rolling into the third period, but again, it was Silovs making it hard on the Flyers. Dumba’s second penalty of the game ran into the opening minute and a half of the third period. The Flyers did not do themselves any favors on that power play.

That did not stop the Flyers from generating chances as the period went on, but it was Silovs again coming up big for the Penguins.

As the third period went on, you could see the Flyers’ offense growing conservative, trying to protect the one-goal lead. They had their chances on the rush, but not everyone joined the initial rush; some hung back.

Eventually, it’d come back to haunt them.

Sidney Crosby moved the puck (not so sure I can call it a shot). It went up and bounced off Nick Seeler, then over the shoulder of Ersson, giving Crosby the equalizing score.

The Flyers would have another chance on the power play moments after the Pittsburgh goal, but it was their worst attempt of the night, coming up short in a big moment.

Both teams had chances in the final four minutes, but neither was able to convert, pushing the game to overtime – the second straight OT game for the Flyers.

Overtime

Flyer of the Game

In a strange sequence, 49 seconds into overtime, it looked like Evgeni Malkin scored the overtime-winner, but there was no goal on the ice because of a premature substitution. Earlier in the sequence, Trevor Zegras earned a slashing penalty on a Kris Letang breakaway, doing what he needed to do. A Penguin’s skater hit the ice early, negating the goal.

The Flyers, with some luck, killed off the penalty and got their own chance on the 4-on-3 power play. Malkin got called for hooking on a Cates breakaway, giving the Flyers one last chance to get the win.

Trevor Zegras had a great hesitation play at the blueline, hit Tyson Foerster, who buried the game-winner, or so they thought.

After a review, the play was deemed offside, making it the second waived-off goal of overtime.

The game would go to a shootout, but not without some fireworks first. Some post-whistle pushing, shoving, and punches were thrown after Parker Wotherspoon threw a few fists at Foerster. Zegras would get involved, going after Wortherspoon.

Unfortunately for the Flyers, that meant Zegras could not go in the shootout. Eight misconduct penalties were handed out at the end of overtime. In addition to Zegras, Tippett, Drysdale, and Foerster, the Flyers had misconduct: Crosby, Shea, Wortherspoon, and Acciari all had misconduct for the Penguins.

None of those players could shoot in the shootout.

Konecny went first for the Flyers and put it right on Silovs for the easy stop. Bryan Rust was denied by Ersson. Matvei Michkov scored on the following attempt, but it was negated by Malkin’s good shootout attempt.

Bobby Brink continued his strong night, and Ersson shut the door on Ville Koivunen, giving the Flyers the 3-2 shootout win.

The Keystone State Rivalry is back.

What’s Next for the Flyers

The Flyers continue their homestand on Thursday when they host the Nashville Predators at 7:00 p.m. EST at Xfinity Mobile Arena.

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