It was a Saturday night full of misfortune and miscues for the Philadelphia Flyers, as they fell 5-2 to the Toronto Maple Leafs on Saturday night.

Between a mix of unlucky bounces, a called-back goal, and miscues defensively, Saturday night could have gone very differently for the Flyers. Things did not go in Philadelphia’s favor, and the Flyers were unable to capitalize on what was in their control.

Dan Vladar had his first struggles in a Flyers uniform, allowing four goals on 19 shots against the Blue Jays. The team’s home win streak comes to an end at five games, and their record drops to 6-4-1.

Christian Dvorak and Tyson Foerster each scored for the Flyers in the loss on Saturday. Here is how we got the final score.

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1st Period

It did not take long for the Flyers to make some noise on Saturday night. Just over a minute into the game, Travis Konecny made a short drop pass to Nikita Grebenkin, who immediately found Christian Dvorak low in the left-side faceoff circle. Dvorak (3) buried the shot with the assist from Grebenkin (2) and Konecny (4).

With three new lines in Sean Couturier’s absence, the new second line got right to work.

The Flyers had generated some good momentum after the goal, but Toronto would even the score.

Auston Matthews put the Maple Leafs on the board just over six minutes in, assisted by Morgan Rielly and Nick Robertson.

Right before the goal, Tyson Foerster blocked a shot off his left skate/ankle area and immediately went down. He went to the tunnel immediately following the goal, not able to put much pressure on his foot. He needed help getting down the tunnel.

The Flyers would not be without Foerster for long. He returned to action before his line took another shift.

Both teams settled in and went back and forth. A good bit of the final 10 minutes of the period was taken up by a Konecny double-minor. One for a high-stick on Easton Cowan, the other for unsportsmanlike conduct.

The Flyers’ penalty kill did its job and held Toronto to just one shot on the chance.

Period one would end even, with the Flyers and Maple Leafs tied 1-1, and the Flyers outshooting the Maple Leafs 7-6.

2nd Period

At the start of the second period, the Flyers got another good early chance. 1:09 into the second frame, Toronto was called for a bench minor, too many men, and Philadelphia would get its first chance on the power play.

It was the Cates line plus Zegras and Cam York to start, and it looked like they had some momentum. York found Zegras for that dangerous one-timer once again, but he hit the post. The puck ran the line, but never crossed, leaving the Flyers scoreless. Philadelphia’s other unit, made up of Drysdale, Konecny, Michkov, Tippett, and Dvorak, would get their crack at it, but they would come up empty.

The game remained tied 1-1, with Toronto getting the bulk of the dangerous chances following the Flyers’ power play.

Toronto was making plays, getting close, but they could not make the final play on their scoring chances.

Around eight minutes in, the Maple Leafs were able to break the tie.

Jake McCabe fired a shot from the point with a double screen on Vladar. The puck got past the Flyers’ goalie cleanly, and the Maple Leafs had a 2-1 lead.

All the momentum was in the Leafs’ favor. The Flyers would have good possessions, including another power-play chance where the Flyers again got an unfortunate bounce off the iron on an Owen Tippett shot.

Philly was in a pass-first mentality and rarely got the shot off. Toronto took advantage of that.

After the Flyers went back and forth with the puck, the Leafs were able to force the turnover and take the puck the other way. With the Flyers misplaying a two-on-two, Nick Robertson cashed in on the rush, extending Toronto’s lead to 3-1 before the second intermission.

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3rd Period

As if the Flyers did not already have a hole to dig themselves out of, it would not get any easier for Philadelphia.

Easton Cowan gave Toronto a 4-1 lead just 33 seconds into the third period. The Leafs’ rookie scored the first of his NHL career. Aleksei Kolosov replaced Vladar after Cowan’s score.

The Flyers thought they had an answer after it looked like Rodrigo Abols had brought the Flyers back within two. However, the play was immediately blown dead after Abols played the puck with a high stick. A second look was taken, but it was still deemed no goal.

Play went on, and it looked like Toronto was taking hold of the game.

A scary moment occurred when Chris Tanev and Matvei Michkov collided at the blueline. Tanev, in his first game back after suffering a concussion, looked to get spun around and landed face-first on the ice. He had to be stretched off.

Michkov was given a minor for interference in the play.

The Flyers would try to fight their way back into the game.

Tyson Foerster (4) cut the deficit to two with a power-play goal, assisted by Zegras (9) and Michkov (5). The goal extended Zegras’ home point streak to eight games.

Zegras ties Peter Forsberg (05-06) for the longest home point streak to start a Flyers career.

Philly would get a chance at six-on-four after an Oliver Ekman-Larsson boarding penalty and an empty net, but the Flyers could not get one back.

Calle Jarnkrok would score on the empty net, ending the Flyers’ chance at a late-game comeback. The game ended with a final score of 5-2, snapping the Flyers’ home win streak.

Flyer of the Game

It’s hard to pick a Flyer of the game in such a sloppy game. There wasn’t much to like about Saturday’s contest.

One Flyer that stood out was Tyson Foerster. It was not for any reason other than his sheer toughness. Taking a point-blank shot off the skate early in the game is not easy to play through. With the Flyers already down an everyday player in Couturier, Foerster remained in the game.

You could see that he was not himself for the entire game, and the pain was clearly bothering him. However, he toughed it out and was eventually rewarded with a power-play goal.

What’s Next for the Flyers

The Flyers have a quick turnaround as they host the Calgary Flames on Sunday night at Xfinity Mobile Arena.

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