Monday, March 23, 2026

Crisi-tunity and Spring Training at the Gulf Shore

by Bob Herpen 
Phanatic Magazine 

Pop quiz, hotshot. 

You're 48 years old, out of work for the fifth time in your adult working life and have a clear late-winter-to-early-spring schedule ahead of turning your eyeballs into pinholes staring at a computer on a 9-to-5 basis trying to find your next source of employment and mortgage payments.

What do you do?

This year, the answer is to put aside a pity party, spend a week-and-a-half setting up unemployment payments and insurance coverage, then add 2,200 miles on your aging car over the next 7 days for a one-of-a-kind trip to Florida's Gulf Coast where you get crispy in the southern sun and see as many baseball games as your budget permits.

False spring? You bet. I hit the road at 6:30 am on a Saturday in sweats and a knit cap under murky skies and chilly temps and by 12:30 pm, well into North Carolina, had to contort myself into a shape approximating a human operating on less than 6 hours of rest who could safely operate a vehicle at 70 mph while simultaneously shedding layers. 

With no travel buddy for 15 hours, it was up to me to calm the space between my ears when radio reception faltered or spins of the dial found repeated pleas to embrace Jesus as a personal friend and for potential lovers to reconsider Tennessee when choosing Texas. 

If we happen to have a conversation in the near future which coincides with your own travel plans for the beachy regions of this time zone, I have ya covered. Can do a tight 10 on the following: the first sighting of a Wawa just off I-95 in Wilson, NC. Four chances to experience the Texan-born roadside phenomenon of Buc-ee's (Florence, SC; Brunswick, GA; World Golf Village, FL & Daytona Beach, FL). That one place off US Highway 301 between Jacksonville and Gainesville where you can see live gators up close before breakfast. The Wawa in Clearwooder that's a 15-minute walk from the Phillies' spring training complex. Hulkamaniacs of all ages can find refuge in his restaurant, where ESPN and old WWF highlights exist side-by-side.

The whole truth and nothing but the truth

Let's get this out of the way first. There's no sense in trying to craft a narrative to protect my ego or reputation just because I'm in control of the content. I was fired for cause.

Not let go, not downsized or laid off. In 2024, my old company adopted a pretty stringent "zero tolerance" policy on "plagiarism" when crafting draft copies of summaries taken from academic journal articles. That meant pretty much every single word submitted under your by-line had to be your own from the drop. 

You'd have to be a grade-A fuck up to plagiarize a Zoom call or emailed interview with an academic or clinician and we were encouraged to dive more and more into the journalistic side of recaps, but it's a little bit harder when you have to fill a weekly quota with some quality research that's been rigorously reviewed and submitted for public perusal.

I signed a document, like we all did, back in October of 2024. Three sentences I failed to properly put into my own words when I submitted the draft for editing. I provided an opportunity and the big boss levied his decision. Never mind that the situation was brought to my attention when crafting a draft of the research summary, I was given a chance to make edits on top of those made by my editorial director, those edits were approved by the ED and I, personally, posted the final approved version of the summary without incident or question. 

It happened bright and early on a Thursday morning after I took a well deserved travel comp day for working on a weekend at an annual MS conference which took place in San Diego. The reasons aren't worth diving into here, but I saw the situation a mile away. I was prepared. As Bill Belichick might say, we're on to joblessness.

One of the reasons I was interested in the company and took my position when offered almost 4 1/2 years ago, was the opportunity to spend multiple blocks of days per year on-site covering conferences where the latest research and clinical trials in neurology and psychiatry were presented. Masters in the discipline and young investigators, all in one place, awaiting an audience. 

In that first year, I was sent packing with a week's notice down to West Palm Beach for the aforementioned MS conference. Later, Denver and Seattle in short order. Then San Diego via Phoenix and Chicago. The next year, new horizons in Boston, Miami Beach and Orlando, followed by Los Angeles in 2024. 

Last year, the options began to shrink as I only attended 3 meetings in person and one was in Baltimore but was denied the chance to travel to LA for the No. 1 psych conference and was shut out of a pre-Christmas jaunt to the A-T-L to ply my trade at the top national epilepsy conference. 

In 2026, while I was granted the chance for another cross-country junket to southern California, it was 2 days instead of 3. Due to budgetary concerns, it didn't look like there was much enthusiasm for spending much time at all or sending more than 1 of our 2-person staff to cover the two major conferences under my purview: American Psychiatric Association (San Francisco) and American Academy of Neurology (Chicago). 

Over the last year, I half-joked way too often that the most meaningful relationship I had at the job was with my computer screen. Reducing the number of trips and the number of days I'd get to see folks in person, drop some business cards and chat up key opinion leaders was going to have the opposite effect of remedying our hybrid work environment which saw me alone, staring at a up blank wall in the home office for 3 days then staring up at a cubicle wall in the office the other 2. 

The work itself was intense; on site, when I went alone and it was more often that not, I packed 4 days worth of work into 3 days and 3 days into 2. I was lucky to find a 20-minute session to decompress, take a deep breath and, in the warmer climes, catch some sun. It was important to finally plan a trip with no solid plan with no deadlines. Not working provides a perfect complement to that goal.

In short, it was the main reason I was not long for the situation. Any task or responsibility can be added, but once tasks and responsibilities are taken away, they very rarely ever come back. 

I have a raging case of wanderlust that ebbs and flows depending on the season. I never wanted to stay in Philadelphia for work or life and formulating a career in sports media was going to satisfy that craving. My parents retired to northern Arizona in 2017, then unretired. In between I caravanned back and forth between here and there twice. How you gonna keep me down on the farm once I've seen Zuzax? 

Approaching 50 years old, this avenue is largely blocked. It was always important, wherever I worked, that I didn't just marinate in any enclosed space all day errry day, passing time plotting against those who would covet my leftover turkey tetrazzini. 

For almost 9 years, I was looking live at Boston, St. Paul and Denver, sometimes all in one night, sometimes back-to-back, but always through a 17-inch TV screen hunkered down in the Philly suburbs. It's why, whenever warm weather hit the region and I spent yet another Saturday night under artificial lights, I purposely found photos of interstate highways, preferably one with a mileage sign for two or more control cities, and slapped it on my desktop du jour. 

Courtesy of AARoads.com

From April 2016 to August 2018, I was, let's say, "chronically underemployed." The first 6 months, I actually enjoyed it. Like an extended vacation, since I had only racked up 10 total vacation weeks in the previous 15 years. 

It's been a month since this latest separation and I'm bored and restless to the nth degree caught in the cycle of submitting and waiting. It has been 6 years since the world was put on pause for the 2-week curve flattening due to COVID-19 and I have yet to find an environment where folks are willing to return to what used to be normal working culture. 

Two jobs ago, the editorial staff fled to their homes, never to return. One job ago, a certain amount of coworkers slowly returned to populate its cubicle maze in the spring of 2022 and then quickly begged off until ordered to show up about a year ago.

So this latest spike of wanderlust appeared as an opportunity borne out of a crisis. 

In the 3 years since my mom's death, I simply didn't want to travel far in my own car or by any means where I assumed the majority of responsibility. I destroyed two others, one at 125,000 miles the other at 245K, as a result of repeated stops and starts from the daily grind and chronic planned and unplanned trips throughout eastern half of the country. The travel schedule from this most recent job rendered my car inert for an extra 25 days a year on top of the other 156 days I didn't travel to the office. 

The gray ghost has only 94K of wear and tear after 8 1/2 years of good service and the furthest I ventured was to Cleveland and back in 2023 for a Phillies-Guardians series. The time was right to make an escape.

It was only last year that I managed to massage my on-site sked in WPB and make it to a Grapefruit League game, since the Astros and Nationals home field was just a 10-minute ride from the convention center. I'd only ever seen the Phillies complex in Clearwater once before, during a surprise middle-school trip to relatives on the Space Coast. Never a witnessed a game in Jack Russell Stadium or the new ballpark that replaced it.

I wanted the stars to align so I could visit five different parks in across all five days allotted, but three-in-three is good enough, no? Blue Jays, Phils & Yankees on tap. 

Mythbusting and memory making

If you're the type of reader who passively absorbs any kind of media, I can see how easy it would be to mythologize a place like Clearwater and an annual ritual like Spring Training. Writers have waxed poetic about it for generations, working a different angle with each story which embeds a certain ideal about the pleasantness and possibility that's supposed to blossom with the passing of winter. Over a series of decades, these starry-eyed word salads collectively become part of team legend.

Then again, I never was someone who, as Hall of Famer and Pittsburgh Pirate Rogers Hornsby put it, "stared out the window and waited for spring." There's too much to do to occupy a busy mind in bad weather and scant sunlight to just concede creeping depression in the cold. Football. Hockey. Basketball. Progression of the seasons was never fossilized in amber.

From this perspective, the Phillies' Florida forever home is nothing special. A Gulf Coast town which goes about its business every day, 24-7-365, one of 15 down here which welcome MLB clubs and their fans each year, embraces them for 5 weeks and lets them go. 

It's not Brigadoon, disappearing into the mist before magically appearing at a pundit's mention of "pitchers and catchers report." Clearwater is the seat of government for Pinellas County -- a shock to learn because St. Petersburg, 30 minutes south, is clearly the most prominent city. 

Life goes on outside the lines, but well hidden. On that first Sunday in Dunedin, the only visible locals were those working at the stadium. The rest? Probably in church or restaurants after church, or nestled snug in their ranchers. You had to get within a block of the field to even sense something other than ordinary existence. Loads of New York, Ontario and Michigan license plates dotted the library adjacent to the field. Not a lot of Florida plates or southern accents.

For the uninitiated, it's nothing like the Jersey Shore. You're not going to get a 5-to-10-degree drop from the mainland to the beaches, and the gulf breeze during periods of early, record-setting warmth is more a rumor than fact. When I made my travel plans, it looked like temps would be in the 72-to-75-degree range. 

Instead, it was in the mid-to-upper 80s. Hot and stagnant. No relief. Protect ya neck and any other body part susceptible to blazing sunlight.

It stood in stark contrast to the Atlantic Coast, where there's a bit more action among the mottled coastal populations along I-95. The ocean waves and ocean breeze provide a clear respite and are more reminiscent of home. There's still a whiff of "God's waiting room" on the gulf that permeates the culture. It may not be a typical experience, but that second week of March, I saw few Philly transplants out and about in town.

That said, the water itself -- and you're traveling over a lot of it to get from the mainland to the peninsula -- is stunningly beautiful, crisp and clear. Nothing compares on the East Coast. The only thing I've seen remotely like it is one cruise my family took out of Cape Canaveral the summer before I started 7th grade, which landed us in the Caribbean. The way beams of sunlight burst through intermittent cloud cover and make the top of the gently-lapping waves shimmer can turn any jabroni with an iPhone into an amateur photog.

When I attended the Phillies home game on Tuesday, I decided to save the gas and the cash and walk from my hotel to BayCare Ballpark and I still regret that decision through slippery fingers as I start to commit these memories to screen. In the heat, you move slowly down here or not at all, and what 15 minutes of brisk exercise up and back got me was a tan like leather, a body greased like Crisco and ready for a midday nap by the hotel pool. 

Those elusive Philly fans I didn't see anywhere in town, sure showed up in force for an eventual 4-2 loss to the Yankees.

Still, there is something prideful about a team choosing a community and sticking with it, marking the passage of the eras. This rings truer when you consider how other franchises such as the White Sox, Royals, Indians, Rangers, Reds and Dodgers dipped out (or returned) for sunnier skies in Arizona, while clubs like the Braves (Lake Buena Vista to North Port), Astros (Kissimmee to West Palm Beach), Nationals (Viera to WPB) and Orioles (Fort Lauderdale to Sarasota) have all burst through their Grapefruit League roots and relocated in recent years. 

One zip code to the north, in Dunedin, the Blue Jays are celebrating their 50th season of operation and 50th in the city and there are multiple banners ringing the poles from TD Bank Stadium to the town center 6 blocks north, commemorating this union. 

In Clearwater, it's 1947. 

That's two years after the conclusion of World War II, one year before Richie Ashburn began his professional career and the same year Jackie Robinson ushered in the modern era by breaking the color barrier. 

At Frenchy's and Lenny's, they wear the colors and welcome long-distance travelers ahead of first pitch and I don't get the sense the smiles, southern charm and wishes for blessed days are all about tips and return business. There's an investment in seeing generations of customers pass through, an upside to what can be a suffocating kind of comfort attached to repeated presence within familiar sights and spaces. 

That familiarity is hammered home once you visit these mini stadia. The influx of millions of dollars in revenue over the last 20 years made it possible for an immersive experience: even though you're conscious of your subtropical location, the dimensions of the fields -- if not the designs of the parks themselves -- is meant to evoke a strong connection with the home squad right down to the color and size of the outfield walls. 

I miss the aura of major-league teams playing on their older stomping grounds from the 1980s and 1990s. On TV it radiated a sense of nostalgia where hundred-thousand-aires built up their fundamentals on high-school-grade fields. 

Nowhere is that more evident than in 2026-era exhibition game pricing. Let's just say without the benefit of a rant that it was a shock that a Yankees game was more cost effective than a Phillies game and the Blue Jays might have offered the best bang for the buck on all three locations. 

Baseball aside, everyone should make the pilgrimage once. Once. Don't wait until adverse circumstances give you the time and energy to plan a trip. Carve out some quality time with the fans in your clan, stay about a week and soak up as much as you can. Make it a roadie to remember, something you talk about 20 years later. 

If you've made it this far, your reward for the investment of time is this: my resume and cover letter can be forwarded to whomever is hiring at the earliest convenience. Writing samples, shorter than this, provided upon request.

Monday, March 16, 2026

Spectrum Memories: He's Never Been Past the Second Round in His Entire Life

From NBCSports.com
by Bob Herpen
Phanatic Magazine

While the St. Louis Blues won the sweepstakes to pry Wayne Gretzky away from Los Angeles, doing so on Feb. 28, 1996, the market for the next best living thing to Wayne Gretzky was wide open.

Dale Hawerchuk, already a veteran of more than 1,000 games and well over 1,000 career points and who played in the shadow of Gretzky for the first nine years of his NHL career, had been bounced from Buffalo to St. Louis, victim of two consecutive veteran purges in less than one season. 

Flush with the confidence of several moves that profoundly shifted the way the Philadelphia Flyers roster was constructed in the mid-1990s, GM Bob Clarke sniffed an opportunity. The desire was mutual. 

According to Jay Greenberg in his 1996 book Full Spectrum, Hawerchuk actually wanted to sign with the Flyers during the 1995 offseason as the Sabres shifted into purge mode after a first-round playoff exit handed to them by Philadelphia. 

Looking for a deal in the range of what he received at $7.8 million over 3 years, there simply wasn’t enough cash in the till at that point due to the necessity for Clarke to lock up two-thirds of the Legion of Doom line as well as seasoned defensive vets Eric Desjardins and Kevin Haller.

But when the Blues – well, GM and head coach Mike Keenan – decided to radically reshape their roster into one more playoff tested and reacquire a bunch of higher-level players already known as friend or foe, Hawerchuk had a little bit more runway to fly the coop. Despite a lineup which featured offensive weapons such as Brett Hull, Hawerchuk, Al MacInnis and Geoff Courtnall, St. Louis waded in the bottom five in total goals scored and goals-per-game all season.

Read about the Blues-Flyers mid-January post-blizzard game decided because a clearing attempt hit a glove.

The deal struck on March 15, 1996 was one-for-one: Craig MacTavish (by then a 4-time Stanley Cup winner and the last helmetless player in league history) headed to the Gateway City and Hawerchuk (who never advanced past the second round of the playoffs at any point of his future Hall-of-Fame-worthy 15-year career) arriving in Philadelphia.

Timing couldn’t have been better for the Flyers, who were hanging on long enough to challenge for the Atlantic Division lead with the Florida Panthers and New York Rangers – both of which were beginning to fade after scorching sections of their earlier schedule. 

After battling each other to a 3-3 tie at Madison Square Garden on March 13, the Panthers were 2-9-2 since Feb. 14 and the Blueshirts just 3-5-4 since then. The Orange and Black had 16 games remaining, just 2 points behind Florida and 9 back of New York, but sputtered to a 2-4-1 mark since Feb. 22.

They were missing the back third of the Legion, Mikael Renberg, sidelined with a persistent stomach-muscle issue that today would have been identified as a core muscle problem or sports hernia injury.  

Instead, as hockey remained in the dark ages orthopedically speaking, Renberg missed 17 straight games from late January to early March, then failed to record a point in the 2 games he started thereafter; another top-flight veteran option who could be moved on a line was a must after Dan Quinn was brought in to shore up the second line and Bob Corkum the bottom six.

“Mike said he needed to free up some money to sign Gretzky,” Clarke recalled in Greenberg’s book. “I would have been interested even if Renberg wasn’t hurt. He’s an intelligent player who could fit into the power play and he could play the wing.”

As luck would have it, Hawerchuk’s debut was at the Spectrum against the franchise he basically willed into existence, the original-and-not-extra-crispy Winnipeg Jets. 

These Jets, saved from relocation at the last minute the previous summer, were almost officially on their way out of Canada by now, though angling for the final playoff spot in the Western Conference. It was a long way from the club which rose from the dead after selecting Hawerchuk No. 1 overall in the 1981 NHL draft after back-to-back championships in Canadian juniors with the Cornwall Royals.

“I had no clue anything was up,” Hawerchuk remembered in Full Spectrum. “But I wasn’t playing that much and I thought if anybody was interested it would probably be Philadelphia. You always have mixed feelings about a trade, but I felt pretty comfortable with Philadelphia.”

Hawerchuk played primarily on the power play, putting 4 shots on goal without a point in a 3-0 Flyers victory. Renberg, on the other hand, was a human adrenaline boost with his season-best 7-shot performance.

Unfortunately, Renberg wasn’t able to skate the next night against San Jose. Hawerchuk was, with Flyers head coach Terry Murray giving him carte blanche to get comfortable up and down the lineup. He centered three lines including the Legion, recording two assists (on goals from Joel Otto and John LeClair) and a third-period goal while riding shotgun with the top line which closed out the 8-2 romp

“When I walked into the locker room for the morning skate at Voorhees,” Hawerchuk recalled, “It was a much happier, looser atmosphere than in St. Louis. I just had a good feeling about being there.”

That good feeling was rocket fuel for a sudden spate of health and wealth which spurred a sprint to the finish. From the day of Hawerchuk’s acquisition, the Flyers went 13-3-0 overall, including a 7-1-0 at home. One of the two road losses was No. 18’s final visit to the Winnipeg Arena on March 22, a 4-1 Jets victory.

The Flyers sped past the faltering Panthers and the sagging Rangers, not only reaching first in the Atlantic, but the top overall seed in the Eastern Conference as the Penguins also backslid at the finish. Hawerchuk’s final regular-season line: 20 points in 16 games (4G, 16A). Five multi-point efforts. At least one shot on goal in all 16 games, 44 SOG all told. A six-game point streak from March 23 through Apr. 2.

In the playoffs, Hawerchuk was widely credited with calming down a jittery locker room after the Tampa Bay Lightning stole Games 2 and 3 in their Eastern Conference quarterfinal series. His calm tip from the slot near the end of the second period of a contentious contest at the Thunderdome gave the visitors a 3-1 edge in Game 4.

The Flyers won the night to draw even in the series and then took next two, pummeling the Bolts, settling all scores and outsourcing them by a 14-3 margin. They lost to the Panthers in 6 games in round two and again, Hawerchuk couldn’t clear the nagging postseason hurdle.

Hawerchuk was again leaned on at the start of the following season when Eric Lindros missed most of the first two months with a nagging hamstring issue brought on by playing in the inaugural World Cup of Hockey. Before Lindros' return, he earned a piece of team history, recording the first hat trick in NHL play in the Flyers’ new arena, netting 3 goals in a 7-3 decision over the Penguins on Nov. 21, 1996. It was his first hattie since 1992 and the 15th and final 3-goal effort of his storied career.

Even when reaching the promised land of a Stanley Cup final, fate turned a cruel hand. Hawerchuk's playing days concluded on June 4, 1997 at Detroit, when a crushing open-ice hit by Red Wings defenseman Vlad Konstantinov early in a 6-1 Game 3 loss resulted in a concussion which kept him out of the club’s season-ending Game 4 defeat.

Hawerchuk finished his Philly career by posting 54 points in 67 regular-season games, adding 16 points across 29 playoff appearances. He was elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2001. Coaching soon beckoned and the product of Quebec major junior hockey spent nine seasons as bench boss for the Barrie Colts of the Ontario Hockey League.

After a years-long battle with stomach cancer, Hawerchuk passed away at the age of 57 on Aug. 18, 2020. As a way to thank him for his years of service to hockey in Winnipeg, a statue in his honor greets fans outside MTS Centre.

Friday, March 06, 2026

Catching up with: Darren Jensen

by Bob Herpen  

Phanatic Hockey Editor

Forty years ago this weekend, former Philadelphia Flyers goaltender Darren Jensen played his last game in the National Hockey League. 

It was a 7-3 loss to the New Jersey Devils, in which he started but was pulled after yielding 5 goals on 10 shots in less than 2 periods of action.

The goaltender he faced that afternoon at the Meadowlands, was Chico Resch. Resch would join the Flyers via trade only 3 days later, with Jensen earning a trip back to Hershey in the American Hockey League where he teamed up with another goalie prospect, Ron Hextall, to take the Bears all the way to the AHL finals.

Although it's been four decades since his last appearance in the pros, when I spoke to Jensen on Feb. 23, it was obvious he still appreciates the shot he was given here, promoted under the worst of circumstances.

Recall that, on Nov. 10, 1985, Flyers starter Pelle Lindbergh sustained fatal injuries in a one-vehicle accident in south Jersey. Two days later, backup Bob Froese was injured in a sensitive area and unable to start their next contest, Nov. 14 against the two-time defending Stanley Cup champion Edmonton Oilers. 

Enter Jensen. His lone NHL start occurred just over 9 months prior, left to face the fusillade in Uniondale when then-head coach Mike Keenan decided Lindbergh needed a break, suffering a 7-5 loss to the Islanders. With the heat intensified, Jensen stood firm. He stopped 29 shots in a pressure-packed and emotion-laden 5-3 victory as the Flyers took their 11th straight. 

With Froese still sidelined, Jensen remained in net and the club continued to roll -- winning 5-2 at Hartford two nights later then rallying for a 5-4 OT victory against the Islanders. Two nights after that, the roller coaster ride came to a crashing halt with an 8-6 loss on the island which saw the Orange and Black rally from deficits of 5-1, 6-3 and 7-5.

“Everything happens so fast, so you don't have time to really think about it and really, it's kind of a good thing, I think, in the long run,” Jensen said of his being thrown into the starter's role at an unexpectedly tense period in franchise history.  “The more you think, the worse off you're going to be.” 

When Froese returned to action just before Thanksgiving, the gears were greased and set in motion. Froese, in his fourth NHL season, wound up leading the NHL with 31 wins, 5 shutouts and a 2.55 goals-against average. Jensen rode shotgun, picking up his first career shutout at the Spectrum on Jan. 9, 1986 against the Capitals, then added his second clean sheet 16 days later in St. Louis.

That night, Jensen halted 48 shots -- 24 in the third period alone -- along with a combined 18 from Blues scorers Joe Mullen, Rob Ramage and Bernie Federko. It still stands as a club record for most saves in a shutout victory, home or road, regular season or playoffs, according to Flyers PR guru Brian Smith. It was no surprise Jensen had no idea until I told him.

“I didn't even know if it was a record. It's kind of neat,” he said. “It was just such a special game. No expectations, nobody thought much. They were just bombarding us. And the puck just kept hitting me positionally."


“I absorbed it more after the game,” Jensen admitted. “Because I didn't realize I had that many shots. I just know I was getting a lot of rubber directed at me.”

That night at the old Arena served as the high point of Jensen’s NHL journey. As the Flyers and Capitals began to wage war for the Patrick Division lead, the team sagged a bit, starting on a late February West Coast trip and continuing into mid-March. Jensen – whose name eventually was engraved on the Jennings Trophy alongside Froese as the goalies who led the Flyers to the lowest total team GAA in 1985-86 – faltered as well. 

First, it was a loss in Vancouver when the offense took a rare night off. Next, after playing the powerful Oilers in the season's rubber match to a 1-1 tie through regulation at Northlands Coliseum, a harmless Jari Kurri backhander slipped through his pads. Next, when subbing for Froese at home against Buffalo down 3-0, he allowed a goal on the first shot he faced and after watching the hosts storm back with 4 straight only to allow the Sabres’ game-winner to squeeze between his arm and body 30 seconds later. Jensen rebounded to win against a defense-averse Toronto Maple Leafs despite allowing 4 more scores ahead of his final NHL appearance in north Jersey.

With the benefit of hindsight, Jensen said his focus wasn’t on the division race or the season-long mental and physical effects of playing at a high level in the wake of a trusted teammate’s death.

“I just wasn't looking at it that way,” he noted. “I was really more focused on my play.” 

“My job was to win, help the team, give them the best opportunity to win," Jensen added. That's all I really cared about. Fifth place, first place, it really didn't matter because I just believed if I do my job, everything will take care of itself." 

Yes, he admitted, Philadelphia was striving to remain one of the NHL's top teams, so the element of pressure was ever present. Added to that pressure was stepping into the crease each time for both Froese and himself after the way Lindbergh established himself the year before by becoming the first European-born netminder to win the Vezina Trophy. 

“You're trying to put it all together,” he said. “Sometimes it's bad luck, but I would never point the finger. I'm appreciative that I had the opportunity.”

Ultimately, Jensen ended his lone NHL season at 15-9-1, with a 3.69 GAA and two shutouts. The Flyers, with Resch backing up Froese, outlasted Washington and won the Patrick Division on the season’s final night, 5-3, on home ice vs. the Caps. 

“We, thank God, had a great team,” he added. “Guys like Mark Howe and Brad McCrimmon and Brad Marsh (on defense) so that gave me probably more confidence than anything, just the quality of players that we had.”

Jensen currently resides in Kelowna, British Columbia. He and his wife act as a billet family for three players on the Kelowna Rockets of the Western Hockey League in Canadian juniors. From afar, he still keeps tabs on his former team and host city, even showing up to the Flyers-Penguins Alumni contest in January, 2017.

This year, a newbie, Dan Vladar, is dealing with his time in the line of fire as the prospective No. 1 starter as the Flyers attempt to claw back into the playoff chase. Vladar, who will continually set personal records for wins and games played as long as confidence is placed in him by now-head-coach Rick Tocchet, bears a burden familiar to many. 

As an NCAA champion with North Dakota in 1982 and as a player who came to know about how to deal with being thrown into a tough situation in a city whose fans can be tough on their players, Jensen offered Vladar the usual time-tested wisdom spiced with some modern twists.

Goaltending, he said, has never changed. For elite athletes, it’s all mental and taking care of the mental side has not changed. What has since his time, Jensen added, is the legion of mental-health professionals invested in keeping goalies on an even keel. He bristled when recalling a memory of Keenan suggesting he seek help from a sports psychologist, as if his performance wasn’t enough of an indicator of his worthiness to stick in the NHL.

“I would never be on social media,” he offered.

Among the other time-tested chestnuts Jensen had for Vladar: never get too high or too low. Focus on each game, one at a time. Seek to sharpen the good points and remedy the bad ones. Ditch the memory of a bad game as quickly as the memory of a good one. When you play, you alone have control of your destiny and if you don’t play much, you’ll want to play as many games as possible.

“He’s just got to get through all the rubble at the beginning and then things will calm down,” Jensen said of Vladar’s development. “You’ve got to be strong mentally. Management reacts very fast, so, you’re there to win and these guys have the ability to be very consistent and that’s the biggest challenge – consistency.”