Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Passion muted in Penguins-Flyers rivalry but discord still lingers


by Bob Herpen

Phanatic Hockey Editor

Once upon a time, the Philadelphia Flyers and Pittsburgh Penguins were at each other’s throats 8 times a year. Then, it was reduced to six regular-season meetings and, upon the reversion of the NHL from six divisions to four back in 2013, only 3-to-4 matchups per season.


That familiarity bred contempt with playoff pairings between these Atlantic Division foes in 2008 (5 games), 2009 (6 games) and especially in 2012 (6 games) while the anger migrated on autopilot in the Metropolitan Division era when loads of the same players on both sides remained.


The hatred that was bred during the glory years of the league’s premier intra-state battle has waned significantly since then; only resurrected briefly when former Flyers D1 draftee and defenseman Mark Friedman switched teams during the pandemic and enacted his vendetta as a Penguin during the COVID-shortened 2021 season.


These long-time rivals only played each other 3 times this season, twice in Pittsburgh, with a combined 74 penalty minutes and two fights among the clubs. That’s exceedingly mild compared to the 312 PIMs over 6 games 14 years ago (led by Philly’s Zac Rinaldo with 46 PIM in 4 appearances).


With so much focus on the Flyers not having won a playoff round since 2020, it’s easy to forget – or straight up just not research – that the Penguins are dealing with a serious drought of their own, having failed to win a playoff series since 2018. 


So, I’m not really sure how Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin and Kris Letang all being three-time Stanley Cup winners enters into the discussions of who has the greater playoff experience when one key battle is who can maintain composure between and after the whistle.


Plus, there’s only 4 players on either roster (Sean Couturier, Crosby/Malkin/Letang) who remain from those Battles Royale. Four Penguins and 10 Flyers made their playoff debut in the Steel City over the weekend. 


So how could these division foes, with the thick of the rivalry behind them and totally transformed rosters, possibly ramp up the emotion and give fans and writers a series full of collisions, explosions and straight-up bloodlust like they’ve been pumping up all over social media? 


The answer is, they can’t. It’s a different generation where a players’ personality is best downplayed and quotability off it has become a non-starter. The big, game-changing (illegal) hits are few and far between. That doesn’t mean it’s all Kumbaya.


Flyers head coach Rick Tocchet warned that his team would work the body right from the drop before Saturday’s series opener. Couturier laid a hit on Crosby on the former’s first shift and the snipe hunt was on.


“You’ve gotta be a physical team,” he noted. “The one thing is, you can’t run around. If you’re 6, 7 feet away, to finish your check is really not the smartest thing but if you’re 3 feet you gotta finish your check.”


The rut commenced officially when Crosby was locked with Flyers defenseman Jamie Drysdale during a Penguins offensive excursion just after the midway point of the first period. Somewhat puzzled by the prospect of needing Crosby to sit in the box after ripping Drysdale’s helmet off, the zebras had a decent confab before deciding the Golden Child would need accompaniment to the sin bin so Drysdale was sent for “interference.”


Late in the second and early in the third, Pens snit-disturber Anthony Mantha took up woodworking, brandishing his stick high for infractions against a pair of Flyers. Then, adding more drama to the final 1:09 of regulation of a 3-2 result, Crosby and Travis Sanheim hacked and slashed at each other drawing mutual minors.


“I think ‘Sanny’ set the tone. To play a ton of minutes and then to play physical like that, it’s hard,” Tocchet said in the postgame. “He really led the physicality for us.”


The Flyers also laid some obvious and surreptitious shots whenever needed; in the second period, Connor Dewar was met at center ice by Owen Tippett with ill humor and dumped on his dupa, Malkin was also targeted by an errant stick around the midsection on several occasions. 


“The kids, they were hooting and hollering a little bit, but what I like about (them) is that they’re even keeled,” Tocchet added. “I just like that demeanor, even keeled.”


Pittsburgh’s current 8-year playoff series victory drought is the longest for the franchise since it went between 1980 and 1989 without advancing. Down by one already on home ice, they’d have to play a better, more complete game on Monday night to avoid a bad situation heading back to Philadelphia.


“It’s going to be part of this series. We gotta stay out of it a little bit more,” a stone-faced Crosby offered after the Game 1 defeat. “And trust that when they do it and try to stir it up, they’re going to get penalized for it. But that’s more something they’re looking to do. We have to trust that they’ll be undisciplined.”


The action of Game 2 manifested itself with a series of tiny snipes rather than grand gestures.


The festivities began on the game’s third shift when Flyers winger Noah Cates plastered counterpart Connor Clifton against the end boards to the left of Pens goalie Stuart Skinner but the zebras and the hosts looked the other way. Then, just after the midway point, playoff newbie Rasmus Ristolainen cruised in on a 4-on-4 chance, took an extra whack at Skinner, and though Crosby rushed in to engage Risto, the former was the only one called to the box. 


Before the end of the first, Philly feeler Nick Seeler was held but was booked for a careless stick, then Tippett was openly booped on the snoot by Clifton as four sets of eyes looked anywhere but there. Couturier later flicked Malkin in the face with a stick blade in full view of an official with zero repercussions.


A quiet second period was punctuated by a bit of comical violence, when Travis Konecny drew friendly and enemy fire simultaneously, when Malkin maneuvered his own stick AND Ristolainen’s into Konecny’s face for a 2-minute penalty despite drawing blood.


Down by 2 with 20 minutes remaining, the Pens couldn’t afford to turn up the heat. And they behaved themselves until a scrap with 1:47 to play and the visitors up 3-0. From an o-zone scrum, Tippett received two uppercuts square in the mush from Mantha, drawing blood on the bridge of his nose and no notice from the officials.


Forget bulletin-board material, the crimson splotch on Tippett’s nose and jersey did more than 100 sharp-tongued words.


“I think you’d have to ask the guys who were on the ice,” Penguins head coach Dan Muse said coolly during Monday’s postgame when asked what prompted the late-game battles. “There should be frustration. We just lost two games at home. With the frustration comes (asking yourself) ‘how are you gonna respond?’”


Although the Penguins had gained a stranglehold on the overall series at home since the start of the 2021-22 season (8-1-1 since then entering play on Saturday), the Flyers possess one of the more unique road-ice advantages in the building which opened in October of 2010. 


After winning two on the road to start this series, their overall record there stands at 24-14-7, including a 6-2 record in the playoffs over two-and-a-stub worth of series.


In 2012, a relatively calm opening pair of games in Pittsburgh exploded into mayhem in Philadelphia. It’s 14 years later and there’s likely not gonna be any equivalent to Scott Hartnell getting his hair pulled by Craig Adams, or Brayden Schenn blowing up Paul Martin. Then again, who knows? 


Flyers fans will be ready on Wednesday. The players *better* be ready to match the crowd’s intensity. The Penguins have an impossible choice ahead, down 0-2 without winning the battles or the war, now without the protection of favorable officiating.

Thursday, April 16, 2026

The little team that didn't seem like they could, finally did

From WGAL/Getty Images
by Bob Herpen

Phanatic Hockey Editor

A thought occurred while watching another late-night cable re-airing of the 1985 classic Michael J. Fox blockbuster, “Back to the Future" while fading in and out of consciousness.

Actually, a second thought. The first being “I wonder if I’m ever going to love a movie so much or if another movie will become so popular that I’ll see it SEVEN times in a theater in less than a year.” 

Here it is: If the National Hockey League playoffs were Doc Brown, the Orange and Black were the mercenary Libyans, doggedly pursuing the eccentric scientist to regain their stolen plutonium until cornering him in the Twin Pines Mall. 

Before the bazooka was figuratively pointed in its face, the league would be clutching its young sidekick by the lapels and screeching: “They found me. I don’t know how, but they found me.”

“Who?”

“THE FLYERS!!”

The long and winding journey to ending the franchise’s second five-season postseason drought finally hit the tape with Monday’s Game 81 3-2 home shootout victory against the Carolina Hurricanes, whose loser point assured them of a first-overall seat in the Eastern Conference and home ice through three playoff rounds.

Tyson Foerster and Dan Vladar joined the ranks of the illustrious, a mere 16 years and two days after Claude Giroux scored and Brian Boucher stopped Olli Jokinen of the Rangers to get the O&B into the postseason in Game 82.

It earned them a chance to exact revenge on the rival Pittsburgh Penguins, who will finish second in the Metro Division and have home-ice advantage in their best-of-seven series set to begin this coming weekend. 

With a 4-2 decision against the playoff-bound Montreal Canadiens in Tuesday’s season ender, Rick Tocchet’s young charges finished the post-Olympic portion of their schedule at 18-7-1 and 43-27-12 overall. Those 98 points are the most for the team in a full, uninterrupted season since 2017-18.

The much-maligned head coach with deep roots in this town finished third in team history among all full first-year Flyers bench bosses. Only Mike Keenan (53 in 1984-85) and Ken Hitchcock (45 in 2002-03) did better in their initial season.

Whenever that eventual Game 3 will be scheduled – and it appears it might be late next week based upon initial scuttlebutt that Game 1 will take place in Pittsburgh either Saturday or Sunday – it will be the first actual home playoff game taking place in Philadelphia since April 22, 2018.

The infamous coulda-been-Sean-Couturier-instead-it-was-Jake-Guentzel Game. 

Although the Flyers participated in eight contests as the host during the COVID re-started postseason the summer of 2020, all were held inside the Canadian bubble, including a season-ending loss to the Islanders in a Game 7 played on Labor Day weekend. 

That terminal contest in the Eastern Conference quarterfinals 8 years back was a Sunday afternoon start and an international broadcast. Looking to avoid elimination as well as to claim their first home victory in the series, Dave Hakstol’s team bolted to a 4-2 lead in the second period only to see it evaporate into an 8-5 loss thanks to Guentzel’s 4-goal explosion.

Should the Flyers win either Game 3 or Game 4 after a loss, it would be their first positive home-ice playoff decision in a decade. They didn’t win any of the three against the Pens in 2018. Rather, during Hakstol’s rookie season behind the bench, the draw was the Washington Capitals, in an Eastern quarterfinal in which the Caps badly outshot their opponents almost every night.

On Apr. 20, 2016, the Flyers came alive long enough to stave off elimination and a potential sweep with a 2-1  in Game 4 of that set. Andrew MacDonald netted the game winner in the 2nd period and Michal Neuvirth stopped 31-of-32 pucks. 

Playoff Recaps

Whenever this series commences, it will be the eighth between these cross-state rivals. Here are brief recaps of the previous five:

1989 Patrick Division Finals - Flyers won, 4 games to 3. Big things were expected of a Pittsburgh squad featuring three-time Cup champion Paul Coffey on the back end, while Philadelphia limped to a fourth-place finish in the early stages of clearing out a veteran defense corps. Nothing of consequence happened until Mario Lemieux's superhuman 8-point effort in a 10-7 Game 5 victory, but Philly took Game 6 at home and then stole Game 7 at the Civic Arena.

Most memorable moment(s): Scott Mellanby mocking the Pens by imitating Rob Brown's windmill after sealing the series with an empty netter, and ex-Pen Mike Bullard reportedly flipping off the locals after the handshake line.

1997 Eastern Conference quarterfinals - Flyers won, 4 games to 1. While the Penguins were busy bronzing Lemieux in the wake of his first retirement, the Orange and Black used their opponents, who skidded into the postseason with an 8-18-3 record, as a mere warmup for future playoff matchups. The Flyers set a still-standing postseason record with 53 shots in a Game 3 victory.

Most memorable moment: Rod Brind'Amour's two shorthanded goals on the same Penguins power play to pull the hosts out of an early funk in the clinching Game 5.

2000 Eastern Conference semifinals - Flyers won, 4 games to 2. Typical for the Dead Puck Era, Craig Ramsay's club failed to capitalize on home-ice advantage to start, dropping two in a row before running off four straight to advance.

Most memorable moment (that everyone was awake for): Rookie defenseman Andy Delmore's mid-afternoon hat trick to cement Game 5.

Most memorable moment (insomniac edition): Keith Primeau ends an 8-period marathon on the game winner and series shifting score at 2:30 AM.

2008 Eastern Conference finals - Penguins won, 4 games to 1. Pittsburgh steamrolled a younger Flyers club not expected to advance past the first round, but who limped to the Cup semifinals with a host of injuries, none bigger than the first occurrence of defenseman Kimmo Timonen's blood-clotting disorder which ended his season prior to this series.

Most memorable moment: N/A

2009 Eastern Conference quarterfinals - Penguins won, 4 games to 2. After the Pens intentionally tanked the last 2 games of the previous season to gain a favorable matchup with Ottawa, they couldn't bluff their way out of this one. Although goaltender Martin Biron registered a heroic Game 5 shutout to stave off elimination, an ill-timed Game 6 fight between Max Talbot and Dan Carcillo turned a 3-0 Pittsburgh deficit into a series-ending 5-3 win.

Most memorable moment: The Flyers d-core being routinely pushed around deep in their zone near Biron was the impetus for the free-agent acquisition of Chris Pronger.

2012 Eastern Conference quarterfinals - Flyers won, 4 games to 2. Where. To. Start. The playoff series between these clubs is the standard by which all others will be viewed. Stefon was right, this best-of-seven had everything: Multiple blown leads by the team with the home-ice advantage in the first 2 games; double hat tricks; Philly fans' hatred and bloodlust showing up loudly at least 30 minutes before *warmups* for each of 3 home games; hair pulling and biting; a potential sweep derailed by a 10-goal road outburst; collisions, explosions; Bryzgalov's spacey quotations win or lose; Claude Giroux's hit on Sidney Crosby and opening goal on the first shift of Game 6.

Most memorable moment: Sam Carchidi's evergreen, engagement-bait tweet declaring Giroux eclipsed Crosby as the best in the NHL.

2018 Eastern Conference quarterfinals - Penguins won, 4 games to 2. A series that nobody could get a handle on. The Flyers completely failed to show up in Games 1 through 4 and it was only by the grace of the hockey gods Steve Mason singlehandedly won Game 2. The Pens failed to show up in a potential elimination game on home ice, then ... well ... see above for Game 6.

Most memorable moment: Couturier's hat trick which couldn't prevent a season-ending defeat.

All shared sorrow is valid but rarely equal

One of my final tweets upon Monday’s win dealt with the release of emotions from a weary fanbase after the playoff berth was secured.


Let me explain.

When the Flyers descended into chaos both above and on the ice from 1989 to 1994 and ended a 17-year playoff streak, the NHL was a small league rapidly expanding but one in which losing teams were regularly welcomed to the Stanley Cup chase. Two years before the club’s slide into oblivion started, the Maple Leafs made the playoffs with only 21 wins and 52 points since 1 through 4 in each division, regardless of record, earned berths. 

In 1990, with injuries rampant, a change in the captaincy and trades which dismantled what could have been a proper rebuild if then-president Jay Snider’s plan was enacted, the Flyers missed out by 3 points. The Islanders, which won only 3 games from mid-February on, finished 4th in the Patrick Division and made it. They earned that berth by beating the Flyers on the second-to-last day of the regular season.

The following year, despite a lack of depth in the wake of near-season-long injuries to veteran leaders Mark Howe and Tim Kerr, Paul Holmgren had the team in 3rd place at the start of March, but a 2-10-2 crash sunk them into 5th with only the rebuilding Islanders to cushion their fall. In those 2 years, only 5 teams out of 21 DIDN’T make the playoffs.

In ‘92, a near-complete lack of scoring doomed Holmgren and his successor, Bill Dineen and the club finished in last place again. With the addition of San Jose, only 6 teams were left out.

Eric Lindros arrived the following fall, and the home squad was almost mathematically eliminated when an 8-game win streak to close out the regular season had them tantalizingly close. Sixteen of 24 teams entered postseason play. And in ‘94 with Anaheim and Florida joining the NHL and 16 of 26 clubs playing meaningful spring hockey, a hot start fueled by heavy offense collapsed on itself when Lindros was hurt and never recovered.

And then, the start of the ‘94 season was delayed from October to late January and the Flyers didn’t get hot until late March before finally locking down a playoff spot in late April.

It is frustrating, but so totally different, when even a legacy franchise can sit among exactly half the league which fails to make the postseason each year. You need at least 92-94 points to make it and that does cushion the blow when the retool-that’s-not-a-rebuild doesn’t achieve linear progress. 

In 2021, the season was over once the Flyers lost, 9-0, at Madison Square Garden on St. Patrick’s Day. In ‘22, it was a wrap by MLK Day and the next year it was obvious by St. Practice Day there would be no playoff charge. Sure, 2024 was maddening among the twisted conspiratorial logic that Torts threw that last game vs. the Capitals to screw over the Red Wings.

And last year was filled with nothing but 🗣dramaaaaaaa before and after John Tortorella was eventually ousted. 

To those fans under the age of 40, who are finally cutting loose: I saw your suffering, I shared in the grief and the relief, but you can exhale now. The punching bag head coach and your favorite players are dealing with house money from here on out. Expect the unexpected, even if that entails a slow start to next season, because, again, linear progress is largely a goal and a theory instead of reality. For everyone else over 40, we have too much of a 500-yard-stare from the first drought to have been messed up by the last few years.

Cat’s outta the bag

Did a Delco man have anything to do with the Flyers' late season push to a playoff berth?

I was sitting on this for the last month and waited for the right time to talk about it, just in case I spoiled the karma or called down the thunder by demonstrating the sin of pride. One way or another, the news was going to become public with some kind of postseason run either on South Broad Street or East Baltimore Pike.

You’ve heard by now about the family which traveled to Vatican City and called out to Pope Leo XIV in St. Peter's Square armed with a custom-made orange home Flyers jersey, right? 

It’s been about 4 weeks since Michael Culin stood in St. Peter’s Square, signaling to the first American pontiff. Since that March 18 brush with greatness as the Flyers embarked on a three-game California Special – which they swept – they ended the season with an 11-4-0 record, blowing past Detroit, Ottawa, Columbus and the New York Islanders to claim the final playoff spot in the conference. 

I wrote in a column several weeks back that fans should enjoy the playoff chase no matter what happens, because the likelihood of all five things happening simultaneously was highly unlikely. 

What’s that old Yiddish saying, “Man plans, God laughs?” 

Except in this case, God’s laughing in a kind, benevolent way because the Culin clan loved their team enough and showed uncommon bravery to plead their case to the Pope directly with a personalized offering. 

Mike and I played on an over-50 dek hockey team in Springfield, Delco, last fall, a league housed in a conspicuously large red barn opposite a dying mall.

The Mooseknuckles were a hard-working, depth-oriented bunch with equal parts skill and grit, hot shots and heart led by captain and south Jersey resident John "Johnny Utah" Urbanski. Our lineup took a hit when Mike was sidelined early in the season with a knee injury.

After a subpar regular season that left our crew with a 4-5-1 record, the Knucks caught fire, going 6-2 through three rounds of the playoffs. We clinched the title on Dec. 30 in a deciding Game 3 by rallying from a 4-2 deficit to win, 7-4. With surgery looming, Mike suited up. His presence in limited minutes was typical of the team's ethos, even in a one-and-done roster situation. In this case, he's not local or regional Emmy bait. He's a teammate and friend.

Anyone have a count on whether Philly or Picksburg has more dedicated Catholics willing to put it on the line and petition the Lord with prayer over a bitter rivalry?

Friday, April 10, 2026

Spectrum Memories: Goodbye is Forever


by Bob Herpen

Phanatic Hockey Editor


First things first. 


The last meaningful game the Philadelphia Flyers ever played in the Spectrum happened on May 12, 1996. It was Game 5 of the Eastern Conference semifinals against the Florida Panthers, who ended up claiming a 2-1 victory in double overtime to take a 3-2 series edge.


After that, the *absolute* last game the Philadelphia Flyers played in their original arena was an exhibition contest against the Phantoms, their American Hockey League affiliate, on Oct. 7, 2008.


On April 11, 1996, with an uncertain number of potential playoff dates on the horizon, the franchise paid respect to its rich history in the building with a farewell pageant following a 3-2 regulation defeat of the Montreal Canadiens. Terry Murray’s club finished their season home slate with a 27-9-5 record, the 11th time in club history they won as many games as the host. 


The others were:


36 - 1975-76 (still a franchise record)

33 - 1985-86

32 - 1974-75; 1984-85

29 - 1977-78; 1982-83; 1986-87

28 - 1973-74

27 - 1972-73; 1979-80


The centerpiece of the remembrance was the pairing of Flyers past and present for one final turn around the rink. I wonder who was the ad wizard who came up with the dramatic idea for these fan favorites to make their skate in almost complete darkness save for a spotlight that followed each set as they moved from center ice at one end of the boards to the opposite side. 


Exactly one month earlier, the Habs made headlines throughout the hockey world with an elegant and emotional ceremony to close down the Fabulous Forum. Hart, in remarks later in the video below, relayed the sentiment from a rival with a birds-eye view of the NHL’s expansion:



“(Former head coach and retired broadcaster) Dick Irvin of Montreal said to me that’s one thing the Flyers have had that so many teams have failed to have, and that is tradition. Now that tradition does not end tonight. Just one chapter ends and soon another begins with the playoffs and the new building.”


Tradition being a relative term. The Canadiens pre-date the establishment of the NHL. Their arena was built five years before the Great Depression. Their 24 Stanley Cups are still the gold standard by which all other sports franchises, save the New York Yankees, will forever be measured. They had an actual torch present, carried from the locker room onto the ice and passed down from captain to captain from surviving team leaders to then-current captain Pierre Turgeon. 


Bobby Clarke as the favored son and then president and GM drew polite and sustained applause. Maurice Richard, who hadn’t played a game since 1960, received a 7-minute standing ovation that nearly ground the proceedings to a halt.


“Montreal, of course, is the greatest organization in hockey,” then-Flyers emeritus presence Keith Allen was quoted by Rich Hofmann in the next day’s Daily News. “Their tradition has been in place for a long time. But in our relative youth, we’ve tried to emulate what they’ve done. Most of it, though, is that I think Eddie (Snider) always wanted a close-knit organization, a family atmosphere.”


Both teams have one thing in common since their moves into the CoreStates/First Union/Wachovia/Wells Fargo Center/Xfinity Mobile Arena and the Bell Centre respectively – neither has won a thing since. Only the Flyers have appeared in a Stanley Cup Final series on their new home ice, as the Habs did so in the 2021 COVID bubble.


“The Flyers immerse themselves in sentimentality on a regular basis,” Hofmann wrote in the same column. “Cynics have a hard time with it sometimes. The problem is, even cynics would have to recognize that it’s real. Flyers owner Ed Snider puts it as well as anybody ‘This is what we believe. This is us.’”


Flyers captain Eric Lindros, attempting to defend his Hart Trophy as the league’s best player, marveled at the level of good feelings the ceremony fostered.


“It’s like there’s no hard feelings around here. In some organizations, you hear how guys are upset, how they leave with bad feelings,” he was quoted in Hofmann’s column. “Here, they bring back so many different teams. It shows that once you’re a Flyer, you’re always part of the family.”



In the present, the victory in Game 81 gave the club its first ever clean sweep (4-0-0) against the most decorated franchise and extended their run of luck against the Habs to 7 straight wins since the infamous deal on March 9, 1995 which netted John LeClair, Eric Desjardins and Gilbert Dionne for Mark Recchi.


Find out how the Flyers started the 1995-96 season with a rout against these same Canadiens in the Montreal Forum.


It also clinched the Atlantic Division crown for the second consecutive season and provided the Flyers their 12th first-place finish in team history, while pulling them within 1 point of the Northeast Division-winning Pittsburgh Penguins with one game remaining for both clubs competing for the top seed in the conference. 


Not everything was well in the kingdom.


Ex-Canadien defenseman Kevin Haller, who showed flashes of scoring when asked to join the play in the previous year’s playoffs, had just 2 points over his previous 13 starts. November acquisition Pat Falloon, nabbed from San Jose to solve the scoring problems on the second line, only hit the net once in his previous 12 games. 


Lindros, who missed the previous two games, lamented his lack of scoring touch after wasting a pair of prime chances among his 5 shots on goal, saying “my hands were horrible, but everything felt strong.” 


Mikael Renberg, who played sparingly since Jan. 22 with a nagging stomach muscle injury, was far less than fully recovered and shunted onto the third line with Joel Otto and Shjon Podein. Head coach Terry Murray acknowledged the rush job, hinting that the third piece to complete the puzzle of the Legion of Doom might not join up any time soon. 


“I think he’s going to be a little off the game the rest of the way. Maybe 90 percent,’ Murray told then-Daily News hockey beat Les Bowen. “And that’s going to be OK if I can keep him in a situation where he’s not going to feel the responsibility to have to go out and score on a regular basis. He’s such an intense guy. The frustration level can set in with him very quickly.” 


Facing the inevitable spectre of facing a defensive-minded Florida or high-octane Pittsburgh in the playoffs, there was reason to be concerned despite the Flyers eventually finishing tied for second with the Bruins (282) to the Penguins (362) in total goals among Eastern Conference clubs.