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Kings fall in overtime to Flyers, who end a 13-game losing streak

The Flyers' Scott Laughton, center, celebrates after scoring the winning goal in overtime past Kings goalie Jonathan Quick.
The Flyers’ Scott Laughton, center, celebrates after scoring the game-winning goal in overtime past Kings goalie Jonathan Quick, left. Philadelphia won 4-3.
(Derik Hamilton / Associated Press)
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Cam Atkinson was sick of losing— and he went out and did something about it.

Atkinson scored twice in regulation and assisted Scott Laughton’s goal 2:22 into overtime, and the Philadelphia Flyers ended a franchise-record 13-game losing streak with a 4-3 victory over the Kings on Saturday.

“I hate losing. We all hate losing,” Atkinson said. “It was one of those things where I didn’t want to lose this one.”

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Laughton scored on the rebound of Atkinson’s shot as the Flyers (14-22-8) picked up their first victory since Dec. 29.

“Obviously, nothing better than winning,” Atkinson said. “It’s been a long time.”

With a long losing streak and heavy snowstorm blanketing Philadelphia, the Flyers thanked the die-hard fans who showed up with free parking outside and free pretzels, hot dogs and soda inside the arena. The club closed the upper level, and the lower level appeared about 75% full.

Troy Terry and Rickard Rakell each score and goaltender John Gibson makes a season-high 44 saves in the Ducks’ 2-1 victory over the Ottawa Senators.

Jan. 29, 2022

The Flyers gave those who braved the weather something to cheer about, something that has been rare of late.

But it sure wasn’t easy.

It looked as if the Flyers would get their first win in 2022 in regulation, but Anze Kopitar scored on a backhander after a scramble in front of the goal with 37.4 seconds left in the third period.

Laughton sent the fans home happy, though — and likely allowed the Flyers to breathe a huge sigh of relief — when he followed Atkinson’s shot from the slot with a rebound goal from close range. Ivan Provorov was in the crease, but the goal stood after an officials’ review.

“We had some guys that sort of said, ‘That’s enough,’ ” Flyers interim coach Mike Yeo said.

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Viktor Arvidsson had a goal and an assist, and Arthur Kaliyev and Kopitar also scored for the Kings (22-16-7). Los Angeles was playing the fourth game of a six-game trip and was coming off a 3-2 victory over the New York Islanders on Thursday.

The Flyers' Claude Giroux, left, and Kings' Phillip Danault battle for the puck Jan. 29, 2022.
The Flyers’ Claude Giroux, left, and Kings’ Phillip Danault battle for the puck.
(Derik Hamilton / Associated Press)

Kings coach Todd McLellan liked the way his team battled back late but believed much of the game left a lot to be desired.

“We just weren’t sharp enough for the other 50 minutes,” he said. “We weren’t sharp defensively. We didn’t check well. We’re probably lucky we deserved a point.”

Atkinson’s second goal was a short-handed tally and came on a breakaway, putting Philadelphia up 3-1 with 10:54 remaining in regulation. Atkinson sped toward Kings goalie Jonathan Quick, then hit the brakes and deked to his right. Quick lunged to stop the forehand try with an excellent glove stop, but Atkinson used his backhand to put home the rebound for his team-leading 17th goal.

“Just stopped and punched it home,” Atkinson said.

Kaliyev brought the Kings to within a goal just 45 seconds later when his slap shot through a screen on a power play got past Carter Hart.

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After a flurry of shots and a scramble in front, Kopitar sent a backhander from the circle under a sprawling Hart to force overtime, where the Flyers prevailed.

“It feels good,” said Hart, who made 37 saves.

Mayhew atoned for a silly penalty earlier in the first period — which Philadelphia escaped without damage thanks to an excellent save by Hart on a Kings power play — by netting his third goal of the season 9½ minutes into the game. Rasmus Ristolainen displayed stellar stickwork in the slot before making a backhand pass to Mayhew, whose wrist shot from a sharp angle beat Quick.

“It was a great move,” Mayhew said. “He put it right on my tape.”

The Flyers got some puck luck too as two Kings shots clanged off the iron, including Alex Iafallo’s chance with 5:42 to play in the period.

Each team scored a goal in the second.

Atkinson’s first gave the Flyers a 2-0 lead midway through the period. Claude Giroux sent the puck toward the net during a shift change. It took a high hop in front of Quick and bounded off the Kings goalie to a wide-open Atkinson, who shot high over Quick’s left shoulder.

Arvidsson pulled the Kings to within 2-1 with 4:45 left in the second, finishing a two-on-none break with Sean Durzi. Phillip Danault got the secondary assist and really made the goal happen with a twirl-around backhanded pass to Durzi that left the Flyers helplessly out of position.

Honoring Yandle

The Flyers held a pregame ceremony to honor defenseman Keith Yandle, who broke the NHL record for consecutive games played with his 965th in a row Tuesday night.

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Philadelphia presented Yandle, who hasn’t missed a game since March 26, 2009, with a gold puck, a Tiffany crystal and an iron man helmet.

Trainer’s room

Kings: Defenseman Mikey Anderson (upper body) didn’t return to the ice after the first period.

Flyers: Center Derick Brassard (hip) was a noncontact participant in practice Friday. Brassard was injured Dec. 8, returned for one game Jan. 6 and hasn’t played since. There’s no timetable for his return.

Up next

Kings: At Pittsburgh on Sunday.

Flyers: Host Winnipeg on Tuesday before a seven-day break.

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