Flyers amp up physicality
PHILADELPHIA — Flyers senior vice president Bob Clarke went on XM radio earlier this week and extolled the franchise's physical image.
"You have to have an identity . . . and we're going to keep ours," he said. "Too many teams are nondescript."
In the first three games, newcomer Andrej Meszaros has fit right into the Flyers' image. The sturdy, 6-foot-2, 220-pounder has seven hits, including a team-high four against Colorado on Monday, and has looked more like the defenseman who once excelled in Ottawa than the one who struggled in Tampa Bay the last two years.
"When you play with good players, it's easier," he said after Tuesday's practice.
The Flyers have arguably the league's deepest defense. It's so deep that Meszaros, who made the NHL's rookie all-star team in 2006, is on the Flyers' third pairing with Sean O'Donnell.
Meszaros downplayed today's meeting against his former Tampa teammates at the Wells Fargo Center.
"I'm going to know a lot more guys, but it's just going to be a normal game for me," he said. "I'll prepare the same way. The management and coaching staff all changed, so it's not like I have hard feelings for them."
Meszaros has been used in all situations and has been a big contributor on the penalty-killing unit, whose 88.2 percent success rate has helped the Flyers start the season 2-0-1.
More times than not, Meszaros has knocked forwards off the play around the net.
"He's got a lot of power in his game," coach Peter Laviolette said. "One or two strong strides, and he's engaged in a battle, and I think he's done a really good job in those battles with his power. He contains people; he breaks things up. He moves things in the right direction and has enough skill to jump in on the power play."
When he was dealt to the Flyers for a second-round '12 draft choice, Tampa Bay officials said they were glad to be free of his $4 million annual salary. The Tampa media piled on, calling him an albatross.
"I don't read that stuff, so I don't know what they're saying, and I really don't care," said Meszaros, who had 10 goals, 29 assists and a plus-34 rating in his rookie season with Ottawa.
But he was a combined minus-18 in two seasons with the Lightning.
"I know I didn't have two very good seasons there, and I've said it," he said. "But I feel great here. Everything is great for me so far. It's great to be playing good hockey again like I did in Ottawa."