Hockey

Nylander, Marner lead the way as Maple Leafs score 4 unanswered goals to top Flyers

The Toronto Maple Leafs survived their pre-holiday trap game by a whisker, taking care of the Philadelphia Flyers with a 4-3 win on Thursday.

Toronto ignites late in 2nd period, survives late-game scare to secure 4-3 home win

Three Maple Leafs players celebrate a goal in front of the net as the puck gets in despite the efforts of a beaten Flyers goaltender and two other Philadelphia players, who all look disappointed.
Maple Leafs right wing William Nylander (88) and centre John Tavares (91) celebrate a goal by teammate Mitchell Marner (16) in a 4-3 victory over the visiting Flyers on Thursday. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press)

The Toronto Maple Leafs survived their pre-holiday trap game by a whisker, taking care of the Philadelphia Flyers with a 4-3 win on Thursday.

The Maple Leafs built a three-goal lead with less than nine minutes remaining before surviving two late Flyers' goals in their annual holiday-season matinee in front of a kids-laden crowd of 18,908 at Scotiabank Arena.

"We were those kids not too long ago," said forward Michael Bunting, who scored early in the third period. "We looked up to the Leafs and cheered for them growing up in the city.

"I liked this kind of game, a two o'clock game, get the kids out, and it was nice to get a win for them."

There was potential for the Maple Leafs (21-7-6) to drift off into a Christmas wonderland, contemplating their four-day, five-evening break before finishing off the Flyers (11-16-7). After all, the visitors have the second-worst record in the Eastern Conference.

But after Philadelphia goalie Carter Hart stopped the first 23 shots he faced, including a short-handed breakaway from Mitch Marner in the opening period, a pair of late goals in the second period ignited the Maple Leafs.

WATCH | Nylander's 20th goal of year leads Leafs over Flyers:

Nylander's goal holds up as the winner, Leafs defeat Flyers

2 years ago
Duration 0:45
William Nylander's three point game leads Toronto to 4-3 win over Flyers.

Marner set up Calle Jarnkrok for a redirect, and 2:47 later, Marner slid a shot underneath Hart's right pad on the power play to put Toronto in front 2-1.

"The building is always rockin', and the kids really enjoy it, especially when they get to take some time off school," Marner said of the game environment.

"It's always fun to play in the afternoon. It reminds me of my days back in the OHL. Nice two o'clock start. I wish we had more, to be honest."

The Maple Leafs (21-7-6) extended their home win streak to six games. William Nylander, whose game-winner pushed him to the 20-goal mark, also had two assists on the day.

Only the Boston Bruins, who were scheduled to play the Winnipeg Jets later Thursday, have a better home record at 17-0-2 to the Maple Leafs' 13-2-3.

"Getting the extra time, it's important no matter what," Toronto head coach Sheldon Keefe said of the upcoming break. "I know every team in the league has their own things going on, and the schedule is not easy.

The Maple Leafs outshot the visitors 34-18 and Hart had a five-game personal win streak halted. Toronto's Ilya Samsonov faced only eight shots in the first two periods.

"Those are hard games to play, especially after the one in Washington," said Samsonov, referring to the 28 shots he faced in a 5-2 loss to the Capitals last Saturday.

After Nylander put the Maple Leafs ahead 4-1 in the third period, Morgan Frost and Joel Farabee scored 1:23 apart.

Farabee's goal came with 6:36 remaining. He missed an open net on his next shift.

Samsonov survived to notch his ninth straight win at home to start the season, a streak that matched a 55-year-old team record set by the late Bruce Gamble to open the 1967-68 campaign.

Tony DeAngelo provided the Flyers with a 1-0 lead with an early-game power-play goal.

Newcomer sits

Toronto left-winger Dryden Hunt, acquired earlier this week from the Colorado Avalanche in exchange for Denis Malgin, did not play against the Flyers.

He practised on the fourth line on Wednesday alongside centre Pontus Holmberg and right-winger Joey Anderson. First, however, Maple Leafs head coach Sheldon Keefe wanted Hunt to become accustomed to his new surroundings.

The undrafted 27-year-old from Cranbrook, B.C. last played for the Avalanche on Dec. 17.

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