With the NHL regular season right around the corner, TSN.ca profiles each team leading up to puck drop. Next up are the Philadelphia Flyers, hoping they have enough to at least maintain last years playoff position. Catch up on their summer moves and the issues they face this season, as well as Craig Buttons analysis of their top prospect and an analytical breakdown by TSNs Scott Cullen. Division: Metropolitan GM: Ron Hextall Head Coach: Craig Berube 2013-14: 42-30-10 (3rd in Metropolitan) Playoffs: Lost in conference quarter-finals Goals For: 233 (8th) Goals Against: 227 (20th) Powerplay: 19.7% (8th) Penalty Kill: 84.8% (7th) That Was Then: Losing seven of your first eight games is never a desirable way to begin a season, but thata€?s the reality the Flyers made for themselves in 2013-14. The losing streak, which extended to nine of the teama€?s first 12 games, set off a trend that unfolded for the entirety of the campaign. The start cost Peter Laviolette his coaching job (after just three games!), with Philly handing Craig Berube the reins on an interim basis on Oct. 7. The former grinder was eventually able to turn the team around, but the shift was not instantaneous. It took until after Christmas for the Flyers to get their first handle on playoff position and that turnaround was largely thanks to two factors. The first was that the Metropolitan Division was not very competitive in the early-going, with the third spot in the division taking fewer points to get hold of than the final wild card spot in the Eastern Conference. The second was Claude Giroux playing out of his mind in December and continuing his hot play throughout the second half. The Flyers captaina€?s nine-game point streak began in Chicago and wasna€?t snapped until New Yeara€?s Eve, including six multi-point games over the span. The Olympic break provided an opportunity for a lot of the Flyersa€? top talent to get a breather with its Canadian core a€“ including Giroux a€“ left out of the nationa€?s Sochi plans. Philly finished strong, securing points in 16 of its final 22 that amazingly includes a stretch that saw them lose six of seven. Finishing third in the Metropolitan, the Flyers earned a first-round date with the team theya€?d battled in the standings for much of the spring: the New York Rangers. The team suffered an untimely injury, though, in their final meeting of the season with their intrastate rivals from Pittsburgh as netminder Steve Mason sustained an upper body injury on Apr. 12. The injury a€“ which Mason later revealed was a concussion a€“ kept him off the ice for the first three games of the first round. He came back with the team in a 1-2 hole but despite holding the Rangers to two goals or less in three of the four games he played, the Flyers were sent packing in seven. Scott Cullens Analytics Predators 2013-14 Stats by Quarter Games GPG GAA SH% SV% SAF% PTS% 1-20 2.00 2.45 6.1% .940 49.3% .450 21-41 3.00 2.90 8.3% .915 50.0% .619 42-62 3.24 3.10 9.3% .909 47.0% .619 63-82 3.10 2.60 8.2% .927 51.6% .600 NHL AVG 2.67 2.67 7.8 .922 50.0% .562 Key: GPG= goals per game, GAA= goals-against per game, SH%= even-strength shooting percentage, SV%= even-strength save percentage, SAF%= score-adjusted Fenwick percentage (differential of shot attempts faced vs. shot attempts, excluding blocked shots, adjusted for game score), PTS%= percentage of available points. Analysis: Games 1-20: Couldnt score early, with Giroux starting slow, and great goaltending wasnt enough. Games 21-41: Goaltending regressed, but shooting was on the mark, improving record. Games 42-62: Poor possession and goaltending were both offset by high-percentage shooting, . Games 63-82: Best goaltending and possession stretch of the year. Key 2014 Additions: D Michael del Zotto, F Andrew Gordon, C Blair Jones, D Nick Schultz, F Zack Stortini, F R.J. Umberger, F Ryan White Key 2014 Subtractions: F Scott Hartnell, F Steve Downie, F Tyle McGinn This Is Now: The Flyers brought in a familiar face to take charge of the roster, bringing in their last great netminder and one of the gamea€?s most sought-after executives in Ron Hextall as general manager. Luckily for Hextall, there was not a lot of heavy lifting to be done in terms of shaping the roster. The forwards were a balanced group, with seven scoring 20 or more in 2013-14, including first-timer Brayden Schenn and nearly-old-timer Vincent Lecavalier. Hextall moved one of those seven out in his biggest off-season move, trading popular vet and one of the gamea€?s best combinations of grit and skill in Scott Hartnell to Columbus to reacquire R.J. Umberger, who broke into the NHL with Philly in 2005. The Flyers now have a couple years to work with the existing roster, since the majority of the current club has at least two years contract remaining, highlighted by the eight-year extension Giroux signed in the middle of last season. Six years may have been a long term to give Andrew MacDonald, but the team got an up-close look at him down the stretch and seems to have liked what it saw. With Kimmo Timonen out indefinitely, there will be some pressure on MacDonald, along with veterans Braydon Coburn and Mark Streit, to handle big minutes on the Flyers blue line. Hextall also rolled the dice on a low-risk addition, signing Michael del Zotto to a $1.3 million free agent deal in hopes that the 24-year-old can regain the form that had many projecting him as an elite offensive blue liner earlier in his career. DEPTH CHART Forwards Left Wing Centre Right Wing Brayden Schenn Claude Giroux Jakub Voracek Matt Read Sean Couturier Wayne Simmonds Michael Raffl Vincent Lecavalier R.J. Umberger Jason Akeson Pierre-Edouard Bellemare Zac Rinaldo Jay Rosehill Blair Jones Petr Straka Taylor Leier Scott Laughton Ryan White Defence Left Right Andrew MacDonald Braydon Coburn Mark Streit Nicklas Grossman Michael Del Zotto Luke Schenn Nick Schultz Samuel Morin Kimmo Timonen Shayne Gostisbehere Goaltenders Steve Mason Ray Emery Anthony Stolarz Craigs List TSN Director of Scouting Craig Buttons Top Prospect: Scott Laughton If there is a prototypical Flyer center, surely Scott would meet all the criteria. Flyer great Bob Clarke to current star Claude Giroux, embody requisite qualities of skill, fire and an indomitable will to win. Scott has no less of these qualities. Hes an excellent playmaker and his vision and anticipation allows him to be dangerous with the puck. He plays in the guts of the action, is not deterred in any way and he will do whatever is necessary to help the team win regardless if it may stretch the boundaries of the rules. A player Flyers fans will come to love. Fantasy - Cullens Player to Watch - Vincent Lecavalier This may qualify as wishful thinking, considering that Lecavalier is a 34-year-old coming off a season that was his least productive, on a points-per-game basis, since he was an 18-year-old rookie. Its not typical to get bounce-back years in a players mid-thirties, and Lecavaliers underlying numbers have been headed in the wrong direction for a while, but there is room in the Philadelphia lineup for Lecavalier to play a supporting offensive role. Given his contract, that may not be the ideal, but better to find a way to get 20-plus goals out of Lecavalier while using him in favourable matchups, in the hopes of trying to recapture some value. Carolina Hurricanes Jerseys . Ghoulam has put pen to paper on a four and a half year deal, tying him to Napoli until 2018. The 22-year-old Algeria international, who played for France at Under 21 level, has made 87 league appearances in four seasons at Saint-Etienne. Justin Faulk Jersey .K. Subban has picked the right time of the year to go on an offensive tear. http://www.hockeyhurricanes.com/rod-brindamour-hockey-jersey/ . -- On any given day here at his companys Silicon Valley headquarters, Vivek Ranadive is ready to compete against any employee who wants to challenge him to any contest. Custom Carolina Hurricanes Jerseys . Ireland was the last unbeaten side in the championship after France fell to Wales on Friday, and was favoured to end a three-match losing run to England with a side with more than twice as many caps, rampant momentum, and added incentive to celebrate Brian ODriscolls world record-tying 139th test cap.The two most recent Stanley Cup winners highlight TSNs Second Round playoff schedule, as Canadas Sports Leader today confirmed its complete broadcast schedule for the Conference Semifinals of the 2014 STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS. TSNs Second Round coverage features two highly-anticipated Western Conference series, as the defending Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks take on the Minnesota Wild, and the Los Angeles Kings square off against the Anaheim Ducks in another clash of California-based teams. Along the way, TSN showcases some of the NHLs biggest stars, including Jonathan Toews, Ryan Getzlaf, Zach Parise, Jonathan Quick, and many more. Broadcast Coverage TSNs Second Round coverage of the 2014 STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS gets underway on Friday with Game 1: Minnesota at Chicago at 9:30 p.m. ET. On Saturday, TSN delivers a battle of crosstown rivals with Game 1: Los Angeles at Anaheim at 8 p.m. ET. TSNs live coverage of the 2014 STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS runs through the first three rounds, with all coverage also available live on TSN GO. Broadcast Team TSNs extensive post-season coverage features play-by-play announcers Gord Miller and Chris Cuthbert and game analysts Ray Ferraro and Mike Johnson. Fans can turn to the acclaimed NHL ON TSN panel for all the essential news and analysis from the 2014 STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS. TSNs pre-game and intermission coverage is led by host James Duthie, alongside Hockey Insider Bob McKenzie, and analysts Aaron Ward, Darren Pang, Jeff ONeill, and Jamie McLennan. TSNs coverage also features Hockey Insider Pierre LeBrun contributing reports and analysis throughout the playoffs. SPORTSCENTRE, Canadas most-watched sports news program, continues to deliver ongoing coverage of all the breaking news, highlights, and reaction from the 2014 STANLEY CUPP PLAYOFFS.dddddddddddd As well, SPORTSCENTRE features an on-site panel of Ryan Rishaug, Hockey Insider Darren Dreger, analyst Martin Biron, and RDSs Francois Gagnon throughout the Montreal Canadiens-Boston Bruins series, with Montréal Bureau reporter John Lu also following the Habs throughout their playoff run. THATS HOCKEY with Gino Reda and THATS HOCKEY 2NITE with Steve Kouleas deliver daily in-depth analysis of each series. During the playoffs, THATS HOCKEY 2NITE will also air in the mornings on TSN2. TSN Radio TSN Radio 690 in Montreal is the official radio voice of the Montreal Canadiens and continues to feature live game coverage of the teams playoff series throughout the 2014 STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS. Throughout the post-season, TSN Radio stations across the country deliver all the breaking news and analysis from around the league. Broadcast Schedule Chicago vs. MinnesotaGame 1: Minnesota @ Chicago - Friday, May 2 at 9:30 p.m. ET on TSNGame 2: Minnesota @ Chicago - Sunday, May 4 at 3 p.m. ETGame 3: Chicago @ Minnesota - Tuesday, May 6 at 9 p.m. ETGame 4: Chicago @ Minnesota - Friday, May 9 at 9:30 p.m. ET**Game 5: Minnesota @ Chicago - Sunday, May 11 at 9:30 p.m. ET**Game 6: Chicago @ Minnesota - Tuesday, May 13 at TBD**Game 7: Minnesota @ Chicago - Thursday, May 15 at TBD Anaheim vs. Los AngelesGame 1: Los Angeles @ Anaheim - Saturday, May 3 at 8 p.m. ET on TSNGame 2: Los Angeles @ Anaheim - Monday, May 5 at 10 p.m. ETGame 3: Anaheim @ Los Angeles - Thursday, May 8 at 10 p.m. ETGame 4: Anaheim @ Los Angeles - Saturday, May 10 at 10 p.m. ET**Game 5: Los Angeles @ Anaheim - Monday, May 12 at TBD **Game 6: Anaheim @ Los Angeles - Wednesday, May 14 at TBD **Game 7: Los Angeles @ Anaheim - Friday, May 16 at TBD Schedule subject to change (visit TSN.ca for confirmed schedule info)**If necessary ' ' '