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  Sunday, Apr. 9 12:00pm ET
Philly wins East without coach, captain
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE

NEW YORK (AP) -- Illness, injury and a 15-point deficit could not keep the Philadelphia Flyers from the top of the Eastern Conference.

Peter White
Peter White contols the puck behind New York's net.

Mark Recchi and Daymond Langkow scored second-period goals and rookie Brian Boucher made 15 saves Sunday as the Flyers captured the Atlantic Division title with a 4-1 victory over the New York Rangers.

Philadelphia rallied over the final eight weeks of the season to overtake the New Jersey Devils and secure the top seed in the conference. The Flyers needed only to avoid a regulation loss in the season finale to finish first.

"You've got to catch some breaks along the way," said Craig Ramsay, the Flyers' coach in the absence of Roger Neilson, who is away from the team receiving cancer treatment. "Adversity drew us together."

Philadelphia, with 105 points, won its first division title since the 1995-96 season. It is the Flyers' highest point total since 1985-86 when they had 110.

On March 13, captain Eric Lindros went out of the lineup with a concussion. He questioned the team's medical treatment and caused an organizational divide with Flyers management and some of his teammates, who have called for him to apologize. He was stripped of his captaincy by the team.

Neilson has been gone since late February and Lindros will be out until at least the second round of the playoffs. Philadelphia is 9-4-1 since Lindros' latest injury.

A collapse by the Devils closed the 15-point lead New Jersey established after defeating the Flyers on Feb. 15. Philadelphia won its final three games to clinch the title.

"You know, if you take care of yourself, good things are going to happen. And that's what we did," said new captain Eric Desjardins, who scored a third-period goal.

Philadelphia (45-25-12-3), which will face Buffalo in the first round, earned home-ice advantage in every round it advances to at least until the Stanley Cup finals.

Boucher, in 35 games, finished with a 1.91 goals-against average, becoming the first rookie goalie since the 1950-51 season to play at least 25 games and have an average under two goals. Al Rollins of Toronto (1.77 in 40 games) and Terry Sawchuk with Detroit (1.99 in 70 games) were the last to do it.

"It's exciting," Boucher said. "It's a team stat and I think the guys realized in these last couple of games because they played real hard for me.

"Fifty years is a long time and you only get one shot at being a rookie."

Boucher, who won his 20th game Sunday, was chosen by Ramsay as the playoff starter over veteran John Vanbiesbrouck. Boucher shut out Boston at home Saturday.

For the second straight game, the Rangers played a goalie making his first NHL start. Milan Hnilicka stopped 36 shots in his second appearance, but it wasn't enough to keep New York from extending its winless streak to nine (0-8-1).

"It's the end of a nightmare, that's for sure," said John Tortorella, who coached New York's final four games after John Muckler was fired. "The best thing to do is start looking ahead because we're rock-bottom right now."

It is the Rangers' longest stretch without a win since an 11-game run from Dec. 9-31, 1990. New York will miss the playoffs for the third straight year.

"It's very frustrating," said Petr Nedved, the Rangers' leading scorer with 68 points. "Everyone in this dressing room would like to be in the playoffs."

Recchi gave Philadelphia a 1-0 lead 45 seconds into the second period, and 4:45 later, the Flyers grabbed a two-goal lead on Langkow's 18th.

The Rangers (29-41-12-3) avoided their third straight home shutout when Rob DiMaio scored his sixth in the final minute of the second.

Desjardins made it 3-1 when he followed up a rebound and scored his 14th with 9:03 left. Craig Berube closed the scoring with an empty-net goal with 9.6 seconds remaining.

New York defenseman Kim Johnsson took a hit to the head in the first period and did not return. Also in the first, Philadelphia defenseman Andy Delmore bruised his foot blocking a shot and saw no further action.

Theo Fleury and Kevin Hatcher, both season-long disappointments, were scratched from the Rangers' lineup. Fleury was said to be out with a knee injury.

 


ALSO SEE
NHL Scoreboard

Philadelphia Clubhouse

NY Rangers Clubhouse


Sabres get the point, slip into NHL playoffs


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 Kieth Primeau feeds Mark Recchi for the goal.
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