
Reflecting on Racism: What Wayne Simmonds Hockey Legacy Teaches
Wayne Simmonds' legacy goes beyond hockey. Discover his journey with racism, resilience, and the call for change in the sport.
Complete coverage of the Philadelphia Flyers - news, analysis, and insights from our hockey experts.

Wayne Simmonds' legacy goes beyond hockey. Discover his journey with racism, resilience, and the call for change in the sport.

Are the Senators finally learning how to win tight games after Tim Stützle’s OT dagger and a defensive clinic?

In '75, the Philadelphia Flyers won their 2nd Stanley Cup, and Bernie Parent built the greatest goaltending wall as he won the Vezina and Conn Smythe—again.

Bernie Parent wasn’t just a Hall of Fame goalie—he backstopped the Philadelphia Flyers to back-to-back Stanley Cups and made a city believe it was unbeatable.

Before NHL stardom, Mitch Marner, Matthew Tkachuk, Christian Dvorak & Evan Bouchard dominated together on the 2015-16 London Knights.

A mixed night for Canadian teams: quiet progress for some, familiar warning signs for others. The standings didn’t shift — the pressure did.

Maple Leafs grind out a 2–1 OT win over Flyers thanks to Hildeby’s calm in net and Laughton & Cowan stepping up when it mattered most.

Saturday’s NHL games brought milestones and frustration. What do Canada’s teams still need to get right in January?

What a mixed night revealed about Canadian teams: control in Calgary, cracks in Winnipeg, and a reminder that even contenders wobble.

Montreal rallies late, Toronto leans on depth and Woll, Vancouver fades—Canadian teams show resilience, grit, and cautionary lessons.

Did the Canucks simply run out of gas at the end of a long road trip, or did this loss expose problems that won’t fade at home?

He didn’t chase the spotlight—he earned trust in the NHL crease. Pete Peeters’ quiet brilliance, record streaks, and Vezina Trophy season defined a goalie era.

Can the Maple Leafs turn late-game heroics into consistent wins, or was last night’s 3-2 comeback against Chicago just a one-off thrill?

Ron Hextall didn’t just wear #27—he transformed it. A fiery rookie, a fearless puck handler, a Flyers icon. The number still echoes his intensity.