Tuesday, October 28, 2025

Articles by Nick Tricome

2 articles found

Sean Couturier looked like his old self in the Flyers' win, and he might still be better
Technology

Sean Couturier looked like his old self in the Flyers' win, and he might still be better

Sean Couturier looked like his old self Monday night on the ice at Xfinity Mobile Arena. He felt like it, too – better even. "I feel better than pre-surgery, honestly," the longtime Flyers center said. "In the last couple years before the surgeries, tight back and, you know, trying to on a daily basis sometimes push through it. "Now I'm getting up in the morning and feeling great. Don't have any problems putting my socks on." And with his skates on, he was everywhere in the Flyers' home opening win over the Florida Panthers, their first win of both the season and the Rick Tocchet era, and perhaps an early statement that Couturier, as the captain, still has plenty more to give. Because the 32-year-old looked like that shutdown, two-way center of old in Monday night's 5-2 victory – maybe even better. It was obvious on the defensive side right away. Couturier got the beat on a Florida possession in the Flyers' own zone during the first period and had the read and the angle to poke the puck loose from Anton Lundell by the blue line to take off on a scoring chance the other way. Then later on, with the Panthers trying to break the puck out from their own corner, Couturier cut across the crease and to the wall, getting his stick in the way of an attempted pass that turned possession back to him, and quickly after, to Tyson Foerster, who Couturier slipped the puck out to for a step inside the hashmarks and a shot that beat Florida goalie Daniil Tarasov for a 1-0 lead. The offense was there, too, with a couple of looks early on, but then two crucial breaks late. Couturier's line with Travis Konecny and Matvei Michkov in his wings was up as the minutes were winding down in the second period. He was slow to register that he had to hop over boards, but by the time he did, defenseman Travis Sanheim had knocked a puck loose that fell right to Konecny's stick. Konecny looked up and saw Couturier at the far blue line all alone. He zipped the pass over, Couturier was in on a breakaway, and all he had to do was pick his shot, which froze Tarasov as the center rang the puck off all the posts and in for his first goal. "I was late there," Couturier said. "But I guess the hockey gods were on my side there." The puck found him all alone again with the game tied late in the third. Couturier ate a hit from Florida center Sam Bennett after wrapping the puck around the offensive zone boards, and after Bennett came barreling out of the box upon the expiration of his penalty to crush whoever had the puck. It went to Trevor Zegras behind the Panthers' net. Bennett made a beeline to him as he loaded up his next check, but as he did, Couturier stood up back up at the rightside faceoff dot with no one there to cover him. Somehow, Zegras absorbed the check, stayed on his feet, and wired a pass straight to him. Couturier took the puck in then beamed another shot that beat Tarasov again, and for the lead once again. Then came the two empty-netters to ice it. Couturier finished with a four-point night – two goals, two assists, and a plus-4 rating in 16:41 of ice time – and throughout, he looked good, he looked healthy. He looked like that old Selke-caliber center before the back issues piled up and sidelined him for nearly two years, and before he couldn't find his place amid all his now-noted issues with former head coach John Tortorella. He was anticipating, he was positioned well, and he was taking the puck and moving it the other way. For a night, at least, he looked like the old Sean Couturier, the center who was everywhere and shutting everyone down– the one he always wanted to be, or maybe even one who can be better now if his back isn't a problem anymore, as he said. "Definitely it was tough times," Couturier said in the Flyers' locker room after Monday night of the past few years. "But it's behind me now. I'm just trying to focus on helping the team right now." "The guy's a good hockey player, right?" Tocchet said postgame. "Plays a 200-foot game, and he cares...He's a good human being. You root for guys like that, and he had a great game for us." SIGN UP HERE to receive the PhillyVoice Sports newsletter Follow Nick on Twitter: @itssnick Follow Nick on Bluesky: @itssnick Like us on Facebook: PhillyVoice Sports

Eagles-Vikings Week 7 odds preview: The Birds are a favorite, but don't exactly look it
Technology

Eagles-Vikings Week 7 odds preview: The Birds are a favorite, but don't exactly look it

The Eagles enter Week 7 a pretty undeniable mess. They got embarrassed by the rival New York Giants on Thursday night in primetime, 34-17. Their offense has become entirely uninventive and predictable, their defense can hardly get off the field because of it, and to make it worse, the unit that last year ranked as one of the best and meanest in the league is now getting pushed around. The signs have always been there since the season started, but some close to straight-up miraculous wins were able to mask them. The past two weeks, though, haven't been keeping them hidden. The Eagles are vulnerable. The Minnesota Vikings, who are on deck for them this week at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, see it. For now, sportsbooks have the Eagles as a favorite for this Sunday but the Birds need to clean themselves up and fast. Here's a look at the betting odds, money lines, and total points over/unders for Week 7: *Lines as of Tuesday, Oct. 14 The Eagles' problems and concerns have been well-documented in the past few weeks. Here's a quick rundown... • They're banged up, critically, along the offensive and defensive lines• Saquon Barkley just hasn't been anywhere close to that same always-on, big run threat that he was last season• The offense overall has seemed to lose all creativity and cohesion in the switch from Kellen Moore to Kevin Patullo as its coordinator, which also seems to have seeded some major frustration among its biggest playmakers in A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith• Defensively, the Eagles are also weak at corner and weak on the edge, which isn't helped by Za'Darius Smith's sudden retirement on Monday• Going on seven weeks in and still relatively fresh off a Super Bowl title, the team is still talking about finding an identity None of it looks or sounds good right now. And sure, they're still 4-2, and last year's Eagles were very shaky for a while...but the 2023 Eagles also started 10-1 with some of the same problems the team has right now, and they couldn't sustain it. They spiraled, and unless the 2025 Eagles can get their act together quick, the Vikings are a team that can accelerate that descent. Coming off a Week 6 bye, Minnesota's defense is allowing the sixth-fewest yards per game at an average of 289.8 and the second-fewest passing yards per game in the league at 157.6. There might finally be opportunity for Barkley and the Eagles on the ground, as the Vikings have been allowing an average of 132.2 rushing yards per game, but the problem so far has been that they have had their shots already, and still haven't gotten going. MORE EAGLESEagles edge defender Za'Darius Smith abruptly announces retirementThe Eagles have gone from bullies to bullied in the trenchesDiagnosing the Eagles' issues after a two-game losing streak On the other side for Minnesota, they'll be coming in with a pass-catching trio of superstar wideout Justin Jefferson, another playmaking receiver in Jordan Addison, and a reliable tight end who can take his space in the middle in T.J. Hockenson. With the current state of the Eagles' defensive backfield, that'd be a lot for them to handle even with a fully healthy Quinyon Mitchell presumably taking on Jefferson. Mitchell, however, suffered a hamstring injury in last Thursday's loss to the Giants, and depending on his status, a much harder time could be awaiting the Philly secondary, doubly so if starting quarterback J.J. McCarthy is deemed ready to play again for the Vikings, too. It might be another rough week for the Birds. SIGN UP HERE to receive the PhillyVoice Sports newsletter Follow Nick on Twitter: @itssnick Follow Nick on Bluesky: @itssnick Like us on Facebook: PhillyVoice Sports