It\'s finally over, folks. The Flyers\' West Coast trip rolls on, which has meant another late night for any of us out East, and tonight\'s game in Seattle made for an even later night with a trip to overtime. Because of course it did. Anyway, let\'s talk about it. The basics First period: 16:21- Travis Konecny (Laughton, Sanheim) SHG Second period: No scoring Third period: 5:45- Vince Dunn (Bjorkstrand, Wennberg) PPG Overtime: 2:35- Justin Schultz (Bjorkstrand, Gourde) SOG: 29 (SEA) - 28 (PHI) Some takeaways The power kill lives on This might not have been the flashiest of showings for the Flyers, and certainly not their highest offensive output that we\'ve seen, but they weren\'t without their share of good looks entirely. If we\'re looking for fun takeaways here, look no further than the fact that the Flyers\' power kill was well at work again, and the Flyers were able to tack on another shorthanded goal to their total for the season, this one care of Travis Konecny, once again. https://twitter.com/NBCSPhilly/status/1740942184516399486?s=20 The penalty kill was not a situation that was wholly kind to them across all of this game, of course. While they did put in a bit of good work while down a man -- besides scoring the shorthanded goal, they were able to limit the chances the Kraken were able to generate well. All told, they only allowed two shots on goal for the Kraken during their four minutes on the man-advantage, and just one scoring chance. That said, it ended up being a not hugely dangerous looking chance that got past them in the end, as a shot from the point deflected in off of Nick Seeler, and that was that. So it goes. It\'s Carter Hart time again After coming into last night\'s game in Vancouver in relief of Sam Ersson, Hart was given the start for this one, and despite some of the challenges of the circumstance, he posted strong overall results. This wasn\'t the busiest game for him, but he still had to come up with some big saves when called upon. All in all, he stopped 27 of the 29 shots he faced, and those two goals he did allow are hard to pin on him, with the first being that tough deflection we mentioned earlier, and the second coming in overtime when he was left without much support after his skaters were stranded on the ice for a shifting stretching to around a minute and a half. He was very good on the whole, but he can\'t do it all. He didn\'t get a great complete result in this one, as they fell just short of a win, but that shouldn\'t diminish the work that Hart did do in this one. His play was solid, undeniably, and he was a huge piece in the Flyers securing that loser point, after how the third period was trending for them. Vibe check If this game felt pretty sleepy for long spells, that\'s not just those of us on East Coast time projecting our own fatigue onto the team. For the first 40 minutes of play, there wasn\'t a whole lot doing, on either side. Heading into the third period, both teams were stuck at 13 shots apiece, and each had only barely broken one Expected Goal, and the pace in total was a bit lacking. It wasn\'t until the third period when things started to open up, and the rest advantage for Seattle really started to become a factor. The Kraken kept their legs under them well, while the Flyers were rapidly looking like they were losing steam. The pace picked up, and the Flyers more often found themselves hemmed into their own end trying to weather a surge (we saw this bear out in the numbers as well, as the Kraken took a 9-3 edge in 5-on-5 scoring chances in the third period). And credit to them, things could have gotten out of hand on them in those final frames, but the Flyers did well to mostly bend but not break. But by the time overtime had rolled around, it was clear that they had just run out of gas. It can be hard to feel good about a loser point, but the Flyers really gutted this one out, and with how unkind the schedule has been to them here, that does feel like a real accomplishment. So we\'ll take it, to be sure.