PHILADELPHIA – Simon Gagne put his foot down. He wanted to play in Game 4, even with an injured toe.

Good call.

Gagne made a timely return to the lineup Friday night, scoring in overtime to help the Philadelphia Flyers hold off elimination by beating the Boston Bruins 5-4 in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference semifinals.

Gagne, the longest-tenured Flyer, played for the first time since breaking his right toe in Game 4 of Philadelphia’s opening series against New Jersey.

“It’s a good ending,” Gagne said. “I can’t ask for more to be able to come back early a little bit in the series.”

Game 5 will be Monday night at Boston. The Bruins can still advance to their first conference finals since 1992 with a victory.

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Matt Carle, who had four assists, fed Gagne for a nice redirect from the top of the crease for the winner. Gagne said he told Coach Peter Laviolette and the trainer to “give me a chance.”

“You couldn’t ask for more,” Gagne said.

The comeback trail is still a long one, but the Flyers at least have a shot at becoming the third team in NHL history to win a series after a 3-0 deficit.

Mark Recchi scored twice for the Bruins, including the tying goal with 31.5 seconds left in regulation that made it 4-4.

Chris Pronger, Danny Briere, Claude Giroux and Ville Leino scored for the Flyers.

Michael Ryder and Milan Lucic had Boston’s other goals.

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Gagne was expected to at least miss this round after being injured while blocking a shot. He was walking around the Flyers’ practice facility this week and was hopeful he could start skating this weekend.

“I tried to challenge him,” Bruins goalie Tuukka Rask said. “I was expecting that kind of pass, but it’s tough to recover with your pads. I tried to get my glove under it.”

The Flyers wasted a 3-1 lead and were deflated when Recchi tied it.

Recchi burned his former team when he scored against Brian Boucher off a faceoff in Philadelphia’s end. The sounds of “Booooosh” that echoed after every late save turned to “boooo” after the Flyers were headed to overtime.

It was Recchi’s sixth goal of the postseason.

The Flyers appeared to have forced Game 5 minutes earlier. Leino skated across the slot and tipped in Pronger’s shot with 5:40 left in regulation for a 4-3 lead.

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As they have in all but one game, the Bruins scored first. Recchi found the net high off a rebound over a sprawled Boucher to give Boston yet another early boost.

It looked as though that goal would be enough to give the Bruins the lead heading into the second period, but Briere scored on a slap shot from the circle that went through Rask’s legs to tie it.

Gagne’s return paid earlier dividends when he won a faceoff early in the second. The puck found its way to Pronger, who scored his fourth goal of the playoffs on a blast from the point that made it 2-1.

The Flyers took their first two-goal lead of the series four minutes later on an opportune kick. Scott Hartnell kicked the puck in the crease to Giroux.

That still wasn’t enough to finish the Bruins.

The strangest goal of the game came midway through the second period. Ryder shattered his stick on a shot that went wide of the net, bounced off the boards and somehow found its way past Boucher. Boucher dropped to his knees for the quick cover, but he either let it knock off his skate, or his pad was punched by Vladimir Sobotka of Boston to allow the puck to scoot by.

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Either way, the Bruins were suddenly back in the game.

The Bruins erased the deficit in the third when Lucic redirected the puck for a power-play goal that made it 3-3.

Gagne changed all that with his goal.

“We were all pushing him to play and he wanted to play pretty bad, too,” Giroux said. “When he scored that, everybody was so happy.”

 

NOTES: Two former Philadelphia stars, Keith Primeau and John LeClair, were at the game and got huge ovations. The Flyers improved to 25-33 in the playoffs when facing elimination. The Bruins are 5-0 at home in the postseason.

 


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