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BOX SCORE
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Eric Lindros and Keith Primeau showed Thursday night why the Philadelphia Flyers' new "Twin Towers" could be big trouble.
| ![Eric Lindros, Mike Vernon](/media/nhl/2000/0127/photo/a_lindros.jpg) | Philadelphia's Eric Lindros, right, beats Florida goalie Mike Vernon for his 18th goal. |
Primeau marked his return to the ice with a fight, and Lindros
made a stirring comeback from a concussion with a goal, some
crushing hits and a fight of his own as the Flyers beat the Florida
Panthers 4-2.
"The fans saw a game that was toe-to-toe, one of the best games
of the year," Flyers goaltender John Vanbiesbrouck said.
No one expected Lindros to fight in his first game back after
his third concussion in 22 months, but he emerged with nothing more
than a scratch on his forehead.
"I wasn't into fighting," said Lindros, who scored his 18th
goal. "I wasn't going to initiate anything or get involved early.
But you do what you've got to do to get by. That's fine. You just
tie up arms and wait for your chance."
Primeau, playing his first game for Philadelphia and his first
in nine months after a contract dispute with Carolina, set the
physical tone early with a fight against Todd Simpson in the second
period. He also dominated on faceoffs.
With Lindros at 6-foot-4 and Primeau at 6-5, the Flyers have
unprecedented size at center on their top two lines.
"I don't think this hockey club can play any different,"
Primeau said. "We're a big, strong, physical team."
Pavel Bure scored his NHL-leading 35th goal for the Panthers,
beating Vanbiesbrouck on a breakaway to make it 1-0 in the first
period. The Flyers ended an 0-3-2 slide, including 0-2-2 with
Lindros out.
Lindros scored his first goal since Jan. 2 with 8:38 left in the
first. He slammed in a loose puck in the crease on a pass in front
from longtime linemate John LeClair. It gave the Flyers a 2-1 lead.
"I think it's great that Eric came out banging, and everyone
else followed," said Mark Recchi, who scored his 19th goal.
Lindros then slammed Florida's Robert Svehla into the boards
near the Panthers' bench with two minutes left and the Flyers leading 3-1. Lindros pummeled Simpson in a fight as a teammate headed off Paul Laus, who tried to double-team the Flyers captain.
This came several minutes after an all-out melee resulted from Sandy McCarthy and Peter Worrell going after each other several times.
"Philly has some big guys," Worrell said. "They get away with
some stuff that maybe they shouldn't, and we kind of got fed up with it."
But it was the Flyers who were angry about two noncalls that
resulted in injuries for two of their players. Defenseman Adam Burt
left in the first period with a concussion after he was blasted in
the head by Simpson. Burt retaliated with an elbow, but that was the only penalty called.
The Flyers said Friday that Burt's concussion will keep him out of the lineup for an indefinite period of time.
Later, Jody Hull went down with a left knee injury on a play that the
Flyers thought should have drawn a penalty. On Friday the team learned that Hull will miss 2-4 weeks with a sprained ligament.
"I think everyone saw what happened out there," Lindros said.
Primeau, acquired from Carolina for Rod Brind'Amour on Sunday, skated out to loud cheers 40 seconds into the game. They quickly
turned to boos when a Flyers rush led by Primeau resulted in Bure's breakaway goal.
"He's just going to get better," Lindros said of his new
teammate. "He had a lot of emotion tonight. His hands are going to
come with time. He hasn't played in eight, nine months."
Primeau and Simpson dropped their gloves quickly after some
contact near the Florida bench early in the second. The sellout
crowd of 19,781 roared with approval.
"I sat on the bench at times and wondered if it was all
worthwhile," said Primeau, winded and wobbly legged after the game. "As the game went on, I felt better."
McCarthy and Worrell engaged in a lengthy bout in the second,
then targeted each other with a series of hits in the third that
led to an all-out melee with 5:09 left. Florida's Lance Pitlick got
a double-minor, and Philadelphia's Dan McGillis got two minutes.
"We've got to show that we can play a physical game as well,
and that we're not going to sit around and let people run us,"
Simpson said.
Panthers coach Terry Murray, infamous for saying the Flyers'
loss to Detroit in the Stanley Cup finals in 1997 was a "choking
situation," was impressed with his former team's emotion.
"Lindros is rested and full of energy, and you've got Primeau
with lots of adrenaline and emotion," Murray said. "It carries
over to the whole team."
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ALSO SEE
NHL Scoreboard
Florida Clubhouse
Philadelphia Clubhouse
Lindros returns for Primeau's Philly debut
Primeau tries to get up to speed at first Flyers practice
NHL East: Clarke knows both sides
Morganti: Masked men are marked men
RECAPS
Phoenix 4 Carolina 2
Montreal 0 Boston 0
Toronto 4 NY Rangers 3
Philadelphia 4 Florida 2
Pittsburgh 4 Atlanta 1
Los Angeles 6 Nashville 2
Chicago 6 Colorado 4
AUDIO/VIDEO
![video](/media/nhl/2000/0127/photo/lindros2.jpg)
Eric Lindros does not back down from Todd Simpson.
avi: 680 k
RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1
Ray Whitney scorches the net for the Panthers.
avi: 700 k
RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1
Eric Lindros beats Mike Vernon for the goal.
avi: 600 k
RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1
Primeau shakes off some rust on Todd Simpson's head.
avi: 750 k
RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1
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