A three-goal deficit, 34.2 seconds left, one backhand, one overtime snap—Clayton Keller flipped the script and the standings in a single breathless sequence.
The Utah Mammoth were dead in the water—down 4-1 midway through the second period, out-shot, out-chanced, and staring at a seventh straight game without a regulation win for the opposition. Then Clayton Keller happened.
First, the 27-year-old winger ripped a solo backhand past Samuel Ersson with 34.2 seconds left to force overtime. Ninety-one seconds into the extra frame, he buried a one-time rocket off Dylan Guenther’s feed to complete the 5-4 comeback and stretch Utah’s win streak to four.
How the Collapse Unfolded
Philadelphia sprinted out of the tunnel. Cam York wired a one-timer 29 seconds in, Christian Dvorak doubled the margin at 4:36, and Bobby Brink’s power-play dagger 58 seconds into the second period made it 3-0.
JJ Peterka and Lawson Crouse answered 36 seconds apart to tug Utah within one, but Dvorak’s second—another power-play strike at 10:06—restored the two-goal cushion and seemed to slam the door.
It stayed 4-2 until Barrett Hayton wired a man-advantage wrist shot with 7:13 remaining, setting the stage for Keller’s late magic.
Why It Matters
- Playoff odds swing: The victory vaults Utah within two points of third place in the Central with three games in hand on Nashville.
- Flyers free-fall: Philadelphia has lost seven of eight, sliding six points out of the final wild-card berth in the East.
- Keller’s Hart case: The winger now paces the Mammoth with 28 goals and 12 game-winning points; only Nathan MacKinnon has more clutch tallies league-wide.
Inside the Numbers
Keller’s pair gives him six goals in his last four outings. His OT winner was Utah’s league-leading ninth of the season, a microcosm of a roster built for track meets.
At the other end, Karel Vejmelka stopped 25 of 29, but the real story was Utah’s refusal to fold after surrendering two power-play goals—something they’d done only once before in franchise history.
What’s Next
The Mammoth ride momentum into Nashville on Saturday, while the Flyers limp into Colorado Friday night still searching for a lineup that can protect a lead.
Utah’s next three games come against clubs currently outside the playoff picture; cash in, and they could leapfrog St. Louis before the All-Star break. Philadelphia, meanwhile, faces a gauntlet of Metro heavyweights—Carolina, the Rangers, and Washington—over the same span.
One furious 151-second sequence Wednesday didn’t just flip a scoreboard; it tilted the trajectory of two franchises heading in opposite directions.
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