It means nothing now. Not without Kimmo Timonen in the lineup, not without Braydon Coburn or with rookie Ryan Parent playing more than 18 minutes on defense, not with Steve Downie playing anything resembling a key role.
The Penguins have been the best team in these Eastern Conference playoffs by a large margin, able to get a big goal any time they have needed one, able to poison you with your own adrenaline and desperation. They are hotter and they are healthier, or at least they were until Downie pummeled Petr Sykora with a cheap shot well after Sykora assisted on the third goal in Pittsburgh's 4-1 victory last night - a punctuation mark of their fate if ever there were one.
Downie's turnover led to that goal, the second time this series his presence has underlined how quickly a team's postseason confidence can evaporate into desperation. The rookie's insertion into the lineup was supposed to give the Flyers jump, not make them more jumpy. The last thing this team's depleted defense needs is the most skilled team in hockey coming at them in numbers.
But that's the description of this series, and the return of Coburn tomorrow will not alter that. That last night's game was even close entering the third period was a testament to the still beating heart of Mike Richards and Jeff Carter and Randy Jones and Mike Knuble.
Of the Flyers' 18 shots, Knuble and Carter split 10. Richards had 26 shifts, playing as if he were Alex Ovechkin, which in this series, maybe he is.
"I really liked the way Vinny [Prospal] and Danny [Briere], and Hartsy [Scott Hartnell] played tonight," Flyers coach John Stevens said, but Scott Hartnell was the only one of them who had a shot on goal. It's a reflection of Pittsburgh's depth as much as it is of any lack of desperation on their part. Even with the last change, the Flyers just aren't getting much room to operate this series.