Most teams don't have a chance.
The teams that have a shot are generally those that jell after January 1 and have a hot goaltender.
Flyers have jelled after January 1, do they have a hot goaltender?
Playoff scoring tends to bunched around a half dozen forwards, a couple of whom go apeshit and play above their talent, and a defenseman or two, the rest of the team plays hard and tries to slow down their opponent:
2019: St Louis (26 games): O'Reilly (23), Schwartz (20), Tarasenko (17), Perron (16), Bozak (13), Schenn (12), Pietrangelo (19), Parayko (12)
2019: Boston (24 games): Marchand (23), Pastrnak (19), Bergeron (17), Coyle (16), Krejci (16), DeBrusk (11), Johansson (11), Kuraly (11), Krug (18)
2018: Caps (24 games): Kuznetsov (32), Ovechkin (27), Backstrom (23), Oshie (21), Eller (18), Wilson (15), Carlsson (20)
2018: VGK (20 games): Smith (22), Marchessault (20), Karlsson (15), Neal (11), Tuch (10), Huala (9), Perron (9), Theodore (10)
2017: Pens (25 games): Malkin (28), Crosby (27), Kessel (23), Guentzel (21), Kunitz (11), Schultz (13)
2017: Nash (22 games): Forsberg (16), Arvidsson (13), Johansen (13), Sissons (12), Josi (14), Ellis (13), Subban (12), Ekholm (11)
2016: Pens (24 games): Kessel (22), Crosby (19), Malkin (18), Bonino (18), Hagelin (16), Hornqvist (13), Kunitz (12), Letang (15)
2016: San Jose (24 games): Couture (30), Pavelski (23), Thornton (21), Ward (13), Marleau (13), Donskoi (12), Hertel (11), Burns (24), Vlasic (12)
2015: Chicago (23 games): Kane (23), Toews (21), Hossa (17), Sharp (15), Richards (14), Shaw (12), Saad (11), Keith (21)
2015: TB (26 games): T Johnson (23), Kucherov (22), Killorn (18), Stamkos (18), Palat (16), Filppula (14), Hedman (14)
Flyers are building a team with a Nashville like defensive quartet and solid scoring depth.
To win a Cup, they'll need Hart to be hot and 2-3 forwards to play over their heads (like Briere used to do).
But they won't need great production out of their bottom 5 or 6 forwards.