WINNIPEG, Manitoba _ All you need to know about the state of the Flyers these days is that six of their 12 forwards in Sunday's lineup weren't with the team at the start of the season.
Predictably, their injury-ravaged lineup fell short.
Far short.
Winnipeg pulled away from a 2-1 lead with four second-period goals in a little over four minutes en route to a 7-3 win over the Flyers at Bell MTS Place.
The Flyers faced just a 2-1 deficit when rookie right winger Joel Farabee was called for a five-minute interference penalty and given a game misconduct midway through the second period.
The Jets scored twice in the ensuing power play and quickly added two more goals after the penalty ended, building a 6-1 lead.
The Flyers finished 0-3 on the road trip and were outscored by a combined 14-5 by Colorado, Minnesota, and Winnipeg. They have lost three straight and four of their last five games.
Brian Elliott, who was not given much support, allowed six goals on 17 shots and was replaced by Carter Hart at the start of the final period.
Farabee's major penalty on Mathieu Perreault � the veteran right winger had to be helped off the ice � will be reviewed by the league and he could face disciplinary action.
The Flyers' penalty kill has been superb for most of the season, but not on the Jets' five-minute power play.
Blake Wheeler (blast past a screened Elliott) and Mark Scheifele (one-timer from the slot) scored to make it 4-1. Logan Shaw (left-circle) and Patrik Laine then scored 16 seconds apart to make it 6-1. Laine's goal was a pass a that deflected off Shayne Gostisbehere and into the net.
That gave the Jets four goals in a 4:17 span.
Wheeler and Scheifele each finished with a goal and two assists foer the Jets, who were coming off a 5-2 loss Thursday to woeful Detroit.
The Flyers, playing 22 hours after a loss in Minnesota, had cut it to 2-1 with 15:45 left in the second as Matt Niskanen scored on a rebound, the Flyers' first power-play goal in the last seven games. The Flyers then started applying pressure on Connor Hellebuyck, but Farabee's penalty took away their momentum.
The Flyers used six forwards who didn't start the season with the club, including five who began the year with the Phantoms: Farabee, Morgan Frost, Nic Aube-Kubel, David Kase and Misha Vorobyev.
In addition, Carsen Twarynski, who has spent a large part of the season with the Phantoms, and Chris Stewart, a training-camp invitee, were in Sunday's lineup.
That left just six of the 12 forwards who played in the opener in Prague: Claude Giroux, Sean Couturier, Jake Voracek, Kevin Hayes, James van Riemsdyk and Twarynski.
Van Riemsdyk and Gostisbehere scored their fourth goals in the last eight games, and Hayes (two assists, six shots) had a strong game against his former team.
Other than that, it was difficult to find any positives.