Philadelphia Flyers
The Broad Street Bullies won back-to-back Stanley Cups in 1974 and 1975 by intimidating the rest of the NHL into letting them through and Philadelphia has never let that identity go. These Philadelphia Flyers rivalry shirts are built for the fanbase that turned the Spectrum into the meanest building in the league and brought the energy with them to South Philly.
Anti-Penguins gear is the heaviest in the collection because the Battle of Pennsylvania matters more than any other rivalry in the state, with text or box designs, fully explicit or kept censored, in Flyers orange, black, and white. Anti-Devils designs cover the Metro Division grudge that runs straight through the Jersey Turnpike with anti-Rangers and anti-Islanders tees handling the old Patrick Division wars that defined Flyers hockey for decades.
Philadelphia Flyers fan gear for the Orange and Black. Wear it to the Wells Fargo Center down in South Philly, to tailgates in the sports complex parking lots, to bars from Fishtown to Manayunk, to watch parties anywhere Philly fans gather to talk trash about hockey.
Two Stanley Cups built on the principle that intimidation is a system. Bobby Clarke captaining the Bullies. Bernie Parent winning two Conn Smythes back-to-back. The Legion of Doom line of Lindros, Renberg, and LeClair. The orange and black that gives even people who don't watch hockey strong feelings. Flyers fans don't apologize for any of it. Go Flyers.