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Michkov, Zegras connect for must-see goal in Flyers preseason

As soon as Trevor Zegras was traded to the Philadelphia Flyers we all patiently waited to get extremely hyped and extremely excited at the thought of him linking up with Matvei Michkov. As we asked the big and massive question regarding whether or not the former Anaheim Duck would return to his previous form, we dreamt of Michkov finally having someone on the Flyers that can come even close to his individual skill level.

Well, the two of them have been partnered up for periods in the preseason and on Saturday evening, as the Boston Bruins visited Philadelphia for some exhibition action, Zegras and Michkov connected on a goal that is easy to describe as “Oh my God, that was so sick. Oh my God.”


🚨 ANOTHER PPG! 🚨

Welcome to Philly, Trevor Zegras. 👊#BOSvsPHI | #LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/sYoQvGLPF0

— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) September 27, 2025

Zegras enters the zone cleanly on this power-play opportunity and as he draws three of the four Boston defenders to him, swiftly lays it off to Michkov just on the edge of the blue line along the boards. The 20-year-old Russian sees a gap open up as two of those Bruins keep follow Zegras into their own zone and drives to the slot. The Bruins defenders (those silly ones who decided to go skate with Zegras to the boards), quickly realize their mistake and both try to cover the net for Michkov, sprawling out to block his shooting lane. But, oh silly them. That leaves Zegras as open as anyone has ever been on a Flyers power play in the last five years and Michkov is able to make a crisp pass right to tape and Zegras was able to rocket it for his first ever (preseason) goal as a member of the Philadelphia Flyers.

It’s just beautiful. Something that we all thought of happening as soon as the Flyers acquired the 24-year-old center. Even if they wouldn’t be playing together on the same line at 5-on-5, at the very least they would eat up a whole lot of minutes on the man advantage and devour penalty-kill units like they were nothing.

While it is preseason and the goal doesn’t truly matter, we can still enjoy some evidence that they do, in fact, work well together and think on the same level. Or, Michkov is just so talented that just about anyone can score a pretty sick power-play goal off of his stick and as he progresses more to an even greater scoring threat, he’ll neatly be handing out primary assists for years to come.

The preseason matchup against the Bruins overall, did not go the Flyers way. After Travis Sanheim opened the scoring in the first period on his own power-play goal (when was the last time the Flyers had two power-play goals in the same game?), the Bruins came charging back and ended up leading 2-1 early in the second period.

A goal from Nikita Grebekin, which was assisted by both Michkov and Zegras too, would be followed by this lovely goal we spilled some ink on. The Flyers would lead the game 3-2 for just a couple more minutes until someone named Dalton Bancroft would score his second goal of the game to tie it and Jeffrey Viel would score the game-winning tally in the third period as the Flyers were unable to get on the board in the final frame.

Flyers head coach Rick Tocchet is still in search for the left winger to complement the Zegras and Michkov pairing — and tried multiple Saturday night — but so far, this connection is working just as perfectly as we could have dreamed of.



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Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/michkov-zegras-connect-for-must-see-goal-in-flyers-preseason/
 
Flyers’ 3 Stars of the Week: Michkov, Zegras lead the team

It’s the first week of the Philadelphia Flyers’ season (sort of)! We now have four preseason games behind us and just three in front of us, and while it is great to actually see this team on our various screens again, it was overall a somewhat miserable week for our Flyers.

A record of 1-3-0 in these exhibition games does not mean anything with the rotating rosters, but there is just a darker cloud over the team than normal. The prospects we were all extremely excited to watch have been somewhat underwhelming and the Flyers might just limp into the season where the games actually start to matter.

But, there were bright spots. And that’s what we’re here to focus on. Let’s look at the three stars of the week.

3. Sean Couturier​


1 A, 3 SOG, 69.35 CF% at 5v5, Having a coach that doesn’t hate him, in 2 GP

In his first week of playing hockey games without John Tortorella breathing down his neck in a few years, Couturier had glimpses of his old self. There might not be another Selke Trophy in his future, but he was certainly able to control play and provide an immense amount of support to his teammates. In classic Couturier fashion, the Flyers were the better team when he was on the ice in just about every category you can think of.

Add that level of control to being able to get on the scoresheet with a power-play assist on Travis Sanheim’s goal against the Boston Bruins. A beautiful display of maybe something to come?


TRAVIS SANHEIM GETS THE FIRST PECO POWERPLAY GOAL OF THE YOGI/TOCC ERA! BEAUTIFUL PASSING FROM COOTS AND DVORAK. 1-0!#LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/vFNjOfj6Vm

— Flyers Clips (@Flyers_Clips) September 27, 2025

This coming right after Couturier shot a very blatant and honest jab at Tortorella and the past coaching staff’s way of running a power play is even sweeter. His mention of the team being “scared to make plays” or else they would be pulled from the power play is certainly something to keep in mind when something like this happens and just how free-flowing it looked. Hopefully it translates into games that matter.

2. Trevor Zegras​


1 G, 1 A, 6 SOG, Looking really cool on a new team, in 2 GP

Trevor Zegras was actually on the ice playing hockey games for the good team that wears orange and black. In two appearances for the Flyers this preseason, the new center earned an assist, had six shots on goal, and was able to be the receipient of a very, very cool pass from Matvei Michkov (and he was able to actually put the puck into a wide open net).


Matvei Michkov and Trevor Zegras

Your new dynamic duo pic.twitter.com/cUUGBoHk30

— Nasty Knuckles (@NastyKnuckles) September 27, 2025

Beyond the goal, Zegras also was able to earn an assist on Nikita Grebenkin’s first goal in a Flyers sweater in that same game against the Bruins on Saturday, potentially being just one of those players that can raise a younger player to his level or just utilize a dude who loves to crash the net. Zegras also managed to stay afloat and above the 50 percent threshold in most underlying statistics — while those don’t really matter at all in the preseason, it is at least nice to see something the nerds can praise him for.

It was so important for Zegras to have a good week to start his career in Philadelphia and already with a multi-point performance and being able to show off some slick skill, earns him the silver medal from us.

1. Matvei Michkov​


1 G, 2 A, 6 SOG in 2 GP

Yeah, duh. We have a feeling that this top spot will be Michkov’s a lot throughout this upcoming Flyers season, but here he is for the first week. The 20-year-old winger was a demon to start his preseason. He scored a very classic Michkov goal — the entire play running through him and then being able to cash-in after driving to the net just ever so slightly after some quick passing — against the Islanders to open the preseason, and then earned two assist against the Bruins including the perfect linking-up with his new teammate Zegras.

It’s one thing to currently lead the entire team in points in the preseason, but it’s another to be the player that so many are depending on to reach a new level while scoring a whole lot. Michkov is just that player and this past week he has been dominant — a player that an entire team’s defense can and probably has to focus on.

Now we’re just left hoping that this scoring and dominance can continue into the season, so that we can avoid ever thinking about a sophomore slump whatsoever.




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Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/flyers-3-stars-of-the-week-michkov-zegras-lead-the-team/
 
Despite hiccup, Rodrigo Abols still leads pack of Flyers roster bubble forwards

After what’s been, on the whole, a very successful preseason for Rodrigo Abols, last night’s matchup saw him hit a bump in the road, in his fourth start in seven days.

Something in the configuration of his line — having him moved over to the wing to play alongside Jacob Gaucher and Garnet Hathaway, at least to start — wasn’t really working last night, and it was evident pretty much from the jump, with one particularly rough shift which saw them hemmed in and getting cycled on, looking helpless while no one seemed to be able to step up to make a play to break them out of the zone. The numbers bear out similarly as well, with the line’s impacts at 5-on-5 averaged out to a meager 12.83 CF% and somehow impossibly low feeling 1.32 xGF%.

This game, all told, was the biggest test of that old “bend, but don’t break” approach for Abols and his linemates, and perhaps the silver lining here is that they essentially managed to pull it off — perfect but for the shift late in the third period during which Abols whiffed on a play on the puck which might have broken up the Bruins’ breakout attempt, but even worse, that routine breakout ended up in the back of the Flyers’ net after Helge Grans stumbled in an attempt to defend that building rush, and never was able to recover, and found himself again outpaced and outmuscled (in a play remarkably reminiscent of one which befell him in Thursday’s game as well) while the Bruins skater walked right in for a chance on goal. On the whole, it was a challenging game for Abols, but still one in which — despite what the numbers might suggest — he didn’t look outright poor to the eye, but rather just somewhat unremarkable.

It’s the type of game which, in isolation, one might imagine would hurt a bubble player’s case for a final roster spot with the NHL squad, but with how much momentum he brought into that game, this will likely serve as little more than a blip on Abols’s resume. That is, the gap that he’s built up between himself and the other players pushing for the same job might not be so large as it was at this time at the end of last week, before this last game, but the work he did to establish a baseline for himself should be enough to keep his stock steady through one not-so-great showing. Because in that Thursday game, most critically of all, that even what fatigue was setting in in a big way, he was able to keep up a reasonably solid level of impact.

“I think you can feel it today, I’m not gonna lie,” he said after the game, “you can feel it was the third game in five nights. But I think that’s where I gotta learn to pick my spots and kinda put myself in good positions, I think, not to cheat for offense, not get stuck out there, but I think that I managed that pretty well.”

Performance in a more sloppy than anything team effort on Saturday notwithstanding, Abols has largely been able to stick to that approach. What he’s shown over the course of the majority of this preseason is a promise of a game which can be more even, more sustainable, and bringing with that a promise of longer term success. That is, maybe there’s something to a commitment to playing one’s own game as he has, a game that is such that there’s no need to empty the tank on each and every shift in a scramble to make an impression — his game at the energy level which it usually sits at will be enough to speak for itself. And, in turn, perhaps this speaks as well to the maturity in his game — it’s not just that he’s been around the block here and knows the tricks and what goes into being a good pro, the subtle plays to make and the commitment to playing the right way which so quickly endears him to coaches, but also how to approach a rigorous preseason schedule, how to manage his energy so as not to leave him completely depleted by the time opening night comes around, and at risk of being a quick demotion because he can’t deliver to the same level that he did during these exhibition games. His game hasn’t been perfect, but it’s also avoided slipping into the myopic approach which feels all too common in these training camp battle. As they say, it’s a marathon, not a sprint, and Abols seems to know this well.

It’s not as though he’s running away with this race, and a good game from Nikita Grebenkin on Saturday did a good bit of heavy lifting to help close the gap, but Abols has built up a nice bit of insulation for himself through his strong first three games of the preseason, along with the fact that even in his lowest game to date, he kept his game to the level of something unremarkable, rather than something catastrophic — something a number of similar bubble players cannot say themselves.

With three games left on the schedule before the close of the preseason, there’s ample room for things to change, and players’ standings to shift. But, to date, Abols has been steadfast in his commitment to playing a well-managed and dependable game, and if he’s able to keep that up for however many more games he is dispatched for, regardless of what happens elsewhere in the lineup, this could well be enough to keep him at the top of the bubble pecking order, and carry him into a spot on the opening night roster in the end.

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Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...-leads-pack-of-flyers-roster-bubble-forwards/
 
Mason McTavish hates that Trevor Zegras was traded to Flyers

As soon as Trevor Zegras was traded to the Philadelphia Flyers, everyone got extremely excited about his reunions with Jamie Drysdale and Cam York. Drysdale, a former teammate on the Ducks, and York, who was with the centerman during his time on the U.S. National Team Development Program, would be getting to pal around with their goofy forward once more and all is right in the world.

But we often don’t think about the other side and the teammates who are now losing a clearly positive player to have in the locker room. Well, of course we don’t as fans of the team acquiring the player. But, in his first media availability since signing his substantial six-year contract with the Anaheim Ducks, Mason McTavish made it clear that he hates the fact that Zegras is no longer going to be his teammate.

After answering a couple milquetoast questions about how the contract negotiation process was and how he spent his summer away from the team, the 22-year-old center gave his thoughts on the departure.


McTavish on Zegras trade: “That sucked. Brutal. I pretty much spent every day with him. He's happy there, which is good. I think it's a good thing for him, good fit. No, it's tough seeing your best friend go away.”@SportingTrib | #FlyTogether pic.twitter.com/dQbewZJWQe

— Zach Cavanagh (@ZachCav) September 29, 2025

“Yeah, you know, it sucked. Brutal,” McTavish said when asked what it feels like not being on a team with Zegras. “I mean, I pretty much spent every day with him. You know, he’s happy there which is good, I think it’s a good thing for him and it’s a good fit. But yeah, it’s tough seeing your best friend kind of go away but at least he knows a couple guys there, Jamie obviously, so yeah it’ll be good to see them on the road.”

That’s about as honest an answer you’ll get for just how much a player hated that his general manager decided to trade someone that was well-liked among his teammates. Well wishes of course on a personal level, but to just be as honest as possible and straight forward in a way that you say trading him “sucked” is something you don’t see too often.

But McTavish clearly feels a kinship with Zegras and even his other former teammate in Drysdale. Later on, after saying just how much he didn’t want to see another person from his locker room traded to Philadelphia, McTavish mentioned that he spoke with both of his former teammates during his lengthy contract negotiation and they told him just how long it would take and what exactly to expect when trying to sort out a new contract coming out of their entry-level contract with this Ducks front office.

Of course, both Zegras and Drysdale experienced the same thing with Ducks general manager Pat Verbeek as restricted free agents needing a new deal. A lack of communication for months and months and then just getting a deal done days before the regular season started. Back in 2023, with both the current Flyers needing new contracts, they didn’t put pen to paper until the early days of October. And Verbeek just went ahead and went through the same negotiation strategy with McTavish, another young and promising player that might now have their relationship with management slightly soured.

And, well, now those two other players that had to go through that same terrible process are playing for the Philadelphia Flyers.

Are we saying that the same thing will happen here? We’re not not saying it.



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Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/mason-mctavish-hates-that-trevor-zegras-was-traded-to-flyers/
 
Tyson Foerster impresses Rick Tocchet: ‘He’s a really good hockey player’

Philadelphia Flyers head coach Rick Tocchet said he was “excited” to see Tyson Foerster make his preseason debut against the Boston Bruins Monday night. Tocchet’s excitement was warranted, and he wasn’t left disappointed after a strong performance from the 23-year-old.

After starting training camp wearing a non-contact jersey as he recovered from an offseason elbow procedure, Foerster was cleared for full contact last Tuesday, but was held out of the Flyers’ three ensuing preseason games. He finally drew into the lineup at TD Garden, though, and made quite an impression on the Flyers’ new bench boss.

“He’s a really good hockey player,” Tocchet told media postgame. “There’s just people that are just good hockey players. Knocks pucks down, he’s strong on the puck. He makes good puck decisions. He’s a really good hockey player.”

It didn’t take Foerster long to get on the scoresheet. In the middle frame, he set up Noah Cates with a quick feed in the low slot after some strong work on the forecheck.

Foerster got the play started by gaining the red line and firing the puck deep into the Boston zone. Some good hustle by Bobby Brink forced Jeremy Swayman to attempt an ill-advised pass and turn the puck over behind the net. Foerster then gathered the loose change, danced around Bruins defenseman Billy Sweezey, and connected with Cates for the score. Just textbook forechecking.

🚨 1-0! 🚨

The Foerster-Cates-Brink line picks up right where it left off. 🔥#PHIvsBOS | https://t.co/gztjKygSxs pic.twitter.com/nZkWloFMHn

— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) September 30, 2025

It wasn’t just Foerster who caught Tocchet’s attention, though. It was his entire line.

“There’s a lot of chemistry. You can tell the way they play. They’re connected. When you’re connected as a group, as a line, they kind of feed off each other, like that goal,” said Tocchet.

The line of Foerster, Cates, and Brink was the Flyers’ best trio of forwards last season. Most of the Flyers’ forward lines under John Tortorella were mixed and matched throughout the season, but the Foerster line largely remained intact thanks to its consistently reliable two-way play.

Per Natural Stat Trick, in 570 minutes of 5-on-5 ice time together, the Foerster line produced 30 goals and thrived at driving play, logging a 50.05 Corsi For percentage and 56.60 Goals For percentage, all despite only starting 37.62 of its shifts in the offensive zone.

Tocchet’s early approval of Foerster should come as no surprise. After Foerster drew high praise from the likes of Sidney Crosby, who played under Tocchet during the Pittsburgh Penguins’ run to back-to-back Stanley Cups in 2016 and 2017, the new Flyers bench boss came into the preseason with lofty expectations for Foerster.

It’s only one preseason game, but it’s clear Tocchet has already developed a soft spot for one of the Flyers’ top goal scorers.

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Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...rick-tocchet-hes-a-really-good-hockey-player/
 
2025-26 Metropolitan Division Preview: Columbus Blue Jackets are trying to surprise

We’re continuing our glance around the Metropolitan Division and seeing which teams really improved over the offseason (and who didn’t). Next up, it’s the Columbus Blue Jackets who were an incredible story as they approached to making the playoffs last season but could end up even in the same realm as the Philadelphia Flyers after all 82 games are done.

Their offseason, in one sentence​


Added some decent depth, but didn’t do enough to transform themselves from a bubble team into an actual contender.

Blue Jackets’ biggest addition​


The Jackets sent Gavin Brindley, a 2025 3rd round pick (#77), and a 2027 2nd round pick to the Avalanche in order to acquire veteran center Charlie Coyle in late June. The 33-year-old was the ultimate ironman, with 35 points in 83 games split between the Avalanche and the Bruins, although he was much better once he arrived in Colorado. Coyle will probably slot in on the third line behind Sean Monahan and Adam Fantilli, giving the Blue Jackets a solid trio of dependable play down the middle.

With Coyle, the Jackets seem to be looking to try and assemble some depth in support of Fantilli’s development into, what they hope will be, their future number one center. Coyle will look to provide decent production around the half a point per-game mark while mentoring the aforementioned Fantilli, as well as Cole Sillinger, with his 13 years of NHL experience providing a steadying presence.

Blue Jackets’ biggest loss​


Columbus didn’t lose any major pieces to their lineup, but old friend James van Riemsdyk did sign with Detroit after putting up a decent line of 16 goals, 20 assists and 36 points while playing 71 games with the Blue Jackets. Some depth scoring will be lost due to his departure, but they seem to have sufficiently replaced whatever may be lost. This wasn’t prime JVR, and with a slew of young wingers circling around looking for an opening, it may just create an opportunity for someone to stake a claim to a top-9 spot.

Other stuff they did​


Columbus also added Isac Lundestrom in free agency, with the defensively-sound centerman coming over from Anaheim to provide even more forward depth, perhaps even filling the hole left by the departure of Sean Kuraly. Miles Wood also joins from Colorado to add some speed and depth down the wing.

The most significant pieces of business that the Jackets did was in house, they resigned Dmitiri Voronkov to a two-year, 4,175 million dollars a year deal, Dante Fabbro to a four-year, at 4,125 million annually, and most crucially locked up Ivan Provorov to a seven-year, 8.5 million dollars a year contract that will keep him in the navy blue until he is 35. They also made a trade with the Flyers to acquire Ivan Fedotov, who was immediately shuttled down to the AHL soon after. It’s a lot of the same core, with only a few alterations around the edges.

Are they better or worse right now than when they started the offseason?​


The Jackets are probably a bit better than they were when the season ended, by dint of the Coyle acquisition and some internal development that will be expected to come from some of their younger forwards. They also didn’t lose any specific pieces that would result in a massive difference to their roster, and any changes that did happen, they seem to have filled the holes reasonably well. It’s a slight improvement, but it is an improvement nonetheless. The real problem is that, besides the Fedotov reclaimation project, they didn’t do anything to improve their goaltending, and that was the real area of need.

The long-term outlook​


The Blue Jackets are in a strange place. They missed the playoffs by two points last season, but it came in the context of a Metropolitan division where the Rangers underperformed, and the other teams in the division were largely mediocre at best. The playoff format makes it so that unless they can crack the top three of Washington, Carolina, and New Jersey, the Jackets will still have to measure up against Atlantic division competition that, up until this point, has proven to be better.

And Columbus just didn’t level up their roster to the point where they should be expected to improve on their 89 point performance drastically. Now, they will look for jumps from Adam Fantilli and Kent Johnson in order to fuel their offense, but with Fantilli scoring 30 goals and Johnson having 57 points in 67 games last year, there may not be room for another massive jump from each. A breakout season from Kirill Marchenko was what really propelled them into contention, and it’ll be interesting to see if he can repeat it. Their defensive corps are always interesting with the dynamic Zach Werenski leading the way. Werenski is a workhorse, and with 82 points in 81 games last season he led the way points-wise too.

But it all falls apart between the pipes, the Blue Jackets impressively did all of this while getting a .892 save percentage and a 3.18 goals against average from their starting goalie Elvis Merzlinkins, and as much as you try to improve the forward depth, those numbers are going to have to be better in order for the team to take a real step forward. Jet Greaves had some great numbers in 11 games last year, so maybe he can take on a bit more responsibility and find his rhythm, but at the moment the situation in net caps whatever potential the Jackets think they may have. Sound familiar?

Columbus will have a chance to once again sneak into a wild card spot, or maybe even push for the final division spot, but once again, it will be hard to pick them to actually win a series or push to become a serious contender with the deficiencies they currently still have.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...columbus-blue-jackets-are-trying-to-surprise/
 
Oliver Bonk could still earn spot on Flyers’ blue line once healthy

Oliver Bonk had high hopes this training camp. He was going to dazzle during Rookie Camp and the two games against the prospects of the New York Rangers, then he’d be solid throughout the Flyers training camp. He would hope to survive the cuts and eventually end up as one of the six defensemen Philadelphia would carry to start the season.

However, Bonk got hurt early in Rookie Camp, reportedly an upper body injury he couldn’t quite shake. Two weeks ago he had imaging done to see what the problem was. Meanwhile Danny Briere described it as something that “just popped up on him.” And on Sept. 18 he was listed as being day-to-day with the upper body injury.

Injury update: Defenseman Oliver Bonk is day-to-day with an upper body injury.

— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) September 18, 2025

Now, with just two games left in the exhibition schedule, and no sign of Bonk being anywhere near ready for practice or game action, it appears he missed a golden opportunity to become one of the blueliners penciled in for the Flyers third pairing. However, when you look at just how ordinary to underwhelming some of the defensemen still vying for the fifth, sixth, and seventh positions have been, one could argue Bonk still has a puncher’s chance. In fact, he might be in the running simply by having not played.

That’s not to say Bonk will hit the ground running and establish himself as an outstanding rookie defenseman immediately. Yet, the average to rather uninspiring play from some of the blueliners not in the top two pairs has Bonk with a chance. Bonk might end up with the Flyers as soon as he’s physically ready to play. Most likely he’ll spend a few weeks in Lehigh Valley to get himself into game shape and work some of the rust off. Should he get the nod, it’s probably safe to say that Bonk is a cut the group of mediocre defensemen who were still with the club after five exhibition games.

Helge Grans had a great chance to make the club, particularly with Bonk and Rasmus Ristolainen both dealing with injuries. Yet some mind-numbing defensive miscues (and a very untimely fall) had the Flyers place him on waivers on Monday and cut him on Tuesday. Grans was given time to show his wares, but those wares wore thin on the Flyers coaching staff and management. He’ll now have a chance to hone his game in the American Hockey League. So we know Bonk is probably ahead of Grans on the depth chart.

On Monday night in Boston, it seemed like an audition for six defensemen for those final precious openings: Dennis Gilbert, Noah Juulsen, Egor Zamula, Emil Andrae, Adam Ginning, and Hunter McDonald. Gilbert has been better than Juulsen most of the camp, but considering Juulsen’s biggest highlights were two hits (one which was a kneeing penalty), it’s not saying a lot. However, Rick Tocchet saw it differently, praising Juulsen and Ginning for their play against the Bruins. Put head-to-head it seems the Flyers would opt for Bonk over Juulsen any day of the week given his ability, age, and potential. And the same could be said for Bonk regarding Dennis Gilbert also. Gilbert hasn’t been bad, and has looked decent at times, yet he’s not going to impede the development or readiness of Bonk if and when he’s good to go.

Tuesday afternoon the Flyers reduced their training camp by 10 players, with McDonald, Andrae, Ty Murchison and Grans assigned to Lehigh Valley. So that leaves Juulsen, Gilbert, Zamula and Adam Ginning still vying for two or three positions. Aside from Zamula and the two other free agents the Flyers signed this summer, Adam Ginning is still alive and well with the Flyers roster. Ginning took a hard hit on the numbers against Boston on Monday night but shook it off and had a good game (22:58 with four blocked shots, two hits, a takeaway and a giveaway). Again, one has to ask themselves if Bonk would be a better option than Ginning. Most would probably take Bonk over Ginning as he seems to have a better skill set.

Rick Tocchet didn’t mince words earlier in camp when he was asked specifically about Gilbert’s play. Tocchet seemed to put Gilbert in a quartet of defensemen he said he wasn’t overly impressed with. “I would put him in the pack with about four guys, you know, vying for the — you know, nobody’s really kind of stood out to me yet,” Tocchet said. “I mean, we need one of those guys to play a good game for us and they’re all kind of in that area. He’s in that mix but I’d like to see a little bit more from him, obviously. I mean, it’s not in indictment to him, it’s just, when you’re evaluating people, you’re looking for somebody to step ahead. And whether it’s [Gilbert] or [Juulsen] or McDonald or Ginning or whoever, you know, we’re looking for those guys to kind of take over what we’re looking for on the defensive side.”

Emil Andrae had some ups and downs in his game over the exhibition schedule, rarely looking like he was taking over a game. He might have had his best game Monday night against Boston where he had some offensive chances, had a big hit or two and generally moved the puck smartly and quickly. He was on the ice for the Bruins game-tying goal, but more often than not Andrae appeared to use his quickness and brains to get the puck out of the danger zones. Unfortunately for Andrae, it appears that the Flyers are going to send him back down to Lehigh Valley. Although nothing was confirmed by the club as of Tuesday morning, Andrae was seen skating with Alex Bump and Devin Kaplan and not part of the bigger group.

The foursome on the back end that were cut Tuesday leaves Bonk possibly looking at the sixth position if he is going to make the Flyers at some point. You wouldn’t want Bonk as the seventh as you want him playing, regardless of where he’s at. It also could lend some to believe that the Flyers are, at least for starters, leaning towards size and brawn over quickness heading into game one. Egor Zamula seems to have the upper hand on everyone in the depth chart for now not named Rasmus Ristolainen. And Tocchet stated on Tuesday afternoon that Zamula is going to be the fifth defenseman barring something unforeseen happening. Zamula has been average at best, often being used a lot yet not really tilting the ice towards the Flyers favor. What’s also apparent is he’ll most likely see himself with a new defense partner to start the season given Ristolainen’s status. He’s been okay for now. A healthy Ristolainen now probably would’ve put Zamula in jeopardy heading down the stretch to these final cuts. He’s fine, just hasn’t really moved the bar at all.

It’s truly strange (and to some maybe quite damning) that Bonk has an advantage over some Flyer blueliners on the depth chart simply because they have set the bar so low. The chance is there for him, especially if he can find his game early with the Phantoms and be the guy Philadelphia brings up should injuries arise. The Flyers provided some update on Bonk’s health Wednesday, announcing he’ll be out two weeks with the upper-body injury.

The idea heading into training camp was to have competition on the back end to see who would rise to the top. At least that was what both Tocchet and Briere preached before camp started. However, the truth seems to be a lot of the defensemen at camp outside the top two pairs weren’t turning heads or dropping jaws in a good way. It made everyone realize this group mentioned above were at best third-pairing blueliners, nothing more. None of them truly distanced themselves from the others when it came to crunch time. The batch of borderline third-pairing defensemen the Flyers are sorting through right now are living up to their billing as being borderline third-pairing defensemen. At the end of the day it’s not going to cause the rebuild to stall. It just would’ve been nice to see a bit more verve or oomph seen in this batch’s play. The only person smiling right now from this malaise on the backend might be Oliver Bonk. And for good reason.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...l-earn-spot-on-flyers-blue-line-once-healthy/
 
Jett Luchanko needs to start in the OHL, not on the Flyers

There have been several questions thrown around throughout Philadelphia Flyers training camp and we got the answer for most. The blue line is what it’s going to be and no young defenseman truly stepped up to take complete control of the opportunity with Rasmus Ristolainen’s absence to start the season. The goaltending has been good and we could at least see an adequate tandem in Philadelphia. Oh, and Matvei Michkov is going to ruin the lives of dozens of defensemen this season.

But beyond that, the major talking point has been whether or not center Jett Luchanko has played well enough to truly earn the chance to start his season with the Flyers. Famously, Luchanko was able to breakthrough and appear in four games throughout the first couple weeks of the NHL season last year. He demonstrated his ability to potentially be a top-end transition center with his speed, and have his stick work throughout all three zones be effective enough, but there was no pop. No true offensive juice was coming from his stick and that’s why he wasn’t able to be the ultimate surprise and play an entire season in the NHL at 18 years old.

Now, he’s been sort of doing the same thing one year later. So, again, we’re asking the same question and seeing if the decision should just be made even before the Flyers start their season on October 9 — to just send Luchanko down to the OHL’s Guelph Storm and for him to play out his final year of junior hockey.

It wouldn’t be a step back or anything. Luchanko has shown that he is capable of playing in the NHL and can live and exist as an NHL centerman, but that’s not really something as an end goal. Sure, if he stayed with the Flyers for the entire season as a bottom-six center, there could be some moments of development. We could hypothetically see some progress from Luchanko and he would finish the season with maybe eight goals and 20 assists while averaging 12 minutes a night. Sure, that’s a player. But do you want your first-round pick that you believe in so much, to have that experience at 19 years old? An age where some players are just starting to play college hockey, or even just get to a level where they can flourish offensively? Probably not.

Luchanko should simply just start his season down in Guelph and ride it out. There is no shame in playing the Draft+2 season as a first-round pick. It’s been done plenty of times before. And, well, actually let’s just look at the top points-per-game earners among OHL forwards who were taken in the first round for their Draft+2 season, since 2010.

PLAYERSEASONGPGOALSPOINTSPOINTS PER GAME
Dylan Strome2016-173522752.14
Morgan Frost2018-1958371091.88
Max Domi2014-1557321021.79
Quentin Musty2024-253330591.79
Ryan Strome2012-135334941.77
Mark Scheifele2012-134539791.76
Scott Laughton2013-145440871.61
Nick Suzuki2018-195934941.59
Tanner Pearson2011-126037911.52
Liam Foudy2019-204528681.51
Easton Cowan2024-254629691.50
Logan Brown2017-183222481.50
Ty Dellandrea2019-204732701.49
Calum Ritchie2024-254715701.49
Zack Kassian2010-115626771.38
Owen Tippett2018-195433741.37

There are some Names on that lengthy list, but the general takeaway should be that it’s not so uncommon for a first-round pick forward to go back for another year. It will only become less common with now the option to go play in the NCAA or be the one 19-year-old that NHL teams are allowed to send to the AHL starting in the 2026-27 season, but in the OHL-or-NHL era, we saw plenty of high-level forwards go back to junior hockey.

A more specific takeaway should be that this doesn’t limit Luchanko’s ceiling whatsoever. There are players who are (or should be) top-six forwards on this list, or at the very least very solid contributors to their team in the future. Sure, it would be great if Luchanko scored at a high level and turned into Mark Scheifele or Nick Suzuki we would be overjoyed. But looking at the total scope of the very top producers for this age and while it’s a variety of outcomes. There are those top-end centers but also players who completely flamed out, or are just basic top-nine players on mediocre teams.

But Luchanko is different.

Luchanko is atypical from the returning OHL player​


The main reason why this is such a debate is something we already mentioned: Luchanko can survive in the NHL. Unlike other 19-year-olds (and the majority of the players on the list above), the Flyers prospect has tools like top-end hockey sense and defensive work already. Frankly, Luchanko already cares so much about playing in all three zones and we know that someone like Morgan Frost had to work on that. He’s already a step above the former Flyers center was in so many ways that actually contribute to winning hockey games.

For the other top players on that list — Dylan Strome, Max Domi, Easton Cowan, Ryan Strome, and the like — the reason they were sent back was because they didn’t have a complete enough game to stay afloat in the NHL. They would just get swallowed up and needed to go back to the OHL to just grow stronger with the puck and learn how to actually backcheck. Even if it was somewhat a waste of a season for some players, like Strome who was able to put up several points a night like it was nothing, it was the only option they could have without setting them back.

Luchanko already has the high-pace motor, the defensive ability, and the impeccable transition game that you don’t normally see a prospect even come close to developing until after they finish junior hockey and have a couple more seasons playing pro. He’s already there. It’s the offensive side of the game that he needs to work on. All the scoring that we do typically see in those top-end prospects like a Max Domi, who was able to score with ease in juniors and was able to develop the nose to the net, the offensive awareness, and everything else that made him a successful scorer.

That is what Luchanko needs to work on. All of these other prospects grew up with being able to dangle their way through minor hockey and be The Player on their teams. Luchanko was not. Even in minor hockey, he didn’t lead the team in scoring like he has already with the Storm.

There is a foundation laid with his game that is unlike most other prospects and what is typically built on top of it, is something that the score-heavy prospects already have but they’re without that stable foundation.

And if we are worried about Luchanko being yet another “Ty Dellandrea” on this list, we already know that he projects to be a better player than Dellandrea ever was as a prospect. And the other relative failures there are other reasons why they didn’t succeed. Logan Brown was slow and big, Liam Foudy just scored on a good London Knights team, and injuries derailed Tanner Pearson’s career. Every other player was at least a solid contributor in the NHL or is still a prospect.

Of course, that’s a list of the most productive Draft+2 forwards who were selected in the first round. We hope, if Luchanko is sent back to Guelph, that he finishes on that list by season’s end. That’s the goal and it’s fairly achievable.

Guelph is no longer that “bad team”​


One of the major talking points for anyone that wants Luchanko to stay with the Flyers is the thought that him heading back to the Guelph Storm wouldn’t even get his offense going because it is such a poor scoring environment. Well, that might have been the case in previous seasons but it isn’t anymore.

For the 2025-26 season, the Storm added some veterans and kept a whole lot of players around. Their main acquisition this summer was getting overage forward Ethan Miedema from the Kingston Frontenacs. The 20-year-old former fourth-round pick of the Buffalo Sabres already leads the Storm in scoring with five points through the first four games and should easily be in contention to be Luchanko’s wing if he returns to Guelph.

And even then, the Storm kept solid defenseman prospect Quinn Beauchesne on the team, have plenty of veterans like Carter Stevens, Hunter McKenzie, new captain Charlie Pacquette, and even extremely young top prospects like forward Jaakko Wycisk, who should be one of the best players of the 2027 NHL Draft class. Guelph is no London or Oshawa in terms of being loaded with NHL prospects, but there is easily a path that they can take to being a playoff team this season.

The narrative around the Storm being this terrible experience like it’s the worst hockey team ever put together, should probably stop.

There is, of course, always the possibility that Guelph can trade Luchanko at the OHL trade deadline to one of those top-class programs to really get his numbers juiced. Because, maybe being relied upon to be the main focus point of an entire team’s offense is exactly what Luchanko needs to develop more. If he was in Brantford with Jake O’Brien, or Windsor with Jack Nesbitt and Liam Greentree, or Sault Ste. Marie with Brady Martin — he would certainly produce more points but would his offensive game truly develop in the way that we want if he wasn’t so leaned on like he is in Guelph?

Plus, if all we want to see is Luchanko score triple-digit points and get his name up on that table above, and see these endless highlights of him destroying defenses, for us to feel more confident in his development, now is the year to do it. The OHL is seeing a grand exodus of top prospects leave the junior league to go play in the NCAA. We already know that from Porter Martone heading to Michigan State but it’s all over the league. Without those top-end players, scoring will become even easier and some players can get that push into getting more comfortable scoring in game scenarios — which might just be what Luchanko needs.



All in all, it just makes sense. There is more historic evidence of players not plateauing or having their development affected by going back to junior hockey, than the opposite. Most of the time, if there is evidence of players growing lazy as scoring becomes too easy and they don’t get anything out of a crucial development year, it’s those players that have nowhere near the drive that Luchanko has.

We all know that he could survive, yes. But do we want a prospect just trying to grasp at straws and barely stay afloat to prevent them from drowning, at just 19 years old? Do we really think that his offensive habits would benefit from not being able to do anything while on the ice? There’s more risk there of truly becoming a bottom-six center for eternity.

By going back to the OHL, Luchanko can work as hard as he know he will and come in with a fresh understanding next year, of what he can do offensively and how he could start his full-time professional career. It just makes more sense for the 19-year-old center to know where he will be playing, to go be a main contributor on the World Juniors team, and then approach the Flyers’ 2026 training camp with an even higher drive to be an impact NHL centerman. We don’t want any players just doing what they can to get by. We want prospects to flourish.



Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/jett-luchanko-needs-start-ohl-not-on-the-flyers/
 
Rick Tocchet makes curious lineup decisions for Flyers’ penultimate preseason game

The Philadelphia Flyers have just two games left in the preseason, and Rick Tocchet appears to be using them to get a look at a potential opening night lineup.

There are still a few roster spots to be won, with battles at both forward and defense still ongoing. Jett Luchanko is still in training camp with the team, as is Rodrigo Abols, as the two forwards fight for a spot on the fourth line. However, neither Luchanko nor Abols will be in the lineup for Thursday night’s game against the New York Islanders.

The Flyers’ roster for Thursday night is essentially the top four lines and three pairs that they practiced with on Wednesday.

Lines and pairs today:

Tippett – Zegras – Michkov
Grebenkin – Couturier – Konecny
Foerster – Cates – Brink
(Luchanko) Deslauriers – Dvorak – Hathaway

(I've yet to see Abols rotate in for a rep)

York – Sanheim
Seeler – Drysdale
Ginning – Zamula
Gilbert – Juulsen

— Charlie O'Connor (@charlieo_conn) October 1, 2025

It’s interesting to see Owen Tippett up on the top line with Trevor Zegras and Matvei Michkov, although Tocchet could be wanting to see how that line works in the final two preseason games. If they are able to play well in all three zones, that would allow Christian Dvorak to drop down to the fourth-line center role.

That could mean bad news for Luchanko, who either has to stay in the NHL or be sent back to the OHL for this season. Does a decision come in the next couple of days? Does it happen before the Flyers’ final preseason game this Saturday? If he’s not going to be in any more exhibition games for the Flyers, why keep him around?

Thursday will also be the first game off for Abols, who played in each of the Flyers’ first five preseason contests. He impressed in each one, looking like he’d be a lock for the roster, but he may not make the opening night lineup if these lines are any indication.

Still, Abols is the type of guy that the Flyers should want to keep around as an extra forward. He’s 29 years old, so there’s no real need for him to play big minutes in the AHL, and he should see time on the fourth line throughout the season — particularly since the Flyers need to move on from Deslauriers.

But Tocchet didn’t speak too highly of Abols after practice on Wednesday.

“He wants to be an NHL player. It’s my job to give him feedback on how to be an NHL player,” Tocchet told the media via Charlie O’Connor. “I think for him — he’s 6-foot-4, pretty good skater, he’s got a hell of a shot. You guys saw it the other night. There’s some things there. But I think there’s more there for him to be an NHL player. I don’t think, you know, he’s got the job, that he’s an NHL player right now. He’s trending to that. We had a talk today about that. I like his frame, I like his thinking. To me, right now, (it’s) the consistency. Can he put together games of consistency?”

Who knows if that’s to keep Abols motivated or the media (and players) guessing, but the forward has been one of the Flyers’ best players throughout the preseason.

If Thursday night’s roster is indeed the opening night lineup, the Flyers could do a lot worse. But they could still do a lot better with the likes of Abols or Luchanko on the fourth line for Deslauriers. And ultimately, it’s surprising that they’re not getting another game or two to showcase their stuff, especially after Luchanko had his best game of the preseason on Monday night.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...isions-for-flyers-penultimate-preseason-game/
 
Takeaways: Some run and gun runs afoul as in Flyers 4-3 loss to the Islanders

The Flyers made some exciting plays but were on the wrong end of plays a few times too many. The costly turnovers put them on the wrong end of the scoreboard Thursday night as they lost 4-3 to the visiting New York Islanders.

The basics

First period:
1:46- Travis Sanheim (Christian Dvorak) (SHG)
Second period: 3:45- Max Shabanov (Maxim Tsyplakov, Simon Holmstrom) (PPG), 11:10- Travis Konecny (Nick Seeler, Sean Couturier), 11:25- Anders Lee (Maxim Tsyplakov, Ryan Pulock), 17:12- Adam Pelech (Jean-Gabriel Pageau) (SHG), 18:02- Noah Cates (Tyson Foerster, Cam York) (PPG)
Third period: 17:06- Emil Heineman (Anthony Duclair, Mathew Barzal)
SOG: 21 (PHI) – 27 (NYI)

Some takeaways

TMZ? Well, it could be something
.

The trio of Owen Tippett, Matvei Michkov and Trevor Zegras could have been a goldmine for Tippett just looking at the potential on paper. However, the synergy or chemistry didn’t seem to gel right off the bat. Tippett looked a bit out of sorts while Zegras and Michkov might have looked more comfy with Nikita Grebenkin or even Christian Dvorak on the wing. However a shift halfway through period one showed some promise. Tippett won a puck battle along the boards, feeding it to Zegras who quickly fed Michkov. Michkov was foiled on the attempt but it was a nifty little play.

Zegras was also good on both ends of the puck, breaking up a potential Islanders rush following a giveaway by Adam Ginning. But the line made two mistakes that caught them up ice and chasing in transition. Jamie Drysdale made some miscues on both goals given up while the line was on the ice. The line has some promise, but they without question need some work when they don’t have the puck. Perhaps a little too loose for Rick Tocchet’s liking.

Nice little goal

The Flyers maintained control in the Islanders end midway into period two. While making some changes, they continued making safe, crisp passes while creating some traffic in front of Ilya Sorokin. Travis Konecny took a nice pass from Nikita Grebenkin before finding some time and a lane to beat Sorokin for Philadelphia’s second goal.

Grebenkin with the screen, Travis Konecny with the goal! #Flyers pic.twitter.com/C0kotthjR2

— Flyers Nation (@FlyersNation) October 3, 2025

Speaking of Ginning

Ginning was fine in the opening frame, with Zegras quickly erasing a miscue in the neutral zone. Ginning did a good job boxing out at times when not simply overpowering the Islander, clearing the zone and making simple, high-percentage clears out of his own zone. He wasn’t perfect by any stretch yet may still have the upper hand when it comes to being the Flyers sixth defenseman, something not too many would’ve stated when training camp started two weeks ago.

The magic Christian

It didn’t take long but my goodness what a pretty short-handed goal. Christian Dvorak boogied up ice and looked to be in alone on Islanders goalie Ilya Sorokin. However, Dvorak made a beautiful backhanded pass to Travis Sanheim who buried it for a gorgeous tally and an early 1-0 lead. The goal made fans quickly forget the Sean Couturier minor penalty he took early in the game. Unfortunately on shift soon afterwards Dvorak seemed to be favoring his leg after taking a shot around his knee.

🚨 SHG! 🚨

Dvo with the dish, Sanny with the finish. #NYIvsPHI | #LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/O9Kf6czyas

— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) October 2, 2025

On the Flyers fourth penalty of the game, Dvorak again had a great short-handed chance. He tried outwaiting Sorokin but wasn’t able to put the puck by him despite some nice moves heading towards him. And in the third he nearly cashed in on a pass from Garnet Hathaway close in but wasn’t able to get wood (or aluminum) on the puck.

Ersson seeing pucks, stopping pucks…sometimes

Sam Ersson was getting the nod for the entire game Thursday night. And the idea that he’s seeing the puck easier was evident in the opening frame. The Flyers did block some shots but primarily the defense did a strong job of clearing the lanes to let Ersson see and stop the puck. Ersson also stopped a breakaway rush by Emil Heineman in the first and fortunately avoided any injury to his leg after looking like contact was made. In the second Heineman had another good shot but Ersson got the shaft of his stick on the puck.

A penalty to Garnet Hathaway led to New York’s first goal, one Ersson didn’t have much of a chance on. A nice pass and nicer deflection by Max Shabanov led to the game being tied.

Maxim Shabanov scored because of course he did.

1-1. pic.twitter.com/6Uli13hpnF

— Flyers Nation (@FlyersNation) October 3, 2025

The second goal was leaky sadly. Just 15 seconds after Travis Konecny gave Philadelphia a 2-1 lead, the Islanders Anders Lee took a shot the goalie should’ve had even through a bit of traffic. It’s an exhibition game and they don’t count. You still want to see those saves made. Ersson atoned for the goal with a stellar stop against Mathew Barzal who was in alone for a one-time in the slot that Ersson stoned him on.

Ersson looked a bit pissed giving up a short-handed goal, unable to stop a two-man Islanders breakaway, which is saying a lot with a five-on-four advantage. Jamie Drysdale couldn’t make a play to get the puck up ice and tried to be way too cute. Michkov was left watching Jean-Gabriel Pageau passing to Adam Pelech for a rather easy goal. The slight “are you f–king kidding me” shrug afterwards was probably something he’d like to have back. Not a good look. Had the Flyers shrugged at every bad goal Ersson gave up last year some players would’ve had torn rotator cuffs. Fortunately the Flyers tied it up thanks to Noah Cates less than a minute later.

ZZZZamula

You have to feel for Egor Zamula. From being a key component as Michkov’s translator early last season to somehow finding his way into territory he doesn’t want to be in. Zamula was paired with Ginning at times but didn’t have a solid game. Zamula led all Flyers with three giveaways, something a forward might be able to get away with but not a defenseman. His play at times looked hesitant and just looked. A perfect example was halfway through the third when Adam Ginning had his man pinned up. Zamula decided to join Ginning, leaving an Islander wide open had the pass gotten into that area.

Zamula looks as if he knows he’s the fifth defenseman and has things sewed up for the final roster cuts. If he keeps playing like this, he’ll be fighting for his life as a Flyer before the season’s quarter pole. Zamula finished with 16:17 in ice time, the least of all Flyers defensemen.

It’s early, but one almost guarantee

Rick Tocchet is six games into his tenure with the Flyers. He has developed a small but interesting trait to start each period the last two games. In six consecutive periods over the last two games, Tocchet opened the period with the line of Noah Cates, Bobby Brink and Tyson Foerster. Knowing they are very steady in both ends of the ice, and have a tremendous work ethic, they seem to set the tone early which is never a bad thing.

Two-thirds of the trio connected on a power play late in the second to tie things up. Foerster found a seam in the Islanders’ penalty kill that left Noah Cates with a gimme.

The @PECOconnect Power Play keeps lighting it up. ⚡#NYIvsPHI | #LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/ZUQiQoOYg5

— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) October 3, 2025

Glitch in the Xbox?

The Xfinity Mobile Arena had a slight glitch as the fans in attendance were being informed the time remaining in the first period. The scoreboard was stuck on the time (9:33) but play kept going on. The scoreboard clock was fixed shortly afterwards, leaving public address announcer Lou Nolan with a little less work on his hands.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...afoul-as-in-flyers-4-3-loss-to-the-islanders/
 
Flyers coach Rick Tocchet bluntly criticizes Egor Zamula for disappointing performance

The Philadelphia Flyers had a somewhat clear picture for what their blue line could look like to start the 2025-26 season. Defenseman Egor Zamula was a part of it, basically guaranteed the No. 5 role, but after some comments from head coach Rick Tocchet, we’re not so sure that could be the case.

All throughout training camp, Zamula never really popped off as a sure-fire NHL-caliber defenseman. Despite having just 155 career games under his belt and never being a permanent fixture in the top four, it almost felt like Zamula approached the preseason as someone who truly was a lock for a spot and therefore has been very lackadaisical during game action. Simply put, if the Flyers didn’t have their current mess of too many mediocre depth defenders like Noah Juulsen and Dennis Gilbert, Zamula would be much more of a target.

Most of the time, the general consensus with Zamula this preseason is that he’s inoffensive — he’s not ruining anything and his experience already on the team is just to be a youngish depth piece. Someone that just doesn’t add anything but doesn’t hurt a whole lot. That was until Thursday night.

In their penultimate preseason game against the New York Islanders, Zamula put in a terrible performance in just about every way. He looked even worse than before, there was never a puck that he could get to in time, the breakouts were messy; just an overall disappointing output. But then even diving deeper, Zamula was last among defensemen in terms of shot attempt share at 5-on-5, with the Flyers being out-attempted seven to 18 while the Russian blueliner was on the ice. In terms of actual shots, it still was a massive deficit as the Flyers were outshot three to seven.

After the game, Zamula’s name was brought up in Tocchet’s media availability, since everyone saw just how bad of a night he had.

“He’s got to pick it up. Yup. Definitely,” Tocchet said bluntly to the media after Thursday night’s game.

While we might be reading too much into eight words spoken after a disappointing preseason loss that ultimately doesn’t mean anything, it certainly feels like a comment that Tocchet doesn’t really want to expand any further on. Now, it could either mean he doesn’t want to expand any further because he will be dealing with Zamula’s terrible play more privately and that is something they will have to figure out, or the coach just knows that despite a bad game that he’s one of their only suitable options on that bottom pair to start the season.

And to be fair, it is also a group of defensemen trying to learn a new way to play.

Tocchet was also asked specifically how some defensemen are commenting how they are starting to get used to the new coach’s defensive system, but there were still some incredibly sloppy breakouts during the preseason game against the Islanders.

“There’s some good and some bad. We just have to clean that stuff up,” Tocchet said. “It’s a little risky. We have to understand when to do it and when not to — just can’t give odd-man rushes, things like that.”

So, maybe it’s just an entire blue line problem and the weakest link of that happens to be Zamula. But, man, there comes a point where you just want a better option to throw out there. With such a potentially important season lying ahead for the Flyers as they aim to take the next step in the rebuilding plan, it feels like a position that is the easiest to improve is just figuring out who are some decent depth defensemen and not ones that will regularly mess up or do nothing at all.

What does this mean for Zamula?​


Rick Tocchet’s specific comments shouldn’t directly sway the Flyers front office’s decision to keep or throw away Egor Zamula. That would be a little silly. In the end, it’s a disappointing preseason from a player who most would have already projected to be on the blue line for most of the season. Maybe it really is just Zamula playing his “NHL Regular In The Preseason” card for the first time but taking it a little too far and truly looking bad.

But, if anything, this just shows everyone that there is still more positions up for grab. Rasmus Ristolainen will come back eventually but even then, that’s only five defensemen we can safely say should be in a regular spot when healthy. There is a blueliner rats nest of defensemen who we just want to be not noticeable in Zamula, Juulsen, Gilbert, and now Adam Ginning appears to be in there as well. While any of them can be in that bottom-pairing role, it’s not like any of them will be positively contributing to the Flyers winning hockey games in the end.

It leaves everyone in a little bit of a weird position and we guess the easiest thing to do is just for them to play out this entire season and for them to address that position next summer when they want to take an even further step towards contention.

Or, you know, they could recall Emil Andrae.



Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...es-egor-zamula-for-disappointing-performance/
 
Breaking down Porter Martone’s Michigan State debut

An unforgettable opening shift and a pair of freshmen forwards pop as Michigan State cruises to a 4-0 victory over the Windsor Lancers in a season-opening exhibition game. It’s fair to say Philadelphia Flyers top prospect Porter Martone had an exciting college hockey debut.

The first shift​


First game, first shift, first shot? No big deal. Porter Martone had a fantastic debut from the jump. He leveraged his size to park himself in front of the net, corral the free puck, and beat goaltender Max Donoso to open the scoring.

Porter Martone wasting no time making his name known in East Lansing!

Spartans strike first 35 seconds in. pic.twitter.com/buWSHuKd6X

— Michigan State Hockey (@MSU_Hockey) October 3, 2025

This is exactly what we were hoping to see from Martone, it just came a bit earlier than anyone expected. Michigan State dominated the game, and it all began with this Martone shift. He pushed the pace on the forecheck, went to the most dangerous area of the ice, and was rewarded. It was a promising start for Martone, who continued his strong play throughout.

They’re freshmen?​


It’s hard to believe that both Martone, and Nashville Predators prospect Ryker Lee, are freshman forwards. The two were everywhere for Michigan State and by far the two best players in the game. With a goal a piece and five shots on goal each, the two freshmen looked like they were seasoned veterans. We may have been focused on Martone and Shane Vansaghi, but it was impossible to miss Lee. Nashville might have found a gem with the 26th overall pick in this past Summer’s draft.

Oh my goodness, Ryker Lee!

Michigan State leads 4-0 in the second period. pic.twitter.com/uDJJwWDDy4

— Michigan State Hockey (@MSU_Hockey) October 3, 2025

Speaking of…​


Martone isn’t the only Flyers prospect in this game. When he made the decision to join Michigan State, Martone joined 2025 second-round pick Shane Vansaghi. The book on Vansaghi is that he’s a physical-first player, but in this game it was the chances he created offensively that stood out the most. He was only credited with one shot on goal, but he generated more scoring chances than that (he just happened to miss the net). His best individual play came late in the first period, where he stole the puck in the neutral zone, protected the puck with one hand while angling his way to the net, before getting off a quick snap shot that just missed a bit high and wide.

He was also briefly credited with a secondary assist on Lee’s goal, but they later too it away from him. It was a bit of a broken play, so it’s understandable, but Vansaghi got the play started through the neutral zone, eventually leading to a Martone shot and a Lee goal.

Let’s get physical​


Martone wasn’t just involved offensively. He also showed physicality and that competitive edge that will quickly endear him to the Philadelphia faithful.

Yeah, I think this dude is a Flyer pic.twitter.com/MibAu8wDaU

— Broad Street Hockey (@BroadStHockey) October 3, 2025

Getting into someone’s face in your first exhibition game? Yeah, that will win over some fans. This is to be expected from both Martone and Vansaghi this season. Two bigger guys who can will their way to open space. Martone was given two minutes for roughing, as well as two minutes for slashing for his antics. It’s not as if this was the beginning and the end of his physical play either, he was active along the boards and on the forecheck throughout.

What it all means​


It’s one game, it’s an exhibition game. Big picture, this might not count for a whole lot. However, a hot start can go a long way when it comes to long term success, and for Martone, the Flyers, and Michigan State, his debut went about as well as one could hope. The team looks good, Martone being a big part of it, and they look set to continue their winning ways. Coming off back-to-back championships, and two 25+ win seasons, Martone may have a very fun season ahead of him.



Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/breaking-down-porter-martones-college-hockey-debut/
 
Takeaways: Flyers down Devils in final preseason game, final roster seemingly set

In the final tune-up game before the season opener in Florida next Thursday, the Flyers played what was essentially the AHL’s Utica Comets at the Xfinity-Mobile Center. In front of a relatively small crowd just hours before the Phillies-Dodgers NLDS gets underway, the Flyers eked out a 4-3 shootout win over the Devils.

The basics

First period:
16:09 – Kevin Rooney (Ethan Edwards, Austin Strand), 18:16 – Travis Sanheim (Jett Luchanko, Nikita Grebenkin)
Second period: 0:40 – Lenni Hameenho (Shane Lachance, Calen Addison) (PPG), 7:47 – Travis Konecny (Matvei Michkov, Jamie Drysdale) (PPG)
Third period: 1:31 – Paul Cotter (Arseni Gritsyuk), 18:07 – Travis Konecny (Drysdale, Sanheim)
Overtime: No scoring.
Shootout: Bobby Brink – No goal, Arseni Gritsyuk – No goal, Trevor Zegras – Goal, Paul Cotter – No goal, Travis Konecny – Goal
SOG: 36 (PHI) – 25 (NJD)

Some takeaways

Flyers A-Team shaking off rust


After the Devils played the majority of their A-team in their last preseason game, the Devils brought a ton of their AHLers to South Philly to square off with a full NHL lineup for the Orange and Black. The result? Not the blowout you’d be hoping for, but also nothing that needs to raise too big of a concern moving into the season.

The one thing worth pointing out though, is the reality that the Flyers might take some time to fully adjust to Rick Tocchet’s systems. There’s a lot to learn, and it might take a bit for the Flyers to really roll with the defensive zone systems in particular. There were various moments today, and in the other preseason games, where the Flyers just seem slightly out of sync in their defensive zone coverages as a team. Nothing out of the ordinary when a new coach comes to town.

Luchanko’s inconsistency

One of the big storylines of this final game was how big the stakes were for Jett Luchanko. With Nikita Grebenkin’s spot seemingly secure with his consistency in the preseason, Luchanko’s place on this roster was in doubt heading into this one.

Luchanko, frankly, had a really tough start in the first 15 minutes or so of this game. Especially in the defensive zone, Luchanko made some questionable decisions with the puck that led to multiple turnovers in dangerous areas. But, to his credit, Luchanko settled down and played well off his linemates today – Garnet Hathaway and Rodrigo Abols. In the offensive zone late in the first period, Luchanko showed the poise that will likely earn him a place on this roster. Holding off pressure along the boards, Luchanko fed Travis Sanheim for the Flyers’ first goal of the game.

Sanny's THIRD of the preseason. 🥵#NJDvsPHI | #LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/Qbin0F16fs

— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) October 4, 2025

Check-in on final roster battles

In the middle of the game, the Flyers sent Dennis Gilbert to waivers, thus making the final cut to the roster. So, it appears the Flyers will likely roll with Noah Juulsen, Egor Zamula, and Adam Ginning for the depth defense, and carry all three of Luchanko, Grebenkin, and Abols. It’ll be really interesting to see who is the odd-man out in both the forward and the defense core on opening night, but for now the roster is set. If we were to guess right now, we’d be surprised if the Flyers kept Luchanko or Grebenkin just to not play them, so Abols will likely be the extra guy for the first game at least.

Michkov’s behind-the-net prowess…

If there’s one thing clear about Matvei Michkov, it’s his strength and poise with the puck behind the cage. That skill was on display again in the second period, when Michkov carefully constructed a power play goal from behind the net. After being originally denied on a chance, Michkov regrouped behind the net and eventually found a seam for a goal-line pass to Travis Konecny.

🚨 PPG! 🚨

1⃣1⃣ and 3⃣9⃣ are at it again. 🤝#NJDvsPHI | #LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/JTJVXFCH2e

— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) October 4, 2025

and larger takeaways from the Flyers’ power play

Culminating in the Konecny power play goal, there is so much more happening on the average Flyers power play now. It’s preseason, so take it with a grain of salt, but the Flyers just look so much better on the man-advantage than in years past. There’s actual off-puck movement happening, the quarterbacks at the top of the zone (Jamie Drysdale, Cam York) are distributing the puck well, and the Michkov-Zegras connection is alive and well. It’ll be interesting to see how much of a focus Michkov will have behind the net, and if the Flyers will try to leverage that strength of his moving forward. Lots to like, and the early signs of this power play are trending upwards for the first time in a while.

A swing and a miss from Vladar

The Flyers’ goaltending concerns veered its ugly head at the worst time in this one. A little more than halfway into the third period, Vladar played a puck at the side of the net, and completely whiffed on a pass attempt to a teammate. The Devils swarmed, and the puck eventually ended up on the stick of Paul Cotter and into the back of the net. That mistake was nearly the difference, before Travis Konecny’s goal with the net empty.

Otherwise, there was lots to like with Vladar’s play today and in the rest of the preseason. He’s pretty calm in the net, has controlled his rebounds, and has the look of a goaltender who can put up at least average results. The Flyers need those league-average results so badly, so let’s hope.

Konecny game-tying goal

The Flyers didn’t want to end preseason without a fight, and also, without yet another preseason overtime. With the goalie pulled with around two minutes remaining, Konecny found some space at the top of the circle to rip a puck past the Devils goaltender for the tie.

🚨 TIED UP! 🚨

TK says play on. #NJDvsPHI | #LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/jWkwxgWPX5

— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) October 4, 2025

Zegras shootout excellence, Konecny shootout winner

After a relatively quiet and scoreless 3-on-3, the Flyers and Devils had to go to a shootout to finally end the preseason slate. In what may be an area of strength for the Flyers now, Tocchet sent out one of the best to ever do it, Trevor Zegras (62 percent success rate in shootouts all time). Zegras connected, and after multiple stops from Vladar on the other end, Konecny finished the game off with a goal in Round 3.

🔶 FLYERS WIN 🔶

TK saves the day. #NJDvsPHI | #LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/0dT63arMfo

— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) October 4, 2025

One final takeaway:

Go Phils.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...al-preseason-game-final-roster-seemingly-set/
 
Flyers place Dennis Gilbert on waivers, closing in on final roster

There are still several unknowns when it comes to what the Philadelphia Flyers’ final roster will look like when they start their season next week. But at least we do now know one defenseman who will not be part of the blue line.

Announced by the league on Saturday afternoon, the Flyers have placed defenseman Dennis Gilbert on waivers. While we cannot say with certainty that they will then be sending him down once he clears, we’re going to assume that they will be.


Today's Action on the Waiver Wire: https://t.co/so7qgeK2D3

Get Waiver Wires & news sent to your inbox with PuckPedia Alerts:https://t.co/zZESpQlAgp pic.twitter.com/QA3g0QsOrM

— PuckPedia (@PuckPedia) October 4, 2025

Gilbert, 28, was signed by the Flyers to a one-year, one-way contract on July 1 earlier this year and was set to be involved in a heated battle for the final spot on the blue line, along with fellow free agent acquisition Noah Juulsen, and younger homegrown players like Adam Ginning and Helge Grans. Grans was cut as soon as possible after never really seeming like an NHL-caliber defenseman through the preseason, and now it’s Gilbert that gets the next cut just days before the Flyers have to make their final decision.

All 32 NHL teams need to submit their season-opening roster by Monday at 5:00 p.m. and there still remains multiple questions as to who Philadelphia will keep around. As it stands, the Flyers have seven healthy defensemen and 14 forwards. They will need to cut at least one and it almost certainly is coming from up front.

Jett Luchanko and Rodrigo Abols are the only two forwards who are truly competing for a spot. Nikita Grebenkin has made this team and the only other forward who poised a threat, Alex Bump, was already sent down to start his professional career in the AHL.

In keeping Luchanko, the Flyers can get a first-hand influence on the 19-year-old’s development — especially with the options only being the OHL or NHL, there are reasons why the Flyers might want Luchanko to stay in Philadelphia. For Abols, he has had as good a preseason as he possibly could and has looked like an improved fourth-line center compared to what we saw from the Latvian last season. Keeping him around would be rewarding him for his effort and in the end, if he’s the 13th forward it would not be as detrimental as keeping Luchanko out of the lineup.

Of course they could carry 14 forwards and seven defensemen to fill the 23-man roster, and that would mean Abols and Nic Deslauriers would most likely be the extra forwards in that scenario. It’s not the most outlandish thing and is entirely possible.

But for now, all we have is one more answer with Gilbert being sent down. Last season, the 28-year-old defenseman played 25 games for the Buffalo Sabres and earned five total assists while racking up 50 penalty minutes.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...ilbert-on-waivers-closing-in-on-final-roster/
 
How Ryan Ellis trade affects Flyers’ salary cap

Danny-Briere.jpg


Ryan Ellis wasn’t expected to be traded by the Philadelphia Flyers. Who would want him? Well, Sunday we found out that the San Jose Sharks were interested, acquiring Ellis and a sixth-round pick in the 2026 draft in exchange for defenseman Artem Guryev and forward Carl Grundstrom. But let’s look a bit deeper in what that does for the Flyers’ salary cap moving forward, and what it could also mean, given the skaters Philadelphia received in return.

First off, Ryan Ellis played all of four games for the Flyers back in 2021-22. He had a goal and four assists for five points in those four games. That’s it. The devastating, career-ending injury he suffered in that season has been essentially tied to the Flyers’ Long Term Injured Relief ever since. Ellis was slated to make $6.25 million AAV this season and also for the 2026-27 season, now it appears that entire contract has been taken by the Sharks. In short, this is a huge win in terms of the salary cap. Philadelphia will not have to worry about whether Ellis is going to be placed on the roster or not. As was previously discussed during the Fedotov trade, the Flyers were worried that any bonuses on Matvei Michkov’s entry-level contract would carry into the following season with Ellis placed on Long-Term Injured Reserve; a possible bonus of $3.3 million should Michkov hit all the bonus targets would now be paid without seeing them roll over into next year’s salary cap.

Coming back from the Sharks is Arterm Guryev, a physically imposing blueliner who is on an entry-level deal. His cap hit is $860,000 for this year, the final year of his deal with Philadelphia retaining his rights on the next contract. Given his track record — the whole of his last season played in the ECHL with Wichita — it feels safe to assume that he will begin playing for Lehigh Valley in the American Hockey League, if not back in the ECHL with Reading. As for forward Carl Grundstrom, he’s on the final year of a two-year, $3.6 million deal which will see him be a $1.8 million cap hit this season before he becomes an Unrestricted Free Agent. So the $6.25 million goes off the books thanks to Ellis, and $2.66 million is put back on the books if by some strange happenstance Guryev and Grundstrom are both on the Flyers’ roster. That’s an immediate savings of $3.59 million with the removal of Ellis off the books.

Should both Grundstrom and Guryev both spend most of the season in the minors — and again this is the surer scenario — that is a much bigger savings for Philadelphia as it would be the full $6.25 million previously paid to Ellis off the books. Shortly after the trade, Grundstrom was placed on waivers by Philadelphia. Should he clear waivers, it gives the Flyers the option to send him down to Lehigh Valley. So, in layman’s terms, no matter how the return pieces fall, should Michkov hit all the bonus targets worth $3.3 million, nothing will be rolling into the following year in terms of overages. All of it would be accounted for in 2025-26.

Opens things up a lot more

The fact the Flyers now have this $6.25 million off the cap it should open the door a bit more to lure or entice Unrestricted Free Agents. It almost seemed a certainty that Ryan Ellis would continue being a member of the Flyers organization until the conclusion of his contract. Now that he’s gone, combined with the fact additional buyouts (Cam Atkinson) and retained salaries (Kevin Hayes, Scott Laughton) will be off the books, it should give Philadelphia a lot more cash to entertain some of the bigger fish in the National Hockey League pond. That is assuming those big fish (or some of them) even get to free agency without first agreeing to terms with their current respective clubs before July 1 (but that’s a can of worms to open another day). As it stands, according to capwages, the Flyers currently have roughly $39.5 million of cap space looking at the 2026-27 season.

Looking before July 1, the Flyers also have six restricted free agents they will need to resign at the end of this season. So those funds from the Ellis deal — as well as the rising salary cap — could also be allotted to sign Trevor Zegras, Nikita Grebenkin, Jamie Drysdale, Bobby Brink, Egor Zamula, and goaltender Sam Ersson, and of course there’s also the fact that Matvei Michkov could be looking at contract extension as early as next July 1 as well, when he will be in the final year of his three-year entry-level deal. That’s not to say that money from the Ellis trade will be used specifically for those signings, but it just makes things a little less hectic or cumbersome for Flyers general manager Danny Briere.

Worst case scenario?

Although there’s absolutely no report to suggest otherwise, it’s expected that defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen is slated to be healthy and return to the team sometime in November, possibly early in the month or in the middle of the month. However, if the injury which has nagged Ristolainen the last few seasons carries on into this season, it’s possible he might have to be placed on Injured Reserve or, in a nightmare scenario, Long-Term Injured Reserve. If that was to happen (and that’s a big if), then this Ellis move would essentially be seeing the Flyers remove one financial headache replaced with a slightly cheaper but still expensive headache (the difference between the Ellis contract and Ristolainen’s in terms of AAV is a mere $1.15 million). It would be at least getting rid of a huge problem having both Ellis and Ristolainen on LTIR regarding the situation with Michkov’s performance bonuses as mentioned above. But it would still be a problem for this season and next, unless of course Briere was able to make a similar deal with another club and send Ristolainen (who has no clauses regarding trade destinations or movement) elsewhere. However, again, there is no indication that Ristolainen is going to be delayed in returning to the Flyers and be able to play in roughly four to six weeks.

But for now, it looks like the Flyers can breathe a little easier knowing that Ryan Ellis and his $6.25 million is off the books as of today and not sometime in the spring of 2027. That in itself is a huge win! And it gives the Flyers approximately $7 million to play with as they have that much space under the cap with this trade. Briere looks very good both in the short-term and the long-term with this trade.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/how-ryan-ellis-trade-affects-flyers-salary-cap/
 
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