News Flyers Team Notes

Wednesday Morning Fly By: Welcome to your Christmas break

*The Flyers hit the road for their last game before we all get a little holiday reprieve, a 9 p.m. burner over in Chicago. RECAP!

*Denver Barkey is now three games into his NHL career and he’s continuing to take full advantage of the Flyers’ very unfortunate Tyson Foerster situation. Kid looks real good! [BSH]

*The Flyers’ current fourth line iteration is taking full advantage of the fact that Garnet Hathaway has not been able to find his game — any part of it, at all — through the first third of this season. Despite being out of the lineup for now, Hathaway is continuing to try and work to fix what’s broken. [Inquirer]

*You (well, me. I’m talking about me mostly) might not be 100% happy with Rick Tocchet’s overall coaching strategery thus far, but it’s hard to argue with results. Team looks good. Mostly. And since the Easter Conference mostly stinks, the Flyers are sitting nearly at the top. [The Athletic]

*If you’re a subscriber over at Charlie’s website you can read about why Tocchet’s Michkov-related quarrel is with fans like us not pros like Chuck. [PHLY]

*Anyhoo, AGM Brent Flahr sat down with the Inky to talk various and sundry things about various and sundry Flyers prospects. [Inquirer]

*And finally, Happy Christmas Eve to all who observe! Before Santa gets going, we thought it was important to lay out which Flyers have made the naughty list and which have made the nice list. This is important journalism. Enjoy! [BSH]

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/wednesday-morning-fly-by-welcome-to-your-christmas-break/
 
Twas the night before Christmas: Flyers edition

We here at Broad Street Hockey take poetry very seriously. It is an underappreciated art form. Hence, here is the iconic Christmas poem entitled A Visit from St. Nicholas (otherwise known as Twas the Night Before Christmas). Enjoy!

Twas the night before Christmas,

When all through the Flyers house

Not a creature was stirring,

Gritty bludgeoned the mouse;

The stockings were hung near the “Xbox” with care,

In hopes that St. Nick (Seeler) soon would be there;

The players were nestled all snug in their beds;

While visions of a wildcard danced in their heads;

And Danny in his pajamas, and Taco in his skullcap,

Had just rattled their brains about the 1-2-2 trap,

When out on the lawn there arose such a clatter,

Bobby Brink stirred hearing his name as trade chatter.

Away to the window he flew like a flash,

Saw no NTC in his contract but plenty of cash.

The moon on the breast of the new fallen snow,

Couldn’t brighten the power play that was so low,

When what to their wandering eyes did appear,

But a miniature sleigh with eight Phantoms coming near,

With a little old driver so lively and quick,

They knew in a moment wasn’t Nolan Patrick.

Faster than the Eagles his coursers they came,

And he whistled, and shouted, and called them by name:

“Now Hunter! Now, Karsen! Now Carson! Now Christian!

On Oliver! On, Alex! On, Tucker! On, Devin!”

To the top of the porch! To the top of the wall!

Please be ready should one of you get the call!

As the Leafs are no more while the Hurricanes fly,

When they meet with an obstacle, mount Rasmus high

So up to the housetop the coursers they flew

With the sleigh full of sticks, and St. Nicholas too–

And then in a twinkling, they heard on a roof

An former coach with a rope…then suddenly poof.

As they drew in their heads, and was turning around,

Down the I-95 St. Nicholas came with a bound.

He was dressed in orange and black, from his head to his foot,

And his skates were all tarnished with ashes and soot;

A bundle of pucks he had flung on his back,

And he looked like a trainer just opening his sack.

His eyes, how they twinkled! His dimples, how merry!

His cheeks were like roses, he wasn’t Ross Lonsberry!

His droll little mouth was drawn up like a bow,

And the beard on his chin made him look like Garth Snow;

The stump of a pipe he held in his teeth,

And the smoke, it resembled a Tortorella seethe;

He had a broad face and a little round belly

That shook when he laughed, like “Hound Dog” Bob Kelly.

He was chubby and plumb like Jori Lehtera,

And I laughed when I saw him grinning for the camera;

A wink of his eye and a twist of his head

Soon let me know the Pens hopes were dead;

He spoke not a word, but went straight to work,

And filled all the stockings; then turned swiftly like Cam York,

And laying his finger aside of his nose,

And giving a nod as all the Flyers froze;

He sprang to his sleigh, to the team he gave a whistle,

And away all they flew like a Ristolainen missile.

But I heard him exclaim, ere he drove out of sight–

“Merry Christmas to all, the Flyers are still in the fight!”

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/twas-the-night-before-christmas-flyers-edition/
 
What each Flyer deserves for Christmas

The holiday break is upon us. Time to gather round the Christmas tree, sing yuletide carols, and indulge in some kind of belt-altering feast on Dec. 25. Or for others to endure the relatives and in-laws, look at the clock until it ends, and start taking down all Christmas-related items the following day. Wherever you are on the spectrum, the NHL takes a break. So with the Flyers still knocking on the door in terms of becoming a possible playoff team, let’s look at what each Flyers player deserves to find under the tree or in their stocking. The list is in no particular order.

Garnet Hathaway

Hathaway needs love and some cuddles from a furry friend. So what better way to spend the holidays and beyond than adopting a dog from one of the shelters in Philadelphia. What breed? Why not an English pointer. A pointer is something Hathaway has yet to get this season, so by adopting one for home, he might be closer to getting a point, or pointer, during a hockey game.

Trevor Zegras

He’s been happy in Philly, he looks like he wants to stay. So, a key to the city for starters and anything Zegras wants that will ensure he stays with the Flyers for an extended period. Or rename the arena the Xfinity Zegras Arena. Anything to placate him.

Rasmus Ristolainen

The adage of good health at this time of year is what Ristolainen and Philadelphia are hoping for. When he’s healthy and on top of things he’s a decent, mean, imposing defenseman. May he end up playing 50 games this year or as close to that amount as possible, delivering hits that knock opponents on their rears. And maybe, just maybe, trying to become the point guy on one of the two power play units with a rather hard, heavy slapshot.

Matvei Michkov

Dale Carnegie and Matvei Michkov don’t look alike. But Carnegie’s 1936 self-help book How To Win Friends and Influence People could be just the reading Michkov needs during this break. He is still trying to woo Rick Tocchet into more playing time. Maybe some multi-point games and a few charismatic goals will be enough for the winger to break the 16-minute mark a hell of a lot more than he did so far this year.

Travis Konecny

As much as Konecny would love to play for Team Canada at the upcoming Winter Olympics, we’d probably like him to avoid the travel, the tournament and the possible injury that comes with some rather stiff international competition. It might be selfish, but seeing how Konecny sank like a stone in terms of production last year, it’s probably wise to avoid anything that would hamper his season in Philadelphia. Hence a 10-day vacation somewhere warm and away from the rink might be a great stocking stuffer.

Rodrigo Abols

Since 2014-15, the player has scored 20 goals three times: once in Russian junior hockey, once for the Portland Winterhawks in the Western Hockey League, and once in Sweden (21 for Orebro HK). If he could find some YouTube clips, or have the Flyers coaching staff make a stream of highlights showing him scoring, it couldn’t hurt. Abols has a goal this season. And he, like anyone else on the fourth line, needs to pitch in a bit more. Maybe seeing himself scoring could rekindle whatever has been lost this season. A season review of a forward’s scoring highlights should be longer than 10 seconds.

Sean Couturier

The Flyers captain could probably use the rest over the holidays, even if it’s a few days. But Couturier could also use a massage therapist. Since getting hit with a shot against Nashville which knocked him out of the lineup briefly, Couturier — heading into Saturday’s game against the Rangers — has 10 points since that injury. Prior to that, in the opening month of the season alone, he had nine points. And all of those were at even strength. We hope that maybe Couturier can have a professional work some of his body kinks out because, as it stands now, he seems to be a step slower. Maybe Denver Barkey can make him look a little quicker. Through a few games so far he’s looked a little better.

Owen Tippett

A director’s cut box set of Groundhog Day. Not just for Bill Murray, but he should watch it any time he finds himself in a hot streak, potting goals left and right and leading to a few victories with any luck. Tippett might be the superstitious sort, so anything he does on a game time that has him scoring should be the routine moving forward. With that speed he shows sometimes, he should be scoring a little bit more than he currently is.

Denver Barkey

We hope some lodging in the Philadelphia area for the next few months if his debut against the Rangers was any indication. If his two assists weren’t enough to keep him around for a while, then head coach Rick Tocchet’s post-game comments about possibly fighting for him to stay might add some more heft to that notion.

Travis Sanheim

Sanheim has been a horse this season, much like the last few seasons after Ivan Provorov left the building. He is doing yeoman’s work game in and game out. So we can only think positive that the defenseman has somebody in his family or circle of friends who is doing the cooking over the holidays. Thus far this season we’ve heard of players injure themselves at team meals, hurt themselves spilling something hot on themselves or just some freak accident that put them out of the lineup.

Should a flying wishbone catch Sanheim in the eye, or he wrenches his back lifting a 30-pound turkey, the Flyers are probably as dead as the bird in the oven. Maybe we can pass the hat, or Tocchet can do the cooking for his key players.

Noah Cates

We’re not saying Cates is bad at interviews whether pre-game, post-game or during intermissions. It comes with the job. We would like one of the Flyers to branch out in his vocabulary from the standard “pucks in deep” and “play 200 feet” (or 197 in case of the Winter Olympics). Thus Cates’ locker room should be stocked with a Roget’s Thesaurus to bring some freshness to what are otherwise rather stale, tame and rudimentary answers. “We have to be on our toes!” can also be said in the following way: “We have to be whip-smart!” Anything to stand out. He’s remains of the more consistent Flyers in terms of work ethic. Let him stand out with his lexicon for once!

Nic Deslauriers

Deslauriers deserves some hand cream. His knuckles are probably sore at the best of times from a career of hitting jaws, cheeks and helmets. So what better way to sooth those hands than with some hand lotion or skin cream to make them velvety soft. Or at least less like sandpaper. We know he has hard hands from his fighting. As well as how he’s gone pointless so far this season like his linemate in Garnet Hathaway.

Nick Seeler

He might get some jokes played on him alongside Deslauriers, being called St. Nick and all. But with the shot-blocker not blocking the quantity of shots he has in the previous seasons (at least it seems that way), maybe Seeler would do well with something similar to a pitching machine that shoots out tennis balls or something soft in his garage. Maybe he doesn’t quite know how to get up each morning in relatively less agony than last year. This way he has some marks on the shins but nothing that will have him limping every minute of every day.

Noah Juulsen

We think nametags with “Hello, I’m the other Noah without the Roget’s Theasaurus” might be a good Christmas gift for the guy who looks to be (barring injuries) the seventh defenseman on the depth chart.

Dan Vladar

He’s probably tired of Vladar the Impaler jokes or even Darth Vadar barbs. Yet we think the best idea would be to get a new goalie mask that mirrors the helmet the Star Wars villain (and Luke’s father, sorry for the near half-century spoiler folks) was known for. The black matches part of Philadelphia’s colors. And it would look rather menacing. Ideally add some miniature sound system so to amplify his breathing, scaring the wits out of opponents everywhere, especially in the shootouts.

Cam York

A punching bag or a speed bag with a certain face taped to it or emblazoned on it. Connect the dots people. Please.

Bobby Brink

Robert Orr Brink deserves to have a statue made of him. Not necessarily outside the Xfinity Mobile Arena. But maybe in his backyard. It wouldn’t quite be the heroic mid-air celebration the first Robert Orr scored over the Blues in the 1970 Stanley Cup final. We’re thinking of something more along the lines where he’s winning a puck battle against the likes of Matt Rempe or all 6’8″ of Elmer Soderblom from the Red Wings. The proverbial little guy continues to get things done.

Sam Ersson

Ersson might go the entire season being a useful backup goalie despite having an .850 to .860 save percentage all season. He may be worse statistically in that category than last year, something that was almost inconceivable. Yet here we are. Thus, for Ersson, we believe he deserves nothing but the best: an Ikea Hemnes (sort of a huge cupboard/storage unit that is almost ten feet across). The idea is if he can follow the instructions and build the wall unit by the end of Dec. 25, he can certainly figure out how to slow but steadily increase his save percentage. Or maybe seeing such a monstrosity, he might feel as big as a Hemnes in the net and become a stud goalie the rest of the season.

Christian Dvorak

Dvorak could be playing himself into a short-term extension, or having a line of suitors ready to part with prospects and picks at the trade deadline. A lot will be influenced by where Philadelphia is in the standings. But for Christmas? The finest Swiss Army knife that money can buy! Dvorak can do it all, from winning faceoffs to killing penalties while also holding his own on a line with Zegras. So because he’s so useful, that knife would be quite appropriate.

Jamie Drysdale

The defenseman has been having a great season, given more responsibilities while finding himself paired with Emil Andrae. Drysdale probably isn’t going to find Flyers general manager Danny Briere under the tree with a contract extension. He should find a new pad to call home, preferably with bedrooms and parking space for York and Zegras whenever they crash his place.

Tyson Foerster

In all sincerity, we wish the winger good health and a quick recovery from what is — barring a deep playoff run — a season-ending injury.

Emil Andrae

Andrae and noted author Norman Vincent Peale never crossed paths. Peale was dead for about a decade when Andrae was born. But Andrae might be wise to get his hands on Peale’s bestselling book The Power of Positive Thinking. The self-help bible should make Andrae feel good about his game and avoid any gaffes or miscues that could put him back in third-pairing jeopardy. That book could help him stick around in the top four for far longer than anybody expected.

Carl Grundstrom

The winger has been a nice little addition, temporarily getting the fourth line out of the depths of doing squat on the scoresheet. He also was bumped up in the lines but might find himself back down in the bottom six if Denver Barkey has a say in the matter. Grundstrom deserves some Eagles playoff tickets. That way he knows he won’t have to tackle the resell market and lose half his shirt in the process. And a home Eagles playoff game would mean he’s with the club for at least a few weeks, enough to see if he can help that fourth line consistently.

Nikita Grebenkin

Grebenkin has run into damn near everything he possibly can during a game. If he has the puck, you can bet he’s going to get hit within a second of getting it. He skates like a tank, hoping to go through the opponent rather than around him. So we hope he has a set of car keys under his Christmas tree this week. The car won’t be a Porsche but a Waymo. Why? Well, given how much he runs into things on the ice, a driverless car has less of a chance getting into a fender bender than Grebenkin does.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/what-each-flyer-deserves-for-christmas-2/
 
Drafting our favorite Christmas-set movies

Christmas movies are nice, but sometimes you need something with a little bit more JUICE. There has long been a debate about whether or not Die Hard is a Christmas movie. That debate is boring as hell at this point. There is no debating that Die Hard is a movie set at Christmas that uses the season for thematic purposes. The Christmas-set action movie is a tried and true tradition, beloved by writers like Shane Black to put a Santa hat on someone wielding a gun and have beautiful white snow splattered with the shock of red, red blood.

My BSH pop culture aficionado compatriot Jason and I have decided to have a draft with these Christmas set movies. Most of these belong to the action genre, but there are a few that don’t have explosions. Jason, I will be gracious and give you the first pick.

Jason – Thanks Steve! I will take the aforementioned Die Hard. It’s a cliche pick, but the right pick in a list of strong contenders. How often do you have a film that has a different, yet amazing, catch phrase based on if you are watching the edited (yipee kay yay, motherf***er) or unedited version (yipee kay yay, Mr. Falcon)? Back to the Christmas theme, “ho ho ho I’ve got a machine gun”. The film is infinitely quotable with more than I can even list. It is one of the best action films ever made.

Steve – I mean how can you not? Die Hard is iconic and a perfect action movie. I am going to roll with Gremlins here. It’s one of the funniest horror movies ever made. Speaking of icons, GIZMO is one of the single cutest creations in cinematic history. Gremlins is twisted and tells one of the most fucked up stories in Christmas set film history with the fate of Kate’s (Phoebe Cates) father many years ago. The stupid Google AI thing gave me a really weird summary of this when I searched for the scene online.

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Gremlins might be the one film on here I would give a passionate argument for being a straight up Christmas movie. Christmas is pivotal to the plot in so many ways. But then they made the most bonkers (in a good way) sequel in history with Gremlins 2: The New Batch, proving that you can take the Christmas out of Gremlins and they will still be a force for comedic terror.

Jason – Gremlins is so good! Was genuinely scared of “Spike” as a kid. Not sure why my parents were letting me watch this, where were they? Next up I’ll pick up my favorite time travel film and one of my favorite Philadelphia-located films ever, 12 Monkeys. This film blew me away as a teenager when I first watched it as a recommendation from my dad. Brad Pitt was ROBBED for Best Supporting Oscar to Kevin Spacey (The Usual Suspects). For the uninitiated, Bruce Willis is sent back in time to gather information on the cause of a virus that wipes out most of the human population. It is an extremely well done and well shot film. The ending is absolutely perfect. All of this is set against the backdrop of Philadelphia at Christmastime.

Steve – I’m going to go with Trading Places. There are some aspects of this movie that have not, um, AGED WELL, but overall, it’s a hilarious look at 1980s Philadelphia and a tale of how the rich play with the lives of those less fortunate than them. Dan Aykroyd and Eddie Murphy are such a funny pairing of SNL alums. One of the great twisted Christmas images is drunk Aykroyd in a Santa suit eating salmon through his fake white beard. Looking good, Billy Ray! Feeling good, Lewis!

Jason – That was going to be my next! Classic comedy that I try and watch this time every year because it’s so god damn funny. I’ll go with another comedy this round with the underappreciated Just Friends. This is a Ryan Reynolds vehicle that I think gets blown off as just another early 00’s comedy slop. While the Reynolds fat suit stuff in the beginning is a bit cringey, it does evolve into a very funny film as Reynold’s character vies for the affection of an old high school sweetheart as he makes an unexpected stop in his old New Jersey hometown. However the real stars are Anna Faris’ Brittney Spears-esque girlfriend and his oblivious mother played by Julie Hagerty. All of this plays out over the Christmas holiday, of course. This is an anti-Hallmark Christmas set film.

Steve – It’s time to get weird and pick one of the strangest superhero and Christmas-set movies of all-time – Batman Returns. Oh baby, does Tim Burton go off the wall in this one. Christopher Walken’s performance as Max Shreck can be overlooked between Michelle Pfeifer’s scintillating Catwoman (Dean Pelton from Community voice: “This better not awaken anything in me.”) and Danny DeVito’s disgusting Penguin. There are so many great weird moments in this movie! “I’m going to play this town like a harp out of hell!”, Batman scratching a CD like a record, the actual penguins that live with the villain the Penguin marching him to a watery grave, the giant rubber duck boat, the actual penguins firing rockets. I could go on, but who has the time?

JasonBatman Returns feels like a fever dream at times, but in a good way. Going to pick a recent one here and one of my favorite films of the last few years, The Holdovers. This is a 70’s set film during a Christmas break at an all-boys school where some of the kids don’t have family to go to. It’s an Alexander Payne film, so it’s filled with tons of great dialogue and themes. Not to mention frequent collaborator Paul Giammati puts together one of his best performances.

Steve – Paul Giammati is a treasure and truly one of the great underrated actors. I’m going to dive into the Shane Black end of the pool and pick The Nice Guys. Black has used Christmas to set the scene in a number of films, including Lethal Weapon, The Long Kiss Goodnight, Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, and Iron Man 3. I could have picked any of these here. Lethal Weapon is one of the iconic action movies, and for many people THE iconic action movie. Kiss Kiss Bang Bang has Robert Downey Jr., Val Kilmer, and Michelle Monaghan and is an awesome movie. Iron Man 3 is super fun and a blast of a lowkey MCU romp.The Nice Guys, similarly, is a ton of fun. A throwback buddy movie, The Nice Guys features great chemistry between Ryan Gosling and Russell Crowe. Talk to me next year, though, and it might be one of the other Shane Black Christmas films on this list instead.

Jason – Honestly had never put it together how all of Shane Black’s films are all around this time. Neat! LOVE The Nice Guys. Feels like it could have been a whole franchise based on how well Gosling and Crowe worked together. The banter back and forth between the two is infinitely entertaining. For my last pick I’m going with the niche comedy Go by one of my favorite directors, Doug Liman. Clearly inspired by Pulp Fiction, this film focuses on three different stories that are all loosely connected and intertwined. The film takes place during Christmas-time and has many references to it. This is a wild romp that includes drugs, trouble in Vegas, and a young Timothy Olyphant starring as a drug dealer named Todd. So it basically has everything you need.

Steve – Love Go! I actually only saw this movie for the first time recently and it’s such a great late 90s time capsule. I’m going for a super cheesy but undeniably Philadelphian choice for my final pick – Rocky IV. This is without a doubt the most over-the-top of the Rocky films. The fight between Rocky Balboa and Ivan Drago is insanely long and the punching is so fake and it’s all somehow so great. I don’t think either boxer blocks a single punch.

The bonkers training montage in the middle with Rocky working out in the mountains of Russia is the gold standard for bonkers training montages. And this hasn’t even touched on how Christmas ties in! The pivotal fight between Rocky and Drago takes place on Christmas Day, with Rocky and Adrian’s son watching the match on TV with the ROBOT that they bought for Paulie’s birthday babysitting him while wearing a Santa hat and beard. Yes, you read all of that correctly. It doesn’t matter how many director’s cuts Sylvester Stallone tries to sneak in there, we will never forget the “Happy birthday Paulie” robot.

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JasonSteve
Die HardGremlins
12 MonkeysTrading Places
Just FriendsBatman Returns
The HoldoversThe Nice Guys
GoRocky IV

Honorable mentions​


Lethal Weapon – This should have been drafted, but I have just never had the love in my heart for the Lethal Weapon franchise that I have for Die Hard and the other films on my list. It coined the phrase “I’m getting too old for this shit” and really set the template for the buddy cop film. – Steve

Reindeer Games – This isn’t a good movie, but this is such an over-the-top joy of a weird film. Gary Oldman is soooo scummy. We actually watch this one every Christmas in my household because it’s such a great weird time. And what a loaded cast! The aforementioned Gary Oldman, Ben Affleck, Charlize Theron, Danny Trejo, Donal Logue, DENNIS FARINA! There are even bizarre cameos from Isaac Hayes and Ron Jeremy. I might write an entire piece dedicated to Reindeer Games next year. You have to respect robbing an establishment that serves both Coke AND Pepsi. – Steve

Kiss Kiss Bang Bang and Iron Man 3 – See The Nice Guys above.

There are a ton of great films that we didn’t even mention in this piece. What’s your favorite movie set at Christmas that isn’t quite a Christmas movie? Sound off in the comments below!

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/drafting-our-favorite-christmas-set-movies/
 
A 2026 World Junior Championship guide for Flyers fans

It’s that time of year again, folks! Christmas is behind us but the most wonderful time of year still lies ahead — the 2026 World Junior Championship. There’s little better in this hockey season than this facing off of the world’s best under-20 aged talent, and this year’s installment is set to be no different. And on top of that, there will be a lot to be excited about for Flyers fans in particular, as the organization will be represented by a good handful of exciting prospects on some of the tournament’s top teams.

The Who​


The Flyers will once again be well represented in this tournament across the big four teams: Porter Martone and Jett Luchanko will represent them on the Canadian team, while they’ll have another pair of prospects suiting up for Finland in Heikki Ruohonen and Max Westergard, and then Jack Berglund will join the Swedes for his last year of eligibility, while Shane Vansaghi debuts for the Americans.

Additionally, the Flyers will find themselves nicely represented in these teams’ leadership groups, as well, as Martone will serve as the captain of the Canadian team and Berglund will captain the Swedes, while Ruohonen will wear an A for the Finns. It’s a nice nod for a few exciting prospects, and while being given them isn’t positively everything, leadership qualities are one of the bigger intangibles that NHL teams broadly really value, so it’s nice to see a handful of prospects getting this experience.

The When​


The tournament kicks off this afternoon, and you can find the full schedule for absolutely all of the action here, but the schedule for the games in which these Flyers prospects will be playing is as follows (all times in Eastern Standard Time):

Friday December 26
1:00 PM – Sweden vs. Slovakia
3:30 PM – Denmark vs. Finland
6:00 PM – Germany vs. USA
8:30 PM – Czechia vs. Canada

Saturday December 27
4:30 PM – Latvia vs. Canada
6:00 PM – USA vs. Switzerland

Sunday December 28
2:00 PM – Sweden vs. Switzerland
4:30 PM – Finland vs. Latvia

Monday December 29
1:00 PM – Germany vs. Finland
3:30 PM – Finland vs. Czechia
6:00 PM – Slovakia vs. USA
8:30 PM – Canada vs. Denmark

Wednesday December 31
6:00 PM – USA vs. Sweden
8:30 PM – Canada vs. Finland

The New Year will bring an end to the round robin preliminary round, and after a short break for New Year’s Day, the medal round will commence on the 2nd — quarterfinal games will be knocked out on the 2nd and the 4th, before the gold and bronze medal games to close out the tournament on the 5th.

It’s a tightly packed schedule, but it delivers some of the most exciting hockey of the calendar year, and we can’t wait to see how this all unfolds as it gets going.

Storylines To Watch​


USA looking for the three-peat

Things have been good over these past few years for the folks over at USA Hockey. The American teams have been pretty loaded and have been driven to some huge success by members of that highly-touted 2023 draft class. They’re coming off of two straight tournament wins, and this year they’re looking to make it three, and become to first team to win more than two consecutive championships since Canada’s dominance from 2005-2009.

This will be, of course, easier said than done. This is still a talented roster that they’re bringing — complete with a number of returnees from last year’s team — but that level of sustained success is hard to come by in a tournament like this one. The Americans have been a force to be reckoned with over these past few years, but the other teams will all but certainly be bearing down on them.

Finland looks for revenge

At the top of that list, of course, would have to be the Finnish team, who will be coming into this one with a bad taste in their mouth after losing an absolute heartbreaker last time out — a missed opportunity to break up a stretch pass through the neutral zone in overtime sprung Teddy Stiga on a breakaway, and he was able to put away with game-winner one-on-one with the Finnish goalie. There’s no tougher way to lose a game like that, but the Finns will be looking to use that disappointment as fuel and, bringing back with them nearly half of the squad from last year, they’ll have with them some extra motivated returning players along with the broader benefit of experience in a tournament which tends to (but doesn’t exclusively) favor teams heavier with 19 year olds. But will this be enough to push them over the hump? Time will tell.

The Hockey Canada of it all

There are a couple of more directly Flyers related storylines to keep an eye on with this Canadian team — will Martone pop off and score a boatload of goals like we expect, and will they use Luchako on the wing in the main tournament, and what will this do for his game — but the biggest question is what this team is going to do on a collective level. That is, after two straight wins of the tournament, the Canadians were bounced in the quarterfinals for two more straight years, and they’ll be throwing everything they have at avoiding letting that happen for a third year in a row. The team certainly isn’t lacking for talent, but this has never been an issue for them, and this year they’ll be trying to tap into something beyond that, working to reach a whole even greater than the sum of those parts.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/a-2026-world-junior-championship-guide-for-flyers-fans/
 
Flyers goaltending prospect Yegor Zavragin gets leveled during KHL game while on the bench

It’s one thing for Yegor Zavragin to get run into or be hit during the ups and downs of a KHL season. But you often expect that to happen primarily in games, and sometimes in practice. However, it’s rare that a goalie who was a backup, sitting on the bench minding his own business, was leveled as badly as Zavragin was in a game Friday.

Zavragin, a third-round pick by Philadelphia in the 2023 NHL Draft, was the backup goalie for SKA St. Petersburg as SKA played against Dinamo Minsk. In the first period, with St. Petersburg up 1-0, Dinamo Minsk forward Vitaly Pinchuk received a pass around the St. Petersburg blueline. As he entered the zone, St. Petersburg defenseman Markus Phillips, closed in on him and delivered a good hit, knocking Pinchuk off the puck. Unfortunately, the momentum of the hit, and the speed Pinchuk was going caused him to leave his skates.

It wouldn’t be a huge issue in a North American rink as he would’ve simply ran into the boards and fell. However, with one end of the KHL team benches venturing a few feet beyond the blueline into the defensive zone (in periods one and three), Pinchuk ended up sliding into the St. Petersburg bench. And instead of hitting a stanchion or the curved glass, his momentum carried him beyond the seated skaters on the bench and directly into Zavragin who was in the corner near the sticks.

OH MY! WHAT A HIT 💥#hcSKA defenseman @mphillips_18 sends #DMN Vitali Pinchuk in to the bench area and he takes out #LetsGoFlyers prospect goaltender Yegor Zavragin. 😱 pic.twitter.com/dLUYnGWWk1

— Hockey News Hub (@HockeyNewsHub) December 26, 2025

As you can see, Pinchuk goes full bore into Zavragin who thankfully was wearing his mask. He looked to have taken the brunt of the blow in the upper body, and was bowled over by the forward who also took some punishment from the Phillips hit. Zavragin fell to the ground as those nearby tended to the fallen goaltender. There was no word as to whether Zavragin was injured or got hurt in the freak collision. He didn’t appear in the game today which St. Petersburg won 4-1. Zavragin’s last game action with the club was on Nov. 12 as the team didn’t play any games from Dec. 7. In 11 games with the club, he’s 5-6-0 with a .924 save percentage and a 2.48 goals-against average.

With any luck, Zavragin avoided serious injury that could impede his development. It’s bad enough goalies get injured from getting run over from time to time. But to get clocked while being on the bench as the backup? Give Zavragin a break!

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...s-leveled-during-khl-game-while-on-the-bench/
 
Porter Martone played perfect agitator in first World Juniors game

The Philadelphia Flyers are being represented by six prospects at the 2026 IIHF World Junior Championships in Minnesota this week and the first day was highlighted by Porter Martone being the perfect little agitator in a big win for Canada over Czechia.

It was a tough game for Canada as they faced the very team that caused that entire nation heartbreak a year ago, as they exited the tournament earlier than expected and millions of hockey fans started to question the decision making of those in charge of the Under-20 team. It was a back-and-forth affair as there were four total game-tying goals in the eventual 7-5 win for Canada.

Sure, Calgary Flames defenseman prospect Zayne Parekh scored two goals as revenge for not making last year’s team, or Montreal Canadiens prospect Michael Hage earned three points, or projected top pick for next year’s draft Gavin McKenna finished with two assists — but the real star of the show was our own Martone as he ended the game in hilarious and contentious fashion.

The Flyers top prospect managed to score the empty-net goal to put Czechia to bed and after knowing that his team was going to walk away with a win, Martone went by the opposing bench on his way to celebrate with his teammates, and tapped the rear end of Czechia forward Adam Novotny. It was a perfect little way to get under the skin of the opponent but unfortunately, Martone was called for unsportsmanlike conduct and got his second minor penalty of the game.


Porter Martone was called for unsportsmanlike conduct following his empty net goal. #WorldJuniors pic.twitter.com/EDcGHM8AHY

— TSN (@TSN_Sports) December 27, 2025

God, it’s just so good. Something that makes you stand up and point and shout “That’s my f–king guy!!” To show that level of being able to just ruffle some feathers on the biggest stage of his young career so far, is something we can all be proud of.

The Flyers are obviously notorious for players being able to do this and while this season has gone on surprisingly well in terms of wins and (overtime) losses, the main contributor to these extra curriculars in Travis Konecny, has not been focusing a whole lot on that aspect of his game. Maybe Martone potentially joining the Flyers later this season, or at the very latest at training camp next fall, will really make this team the most annoying team to play against once again.

Outside of the game-finishing cheeky tactics, Martone played a more subdued game. He led Canadian forwards in ice-time by over two minutes and only goal-scorer Parekh was able to equal Martone in his five shots on goal. But still, there’s a sense that there could be so much more coming from the Flyers top prospect and that should be a little terrifying for every other team in the tournament.

Martone will get another chance to be a little bit of an agitator and score some points against Latvia on Saturday afternoon. Unfortunately, we won’t be getting the infamous Canada vs. United States game on New Year’s Eve this year as the two nations are in different groups for some reason. Let’s hope that they meet in the final for some outstanding fireworks.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...perfect-agitator-in-first-world-juniors-game/
 
Flyers working towards contract extension for Christian Dvorak

The Philadelphia Flyers want to keep Christian Dvorak around and are willing to sign him to a fresh and new contract extension, according to the latest report.

Dvorak signed a one-year, $5.4-million contract with the Flyers on July 1 last summer as the team’s temporary fix at the center position as Philadelphia hoped to turn the corner from a not-so-good team looking at the draft lottery odds after every game, to one who was looking forward to the playoffs. And it has kind of worked out that way.

The 29-year-old center has found incredible chemistry with fellow newcomer Trevor Zegras as the hotshot forward’s centerman, leading Dvorak to scoring eight goals and 24 points and barring a complete failure of a second half or a catastrophic injury, he should finish this season with a career-high in points.

And because of this, the Flyers want to keep him around.

During the Saturday Headlines segment on the Sportsnet broadcast, Elliotte Friedman specifically mentioned that the Flyers and Christian Dvorak are working towards a deal and that there is at least the start of the conversation to keep the center in Philadelphia past this season.

“The Flyers and Dvorak are talking extension,” Friedman said on Saturday night’s broadcast. “I think everybody here would tell you that it has to work for both sides to happen. He’s played very well there, he’s got 24 points in 35 games, and what I can say Ron is that there are other teams out there that do not expect Dvorak to hit the market now. They think he’s going to sign, but both sides have to make it work.”

There were rumors of this being the desire as early as this month, but now it’s more clear than ever that the Flyers are really going to try to have this happen and not have this be a one-and-done year for Dvorak in Philadelphia.

Due to him being on a one-year contract, the earliest a team can sign a player to a contract extension is January 1. So, should we expect an announcement in just a few days? Maybe. But it wouldn’t surprise anyone if this gets done in the next few weeks and we’re looking at Dvorak committing the remainder of his good years to the Flyers as he’s about to turn 30 years old in February.

This is no doubt going to be a contentious topic among Flyers fans as re-signing a veteran who is having a career year is never a tremendous look, especially if it is for a whole lot of dollars and years. And one could argue that Dvorak could be blocking a center prospect like Jett Luchanko from a full-time NHL role as soon as next season, but it’s also a problem that the team would have to deal with later, and Luchanko would need to improve a whole lot, and it’s never really a bad thing to have too many NHL-caliber centermen.

We’ll just have to see where this goes, but another Flyers-related topic of conversation was brought up by Friedman was well.

Egor Zamula trying to terminate contract, Flyers prefer trade​


Another Flyers skater that had his name mentioned on the national broadcast is defenseman Egor Zamula. The 25-year-old Russian was placed on waivers earlier this month and was sent down to the AHL’s Lehigh Valley Phantoms. He did report and has played in a game, unlike how some NHL regulars deal with being sent down to the minors, but he still wants out.

According to Friedman, Zamula and his agent are looking to terminate their current contract so that he can be free to sign anywhere as an unrestricted free agent. Zamula’s agent is Dan Milstein, the same agent as forward Alexandre Texier who just went through the same thing and signed with the Montreal Canadiens in the middle of this season — he wants the same to happen for the Flyers defenseman.

But, there is a key word in what they want and that’s “mutual”. As reported by Friedman, the Flyers would rather go the trade route to get him to a new environment and would rather not just let him go leave for nothing in return. That makes perfect sense for the team’s point-of-view — to not have their work of developing an undrafted WHL defenseman into someone who has 168 NHL games under his belt before turning 26 years old, just walk away for nothing.

The main takeaway is that there is no future for Zamula on the Flyers. If we’re reading the tea leaves correctly and there isn’t an injury crisis on the Philadelphia blue line in the very near future, we’ve already seen the last game of Zamula wearing the Orange and Black.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...ards-contract-extension-for-christian-dvorak/
 
World Juniors daily recap: Close calls, but no upsets here

Throughout the World Juniors tournament, we’ll be keeping track of all the action and bringing you all of the results in one place.

Germany vs. Slovakia​


The opening match saw two teams coming off of day one losses, but considering their competition, it could be argued that neither team got off to a bad start. Slovakia kept it close against Sweden right to the end, while Germany cut the USA lead to just one goal twice in the second period. Slovakia got a big boost coming into this game, with returning defenseman Luka Radivojevic rejoining the lineup after an illness sidelined him for the opener.

Slovakia had the better of the play in the opening minutes, aided by an early power play, with Tomas Pobezal ringing a shot off the iron. Team Slovakia continued to apply offensive pressure and were rewarded on the scoreboard for their effort Thomas Chrenko opened the scoring on a broken play to give Slovakia their first lead of the tournament. Radivojevic made a pass down low from the point that bounced around in the slot, before Chrenko was able to beat goaltender Linus Viellard. Chrenko would get his second of the game after a really impressive looking power play, concluding in Adam Nemec finding Chrenko right in front of the net for a quick goal. Germany was held without a shot for the final 13 minutes of the first period, getting out-shot 19-3. It was an extremely strong showing from Slovakia, but it’s also worth mentioning how quick of a turnaround this was for the Germans, who had fewer than 18 hours between their games.

The second period saw the script flip some, with Germany controlling play and getting the better of the chances. Unfortunately for them, their momentum came to a halt when Lenny Boos was given a double minor for high-sticking. Chrenko would complete the hat trick on the ensuing power play, with a pass attempt deflecting off of a German defender and into the net.

We have a #WorldJuniors hat trick 🧢🧢🧢

Tomas Chrenko notches 3 for Slovakia! #IIHF #SVKGER pic.twitter.com/UBW2emQJi6

— IIHF (@IIHFHockey) December 27, 2025

Midway through the third period, after another push from Germany, Dustin Willhoft broke the shutout bid, retrieving a loose puck off of an uncontrolled entry and beating Michal Pradel one-one-one with a five hole shot. While he was not super busy for most of the game, Pradel had to make some excellent saves to maintain Slovakia’s lead in the final frame. Adam Belusko added a long-range, empty net goal with just under a minute remaining to secure Slovakia’s first win of the tournament.

Final: Slovakia 4 – Germany 1
Next game up (SVK): Dec 29, 6:00 ET vs. USA
Next game up (GER): Dec 29, 1:00 ET vs. Sweden


Latvia vs. Canada​


In international hockey, Latvia has given Canada some scares, and the start of this game was yet another example. Outshooting the Canadians early, Latvia drew the first penalty of the game when Flyers prospect Jett Luchanko took a holding penalty on what was essentially a football tackle. Luchanko has had a rough start to the tournament, with his line getting dinged for three goals against in game one, and now a pretty bad penalty early in game two. A bit later, it looked as if Markuss Sieradzkis had given Latvia an early lead, but it was ruled no goal due to a distinct kicking motion. Canada finally began to find their game in the final minutes of the first period, overtaking Latvia in shots. Though the takeaway being “Canada finally overtakes Latvia in shots” really speaks to where this Canadian team is right now. Their ramp up seemed to carry somewhat over into the middle frame, and they very quickly went to work on a five minute power play after Zayne Parekh was hit up high.

Less than a minute into the power play, Gavin McKenna found Cole Reschny on the right faceoff dot, who then cut to the middle of the ice for a shot that beat Nils Maurins and broke the scoreless tie. While the shots on goal count was relatively close through the second period, Canada missed the net a ton in this game and was by this point largely controlling play. They still looked a step behind what we’d expect from a hockey powerhouse, but did recover well after a really troubling start to the game. Cole Beaudoin caught a bit of a lucky break when the referees missed a high hit he laid that could’ve absolutely been a major penalty, and soon after Ben Danford would be assessed a double minor for high-sticking. Discipline was a topic of conversation after game one — thanks in part to Porter Martone’s antics — and they appeared to be beginning to lose their composure a bit in this one as well. Martone did have a handful of run-ins with the Latvian goaltender that caused some post-whistle scrums. However, the Canadians were able to kill off the penalty and stayed out of the box the rest of the way.

The story of the third period was defensive hockey, with both teams looking to lock the other down. Eventually, the Latvians had start taking some chances as time was not on their side, and this opened the game up for both sides. Canada strung together a couple of really dangerous shifts but were unable to get another one by Maurins in regulation. With just under two minutes to play in regulation, Latvia found the game-tying goal thanks to Rudolfs Berzkalns pouncing on a rebound and kicking the puck off of his stick and into the net. A delay of game penalty put Canada on a power play with less than a minute remaining, and thanks to a pair of blocks by Antons Macijevskis, the game would head to overtime.

Still on the power play, and just 44 seconds into overtime, McKenna found Michael Hage across the ice for a one-timer to end the game. Canada got the win, but notably skated away with just two points instead of the three that a team gets for a regulation win. This is a team that is playing way under their potential right now, which has recently become an all too familiar trend for Canada in this tournament.

Final: Canada 2 – Latvia 1 (OT)
Next game up (CAN): Dec 29, 8:30 ET vs. Denmark
Next game up (LAT): Dec 28, 4:30 ET vs. Finland


USA vs. Switzerland​


Heavy favorites in this one, team USA found themselves in a tightly contested first period against Switzerland. Interestingly, the Americans threatened much more offensively on the penalty kill than they did at even strength. First it was Cole Hutson on a partial breakaway, and then Brodie Ziemer only moments later on a odd man rush. Goaltender Christian Kirsch stood tall, stopping both A-plus chances to keep the game scoreless after 20 minutes. All in all, it was a period that Switzerland had to have been happy with, keeping pace with the team going for a three-peat.

Early in the second period, Ziemer gave team USA the lead with a snipe from the inside of the faceoff circle. Ziemer had a great first period and the goal was a continuation of his strong play. Soon after, there was a scary moment when Cole Hutson was hit with a point shot on the back of his neck and dropped to the ice. He remained on the ice for some time, and eventually they called for the stretcher. He was moving his arms and legs before being taken off the ice, and the most recent report is that he was discharged from the hospital.

Team Switzerland scored their first goal of the tournament when Basile Sansonnens went bar down with a shot from far out to tie the game. On the very next shift, Cyrill Henry found an opening the flew in on a breakaway but was unable to beat Nicholas Kempf. It was a massive save at a huge spot in the game, keeping the game tied at one, and coming right after the Hutson injury. It wouldn’t stay tied for long, though, as Will Zellers, who has been great through this first two games, re-gained the lead for team USA. Zellers came in on the left boards and took a shot from an angle that isn’t the most dangerous, but it was a classic RVH goal, where the shooter aims for the goalie’s helmet/over the goalie’s shoulder to find the open space.

With the net empty and just about 40 seconds remaining in regulation, the Swiss hit the crossbar, but that would be as close as they would come to tying it. Similarly to their rivals from the north, it felt like team USA didn’t deliver their best game, but Kempf came up big when needed, and the Swiss were held to just 9 shots on goal.

Final: USA 2 – Switzerland 1
Next game up (USA): Dec 29, 6:00 ET vs. Slovakia
Next game up (SUI): Dec 28, 2:00 ET vs. Sweden


Denmark vs. Czechia​


An early goal from Vojtech Cihar set the tone for Czechia just two minutes into the game. It was a bit of weird one, with a Tomas Galvas shot hitting him in front of the net, with the puck then finding its way through the five hole. The lead wouldn’t last for long, however, as just three minutes later Tristan Peterson jumped on a loose puck right in front of the net following a failed shot attempt and made no mistake. Both teams were humming offensively to start, but Denmark found themselves in trouble when Jesper Olesen was assessed a five minute major for a hit to the head.

On the ensuing power play, Matej Kubiesa found the back of the net with an absolute snipe, skating down the right boards and shooting far-side over the blocker of Anton Wilde. Czechia continued to press on the power play, with Wilde facing a number of tough chances, but were held to just the one tally on the major power play.

Back on the power play in the middle frame, Vaclav Nestrasil hit a no-look shot that found the back of the net. Tomas Poletin set a great screen in front to help block Wilde’s sight, and Nestrasil showed off his accuracy while feigning pass. This comes the day after Nestrasil set up a goal against Canada with a no-look pass; he’s had a great start to the tournament. Denmark pulled within one with a goal right off of a faceoff when Oliver Larsen ripped it far-side past Matyas Marik. Just a few minutes later Marik made the save of the tournament so far, robbing Oliver Green.

Denmark cam SO CLOSE to tying the game but Matyas Marik had other plans 😱#WorldJuniors pic.twitter.com/mThIPTbPu7

— TSN (@TSN_Sports) December 28, 2025

It’s at this point that game really got away from the Danes, with goals from Adam Jiricek and Stepan Hoch that increased Czechia’s lead to 5-2 prior to the end of the middle frame. The offense would continue in the third, with goals from Tomas Galvas (Czechia’s third power play goal of the game) and Richard Zemlicka to make it 7-2, which is how the game would end. On a day that included lopsided matchups on paper for both Canada and the United States, it was team Czechia that ended up producing the most dominant performance.

Final: Czechia 7 – Denmark 2
Next game up (CZE): Dec 29, 3:30 ET vs. Finland
Next game up (DEN): Dec 29, 8:30 ET vs. Canada


Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/world-juniors-daily-recap-close-but-no-upsets-here/
 
Takeaways: A lifeless loss in Seattle

In what was one of the most boring games of the season, the Flyers snoozed their way to a sloppy 4-1 loss in Seattle on Sunday night. Messy neutral zone play and little offensive creativity abound, the Flyers couldn’t solve Phillip Grubauer in their first game out of the holiday break.

The basics

First period:
No scoring

Second period: 3:48 – Jordan Eberle (Kappo Kakko, Matty Beniers)

Third period: 5:49 – Chandler Stephenson (Eeli Tolvanen), 17:30 – Eeli Tolvanen (Stephenson) (EN), 18:03 – Carl Grundstrom (Rodrigo Abols, Nikita Grebenkin), 18:24 – Tolvanen (EN)

SOG: 32 (PHI) – 20 (SEA)

First period things

The opening 20 minutes had no score, and it was a pretty sluggish start for the Flyers coming out of the holiday break. Through the first eight or so minutes of the game, the Kraken had the Flyers on their heels a bit, and the Flyers couldn’t move the puck very well through all three zones, registering just one shot in the opening eight minutes.

However, once Nikita Grebenkin drew a penalty at the 7:40 mark, the Flyers really gained the upper hand in puck possession and dictating play. Against the dead-last Kraken penalty kill, the Flyers came up empty, but they generated numerous high-end scoring chances. Later, on a second power play (on a penalty drawn by a Denver Barkey breakaway), the Flyers came up empty again. There was a lot to like on both power plays, and each of the opportunities really eased the Flyers into the offensive flow of the game, but you have to capitalize against the league-worst unit. So, it was a bit of a strange start to this game, but there were things to like from the Orange and Black.

Flyers allow the first goal, again

For the 25th time in 37 games, the Flyers let up the first goal of the game. As has been discussed over and over again throughout the first half of the season, the Flyers have been one of the most impressive come-from-behind teams in the NHL. However, at some point, the Flyers are going to need to start scoring first with more regularity, right? It’s great that the Flyers are resilient and all, but you’d think the Flyers are due for some regression in a negative direction in terms of wins.

That regression may have started tonight, where the Flyers just truly never got their bearings on this game. Falling behind 1-0 in the second period on a pretty unstoppable Jordan Eberle goal, the Kraken never really looked back, and Grubauer really just shut the door.

1-0 #SeaKraken

Excellent transition from Eberle and Beniers before their line combines a laterall pass below the goal line to Kakko and then a slot pass to Eberle. Really pretty play pic.twitter.com/sUjaiXUS0U

— Alison (@AlisonL) December 29, 2025

Flyers get goalie’d, sort of

On top of the Flyers never truly getting into the flow of the game, Phillip Grubauer was at his highest level, making high-quality saves when the Kraken needed it. So, why did it just feel like nothing happened offensively at all in this game? The Flyers just felt like a lifeless team tonight, and it didn’t seem at all like they made Grubauer’s life very difficult whatsoever.

According to Micah Blake McCurdy’s model, the Flyers actually won the expected goals battle with 3.1 expected goals to the Kraken’s 1.2. The Flyers also had 10 high danger chances to the Kraken’s 1, and carried a 57.3 Corsi-for percentage in the game, according to Natural Stat Trick. And, by the shot counter, the Flyers had 32 shots on goal to the Kraken’s 20. So, by all accounts, the Flyers actually dictated quite a bit in this game, and had a strong underlying process that should have resulted in a win on most nights. Maybe the real story of tonight is that the Flyers ran into a goalie on a hot streak, but it’s hard to leave that game thinking the Flyers played as well as the underlying stats imply.

Power play struggles

Outside of Grubauer, if you’re looking for the difference in this game, the Flyers’ inept power play is No. 1 on the list. With three opportunities in the first two periods against an absolutely horrendous penalty killing unit, you just have to come up with a goal or two in that situation. As mentioned previously, the Flyers created plenty of chances on those power plays, but it ultimately doesn’t matter when you can’t cash in against a penalty kill operating at a 70 percent clip. The Flyers’ power play, currently ranked 24th in the league, continues to show little signs of improvement as we enter the new year. When you combine that with the Flyers often playing from behind and their middling underlying numbers on the whole, it’s hard not to think that regression is on its way, but we’ll see how they respond for the rest of this road trip.

A late Grundstrom goal!

Hey! Carl Grundstrom scored again! For the third straight game, Grundstrom and the fourth line were productive. Tonight, the Grundstrom goal came in garbage time with the Flyers trailing 3-0, but his goal prevented the Flyers from being shutout for the second time this season. It also was another showcase of Grundstrom’s shot, which has proven itself to be a pretty useful attribute so far in his tenure with the Flyers.

Carl Grundstrom extends his goal streak to three games. #PHIvsSEA | #LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/NVJeYHSbQp

— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) December 29, 2025

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/takeaways-a-lifeless-loss-in-seattle/
 
World Juniors daily recap: Finland dominates, Ruohonen, Westergard pop

Throughout the World Juniors tournament, we’ll be keeping track of all the action and bringing you all of the results in one place.

Sweden vs. Switzerland​


The Swedes kicked off the tournament with a close win over the Slovaks, and while they surely came out of that game looking to pick up some more steam and show a little bit more dominance in their offense, this wasn’t quite a level they were able to reach in yesterday’s matchup with the Swiss.

They certainly got themselves off to a hot start, as they were able to jump out to a very early start on a goal from Eric Nilson scored just 54 seconds into the game. The Swedes bought themselves the early edge in momentum with that one as well, but it proved to be an edge not so easy to hold on to — they had two opportunities on the power play before the midway point of the period, but they weren’t able to generate a ton, or as much as they would have like to, and instead the Swiss took the momentum from those two big kills and ran with it. The Swiss were able to capitalize on the good offense they were generating (even with those penalty kills, they would come out of the period with a 15-13 edge in shots) and get themselves on the board with just under six minutes to go in the first frame, and it was an even game again.

The Swiss were nicely able to build on that effort on the other side of the intermission, and while their effort wasn’t perfect — they handed the Swedes another prime opportunity on the power play early in the period — they did some good work to shut down the Swedish offense, holding them to seven shots while putting up another goal themselves, this one from Lars Steiner, to pull them back into the lead.

It was looking, for a time at least, like they might just be able to keep up this level of effort and pull off the first major upset of the tournament, but by the third period, with desperation mounting, the Swedes were able to really find their legs again and run away with this game. They were able to find the equalizer again very early in the period (this time 57 seconds on, by Viggo Bjork), and this time, they weren’t going to let go of that momentum so easily. They were able to build on that, grabbing the lead just under six minutes later on a goal from Lucas Pettersson, and despite a bit of an anxious moment building when they followed that up by taking a tripping penalty, it was their turn to come up with a big kill to take the wind out of the Swiss’s sails. They put up some good chances, but the Swedish goaltending wouldn’t be beaten again, and this one ended with a second goal for Pettersson into the empty net to seal their second win of the tournament.

Final: Sweden 4 – Switzerland 2
Next game up (SWE): Dec 29, 1:00 ET vs. Germany
Next game up (SUI): Dec 29, 8:30 ET vs. Denmark


Finland vs. Latvia​


If the first game of the afternoon was a nicely enough balanced game, the second and final of the day between Finland and Latvia was anything but. Both teams were coming into this matchup on a bit of a high — Finland dominated Denmark in their first game of the tournament, beating them by a 6-2 score, while Latvia once again stepped up as a major disruptive force to the Canadians, and despite losing that game, still played them well and managed to take them to overtime — but only one was going to be able to keep that up, and the Finns answered quite decisively that it would be them.

This is a game that, in truth, they had full control over for just about the whole of. The Finns were able to get themselves on the board early in this one, with Emil Hemming scoring just inside the four minute mark, and while they weren’t able to build on that lead immediately — and they did have a prime opportunity, as the Oskars Breidis was called for a delay of game penalty just 25 seconds after giving up that goal, but the Latvians came up with a big kill — that was soon to come.

The Finns were able to pour on two more goals before the period was out — the first by Jasper Kuhta and assisted on by Flyers prospect Max Westergard, and then Westergard got his own first goal of the tournament with just 44 seconds remaining in the frame — totaling three goals while holding the Latvians to just three shots on goal, and with this, it would seem, they were only getting started. Hemming scored on the 5-on-3 power play early in the second period, and Joona Saarelainen (assisted by another Flyers prospect in Heikki Ruohonen) tacked on another to make it five goals unanswered and an official out-scoring of the Latvians’ shots total (one on the period to make it four in total).

We won’t belabor this point, but it was a pretty complete thrumming by the Finns from start to finish. The Latvians managed to generate marginally more offense in the final frame (three shots, matching their first period output), but the Finnish offense continued to overwhelm them. The Finns added three more goals in the third period — from Roope Vesterinen, then a first for Ruohonen, and the final from Lasse Boelius (assisted on by Ruohonen to make it a three-point game for him) — to well and truly put this one away, though it was over well before that point.

Final: Finland 8 – Latvia 0
Next game up (FIN): Dec 29, 3:30 ET vs. Czechia
Next game up (LAT): Dec 30, 4:30 ET vs. Denmark


Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...ap-finland-dominates-ruohonen-westergard-pop/
 
Porter Martone finally dominates with perfect World Juniors performance

It was bound to happen. We were just waiting for this sort of game from Porter Martone to come by and make a whole lot of jaws drop with the sheer magnitude of ability he has on the ice while skating for Team Canada at the 2026 World Juniors.

It could’ve been against Latvia over the weekend but the central European nation stood strong against Canada for the second year in a row and managed to be a real hard out. It could’ve been against Czechia in the tournament opener but that is a larger ask — to get up against one of the more impressive teams in the tournament and in the very first game.

All that needed to happen was for Canada to really need to put step on the throat of some poor team just trying to not be relegated to a lower division. Unfortunately, Denmark walked in front of their path and Martone and some of his teammates just lit up with a bloodthirsty smile.

The end result was a 9-1 win for Canada in which a total of 48 shots on goal were thrown at the Danish crease and all the Canadian netminder needed to do was stop 12. It was a bloodbath and one that Martone really capitalized on to show off just why he is one of the top prospects in the world and is going to be a perfect Flyer one day.

Porter Martone showed off so much in latest World Juniors domination​


Martone was doing what he typically has done during this tournament through the start of this game — getting to the dangerous areas of the ice, controlling the puck along the boards and behind the goal line looking for any open teammate to create a goal from his stick. But it all materialized when he was able to unleash his hellish shot for a one-timer on the power play into the back of a wide-open net.


THE CAPTAIN! 🫡

Porter Martone makes it 4-1 for Canada! 🇨🇦 #WorldJuniors pic.twitter.com/xBZK9w2Sxq

— TSN (@TSN_Sports) December 30, 2025

It’s not the most impressive goal but it is certainly one that makes you take a step back and go “Wow, okay damn” and realize that there’s this weapon in the typical playmaker that he is able to just unleash whenever the situation arises. The poor Danes had no chance.

Martone’s game only evolved from there. He earned his only assist of the game after pouncing on a loose puck and ever so faintly faking a trip down to the other side of the ice, spinning it around for linemate Michael Misa who was waiting for the chance to one-time it home. It was a near-perfect assist from the playmaking winger; a reverse pass that fooled a whole lot of defenders on the ice and something that might just be repeatable at the NHL level if the pace is brought up to the next marker.

That goal and assist against lower competition is just fine and dandy and if that was all that came off of Martone’s stick on Monday night, we probably wouldn’t think we needed to rush to the laptop and write just about how sick his game was. We would nod in approval and expect some more from him.

But, that’s not all that happened.

In the third period, with the game truly gone (but that doesn’t matter; whatever), Martone gave his best Leon Draisaitl impression and scored a goal from an impossibly tight angle. And it wasn’t just any old shot that dribbled in, it was an absolute rocket into the back of the net with an NHL-ready quality to it.


Porter Martone double-dips and it's 9-1 Canada! 🇨🇦 #WorldJuniors pic.twitter.com/BuMWbv6wW4

— TSN (@TSN_Sports) December 30, 2025

That’s just beauty right there. That’s pure beauty. The Flyers’ top prospect doing stuff like that on the world stage while wearing the letter for Team Canada. That’s the stuff we dream about.

This whole game seemed to be Martone’s attempts finally becoming real production. He’s been doing the exact same thing throughout all three games in the tournament but all he needed was one game to really hit home that he can do this on a regular basis. He will always be a play-driving winger that will contribute in just every way possible on the ice, and some games he’ll walk away with zero points in a tough overtime win, or have two goals and an assist that are highlight-reel worthy in a dominating performance. It just depends if the bounces go his way or not.

Martone now has three goals and four points in three games in the tournament, which might not seem like something to really write home about but after Canada struggled against Czechia and narrowly escaped with a win while facing Latvia, it’s pretty much as expected given the circumstances. Now, the Flyers top prospect and his other Canadians take on Finland on New Year’s Eve in another actual test to see if they are actually worth the hype.

That Canada-Finland clash will feature four Flyers prospects as Martone and Jett Luchanko face off against Heikki Ruohonen and Max Westergard, who have been very impressive in their own right. We’ll be glued.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...nates-with-perfect-world-juniors-performance/
 
Flyers’ 3 Stars of the Week: Barkey remains fun, and the fourth line finally steps up

This past week, the Flyers have somehow played three games while also having a four-day holiday break. In that stretch, the Flyers went 2-1-0 against three of the worst teams in the Western Conference, with wins over Vancouver and Chicago and a regulation loss against Seattle.

The week started off on the right foot with a pretty dominant 5-2 win over the Canucks, where the new look fourth line of Nikita Grebenkin, Rodrigo Abols, and Carl Grundstrom combined for two goals. The next night, Sam Ersson put in one of his strongest performances of the season in a 3-1 win over the Blackhawks. Then, after a four day holiday break, the Flyers began their West Coast trip with a lifeless 4-1 loss to the Kraken on Sunday night.

With the results this week, the Flyers now sit in third place in the Metropolitan Division with 45 points, but second in the division in terms of points percentage (.608). They are tied with division leader Carolina for the least regulation losses in the Eastern Conference with 11, and continue to find ways to earn at least a point in the majority of their games.

So, before tonight’s games in Vancouver, let’s dive into what players really stood out this past week for the Orange and Black.

3. Denver Barkey​


0 goals, 0 assists, but he was a bundle of energy and fun

There were not many pure standouts on the scoresheet for the Flyers this week, so we really liked the things that Denver Barkey was doing this week. While he wasn’t able to register a point, he was frequently in and around offensive chances for the Flyers, and was an annoying pest for defenses to deal with.

One area of strength that came out for Barkey this week? His ability to frustrate defenses, and draw lots of penalties in the process. Take the play below from Sunday night in Seattle, where Barkey blocks a shot at the top of the defensive zone, gains the puck in the neutral zone, and earns a penalty on a mini-breakaway chance. Relentless, all-three-zones hockey from Barkey is going to endear him to Rick Tocchet, and that’s exactly what we saw from him this week.

Denver Barkey is an ANIMAL.

Draws a penalty here. #Flyers pic.twitter.com/XLcjg0nnxF

— Flyers Nation (@FlyersNation) December 29, 2025

The way Barkey plays, though, sometimes can come with a cost, and we also saw that this week against the Blackhawks. On a power play, Barkey went hard after a Chicago defenseman along the boards to retrieve a puck, and ended up throwing a hit that Barkey received the worst of. He left Tuesday’s game, but the injury ended up being not serious. Still, from here on out, it’ll be interesting to see how Barkey’s 5’8” frame holds up in the NHL.

2. Travis Konecny​


1 goal, 2 assists, 3 games played, and he looks like he’s back

The trend started before this week, but Travis Konecny’s play as of late has really inspired confidence that the 28-year-old forward still has an extremely high level of hockey in him. He’s back to making a shift-by-shift impact, as being united with Trevor Zegras and Christian Dvorak has really played out well for the Flyers.

This week, Konecny’s point against the Canucks came on a secondary assist to a Dvorak goal. With a creative zone entry, Konecny was a key part in a goal that emphasized what he arguably does best – offensive creation on the rush.

CHRISTIAN DVORAK BATS IT IN (BARELY) BELOW THE CROSSBAR AND TREVOR ZEGRAS EXTENDS HIS POINT STREAK TO 8 GAMES!!! WHAT A RUSH. 3-0!#LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/bItjfFRzj1

— Flyers Clips (@Flyers_Clips) December 23, 2025

Then, against the Blackhawks, Konecny put in one of his most complete games of the season, with a goal and an assist to show for it. While Konecny’s goal came off a ridiculous feed from Zegras, the play started with another strong zone entry from the Konecny-Zegras combo, and was also all about Konecny’s movement and creativity in the offensive zone.

TK ft. TZ: A perfect collab.#PHIvsCHI | #LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/wpFARZ02yW

— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) December 24, 2025

And finally, later in the Chicago game, Konecny had a bit of luck with his power play assist, where his pass from the side of the net ended up on the stick of Noah Cates in front for a goal.

TK put it on a platter. 🍽️#PHIvsCHI | #LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/hi3o9P2TlZ

— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) December 24, 2025

1. Nikita Grebenkin, Rodrigo Abols, Carl Grundstrom


Combined for 4 goals this week, the first really good fourth line of the season

With Rick Tocchet loving the idea of rolling all four lines all the time, even in late-game close situations, it’s imperative that the Flyers’ fourth line can keep up. For much of the season before this week, that simply wasn’t happening, and the Flyers were getting absolutely caved in the defensive zone when the fourth line was on the ice.

Well, since the benching of Garnet Hathaway, the new look fourth line of Nikita Grebenkin, Rodrigo Abols, and Carl Grundstrom has been a revelation. There’s actually some offensive tools on that line now, with the puck protection of Grebenkin and the shot of Grundstrom giving the Flyers some real quality on the fourth line.

This week, the line combined for the first two goals in the game against Vancouver. For the first goal, Grebenkin protected the puck as he entered the zone, left it for Abols, and immediately went to the netfront for a deflection goal. Strong, “gritty” work from Grebenkin and exactly what you’d like to see from the fourth line.

Jolly Old St. Nik delivered. 🎅#PHIvsVAN | #LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/bmLhD2mzZf

— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) December 23, 2025

On the line’s second goal of the game, Grebenkin flashed some pretty high-end skill as well. Again, Grebenkin’s puck protection skills along the boards and behind the net are some of the best on this Flyers roster, and having that in a fourth line position can be a luxury. This play below is really all Grebenkin, even with Grundstrom’s persistence for the rebound. Grundstrom also added an empty netter in Chicago to seal the deal on Tuesday night.

Persistence pays off. 💪#VANvsPHI | #LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/RiYWFsr5I0

— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) December 23, 2025

Finally, the fourth line registered the only goal for the Flyers in Seattle, on an absolute rip from Grundstrom to make the score 3-1 Kraken. It’s been pretty shocking to watch Grundstrom become a serviceable player for the Flyers, and while he’s certainly not going to keep up on this pace (6 goals in 11 games), his shooting skill is real. Combine that with Grebenkin’s puck protection skills and Abols’ well-rounded game, there could be lots more offense to come by for this new look fourth line.

Carl Grundstrom extends his goal streak to three games. #PHIvsSEA | #LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/NVJeYHSbQp

— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) December 29, 2025

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...ins-fun-and-the-fourth-line-finally-steps-up/
 
Takeaways: Flyers start slow but end up doubling Vancouver in a 6-3 road victory

The Flyers were late to the dance, but they put in the work necessary to earn a 6-3 win over the host Vancouver Canucks. Philadelphia split their first two games of the post-Christmas West Coast swing and look to get their second win Wednesday night against Calgary.

The basics​


First period: 3:45 – David Kampf (Drew O’Connor, Marcus Pettersson), 12:02 – Noah Cates (Matvei Michkov, Bobby Brink)
Second period: 3:40 – Carl Grundstrom (Nikita Grebenkin, Travis Sanheim), 16:20 – Travis Konecny (Jamie Drysdale, Trevor Zegras)
Third period: 1:08 – Drew O’Connor (David Kampf), 1:34 – Bobby Brink (Matvei Michkov, Noah Cates), 17:19 – Owen Tippett (Rodrigo Abols) (SHG), 18:16 – Tom Willander (Unassisted), 19:23 – Christian Dvorak (Trevor Zegras, Travis Konecny)
SOG: 33 (PHI) – 35 (VAN)

Some takeaways​


Huge matchup: Grundstrom versus Karlsson

Vancouver’s fourth-line winger Linus Karlsson has scored a few goals this month, as has Flyers fourth-line winger Carl Grundstrom. It’s strange to see two of the hotter snipers for both teams on the fourth line, but there you have it. However, in the second period, after a long shift by Vancouver who have the long change, Grundstrom picked up a loose puck deep and roofed the puck over Demko to put Philadelphia ahead 2-1. The goal was Grundstrom’s 50th of his career and seventh of the year, once again putting some punch into the fourth line.

GRUNDSTROM IS SCORCHING. 🔥#PHIvsVAN | #LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/JBj26XF5Ce

— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) December 31, 2025

In an insane coincidence, the game’s first three goals were all scored by players who had scored their 50th goal in their respective NHL careers. Grundstrom finished with the one goal in 13:39 of ice time while Karlsson was a minus-2 with no points in 17:22 of action.

Barkey continues to impress

Denver Barkey lost his stick in the first period but made a play that helped get the Flyers a huge clear. In the second he delivered a fantastic pass to Sean Couturier who forced Demko to make a big save. What’s clear is that the youngster is taking everything in stride and rarely looking like a fish out of water.

Barkey looked like everything Jamie Drysdale wasn’t on this night. Drysdale, who had a lone assist on the night, had a rather rough game. He was pushed back on Vancouver’s opening goal and nearly making a brain cramp in the third when, with no stick, he finally booted the puck behind the net and away from an oncoming Canuck forward. As if that wasn’t enough, he also broke his stick on another scoring chance. Hopefully Drysdale has a better evening Wednesday night against Calgary.

Tippett tossing weight around

When the Flyers appeared to be in quicksand, Owen Tippett was throwing his body around. And he delivered a few hard hits, including one on Pierre Oliver Joseph that sent him on his backside. The winger, who woke up far quicker than any other Flyer, seemed to drag Philadelphia into the fight, resulting in a far better last 10 minutes of the first period than the first 10. Vancouver still outshot the Flyers 10-5 after 20 minutes, but Philadelphia looked like they were no longer hitting the snooze button.

Although he was -1 after the first, he was tied with Grundstrom with three hits apiece. Tippett also ran into Demko midway through the second but neither party were hurt in the collision. The winger scored an empty-net goal which was also a short-handed tally which made it a 5-2 game.

Konecny and Zegras keep chugging along

Travis Konecny continues to keep motoring along, not really looking like he’s lighting the world aflame but just being consistent. Late in the second period, Konecny took a great pass from Jamie Drysdale and didn’t get the initial shot in. However, Konecny dove and got enough of the puck to lift it high over Demko to make it a 3-1 game.

WHAT A GOAL FROM TRAVIS KONECNY!!!

3-1 #FLYERS!!! pic.twitter.com/JkbHDQVYTq

— Flyers Nation (@FlyersNation) December 31, 2025

Zegras — who had his point streak stopped against Seattle — started another one with a secondary assist on Konecny’s goal, giving Zegras 38 points in this, the team’s 38th game of the year. The momentum continued as Philadelphia — once outshot 10-0 to start the game, was outshooting the Canucks 22-9 the rest of the first two periods. The shots mirrored the Expected Goals For percentages: 28.29 percent for Philadelphia in the first period, but 70.62 percent in the second.

Both players ended up with a pair of points, both getting assists on a late empty-netter by Christian Dvorak which made it a 6-3 game.

Seeler decisions Kane

After taking a hit from Evander Kane, Flyers defenseman Nick Seeler didn’t take too kindly to it. The two began a fight that saw Seeler hitting Kane far more than the Vancouver winger who fell to the ice. Not an ideal start to go with five blueliners for five minutes just two minutes in, but Philadelphia was able to weather the storm somewhat. Unfortunately, because play continued, the penalty to Seeler was more like eight to nine minutes.

Nick Seeler vs Evander Kane 🥊#LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/WWscJiGcE6

— Flyers Clips (@Flyers_Clips) December 31, 2025

Good start? (Expletive) no!

The Flyers started with the line of Christian Dvorak with Travis Konecny and Trevor Zegras on either side of him. After backing in on the first shot on goal that narrowly missed Flyers keeper Dan Vladar’s glove side, Travis Sanheim had a chance that didn’t connect. Vancouver, who played Monday, looked far more ready than Philadelphia, getting the opening four shots. The first real chance was a two-on-one with defenseman Emil Andrae and Konecny. Andrae got a little too cute with the puck, opting to pass and missing a possible scoring chance. Minutes later the Flyers kept looking lethargic and it bit them as David Kampf gave Vancouver a 1-0 lead. That makes it 26 times in 38 games Flyers didn’t score first. Brutal.

David Kampf back in the lineup and gets the games opening goal pic.twitter.com/Y0jMoSrVZY

— Bik Nizzar (@BikNizzar) December 31, 2025

Tocchet video tribute

The Canucks created a video tribute for Tocchet. But it should have been simultaneous with the coach absolutely ripping his team for their lack of effort against a team that hasn’t been dominating the league all season. Through 11 minutes, Vladar and Ersson had as many shots combined as the other 18 skaters. Having said all that, Christian Dvorak nearly tied it up after finding a huge, juicy rebound that just missed the net. Seconds later, the Flyers tied things up as Noah Cates received a nice pass from Matvei Michkov (who made a great play to start the scoring chance) to make it 1-1, beating Thatcher Demko on the glove side.

MICHKOV FEEDS NOAH CATES!!!

1-1!!! pic.twitter.com/MPbe4jyk58

— Flyers Nation (@FlyersNation) December 31, 2025

Speaking of Michkov, he nearly put Philadelphia ahead early in the second, but Demko was able to stop the shot heading for his five-hole. And with just over four minutes in the second, Michkov again had a great chance, shielding the puck from the Vancouver defender but unable to beat the Canucks goalie and give Philadelphia an important insurance goal. The Mad Russian was left shaking his head but it’s chances like that which Michkov wasn’t getting at all earlier in the season. Baby steps, but heading in the right direction.

In the third, after Vancouver narrowed it to 3-2, Michkov and Brink ended up on a two-on-one. Michkov made a great pass to Brink who tapped it into the open net for a terrific response, once again giving Philadelphia a two-goal lead. It marked his first multi-point game since Dec. 3 when he registered a pair of assists against Buffalo. And, in keeping with the theme of the evening, it marked the 50th career assist for Michkov in the National Hockey League.

What a response by the Flyers to reinstate their two-goal lead 24 seconds later. Matvei Michkov dished a beauty to Bobby Brink, 4-2.
Goal: Brink (10) pic.twitter.com/oVrzz0V3UX

— Andrew Coté (@acote_88) December 31, 2025

All stats courtesy NHL.com and Natural Stat Trick

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...-up-doubling-vancouver-in-a-6-3-road-victory/
 
Flyers’ Travis Sanheim officially makes Canada’s Olympic roster, Travis Konecny does not

Team Canada’s Olympic roster was announced this afternoon, and Philadelphia’s Travis Sanheim has made the cut. On the other hand, Flyers forward Travis Konecny hasn’t.

Sanheim, who made inroads when he had a strong appearance at the 4 Nations Face-Off, has grown into a quality, minute-munching, top-pairing defenseman. Although the roster will feature some defenseman who are obviously more offensively gifted, Team Canada could do a heck of a lot worse than seeing Sanheim possibly as a third-pairing blueliner. Team Canada Doug Armstrong said Sanheim’s size certainly didn’t hurt as Team Canada has some bigger, towering defenders.

Earlier this week, Flyers head coach Rick Tocchet all but confirmed that Sanheim would be part of the squad when play begins in Milano/Cortina next February. The roster will be the first featuring National Hockey League players since 2014. In June, Canada announced the first six players to the roster: Pittsburgh’s Sidney Crosby, Avalanche forward Nathan MacKinnon, Oiler superstar Connor McDavid, Florida’s Sam Reinhart, Tampa’s Brayden Point, and Colorado defenseman Cale Makar.

Here are the 2⃣5⃣ players who will wear the 🍁 at #MilanoCortina2026! 🇨🇦

Voici les 2⃣5⃣ joueurs qui porteront la 🍁 à Milan-Cortina! 🇨🇦

ROSTER: https://t.co/5I8Uz2Psfa
FORMATION : https://t.co/zbOWuEgdPQ@TeamCanada | @Equipe_Canada pic.twitter.com/dTc1YKengx

— Hockey Canada (@HockeyCanada) December 31, 2025

Team Canada’s roster is fleshed out with goaltenders Jordan Binnington (St. Louis), Darcy Kuemper (Los Angeles), and Logan Thompson of the Washington Capitals. Binnington was crucial to Canada winning the 4 Nations Face-Off with some incredible overtime saves down the stretch before Connor McDavid scored the winner. As for the blueline, besides Makar and Sanheim, Kings’ defenseman Drew Doughty, Stars blueliner Thomas Harley, Winnipeg’s Josh Morrissey, St. Louis’ Colton Parayko, Vegas defenseman Shea Theodore, and Colorado’s Devon Toews.

As for the forwards, perhaps there are a few surprises, including Washington’s Tom Wilson, the Islanders’ Bo Horvat, and Tampa’s Anthony Cirelli. But there’s also some young blood in the team, notably San Jose’s Macklin Celebrini and Montreal’s Nick Suzuki. Rounding out the lineup is Tampa’s Bradon Hagel, Florida’s Brad Marchand, Mitch Marner and Mark Stone from the Knights. Team Canada’s general manager Doug Armstrong said essentially nobody played their way off the roster. It was a case of some players playing their way into the mix, meaning as strong as Konecny’s season has been this year, a few more might have leapt over him in the depth chart.

Team Canada begins its schedule against Team Czechia on Feb. 12 and the following day against Switzerland and Feb. 15 against Team France.

There were no Flyers on the 2014 Team Canada roster but it did include a few former Flyers including Jeff Carter and Patrick Sharp. The coaching staff also included former Philadelphia head coach Ken Hitchcock. The 2010 roster featured Flyers defenseman Chris Pronger and forward Mike Richards.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...nadas-olympic-roster-travis-konecny-does-not/
 
Takeaways: Flyers conclude 2025 with more iron than twine in 5-1 loss to Calgary

The Flyers had some chances, hit some posts and crossbars, and had a goal called back. But overall, the Flyers weren’t the better team on this night, losing 5-1 to Calgary to conclude the calendar year.

The Basics​


First period: 13:30- Mikael Backlund (Matt Cornato, Blake Coleman)
Second period: 3:08- Jonathan Huberdeau (Mackenzie Weegar, Yan Kuznetsov), 8:49- Travis Konecny (Unassisted), 12:03- Rasmus Andersson (Connor Zary, Nazem Kadri) (PPG), 17:52- Yegor Sharangovich (Matt Coronato, Mackenzie Weegar) (PPG)
Third period: 9:37- Connor Zary (Ryan Lomberg)
SOG: 26 (PHI) – 24 (CAL)

Some Takeaways​


Taking both of a back to back? Nope

The Flames were riding high the last little while with a 9-1-1 record at home. Toss in the fact the Flyers were on the latter half of a back-to-back and Philadelphia might have entered the game at a disadvantage. But give the Flyers credit, at least initially. They didn’t start the game half asleep, nor did they try to run and gun with Calgary. Instead they played a rather simplified game, keeping the puck ahead of them and winning the puck battles more often than not.

In the second period, the Flyers continued doing more of the same, and not getting away from their structure all that often. Even down a pair, Philadelphia kept chipping away, eventually cutting Calgary’s lead in half midway through regulation. But the Flyers ran into penalty trouble shortly thereafter. A tripping call on Cam York was followed up six seconds later by another tripping minor on Christian Dvorak. The nearly full two minutes of five-on-three saw Philadelphia eventually give up one as Rasmus Andersson (who had a Flyers fan sticking her tongue out at him afterwards) beat Ersson from far out on the glove side. The goal restored Calgary’s two-goal lead.

🔥FLAMES GOAL🔥

Rasmus Andersson scores on a 5 on 3! It's 3-1 Calgary

🎥: Sportsnet | #Flames pic.twitter.com/ZBcU77qnLF

— Robert Munnich (@RingOfFireCGY) January 1, 2026

Moments later, the Flames mascot Harvey the Hound presented the Flyers fan with a t-shirt that said “Rasmus Andersson Stared At Me.”

Sanheim’s day a whirlwind

Travis Sanheim had a busy 24 hours. Following the victory Monday night in Vancouver, then the travel to Calgary, Sanheim had a hard time getting some shuteye wondering if he was getting a call to be part of Team Canada’s Olympic squad. Well, we know how that turned out. Whether he was running on fumes or adrenaline, Sanheim put in another strong game with Jamie Drysdale as his partner as Emil Andrae wasn’t in the lineup. But he got dinged blocking a shot off his knee about five minutes in, hobbling to the bench. However he was out there again, fortunately eating up minutes as he usually does.

Sanheim made a great rush late in the second and tried the wraparound but couldn’t get enough on it. Through two periods he was second in minutes played among Flyers defenseman. Sanheim was at 15:56, nine seconds behind Rasmus Ristolainen.

Juulsen returns

Noah Juulsen returned to the lineup for the first time since Dec. 14 against the Hurricanes. Juulsen was paired with Nick Seeler and looked okay most of the first period. He was on the ice for the lone goal of the first which put Calgary ahead. Yet he seemed to not have a whole lot of rust on his game, especially with no playing time in 17 days. After two periods, Juulsen was at 7:16 in terms of ice time and found himself second among Flyers skaters with a 78.41 expected goals for percentage, only behind Noah Cates.

Vladar gets kudos as Ersson starts

Early in the first the Flames gave a short tribute to Dan Vladar who was with Calgary last season. Vladar thanked the crowd as the opposition tapped their sticks in appreciation for his time there. He wasn’t in net on this night as Philadelphia gave the start to Sam Ersson. The shots on goal were one each through the first 10 minutes, with Ersson’s first stop of the night a good one against Calgary’s Blake Coleman in close. Sadly, Ersson couldn’t handle a Mikael Backlund shot roughly 13 minutes into the contest. The shot beat him on the glove side and, while he might have been screened by Nick Seeler who tried to block it, it was once again a shot by Ersson you would think he could’ve got a piece of. It sounds like a broken record, but Philadelphia gave up the first goal now 27 times in 39 games. Unacceptable.

Ersson was having his standard kind of start, as two of Calgary’s first four shots were behind him. The second saw a lot of traffic in front as the puck bounced off former Flyer Morgan Frost for a goal. Philadelphia quickly replied as Nick Seeler cut the deficit in half. However, Calgary challenged the goal, believing Carl Grundstrom interfered with Wolf on the goal. Calgary won the challenge, but were called for a tripping penalty which put Philadelphia on the power play. Dvorak had a few chances thanks to some good passing by Barkey, but couldn’t finish.

The Flyers finally got a bit of puck luck as Konecny just got enough of the puck to get it by Wolf. A Flames forward tried to clear it but fortunately for Philadelphia it bounced off the far post and curled in.

FLYERS GET ONE BACK OFF AN EXTREMELY WEIRD GOAL (which I believe is Travis Konecny's)! DVO AND ZEGRAS ASSISTS. #LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/cFP5E9NuY9

— Flyers Clips (@Flyers_Clips) January 1, 2026

Ersson wasn’t great, but the Flyers weren’t much better in front of him. A backward pass by Bobby Brink in essentially garbage time nearly made it 6-1, but Ersson atoned for Brink’s major miscue. Ersson made 19 stops on 24 shots for another ugly .792 save percentage.

Michkov could’ve had four assists

Matvei Michkov has been playing better. And he almost got an assist on a Rasmus Ristolainen cannon that was deflected. The puck nearly landed in the back of the net but just landed behind it. Late in the first, Michkov held on to the puck behind the net and fed Juulsen with a perfect pass. Juulsen rifled the shot off the post as Flames goalie Dustin Wolf thanked the iron after the play. He also fed Sanheim with a great pass but Sanheim’s shot sailed over the net. Again, no points came of the plays, but they were plays that you mainly weren’t seeing from him the first 20 to 25 games of the season.

In the second, Michkov again created a prime scoring chance, intercepting a pass in midair before sending Tippett in alone on Wolf. Tippett, like Juulsen, and Ristolainen, couldn’t score. It’s a good sign the youngster is heading in the right direction. Even more importantly, in his first 11 shifts of the game, eight of them were at least 50 seconds or more. It appears Michkov is staying out a bit longer per shift than he previously was.

Dvorak no luck around the net

As mentioned before, Dvorak missed a chance off a feed from Michkov, but had a chance to make it a 3-2 game with a solid short-handed opportunity. He missed what looked to be a near guaranteed tap in. Seconds later it proved to be a two-goal swing as Calgary came back up the ice and made it a 4-1 contest.

And finally…

Thank you all for reading, commenting, liking, and subscribing to Broad Street Hockey the last 365 days. May you all have a happy and healthy 2026!

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...-more-iron-than-twine-in-5-1-loss-to-calgary/
 
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