News Flyers Team Notes

Takeaways from the Flyers 7-2 loss to the Maple Leafs

Welp.

That’s a wrap on the roadtrip, folks. Mercifully, it’s over. The Flyers wrapped up their trip tonight in Toronto, and felt the full force of the Leafs’ high-powered offense, and had very little to offer in the way of pushback. It’s rough out here.

The Basics​


First period: 7:59- Ryan Poehling (Pelletier, Abols), 10:37- John Tavares (Nylander), 15:11- William Nylander (Knies, Matthews)PPG
Second period: 1:45- Bobby McMann (Nylander), 7:49- John Tavares (Matthews, Knies), 11:55- William Nylander (Tavares, McMann), 15:08- David Kampf (Jarnkrok, Lorentz), 18:17- Sean Couturier (Drysdale, Michkov)
Third period: 11:30- Max Domi (McCabe)
SOG: 30 (TOR) – 19 (PHI)

Some Takeaways​


New looks

We’ll give the Flyers credit here, as bleak as things have grown and how Over the season well and truly feels, at least they’re not just completely going through the motions and refusing to put in any work to improve. Granted, there does feel like there’s a degree of throwing anything and everything at the wall right now, but it’s not nothing.

All of this is to say that the Flyers tried something new tonight, in the form of an all-forwards top power play unit, comprised of Brink, Konecny, Couturier, Michkov, and Foerster, in an attempt to load that unit with as much offense as possible. It was an interesting idea, but not one that paid dividends in this one. It just didn’t click, in short, as they struggled to so much as get set up in the offensive zone, much less create anything meaningful in the way of chances. We’ll see if they go back to this unit again on Thursday, if they’re given a bit more time to figure it out, but their first audition wasn’t an overly strong one.

Nothing doing

Of course, that top power play unit isn’t the only one that struggled to get their offense going in this game. Indeed, there were long stretches of this game wherein the Flyers had no more than two or three more shots than the Leafs had goals on them, the disparity in possession and dangerous plays put together was so great. Now, the Flyers did manage to bear down some through the back half of the game (putting up 12 shots, building on the just seven they had in the first half), and were able to put away two of their shots, but on the whole, the offense was just not there for them in this one. There was nothing overly cohesive about their play — they were overpassing at times and missing out on windows that were opening up, they were failing to connect and undercooking their plays in other times — and they had very little to show for their efforts. Hopefully they can respond in their next game, but the lack of offense and lack of cohesion was certainly concerning in this one.

York benched

It was a long night for the whole of the team, and for all of us watching, but it was a short one for Cam York. After a rough shift on the play leading up to that first Leafs goal — wherein he was stripped of the puck behind his own net and then had the shot from Tavares ultimately went in off of his skate — just 10:37 into the game, York didn’t see the ice for the remainder of the game. It was a bit of a baffling move, and one that will remain baffling, as John Tortorella declined to give any reasoning or explanation for the move in his postgame availability, so we’ll leave it here — the Flyers were left to play the remaining nearly 50 minutes of that game shorthanded, without a defenseman who regularly takes 20 or so minutes a night, and it showed.

Self-inflicted wounds

While it’s true that the Flyers were victims in this one of a real mismatch in the levels of talent between their roster and the Leafs’, it’s impossible not to acknowledge that, but the even more significant killer for the Flyers tonight came at their own hands. They were a mess tonight, there’s no other way to say it — they were losing one-on-one battles left and right and getting burned for it, they weren’t connecting on their passes, they were skating right into pressure so intense that the only foreseeable outcome was them turning the puck over, and turn the puck over they did. In short, tonight was the Flyers straying far, far away from the game they need to play — they’ve said it time and again, while they’re not a team that can out-skill many others in the league at the moment, they are one that can try to outwork their opponents, but they got blown out of the water in that department tonight as well. And that, indeed, is probably the biggest cause for concern coming out of this one.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/takeaways-from-the-flyers-7-2-loss-to-the-maple-leafs/
 
Flyers sign Ty Murchison to two-year entry-level contract

The Philadelphia Flyers announced Wednesday they’ve inked defenseman Ty Murchison, their fifth-round pick from the 2021 NHL Draft, to a two-year entry-level contract which begins in the 2025-26 season.

OFFICIAL: We've signed defenseman @TyMurchison to a two-year, entry-level contract beginning the 2025-26 season. #LetsGoFlyers https://t.co/8H6BLmt7wq

— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) March 26, 2025

Murchison, 22, and a native of Corona, California, took part in the Flyers’ three previous Development Camps and wrapped up his NCAA career this season with the Arizona State University Sun Devils. The 6-foot-2, 205-pound blueliner played 146 regular-season games and is clearly a defensive defenseman with just nine goals and 15 helpers in that span. Muchison, an assistant captain, played in the National Collegiate Hockey Conference Frozen Faceoff this year as the Sun Devils lost to Denver in the opening round. The draft prospect also majored in Sports Business during his time with Arizona State.

Muchison might also give Nick Seeler a run for his money as he blocked 98 shots this season, a record for the university and leading all NCHC skaters in that statistic. Muchison, whose parents are from Eastern Canada (his father Ken played in the East Coast Hockey League while his mom was a figure skater), played roller hockey as a child and from there developed his career. He also played with the U.S. National Under-17 and Under-18 teams in 2019-20 before playing 23 games with the U.S. National Development Team in 2020-21.

He also appears to be far from a wilting flower on the ice, leading his team in penalty minutes in four consecutive seasons from 2021-22 to 2024-25. So, with any luck, the Flyers have added another big, bulky defenseman who could possibly turn into something down the road. If not, he would be a capable farm hand down in the minors.

What’s next for Murchison? While he is certainly destined to stay in the AHL for next season with the current crop of blueliners the Flyers have and the leap to the NCAA to the NHL is astronomical, we could possibly see him sooner rather than later. As it is with players that sign at this time of year for the next season, they do have the option to join the AHL team on an amateur try-out and start playing in the system right away.

The Phantoms currently have Ethan Samson, Hunter McDonald, Helge Grans, Louie Belpedio, and Adam Ginning as the mainstays on their roster — Ben Gleason and Xavier Bernard are the other defensemen — so there might not be a whole lot of room for a newcomer to find some minutes. But, we’ll see what his decision is or if the Flyers want to add more players to the Phantoms right now.

We already know that it is likely that Jett Luchanko and Alex Ciernik are going to report to Allentown to play with the Phantoms for the rest of the season, so will there be an addition on defense as well? We’ll see.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...y-murchison-to-two-year-entry-level-contract/
 
Flyers prospect Alex Ciernik signs ATO with Phantoms

The Lehigh Valley Phantoms are adding an exciting young talent as they push for the playoffs and hope for some Calder Cup contention. No, not that one, it’s the other one.

Made official after a couple days of rumors, the Phantoms have signed 20-year-old winger Alex Ciernik to an amateur try-out for the remainder of the 2024-25 season.

Ciernik was drafted in the fourth round of the 2023 NHL Draft and since then has been bouncing around the second division in Sweden, the HockeyAllsvenskan, with multiple teams. After scoring at a decent clip in juniors during his draft year, Ciernik moved to Vasterviks IK and scored four goals and 14 points in 26 games. And then just this season, moved to Nybro Vikings IF, where he scored 11 goals and 23 points in 46 games.

The young winger’s early career has been marred with injury as he sustained a concussion during the 2023-24 season that cut his year in half. And he admitted to himself that he tried to accelerate the recovery process to represent Slovakia at the 2024 World Junior Championship that season.

At rookie camp last July, Ciernik explained his setback and how that season went for him.

“It wasn’t the easiest,” he told Flyers media. “I didn’t play for half the year with the head injuries. It was a little bit lonely, a little tough at times, but I’m just happy to be back here, back with the guys, and be on the ice and work out and all that fun stuff.”

Ciernik’s bounce back was scoring half a point per game for a team that finished ninth out of 14 teams in the overall standings and was the team’s fifth-highest scorer.

The Flyers have not officially signed Ciernik to his entry-level contract. By the Phantoms bringing him in on an amateur try-out, they can have a close look at the player for the remainder of the AHL season — certainly a level above where he was just playing in Sweden — and then determine what the next steps should be for what was an exciting prospect at the time the Flyers selected him two years ago. To remain with the organization full-time next season, Ciernik will either sign his ELC with the Flyers (and take up one of the contract slots in the 50-contract limit for the team), or possibly sign an AHL-only deal with the Phantoms to keep playing that level of hockey.

With him missing so much time, it is understandable that the Flyers are being cautious with these next steps and don’t want to commit to anything quite yet.

The Phantoms have nine regular season games left in their season and this important stretch of games starts with a road trip up to Canada to face the Belleville Senators and the Laval Rocket this weekend.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/flyers-news-prospect-alex-ciernik-signs-ato-with-phantoms/
 
5 possible replacements for Tortorella as Flyers head coach

John Tortorella is out. The Philadelphia Flyers fired the veteran head coach on Thursday morning, just hours before they lace up at home to face the red-hot Montreal Canadiens. But what is the future of the Flyers’ bench?

The Flyers have eight games left of the 2024-25 regular season. A season that has brought us some hope for the future but will mainly be remembered as Matvei Michkov’s rookie season where they still finished near the bottom of the league. Associate coach Brad Shaw will be taking over as interim head coach for the remainder of the year, but where the team goes from here is going to be interesting.

What are some names that we could see pop up in rumors to replace Tortorella? Or, who are logical pieces that could turn the Flyers around and bring the level of hockey we all have been craving for some time? Let’s look at some bench bosses.

Brad Shaw​


It might not be the spiciest move or the one that gets everyone’s heart racing at the possibilities, but keeping the coach that has made this Flyers team much better defensively than anyone expected, would be logical to keep around. We all expect the Flyers to try to pitch to Shaw to stay in Philadelphia and work with the new guy they brought in — if that is their plan — but why not see if Shaw wants to take over?

The last time Shaw was in a head coaching role was when he took over for a fired Steve Stirling to finish off the 2005-06 New York Islanders season. So, this might be a stretch to see if he even wants to do it. Plus, the relationship with the players — going from the more approachable assistant to the boss — could become a little rocky for no real reason.

Please, we hope that Shaw stays as an associate though.

Jay Woodcroft​


Jay Woodcroft is a real big option if we want to connect some dots. He is currently unemployed after being fired by the Edmonton Oilers and during training camp just several months ago, he was brought in to hang out with Tortorella and the coaching staff.

Whether that was done by Tortorella or the Flyers is uncertain, but either way the organization likes him enough that him being involved during training camp was alright by them.

Under his reign, the Oilers had a 79-41-13 record and won three playoff rounds in three years. It was a 3-9-1 start to the 2023-24 season that caused him to get fired from Connor McDavid’s team and led the Oilers to hire the captain’s former junior coach.

He has a Calder Cup win under his belt and generally plays winning hockey, even if he had the best player in the world on his team. Woodcroft can coach a team that scores a lot of goals, and if Shaw keeps the defense in check, that could be a winning equation.

Mike Sullivan​


Now, Sullivan was certainly more of an option if Tortorella was going to stay with the organization. A friend of the fired coach, the current Pittsburgh Penguins bench boss was thought to be an easy replacement if Tortorella went to the front office and if he was fired by the cross-state rival.

There could still be something there, though. He knows how to win with a couple Stanley Cup rings and knows how to coach with superstars on his team. Out of every candidate, he might have the best resume if he were to be a free agent this summer.

And if everything is chill between Tortorella and the Flyers even after parting ways (not so sure about that), Shaw could certainly stay around with Sullivan in charge. (Clearly, we care a lot about the current defensive coach staying in Philadelphia.)

Rick Tocchet​


We had to put Tocchet’s name on this list. Currently in Vancouver, the former Flyer might be leaving the Canucks as early as this summer and if the team still wants someone to play with a Torts-level of temperament, then Tocchet could be their guy.

Aside from last season’s Canucks, he has not had a very good record out on the west coast. We’re not sure how much that plays into it, but you just know that there will be alumni in the front office begging Danny Briere to bring him in.

If the Flyers were to hire Tocchet, then it would show that they still want the hard mentality and accountability for their team like Tortorella provided. But, it could be bringing all the negative aspects of Tortorella without any of the good.

David Carle​


This is the one everyone wants to see, of course. The wunderkind University of Denver coach that has led his team to a national championship, and led the USA World Juniors squad to back-to-back championships for the first time. Almost every single team should be clamoring to bring Carle to their organization but it is going to take a lot.

Being just 35 years old and already the belle of the coaching ball, he has all the time in the world. With a young family and a comfortable situation in Denver, the NHL team that hires him will probably need to give him the level of security that he desires. Is that a seven- or even an eight-year contract? Possibly. Maybe something like a coaching no-move clause will be invented for this specific situation.

There has never been a coach that almost every single fan base wants this badly. Signs are pointing to him just staying with Denver for the long-term and then maybe in a few years with more titles under his belt and more rings on his finger(s), he can poke around the NHL to see if there is a landing spot him and his family are alright with.

The Flyers are in an interesting spot where they could be a team that offers him that security if he wants. Briere and Keith Jones have a long-term vision and with no quick-acting owner to worry about, Carle could be brought in as the guy to guide this team on the ice for the next decade.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/5-possible-replacements-for-tortorella-as-flyers-head-coach/
 
Briere says “it was time” to fire John Tortorella

Flyers general manager Danny Briere said it was time to remove John Tortorella as head coach, stating it wasn’t one particular incident or event but rather a series of things that happened over the last three weeks since the trade deadline.

“I felt it was time,” Briere — who said he and Keith Jones believed the team might take a step backwards in 2024-25 — said after reading a brief prepared statement Thursday thanking Tortorella for his time and effort. “It’s not one thing, it’s a series of things that have happened and probably a little more in the last three weeks that escalated prior to the trade deadline, right after that. It’s an accumulation that have happened but probably more often lately.”

Asked if Tortorella’s comments after the Flyers’ 7-2 loss to Toronto on Tuesday night was the catalyst for the firing, Briere said it was “one of the things that have happened along the way” but it wasn’t the specific reason. “I’m not going to get into the specifics of what we dealt with, that’s not fair to Torts. We had just some different opinions on different things.”

When pressed about whether Tortorella was frustrated with the situation when he uttered those words in Toronto, Briere said “getting shallacked” and “the embarassment” that went with the loss certainly didn’t help. “I put it more as he was frustrated with how things have gone lately and how he was embarrassed by the loss that night just like a lot of our players were.”

Briere said he didn’t get any input from the players regarding the decision this morning, but added he and Keith Jones “are pretty aware” of what’s going on in the room. Although the general manager said Tortorella made some players develop, there were others who probably didn’t fare as well under his coaching style.

Over his tenure, Tortorella rarely interacted with a Flyer who he didn’t bench or scratch over his nearly three seasons. From Travis Sanheim’s scratching before his friends and family in Calgary, Sean Couturier’s scratching last season, and Matvei Michkov’s earlier this season, Tortorella used that tactic a lot. His last game as a Flyers coach saw Cam York benched for 50 minutes. Although not addressing those incidents, Briere intimated Tortorella wasn’t exactly everyone’s cup of tea behind the bench.

“There’s things that happen that leave scars, it’s just the real world, that affects certain players more than others,” he said. “Maybe a little bit. I don’t know to which degree but there are certain things that you keep an eye out and watch for that have happened in the past, yes.” Briere added the absence of Tortorella could give other players a chance to be more “vocal” and step up as leaders on the team and in the locker room.

Perhaps the biggest surprise was that there was no discussion of Tortorella moving upstairs to an advisory role within the organization next season. Briere still believes Tortorella has the passion to coach elsewhere but a place with the Flyers other than coaching wasn’t in the cards.

As to a possible successor to Tortorella when the season is done, Briere said he hasn’t thought that far ahead, hasn’t made any lists or hasn’t made any calls to possible candidates. He also isn’t limiting his list to experienced NHL coaches or those who are young. According to the general manager the goal now is to support Shaw and the players. “I’m not sure what we’re going to be looking for as a coach. I can tell you is we have a young team. A coach that can teach is going to be important to start with.”

Briere said both he and Tortorella had different viewpoints on some things over their time together but didn’t articulate those specific issues. He admitted that Tortorella is one of a kind. “Torts is a complicated man, he’s a complicated coach,” Briere said. “He’s a blast to work with because he challenges you. I truly believe he made me a better GM. He’s not a yes man. He had opinions and he had the right to share his opinions. But again, myself, Keith Jones, Dan Hilferty, we felt at this time it was time to move in a different direction.”

The general manager admitted that trading players both at the 2024 trade deadline and again this deadline for future prospects and draft picks didn’t improve Philadelphia’s playoff chances. But Briere emphasized he wasn’t going to take any shortcuts in getting to the ultimate goal to keep Sean Walker, Morgan Frost, and Joel Farabee to try and squeeze into a wildcard spot. “Torts was on board with that, he understood that was part of the plan and the phase of the rebuild we were in. So that was not an issue.”

With the Flyers having one win in roughly the last month of play, Briere admitted the losing has taken its toll on everyone in the organization from the players, the coaching staff and front office. “It’s not easy,’ he said. “The toughest part of the rebuild is going through this. Now I really hope that this is the bottom, that this is rock bottom for us today. And this is the turnaround. The trades were tough to do, to send some good players elsewhere and not really replace them in the trades. That was taking a toll on all of us, Torts included. He hates losing probably more than anybody we know but I hope moving forward now it’s going to start to get better. It’s not going to be an overnight thing, it’s going to take time. But I feel we’re stepping into a different phase of the rebuild. It’s still a rebuild but starting to go into a different phase now.”

Of course Tortorella and Michkov had their tete-a-tetes this season. “He coached him hard,” Briere said regarding how Tortorella dealt with the Mad Russian, adding Michkov is “one of the most competitive hockey players I’ve been around.” That competitive streak probably helped him deal with Tortorella. “You’ve seen him get benched, you’ve seen him get scratched. And what does he do? He comes back and all he wants to do is stick it back to you, stick it back to Torts. It was really impressive.”

Although he probably didn’t foresee it coming this morning, Tortorella could probably see something on the horizon. In a discussion with NBC Sports Philadelphia a few weeks ago, the former coach explained how he knew he had a certain shelf life like any other coach.

“I’m a realist. I know there’s going to be a certain time when it’s time for another voice. And Danny’s going to have to make that call. But I’m going to coach the team the way I think it should be coached. I’m not going to make decisions to keep my job. I’m going to make decisions that are best for this organization. And when it’s my time Danny’s going to let me know. And we’ve had a very honest conversation about that too. Just let me know. I’ve got other things too.

“I’m locked in here and I want to be part of this but if you don’t feel it’s the proper thing, and I get that because building is a lot of teaching. It’s a lot of my voice. It’s a lot of that. And I’m sure Danny, Jonesy, Dan Hilferty keep a close eye on that. They talk to the players at exit meetings at the end of the year and all that, they get information. I’m a big boy. Just let me know because I do not want to be that guy that people say, ‘Man it’s time to go.’ Let me know, I’ll leave.”

Tortorella, 66, finished his tenure with the Flyers 10 games under .500 (97-107-33). He has another year remaining on his four-year contract.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/briere-says-it-was-time-to-fire-john-tortorella/
 
Flyers reportedly sign top NCAA free agent Karsen Dorwart

The Philadelphia Flyers just scooped up one of the biggest prizes of the college free agent pool.

According to multiple sources, the Flyers have signed Michigan State center Karsen Dorwart. The details of the signing have not been confirmed — whether it will start this year or next — but he will be signing a two-year, entry-level contract.

If Dorwart is to sign a contract that starts this season, he could play with the Flyers or down with the AHL’s Lehigh Valley Phantoms as they continue this late-season push into the playoffs. And maybe the option either sign with some exciting young prospects like Jett Luchanko and Nikita Grebenkin is more enticing than playing with a team who is just trying to finish this miserable NHL season on a high note.

In the instance that Dorwart signs a contract starting in the 2025-26 season, he could sign an amateur try-out to go and suit up for the Phantoms for the rest of the season and get the professional hockey debut over and done with before this fall. Since Dorwart is one of the more premier free agents available, one has to assume that he will sign his contract that starts this season and have his rookie deal go through next season, making him a restricted free agent next summer.

But what kind of player is Dorwart? We know he’s a 6-foot-1, 194-pound center that has scored 38 goals and 92 points in 111 games through his three years at Michigan State. But beyond the stat sheet, what is he?

On the March 21 episode of Daily Faceoff Live, Steven Ellis was talking at length about the upcoming pool of free agents from the NCAA and mentioned Dorwart off the top with some high praise.

“I’ll start with Karsen Dorwart out of Michigan State,” Ellis said. “This guy is probably the best two-way center of any of the college free agents there. He really controls the puck well. I saw him a couple times in person this year, and it felt like he was just involved at both ends of the ice. He’s not going to be a high-end producer, pretty much at any level, but I think he’s got the hockey sense and that defensive responsibility that you can plug and play him in different spots, and he’s going to perform.”

For some even further praise, we turn to Elite Prospect’s 2025 NCAA Free Agency Guide, where they touched on more of Dorwart’s pace of play.

“His feet and mind are always racing. He moves from defence to offence instantly, catching the puck and exploding toward the neutral zone, and plays a fast-paced, give-and-go style in transition. He can reach teammates by using his backhand, lobbing the puck above sticks, or slipping it under them. Not only is he a diverse passer, but his feeds always seem to have the right weight and angle, falling in the right spot for teammates.”

Taking in everything that experts have to say about the player, we come away with the impression that in the NHL, he can be one of those classic energetic forwards that run amuck and love forechecking more than anything, but will be in a bottom-six role. There is the possibility to be more, but as it normally is with NCAA free agents, the most you get out of them is just being a useful NHL player — nothing much more impactful than that.

No matter what, the Flyers are adding a very high-speed center who projects more to be an NHL player than some of the other available free agents from the NCAA this year. Can’t complain about that.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...mors-sign-top-ncaa-free-agent-karsen-dorwart/
 
Alex Bump and Devin Kaplan advance to NCAA regional finals

The first day of action over in the regionals for the NCAA tournament is in the books, and it was a productive one for the pair of Flyers prospects taking part.

In the first game of the Toledo regional, Devin Kaplan and his Boston University squad took on Ohio State in their semifinal, and this one was a doozy. The Buckeyes got on the board first, but the Terriers were able to tie things up early in the second period (care of Cole Eiserman, assisted by Kaplan), and they spent the rest of the period trading goals, and ultimately carried a 3-3 tie into the second intermission. The question of who would pull ahead in the final frame loomed large, and BU stepped u[ resoundingly — putting up five goals in the third period, they cruised away with the lead and put a stamp, as strongly as possible, on the win.

And then over in the Fargo regional, Western Michigan kicked off what they hope will be a long run with their opener against Minnesota State Mankato. And while BU’s first game turned into a barn burner, this one was close all the way to the very end — the Broncos got on the board first but despite their best efforts (and particularly Bump’s best efforts) they couldn’t pull away, and Mankato was able to tie things up early in the third period, and keep the Broncos’ offense contained long enough to force not just one overtime, but two. But they couldn’t hold them off forever, and once again, the Broncos got some double overtime heroics (this time from Grant Slukynsky) to punch their ticket to the final.

BU will take on Cornell in tomorrow’s regional final, while Western Michigan will face UMass, and both of these matchups are sure to be thrillers — while they’re coming in as the favorites, arguably, both of their opponents are going to be riding real highs, after Cornell upset second-ranked Michigan State in their opener, and UMass pulled off a huge overtime win over over Minnesota. The stakes are rising here, as the winners of these finals will advance to next month’s Frozen Four. We’ll see how this shakes out.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/alex-bump-and-devin-kaplan-advance-to-ncaa-regional-finals/
 
Some takeaway from Flyers’ 7-4 win over Sabres

Matvei Michkov scored two, the power play did something twice and the Flyers are now with two wins under the belt since John Tortorella’s dismissal thanks to a 7-4 win over the hapless Buffalo Sabres. It didn’t help with the lottery odds but seeing 13 goals in the last six periods of hockey has been refreshing.

The Basics

First period:
5:27- Matvei Michkov (Travis Konecny, Egor Zamula), 5:56- Jakob Pelletier (Owen Tippett, Ryan Poehling), 10:57- Jack Quinn (JJ Peterka, Ryan McLeod)

Second period: 1:41- JJ Peterka (Jack Quinn, Peyton Krebs), 8:13- Jack Quinn (Ryan McLeod, Owen Power) (PPG), 10:36- Matvei Michkov (Travis Konecny), 14:11- Noah Cates (Tyson Foerster)

Third period: 6:39- Owen Tippett (Olle Lycksell, Jamie Drysdale) (PPG), 10:13- Tyson Foerster (Bobby Brink, Noah Cates), 15:05- Alex Tuch (Ryan McLeod) (SHG), 15:34- Ryan Poehling (Noah Cates) (PPG)

SOG: 32 (PHI) – 21 (BUF)

Some takeaways

Cates breaks streak


Noah Cates has played well but wasn’t being rewarded as much as earlier this season. He finally broke almost a month-long streak, putting the Flyers up 4-3 late in the second. The goal, the fifteenth of the year for the center, came from a bad Sabres play in their own end. Tyson Foerster fed Cates who buried it for the go-ahead goal.

Noah Cates scores after the sick feed from Tyson Foerster!

4-3 #Flyers. pic.twitter.com/F6emWNWhOG

— Flyers Nation (@FlyersNation) March 29, 2025

Defensive shuffles

The idea of Egor Zamula and Emil Andrae paired up would scare most people, but in a season dwindling down to a handful of games, interim coach Brad Shaw juggled the defense pairings, seeing Nick Seeler with Travis Sanheim while Cam York (who actually ended up on the ice this afternoon) was teamed up with Jamie Drysdale. Unfortunately York was caught out of position on Buffalo’s first goal, cutting the Flyers lead in half midway through the first period. Drysdale had a decent opportunity on a wraparound late in the first period but was denied. Overall the three pairs did fine most of the game, with most of the blueliners ahead in the chances for category.

To Ersson is human

Sam Ersson has had a rough season. And this game added to it. After having a 2-0 lead, proceeded to make few if any key saves to keep the Flyers lead. Halfway through the game, Buffalo had 10 shots on goal. Seven of them were stopped, so a .700 save percentage is horrid. The third Sabres goal, on the power play, saw Ersson not ready and all out of sorts as Jack Quinn beat him with a nice wrister on his blocker side.

2nd goal and 3rd point of the game for Jack Quinn. He’s been on fire lately. pic.twitter.com/cMYiMKWds2

— The Charging Buffalo (@TheChargingBUF) March 29, 2025

Few whistles, fast-paced game

With both team playing (or not playing) for lottery balls in the draft, the Sabres and Flyers probably couldn’t muster much animosity between them. Instead the teams traded some chances in the first and didn’t engage in any scrums after the whistle. The lone hard hit in the first came when Foerster took a boarding penalty while on the power play. It didn’t look like an awful hit from behind but the Sabres player fell into the boards awkwardly. That certainly didn’t help Foerster’s case.

Foerster did have a handful of chances to score in the first but couldn’t make any of them count. In the third, Foerster let a one-timer go and made the game a bit of a laugher at 6-3. Bobby Brink made a nifty pass to set up the goal.

Tyson Foerster hated Torts too!

6-3 #Flyers. pic.twitter.com/8ZnzBkLIPG

— Flyers Nation (@FlyersNation) March 29, 2025

The one Flyer who seemed to have an axe to grind was Seeler. Naturally Seeler doesn’t have a cruise control setting in his game. He threw a few hard hits and stood up a Sabre or two at the blueline which enthused the Wells Fargo Center faithful.

Michkov’s March Madness

Matvei Michkov missed scoring on his last shot of the Thursday night game against Montreal, missing his first hat trick. However, he was deadly on a two-on-one with Travis Konecny, beating Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen clean for his twenty-third goal of the year. It’s his third goal (and could’ve been his fifth goal) since John Tortorella’s departure. But regardless, a strong productive finish to the season should make him not just a candidate for the Calder Trophy but the candidate to win it.

Michkov gets the party started‼️

📺: @NHLNetwork pic.twitter.com/9En0BFUJ3N

— NHL (@NHL) March 29, 2025

Later in the period, Michkov lost his stick but made a nice defensive play, preventing a pass or shot by sliding on the ice. The forward also got caught on a long shift in the second period and was slow to get back for coverage. Fortunately the Sabres shot beat goalie Sam Ersson but caught the post, keeping things tied up 2-2.

In the second period Michkov again got a shovel pass from Konecny to come down the wing, then roofed a backhander over Luukkonen for his second of the night, this one resembling a quasi-Owen Tippett highlight reel goal over Dallas last season (was it last season?). He is making a case for the Calder people!

MATVEI MICHKOV WITH THE BACKHAND MAGIC!!!

THE CALDER IS CALLING!!!#Flyers pic.twitter.com/JcPDOYuyk5

— Flyers Nation (@FlyersNation) March 29, 2025

Late in the second most Flyers fans watching in person and elsewhere thought they were seeing history as Michkov had another chance coming down the wing. But Luukkonen got enough of the wrister to keep the ice from being littered with hats (the baseball kind, not those big, furry, cumbersome Russian hats).

Two power play goals? In a period??

The Flyers scored two power play goals in this game, the first time since a Jan. 21 contest against Ottawa. The percentage is still horrible, but seeing Ryan Poehling score the team’s seventh of the afternoon with the man advantage was a small bright spot in what has been an abysmal season for that particular special teams.

Pelletier puts one home

Just 29 seconds after Michkov opened the scoring, the Flyers came down on the rush again and made Buffalo pay. This time a nice passing play between Poehling and Owen Tippett resulted in Jakob Pelletier having an empty net. He put it in and finally got his first as a Flyer.

OWEN TIPPETT MAGIC LEADS TO JAKOB PELLETIER'S FIRST #FLYERS GOAL! pic.twitter.com/zbYOaIGBCl

— Flyers Nation (@FlyersNation) March 29, 2025

Couturier coming back?

Sean Couturier has played well for the most part the last little while, something that was quite the opposite last season. The fact he’s probably going to end up with his highest point total (yes, a few pandemic shortened years included) since his 59 points in 2019-20. The line was inches from making it 3-1 about a minute into the second period when a nice passing play left Konecny at the doorstep but couldn’t bang it in.

As is often the case, the opposition came up the ice and tied things up when the Flyers looked out of sorts and a bad line change only added to the misery.

Peterka, 2-2 #Sabrehood #LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/bANQ60kO6M

— Buffalo Hockey Moments (@SabresPlays) March 29, 2025

Tippett gets in on the action

Feel good stories all over the place this afternoon. Tippett got his twentieth of the season with a nice wrist shot. The goal, also on the power play, broke a three-week string of games with no goal (he last scored March 8 against Seattle). Tippett probably isn’t going to end up with 25 goals to close the season, but he won’t end the year with a 20-game drought.

Owen Tippett rifles a shot on the powerplay to extend the Flyers lead to 5-3.
Goal: Tippett (20) Assists: Lycksell (5) Drysdale (14)pic.twitter.com/QAnirr54jM

— Andrew Coté (@acote_88) March 29, 2025

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/post/some-takeaway-from-flyers-7-4-win-over-buffalo/
 
Flyers vs. Sabres: Coverage, how to watch, lineups, and game thread

Puck drop: 1:00 p.m.
How to watch/listen:
📺: NBCSP, ESPN+
📻: 97.5 The Fanatic

Pregame reading


Pregame watching

Projected Lineups​


Philadelphia Flyers

Travis Konecny – Sean Couturier – Matvei Michkov
Tyson Foerster – Noah Cates – Bobby Brink
Owen Tippett – Ryan Poehling – Jakob Pelletier
Nic Deslauriers – Rodrigo Abols – Olle Lycksell

Cam York – Travis Sanheim
Nick Seeler – Jamie Drysdale
Emil Andrae – Egor Zamula

Sam Ersson
(Ivan Fedotov)

Buffalo Sabres

Zach Benson – Jiri Kulich – Tage Thompson
JJ Peterka – Ryan McLeod – Jack Quinn
Isak Rosen – Peyton Krebs – Alex Tuch
Beck Malenstyn – Tyson Kozak – Josh Dunne

Mattias Samuelsson – Rasmus Dahlin
Owen Power – Jacob Bernard-Docker
Bowen Byram – Connor Clifton

James Reimer
(Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen)

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...erage-how-to-watch-lineups-and-game-thread-3/
 
Flyers Farm Stars: Luchanko debuts with Phantoms, Denver Barkey pops in playoff opener

IMG_4326.jpeg


Things are beginning to wind down across all corners of the Flyers’ prospect pool, as regular seasons come to an end and only select players and teams manage to advance, but there’s been no shortage of notable and exciting action to recap this week. Let’s get right into it.

The News of the Week​


For a week where a relatively small group of prospects have played a relatively small number of games, we still had a lot of news come through! First up, the Phantoms got themselves some more reinforcements, as Jett Luchanko was assigned to the team, and Alex Ciernik joined them on an Amateur Tryout. Luchanko got in for his first games with the team this weekend (more on that later), but Ciernik is yet to make his debut.

The Flyers also made a signing this week, getting stay-at-home defender prospect Ty Murchison signed to his ELC this week. With the contract not set to begin until next season, he’s also technically an option to join the Phantoms for the remainder of the season on an ATO, but there’s been no development yet in that department, so we’ll see what happens there.

And finally, the postseason runs are going to continue for two more Flyers prospects, as both Alex Bump and Devin Kaplan have punched their tickets to the Frozen Four, as Western Michigan took down UMass and Boston University bear Cornell in their respective regional finals.

Three Stars​


Denver Barkey

Speaking of postseason action, the OHL playoffs got underway this weekend, and Denver Barkey and his pals up in London got their started off with a bang. The Knights took the first game of their series with Owen Sound, and they did it in pretty commanding fashion, coming away with the win by a 6-1 margin. Barkey picked up one of those goals (a buzzer beater to make it 4-1 heading into the second intermission), and assisted on another (Sam Dickinson’s at the end of the first period). London’s primed to make a long run at the Memorial Cup this spring, and they began it on about as high of a note as possible, and Barkey’s remained a key driver of that success, both in the offensive production that he brings, as well as the energy, and he’s doing very well to put to rest any concerns that he might not be fully ready to go for the playoffs, given the time he missed with injury earlier in the month.

Ilya Pautov

Internationally, there’s another postseason which has gotten underway — over in the MHL, things are getting rolling for Ilya Pautov and his Krasnaya Armiya squad, and he’s been a big part of the success they’ve found so far. They advanced past the play-in round with a pair of wins over Atlant, two games which saw their offense getting going in a big way (winning 5-0 in the first game and 7-2 in the second) and Pautov got involved nicely in those offensive efforts, scoring a goal and an assist across those two games. He’s finding a bit of momentum of late, and hopefully he’s able to keep that rolling, as they kick off their first-round series this week.

Heikki Ruohonen

And then in some of the last remaining regular season action that we have left to talk about around here, Heikki Ruohonen is putting in some nice work. With just one game on the schedule over this past week, he made the most of it, putting up a goal and an assist in Dubuque’s overtime win over Green Bay. This also kicked off what we hope can be a bit of a scoring streak for him — we recall that he also had a goal and an assist in last weekend’s game against Madison, which broke a two-game drought. With still about three weeks left in the USHL regular season, there’s a lot of runway ahead of him still, but it would be nice to see him keep rolling and finish it out strong.

Honorable Mentions​


The other bit of regular season action still unfolding, of course, is down in the AHL. And while the NCAA have taken over their building for a regional, the Phantoms are on the road up in Canada, and they’ve turned it into a pretty successful one. After letting Friday’s game in Belleville slip away from them, they responded in a huge way, shutting out the top team in the whole of the league, beating the Laval Rocket 3-0. And there was a lot to like from the growing prospect group putting in work on that team — of the five goals scored on the weekend, prospects accounted for four of them, as each of Zayde Wisdom, Elliot Desnoyers, Ethan Samson, and Nikita Grebenkin all chipped in goals (Grebenkin also had an assist on top of his goal). Outside of that, Helge Grans was supporting the team’s offense well, and he set up a goal and came away with an assist in both games this weekend, while Luchanko picked up his first points as a Phantom on Saturday in Laval, assisting on Garrett Wilson’s goal.

There have been some flashes of positive production elsewhere in the prospect pool as well, as we saw Devin Kaplan get himself on the board with an assist in BU’s regional semifinal win over Ohio State on Thursday, and then Noah Powell pick up an assist as well in Oshawa’s opening win over Brampton to put themselves up in their series.

And finally, to end on a bit of a low note, things aren’t going great over in the KHL playoffs for Yegor Zavragin, but it certainly isn’t for lack of trying on his part. His team is down 0-2 in their first round series against Minsk, and Zavragin has started in both of those losses. His play hasn’t been poor, to be sure, but he’s kind of getting hung out to dry — he’s only allowed three goals in his first game and two in the second (respectable feats considering his teammates allowed 37 shots get through to him in each of those games). He’s doing just about all we might expect to see from him given the situation, but the support just hasn’t wholly been there. So it goes.

Source

Source: https://www.broadstreethockey.com/p...hantoms-denver-barkey-pops-in-playoff-opener/
 
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