Category: Flyers/NHL

  • Johnny Gaudreau’s dream was to be an Olympian. His family lived it for him, in a moment fit for a ‘movie.’

    Johnny Gaudreau’s dream was to be an Olympian. His family lived it for him, in a moment fit for a ‘movie.’

    In May 2024, Johnny Gaudreau reached out to his father, Guy. He’d recently wrapped up his 10th full NHL season, with the Columbus Blue Jackets, but he had a bigger goal in mind.

    For the first time since 2014, NHL players would be allowed to compete in the 2026 Winter Olympics.

    Gaudreau had already started conditioning, and wanted to do more. So, he went to his first coach.

    “He said, ‘Dad when I come home, we really have to push it,’” Gaudreau’s sister, Katie, recalled Sunday. “‘I really want to make the Olympics.’”

    From May through August, Johnny and Guy drove from their Shore house in Avalon — where their family spent the summer — to any rink in the area that would give them an hour of ice time.

    These weren’t always quick trips. Hollydell Ice Arena was about 60 miles away. Pennsauken Skate Zone was a little farther than that.

    But Gaudreau knew this was his chance to achieve a lifelong dream. So he put in the extra work, sometimes getting additional conditioning in before his father arrived to the rink.

    He was, by his own admission, “not impressed” with what shape he was in at the start. But by the end of the summer, he’d improved.

    Guy saw it himself. In August, he turned to his wife, Jane.

    “I think he might make the team,” he told her. “He’s in the best shape of his life.”

    The Gaudreaus started thinking about a future trip to Milan, where the Olympics would take place.

    Katie, who was set to get married in late August 2024, was already planning a honeymoon there, and joked that it wouldn’t make sense to go twice in a short span.

    She began sketching out the conversation with her supervisors at Oldmans Township School, where she works as a first-grade teacher.

    But all of this excitement and hope came to an unceremonious halt on Aug. 29, 2024.

    Johnny and his brother, Matty, were at home in Oldmans Township for Katie’s wedding the following day.

    They were hit by an alleged drunk driver while riding bicycles on County Route 551. The brothers were severely wounded and both died at the scene. Johnny was 31 years old, and Matty was 29.

    Ever since they died, their family has been trying to honor their legacy. Jane and Guy have attended multiple ceremonies to honor their late sons.

    After some initial hesitation, Jane and Guy Gaudreau made the trip to Italy to honor their son and root on his former Team USA teammates.

    In 2025, they started the annual Gaudreau Family 5K, an in-person and virtual road race to raise money for the Gaudreau Family Foundation.

    But last week, they received a special opportunity to celebrate Johnny’s ultimate goal.

    On Tuesday, a representative for USA Hockey asked the Gaudreau family if they’d want to attend the semifinal game against Slovakia on Friday. They were also invited to Sunday’s gold-medal game, if the Americans qualified.

    Initially, Guy and Jane said no. Katie and her sister Kristen weren’t able to make it, and they didn’t want to travel without them.

    It also seemed bittersweet to attend an Olympic semifinal or final without their late son.

    But on Wednesday morning, Jane had a change of heart.

    “My mom was like, ‘I really didn’t sleep,’” Katie said. “‘I think John would want us to go. I think we should go.’”

    A staple of Team USA

    Throughout his career, Gaudreau was a staple of USA Hockey. He’d been involved in development camps since he was a teenager.

    He’d competed in international tournaments since 2010, when he was a member of the Under-18 select team.

    In the 2013 World Junior Championship, Gaudreau led the tournament with seven goals en route to a gold medal.

    The forward continued to establish himself as a key player on the senior team, setting a number of offensive records despite never competing at an Olympics.

    He still holds the mark for the most points (43) and assists (30) by any American in IIHF men’s World Championship history.

    “He does his best, I swear, in a Team USA jersey,” Katie said.

    His Olympic enthusiasm went beyond tournament play. The Gaudreau family watched the movie Miracle, about the 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey team, so many times, they could recite it by heart.

    It was always playing in their minivan, as they traveled up and down the East Coast for Johnny and Matty’s hockey tournaments.

    As the years passed, and Gaudreau continued to solidify himself as an NHL star, the idea of him making an Olympic team seemed less of a dream and more a reality.

    Team USA confirmed as much after Johnny passed. Last year, at the Four Nations Face-Off, an official told Guy that “John would have had a spot on the team.”

    “Any hockey player growing up, of course they want to make it to the NHL, but the Olympics is really the big thing,” said Katie. “And it’s always been a dream of John and Matthew’s. And we knew it was a tangible dream.”

    So, when Team USA made the initial offer to fly the family out to Milan, Jane and Guy were hesitant.

    They knew going to a game or two would be an emotional experience. Katie knew this, too. But she encouraged her parents to at least try.

    Guy Gaudreau, a longtime coach in South Jersey, has spent time on the ice as a guest of Team USA over the past two years.

    “I said, ‘If you get there, and you go to the first game, and it’s entirely too hard, you don’t have to go back,’” Katie said. “‘You don’t have to go. You can leave. But if you’re watching the game at home, you can’t be there.’

    “‘So this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to honor the boys. And keep their legacy alive. And that’s what we do, every day. We wake up and we just want to honor the boys’ legacy.’”

    Jane and Guy decided to go. They met Johnny’s widow, Meredith, in Atlanta, with her two oldest children, Noa and Johnny Jr.

    Together, they flew to Milan, where they attended Friday’s game against Slovakia and Sunday’s gold-medal game against Canada.

    Katie and Kristen watched from their parents’ house in South Jersey with family and close friends. They knew that the players had hung up Johnny’s USA jersey in their locker room, and hoped that he would be celebrated if they won.

    But they weren’t sure what would happen when the United States beat Canada, 2-1, in overtime. Katie and her sister were “in tears” when Auston Matthews, Matthew Tkachuk, and Zach Werenski carried Gaudreau’s No. 13 jersey as they glided across the ice.

    The next few moments exceeded the family’s expectations. Meredith, who was watching in the stands with her two oldest kids and in-laws, received a call from a Team USA official.

    He put her in touch with Tkachuk, who asked if she could bring Noa and Johnny Jr. down to the ice.

    Two players, Dylan Larkin and Werenski, skated off the rink, with gold medals hanging around their necks.

    They met Meredith at the bottom of the stands, scooped up Noa and Johnny Jr., and carried them back out for a team photo.

    Noa sat on Werenski’s lap. Johnny Jr. — who was celebrating his second birthday — sat on Larkin’s.

    “I was like, ‘There’s no way they’re going to do that. There’s no way,’” Katie said. “When they did that, I lost it. I’m so proud. I’m so happy that the kids got to experience that, because this is what John wanted. The team did an amazing job.”

    United States forward Dylan Larkin (21) holds Johnny Jr., the son of the late player Johnny Gaudreau, in the team photo after the gold-medal game.

    It’s a memory the Gaudreaus will hold close. They know that tomorrow, people will go to work, and get on about their days, and a fresh news cycle will take hold.

    But a year and a half later, Team USA still hasn’t forgotten about Johnny and Matty Gaudreau. And for that, their family is grateful.

    “Every time I think, ‘All right, now it’s time to move on, we’re not going to have all this support’ — they don’t [move] on,” said Katie. “This is a history book [moment] that there will be a movie about.

    “And in that movie, Noa and Johnny will be on the ice.”

  • Dan Vladař relishes in his Olympic experience; Flyers’ Americans celebrate Team USA’s historic gold

    Dan Vladař relishes in his Olympic experience; Flyers’ Americans celebrate Team USA’s historic gold

    Dan Vladař had goosebumps when he first saw his jersey hanging in his stall.

    For the first five minutes of his lone start, he just thought to himself, “wow,” as he looked around and saw the fans waving flags and the Olympic rings plastered everywhere.

    “This is actually happening,” he thought.

    Indeed. The Flyers’ No. 1 goalie returned to practice on Sunday for the first time after donning the red, white, and blue of Czechia at the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics.

    Vladař played in one game, allowing three goals on 12 shots in a 6-3 win against France in Czechia’s second game of the tournament. France took a 3-2 lead at one point in the second period before David Pastrňák tied it up, and Czechia never looked back.

    “You never know if you’re ever going to get the chance, so I didn’t want to take it for granted, but it was, for me, it was just trying to focus on myself,” he said about his solo start.

    “Obviously, we won, it was good. I wasn’t the best, but those games are tough when you’re just standing there, and nothing’s going towards you, and then, all of a sudden, you look up, and you’re like, one, two, three; you’re like, what’s going to happen now?”

    The Czechs tournament ended in the quarterfinals with a 4-3 overtime loss to Canada on a goal by Mitch Marner against Lukáš Dostál. Vladař said he spoke with his Flyers teammate, Travis Sanheim, during handshakes and congratulated Flyers coach Rick Tocchet, an assistant on Jon Cooper’s staff, in the tunnel after. The two Flyers won silver medals on Sunday, one day after defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen won bronze with Finland.

    For the 28-year-old goalie, leaving Italy without a medal didn’t diminish the experience. He stayed in the athlete’s village — goalies got their own room — and took in the sights and food of Milan. He liked the freshness of all the salads and pasta, which were cooked al dente, but didn’t have any pizza, and rode the golf cart in full gear between rinks.

    Flyers goalie Dan Vladař said the Olympic experience makes him want to play meaningful NHL games even more than ever.

    He wasn’t able to take in other events due to a tight schedule, or get the tattoo he told The Inquirer he was planning on getting — that’s coming in the summer, he said — but “I was trying to enjoy every moment, every second there, which I thought I did.”

    Vladař is now back between the pipes for a Flyers team trying to make a playoff push with 26 games left in the season. Across his first 33 games, which is already a career high, he went 17-8-6 with a 2.47 goals-against average and .905 save percentage. And while he didn’t return to Philly with a medal, he came back with some fuel.

    “You don’t want to have that feeling again, losing [and] not accomplishing anything; that was probably … my biggest fire coming back here, was just, I don’t want to feel like we all felt after that overtime goal in the quarterfinals,” he said.

    “I think that we still have some time to really push for it and then, at least, sneak in.”

    Golden!

    The Flyers’ practice was slated to start at 11 a.m., and on a typical day, guys start hitting the ice well in advance. But Sunday was not your typical day as the United States and Canada were going toe-to-toe in the men’s hockey finale at the Olympics.

    Huddled in the video room, the Flyers watched — and then hooted and hollered, according to Cam York — as Jack Hughes scored the golden goal to give the Americans their first gold medal in men’s ice hockey since the 1980 Lake Placid Olympics at roughly 10:55 a.m. It came on the 46th anniversary of the “Miracle on Ice,” when the plucky U.S. squad of collegians upset the powerhouse Soviet Union before beating Finland for gold. York said he won $100 off Canadian Tyson Foerster thanks to the U.S. win.

    Cam York and Trevor Zegras know the feeling of winning gold with Team USA after accomplishing it at the 2021 World Juniors.

    “That’s my good buddy who scored the overtime winner, so that was pretty crazy,” said New York native Trevor Zegras. “It was weird practicing after that.”

    “It was one of the best games I’ve ever watched, I think, just the pace of it all, the Grade A chances, both sides, goalies playing incredible,” added the Californian York, who played with Zegras for the U.S. National Team Development Program and won gold at the 2021 World Juniors.

    “For USA Hockey, it’s huge, it’s been a long time coming, I think, and to see those guys win, I thought that was just a really sick game.”

    It’s been a long time coming indeed. The U.S. entered the day with 12 medals but just two golds in men’s hockey, from the 1980 and 1960 Squaw Valley Olympics. The last time USA Hockey medaled was 2010, when Sidney Crosby, who was injured and unable to play on Sunday, scored a heartbreaking golden goal in the finale.

    “It was a big one. [Goalie Connor] Hellebuyck was unbelievable in that game, made a lot of huge saves there,” said Christian Dvorak. “Americans came through, so it was great to watch and fun to chirp some of the Canadians in here.”

    The Flyers have seven Americans on the roster in York, Zegras, Maine’s Garnet Hathaway, Dvorak (Illinois), and the Minnesotans, Nick Seeler, Noah Cates, and Bobby Brink; Sean Couturier was born in Phoenix but grew up in New Brunswick and represents Canada on the international stage.

    None of the players on the current roster were around for the last gold medal, and only five, including Hathaway and Dvorak, were around for the 1996 World Cup victory over Canada. For assistant coach Todd Reirden, this was another special — and defining — moment for hockey in the U.S.

    “I remember clear as day, everything that went on with that ’80 Olympics, being pretty young at the time, 9 or 10 years old. So it was something I could remember very clearly, and how exciting it was, and how those guys became my heroes,” said the Illinois native.

    “To see where it’s come now, I think all that stuff was a culmination of the growth of the game, and now it’s going to continue. Major credit to what USA Hockey has done with the way that they’ve changed the way that they’re teaching the youth, the small area games, the smaller sheets. You see the skill level players, we see it all the time in the NHL, but it’s really made it a more exciting game, and something that hopefully will continue to rise because it’s fun to be a part of.”

    Breakaways

    With Vladař back from Italy, Aleksei Kolosov was loaned back to Lehigh Valley of the American Hockey League on Sunday.

  • Team USA honors the late Johnny Gaudreau after winning Olympic gold in Milan

    Team USA honors the late Johnny Gaudreau after winning Olympic gold in Milan

    The dramatic Olympic gold medal win by the United States men’s hockey team on Sunday, which snapped a 46-year drought for the Americans, will be remembered forever.

    But amid the celebrations and flowing tears of joy in Milan after Jack Hughes’ overtime goal against the Canadians, Team USA’s players had one of their fallen teammates at the front of mind.

    Former USA Hockey and NHL star Johnny Gaudreau grew up in Salem County and was killed in August 2024 alongside his brother Matthew by an allegedly drunk driver in Oldmans Township, N.J. Gaudreau was supposed to be on this team in Milan skating around with a gold medal around his neck. But as they have all tournament, and in previous ones since his tragic death, Johnny Gaudreau’s former U.S. teammates ensured that he was there in spirit, as captain Auston Matthews and close friends Matthew Tkachuk and Zach Werenski skated around the ice holding up his No. 13 Team USA jersey. Tkachuk and Werenski played with Gaudreau in Calgary and Columbus, respectively.

    The moment was especially touching given that Gaudreau’s parents, Guy and Jane, his widow, Meredith, and two of his children, Noa and Johnny Jr., were in the stands Sunday at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena. The American players later brought Noa and Johnny Jr. onto the ice to sit in for the team picture alongside their father’s jersey. Werenski and Dylan Larkin held the children during the photo, while Tkachuk held up Gaudreau’s jersey front and center. Sunday, in addition to being the anniversary of the 1980 Miracle on Ice at Lake Placid, was Johnny Jr.’s second birthday.

    Gaudreau, who represented Team USA at the 2013 World Junior Championship as well as World Championships in 2014, 2017, 2018, 2019, and 2024, is the United States’ all-time leading scorer at World Championships. His mother told reporters in Italy on Friday that playing on this team was their dream.

    After Team USA’s win in the semifinals, Larkin, Werenski, and several other teammates spoke about how important Gaudreau was to them and USA Hockey.

    “It means everything — we all know he should be here with us,” said Larkin, who played with Gaudreau at multiple World Championships. “He should be with us. We love him, and I like that we continue to think about him and I wouldn’t imagine it any other way.”

    Werenski added Friday how excited he was to have Gaudreau’s family in Italy cheering them on: “It’s great having them here, and it’s super special,” Werenski said. “We’re happy that we made it to the gold-medal game so they can watch that and be a part of it. It’s on us to make them proud.”

    Gaudreau, who had just turned 31 before his death, racked up 743 points in 763 NHL games across 10-plus seasons, eight plus one game with the Flames and two with the Blue Jackets. He is considered the best hockey player to hail from the Philadelphia/South Jersey area, and his career 0.97 points per game mark in the NHL is the 10th-best all-time among Americans.

    The United States’ Dylan Larkin (21) holds Johnny Gaudreau Jr. while posing with teammates after the gold medal victory against Canada.

    The former Gloucester Catholic star, who later went on to win an NCAA title and the Hobey Baker Award as the best player in college hockey at Boston College, was a seven-time NHL All-Star. His brother Matthew also played at BC and carved out a four-season pro career, reaching as high as the American Hockey League. “Matty” was 29 when he and Johnny, riding bicycles on the night before their sister’s wedding, were run off the road on Aug. 30, 2024.

    After the brothers’ deaths, tributes poured in across the hockey world, including in South Jersey and with the Flyers, and across the NHL and beyond. USA Hockey has repeatedly honored Gaudreau’s legacy over the last few years and has made him and his family a constant presence. Gaudreau’s jersey has hung in the locker room at several international tournaments, including this year’s Olympics, while Guy Gaudreau, a longtime coach in South Jersey, has been invited to speak and help coach with Team USA.

    “It meant everything,” said Werenski, who assisted on Hughes’ golden goal Sunday. ”This is something John would have been at. And to see his family here supporting us and seeing his kids, bringing them on the ice, we talked about playing for him, making him proud, and I think we did that. Super special to see them and to have kids on the ice, he was a huge part of USA Hockey.”

  • Team USA beats Canada in OT to win first men’s hockey Olympic gold since 1980

    Team USA beats Canada in OT to win first men’s hockey Olympic gold since 1980

    MILAN (AP) — No miracle needed. The United States is on top of the hockey world for the first time in nearly a half-century.

    Jack Hughes scored in overtime and the U.S. defeated Canada 2-1 in the gold medal final at the Milan Cortina Olympics on Sunday to earn the nation’s third men’s title at the Games and its first since the “Miracle on Ice” in 1980 — 46 years to the day of the famous upset over the Soviet Union, too.

    Unlike that ragtag group of college kids that pulled off one of the biggest shockers in sports history, the Americans in Milan were a machine that rode goaltender Connor Hellebuyck and a stacked roster full of NHL players through the tournament unbeaten.

    “This is all about our country right now,” Hughes said. “I love the USA. I love my teammates. It’s unbelievable. The USA Hockey brotherhood is so strong.”

    Hughes’ goal off the rush after a pass from Zach Werenski just 1 minute, 41 seconds into three-on-three overtime, sent players into a wild celebration as Canada’s entire team watched from the bench. Werenski and Matthew Tkachuk, former teammates of Johnny Gaudreau, carried a Gaudreau No. 13 around the ice as the latest tribute to the beloved player who was killed along with his brother in 2024 by an alleged drunk driver while riding his bicycle in South Jersey’s Salem County.

    Gaudreau’s parents, Guy and Jane, his widow, Meredith, and their oldest children were in attendance. It was John Jr.’s 2nd birthday.

    Hellebuyck was by far the best player on the ice, stopping 41 of the 42 shots he faced as Canada tilted the ice toward him. He made the save of the tournament by getting his stick on the puck on a shot from Devon Toews in the third period, then minutes later denied Macklin Celebrini on a breakaway — something he also did to Connor McDavid earlier.

    “Unbelievable game by Hellebuyck,” Hughes said. “He was our best player by a mile.”

    It was only fitting the Americans needed to go through Canada, their northern neighbor that beat them at the 4 Nations Face-Off a year ago and has won every international competition over the past 16 years that featured the world’s best players.

    Not anymore.

    Winning a fast-paced, riveting game that was full of big hits and plenty of post-whistle altercations, the U.S. got a goal from Matt Boldy 6 minutes in and led until Cale Makar tied it late in the second period. Hellebuyck and the penalty kill were a perfect 18 for 18 at the Olympics.

    “I can’t even believe this,” Hughes said. “I mean it’s such an unbelievable game, USA-Canada. Such a good game. There’s so many great players. We’re a great team. That’s exactly how we wanted it to go. We’re underdogs to Canada, [but we] beat them. It could have gone either way.”

    The U.S. finally came through after generations of churning out talent from the grassroots level like a production line. All but two of the 25 players on the team went through USA Hockey’s National Team Development Program.

    That group of 23 includes captain Auston Matthews, the top line of Brady and Matthew Tkachuk and Jack Eichel, and the second set of brothers, Jack and Quinn Hughes. Much of the team played together either at the program, under-18s, the World Junior Championship, or some combination of them.

    The U.S. winning silenced criticism of general manager Bill Guerin and his management group choosing a roster full of experienced veteran players to fill specific roles and leaving four of the top 10 American goal scorers in the NHL this season at home. Some decisions were no-doubters, like coach Mike Sullivan giving the net to Hellebuyck, who was the best goalie in the tournament.

    Canada, back-to-back Olympic champions in 2010 and ’14 and winners of three of the first five, fell short while playing without injured captain Sidney Crosby. The 38-year-old two-time gold medalist and three-time Stanley Cup champion left the quarterfinal game against Czechia and sat out the semifinal game against Finland.

    McDavid, the widely considered best player in the world who wore the “C” in Crosby’s absence, suffered another devastating defeat on the doorstep of a title. He and the Edmonton Oilers have lost to Matthew Tkachuk and the Florida Panthers in the Stanley Cup Final each of the past two years.

  • Flyers center Sean Couturier is bringing ‘a fresh mindset’ into the final stretch

    Flyers center Sean Couturier is bringing ‘a fresh mindset’ into the final stretch

    Reset.

    That’s what Sean Couturier was planning to do during the NHL’s Olympic break.

    The Flyers captain is also looking to reset — by doing again — how he plays away from the puck, defensively, and setting up his teammates, but reset — differently — his offensive production.

    “Yeah, feels good to have a fresh mindset coming into the last stretch here,” he said. “Excited to get going here.”

    Analytically, Couturier’s numbers are solid. According to Natural Stat Trick, at five-on-five, the Flyers have a 51.9% Corsi For percentage, 53.6% of the shots, 56.64% of the expected goal share, and 57.35% of the high-danger chances, when he is on the ice. His Corsi For percentage is No. 1 for Philly, while the rest range in the top two or three among players who have skated in at least 20 games.

    Flyers center Sean Couturier has five goals and 26 points in 55 games this season.

    The only issue? The Flyers have allowed three more goals (29 goals for, 32 against). It’s not egregious, but the number is compounded by the fact that Couturier hasn’t scored since Dec. 7. He has five goals and 26 points in 55 games this season, with nine assists and zero goals across his last 29.

    “You know, before the break, I was just trying to simplify my game, go to the net, try to get a lucky bounce hit me off a shin pad, or my pants, or something, just get a dirty goal,” he said. “But bounces just seemed not to be going my way before the break.”

    As someone who sits 71 games away from 1,000, Couturier has gone through this type of stretch before.

    “I think you try to cut things down to not look at the big picture and try to have little goals in three-to-five-game segments, and [then] kind of always start with a fresh mindset after that,” he said after the Flyers’ fourth practice since returning Tuesday.

    “… I think it’s just, mentally be sharper, be more [even] keel, I would say. Not too high, not too low, so that you manage to go through these struggles.”

    Not to sound too cliché, but he’s pretty much taking it day by day. He’s getting chances, but he’s just snakebitten, as assistant coach Todd Reirden acknowledged on Saturday.

    Couturier said he has to “get back to that mentality of shooting first and not always looking for a pass.” Working on re-finding his offensive touch, the 33-year-old forward did have the sixth-most shots on the team (54) since his last NHL goal against the Colorado Avalanche.

    “I think it’s just to get my mindset more of just two-on ones, shoot when I can, not just look for passes,” he said. “I like to pass the puck. I like to create plays, but sometimes, you’ve got to simplify things, and I think if I have more of a shooting mentality, it’ll help out for sure putting the puck in the net.”

    It should help that Couturier is back skating with Denver Barkey and Owen Tippett after centering the fourth line for the last four games before the break — with coach Rick Tocchet moving him up the lineup depending on the scenario. The trio had primarily been connected since Barkey was called up from Lehigh Valley of the American Hockey League in late December, skating more than 140 minutes together.

    Flyers center Sean Couturier and teammate Owen Tippett go after the puck against Tampa Bay Lightning on Jan. 10.

    When they were on the ice at five-on-five, the Flyers had a 56.32% Corsi For — with 69.09% of the high-danger chances — outshot opponents 62-47, had almost twice as many scoring chances (76-47), and 64.62 of the expected goal share. The only negative is that they were outscored 9-6.

    Does Couturier, a Selke Trophy winner as the NHL’s top defensive forward in 2019-20, focus on defense to let them fly up the ice?

    “I don’t know,” he said. “They’re two great offensive young players. So, yeah, I try to, maybe, balance things out on the defensive side and let them do their things offensively, letting them take a little more chances and, you know, back them up at times.

    “But, honestly, I think it’s more on me to just be better, more involved in the play, timing-wise, when to be up the ice and when to be back under the play.”

    Couturier may not be scoring, but he’s doing the little things that lead to goals, like his play on the wall or winning a faceoff — among forwards who had taken at least 90 draws, he led the Flyers in faceoff win percentage in the last 29 games (54.0%). And the captain, whose “voice carries a lot of weight,” according to Reirden, is a key penalty killer and can play on the power play.

    Reirden has worked with some of the NHL’s best players, notably Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin of the Pittsburgh Penguins, and Washington Capitals star Alex Ovechkin, who the Flyers will see on Wednesday (7 p.m., NBCSP) when they restart the season. He draws back on working with players like that to help Couturier get through the difficult times, and he feels “a little different vibe from him than I did before the break.”

    Maybe that’s because, as Couturier said, “It’s a new chapter to finish the year.”

    Bronze Age

    Flyers defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen and Finland captured the bronze medal with a 6-1 win against Slovakia at the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics.

    The 6-foot-4, 208-pound blueliner had an impressive tournament, popping on both sides of the puck. He entered the medal game with two assists and a plus-7 across five games. He had an assist on the sixth goal on Saturday and finished plus-9, tied for the top spot in the men’s tournament with one game left to be played.

    “We know he’s a big, big body,” said former Dallas Stars forward Jere Lehtinen, who is Finland’s general manager, in a phone interview from Milan before the Olympics began. “He moves quick, a physical guy, and in the defensive zone it’s tough to play against him.

    “But at the same time, he gets up to play and has a good shot. … So, the main thing is he brings us size and speed and physicality. And if you want to succeed as a team, you need those types of players in your defensive zone, [who] may play against the top players.”

    Ristolainen, 31, skated for his country for the first time since the 2016 World Cup when it went 0-3-0, shut out by Sweden and Russia, and scored just one goal against Team North America. He was named to the 4 Nation’s Face-Off roster last February but was unable to play due to injury.

    The bronze medal now goes along with the gold he won — literally — at the 2014 World Juniors. In overtime, the physical defenseman hopped over the boards, carried the puck around Sweden’s Robert Hägg — the Flyers’ 2013 second-round pick — cut across the crease, and tucked in the golden goal. His game-winner gave Finland its first World Junior medal since 2006 and first gold since 1998.

    “Obviously, it was a big one, and, you know, sometimes I used to make plays and play a little offense,” he said with a chuckle.

    Saturday’s bronze is Finland’s eighth medal at the Olympics in men’s hockey. Its lone gold came at the 2022 Beijing Olympics, with Slovakia winning bronze that year.

    Breakaways

    Defenseman Adam Ginning and goalie Aleksei Kolosov were recalled from Lehigh Valley on Saturday. … The gold medal game will be played on Sunday with Tocchet, defenseman Travis Sanheim and Canada facing the United States and former Flyers coach John Tortorella (8 a.m., NBC, Peacock).

  • U.S. pays tribute to the late Johnny and Matthew Gaudreau at the Winter Olympics

    U.S. pays tribute to the late Johnny and Matthew Gaudreau at the Winter Olympics

    MILAN — Johnny Gaudreau was working hard to make the U.S. team heading to the 2026 Winter Olympics. He and brother Matthew watched the event growing up in South Jersey, always with eyes on playing in it.

    “It was their dream,” Jane Gaudreau said her sons.

    Johnny and Matthew died on Aug. 29, 2024, when they were struck by an SUV while riding bicycles near their hometown of Salem County on the eve of their sister Katie’s wedding. Their deaths shocked the hockey community, and the Gloucester Catholic High School graduates have been honored since by retired numbers, a memorial 5K, and more.

    An elite player a decade into his NHL career and the all-time U.S. leading scorer in international play, Johnny Gaudreau was on track to be in Milan for the tournament that wraps up Sunday when the Americans play rival Canada for the gold medal. Guy Gaudreau said USA Hockey was gracious enough to tell the family their oldest son was on the projected roster.

    “He wanted to be on this team,” Guy Gaudreau said during the third period of the U.S. semifinal win on Friday night. “And it would’ve been nice if he’d been here.”

    The U.S. is honoring the Gaudreau brothers with a tribute to them in their locker room at the Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena. A blue No. 13 Gaudreau jersey hangs there as a reminder of the player known as “Johnny Hockey,” who was beloved by so many on the national team and beyond.

    “It means everything — we all know he should be here with us,” said Dylan Larkin, who played with Gaudreau at multiple world championships. “He should be with us. We love him, and I like that we continue to think about him and I wouldn’t imagine it any other way.”

    Jane and Guy Gaudreau, along with Johnny’s widow, Meredith, and their two oldest children arrived in Milan on Friday. The Gaudreau parents had been planning a trip to Las Vegas and initially hesitated after USA Hockey invited them to attend.

    “Our two daughters, for 24 hours, they just kept at us: ‘You have to go. The boys would want you to do this. This would mean so much to John,’” Jane said. “It just means so much to our family, and we’re so excited to remember what our boys meant to hockey.”

    The Gaudreau family connections to players on the roster run deep, from Boston College to the NHL. In addition to the world championships, Johnny played with Noah Hanifin on the Calgary Flames and Zach Werenski on the Columbus Blue Jackets.

    “Johnny was close to a lot of guys in that room,” Hanifin said. “We know he’d be here with us, so we’ve been thinking about him and carrying him with us.”

    Werenski said after he and his teammates advanced to the final that Meredith reached out to his wife a few days earlier to let them know they were coming.

    “It’s great having them here, and it’s super special,” Werenski said. “We’re happy that we made it to the gold-medal game so they can watch that and be a part of it. It’s on us to make them proud.”

    Not that it would have been much of a debate, but coach Mike Sullivan confirmed what management told the Gaudreaus: Johnny would have been on the team if he were still alive, based on his body of work and how well he has played in a U.S. uniform.

    “He was one of America’s very best,” Sullivan said. “He’s just a good person on the ice and off the ice, and I think he’s an inspiration to our players to this very day.”

    Players still talk about Gaudreau, and “all the stories are funny,” according to Charlie McAvoy, who played alongside him at worlds.

    “Just an amazing person, just an infectious personality,” McAvoy said. “The detail, really, with our staff and our equipment staff especially to make sure that he’s always with us, little reminders of him in the room, and they just go a long way. You always see them. They’re just gentle. They’re right there. But we know that he’s always with us.”

    Along with Johnny’s No. 13 jersey is that number on the wall alongside Matthew’s No. 21. It’s similar to what USA Hockey did a year ago at the 4 Nations Face-Off, when Guy Gaudreau took part in practice as a guest coach.

    This would have been Johnny Gaudreau’s first chance to play at the Olympics after the NHL did not participate in 2018 and 2022. But it almost certainly won’t be the last time his jersey hangs in the U.S. locker room at the game, a tradition that could continue for years to come.

    “I hope so,” Larkin said. ”I sure hope so.”

  • Flyers continue to fight local hunger one assist at a time: ‘We needed to do more, plain and simple’

    Flyers continue to fight local hunger one assist at a time: ‘We needed to do more, plain and simple’

    The Flyers and Penn Medicine have partnered up to donate 13,750 pounds of food, which accounts for over 9,000 meals, so far this season as part of their Penn Medicine Assist program.

    The initiative, which started during the 2023-24 season, donates 50 pounds of food to local hunger-relief organization Philabundance for every Flyers assist — increasing last year’s amount by 20 pounds per assist. So far, the Flyers have tallied 275 assists.

    “We needed to do more, plain and simple,” said Todd Glickman, the chief revenue and business officer for Comcast Spectacor. “We felt like we needed to do more and give more because food insecurity is such a big thing in the region. It was important to Penn Medicine and it was important to us. And it was an easy thing to do.”

    The program’s numbers continue to grow each year. During the 2023-24 season, the Flyers’ 396 assists donated 11,880 pounds of food. The following year, the Flyers’ 403 assists donated 12,090 pounds of food — making it over 37,000 pounds of food, and over 25,000 meals, that have been donated over the last three years.

    “I think we’ll see the numbers go up significantly from last year just by increasing the amount by 20 pounds per assist,” said Lori Gustave, the chief strategy officer of Penn Medicine. “I personally hope they get a lot of assists so that we can donate a lot of food.”

    The initiative will benefit Philabundance, which has been operating for 41 years, growing across two states in nine counties, with the mission to bridge the gap between a surplus of food and those in the community struggling with food insecurity.

    The foundation started from the back of Pam Rainey Lawler’s Subaru in 1984. Since then, it has grown tremendously — delivering over 40 million pounds of food to the community over the past year.

    Gritty at Philabundance last year, packing some of the meals donated from the Penn Medicine Assist program.

    “Of the nine counties, which includes Philadelphia, there are approximately 700,000 neighbors that are food insecure,” said Amy Galette, the director of corporate relations at Philabundance. “If you think about the amount of people we serve a week, it’s enough to fill five stadiums full during Flyers games. It’d be like selling out five Flyers games per week.”

    As part of last year’s Penn Medicine Assist program, Gritty and some of the Flyers players, including Jamie Drysdale and Bobby Brink, joined the assembly line at Philabundance to help package some of the meals.

    “It was fun,” Brink said. “I mean it was nice to get a little day-in-the-life kind of vibe and help out. The environment was great, a lot of great people, and it’s always nice just giving a few hours to help.”

    Drysdale added: “We are very fortunate to be in this position that we’re in. And I don’t think it takes a lot for us to give a few hours wherever we can to kind of help out and just show some love back to the community that treats us so well.”

  • Flyers defenseman Emil Andrae is ‘doing everything he can’ to get himself back into the lineup

    Flyers defenseman Emil Andrae is ‘doing everything he can’ to get himself back into the lineup

    During the last stretch of February heading into the Olympic break, Rick Tocchet had a familiar refrain regarding defenseman Emil Andrae — “we’re trying to get him in.”

    But Andrae, 23, ultimately ended up sitting the final five games before the break, the odd man out thanks to his left-handed shot and lack of utility on the penalty kill. Is there a place for him in the Flyers’ lineup down the stretch?

    “We need his input from the blue line offensively and the things that he can do in terms of breaking pucks out,” assistant coach Todd Reirden, who runs the defense, said Thursday.

    In the 40 games Andrae has played so far this year, he’s set career-highs in points and assists, with 11 points and 10 assists. The 2020 second-round pick is averaging 16 minutes, 54 seconds of ice time and is second on the Flyers with a plus-11 rating.

    In Andrae’s place, Tocchet reinstated Noah Juulsen into the lineup. The veteran Juulsen is a right-hand shot and kills penalties. Juulsen and Andrae played on a pair together early in the year with right-handed defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen injured. But since Ristolainen’s return on Dec. 16, Andrae has jumped in and out of the lineup.

    Reirden echoed a similar sentiment to Tocchet — the coaching staff likes Andrae, but situationally, they don’t think it makes sense to play him.

    “He’s been really sharp in these three practices that he’s been back for,” Reirden said. “I know he came back a little bit earlier and did some other skating. He’s doing everything he can to get himself in a situation where he’s fighting to be in that lineup every night.”

    With the trade deadline coming up, and the Flyers still on the outside looking in, the team might be looking to ship out some of their extra defensemen — especially with a glut of prospects coming up, like 2023 first-round pick Oliver Bonk, who got an extended look during the last two days of practice with Travis Sanheim and Rasmus Ristolainen away in Milan.

    Flyers defenseman Emil Andrae is second on the team with a plus-11 rating, yet he’s found himself on the outside looking in of late.

    Andrae is no stranger to fighting for his place with the Flyers. He started the year in the AHL out of training camp, despite playing over 40 games for the Flyers in 2024-25. He put up five points in seven games before earning a recall to the NHL.

    “We sometimes forget what he’s gone through this year, by starting in the minors and going through that — it’s not easy, mentally and physically,“ Reirden said. ”To his credit, he came back and he’s been able to post those type of numbers.”

    Whether Andrae finds himself back in the lineup come Feb. 25 in Washington or not, nearly a month after his last start, or on the Flyers beyond the March 6 trade deadline, he’s continued to take steps forward as the year progresses.

    “This is a player that definitely has improved, and continues to improve,” Reirden said. “Being able to just keep that level of consistency for us is important. Sometimes you need to take a step away and then take the break that he had.”

    Breakaways

    Sanheim, Tocchet, and Team Canada will take on Ristolainen and Finland in the Olympic semifinals on Friday at 10:40 a.m. … Team USA will face Slovakia at 3:10 p.m. The two winning teams will play for gold on Sunday and the losing teams will play for bronze on Saturday. … The Flyers loaned Bonk, Hunter McDonald, and Carson Bjarnson back to Lehigh Valley in order to play in American Hockey League games this weekend.

  • Flyers call-ups bring ‘a new energy’ as the team prepares for the stretch run

    Flyers call-ups bring ‘a new energy’ as the team prepares for the stretch run

    On Wednesday, Travis Sanheim, Rasmus Ristolainen, Dan Vladař, and Rick Tocchet were part of tense, overtime battles at the Olympics in Milan, Italy.

    Those high-pressure games are exactly the kind of battles the Flyers hope to find themselves in come April. But with the team currently eight points out of third in the Metropolitan Division, a lot has to change to make that happen.

    “That’s our No. 1 mindset and why we’re doing the things we’re doing in practices is with that endgame in mind,” assistant coach Todd Reirden said. “We’re going to approach every game with that mindset. It’s something that is attainable and our guys believe in.”

    Tocchet mentioned numerous times before the break that the Flyers haven’t had the opportunity to get a lot of practice time in. But the Olympic break provides an opportunity for a sort of second training camp — a full, uninterrupted week for the Flyers to drill new concepts and even work new faces into the mix.

    The Flyers called up defensemen Oliver Bonk and Hunter McDonald, and goaltender Carson Bjarnason, from Lehigh Valley to fill in for the players in Milan, and Reirden said having new, hungry players in practice has given the group a “new energy.”

    “The guys, their spirits have been really high,” Reirden said. “Today’s practice was pretty spirited, with some competitions that we had. That, in conjunction with bringing in new players that are excited about getting an opportunity, I think is really great experience for everybody involved.”

    Reirden said some of the drills were designed to test the Flyers’ prospects’ ability to handle NHL pace.

    During the hourlong practice, the Flyers ran five-on-five drills, and smaller one-on-ones and special teams sets. Drill losers dropped to the ice for pushups, and there were plenty of celebrations for goals and clears.

    “It’s cool,” Bonk said. “This is where you want to be all the time.”

    The Flyers still have a full week before their next game, on Feb. 25 in Washington, and they won’t be getting Tocchet back early after the Canadians pulled off the quarterfinal win.

    Travis Sanheim, pictured last year at the 4 Nations, is two games away from an Olympic gold medal.

    But Tocchet, working with some of the NHL’s best coaches, including Cup winners in Jon Cooper and Bruce Cassidy with Team Canada, also is picking up a lot of new tactics, Reirden said, which they’ve been discussing and implementing with the group back in Voorhees.

    “This scenario, I think, leads itself to more hockey discussion,” Reirden said. “There’s some things that he’s watching develop in terms of how they’re doing some different elements of their game strategically, and thinking about whether we should adjust different things. We’re always looking to tinker and tweak certain things to try to better fit the identity of our group.”

    Breakaways

    Sanheim, Tocchet, and Team Canada advanced to the Olympic semifinals with a 4-3 overtime win over Dan Vladař and Czechia … Ristolainen and Finland beat Switzerland, 3-2, in overtime to advance to the Olympic semifinals. Canada will play Finland on Friday, and the United States will play Slovakia.

  • Flyers return to practice after the Olympic break with playoffs on the mind: ‘The urgency, the compete level needs to be up’

    Flyers return to practice after the Olympic break with playoffs on the mind: ‘The urgency, the compete level needs to be up’

    It’s 23,040 minutes and a handful of hours. It’s five games.

    But how do you measure a year?

    In goals? In saves? In shifts?

    How do the Flyers’ decision-makers measure this season? That’s the question as president Keith Jones and general manager Danny Brière figure out what to do as March 6’s 3 p.m. trade deadline ticks closer.

    For the players who hit the ice Tuesday for the first allowed practice after taking 11 days off for the Olympic break, they are focused on closing out strong, beginning on Feb. 25 against the Washington Capitals (7 p. m., NBCSP).

    “I don’t think there’s any emphasis on the games before the deadline, [it] doesn’t change anything for us,” winger Travis Konecny said. “We’re just looking to get back on track, kind of back to the way we were playing at the start of the season.”

    The last time the Flyers were in playoff position was Jan. 12. They sat in third place in the Metropolitan Division, but since then, they have won only three of 12 games (3-6-3) and posted the fifth-worst points percentage (.375) in the NHL.

    With 26 games left on the schedule, and just five until the trade deadline, time isn’t just ticking on what management will do but also ticking on the season. The Flyers enter the last stretch eight points back of both the Boston Bruins, who hold the second wild card in the Eastern Conference, and the New York Islanders in the Metropolitan Division. The Flyers have a game in hand in Boston and two on the Islanders.

    “Two division opponents right when we get back, huge back-to-back,” said center Noah Cates, regarding playing the Capitals and New York Rangers on consecutive nights (8 p.m., ESPN).

    “So, yeah, definitely the urgency, the compete level needs to be up, everything. Definitely huge for us to get back into shape and our structure, different things that were lacking before the break. And get reset and refocused and dialed in for huge games in February and then in March.”

    Tuesday marked the start of pseudo-training camp, with seven practices over the next eight days at the Flyers Training Center in Voorhees.

    President Keith Jones and GM Danny Brière are in an interesting spot with the trade deadline less than a month away.

    Things started slowly as the players worked on getting their hands back, touching the puck for the first time in a while, and skating. Some of the drills included a small area game of keep away, with one fewer puck than the players, and someone ending up as the last man standing, and another where the players had to pass between pylons a certain number of times before being able to shoot on goal.

    As the day wore on, the intensity ratcheted up — without contact — and it ended with a conditioning bag skate.

    “I think you realize where we’re at in the standings, where things are schedule-wise. Right now is part of the process, and today was part of the process of getting ourselves back up to speed,” assistant coach Todd Reirden said. Reirden spoke with the media with Rick Tocchet still in Italy as an assistant coach for Hockey Canada.

    “Every drill was done with a purpose and with a reason behind it to be able to get the players executing as high a pace as they possibly could, conditioning at the end, and then tomorrow, we’ll go after certain areas of our structure to improve.”

    One guy the Flyers will be relying on is Konecny, who has 37 points in the past 35 games, including nine points in five games heading into the break. Banged up and playing through it — he tallied a hat trick as he gutted out and grimaced through a demoralizing loss to Columbus on Jan. 28 — the alternate captain has impressed everyone, including Reirden.

    “I had a good break, got a chance to reset, get my mind in a different spot. Kind of realize where we’re at as a team and what we need to do finishing the season here. For me, just getting to the top of my game, where I need to be to help our team, and I think everyone is in the same spot,” Konecny said.

    But he’s also looking ahead. Konecny, who said after the loss in Boston to the Bruins before the break that “I’m tired of missing the playoffs,” looks at the standings every day.

    “I think it’s disappointing every year if you miss it,” he said on Tuesday. “I think what’s gotten everyone to this point is everyone’s a competitor, everyone wants to compete in the big games. … It’s not going to be like the end of the world if it didn’t happen; I’d be frustrated.

    “But I know that the team we’re building, what we have, the plan, we’re going to be a playoff team, and I’m not worried about that. I know everyone believes in that in this locker room, so we keep on pushing. Hopefully, it happens, and we’re going to give everything to get there, and if it doesn’t, we re-evaluate and get better in the summer.”

    Breakaways

    Goalie Carson Bjarnason was recalled from Lehigh Valley of the American Hockey League on Tuesday to give the Flyers two goalies with Dan Vladař at the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics. … According to Reirden, defensemen Oliver Bonk and Hunter McDonald will also join the Flyers with Rasmus Ristolainen and Travis Sanheim in Italy playing for Finland and Canada, respectively, and the Phantoms off until Friday in Hershey. McDonald was with the Flyers across the weeklong trip to Las Vegas, Salt Lake City, and Denver, but did not play. Bonk joined the Phantoms in early December after missing training camp and the start of the season with an upper-body injury. He has six points in 22 games.

    Youngster Carson Bjarnason (right) is up to practice with the Flyers while Dan Vladař is at the Olympics with Czechia.