Category: Flyers/NHL

  • Acquiring David Jiříček is the latest example of the Flyers’ unorthodox approach to rebuilding. It’s worth the risk.

    Acquiring David Jiříček is the latest example of the Flyers’ unorthodox approach to rebuilding. It’s worth the risk.

    With one trade Friday morning, the Flyers got more interesting. Not immediately. They’re still likely to miss the playoffs this season, which would be the sixth in a row that they’ve failed to qualify for the postseason. For all that time and longer, they’ve been the NHL’s version of late-career Martin Scorsese: Back in the day, they were great and fascinating, and now they’re one suspenseless snoozefest after another. (Seriously, has Killers of the Flower Moon ended yet?)

    Their decision to send winger Bobby Brink to the Minnesota Wild for defenseman David Jiříček was an eyebrow-raiser, though. The move in and of itself wasn’t all that surprising, in that the Flyers have a surplus of wingers both on their roster and in their farm system. They were bound to say goodbye to one of them at this trade deadline, and Brink was a prime candidate: At 24, he’s a relatively promising player on a cap-friendly contract.

    No, the intrigue of the Brink trade comes from its context. It’s the latest thread in a larger pattern that general manager Danny Brière and team president Keith Jones have been weaving since they took control of the Flyers’ player-personnel department in 2023. Rather than having the team bottom out over a full season or two and ending up with a pick or picks that are at worst among the top five in their drafts, the Flyers are taking risks, some more calculated than others, by acquiring young players who were high draft picks for other clubs.

    They did it with Jamie Drysdale, whom the Anaheim Ducks had picked sixth in 2020 before trading him to the Flyers for Cutter Gauthier in January of 2024. They did it with Trevor Zegras — another Ducks draftee, ninth overall in 2019 — when they got him last offseason for Ryan Poehling and two draft picks. They did something similar in 2023 when they drafted Matvei Michkov, who fell to them at No. 7 in part because of worries among NHL clubs that he wouldn’t be leaving Russia for three years, if he was able to leave at all.

    Now they’ve done it with Jiříček. Drafted sixth overall in 2022 by the Columbus Blue Jackets, he reportedly was unhappy that the Blue Jackets thought he needed to spend time in the minors. They shipped him to Minnesota in November 2024; there, he bounced between the Wild and its farm team until Friday.

    Flyers forward Trevor Zegras has been a shrewd addition after struggling the past two seasons in Anaheim.

    At first glance, that’s not an especially appealing player profile: a high draft pick who has been traded twice before his 23rd birthday, once because he was malcontented, once because he couldn’t stick on an NHL roster. And it’s generally acknowledged that Jiříček’s skating has to improve substantially. Still, he is just 22, and he is 6-foot-4 and rugged, and he has a booming slap shot. There are tools there, and there is still time for him to mature into the player he was projected to be.

    The Flyers are attempting a daring bit of raindrop-dodging here. They haven’t tanked. They don’t want to tank. They believe it would be corrosive to the franchise as a whole and to the locker room in particular (and it certainly would be to their ticket-sales department). So they are banking — and a team source confirmed Friday that this element was part of their approach — that head coach Rick Tocchet, his staff, and the other power people in the organization can cultivate a strong enough culture that Drysdale, Zegras, Jiříček, and players like them can develop and thrive here even though they didn’t elsewhere.

    Michkov is again an instructive example in this regard. After entering the season out of shape and seeing Tocchet limit his ice time, he has been a better player since the Olympic break. The fears within the fan base that Tocchet was angering or alienating him have quelled, and Tocchet’s strategy for handling the most important player on the roster seems to be working, for the time being anyway.

    Drysdale hasn’t been the same caliber of player that Gauthier has been — someday, someone will get the full story on why the relationship between the Flyers and Gauthier deteriorated to the point that they felt they had to trade him — but he has come a long way and is just 23. Zegras, 24, has been an excellent addition so far. The Flyers are in need of two major components of a Stanley Cup-contending team — a No. 1 center and a No. 1 defenseman — and Jiříček’s pedigree suggests that he can one day be a top-tier defenseman, assuming a team can figure out how to get the best out of him.

    He may or may not become that kind of player. Whether he does or doesn’t isn’t really the point. The point is that the only way the Flyers are going to return to respectability again is by taking some chances and having those gambles pay off. They’re past playing it safe. They might end up exactly where they are now or in even worse shape, but at least they’ve stepped into the casino.

    Danny Brière has taken an unconventional and risky path to rebuilding. Time will tell if it pays off.
  • Flyers flip tough guy Nic Deslauriers to Carolina for a conditional draft pick

    Flyers flip tough guy Nic Deslauriers to Carolina for a conditional draft pick

    Nic Deslauriers has thrown his last punch as a Flyer, as the tough guy was traded to the Carolina Hurricanes for a conditional seventh-round draft pick in 2027 on Friday before the trade deadline.

    The 35-year-old, who was in the final year of the four-year, $7 million contract he signed with the Flyers in 2022, was one of the team’s few pending unrestricted free agents. Deslauriers has played in just 24 of the team’s 61 games this season and recently told The Inquirer that “it’s frustrating” and that “I still think I have some in the gas tank.”

    While the return isn’t much, the move was more about the organization doing right by a popular veteran who seemed to want a change of scenery and a chance to chase a Stanley Cup, which he certainly will get with the Metropolitan-leading Carolina Hurricanes.

    “I’m happy for him. I think he still has gas in the tank, too,” forward Garnet Hathaway told The Inquirer on Friday after the Flyers’ practice, in which Deslauriers participated. “I see it every day. I see the work ethic, I see how much he cares, and I see the teammate he is. So Carolina has got a great player [and a] great guy.”

    Deslauriers’ time in Philly will be defined by his willingness to stand up for his teammates and take on all comers. Long one of the most feared and toughest customers in the league, the fourth-line winger managed nine goals and 20 points in 195 games with the Flyers. He also had 33 regular-season fights, including spirited bouts against heavyweights like Matt Rempe, Ryan Reaves, and Tanner Jeannot.

    “One of the toughest guys in the league around. So we’ll definitely miss him,” center Noah Cates said.

    He also was beloved by his teammates for his selflessness, toughness, leadership, and the space he created for teammates with his physicality. Whether Deslauriers will have a nightly spot in Carolina’s lineup remains to be seen, but he does bring a physicality and toughness that many have criticized the Hurricanes for lacking in recent playoff runs.

    Nicolas Deslauriers played in his final game with the Flyers on Thursday night against the Utah Mammoth.

    “A heart-and-soul guy who has your back no matter what, competes every night, and is a guy, regardless of how many minutes or how many games or how things are going, you know he’ll be a guy to support you, and will always be around to help too,” said Hathaway, who laughed when asked if he’s happy the Flyers don’t play the Hurricanes again this year.

    “It’s probably tougher than most people think, to be so competitive, as I think all of us are in this league, and not have the role you want, or the ice time you want.

    “And so be able to have that role, and personality-wise, not let it affect you, is special for a locker room to have and intricate for it to have, too. So I’m going to miss him.”

    In a corresponding move, the Flyers claimed veteran center Luke Glendening from New Jersey. The 36-year-old, who had four points in 52 games with the Devils, has played over 900 career NHL games and is known for his dexterity in the faceoff circle (55.6% career mark). He figures to be a fourth-liner or the 13th forward for the Flyers.

    Staff writer Jackie Spiegel contributed to this article.

  • 5 things to know about new Flyer David Jiříček, from his Cutter Gauthier connection to his powerful shot

    5 things to know about new Flyer David Jiříček, from his Cutter Gauthier connection to his powerful shot

    The Flyers made their first big move of the trade deadline early on Friday, trading winger Bobby Brink to Minnesota for defenseman David Jiříček.

    Jiříček will start his career with the Flyers organization in Lehigh Valley, but he’s got the potential to be a big part of the Flyers’ future. Here are five things to know about the organization’s newest blueliner.

    1. He was drafted one pick after Cutter Gauthier

    Jiříček, whom the Flyers really liked at the time, was picked sixth overall in the 2022 NHL draft by Columbus, one pick after the Flyers selected Gauthier. Famously, Gauthier never played a game with the organization, requesting a trade out and getting swapped for Jamie Drysdale in January of 2024.

    2. His brother is an NHL prospect, too

    Jiříček‘s brother, Adam, was the St. Louis Blues’ first-round pick in 2024. He’s also a right-handed defenseman, and was one of the stars for Czechia in their silver-medal campaign at the 2026 World Juniors.

    3. He’s on his third NHL team

    Despite his draft pedigree, Jiříček hasn’t been able to stick at the NHL level yet. He bounced between the Blue Jackets’ AHL and NHL squads, even making the 2023 AHL All-Star team, before being traded in 2024 with a fifth-rounder to Minnesota for defenseman Daemon Hunt and first-, second-, third- and fourth-round picks. He spent time with the Wild’s NHL and AHL clubs before being flipped for Brink. He will start his Flyers career in Lehigh Valley.

    New Flyers defenseman David Jiříček’s calling card is a booming shoot.

    4. He’s got a hard shot

    One of Jiříček‘s best attributes is his hard shot from the point. The big selling point during his draft year was his strong offensive toolkit, especially on the power play, but he hasn’t been able to carve out power-play time in Minnesota. Currently, the Flyers have Drysdale and Cam York running the two power play units.

    5. He’s tall

    Jiříček stands 6-foot-4 and weighs 204 lbs., according to the NHL media site. He’ll instantly be one of the Flyers’ biggest defensemen, behind just Travis Sanheim — especially with Rasmus Ristolainen likely on his way out.

  • Flyers trade Bobby Brink to Minnesota for 2022 top 10 pick David Jiříček

    Flyers trade Bobby Brink to Minnesota for 2022 top 10 pick David Jiříček

    The Flyers are officially in the trade column, as they started to unclog their logjam on the wing by trading Bobby Brink to the Minnesota Wild for defenseman David Jiříček on Friday.

    Although Rasmus Ristolainen, who ultimately was not moved, was the biggest name in play for the Flyers, many felt Brink could be moved ahead of the 3 p.m. trade deadline. Brink, who will be a restricted free agent at season’s end, also will relish the destination as he is a native of Minnetonka, Minn.

    “He’s helped me a ton with my game, [and] hopefully he can say the same about me,” linemate Noah Cates said after the team’s practice in Voorhees. “Both being from Minnesota, there’s a lot of good things; it’s sad, but obviously happy. He’s going back home and going to a really good team.

    “But definitely a shock, and still processing it. This still doesn’t feel too real. So, obviously, just a great kid, and [he] means a lot to me. So, hoping nothing but the best for him.”

    The 24-year-old winger, who was a second-round pick in 2019, has 13 goals and 26 points in 55 games this season, and is on pace for a career-high 17 goals. Brink, who developed chemistry and increased his all-around effectiveness on a third line with Cates and Tyson Foerster the past few seasons, tallied 36 goals and 94 points in 201 career games with the Flyers.

    It was quite a spell in Philly for Brink, who went from John Tortorella’s doghouse — the coach said two years ago that Brink couldn’t spell “check” and, interestingly enough, scratched him for what would have been his first game in Minnesota — to someone he relied on heavily.

    “He’s come a long way,” captain Sean Couturier said in October. “We’ve always seen his offensive skills and his ability to make plays and create offense, but the defensive side and the reliability of him have really improved. Feels like he’s a complete player, can play in all situations, and he’s going on a nightly basis against top lines. So, credit to him for developing that side of the game.”

    Cates did not see Brink before he left for Las Vegas, where the Wild play on Friday night, and hadn’t sent him a text just yet. But he will be seeing him on Thursday, when the Flyers are in Minnesota (8 p.m., NBCSP).

    “He went through some tough times with Torts and being a younger player, smaller player, skilled player. And he really helped me,” Cates said. “And I think our games kind of meshed well together and found some good chemistry. … He grew a ton. And credit to him. He’s seen as a critical piece to the Wild that they want and for them to go on a playoff run. So, obviously, an awesome kid, and we’re going to miss him.”

    Once known for his shot and overall offensive skills, David Jiříček has yet to fire at the NHL level.

    Coming back the other way is the intriguing Jiříček, who will be joining a third team since being selected sixth overall — one pick after the Flyers selected Cutter Gauthier — in the 2022 NHL draft. The 6-foot-4, 204-pound blueliner has split time this season between Minnesota and its American Hockey League affiliate in Iowa and has no points in 25 NHL games and two goals and 10 points in 24 AHL contests.

    Still just 22, Jiříček has yet to deliver on the promise that made him such a highly touted prospect in his draft year. Blessed with great range, puck skills, and a bomb of a shot, Jiříček’s combination of size, offensive ability, and edge has yet to translate since he moved over to North America.

    The Flyers, who were known admirers of Jiříček in his draft year, still obviously believe he’s a worthy reclamation project, given his age and toolbox. With the Flyers likely to entertain trades this summer for Ristolainen, Jiříček, although a different player, could fill the size void and could be viewed as an heir apparent. The Flyers announced that Jiříček will report to the Lehigh Valley Phantoms of the AHL to start.

    The questions with Jiříček largely center on his foot speed and clunky skating. Alongside his injury history, they was the other concerns entering his draft and have only been magnified since he turned pro. He struggles to catch up when forwards get around him, and his decision-making often has gotten him in trouble in the NHL. He has bona fide power-play traits, but has yet to receive those opportunities.

    It is worth noting that the Flyers are buying low on Jiříček, as Minnesota traded defenseman Daemon Hunt plus first-, second-, third- and fourth-round picks for Jiříček just 16 months ago.

    Flyers make minor league swap

    Forwards Massimo Rizzo and Alexis Gendron are shipping up to Boston in a swap with the Bruins that sees forward Brett Harrison and defenseman Jackson Edward heading to Philly. They will report to Lehigh Valley.

    A native of London, Ontario, Harrison was a third-round pick by the Bruins in 2021 and has 19 goals and 49 points in 140 games across four seasons with the Providence Bruins. The 6-foot-3, 201-pound 22-year-old is having a career year with eight goals in 46 games and tied his career high of 17 points set last season.

    Edward has spent most of the season with Maine of the ECHL, producing seven assists in 21 games. A native of Newmarket, Ontario, he was teammates with Oliver Bonk and Denver Barkey, the latter of whom also hails from Newmarket, with London of the Ontario Hockey League. The 6-foot-2, 201-pound blueliner was a seventh-round pick of the Bruins in 2022 and brings a physical game to the ice. The Elite Prospects draft guide said Edward is “violent, and he uses that violence to emphatically kill plays at the blue line and end the cycle.”

  • NHL trade deadline: Danny Brière explains decision to keep Ristolainen, what to expect from Jiříček, and why they dealt Brink

    NHL trade deadline: Danny Brière explains decision to keep Ristolainen, what to expect from Jiříček, and why they dealt Brink


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 5:01pm

    Update on injured winger Tyson Foerster

    Tyson Foerster hasn’t played since injuring his arm back in December, but GM Danny Brière said Friday that if the Flyers made the playoffs, the winger would be on track to return following surgery.

    “Tyson is doing really well,” Brière said. “I think when we announced he had the surgery that he was going to be out until the playoffs, or somewhere [around] the beginning of the playoffs. He’s pretty much on pace. It would be nice if we could get in the playoff hunt, but so far it’s going well.

    “He’s starting to skate and shoot pucks. It’s trending in the right direction. I know he’s going to start knocking on my door soon to get back in the lineup early, he’s just that type of person. He’s going to push to get back earlier, but it’s exciting.”

    Gabriela Carroll


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 4:52pm

    Sielski: Acquiring David Jiříček is worth the risk

    David Jiříček is just 22 years old.

    With one trade Friday morning, the Flyers got more interesting. Not immediately. They’re still likely to miss the playoffs this season, which would be the sixth in a row that they’ve failed to qualify for the postseason. For all that time and longer, they’ve been the NHL’s version of late-career Martin Scorsese: Back in the day, they were great and fascinating, and now they’re one suspenseless snoozefest after another. (Seriously, has Killers of the Flower Moon ended yet?)

    Their decision to send winger Bobby Brink to the Minnesota Wild for defenseman David Jiříček was an eyebrow-raiser, though. The move in and of itself wasn’t all that surprising, in that the Flyers have a surplus of wingers both on their roster and in their farm system. They were bound to say goodbye to one of them at this trade deadline, and Brink was a prime candidate: At 24, he’s a relatively promising player on a cap-friendly contract.

    No, the intrigue of the Brink trade comes from its context. It’s the latest thread in a larger pattern that general manager Danny Brière and team president Keith Jones have been weaving since they took control of the Flyers’ player-personnel department in 2023. Rather than having the team bottom out over a full season or two and ending up with a pick or picks that are at worst among the top five in their drafts, the Flyers are taking risks, some more calculated than others, by acquiring young players who were high draft picks for other clubs.

    Mike Sielski


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 4:43pm

    Flyers lost a ‘great teammate’ and a ‘heart and soul guy’ in Nic Deslauriers

    Former Flyer Nic Deslauriers never backed down from a fight.

    While the return for Nic Deslauriers isn’t much — a conditional seventh-round draft pick — the move was more about the organization doing right by a popular veteran who seemed to want a change of scenery and a chance to chase a Stanley Cup, which he certainly will get with the Metropolitan-leading Carolina Hurricanes.

    “A great teammate, a great protector for our guys the last few years,” Danny Brière said of Deslauriers. “We had a discussion, him and I, Nic wasn’t looking to leave, he loves it here, I think he even said his family is not going anywhere, they’re staying in the area. But he said if you need to trade me, I’m open to it, I don’t have a problem. I said, look, we’re not trying to trade you, but if you want to have the chance to go chase a Cup, I’ll give you that opportunity.

    “I had a chat with Carolina, they were interested, and Nic was interested as well. It was one of those things, Nic has earned that right, for everything that he’s done for his teammates, for our players, our organization, [I] thought it was the right thing to do for him.”

    And those now-former teammates are glad to see Deslauriers get a chance to contend for a Cup.

    “I’m happy for him. I think he still has gas in the tank, too,” forward Garnet Hathaway told The Inquirer on Friday after the Flyers’ practice, which Deslauriers participated in. “I see it every day. I see the work ethic, I see how much he cares, and I see the teammate he is. So Carolina has got a great player [and a ] great guy.”

    Deslauriers’ time in Philly will be defined by his willingness to stand up for his teammates and take on all comers. Long one of the most feared and toughest customers in the league, the fourth-line winger managed nine goals and 20 points in 195 games with the Orange and Black. He also had 33 regular-season fights, including spirited bouts against heavyweights like Matt Rempe, Ryan Reaves, and Tanner Jeannot.

    “One of the toughest guys in the league around. So we’ll definitely miss him,” center Noah Cates said.

    He was also beloved by his teammates for his selflessness, toughness, leadership, and the space he created for teammates with his physicality. Whether Deslauriers will have a nightly spot in Carolina’s lineup remains to be seen, but he does bring a physicality and toughness that many have criticized the Hurricanes for lacking in recent playoff runs.

    “A heart and soul guy who has your back no matter what, competes every night, and is a guy, regardless of how many minutes or how many games or how things are going, you know he’ll be a guy to support you, and will always be around to help too,” said Hathaway, who laughed when asked if he’s happy the Flyers don’t play the Hurricanes again this year.

    “It’s probably tougher than most people think, to be so competitive, as I think all of us are in this league, and not have the role you want, or the ice time you want.

    “And so be able to have that role, and personality-wise, not let it affect you, is special for a locker room to have and intricate for it to have, too. So I’m going to miss him.”

    Jackie Spiegel, Gabriela Carroll


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 4:35pm

    Briere believes Flyers have assets to go after top center in offseason

    One of the things the Flyers need is a bonafide No. 1 center. They haven’t found one through the draft — but with the way some of their other young players are developing, Danny Brière believes the team may be close to having the assets to acquire one in the offseason.

    “It’s all about value, and also your draft picks. As they get closer, you draft players, you get to know them, they become — they have more and more value,” Brière said. “It’s tougher to let them go, but at the same time, we have a lot of good young players who are coming. We have more and more assets. Three years ago, we almost had noithing to work with in terms of good young players coming, so it wasn’t enticing to other teams to trade young guys to us.

    “But more and more with the way our young guys are coming along, and a lot of centers, those are always a lot of value, we have more and more assets. It’s going to hopefully get us a chance to get in on a player, or sometimes one of those players is just going to come and take it, like [Denver] Barkey did this year, surprised us a little bit. There’s going to be opportunities for our young guys to do that as well.”

    Gabriela Carroll, Matt Mullin


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 4:28pm

    Brière sees high potential with Jiříček, likens development to that of Jamie Drysdale

    Jamie Drysdale, like Jiříček, entered the NHL at 18 years old.

    Despite trading away an NHL player to acquire him, the Flyers announced that new defenseman David Jiříček will report to Lehigh Valley. The former top-10 draft pick hasn’t quite developed as quickly as some hoped — as evidenced by him joining his third team in the last four years — but general manager Danny Brière was optimistic that the 22-year-old defenseman will make an impact with the big club at some point.

    Why? He pointed to the team’s development of another reclamation project: Jamie Drysdale.

    “I think a little bit about Jamie Drysdale, totally different style of players, but I think about the development of Jamie Drysdale, where they both came in [to the NHL] at 18 years old, probably a bit too early to turn pro yet, go through some ups and downs, probably lose their confidence along the way,” Brière said. “He’s going to need some love, he’s going to need some reps, especially. He needs time, he needs to play a lot of minutes and build his confidence. The talent is there, it’s working with him.

    “Defenseman, it seems, they need time. We saw it with Jamie, to see him kind of come into his own this year is really exciting, but we went through a learning curve with Jamie. I expect the same thing with David, we’re going to give him the chance to build his game, we’re going to work with him, I really like what Todd Reirden and Rick Tocchet’s staff has done with a lot of our young guys, especially Jamie, and I hope the same kind of wave can be on for David.”

    As for whether or not he can make an impact this season, Brière said that remains to be seen. More important, he explained, is making sure Jiříček is ready to roll next season.

    “I didn’t make him any promises [about NHL playing time], but yeah, at some point, if we have the chance I’d like to give him a look, give him a few games,” Brière added. “The most important, we felt, is for him to start in Lehigh, give him high minutes and lots of reps, and if things go well, I’d like to see him play a few games here, and get him ready for next season would be the ideal part.”

    Once he does make the jump back to the NHL, the team thinks he could play a key role, especially if he’s able to return to the top-4 defenseman potential the Flyers saw when they considered drafting him with the fifth pick.

    “The potential is high,” Briere said. “Yeah, he hasn’t maybe come out of his draft year as high as people expected, and look, that’s why he’s available as well. If he was playing like Matthew Schaefer we wouldn’t be talking about him. But we still see a high potential. You know, 21-22 year old, 6-foot-4 defensemen of his caliber are tough to find. We know we have to work with him, we need to be patient, we need to give him a bit of rope to develop him, but that’s why I go back to the Jamie Drysdale learning curve. [It] gives us hope that he can get on the same track and eventually become a difference maker for us.”

    Gabriela Carroll, Matt Mullin


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 4:10pm

    Did the Flyers specifically target Jiříček?

    David Jiříček will hope the third home is a charm as he joins the Flyers after stops in Columbus and Minnesota.

    It’s no secret that the Flyers have previously shown interest in defenseman David Jiříček, whom they acquired Friday for Bobby Brink. Chuck Fletcher nearly drafted him over Cutter Gauthier with the fifth pick in 2022. Then, last deadline, they were reported to be one of the teams interested in him when he was traded from Columbus to Minnesota.

    “We inquired about him, we were in the mix before, when he was traded to Minnesota we were very interested,” GM Danny Brière admitted during his post-deadline press conference. “I didn’t think he was going to be available, all of a sudden we started talking to Minnesota, they liked Bobby, he’s from there too, so there’s something special. They knew Bobby very well because of him being from Minnesota, and all of a sudden the conversation turned to that.

    “They paid a huge price for David when they acquired him — I think he was supposed to be part of their future, and then all of a sudden, they resigned [Kirill] Kaprizov, traded for Quinn Hughes, and everything opens up for them and they become contenders this year.

    “David was a piece for them, because they thought he was not ready to play a big, heavy role that we just talked about yet, so he became a piece they could use to acquire someone who could help them. That’s kind of how it came around, and the price was reasonable at this point since we had so many wingers.”

    Gabriela Carroll, Matt Mullin


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 3:58pm

    Why did the Flyers keep Ristolainen? Brière explains.

    The Flyers are keeping defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen.

    Defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen was considered to be the Flyer most likely on the move ahead of Friday’s deadline, but when the deadline passed, he was still with the team.

    After practice, GM Danny Brière explained why the team stuck by their reportedly high asking price and ultimately didn’t move him.

    “You guys made a big story, I didn’t know I was trying to sell him, but you guys made it sound like we were dumping Risto for next to nothing,” Briere said. “At the end of the day, Risto has a lot of value to our team. I wasn’t trying to dump Risto. I wasn’t trying to get rid of him. I think the media turned it into a little bit of a circus to be honest, and that’s OK. I get it’s part of the job, part of my job to deal with that.

    “But the reality is, Risto is an important part of our defense. He’s still under contract next season, so we weren’t looking to dump him. Where do you find 6-foot-4, physical, top-4, right-shot defenseman? There’s not a lot [of them]. We saw it on the market, and when that came out, we did get a lot of calls. We took them seriously, and we went through all the teams that were serious, but at the end of the day it just did not make sense value-wise. There’s nothing that made more sense to trade him.

    “Risto’s an important leader in our room. I can promise you that our guys prefer having him on their side than playing against him. He’s the type of defenseman that brings guys to the fight, he runs around, he hits guys, he pisses off the opponents, there’s a lot of value to that. At the end of the day, it made more sense, we listened, but it made more sense to have Risto with us.”

    When asked if a first-round pick was ever on the table, Brière declined to comment, only saying that “the value wasn’t as high as we needed for us moving forward.”

    As for whether or not keeping the 31-year-old blue-liner, who could still be dealt around the NHL draft in June, creates a logjam for the organization’s defensive prospects, Briere said they’ll worry about that when the time comes.

    “When they’re ready, we’re going to make room for them, a little bit like the Bobby Brink trade,” he said, referring to the team’s other log jam at left wing. “We feel like guys are almost there and we’re trying to make a little bit of room. It’s the same thing, I can’t say that David [Jiříček] and Oliver Bonk are ready to come in today, especially in a top-4 position. It’s one thing to come in and play in a bottom pairing as they start, but they haven’t even done that yet. I think they need a little bit more time, and we need to protect them a little bit. You ask those two guys to come in and play — Risto’s playing top pairing with Sanheim right now. I don’t think it would be fair to ask David or Oliver to come in and play those minutes yet.

    “We hope that at one point it comes to that, but I don’t think they’re ready for that role yet. Risto has shown since he’s come back that he can handle those minutes, he’s shown at the Olympics as well how valuable he can be for a team. We hope they get there, but we want to protect them.”

    Gabriela Carroll, Matt Mullin


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 3:54pm

    Danny Brière on Bobby Brink trade: ‘Not an easy one’

    Flyers GM Danny Brière made a couple of moves ahead of Friday’s deadline.

    Following the passing of the NHL trade deadline, Flyers general manager Danny Briere spoke to reporters at the team’s practice facility in Vorhees.

    Here are this thoughts on the biggest deal the Flyers actually made on deadline day, trading Bobby Brink to Minnesota for defenseman David Jiříček …

    “Not an easy one. I was part of the development staff when Bobby came along. We had some long discussions about his future and his career, so having been part of that, and seeing him blossom into the player he has become, selfishly there’s a lot of pride in that, so he wasn’t an easy one to let go of,” Briere said. “But when you look at the way our team is coming along, you look at the depth that we’re building on the wings — [Travis] Konecny, [Matvei] Michkov, [Owen] Tippett, [Trevor] Zegras; Tyson [Foerster], who’s going to come back next season; [Porter] Martone that’s getting close; [Denver] Barkey, who surprised us this year in how well he’s played; you have Alex Bump; and then other guys behind that who are also pushing.

    “It’s tough, at some point we were going to have to make a change or trade some wingers for other positions. When that came in yesterday, we started thinking it’s a chance to add a big, young, strong defenseman like David, we felt that’s a good opportunity to look toward the future and add another hopefully big piece down the road to our D-core, adding the size.”

    Gabriela Carroll, Matt Mullin


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 3:45pm

    Flyers discuss Bobby Brink trade

    Right wing Bobby Brink (right) celebrates a goal with former teammate Noah Cates. Brink was traded to Minnesota on Friday.

    Bobby Brink’s former linemate Noah Cates discussed the departure of the winger, who was traded to the Wild on Friday, after the team’s practice in Vorhees.

    “He’s helped me a ton with my game [and] hopefully he can say the same about me. Both being from Minnesota, there’s a lot of good things; it’s sad, but obviously happy, he’s going back home and going to a really good team. But definitely a shock, and still processing it. This still doesn’t feel too real. So, obviously, just a great kid, and [he] means a lot to me. So, hoping nothing but the best for him.”

    Cates did not see Brink before he left for Las Vegas, where the Wild play on Friday night, and hadn’t sent him a text just yet. But he will be seeing him next Thursday, when the Flyers are in Minnesota (8 p.m., NBCSP).

    “He went through some tough times with Torts and being a younger player, smaller player, skilled player. And he really helped me,” Cates said. “And I think our games kind of meshed well together and found some good chemistry. … He grew a ton. And credit to him. He’s seen as a critical piece to the Wild that they want, and for them to go on a playoff run. So obviously, an awesome kid, and we’re going to miss him.”

    The team’s captain, Sean Couturier, also saw considerable growth from Brink during his time with the Flyers.

    “He’s come a long way,” Couturier said back in October. “We’ve always seen his offensive skills and his ability to make plays and create offense, but the defensive side and the reliability of him have really improved. Feels like he’s a complete player, can play in all situations, and he’s going on a nightly basis against top lines. So, credit to him for developing that side of the game.”

    Jackie Spiegel


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 3:36pm

    Scott Laughton on the move again

    A year after the Flyers traded Scott Laughton to the Maple Leafs, the forward is on the move again. According to Elliotte Friedman, Toronto is sending Laughton to the Los Angeles Kings for a third-round draft pick. That pick can become a second-rounder if the Kings make the playoffs, according to ESPN’s Emily Kaplan.

    Matt Mullin


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 3:11pm

    Flyers don’t trade Ristolainen … again

    Flyers defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen was not moved at the deadline as the team couldn’t find someone to match their asking price.

    It’s after 3 p.m., and Rasmus Ristolainen is still a Flyer. The team elected to hold onto the right-handed defenseman at the deadline, after it was reported that no team met the high price the Flyers were looking for in a deal, which was reportedly at least a first round pick and a prospect. This is the third straight year that Ristolainen has been the subject of trade talks, and the third time the team opted not to move him.

    Ristolainen still has one more year on his contract at an affordable $5.1 million a season, and could be a trade piece in the offseason or at next year’s deadline. He played in 24 games this year and has been regularly hurt during his five-season tenure with the Flyers, including an upper body injury that sidelined him for the first 31 games this season.

    General manager Danny Brière will speak shortly on the deadline and why the team decided to hang on to Ristolainen.

    Gabriela Carroll


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 3:00pm

    The NHL trade deadline has passed

    While some deals could trickle in in the next few minutes — assuming they were made before 3 p.m. — it appears the Flyers are done for the day.

    Gone are Bobby Brink and Nic Deslauriers, while the Flyers added David Jiricek and a conditional seventh-round pick. The Flyers also traded minor leaguers Alexis Gendron and Massimo Rizzo for Bruins minor leaguers Brett Harrison and Jackson Edward, and reportedly picked up forward Luke Glendening off waivers from the Devils.

    Did Danny Briere’s team get any better?

    Matt Mullin


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 2:49pm

    Former Flyer Brayden Schenn reportedly heading to Isles


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 2:11pm

    Flyers claim a forward off waivers

    With Bobby Brink and Nic Deslauriers both on the way out at the trade deadline, the Flyers reportedly picked up forward Luke Glendening off waivers from the Devils.

    Glendening is a 36-year-old center known for being elite at the face-off dot, with a career 55.5% win percentage, and good on the penalty kill. He’s a depth center option for the fourth line, which as of late has been centered by winger Carl Grundstrom.

    Gabriela Carroll


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 1:55pm

    Flyers trade Nic Deslauriers to Carolina

    The Flyers have dealt Nic Deslauriers to the Carolina Hurricanes ahead of the deadline for a conditional pick.


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 1:50pm

    The Flyers have long admired Jiříček

    Just 16 months ago, the Wild traded a player and four draft picks (one from each of the first four rounds) to the Blue Jackets for David Jiříček.

    While David Jiříček is the newest Flyer, the defenseman is a familiar figure to many holdovers from the Chuck Fletcher era that remain in the Flyers’ front office, including general manager Danny Brière and assistant GM and head of scouting Brent Flahr.

    Why? The Flyers were high on Jiříček entering the 2022 NHL draft, with many believing that the decision at Pick No. 5 ultimately came down to Cutter Gauthier and Jiříček, with the Flyers selecting Gauthier and Jiříček going a pick later to Columbus. Fast forward nearly four years and the roles are reversed, as Gauthier is gone and Jiříček is a Flyer.

    There were also reports that the Flyers kicked the tires on acquiring Jiříček in 2024 when he was traded to Minnesota for a massive haul that included defenseman Daemon Hunt and first-, second-, third-, and fourth-round picks. While some more of the luster has worn off Jiříček now that he’s flopped with a second organization, from an assets management standpoint, the Flyers acquiring him for just Brink seems like a win considering what he cost the Wild just 16 months ago.

    The Flyers are big on reclamation projects — Owen Tippett, Trevor Zegras, Jamie Drysdale — and they obviously believe Jiříček, 22, has the offensive tools to still reach his potential as a top-four NHL defenseman.

    Gustav Elvin


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 1:24pm

    Ristolainen at Flyers practice despite trade rumors


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 12:10pm

    Nick Sirianni doppelganger, Nick Foligno, is on the move

    Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni, left, and Chicago Blackhawks left wing Nick Foligno, right, look so similar that they went as each other for Halloween.

    Eagles coach Nick Sirianni is staying put, but Nick Foligno, the man who dressed like the Eagles coach for Halloween — and who Sirianni returned the favor by dressing like during his own trick or treating — is headed to a new city.

    Foligno will join Bobby Brink in Minnesota after the Flyers dealt the young winger to the Wild earlier on Friday.

    Here’s a look back at Sirianni and Foligno dressed as one another.

    “I had a good laugh,” Foligno said of his reaction to seeing the Eagles coach dressed as him. “He was a great sport about it. I give him credit, especially in the Philly sports market, to rip a Chicago Blackhawks [jersey]. But I think it shows his personality. He gained a lot of points in my eyes just for the fun of it.”

    Foligno was scheduled to come to Philly later this month with the Blackhawks and hoped to meet Sirianni in person. While the Flyers head to Minnesota next week, the Wild aren’t scheduled to play in Philly again this season. So it appears a meeting of between the two Nicks will have to wait.

    There’s always next year.

    Matt Mullin


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 11:59am

    New Flyer David Jiříček will report to Phantoms, team says


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 11:38am

    Flyers make minor-league trade with Bruins

    The Flyers traded minor leaguers Alexis Gendron and Massimo Rizzo for Brett Harrison and Jackson Edward from the Bruins. Harrison was a third-round pick in 2021, and spent most of his career with the Providence Bruins. Edward was drafted in the seventh round of the 2022 draft, and has bounced between the ECHL Maine Mariners and Providence.

    Gendron has spent three seasons playing with Lehigh Valley, and Rizzo, who was acquired from Carolina in 2023, has played for both Lehigh and the ECHL Reading Royals.

    Gabriela Carroll


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 11:34am

    Brink could make his Wild debut tonight: report


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 11:29am

    National analysts react to the Bobby Brink trade

    The Flyers traded right wing Bobby Brink to the Minnesota Wild on Friday.

    The Flyers traded Bobby Brink to Minnesota in exchange for defenseman David Jiříček, swinging a middle-six winger for a high-upside defenseman who hasn’t found his footing yet in the NHL. So, who actually won the trade?

    For a team with a glut of winger prospects coming up — most notably last year’s No. 6 overall pick Porter Martone — Brink became expendable to acquire players in positions of weakness, like defense. At this stage, Jiříček is more of a reclamation project than a top prospect, but the Flyers swung on Trevor Zegras and he’s bounced back into an elite player. Could the same happen with Jiříček?

    Here’s what a few hockey analysts had to say about Jiříček and the deal …

    Meanwhile, Erik Johnson, who spent parts of the past two seasons with the Flyers before retiring and joining ESPN as an analyst, thinks the Wild made out in the deal to acquire the Minnesota native.

    “Also, maybe the greatest name in hockey,” Johnson added on X. “Bobby’s middle name is Orr. Bobby Orr Brink. Can’t even make it up. Legend.”

    Gabriela Carroll


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 10:33am

    Who is David Jiříček?

    The Flyers acquired Minnesota Wild defenseman David Jiricek ahead of the trade deadline.

    The Flyers have traded Bobby Brink to the Minnesota Wild for defenseman David Jiříček. So who did they get back?

    Jiříček was drafted sixth overall in the 2022 NHL draft by Columbus, but has struggled to stick in the NHL. He was traded to Minnesota in November 2024. In 2025-26, he has played 25 games with the Wild, scoring no points, and 24 games with the AHL Iowa Wild, with two goals and eight assists.

    During his draft year, Jiříček, a righty, was praised for his offensive skills, especially his hard shot, but he’s struggled to establish those tools at the NHL level.

    Gabriela Carroll


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 10:28am

    Flyers trade Bobby Brink to Wild

    The Flyers are officially in the trade column, as the team started to unclog its logjam on the wing by trading Bobby Brink to the Minnesota Wild for defenseman David Jiříček, a source confirmed to The Inquirer on Friday morning.

    While Rasmus Ristolainen was the biggest name in play for the Flyers heading into Friday, Brink was another player that many felt could be moved ahead of the 3 p.m. trade deadline. Brink, who was set to be a restricted free agent at season’s end, will also relish the destination as he is a native of Minnetonka, Minn.

    The 24-year-old winger, who was a second-round pick in 2019, has 13 goals and 26 points in 55 games this season, and was on pace for a career-high 17 goals. Brink, who really developed chemistry and increased his all-around effectiveness on a third line with Noah Cates and Tyson Foerster the past few seasons, tallied 36 goals and 94 points in 201 career games with the Orange and Black.

    Jackie Spiegel


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 10:25am

    A deal for Deslauriers?

    Nic Deslauriers has been a good soldier since signing a four-year, $7 million deal in July or 2022. One of the league’s toughest and most feared customers, the 35-year-old has played a hard and physical game and has fought 33 times as a Flyer, many of which were in defense of or to stand up for fallen teammates.

    The Flyers could look to do right by the popular veteran and trade him to a team where he can get more ice time and play a regular role. Deslauriers, who has only played in 24 of the Flyers’ 61 games this season, would be a particularly good fit for a team looking for someone to protect their youngsters and help mentor them off the ice.

    Deslauriers told Jackie Spiegel recently he still thinks “I have some in the gas tank” and hopes to play a few more years. But with the Flyers upgrading American Hockey League tough guy Garrett Wilson’s contract to an NHL one on Thursday, it looks like his time with the Flyers is coming to an end.

    Gustav Elvin


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 9:51am

    Landing spots for Risto?

    Was Thursday night’s loss to the Mammoth the final game in a Flyers jersey for defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen?

    The list of potential landing spots for Rasmus Ristolainen, the Flyers’ rugged right-shot defenseman, shrunk overnight. With Buffalo adding a pair of big blueliners in Logan Stanley and righty Luke Schenn, and Anaheim making a surprising move for veteran righty John Carlson, you can cross two more potential suitors off the list. This came after Dallas, Edmonton, and Utah, three other clubs that had been linked with Ristolainen, made moves for defensemen in recent days.

    Detroit and Boston now seem to be the two most likely trade partners for Danny Brière. The Red Wings and Bruins are both well-stocked when it comes to future first-round picks and young centers and defensemen. Detroit center prospect Nate Danielson would be an intriguing name for the Flyers, as would 6-foot-7, 230-pound Bruins pivot Dean Letourneau. The Bruins, who have four first-rounders over the next two years, are also dangling 21-year-old center Matthew Poitras and 25-year-old offensive defenseman Mason Lohrei in potential trades.

    The Flyers are still holding out for a first-rounder plus an A- or B-level prospect in return for the Finnish defenseman. Ristolainen, 31, has one more year remaining on his contract and carries a $5.1 million cap hit. The Flyers could offer to retain 50% of Ristolainen’s deal to sweeten the pot as well.

    Gustav Elvin


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 8:06am

    Ristolainen on trade deadline rumors

    Flyers defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen could be on the move ahead of the trade deadline.

    It’s deadline day.

    The Flyers, six points out of the last wild card spot, are expected to be sellers, and the loudest rumors have surrounded defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen, who has another year on his contract at $5.1 million after this one. That extra year could keep him in Philadelphia past the deadline if Danny Brière doesn’t get the offer he wants.

    “I can’t really control that,” Ristolainen said after Thursday’s loss to the Mammoth. “I just try to come in here every day, and obviously tomorrow, we’ll see what happens.”

    The d-market has been moving in the lead-up to 3 p.m., with the Capitals trading John Carlson to Anaheim in the dead of night for a conditional first-round pick. The Sabres acquired Logan Stanley and Luke Schenn after striking out with Colton Parayko, and the Stars acquired Tyler Myers earlier in the week.

    Other Flyers who could potentially be moved are wingers Bobby Brink and Owen Tippett, and pending free agents Garnet Hathaway and Nic Deslauriers.

    Gabriela Carroll


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 7:26am

    Capitals trade John Carlson to the Ducks in ‘jaw-dropping’ move

    The Washington Capitals traded defenseman John Carlson to the Anaheim Ducks early Friday morning.

    John Carlson is going to the Anaheim Ducks as part of a surprising deal from the Washington Capitals agreed to just after midnight on NHL trade deadline day.

    Anaheim sent a conditional first-round pick in either this or next year’s draft plus a 2027 third-rounder to Washington for Carlson, a 36-year-old defenseman who has only played in the league for the Capitals since 2009 and helped them win the Stanley Cup in 2018.

    Longtime hockey insider and former Daily News reporter Frank Seravalli called the move “jaw-on-the-floor shocking,” describing it as the “end of an era in Washington.”

    The trade happened so late Carlson was still asleep and “didn’t found out until this morning,” The Athletic’s Pierre LeBrun noted.

    “John Carlson brings leadership, character, a high hockey IQ and a presence to our lineup,” Ducks general manager Pat Verbeek said. “We are very excited to add a Stanley Cup winner to complement our group and make a big push down the stretch.”

    Carlson is a pending free agent without a contract beyond this year but was not expected to get moved before the deadline. He joins the Ducks as they look to end a seven-year playoff drought.

    Rob Tornoe, Associated Press


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 7:22am

    Who could the Flyers end up moving?

    With a surplus of wings, the Flyers could move Owen Tippett ahead of the trade deadline.

    The Flyers aren’t moving Dan Vladař, Travis Konecny, Travis Sanheim, Matvei Michkov, Trevor Zegras, or top prospect Porter Martone, but everyone else would seem to be — and should be — in play.

    Topping that list is rugged but oft-injured defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen, who has been on the trade block each of the past two seasons but has so far stayed put. The 31-year-old doesn’t fit the team’s timeline, has a year remaining on his contract, and is exactly the type of player that contenders tend to overpay for due to his physicality and “playoff brand of hockey.”

    Trading him at this deadline would at minimum land a second-rounder and a legit prospect, and potentially a first-rounder. The Flyers should look to cash in on the 6-foot-4, 208-pound Finn on the heels of his eye-catching Olympics and should be seeking a first-round pick or a high-end center or blueline prospect in return.

    The Flyers also have a surplus of wings with Konecny, Michkov, Zegras, Tyson Foerster, Owen Tippett, Bobby Brink, Denver Barkey, and Nikita Grebenkin, and more on the way, headlined by Martone and Alex Bump. Sooner or later the Flyers are going to have to make room for guys, and parting with Tippett or Brink would start that process and recoup the Flyers something in return, potentially at a position of need.

    With teams always looking for a scoring punch this time of year, trading the 27-year-old Tippett, who is cost-controlled for the next six seasons and on his way to a third 25-plus-goal season in four years, would yield the largest return, assuming Konecny and Zegras are off limits. The Flyers reportedly have a high ask on the speedy Tippett, including a first-round pick, but could a package that includes a center be enticing? The Flyers could opt to hold fast for a better return at the draft, when this type of trade may be easier to complete, but trading a winger or two before next season seems inevitable.

    The Flyers don’t seem willing to meet the high price for St. Louis Blues All-Star Robert Thomas, but Detroit’s Nate Danielson, Minnesota’s Danila Yurov and Charlie Stramel, Buffalo’s Noah Ostlund, Tampa Bay’s Conor Geekie, and Seattle’s Shane Wright are some younger center prospects who could be available in a package involving Ristolainen, Tippett, or someone else.

    In addition to trying to move pending unrestricted free agents Nic Deslauriers, Noah Juulsen, and Carl Grundström, the Flyers could explore trading depth center Noah Cates or restricted free agent defensemen Jamie Drysdale and Emil Andrae, all young players with runways to improve who would generate some interest around the league. Like Ristolainen, Cates is a player that contending teams could view as a final piece due to his versatility, penalty killing, and two-way play. Andrae looks to be in need of a change of scenery and could be swapped for a player in a similar boat.

    Nick Seeler would have some value as a steady, stay-at-home defenseman, but the 32-year-old, who is currently nicked up, would have to waive his no-move clause. Maligned backup goalie Sam Ersson also could be offloaded for a mid-round pick, especially if the team has already decided it won’t extend a qualifying offer to the pending free agent.

    Jackie Spiegel


    // Timestamp 03/06/26 7:20am

    Flyers trade talk: Rasmus Ristolainen, Bobby Brink, and others

    There’s a good chance the Flyers trade away defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen.

    The NHL trade deadline is Friday at 3 p.m. and there are plenty of questions on how the Flyers will approach it. Ahead of the deadline, Inquirer reporter Jackie Spiegel took to Reddit to answer fans’ questions ahead of the deadline. Here are some highlights from her Reddit AMA — “Ask Me Anything” — on Wednesday.

    Q: There’s been a lot of talk about selling at the deadline, with guys like Owen Tippett and Rasmus Ristolainen as top candidates. Is there anyone else who might be on the block and could be a ‘surprise’ player dealt at the deadline?

    A. It’s a good chance that Ristolainen is gone with how he’s been playing, his friendly contract, the farm system, and that he’s a right-shot defenseman. Tippett is less of a sure bet as he brings elements — size, speed, goal-scoring ability — that any team, including the Flyers, would want. However, Tippett does have a modified no-trade clause that begins on July 1, so if they’re going to do it, time is ticking.

    The Flyers do have a logjam on the wings, and one surprise, at least for this week, could be Bobby Brink, who has long been rumored to be on the way out because of who is waiting in the wings. There’s always a chance Danny Brière could do right by some veterans like Noah Juulsen and Nic Deslauriers, each on expiring contracts, and trade them to a contender looking for depth.

    Q. Where do you see us getting an actual top-line center option from and what would it realistically take?

    A. This is a great question. I think part of the issue for the Flyers is that they were banking on this upcoming offseason to get that No. 1 center and all those guys inked extensions. Could Trevor Zegras be that guy? Maybe. Could they swing for a Robert Thomas? Maybe, but from what I’ve been told, that deal would require sending at least one of the Flyers’ young centers in the system the other way. I’m starting to wonder if a true No. 1 center is needed, because if you have enough talented high-end wingers — like Tyson Foerster, Martone, Travis Konecny, Matvei Michkov, Tippett — maybe a less elite center works too?

    Q. What do the Flyers plan to do about Sean Couturier?

    A. From what I can tell, there are zero plans for Couturier. From the outside, yes, his production is down, but a lot of that, in my opinion, has to do with his focus on defense as he lets his younger, more skilled wingers take charge offensively. And heading into the return from the Olympic break, his analytics were actually some of the best on the team. There’s also the leadership in the room that fans do not see. As assistant coach Todd Reirden mentioned, while he was taking over media responsibilities with Rick Tocchet at the Olympics, Couturier’s “voice carries a lot of weight. He’s not [a captain] that’s rah rah, but when he does talk, no one’s not listening. I can tell you that much. So he’s the leader of our team for a reason.”

    Jackie Spiegel


    Flyers standings and playoff chances

    The Flyers’ chances ending their five-season playoff drought became a bit slimmer Thursday night after their 3-0 loss to the Utah Mammoth.

    Eight teams in the Eastern Conference will move forward to the NHL playoffs – the top three teams in each division, plus two wild cards.

    The Flyers currently sit in sixth place in the Metropolitan Division 6 points out of a playoff spot. But with 21 games remaining on their schedule, the odds of making the playoffs are slim but not impossible. The New York Times currently pegs the Flyers’ chances of a postseason berth at 14%.

    Metropolitan Division

    window.addEventListener(“message”,function(a){if(void 0!==a.data[“datawrapper-height”]){var e=document.querySelectorAll(“iframe”);for(var t in a.data[“datawrapper-height”])for(var r,i=0;r=e[i];i++)if(r.contentWindow===a.source){var d=a.data[“datawrapper-height”][t]+”px”;r.style.height=d}}});

    Eastern Conference

    window.addEventListener(“message”,function(a){if(void 0!==a.data[“datawrapper-height”]){var e=document.querySelectorAll(“iframe”);for(var t in a.data[“datawrapper-height”])for(var r,i=0;r=e[i];i++)if(r.contentWindow===a.source){var d=a.data[“datawrapper-height”][t]+”px”;r.style.height=d}}});

    Rob Tornoe

    // Timestamp 03/06/26 7:15am

  • Flyers lose 3-0 to Mammoth at home with the trade deadline looming: ‘We were soft’

    Flyers lose 3-0 to Mammoth at home with the trade deadline looming: ‘We were soft’

    There were two things hanging over the Flyers at Xfinity Mobile Arena on Thursday night: the impending NHL trade deadline and extending their winning streak.

    But as the minutes continued to tick off until Friday’s 3 p.m. deadline, the Flyers’ inability to win four straight kept on going with a 3-0 loss to the Utah Mammoth.

    It is the third time this season the Flyers have been shut out, and it’s been more than two years since the Flyers strung together a four-game winning streak. The last ended with a 5-3 win against the Arizona Coyotes, who are now the Mammoth, on Feb. 12, 2024.

    From the drop of the puck on Thursday, it was a lackadaisical effort by the Flyers that saw them muster just 44 shot attempts and 16 shots on goal, tying the season low set on Feb. 5 in a 2-1 overtime loss to the Ottawa Senators. It is the 10th time this season that they have not put at least 20 shots on goal.

    “I think we’ve got to simplify our game, go to the net hard, drive to the net hard, get some bodies there, bring pucks to the net,” captain Sean Couturier said. “It almost feels like we’re trying to play on the outside and find a backdoor tap-in, which is hard to do in this league.

    “I think if we simplify things, eventually things will open up. But I think we’re too content on playing a little bit on the outside at times.”

    In the first period, the Flyers had four shots on goal, despite having a power-play opportunity.

    “I think the first 10 [minutes] kind of dictated [play]. We were soft; execution was tough,” said coach Rick Tocchet, who also said the Flyers didn’t push back.

    Added defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen: “I feel like at times we might have got a little bit outworked and outbattled, and I think that’s where we should start every game, and obviously we didn’t do that enough tonight.”

    To be fair, Utah also had only four shots in the first period, but in the second, the Mammoth broke through on two of their 14 shots.

    Lou Nolan didn’t even have time to announce the penalty before Nick Schmaltz found the back of the net to give Utah a 1-0 lead less than two minutes into the frame. Eight seconds after Noah Cates was called for holding the stick, Dylan Guenther curled off the boards and into the high slot before going against the grain to Schmaltz on the goal line for the shot.

    “Just didn’t play hard enough tonight,” defenseman Travis Sanheim said. “They’re a tough team to play against. They battle hard, hard on the walls, and make it tough on you. And we weren’t willing to play that style so hard to win when you don’t dig in and win those battles.”

    Less than seven minutes later, it was 2-0 on a goal by Clayton Keller, who just helped the United States win gold at the Winter Olympics.

    Off a faceoff, Sanheim got the puck from Matvei Michkov, who took his spot at the left point and carried the puck down and around the net, trying a wrap-around. The puck slid off his stick, and while he tried to regroup, he eventually lost the puck to Guenther.

    Utah’s speedy forward chipped the puck around Ristolainen, and as Sanheim backchecked and tried to cut off Guenther, Keller split through a hole with Michkov too far over.

    “What do you want me to say?” Tocchet retorted when asked about the play.

    “Yeah, I tried to make a play at the net,” Sanheim said. “And then as it came up, Risto goes to step up on, I think it was on Guenther, and I saw that we had an F3, so I thought I could play Guenther on the wall. Obviously misread it with Mich, and obviously don’t want to give up a breakaway at that time of the game.”

    Michael Carcone added an empty-netter for Utah in the third period.

    Now the question is, who will be here after the trade deadline at 3 p.m. on Friday?

    Flyers defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen has been a hot name in trade deadline rumors.

    Ristolainen, whose name is swirling as someone more than likely getting traded, suited up and skated more than 22 minutes in his 800th NHL game.

    “I can’t really control that,” Ristolainen said. “So I just try to come in every day, and obviously [Friday], we’ll see what happens.”

    Did the pending trade deadline impact the team?

    “Hard to say, maybe for some guys, I guess,” Sanheim said. “But we’re in the thick of it and just trying to win every hockey game and take it day by day and deal with it as it comes.”

    Breakaways

    Forward Travis Konecny missed his second straight game with an upper-body injury, and defenseman Nick Seeler, who sustained a lower-body injury in Monday’s game against the Toronto Maple Leafs, did not play. … On Thursday, the Flyers signed forward Garrett Wilson to an NHL contract to finish the 2025-26 season. A member of Lehigh Valley of the American Hockey League since 2019, a team source has also confirmed the captain inked a new AHL contract for next season. Wilson, a native of Barrie, Ontario, has 16 points (four goals, 12 assists) in 51 games this season and leads the team in penalty minutes (99), which enters Thursday tied for 11th overall in the AHL. Wilson, who turns 35 on March 16, has played 751 AHL games for San Antonio, Portland, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, Toronto, and Lehigh Valley. He is Lehigh Valley’s all-time leader in games played (338) and ranks fourth in goals (62) and points (148). A rugged 6-foot-3, 218-pound winger, Wilson was drafted in the fourth round of the 2009 NHL draft by the Florida Panthers and has 84 regular-season and 10 playoff games at the NHL level. His last NHL game was a playoff game on April 16, 2019, for the Pittsburgh Penguins.

    Up next

    On Saturday, the Flyers will be in Pittsburgh taking on the Penguins (5:30 p.m., NBCSP).

  • How does Flyers GM Danny Brière’s previous trade deadline moves inform what he might do ahead of Friday?

    How does Flyers GM Danny Brière’s previous trade deadline moves inform what he might do ahead of Friday?

    Although Flyers general manager Danny Brière has the experience of just two NHL trade deadlines in his pocket, if this year is anything like the previous two, expect the Flyers to make some noise.

    The buzzer will go off on the wheelin’ and dealin’ at 3 p.m. on Friday, and Brière has already made one deal this week, sending Lehigh Valley of the American Hockey League defenseman Roman Schmidt to Minnesota for NHL/AHL forward Boris Katchoul.

    Is it the start of something? Potentially, with players such as Rasmus Ristolainen rumored to be on the move.

    Here’s a look back at what Brière did in the week leading up to the previous trade deadlines.

    What did the Flyers do at the 2024 NHL trade deadline?

    The 2024 trade deadline was at 3 p.m. March 8.

    March 6 at 3:48 p.m.

    Brière was patient, waiting weeks before finally accepting an offer for defenseman Sean Walker. Two days before the deadline, he acquired a 2025 first-round pick and center Ryan Johansen from the Colorado Avalanche for Walker and a 2026 fifth-round selection.

    The Flyers initially agreed to retain 50% of the final year and a half of Johansen’s contract as a trade sweetener, but he was immediately placed on waivers for assignment to the AHL. The forward, citing a hip injury, refused to report to Lehigh Valley and never played for the Flyers and was placed on unconditional waivers Aug. 20, 2024, “for the purpose of terminating his contract due to a material breach.”

    The NHL Players’ Association filed a grievance, but a source confirmed to The Inquirer last summer that an arbitrator had ruled in favor of the Flyers.

    Walker played 18 regular-season and 11 playoff games for the Avalanche before signing with the Carolina Hurricanes on July 1, 2024. The 2025 first-round pick was packaged in the first-round swap at the draft that helped the Flyers snag Jack Nesbitt at No. 12.

    Erik Johnson played just 39 games for the Flyers after getting acquired from Buffalo at the 2024 trade deadline.

    March 8 at 2:12 p.m.

    In a bit of a surprise move, the Flyers acquired Brière’s old teammate Erik Johnson, a defenseman, from the Buffalo Sabres for a 2024 fourth-round pick.

    Johnson played 39 games for the Flyers. Eventually, the Sabres traded the pick to the Winnipeg Jets, who took Kevin He, the highest-drafted player born in China in NHL history at the time.

    March 8 at 2:47 p.m.

    The Flyers acquired forward Denis Gurianov from the Nashville Predators for Wade Allison.

    A second-rounder in 2016, Allison played 75 games across three seasons for the Flyers but never really stuck at the NHL level. Gurianov played four games in Philly and, as an unrestricted free agent, opted to sign with the Kontinental Hockey League that summer.

    What did the Flyers do at the 2025 NHL trade deadline?

    The 2025 trade deadline was at 3 p.m. March 7.

    March 7 at 12:45 p.m.

    The Flyers acquired a third-round pick in the 2027 NHL draft from the Los Angeles Kings for forward Andrei Kuzmenko and a 2025 seventh-round pick. Philly retained 50% of his salary.

    Kuzmenko was acquired by the Flyers at the end of January of that season from the Calgary Flames with Jakob Pelletier for Morgan Frost and Joel Farabee. He played in seven games, registering five points, and the pending unrestricted free agent looked like someone the Flyers could re-sign.

    Instead, he was shipped out weeks later and signed a one-year deal on June 30, 2024, to stay in Hollywood. He has 18 goals and 42 points in 74 regular-season games and three goals and six points in six playoff games across his tenure with the Kings.

    March 7 at 4 p.m.

    Although the trade had to be registered with league by 3 p.m. the Flyers officially announced at 4 p.m. that they acquired forward Nikita Grebenkin and a first-round pick in the 2027 NHL draft from the Toronto Maple Leafs for Ontario native Scott Laughton, a 2025 fourth-round pick, and a 2027 sixth-round pick.

    In the deal, the Flyers retained 50% of Laughton’s salary, which comes off the books after this season. Toronto’s first-round pick is Top 10 protected; however, the Leafs are in a free fall, so, because they owe the Boston Bruins their 2026 pick from the Brandon Carlo deal, it could slide to 2027, as the 2026 pick is top-five protected.

    Scott Laughton (center) has 16 points in 63 regular-season games with the Maple Leafs since being traded by the Flyers at last year’s trade deadline.

    Even before the trade was announced, the team was taking down banners at the Flyers Training Center with Laughton on them. A depth center, Laughton is rumored to be on the trade block now in Toronto — he was held out of the lineup on Wednesday for roster management — and has 16 points in 63 regular-season games and two assists in 13 playoff games with the Maple Leafs since being acquired.

    Grebenkin played in the minors last season after being acquired, collecting seven points in 11 regular-season games and four points in seven playoff games for the Phantoms. He has spent the entire 2025-26 season with the Flyers and has 12 points in 46 games, including his first NHL goal, which tied the game at 4 in a 5-4 shootout win against the Montreal Canadiens on Nov. 4.

    March 7 at 5:40 p.m.

    Another late announcement, with the Flyers sending Johnson home to the Avalanche, where he had won a Stanley Cup in 2022, for forward Givani Smith.

    Johnson finished the year with the Avalanche and has since retired.

    Smith, who was a pending unrestricted free agent, played 10 regular-season games for Lehigh Valley last season, registering a goal and an assist, and played in seven playoff games. He signed a professional tryout agreement with the Carolina Hurricanes for the 2025-26 training camp, earning a two-way deal in early October.

  • The Flyers should be firm sellers at the NHL trade deadline despite their recent winning streak

    The Flyers should be firm sellers at the NHL trade deadline despite their recent winning streak

    When the curtain rose on the Flyers’ 2025-26 season on Oct. 9 in Sunrise, Fla., it almost seemed preordained that they would be in the exact position and dilemma they find themselves in at the NHL trade deadline.

    Entering Thursday’s game against Utah (7 p.m., NBCSP), the Flyers’ final tilt before Friday’s 3 p.m. deadline, Rick Tocchet’s seesaw club finds itself on a sudden upswing and just six points out of a playoff spot with 22 games to play. That brings us to the all-important question: Should the Flyers be buyers or sellers before Friday’s buzzer?

    Just a week ago, that answer seemed clear-cut. The Flyers emerged from their three-week Olympic sabbatical sitting eight points out of both third place in the Metropolitan Division and the final wild-card spot, and reeling from having lost 12 of their previous 15 games. A sleepy loss in Washington to the Capitals last Wednesday in their first game back from break, followed by an early 2-0 deficit in New York the next night to the lowly Rangers, seemed to be the final nails in the coffin. The Flyers were open for business … as sellers.

    But after rallying to beat the Rangers in overtime, followed by wins over wild-card rival Boston and then Toronto, the Flyers players have made that buy-or-sell decision a little more difficult on shot-callers Danny Brière and Keith Jones. Jones said before the season that “in the previous two years, we would be quick to make changes in order to get better for the future. Now, it would be about staying on course, which is advancing. It’s not about moving back.”

    So are the Flyers still taking the long-view approach to rebuilding or has patience worn thin? The next 48 hours will tell us a lot about how the organization views itself and those in charge.

    Why the Flyers should sell

    The proof is in the pudding. The Flyers are a wildly inconsistent team that hasn’t won more than three games in a row all season, and whose minus-11 goal differential ranks 12th of 15 teams in the Eastern Conference. In the conference, only the Rangers (14) have fewer than the Flyers’ 19 regulation wins, which also happens to be the first playoff tiebreaker.

    The Flyers have largely ridden an excellent season from goaltender Dan Vladař (.908 save percentage, 11 goals saved above expected, according to Money Puck), and some hot shooting at five-on-five (11th in shooting percentage, according to Natural Stat Trick). They’ve also been able to grind out points by getting to overtime in 20 of their first 60 games. Those three factors have largely papered over more worrying cracks, such as the team’s 24th-ranked Corsi For percentage, which measures control of shot attempts, 29th-ranked power play (16.2%), and the ongoing absence of a No. 1 center with no clear heir apparent in the organization.

    Dan Vladař has covered up a lot of the Flyers’ warts this season with his stellar play in goal.

    The team’s recent 3-1-0 stretch post-Olympic break is also a bit of fool’s gold, as two of the wins came after regulation, while the Flyers have lost the expected goals percentage in three of those four games. The Flyers still need to leapfrog five teams to make the playoffs, which would likely require them to take at least 27 or 28 points from their final 44, or to play at somewhere near a .620 points percentage the rest of the way. They’ve played at a .558 clip so far this season.

    Even if the Flyers — who, according to Money Puck, have just an 11% chance to make the playoffs as of Wednesday — did pull off a miracle and reach the playoffs for the first time in six seasons, they would likely get steamrolled in Round 1 by Carolina or Tampa Bay, whom the Flyers haven’t beaten in six tries this season.

    While the Flyers are desperate for postseason hockey to return to the newly named Xfinity Mobile Arena, Jones, the team’s president, told The Inquirer in January that while it is “important that we reward our players,” the goal remains being “a playoff team that is a sustainable one. Not just a one-and-done.”

    If he’s true to his word and takes a good look at the Flyers in the mirror, the team won’t be adding short-term pieces to try to get over the playoff hump.

    What the Flyers have to move

    The Flyers aren’t moving Vladař, Travis Konecny, Travis Sanheim, Matvei Michkov, Trevor Zegras, or top prospect Porter Martone, but everyone else would seem to be — and should be — in play.

    Topping that list is rugged but oft-injured defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen, who has been on the trade block each of the past two seasons but has so far stayed put. The 31-year-old doesn’t fit the team’s timeline, has a year remaining on his contract, and is exactly the type of player that contenders tend to overpay for due to his physicality and “playoff brand of hockey.”

    Flyers defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen is an in-demand player as the trade deadline nears.

    Trading him at this deadline would at minimum land a second-rounder and a legit prospect, and potentially a first-rounder. The Flyers should look to cash in on the 6-foot-4, 208-pound Finn on the heels of his eye-catching Olympics and should be seeking a first-round pick or a high-end center or blueline prospect in return.

    The Flyers also have a surplus of wings with Konecny, Michkov, Zegras, Tyson Foerster, Owen Tippett, Bobby Brink, Denver Barkey, and Nikita Grebenkin, and more on the way, headlined by Martone and Alex Bump. Sooner or later the Flyers are going to have to make room for guys, and parting with Tippett or Brink would start that process and recoup the Flyers something in return, potentially at a position of need.

    With teams always looking for a scoring punch this time of year, trading the 27-year-old Tippett, who is cost-controlled for the next six seasons and on his way to a third 25-plus-goal season in four years, would yield the largest return, assuming Konecny and Zegras are off limits. The Flyers reportedly have a high ask on the speedy Tippett, including a first-round pick, but could a package that includes a center be enticing? The Flyers could opt to hold fast for a better return at the draft, when this type of trade may be easier to complete, but trading a winger or two before next season seems inevitable.

    The Flyers don’t seem willing to meet the high price for St. Louis Blues All-Star Robert Thomas, but Detroit’s Nate Danielson, Minnesota’s Danila Yurov and Charlie Stramel, Buffalo’s Noah Ostlund, Tampa Bay’s Conor Geekie, and Seattle’s Shane Wright are some younger center prospects who could be available in a package involving Ristolainen, Tippett, or someone else.

    Detroit Red Wings center Nate Danielson, 21, is the type of young center the Flyers need to add to their system.

    In addition to trying to move pending unrestricted free agents Nic Deslauriers, Noah Juulsen, and Carl Grundström, the Flyers could explore trading depth center Noah Cates or restricted free agent defensemen Jamie Drysdale and Emil Andrae, all young players with runways to improve who would generate some interest around the league. Like Ristolainen, Cates is a player that contending teams could view as a final piece due to his versatility, penalty killing, and two-way play. Andrae looks to be in need of a change of scenery and could be swapped for a player in a similar boat.

    Nick Seeler would have some value as a steady, stay-at-home defenseman, but the 32-year-old, who is currently nicked up, would have to waive his no-move clause. Maligned backup goalie Sam Ersson also could be offloaded for a mid-round pick, especially if the team has already decided it won’t extend a qualifying offer to the pending free agent.

    Brière has said he expects a quiet deadline, but trading Ristolainen is a must, while being creative to try to add another young center prospect to the pipeline should also be on the agenda. The Flyers aren’t ready to contend yet and still have several needs to address. We’ll see if they agree come Friday at 3 p.m.

  • Phones off, heads down: The Flyers players are trying not to think about Friday’s NHL trade deadline

    Phones off, heads down: The Flyers players are trying not to think about Friday’s NHL trade deadline

    This time of year, fans, reporters, and insiders’ phones will be dinging constantly with notifications, but there’s a good chance several phones in hockey will be off.

    “I’d say most guys probably stay off their phones around this time. You don’t want to see any tweets from guys that are breaking stuff,” forward Garnet Hathaway said with a bit of a grin, a laugh, and a glance as Sportsnet insider Elliotte Friedman was in earshot in the Flyers locker room in Toronto on Monday.

    The NHL trade deadline is fast approaching, with the final horn sounding on Friday at 3 p.m. But while everyone speculates and debates what Flyers general manager Danny Brière and management will do, the players are trying to stay in the moment.

    “Focus on what we do on the ice and play some good hockey, try to win some games. Those are things that we don’t control,” captain Sean Couturier said. “It’s more you guys [the media] that talk about it and make big stories out of it. In the locker room, it’s not something we really talk about. We’ve got other things to focus on.”

    It’s totally fair for Couturier to say the media makes it a big deal. After all, is it not entertaining when the wheelin’ and dealin’ can come fast and furious? But what we all don’t see is the toll it can take.

    Last season, several players acknowledged that the trade of Morgan Frost and Joel Farabee in January to the Calgary Flames and Scott Laughton at the deadline to the Maple Leafs impacted the room. Two seasons ago, it was Sean Walker being dealt to the Colorado Avalanche that sent the defense into a tailspin, leading to a team looking at a playoff spot finding itself on the outside at the end.

    General manager Danny Brière could move a couple of Flyers players by Friday’s trade deadline.

    “One day you’re in one place, and the next morning you’re in a different place, getting ready to play a game,” recalled Owen Tippett, who was acquired by the Flyers in the Claude Giroux trade two days before the 2022 deadline. “I think I was traded at 6 o’clock at night and played the next day at 2 o’clock. So, pretty quick turnaround [after] you pretty much lift up your whole life and move. For me, I kind of had an idea it was coming. But it all happened so fast, so you don’t really have time to think until everything dies down.”

    “So, it’s a tough time of year,” he added. “Obviously, you don’t want to see anyone go, and you never know who could be on the move or, if it’s you, then you just have no choice but to roll with it and deal with it and settle things down as quick as you can.”

    If the Flyers do make moves — and rumors continue to swirl around defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen being one such player expected to find himself in a new jersey — the player they get in return will be facing an interesting time in Philly. Because the “other things” the captain alluded to are that the Flyers are not just focusing on their first four-game winning streak in over two years when they take on the Utah Mammoth on Thursday (7 p.m., NBCSP), but a playoff spot.

    Entering Wednesday, they were eight back of second and third in the Metropolitan Division, held by the Pittsburgh Penguins and the New York Islanders, respectively, and six back of the Boston Bruins, who hold the last wild card in the Eastern Conference.

    “We’re in the thick of it. We’re fighting for a playoff spot,” defenseman Nick Seeler said. “So that’s where our heads are at, and that’s what guys are focusing on, getting wins here, and that’s the most important thing.”

  • What to expect at the trade deadline, how the Flyers can get a No. 1 center, and more from our Reddit AMA

    What to expect at the trade deadline, how the Flyers can get a No. 1 center, and more from our Reddit AMA

    With just over 48 hours remaining until the 2026 NHL trade deadline, Inquirer Flyers reporter Jackie Spiegel hopped on r/Flyers to field some fan questions in a Reddit AMA (Ask Me Anything) Wednesday afternoon. Here are a few highlights …

    (Questions have been lightly edited for clarity and brevity.)

    Q. There’s been a lot of talk about selling at the deadline, with guys like Owen Tippett and Rasmus Ristolainen as top candidates. Is there anyone else who might be on the block and could be a ‘surprise’ player dealt at the deadline?

    A. It’s a good chance that Ristolainen is gone with how he’s been playing, his friendly contract, the farm system, and that he’s a right-shot defenseman. Tippett is less of a sure bet as he brings elements — size, speed, goal-scoring ability — that any team, including the Flyers, would want. However, Tippett does have a modified no-trade clause that begins on July 1, so if they’re going to do it, time is ticking.

    The Flyers do have a logjam on the wings, and one surprise, at least for this week, could be Bobby Brink, who has long been rumored to be on the way out because of who is waiting in the wings. There’s always a chance Danny Brière could do right by some veterans like Noah Juulsen and Nic Deslauriers, each on expiring contracts, and trade them to a contender looking for depth.

    Owen Tippett is a potential trade candidate for the Flyers
    Q. At what point do we finally trade away some of our right wings to fix the log jam we have? And why is it taking so long?

    A. The expectation was always that this process would begin over the summer, but it could come sooner. Names like Brink and Tippett have popped up in recent trade-deadline chatter. The only crux of trading Brink now is his size, as playoff teams are always looking to get bigger this time of year, but he is a pending restricted free agent. … But there is no denying that the Flyers need to make room for right winger Porter Martone.

    As to why it has taken this long — you can’t trade someone if you don’t have someone ready to take the spot. Some of the wait was the hope of reeling in a big fish during this summer’s free agency — that is gone — but more recently, the wait has been on Martone, with all signs pointing to him inking his entry-level contract once Michigan State’s season is over.

    Q. Where do you see us getting an actual top-line center option from and what would it realistically take?

    A. This is a great question. I think part of the issue for the Flyers is that they were banking on this upcoming offseason to get that No. 1 center and all those guys inked extensions. Could Trevor Zegras be that guy? Maybe. Could they swing for a Robert Thomas? Maybe, but from what I’ve been told, that deal would require sending at least one of the Flyers’ young centers in the system the other way. I’m starting to wonder if a true No. 1 center is needed, because if you have enough talented high-end wingers — like Tyson Foerster, Martone, Travis Konecny, Matvei Michkov, Tippett — maybe a less elite center works too?

    Sean Couturier has been the Flyers captain for a little over two years.
    Q. What do the Flyers plan to do about Sean Couturier? Having the captain of the team be the guy farthest from living up to his contract and visibly frustrated seems like a less-than-ideal leadership situation. Not to mention he’s signed for four more seasons after this one and his contract is buyout proof.

    A. From what I can tell, there are zero plans for Couturier. From the outside, yes, his production is down, but a lot of that, in my opinion, has to do with his focus on defense as he lets his younger, more skilled wingers take charge offensively. And heading into the return from the Olympic break, his analytics were actually some of the best on the team. There’s also the leadership in the room that fans do not see. As assistant coach Todd Reirden mentioned, while he was taking over media responsibilities with Rick Tocchet at the Olympics, Couturier’s “voice carries a lot of weight. He’s not [a captain] that’s rah rah, but when he does talk, no one’s not listening. I can tell you that much. So he’s the leader of our team for a reason.”

    Q. If you had to look for a funny quote for a story after a win who would be your best bet on the team this year?

    A. This is a great question. Funny is good, but what we call money bites (at least that was the term when I worked in TV) are always better. Dan Vladař is always good for that and usually has a funny quote or two. Zegras is always on with a quick, funny response. And Garnet Hathaway is always insightful, but brings a good quote too.