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  • Adoree’ Jackson has had ups and downs as an Eagle. A positive approach has him playing his best when it matters most

    Adoree’ Jackson has had ups and downs as an Eagle. A positive approach has him playing his best when it matters most

    On any given weekday, 30-year-old Adoree’ Jackson still has the look of a college student. After practice, he’s often sporting a University of Southern California sweatshirt, the alma mater that he considered his dream program as a child. He totes a notebook filled with Vic Fangio’s defensive plays to complete his studious uniform.

    Jackson didn’t stop learning when his college career ended. It’s a process, even in Year 9 — especially in Year 9 — of his NFL career. After splitting the first eight years of his career with the Tennessee Titans and the New York Giants, Jackson arrived in Philadelphia last offseason on a one-year deal to help replace Darius Slay, competing with Kelee Ringo for the vacant starting cornerback role in the Eagles defense.

    Everything was new — new system, new terminology, new coordinator. Jackson’s transition wasn’t seamless, as evidenced by his shaky showing in the home opener against Dallas Cowboys All-Pro receiver CeeDee Lamb. But his persistence and his smile never wavered.

    “To be able to go through the offseason, learning, keeping my head down, just trying to be consistent and get better and get better and understand that it would take time, didn’t know how long it would take,” Jackson, the Titans’ first-round pick in 2017, said. “But just being persistent and not giving up and not wavering in my faith.

    Eagles cornerback Adoree’ Jackson had his issues covering CeeDee Lamb in Week 1.

    “Sometimes I just think that the Lord maybe wanted to see that I want it as much as I said I did. As much as I prayed for. And if I was going to continue to put the work behind it, because when there’s a storm coming, it’s got to end.”

    The storm isn’t so relentless now. Jackson weathered it, rebounding from a groin injury in late September that gave Ringo an opportunity to start in his place. The 5-foot-11, 185-pound cornerback won his job back a few weeks later, then suffered a concussion that sidelined him for another game.

    Injuries weren’t his only threats. Howie Roseman attempted to add competition, acquiring Jakorian Bennett from the Las Vegas Raiders in training camp and Jaire Alexander from the Baltimore Ravens at the trade deadline. Still, Fangio turned to Jackson at the bye week and hasn’t looked back.

    “I’ve personally been rooting for him all year to play [well,]” Fangio said earlier this month. “He’s had his ups and downs, like a lot of us. Hopefully, he can stay on the track that he is, but I don’t think it’s any magical thing [that led to his improvement]. It’s just a process [of] getting comfortable and getting confident.”

    Jackson’s confidence is showing. His play in the second half of the season — while far from flawless — has stabilized, peaking with his interception and pair of pass breakups against the Los Angeles Chargers earlier this month. His positive attitude, though, never changed.

    “I’m so used to being uncomfortable with something just very unexpected happening,” Jackson said. “But just keeping my faith and what I was taught and how I was raised helped me prepare to keep me going forward.”


    Long before he became the senior member of the Eagles’ defensive backs room, Jackson considered himself an old soul.

    Jackson hails from Belleville, Ill., a suburb of St. Louis, where his dream of becoming a pro athlete was born. Jackson told his mother, Vianca, that he was bound for the NBA after watching Space Jam at age 4. The dream felt attainable as he practiced Michael Jordan’s game-winning dunk over his parents’ bed.

    That aspiration evolved. Jackson played sports year-round as a child, from basketball to soccer to track to football. He moved to California to live with his older sister, Lekisch Williams-Keene, ahead of his sophomore year of high school, in pursuit of better athletic and educational opportunities. He found such opportunities at Junipero Serra High School in Gardena, about 15 miles south of Los Angeles.

    “I think it helped me grow up a lot faster,” Jackson said. “It made me, I guess, prepared to be independent and in college. And also that fear of going back home motivated me to want to be something more than maybe I’d seen or what people assumed was going [to happen] for me.

    “I think that was the biggest thing for me, just staying motivated. I didn’t want to let my family down.”

    Adoree’ Jackson reunited with his high school football coach, Scott Altenberg, at the Eagles’ game against the Los Angeles Chargers on Dec. 8.

    Scott Altenberg, Serra’s football coach, never sensed that kind of pressure on Jackson. Rather, he picked up on two other qualities about his newest player on the first day of practice with the junior varsity team.

    For one, Jackson wasn’t long for the JV squad. He wasn’t the biggest player, Altenberg said, but he was the “Road Runner-type guy,” capable of running around and covering receivers effortlessly.

    Jackson also had a “glow” to him, according to Altenberg. He seemed to have more fun on the football field than anybody else. He set the tone for his teammates, dancing between plays, then dialing in on his assignment at the snap of the ball. Even opposing teams took notice of Jackson’s blend of prowess and personality.

    “He would wear the grill and do different things that would look like he was kind of one of those look-at-me guys,” Altenberg said. “But he did it in a way that the opponents, like, he was very respectful about it. It was the strangest thing. I’d never seen it before or since. He would kill them the whole game, and then they would take pictures with them afterward, the opponents.”

    His glow never dimmed, no matter the circumstance. In his senior season, Jackson hurt his ankle in the playoffs. He played on his bad ankle through the state final. After every play, Altenberg watched as Jackson would limp, reset himself, make a play, then do it again.

    In the state final, Jackson had a 92-yard punt return for a touchdown and a 93-yard kickoff for a touchdown, despite his nagging ankle injury.

    “When things don’t go his way, he’s able to recompartmentalize it and then get back going,” Altenberg said. “He’s always been like that.”

    Adoree’ Jackson joined the Eagles this offseason after splitting time with the Titans and Giants over eight seasons.

    Jackson takes after his mother, he says. He acknowledged that they tend to keep their struggles to themselves. In the spring of 2015, Vianca was diagnosed with breast cancer. She didn’t share her diagnosis with her son until she was pronounced cancer-free in the winter that year.

    But Jackson said his father, Christopher, told him and that he knew about her illness throughout his sophomore year at USC. The uncertainty surrounding her health made him uneasy. At age 15, Jackson had lost one of his closest friends, Jeremiah Radford, to cancer.

    Even though Jackson wasn’t by Vianca’s side as she went through treatment, he admired her strength from afar. Her resilience and positivity still inspire Jackson.

    “We think we’re strong playing football and doing different things and our bodies getting beat up, but [strength is] to have eternal and spiritual warfare and figuring out how you’re going to get through it, and not really trying to tell and keep a secret, and to come out on top and to thrive after what all you’re going through,” Jackson said.


    Altenberg still will give Jackson the occasional call just to receive a dose of the positivity he cherished daily during Jackson’s high school years.

    Jackson exudes it, even when his on-field performance slips. Early this season, when opposing quarterbacks were picking on Jackson, Altenberg sent him a text to lend his support. The cornerback responded with a sense of determination familiar to his high school coach.

    “He just was like, ‘I got this,’” Altenberg said. “‘I’m working on it, Coach. I’ll get there.’ And he just had that positive attitude. I was like, ‘OK.’ It’s hard not to be successful when you look for the positive and you work for the positive.”

    Cooper DeJean saw that work firsthand. The second-year defensive back said Jackson can keep the atmosphere in the room light, just like Slay did last season, while learning alongside his younger teammates.

    Adoree’ Jackson’s teammates have remarked the corner’s ability to remain even-keeled amid the peaks and valleys of the season.

    “He’s been the same person every single day, whether he’s playing well or if he’s had some downs throughout the year,” DeJean said. “He’s been the same guy. Every single day, he comes in and he works, and you can see that starting to show out on the field, I think. You’ve seen the past few weeks, the way he’s playing out on the field. Playing at a really high level. And he just continued to get better each and every week.”

    Ringo, who had been vying for the starting outside cornerback role with Jackson early in the season, has a deep sense of appreciation for the veteran, too. Jackson is always willing to lend his perspective and experience to younger players in the room. While he’s competed with Jackson this season, he says he harbors no resentment toward him.

    “Relationships are beyond football,” Ringo said. “Nothing out there on the field would affect a good relationship. We all have that good, dynamic relationship within each other, and it’s nothing but love, regardless of what that is.”

    That gratitude — for everything — is mutual. Even in the aftermath of the Week 1 game against Dallas, Jackson stood at his stall in the NovaCare Complex and insisted that he wasn’t discouraged. He said he was excited that every week provides another chance to improve and build confidence in practice and on game day.

    He had that mentality when he wasn’t the starter, too. When Ringo briefly took over in early October, Jackson said he had learned to be content with his role, no matter how big or small. He had cultivated that attitude over the course of his career. He was a starter for seven seasons until his final year with the Giants.

    Adoree’ Jackson (22) was a known figure to the Eagles via his work as a Giants starter.

    His sense of appreciation for every opportunity, Jackson said, also comes from his mother.

    “She used to always tell me, ’The Lord can give it to me and he can also take it away,’” Jackson said. “It’s easy to praise the Lord when everything is going great, but how easy is it when things are not going your way? Or you seem like you’re in a turmoil.

    “I think just my mom, she did a great job as a kid of instilling faith in me, belief, but also humility and being humble and understanding that we are all human beings and we have to be grateful for what we have because it can be something as small as blinking, breathing, seeing, touching, tasting that you might take for granted, and the next person doesn’t have it.”

    Bigger tests await in two weeks, when Jackson is slated to suit up for his first playoff game since the 2022 season and just his ninth total. Beyond that lies uncertainty — over the Eagles’ chances at a Super Bowl repeat and Jackson’s next contract.

    But his youthful energy, willingness to learn, and unyielding sense of gratitude seem unlikely to change, no matter what the future holds for Jackson.

    “He loves where he is right now, always,” Altenberg said. “And I think that we could all benefit from that.”

  • Eagles Week 17 film preview: What to look for against the Buffalo Bills

    Eagles Week 17 film preview: What to look for against the Buffalo Bills

    Sunday’s game between the Eagles and Buffalo Bills, premier teams in their conferences, could ultimately serve as a Super Bowl preview and a much-needed measuring stick before the teams prepare for the playoffs.

    The Eagles and Bills are coming off wins over teams without playoff aspirations, and both are on the upswing after midseason lulls. Playoff seeding will be on the line as the Eagles chase the No. 3 seed and the Bills chase the Patriots in the AFC East race.

    From Buffalo’s two-headed rushing attack of Josh Allen and James Cook to a shaky run defense, here is what the film says about Sunday’s Week 17 matchup (4:25 p.m., Fox29):

    How the Bills forged the NFL’s best rushing attack

    Cook has been lethal all season, particularly between the tackles. He leads the NFL in rushing with 1,532 yards, with more than half coming between the tackles (853 yards), according to Next Gen Stats.

    The Bills do their most damage in the run game from under center. Over 1,300 of Cook’s 1,532 rushing yards have come from under center, and the Eagles allow the fifth-most rushing yards (73 yards) per game from those alignments. The Birds, though, have a minus-0.11 expected points added against under-center runs, which ranks ninth in the NFL.

    Buffalo has a diverse run game, but Cook is particularly dominant on counter runs that pull fullback Reggie Gilliam and tight end Jackson Hawes across the formation. Cook scored a 64-yard touchdown against Carolina on a counter run and scored from 45 and 44 yards out against the Texans and Browns, respectively.

    In addition to counter runs, Cook also thrives finding cutback lanes on zone runs, making defenses pay if they overpursue the running back on the back side. His vision and acceleration in the hole allow him to weave through defenses. Cook has recorded 1,034 of his 1,532 yards after contact.

    Buffalo also likes to get Cook on the perimeter on toss plays, and its offensive line does a nice job of paving lanes for him to create explosive runs.

    If Cook has one weakness, it’s fumbling the ball. He has coughed it up six times but has just lost three. His three fumbles lost this season are tied for the most among qualified running backs, according to Next Gen Stats.

    Allen, meanwhile, leads quarterbacks in rushing yards (552) and rushing touchdowns (12). He is particularly dangerous when he can escape the pocket on throwing downs. Of Allen’s 16 runs that have gone for 10 or more yards, five have come from the quarterback scrambling for third-down conversions, according to Next Gen Stats, and he has converted seven third-downs by scrambling.

    The Bills quarterback has became the go-to short-yardage player on quarterback sneaks and designed runs. If it is third-and-short, more than a yard, the Bills will utilize Allen on zone read runs or motion into an empty formation and follow a pulling linemen on a downhill quarterback run.

    The same can be said about utilizing Allen’s legs in the red zone. Allen will carry the ball on similar designed quarterback runs, like a draw, counter, and power scheme runs. Even the threat of Allen running can draw extra defenders into the box inside the red zone, allowing space for Buffalo’s receivers to make plays.

    Poor run defense and tackling is Bills’ Achilles’ heel

    While Buffalo’s rushing offense is elite, the Bills defense is allowing the fourth-most rushing yards per game this season (144.3 yards) and gives up the most yards per rush after contact in the NFL (4.1 yards), according to Next Gen Stats. They have allowed 63 runs of 10 or more yards, and nearly 60% of their opponents’ rushing production has come outside of the tackles. The Bills have also allowed 5.4 yards per rush per play, second-most in the NFL.

    Early-down runs have been a killer for Buffalo, which is allowing the fourth-most rushing yards on first down — 34 of the 63 runs that have gone for 10 or more yards have come on that down, according to Next Gen Stats.

    In addition to the run-game struggles, Buffalo’s defense allows the most rushing yards from pistol formation runs (36.5 yards per game), according to Next Gen Stats, and a large chunk of those yards have come on outside zone and counter scheme runs.

    The Eagles deviated from pistol formation runs after their first meeting with the Giants earlier this season, and have used them sparingly since the bye week. The only pistol run during their Week 16 win over the Commanders resulted in a 12-yard gain by Tank Bigsby to close out the game, and the Birds used the formation five times against the Raiders, four of which came with the game already decided in the fourth quarter of their shutout win.

    Only five times this season have the Eagles posted a positive rushing EPA. Three of them came in the first three weeks, and the other two were Week 8 against the Giants and Week 16 against the Commanders, according to Next Gen Stats. But Saquon Barkley has rushed for 100 yards or more in two of his past three games, with one trend starting to materialize.

    Barkley has had four games with positive EPA on under-center runs: the Chiefs in Week 3, the Giants in Week 8, the Chargers in Week 14, and the Commanders last week. Yards after contact accounted for 117 of Barkley’s 132 yards, and the same trend carried over from the Raiders game: 75 of his 78 rushing yards were after contact vs. Las Vegas.

    The Eagles are finding a formula in the run game and need to keep riding it against a struggling Buffalo defense.

    X-factor: Shutting down Shakir and screen game

    The passing game for Buffalo has been inconsistent, but one constant has been wide receiver Khalil Shakir, who leads the team in receptions (66) and yards (684).

    As an extension of their run game and to take advantage of his elusiveness, the Bills get the ball into Shakir’s hands quickly on swing routes and screen passes. It forces defensive backs to come up and make tackles, while also challenging off coverage looks.

    Of Shakir’s 684 receiving yards, 506 have come after the catch, according to Next Gen Stats. The bread and butter play for Buffalo’s passing game is mesh, which usually has one or two players running shallow crossing routes.

    Shakir often is asked to run those routes in the offense, especially on third-and-medium distances. He’s also effective in making the first defender miss and forces missed tackles similar to a running back in space.

    Cooper DeJean and Adoree’ Jackson likely will be tested in those situations to get Shakir to the ground. If Shakir is forcing missed tackles and turning 5-yard gains into 10 yards or more, it could be a long day for the Eagles’ secondary.

  • Evan Simon became a true starting QB in his final year of college, and it’s a year he won’t forget.

    Evan Simon became a true starting QB in his final year of college, and it’s a year he won’t forget.

    If someone were to ask Evan Simon how the 2025 season went, his answer would be simple — the best of his college football career. Why? He finally had an opportunity.

    The quarterback’s collegiate career started at Rutgers in 2020. He spent four seasons as a backup in New Brunswick, N.J. He transferred to Temple with two years of eligibility remaining — and the chance to be a starter.

    “It’s taken me six years, and for each game I traveled, whether I was at Rutgers [or] Temple and I played or didn’t play, I had one family member there,” Simon said. “My mom drove to Ann Arbor, Michigan, when I was a third string or whatever. This just had to be the year that I gave myself a chance, and it was just a matter of doing whatever it took.”

    It wasn’t easy. At Temple, there were quarterback battles and a coaching change that stood in the way of Simon achieving his goal, but he did it. His career ended when Temple lost to North Texas on Nov. 28, and, while the 5-7 Owls fell short of a bowl game, Simon helped usher in a new era of Temple football.

    “I’ve had a shaky career. It’s taken six years for me to start the first game of the year,” said Simon, who threw for 2,097 yards and 25 touchdowns, while throwing just two interceptions this season. “It’s been quite the journey. I would do it all over again in a heartbeat.”

    Carving his role

    Simon doesn’t like to talk a lot about what happened at Rutgers.

    The Manheim Central graduate joined the team in 2020. However, much of his time with the Scarlet Knights was spent on the sideline, prompting him to enter the transfer portal in 2023.

    The options were limited, but one school stuck out: Temple, which had lost quarterback EJ Warner, who transferred to Rice.

    “I had two other schools that were pretty interested, but they were lower level than Temple,” Simon said. “I had a great conversation with [former Temple coach Stan Drayton]; he made me laugh. I talked with the offensive coordinator. They both seemed like great people. I just put my trust in Temple as a whole.”

    Temple quarterback Evan Simon (6) threw 25 touchdowns this season.

    He competed with Forrest Brock, Temple’s third-string quarterback in 2023. Brock won the job and started the first two games. The door cracked for Simon when Brock injured his wrist against Navy on Sept. 7. Simon started the next game against Coastal Carolina.

    Temple nearly defeated the Chanticleers, but Simon had his coming out party the following week against Utah State. He threw five touchdowns in a 45-29 comeback win over the Aggies. Simon would start every game but one for the rest of the season.

    Temple, however, finished 3-9, and Drayton was fired before the season ended. Temple then hired K.C. Keeler, who opened up the quarterback position. Simon was considering entering the portal again.

    “That whole transfer portal window was not easy, especially when you know coaches are telling you about guys who they are recruiting,” Simon said. “You’d like to think your position is safe, but it’s never safe. They brought two other senior quarterbacks in during this whole past year. It’s always in the back of your head.”

    Getting a chance

    Former Oregon State quarterback Gevani McCoy joined Temple in April, prompting yet another competition for Simon. This time was different, though. Simon was going to do anything to earn his job back, he said.

    “I would study [McCoy], in a sense,” Simon said. “I’d study how many notes is he taking, how hard is he working in the weight room, how he interacts with teammates. I said this toward the end of the year, but bringing in two other quarterbacks and the competition during camp was by far the best thing that happened to me.”

    He began doing things he had never done before, like sleeping in Edberg-Olson Hall. Simon was becoming a leader on the team.

    Keeler took notice too, and named Simon the starter. He threw a career-high six touchdowns in the season opener against Massachusetts on Aug. 30, while McCoy was the backup.

    “Chance is all we need,” Simon said. “I think Coach Keeler is a big part of it as well. He kind of forced me to be in some of those uncomfortable situations where it’s talking to the team or just things where you’re being forced to talk more.”

    Next steps

    When Simon walked off the field against North Texas, it signified multiple things.

    Temple lost its fourth straight game, missing a chance at a bowl game. But for Simon, it was the final game of his college career.

    But it won’t be the last time he picks up a football.

    The chance of being drafted isn’t high, Simon said, but he hopes to get a camp or workout invite from an NFL team. He signed with an agent at the end of this season and will spend the winter and spring training to prepare for Temple’s pro day.

    “These next couple months are all unknown,” Simon said. “I’m just going to try to stay in the moment and make the most of it when the time comes.”

    Simon’s journey was filled with twist and turns, and despite getting one year as a true starter at Temple, Simon says he wouldn’t change a thing because he believes that he left an impact on the program.

    “This is a group of guys where they’re harder on themselves than their coaches are on them from a care factor,” Simon said. “We won five games, and we lost two games by a total of two points, and we played five ranked opponents. And, damn, we played hard, even in blowout losses. I think you give Keeler another year, baby, here we go.”

  • How to watch Porter Martone and the Flyers’ prospects at the 2026 World Juniors

    How to watch Porter Martone and the Flyers’ prospects at the 2026 World Juniors

    The Flyers will be well-represented as the world’s best under-20 hockey players hit the ice in a battle for supremacy and bragging rights at the 2026 IIHF World Junior Championship

    Six prospects will don their country’s colors with their sights set on a gold medal.

    Which Flyers prospects will be at the 2026 World Juniors?

    Redemption is on the mind for Porter Martone and Jett Luchanko. The forwards were on Canada’s squad last year, which was ousted in the quarterfinals by Czechia. Martone, who was picked sixth overall in the 2025 NHL draft by the Flyers, will be leading the charge after being named captain on Christmas.

    Martone’s teammate at Michigan State, Shane Vansaghi, will be making his World Juniors debut for USA Hockey. The Americans are aiming for the nation’s first-ever three-peat.

    Heikki Ruohonen, selected in the fourth round in 2024, and Max Westergård, a fifth-rounder this summer, will skate for Finland. Ruohonen will don an “A” on his jersey. And Martone isn’t the only captain among the Flyers prospects; Jack Berglund will wear the “C” for Sweden.

    How to watch the Flyers prospects at the World Junior Championship

    As tradition dictates, the 2026 edition begins on Dec. 26 and ends on Jan. 5. This year, the tournament will be held in Minnesota, with games split between Grand Casino Arena (formerly Xcel Energy Center) in Saint Paul and 3M Arena, the home of the University of Minnesota, in Minneapolis.

    Broken up into two groups, teams will play four games in pool play before the playoffs start. Group A is the U.S., Sweden, Slovakia, Switzerland, and Germany. Group B has Canada, Finland, Czechia, Latvia, and Denmark.

    Fans can watch the Flyers prospects on NHL Network and stream the games on Fubo.

    When do Porter Martone, Jett Luchanko, and Canada play at World Juniors?

    Martone recently told The Inquirer he has “a bit of unfinished business” at this year’s World Junior Championship, and he has the opportunity for some revenge on Day 1. Canada opens its schedule against Czechia on Dec. 26 at 8:30 p.m.

    What time does Jack Berglund play for Sweden at the World Juniors?

    Berglund was supposed to play for Sweden at last year’s tournament, but the 2024 second-rounder had to miss it after he broke his left index finger and hand in Sweden’s final pre-tournament game. Sweden’s captain looked impressive in this year’s pre-tournament matchups, including while scoring a pair of goals against Canada.

    “I think he’s a very well-rounded player and has the ability to be a really good 3C, maybe more,” assistant general manager Brent Flahr told The Inquirer recently. “But he can play power play. He’s strong. He wins battles. He can make plays. He’s very sound defensively. Where he’s played, he’s had to earn everything he can, but he can shoot it.

    “I think people worried about his skating, but his skating is coming along as well, and he’s big and strong. You’ll see at the U20 level, he’s a big, strong horse out there, but he’s nowhere near where he’s going to be at 23 years old.”

    When do Heikki Ruohonen, Max Westergård, and Finland play at World Juniors?

    After notching four assists in seven games last year for the silver-medal-winning Finns, Ruohonen returns for a shot at gold. The Harvard freshman is joined this year by Westergård, a 2025 pick who has 21 points (four goals, 17 assists) in 12 games for Frölunda HC’s junior team in Sweden.

    How to watch Shane Vansaghi and USA Hockey at World Juniors?

    It’s a big moment for the Americans as they bid for history, and Vansaghi lives for the big moments.

    “You go to a game at Michigan State, you understand what he brings and how he impacts games. He’s a tank. He’s physically engaged. He wins every battle, but his details are really good,” said Flahr.

    “And more importantly, off the ice, the way he conducts his business is extremely mature for a young player. It’s contagious to the people around him with how hard he works and the intensity he works.”

    When do the Flyers’ prospects face each other?

    Fans will have to wait and see if Canada and the U.S. will square off in the playoffs, but until then, sets of prospects will meet up in round-robin action during a busy night of Flyers action.

    It is a triple header of Flyers action on New Year’s Eve, closing out with the Flyers taking on the Calgary Flames at 9:30 p.m. on NBCSP.

    What is the 2026 World Juniors full schedule?

    All games will be on NHL Network or can be streamed on Fubo.

    Fri., Dec. 26

    Sat., Dec. 27

    Sun., Dec. 28

    Mon., Dec. 29

    Tues., Dec. 30

    Wed., Dec. 31

    Fri., Jan. 2

    Sun., Jan. 4

    Mon., Jan. 5

  • Flyers winger Porter Martone named Canada’s captain for the upcoming World Juniors

    Flyers winger Porter Martone named Canada’s captain for the upcoming World Juniors

    Porter Martone said he has “a bit of unfinished business” at this year’s World Junior Championship.

    “We kind of want to come back and really show what we can do,” he told The Inquirer recently.

    Now, Martone, who was selected sixth overall by the Flyers in the 2025 NHL draft, will lead that charge. On Wednesday night, after some Christmas Eve dinner, the right winger found out he had been named captain for Canada’s squad. On Thursday, they made it official.

    “Just a huge honor,” Martone told TSN, adding he was at a loss for words initially. “When you’re a kid, you dream of playing in this tournament, and to wear the captaincy for this team is special. We’ve got a great group of leaders in that room and I think it’s going to be led by committee, but we’re all excited for tomorrow to start.”

    Last year at the World Juniors in Ottawa, the Canadians were ousted by Czechia in the quarterfinals for the second consecutive tournament. Martone played in three of the team’s five games — scoring one goal — and was one of three skaters from his draft class to play for Canada, which usually takes an older roster.

    “I said last night with the group, there’s going to be lots of adversity in this tournament,” Martone added in Minnesota. “It’s not going to be easy but it’s whether at those times we come closer together and we don’t fall apart. So, when the times get going tough it’s when teams bond and that’s when you win championships.”

    He was then invited to participate in pre-tournament games and practices for Canada at the 2025 IIHF senior World Championships in May. Unlike previous players in his role, he stuck around and was called into action when Bo Horvat was injured. He suited up in two games, alongside Flyers forwards Travis Konecny and Tyson Foerster, and defensemen Travis Sanheim.

    “One day, Travis Konecny took me golfing in Sweden,” Martone told The Inquirer in June at the NHL scouting combine in Buffalo. “Foerster’s very great, kind of around my age, I sat beside him in the room. And then, Sanheim, too.

    “They’re all unbelievable people. And one thing I could tell is what it means to be a Flyer. And they really value that. They’re very tight, tight, tight people, and they really enjoy playing for the Flyers.”

    Porter Martone, right, is expected to be one of Canada’s biggest stars at the upcoming World Juniors.

    Martone has previously worn the “C” for his country. He captained the gold-medal winning Canadians at the 2024 U18 World Championship. Canada came back to beat USA Hockey, 6-4, with current Penn State forward Gavin McKenna, then 16 years old, chipping in with three goals and an assist in the finale.

    “I feel like anytime you get to put on the maple leaf, like, there’s really no words to describe it,” the 19-year-old told The Inquirer last week from Hockey Canada’s World Juniors camp in Niagara Falls, Ontario.

    “It’s definitely a huge honor. And, you know, every time you put on that maple leaf, you want to represent Canada to the best of your ability. So it’s always special. I’m really looking forward to this tournament.”

    The captain for Brampton of the Ontario Hockey League in his draft year, Martone is now suiting up for Michigan State. As a freshman, the right winger leads the Spartans in goals (11), points (20), power-play goals (three), game-winning goals (three), and penalty minutes (58) across 16 games.

    Flyers center Jett Luchanko will also compete in the upcoming World Juniors alongside Martone.

    Martone is not the only Flyers prospect who will wear a letter in Minnesota when the tournament begins on Friday. Jack Berglund, who was drafted in the second round in 2024, will be the captain for Sweden. Heikki Ruohonen, a 2024 fourth-rounder, will be an alternate captain for Finland.

    Playing alongside Martone for Hockey Canada is fellow Flyers forward Jett Luchanko, who is typically a center but is playing on the wing for Dale Hunter. It will be the second time the duo will compete together for their country at World Juniors.

    Max Westergård, who was taken in the fifth round of the 2025 draft, will also play for Finland, and Shane Vansaghi, a 2025 second-rounder and teammate of Martone’s at Michigan State, will suit up for USA Hockey. The Americans are looking for their third straight gold medal.

  • The NFL’s stadium greed, the Flyers’ missing component, and other thoughts

    The NFL’s stadium greed, the Flyers’ missing component, and other thoughts

    First and final thoughts …

    Clark Hunt and his family, who own the Kansas City Chiefs and are worth a reported $25 billion, are going to build a new domed stadium for the team in Wyandotte County, Kan. Wait, that’s not quite right. The Hunts aren’t really the ones building it. The construction is projected to take $3 billion to complete, but $1.8 billion — 60% of the cost — will come from Kansas taxpayers.

    That’s OK, though, because once the stadium is finished, it’ll be a gleaming football palace where the Chiefs’ opponents will never have to face harsh Midwest winter conditions during December and January. The teams will play football the way it was meant to be played: inside an aseptic arena where the temperature is always 72.3 degrees Fahrenheit.

    Best of all, the NFL is sure to hold at least one Super Bowl at the stadium. And by at least one, I mean one, because if there’s anywhere that the celebrities and fat cats and influencers who populate Super Bowl week can’t wait to go, it’s … the Missouri-Kansas border.

    What we’re seeing here, of course, is the privatization of profit and the socialization of cost, a dynamic as old as the modern multibillion-dollar industry of pro sports. What we’re also seeing — and it will accelerate — is the slow death of the un-rich sports crowd. Those with the financial means to go to a game in the Chiefs’ new stadium — or in a new Eagles stadium, if Jeffrey Lurie eventually gets his way — don’t want cold and snow to mar their fun. They don’t want the experience they’re having to be common or accessible.

    Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts kneels in the endzone before a game at the Kansas City Chiefs on Sept 14.

    Attending a major pro sports contest became a luxury buy long ago. Now it’s on its way to becoming a sterile exercise only a select few can afford, and those fans who care the most, who drive interest and revenue in these games boys and girls can play, end up paying anyway, even while they are kept on the other side of the window.

    Still seeking a star

    If the NHL season had ended on Christmas … well, that would be a really short NHL season. Also, the Flyers would have qualified for the playoffs for the first time since 2020, and Trevor Zegras would have been considered a brilliant offseason acquisition.

    But the season, of course, isn’t even half-finished yet, and, given the Flyers’ recent history, there’s still plenty of reason to wonder whether they’ll keep up a postseason-worthy pace. That natural skepticism accounts for some of the relative indifference to their relative success so far. People will believe the Flyers are a good team when they see the Flyers be a good team over a full 82 games.

    After falling out of favor in Anaheim, Trevor Zegras has rebounded in Philly, where he has 37 points at Christmas, besting his mark for the entire 2024-25 season.

    There’s another reason, though, why the Flyers haven’t penetrated the broader, more mainstream public conversation about Philly sports so far: They don’t have any stars.

    At his current pace, Zegras would finish with 34 goals and 83 points over 82 games, which would lead the team but place him 31st in the league in points per game. Offense has been up in the NHL for a while. This would be the fifth straight season that the average team has scored at least three goals each game, the first such stretch in the league since the early 1990s.

    Yet the Flyers haven’t been part of that surge in scoring. They have not had a player with 35 goals or more in a season since 2011-12, when Scott Hartnell had 37. They have not had a player with 40 goals or more in a season since 2008-09, when Jeff Carter had 46. And they have not had a player with 50 goals or more in a season since 1997-98, when John LeClair had 51.

    That recent history also explains part of the frustration and disgruntlement from the fan base over Matvei Michkov’s sluggish sophomore season. Michkov was supposed to be the franchise’s next superstar, and he still can be, but his regression has at least delayed his development into the kind of player who even a hockey neophyte knows and feels compelled to watch. The Flyers haven’t had such a star since Eric Lindros, and, at the moment, they still don’t.

    Casty got one thing right

    A tip of the cap to Mark Whicker, an all-time great Philadelphia sports columnist, for noting that Nick Castellanos delivered the quote of the year in Philly sports.

    After Phillies pitchers Cristopher Sánchez and Ranger Suárez were snubbed for the National League All-Star team in favor of the Milwaukee Brewers’ Jacob Misiorowski, who had made just five starts, Castellanos said:

    “This is turning into the Savannah Bananas.”

    Nick Castellanos is likely out in Philly after a couple tough years in the field and at the mound.

    No offense to the Bananas, who make baseball less stuffy and lots more fun for loads of kids in America. But Castellanos’ point about the All-Star Game being more than just a meaningless exhibition — that it is, still, supposed to be an acknowledgment of and accolade for those players who have performed best through a season’s first half — was well taken. Whatever one might think of his performance on the field in 2025, he launched that answer into the upper deck.

    Good stuff, Gramps

    In his two games with the Indianapolis Colts this season, nearly five years after he had retired, Philip Rivers — 44 years old, father of 10, grandfather of one — has completed 41 of 62 passes for 397 yards and three touchdowns.

    How hard can it be to play quarterback in the NFL if Pop-Pop can do it this well?

  • Why waste a Christmas wish on the Eagles? Phillies, Sixers need all the help they can get

    Why waste a Christmas wish on the Eagles? Phillies, Sixers need all the help they can get

    Since you’ll most likely be reading this column on Christmas Day, here’s a question in the spirit of the season for Philly sports fans:

    What would be your Christmas wish?

    Don’t be hasty and just say, “Another Lombardi Trophy.”

    Yes, it’s football season, and yes, the Eagles secured a home playoff game last Saturday, but the rest of the teams, in one manner or another, are making strides and could use your help.

    The Eagles don’t need it.

    They won it all just last season, and they also won seven years ago, and they also went to the Super Bowl three years ago. Their window for winning titles will remain open for at least another two years.

    I ran a X poll from Monday afternoon through Tuesday evening, which was this column’s deadline.

    For me, the Eagles were the last team for whom I’d hope Santa would bring some luck.

    What about the Phillies? They’ve only ever won two World Series, the last in 2008, and none since John Middleton began spending like he’s the love child of Nero and Louis XIV. They’re my choice.

    And whither The Process, now in its 13th fruitless season?

    Finally, no team has tried longer and harder to build a winner than the Flyers, now engaged in an earnest rebuild.

    Let’s investigate them all.

    Zack Wheeler has said he’s retiring after the 2027 season.

    Phillies, 52.3%

    Most folks agreed: This club needs to eat a whole bushel of apples on Christmas night (a Chinese tradition symbolizing safety and peace). Zack Wheeler is 35. Bryce Harper is 33. Trea Turner and Kyle Schwarber are 32. Tick, tick, tick.

    Wheeler, perhaps the best pitcher in franchise history, has said he’s retiring after his contract expires in 2027. Harper will then be 35, Turner and Schwarber 34. The only viable replacement for these stars is starter Cristopher Sánchez, who is 29, and who will demand an astronomical contract in 2031 — when he’s 34.

    The realistic window for the Phillies ends when Wheeler walks in two years. As such, Phillies faithful should wish for this:

    • Wheeler returns from thoracic outlet syndrome surgery in May and is back to normal by August.
    • Harper outperforms an injury-affected 2025 season that president Dave Dombrowski accurately (if unwisely) said he considered not “elite,” with a .844 OPS, and again produces at an elite level — say, the .937 OPS he averaged in the 10 previous seasons, which was best among all players with at least 5,000 plate appearances.
    • Turner hits .300, as he has since 2024.
    • Schwarber matches his average of 46 homers in his four previous Phillies seasons.
    • Closer Jhoan Duran and setup man José Alvarado are dominant for seven months.
    • Sánchez is, once again, a horse.

    That’s a lot to ask for, but, hey, Christmas comes but once a year.

    Howie Roseman (left), Nick Sirianni, and the Eagles don’t need to rely on Christmas wishes.

    Eagles 36.7%

    A pleasant surprise. I not only thought the Eagles would win the poll with a plurality — say, 45% — I thought that Philly fans wouldn’t be sophisticated enough to accept the logic that makes the Phillies the clear choice.

    Apologies.

    And good job.

    After all, why squander a Christmas wish on a team that doesn’t need it? Thanks to the era of ownership that began with Jeffrey Lurie’s purchase of the team in 1994 — 19 playoff appearances, four Super Bowl appearances, and two titles — the Eagles are, by far, the best team in town. There’s no need for the Birds to put a carp scale in their wallet and carry it around all year (a German/Polish tradition).

    The Birds have given Philadelphia the best seven-year run of any team in the city’s history, and there’s no reason to think that run is anywhere close to ending.

    Howie Roseman has constructed a roster with contracts that ensure at least two more peak years of Jalen Hurts, Saquon Barkley, A.J. Brown, DeVonta Smith, Landon Dickerson, Jordan Mailata, Cam Jurgens, Jalen Carter, Zack Baun, Cooper DeJean, and, last but not least, Quinyon Mitchell, who might be the best of them all.

    Further, head coach Nick Sirianni and his two best assistants, defensive coordinator Vic Fangio and offensive line coach Jeff Stoutland, aren’t going anywhere. No team in Philadelphia, in the NFC East, or in the entire NFL is better positioned for continued success than the Eagles.

    Don’t waste a wish on them.

    Flyers goaltender Dan Vladař against the Vancouver Canucks on Dec. 22.

    Flyers, 8.9%

    This is a great result for a team that hasn’t made the playoffs since the first time Donald Trump was president.

    Dan Vladař has a top-10 2.39 goals-against average, which, if the season ended today, would be the best GAA for a starting Flyers goalie in a decade. Similarly, the Flyers haven’t sent a defenseman to the All-Star game since Kimmo Timonen in 2012.

    These are institutional issues that cannot be undone, no matter how many spider webs you use to decorate the tree (a Ukrainian tradition and the origin of tinsel).

    That said, Vladař, having a career year, is under contract through next season. The team has hovered around the playoff bubble all season. They should lock up Trevor Zegras, a 24-year-old trade gamble who can be a restricted free agent after this season but who leads them in goals and assists.

    The wish: Vladař stays steady, Zegras continues to produce, and error-prone young talent Matvei Michkov eventually prospers under demanding new coach Rick Tocchet. If that happens, the Flyers’ goal to once again be a perennial playoff team is not unreasonable, beginning this spring.

    Joel Embiid (21) shoots against the Indiana Pacers during the second quarter at Xfinity Mobile Arena.

    Sixers, 2.1%

    Like all X polls, mine was unscientific, since it mainly drew from the folks who follow me, who obviously possess high degrees of discernment and taste.

    Maybe that’s why poll respondents seem to have utterly abandoned the Sixers.

    More than any Philly franchise, this bad-luck franchise needs to burn some shoes (a Greek Christmas tradition). I can’t blame the respondents, what with the team’s egregious misevaluations of talent; its mismanagement of the draft, free agency, and player development; not to mention the self-inflicted dramas of Ben Simmons, James Harden, and, of course, Joel Embiid, whose continued entitlement and incredible fragility have exhausted the patience of the populace.

    That said, they’re still ours, and they’re not bad. Tyrese Maxey’s talent and exuberance provide an anchor, the potential of rookie überathlete VJ Edgecombe, the increased presence of Paul George, an energetic supporting cast, and superb coaching from Nick Nurse have made this edition of the Sixers the most watchable team since The Process began in 2013.

    As for the big guy, like him or loathe him, Embiid’s presence makes them markedly better, especially if he is active on the defensive end, which, if you know the game, always has been his greatest value. As of Tuesday, Embiid’s knees had him on pace to play 33 games. The wish:

    By the time the season ends in mid-April, the Sixers can get him to 41 games, which is half the schedule. At that point, if he can play every other day, which is a typical playoff schedule, they not only would have a chance to win a playoff round, but they also would have a template for the next two seasons, the final years of George’s monster contract.

    But 2%?

    Even with a likable young trio, Embiid’s toxic presence has, for most people, ruined the image of the only team I ever cared for (and that, only as a youth).

  • Eagles vs. Bills predictions: Our writers pick a winner for Week 17

    Eagles vs. Bills predictions: Our writers pick a winner for Week 17

    The Eagles and Buffalo Bills meet Sunday in Western New York in one of the best games of the NFL’s Week 17 slate — and maybe the entire 2025 season.

    Josh Allen vs. Jalen Hurts. Western New Yorker Nick Sirianni vs. La Salle College High School graduate Sean McDermott. Cheesesteaks vs. wings.

    The two teams played a classic in South Philly two years ago. Will Sunday deliver the same kind of drama?

    Here’s what our writers think:

    Jeff Neiburg

    I had these teams as my preseason Super Bowl matchup, and I still think Sunday afternoon could be a Super Bowl preview. There are a bunch of flawed teams preparing to battle it out in what seems to be a wide-open NFL playoffs.

    These two teams are among the flawed, but they’re also pretty good.

    Great offense and average defense (Bills) vs. great defense and average offense (Eagles). Who has the edge? I’m leaning Eagles.

    The running game is showing signs of life, and the Bills have been dreadful against the run. They allow 144.3 rushing yards per game, which ranks 29th in the league. They are much better against the pass (167.1 yards, second), but the Eagles should give them trouble with an improving, balanced attack. The offense has looked much better — even if it struggled to finish drives last week — over the last two games, but the Bills present a step up in competition.

    Allen should find it difficult to find open receivers given the quality of the Eagles’ secondary vs. the Bills’ receivers. But Buffalo does a great job protecting Allen. The Bills’ pressure rate allowed of 29.7% ranks sixth in the league. More time for Allen means more time for him to freelance and make plays, and there aren’t many better than him.

    The Eagles have struggled this year against quarterbacks who run, but they kept Marcus Mariota in check before he left the game in the second half.

    It’s a tough one to predict in what essentially is a coin-flip game. But I think the Eagles find a way to win.

    Prediction: Eagles 27, Bills 23

    Bills running back James Cook (right) is the NFL’s leading rusher.

    Olivia Reiner

    The key to an Eagles win starts in the trenches on both sides of the ball.

    James Cook is the league’s top rusher at 1,532 yards on the season. Defensive coordinator Vic Fangio lauded Cook for his elusiveness as a runner and touted his speed once he gets into the open field. This is going to be the Eagles run defense’s biggest test since the Bears game, but they’ve been pretty sound on the ground since then.

    Cook isn’t the only challenge on the ground. Allen is capable of using his legs to extend plays and executing designed runs (especially in the low red zone).

    The prospect of getting Jalen Carter back could be a big boost to the defensive line. The group has already been playing at a high level over the last few weeks, especially Jordan Davis and Brandon Graham. It will be interesting to see if Fangio continues to utilize Graham at defensive tackle upon Carter’s return.

    On the other side, the Eagles offense has done a better job of marrying the run with the pass in recent weeks. They must establish the run game against the Bills, a prospect that ought to be attainable.

    While the Bills boast one of the best pass defenses in the league, their run defense is suspect, conceding 5.4 yards per attempt (the second-most in the NFL).

    Buffalo is a tough place to play. The Bills are a good team with a great quarterback, who may be limited by a foot injury on Sunday. I’m not fully convinced that the Bills are a great team, especially given their strength of schedule this season.

    Prediction: Eagles 28, Bills 27

  • Jalen Carter’s shoulder fix may be temporary, but he’s ready to help the Eagles down the stretch

    Jalen Carter’s shoulder fix may be temporary, but he’s ready to help the Eagles down the stretch

    The Chicago Bears game was a breaking point for Jalen Carter.

    His shoulders had bothered him since training camp, and on the day the Eagles’ defense was gashed for 281 rushing yards in a Black Friday blackout, Carter’s deficiencies showed on the film, he said. The Eagles even took him off the field on early downs.

    There’s a lot of hand-to-hand combat that happens at the line of scrimmage, and Carter couldn’t strike and use his hands the way he usually does. He didn’t have the strength in part because the shoulder pain and mobility limitations made it so that he couldn’t lift weights. Even pushups were painful.

    “The shoulders were kind of restricting it but I tried to fight through it,” Carter said.

    Until he couldn’t. Carter called his shoulder ailments “a little serious” back in October and alluded to a possibility of taking “a little break” to get right. Two months later, and three days after that 24-15 loss, his words came true.

    Carter said Wednesday that he got multiple shots in both shoulders. He feels a lot better now, but the procedures may have been temporary fixes. Carter said he probably won’t feel 100% during the upcoming playoff run and will likely have to revisit the injuries in the offseason.

    Eagles defensive tackle Jalen Carter shown against the Detroit Lions on Nov. 20.

    “I can’t get too excited because I’m still working on it every day, still getting the strength back,” he said.

    Carter is in line to make his return Sunday vs. the Buffalo Bills after missing the previous three games. Carter said he wanted to play every snap, but the Eagles will likely work him back slowly. While conditioning was an issue earlier in the season, Carter said he was able to run and lift and feels like his conditioning won’t slow him down.

    Carter practiced Tuesday in some capacity, though the Eagles weren’t required to give an injury report. Carter was listed as a full participant Wednesday. He said he can feel the difference in practice during practice periods against offensive linemen.

    The Eagles’ defensive front has played well in Carter’s absence. Carter loved watching Jordan Davis, Moro Ojomo, Byron Young, and even Brandon Graham — who moved to the interior with Carter out — help the Eagles go 2-1 over the last three games. But he wanted to be out there.

    “You want to get out there but you can’t rush the process and hurt it even more,” he said.

    The Eagles barely missed Carter vs. Las Vegas and Washington, but the team waiting for him Sunday in western New York is a different challenge with one of the better quarterback-running back combinations in the NFL.

    Carter and Bills running back James Cook overlapped at Georgia. And Josh Allen is a “dog,” Carter said.

    “I remember when we played them two years ago and I missed a sack on him,” he said. “We got to get that back.”

    Injury report

    Lane Johnson (foot) remained out during practice Wednesday, as did Nakobe Dean (hamstring).

    Landon Dickerson (illness) also missed Wednesday’s workout, as did A.J. Brown, who had a dental procedure.

  • There’s no denying the Flyers’ good vibes. What’s behind this season’s positive shift?

    There’s no denying the Flyers’ good vibes. What’s behind this season’s positive shift?

    CHICAGO — Travis Konecny walked into the visitors’ locker room long after the Flyers’ 3-1 victory against the Chicago Blackhawks.

    The alternate captain had just wrapped up doing TNT’s postgame show. He sat down at his stall, wearing everything but his helmet and gloves, ready to chat with the assembled reporters.

    Konecny unwrapped the tape holding his shin guards in place and answered his last question. In a video recorded by the Flyers’ content staffers, you can see a big grin on his face as he paused while talking about notching his 300th NHL assist. Teammate Trevor Zegras is standing behind the media, peering in before saying, “Take your gear off,” with a chuckle.

    It was just one example of many seen around this team since the start of training camp — the Flyers are light and loose this season.

    “I think in here we know we can have as much fun as we want, but when we go on the ice, we have a job to do,” forward Owen Tippett recently told The Inquirer.

    “I think that’s what makes it more special, is that we know we can kind of joke around and mess around with each other off the ice, but as soon as the puck drops, we’re all ready to go to battle for each other.”

    There are several factors contributing to the Flyers’ good vibrations.

    One could be that they wrapped up a perfect back-to-back for the second time this season, after beating the Vancouver Canucks 5-2 on Monday.

    Flyers Bobby Brink watches his goal on the replay as he celebrates with Trevor Zegras (right) and other teammates during a Dec. 3 game.

    The wins halted the Flyers’ fifth losing streak this season at two games. The longest? A measly three-game swing Dec. 11-14, with each loss coming after regulation. There’s still a lot of runway left in the season but the last time the Flyers didn’t have more than a three-game slide was 2011-12.

    That season, current general manager Danny Brière was pulling on a hockey sweater every night instead of a suit, and captain Sean Couturier was a rookie.

    “Enjoy the game. Enjoy everything that goes around you,” Couturier said before playing his 900th game on Dec. 7. “I feel when I was 18, I was just so serious, so focused, which is not a bad thing, but I think throughout the years, I figured to kind of balance it out and take the game on a little lighter side at times, and don’t want to be so serious and focused.

    “That’s probably the thing I’d recommend to myself [back then]. Just loosen up a little bit and enjoy it.”

    The Flyers are loose and enjoying it. And playing well. Yes, the 12 regulation wins — second fewest in the Eastern Conference — are an issue, given that regulation wins are the first tiebreaker for a playoff spot.

    But a team many outsiders expected to be at the bottom of the standings is not just in second place of the Metropolitan Division and two points back of the Carolina Hurricanes at the NHL’s holiday break, but has the sixth-best points percentage in the entire league.

    “I don’t think we care about what they think,” Dvorak said after Monday’s game when asked about the Flyers starting to make the rest of the division believers.

    “We just care about how we believe in ourselves and how we’re playing. And there’s a lot of belief in our room here, and we’re confident in ourselves, and that’s all that really matters.”

    Flyers (from left to right) right wing Owen Tippett, defenseman Travis Sanheim, center Trevor Zegras and center Christian Dvorak on the ice against the Pittsburgh Penguins on Dec. 1.

    Some would point to the maturation of players who have bonded and built a strong culture over the past few seasons. Others would say it’s the injection of veterans and youngsters. Zegras, center Christian Dvorak, forward Carl Grundström, and goalie Dan Vladař (recently compared by coach Rick Tocchet to the vocal goalie in the movie Slap Shot, Denis Lemieux) specifically have injected balance to the lineup.

    “We’re a really, really tight group,” Konecny told The Inquirer in mid-December. “And that’s the thing. I’m sure every team says it, but for some of the guys who have been elsewhere that are here, the staff that’s here, we hear how tight this group is from those guys. … Like, for me, I don’t know any other team, but from what I hear, when guys come in here, this is a great group.

    There is one obvious answer that everyone would probably cite when it comes to the change: the new bench boss.

    There’s no denying the different coaching style Tocchet has when compared to predecessor John Tortorella. When things go bad, you look to the bench and, while he will have his moments, Tocchet often remains cool as a cucumber.

    During practices, he is constantly spotted feeding pucks to players as they work on a specific skill. Notably, Tocchet was seen sending passes recently to Zegras in Voorhees for one-timers like the one he scored on Monday night. Other times, he’s at the whiteboard drawing out a system or structure he wants, or, at 61 years young, the Flyers Hall of Famer is showing players how to shift or move on the ice when trying to evade defenders.

    Flyers head coach Rick Tocchet.

    “Regardless of the winning and losing, I think that when players respect each other, and they have fun with each other, and they care about each other, it goes a long way. If somebody has a bad game or something bad happens, you have people to rally around,” said Tocchet, who played 621 of his 1,144 NHL games in orange and black.

    “Even as a coach, like, I might give a couple of guys [stuff], and you know when I leave, there’s three or four guys picking those guys up. And that’s so valuable for me as a coach. … It’s a huge thing to have that closeness.”

    That closeness can be felt in the room or on the ice. The players go to bat for each other during games and chirp and pick on each other in the room. But they also sit around and discuss what just happened in practice or during a game, and what they did well or need to work on.

    Maybe that’s why they are 19-10-7 through 36 games and playing not just well, but putting the NHL’s top teams on the ropes while beating bad teams.

    Last season, it took the Flyers 44 games to reach 19 wins. Two seasons ago, when they looked like a playoff team before a late-season collapse, it took them 34. (By the way, win No. 19 that season was against Tocchet and the Canucks).

    The Flyers rank 19th in goals per game (2.94) — roughly one-tenth better than last season — but have skyrocketed from the fifth-worst team in goals allowed (3.45) to the ninth-best (2.75). The penalty kill has stabilized lately after a drop and is the ninth-best in the NHL (82.5%), and the power play is not the worst in the league. It’s tied for 23rd with the Hurricanes (16.8%) and has connected three times in the last three games.

    Flyers defenseman Travis Sanheim, right wing Travis Konecny, and center Sean Couturier on the ice against the Carolina Hurricanes on Dec. 13.

    Why are things working? There’s a buy-in.

    “I think you’ve got to be committed to getting to the right areas,” Konecny said Tuesday when asked about the Flyers scoring two more goals by getting to the net.

    “And I think, I forget, might have been Jay [Varady] our assistant coach, he said, ‘You do the right thing 20 times, and nothing happens. But that 21st time is when it goes in, and if you have that mentality of just like doing the right thing every shift, and your opportunities will come, then I think everyone’s going to be in a good spot.’”

    And right now, the Flyers are in a pretty darn good spot.