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Flyers Rumors

Flyers Name Rick Tocchet Head Coach

May 14, 2025 at 3:01 pm CDT | by Josh Erickson 15 Comments

3:01 p.m.: The Flyers have made Tocchet’s hiring official. Brière had the following statement:

I am very happy to welcome Rick Tocchet as our head coach. During this process it became clear that Rick was the absolute right coach to lead our team. He has enjoyed the highest level of success both as a player and coach. Rick’s ability to teach and understand his players, combined with his passion for winning, brings out the best in young players at different stages of their development and has earned the respect and confidence of highly talented All-Stars and veteran players alike.

10:32 a.m.: The Flyers are close to announcing Rick Tocchet as their next head coach, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet confirms Wednesday. ESPN’s John Buccigross implied yesterday that things were moving in that direction.

It’s far from an unexpected move from general manager Daniel Brière and the rest of the front office, who were linked to Tocchet almost immediately after firing John Tortorella late in the regular season. Friedman said Monday that things were moving slower than expected for Tocchet landing a new role after not having his option picked up by the Canucks but that he remained high on the list of Philadelphia’s preferred candidates.

Tocchet returns to some familiar stomping grounds in the City of Brotherly Love. He played parts of 11 of his 18 NHL seasons as a player there, ranking 16th in franchise history in scoring with 508 points in 621 games as a Flyer. His now decades-long coaching career hasn’t yet taken him back to Philly, though.

He walks into a familiar situation with the Flyers, who are not quite out of the woods of their rebuild but have aspirations of being so in short order. As was the case in his most recent stops in Arizona and Vancouver, Tocchet assumes control of a forward group with a young, foundational piece in Matvei Michkov, supplemented by some veteran anchors in Sean Couturier and Travis Konecny.

Tocchet brings nine seasons of experience as an NHL head coach to the Flyers’ bench. He’s posted a career 286-265-87 (.516) record in 638 regular-season games, including a Pacific Division title and Coach of the Year honors with the Canucks just one year ago. He began his career with a year-and-a-half stint with the Lightning in the late aughts before resurfacing as Arizona’s head coach in 2017.

While it’s the first big offseason move for the Flyers, it can’t be their only one if they’re serious about improving their record in 2025-26. Their coaching hire’s impact will be virtually invisible if they can’t find a fix to their goaltending situation, which tanked Philly’s otherwise decent control of scoring chances at 5-on-5 last season. The trio of Samuel Ersson, Ivan Fedotov, and Aleksei Kolosov – all of whom remain under contract for next year – combined to allow a staggering 42.5 goals above expected, per MoneyPuck.

Tocchet’s support staff also remains up in the air. The Flyers also let go of two assistants and their skills coach after the season ended. Brad Shaw, who took over as interim head coach for the final few weeks of the season, is expected to stay on as an assistant, Kevin Kurz of The Athletic said last month.

Image courtesy of Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images.

Newsstand| Philadelphia Flyers Rick Tocchet

15 comments

Flyers Re-Sign Rodrigo Abols

May 14, 2025 at 8:52 am CDT | by Josh Erickson Leave a Comment

The Flyers are keeping depth center Rodrigo Abols around for another season, PuckPedia reports. It’s a one-year, one-way deal with an $800K cap hit.

It’s a significant raise in real cash for Abols, who signed a two-way deal with Philadelphia last summer. The 29-year-old Latvian was a seventh-round pick by the Canucks in 2016 but had spent most of his professional career overseas, a one-year run in the Panthers’ farm system in 2019-20 notwithstanding.

After establishing himself as a quality middle-six center with good defensive instincts in the Swedish Hockey League with Orebro HK and Rogle BK, Abols decided to try North American hockey again in the 2024 offseason. He didn’t make the Flyers’ roster out of camp but got some extended looks in the latter half of the campaign, marking his NHL debut.

The 6’4″, 205-lb center played 22 games for the Flyers, almost exclusively in a fourth-line role. He averaged just 9:11 per game but did manage a pair of goals and three assists. Most of his positive impact was felt in the faceoff circle, where he won 66 of his 113 draws (58.4%). He didn’t have sterling defensive impacts, but things weren’t as bad as his -10 rating in limited action suggested, either. Philadelphia controlled 49% of shot attempts and 46.1% of expected goals with Abolts on the ice at 5-on-5.

Given Abols’ track record of quickly returning to Europe when things didn’t work out stateside, some believed it was likely he’d do so again this summer upon reaching unrestricted free agency. Philly would almost certainly need to give him a one-way commitment to retain him – evidently, that’s what they’ve decided to do. Whether the deal indicates they’ve pencilled him into a fringe roster spot remains to be seen.

If not, Abols was a good producer for AHL Lehigh Valley. He posted a 15-17–32 scoring line in 47 games for the minor-league club.

Philadelphia Flyers| Transactions Rodrigo Abols

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Latest On Rick Tocchet

May 13, 2025 at 10:30 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 17 Comments

May 13th: According to TSN’s Darren Dreger, Tocchet won’t have to wait much longer for a new head coaching role. Dreger indicates that Tocchet will land a new gig this week, and the Bruins, Flyers, and Kraken have been the most interested suitors, similarly to Friedman.

May 12th: Former Canucks bench boss Rick Tocchet is the most recent entrant to the market after unproductive extension talks led Vancouver not to pick up his contract option for 2025-26. While there’s been some expected interest in his services already – the Bruins are believed to want to interview him – the market for his services isn’t as strong as some would have anticipated, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman told CHEK’s Rick Dhaliwal today.

Weeks before it was clear Tocchet wouldn’t be back with the Canucks, he was being linked to the Flyers, where he spent a good portion of his playing career. Philly remains on the hunt for a permanent bench boss after firing John Tortorella late in the season. While Tocchet was reported as a favorite a few weeks ago, there’s yet to be confirmation he’s been interviewed by the Flyers. Friedman told Dhaliwal that Tocchet remains “high on their radar,” but they’ve expanded their search to other names enough (like Pat Ferschweiler and Jay McKee) that Tocchet is no longer a clear-cut frontrunner for the job.

As for other landing spots, Friedman believes Tocchet will ultimately end up commanding too much money for Boston to go his direction. Vancouver’s extension offer to Tocchet was in the $4MM range annually, Friedman said. While money wasn’t the primary reason Tocchet opted not to extend, it stands to reason he won’t take much less, if at all, than that figure after receiving a firm offer.

Another team demonstrating interest in Tocchet during this offseason’s hiring cycle is the Kraken, Friedman relays. It doesn’t appear the interest is mutual at this stage, though. There’s a legitimate possibility he goes unhired and returns to a familiar television job on TNT’s intermission panel, where he served between being let go by the Coyotes at the end of the 2020-21 season and being picked up by the Canucks midway through 2022-23.

There are other jobs out there – the Blackhawks and Penguins. It stands to reason he wouldn’t prefer the former if he’s not interested in another Western Conference non-contending team in Seattle. Pittsburgh remains an intriguing option – he won a combined four Stanley Cups there as a player and assistant coach – but it’ll be a while before they make a decision, Josh Yohe of The Athletic wrote earlier this month.

Boston Bruins| Philadelphia Flyers| Seattle Kraken Rick Tocchet

17 comments

Jay McKee Could Be On Flyers Coaching Radar

May 11, 2025 at 6:55 pm CDT | by Paul Griser 4 Comments

As Flyers general manager Daniel Brière and his staff continue to explore options for their next head coach, the list of candidates keeps growing, and current OHL coach Jay McKee could be among those in consideration, per Jordan Hall of NBC Sports Philadelphia.

Brière has previously stated that the next head coach should be someone who can effectively communicate with, and develop, a young roster. That’s where Briere’s former teammate McKee, the current head coach of the OHL’s Brantford Bulldogs, may excel. At just 47-year-old, McKee had a successful career in the NHL and has a great track record coaching younger players in the OHL. These qualities, along with the familiarity Brière has with his former teammate, may make McKee a strong candidate for the Flyers’ head coaching job.

McKee led Brantford to a 44-19-5 record this past season, and helped the team capture the 2022 OHL title. McKee has spent parts of eight seasons as a head coach in the OHL. His coaching career began in 2011 when he was named an assistant coach of the Rochester Americans. McKee began his coaching career as an assistant with the OHL’s Erie Otters, where he worked with future superstar Connor McDavid. He later served several seasons as head coach of the Kitchener Rangers before taking over behind the bench in Brantford in 2021. Since then, he has compiled a 121-62-21 record and led the team to one division title. And as Hall points out, several coaches have successfully made the jump from the OHL to the NHL, including Jacques Martin, Peter DeBoer, and Sheldon Keefe.

In addition to McKee, the Flyers have also been linked Philly legend Rick Tocchet, Western Michigan University coach Pat Ferschweiler, and current interim head coach Brad Shaw.

Philadelphia Flyers

4 comments

Noah Cates Reportedly Leaning Toward Filing For Arbitration This Summer

May 11, 2025 at 11:48 am CDT | by Brian La Rose 5 Comments

Arbitration decisions are still nearly two months away but one player may already be leaning toward going in that direction.  Anthony Di Marco of Daily Faceoff reports that Flyers forward Noah Cates is not believed to be interested in signing a long-term deal and instead, prefers to simply file for arbitration and take a one-year award.

The 26-year-old has only one RFA-eligible season remaining so such a route would walk him right to UFA eligibility, certainly not an ideal situation for Philadelphia.  However, Cates has had some ups and downs in recent years which makes forecasting the right price tag for a long-term agreement a little trickier.

In 2022-23, Cates had a solid year, tallying 13 goals and 25 assists in his first full NHL campaign.  But with his limited track record, the two sides decided that a bridge agreement would make the most sense, settling on a two-year, $5.25MM deal that summer.  The deal carried a uniform $2.625MM salary, making that the qualifying offer Philadelphia will have to tender him next month.

Unfortunately, the first season didn’t go particularly well as he was limited to just six goals and a dozen helpers in 59 games while seeing his playing time drop by nearly four minutes a night.  Cates fared better this year, rebounding to 16 goals and 21 assists in 78 contests while logging nearly 16 minutes per game of ice time, gaining back a little more than half of his lost ice time the year before.

While that certainly helps his case heading into restricted free agency this summer, the inconsistency still makes it difficult to find a long-term price tag that both sides would likely be happy with.  Di Marco suggests that the team likely views him somewhere in the $3.5MM to $4MM range on a longer-term contract which isn’t that big of a jump from what he has made the last two years.

Given the bounce-back effort this year, Cates’ camp probably feels that they can reach at least the $3MM mark simply by going to a hearing so it’s understandable that a longer-term pact worth not much more than that might not be the most appealing.  If the Flyers are uncomfortable going higher than that long-term (which is also understandable given his inconsistency), opting for the hearing makes a lot of sense.

That approach may lead GM Daniel Briere to examine potential trade options for Cates.  If there’s a team out there willing to meet the higher asking price or even offer a medium-term deal more in his price range, Cates might have more trade value now when that contract could still be signed compared to possibly being an in-season rental player.  Given that Cates predominantly played down the middle this season, Briere should be able to generate some strong interest if he decides to go that route.  Otherwise, it appears we might be seeing Cates among the group to file for arbitration in early July.

Arbitration| Philadelphia Flyers Noah Cates

5 comments

Poll: Who Will Win The 2025 Calder Memorial Trophy?

May 7, 2025 at 7:12 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain 11 Comments

Unlike many years where there is a clear-cut favorite for the Calder Memorial Trophy, the 2024-25 season had different ideas. A reasonable case could be made for any of this year’s finalists: Lane Hutson of the Montreal Canadiens, Dustin Wolf of the Calgary Flames, and Macklin Celebrini of the San Jose Sharks.

Hutson likely has the strongest case of the trio. The former 62nd overall selection scored six goals and 60 assists in 82 games for the Canadiens this season, tying Hall-of-Famer Larry Murphy for the most assists recorded by a rookie defenseman. The 20-year-old blue liner ranked second on Montreal in ATOI (22:44) and was a large part of their run to the postseason for the first time since the 2021 Stanley Cup playoffs. Additionally, Hutson led the Canadiens in postseason scoring with five assists in five games.

Meanwhile, Wolf looks to become the first netminder to win the award since Steve Mason of the Columbus Blue Jackets in 2008-09. He finished with a slightly worse year than Mason, comparatively, managing a 29-16-8 record in 53 games with a .910 SV% and 2.64 GAA. Still, although Mason backstopped the Blue Jackets to their first postseason appearance in 2009, Wolf was a major reason the Flames remained competitive until the last week of the regular season.

Lastly, last summer’s first overall pick will also be up for the award. Celebrini was one of the few bright spots on a rebuilding Sharks team, leading the team in scoring with 25 goals and 63 points in 70 games. His offensive output tied with fellow-rookie Matvei Michkov of the Philadelphia Flyers (in 10 fewer games), and bested last year’s Calder recipient, the Chicago Blackhawks’ Connor Bedard, by two points in two additional contests. Celebrini’s 25 goals accounted for 12% of all San Jose goals this season.

Although the members of the Professional Hockey Writers Association (PHWA) will have the final say in who ultimately wins the award, it’s time to cast your vote. Who do you think will win this year’s Calder Memorial Trophy? Vote below!

If the poll doesn’t show up for you, click here to vote.

Calgary Flames| Montreal Canadiens| Philadelphia Flyers| Polls| San Jose Sharks Dustin Wolf| Lane Hutson| Macklin Celebrini

11 comments

Offseason Checklist: Philadelphia Flyers

May 3, 2025 at 11:28 am CDT | by Brian La Rose 5 Comments

The offseason has arrived for half of the league’s teams that aren’t taking part in the playoffs plus those eliminated already in the opening round.  Accordingly, it’s now time to examine what they will need to accomplish over the coming months.  Next up is a look at Philadelphia.

A year ago, the Flyers nearly pulled off an improbable run before falling off to finish the regular season.  Unfortunately for them, that slide continued for most of the 2024-25 campaign and they finished tied for last in the Eastern Conference.  While GM Daniel Briere likely knew that expectations were a bit inflated based on their finish last year, dropping back this much wasn’t what he had in mind.  As a result, there’s a lot that they need to accomplish in the coming months.

Hire A New Coach

Heading into the final couple of months, the belief seemed to be that John Tortorella would last the season and then he and the team would sit down to discuss his future.  However, following a sequence that saw them drop 11 of 12 games in the final few weeks of the season, Briere decided to make a decision before the year ended, firing Tortorella in late March while elevating Brad Shaw to the interim head coaching role for the final nine games.

Interestingly, the Flyers turned things around following the change, picking up 11 points under Shaw while averaging four goals per game.  While nine games is a very small sample size and it’s hard to put much stock in playing out the stretch, their performance under Shaw should help the 61-year-old gain some legitimate consideration for the full-time nod.  What might hurt him is that his only other head coaching experience came nearly 20 years ago when he was promoted to an interim role midseason with the Islanders.

It will be interesting to see what Briere will choose to do here.  As a team that’s still rebuilding, a coach focused on development would make some sense.  And in that case, keeping Shaw in the role on a short-term deal could make some sense.  That would allow both sides more time to assess if he’s the coach that could run the team for the longer haul or if he’d be the one who gets them through this next phase before looking for more of a win-now coach after.

Having said that, Briere has talked about this team trying to take a step forward in the near future which could have him leaning toward a more experienced option.  There’s no shortage of veteran coaches on the market now if he wants to go that route.  Either way, if they have a preferred option, Briere will need to move quickly as some of these vacancies will likely be filled before too long.

Find A Goalie Upgrade

The Flyers have been trying to find a legitimate starting goalie for the better part of two generations now.  The hope was that Ivan Fedotov could be their goalie of the future; they held onto that hope for a long time while they waited for him to come over from Russia.  However, after posting a save percentage of just .880 this season, there’s a chance they run him through waivers in 2025-26.  He’s not the long-term solution.

Aleksei Kolosov also had some potential but no desire to bide his time in the minors.  He spent the bulk of the year in Philadelphia, struggled more than Fedotov did, then went back to Russia over returning to AHL Lehigh Valley.  At this point, while he might have some upside, he can’t be counted on as the solution either.

Samuel Ersson has shown some flashes of being a quality goaltender but has also struggled under the weight of being the de facto number one goalie the last two seasons.  It’s possible that he’s part of the longer-term solution as the second option but it would be surprising to see Briere and the Flyers think they have their future starter on their roster today.

With a stated goal to be more competitive next season, this is a position that needs to be upgraded.  Unfortunately for them, that’s something that will be easier said than done this summer.  The UFA market between the pipes doesn’t have a single sure-fire starter available so they can’t go that route.  Meanwhile, legitimate number ones aren’t traded a whole lot although they could make sense as a possible landing spot for John Gibson if this proves to be the summer Anaheim decides to move him.  That said, he’d carry some question marks as well.

At a time when there aren’t as many true legitimate number one goalies out there, finding one becomes that much harder.  But at this point, even an upgrade a tier below that could be enough to give the Flyers a few more wins next season.  Even with all of Ersson, Fedotov, and Kolosov signed, they need to find a way to add one more netminder to the group, one that will see big minutes next season.

Re-Sign Key RFAs

A lot has changed over the last season for Cam York.  This time last year, it looked like he had taken that step forward to cement himself as a core piece on the back end.  However, things didn’t go so well this season, calling that into question.  The 24-year-old is seeing his bridge deal come to an end this summer and while he’s going to land considerably more than $1.6MM either way, Briere is going to need to decide if he’s seen enough to lock York up long-term or push for another short-term contract.

York is three years away from UFA eligibility so they could look for another bridge agreement although they run the risk of him having a breakout and needing a much more expensive contract a couple of years from now.  Or worse, he decides he wants to test the open market and simply opts to take an arbitration award at the end.  On the other hand, if they’re uncertain about his long-term upside, another bridge makes sense.  Meanwhile, if they feel that York for sure is going to be part of the long-term core, then trying to work out a long-term agreement makes some sense although the cost of it will likely seem high relative to his performance this season.

Tyson Foerster is another RFA of note.  He only has two full NHL seasons under his belt but has reached the 20-goal mark each time including a 25-goal showing this year.  If the team feels the 2020 first-rounder has another level to get to, they could look to try to do a long-term agreement, not unlike the pact that former Flyer Joel Farabee received.  Otherwise, a short-term bridge contract will be coming his way, likely somewhere in the $3.5MM range.

Speaking of forwards, Noah Cates also needs a new deal as his bridge agreement will end at the end of June.  Notably, he’s only one year away from UFA eligibility and has arbitration rights this time around.  After a rough first year on his soon-to-expire deal, he bounced back with 37 points this season.  That should be enough to land him a small raise on another short-term contract as it’s unlikely Briere will be comfortable handing out a long-term agreement to someone who has run hot and cold over the last few years.

Flip The Switch

If the plan is to go from asset accumulation to starting to add pieces, the Flyers have a lot of work to do this summer to try to get back into playoff contention.  On top of needing a viable starting goaltender, their back end isn’t the strongest nor is their forward group which finished in the bottom ten in scoring despite the hot finish under Shaw.  It’s the fourth year in a row they’ve landed in the bottom ten in goals scored so this wasn’t a one-off either.

If they’re going to truly get back into the thick of things, they’ll need at least one top-six forward addition coupled with younger players like Matvei Michkov, Foerster, Owen Tippett, and Bobby Brink all taking steps forward offensively to move their attack closer to the middle of the pack.  Defensively, with York struggling a bit last year, Jamie Drysdale being up and down, and Rasmus Ristolainen set to miss the start of next season, there’s a legitimate need for at least one top-four defender if they’re serious about being in the mix in 2025-26.

The good news is that Philadelphia is well-positioned to try to add some core elements.  They have nearly $25MM in cap room per PuckPedia, an amount that can be added to if Ryan Ellis needs to be moved to LTIR.  Yes, new deals for their RFAs will cut into that but there will still be enough left for one or two additions of note.

Meanwhile, the Flyers have three first-round picks at their disposal next month along with four picks in the second round.  Some of those will undoubtedly be kept to add to their prospect pool but some of those selections could be dangled for win-now help, especially if they can add an experienced younger player who fits in age-wise with their current core.  Adding through free agency but they have some decent trade chips to dangle over the coming weeks to try to flip the switch from being a rebuilding team to one looking to make a push.

Photo courtesy of Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images.

Offseason Checklist 2025| Philadelphia Flyers| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

5 comments

Pat Ferschweiler Interviews For Flyers Head Coaching Job

May 1, 2025 at 11:54 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 2 Comments

Western Michigan University head coach Pat Ferschweiler was interviewed by the Flyers this week for their head coaching position, ESPN’s Kevin Weekes said.

Ferschweiler, 55, is coming off a national championship and has been mentioned as a potential candidate of interest for Philly multiple times in the past few weeks. It’s the first time he’s gotten NHL head coaching buzz, but it wouldn’t be his first time coaching in the league. The Minnesota native was an assistant coach with the Red Wings under Jeff Blashill from 2015-16 through 2018-19.

The reigning NCAA Coach of the Year never made it to the NHL as a player, but he did have an eight-year professional career as a right winger and defenseman in the minors and briefly in England. He has guided the Broncos to a 104-42-10 record over the last four years, making the NCHC tournament on every occasion, after making the playoffs just once since the conference was founded in 2013.

Other candidates linked to Philly’s opening include former Canucks head coach Rick Tocchet and the recently-reinstated Joel Quenneville. It’s unclear if they’ve interviewed either, although the latter has already talked to the Ducks about their vacancy. They also haven’t ruled out the possibility of removing the interim tag from associate coach Brad Shaw.

Of course, the search comes after the Flyers fired John Tortorella with just weeks left in the regular season.

Philadelphia Flyers Pat Ferschweiler

2 comments

Ed Van Impe Passes Away

May 1, 2025 at 8:29 am CDT | by Josh Erickson 6 Comments

Former NHL defenseman Ed Van Impe, who played in the league from 1966 to 1977, has passed away at age 84, according to a statement from the Flyers.

Undrafted, Van Impe spent six years playing minor professional hockey with the WHL-Sr.’s Calgary Stampeders and the AHL’s Buffalo Bisons before earning his first NHL contract with the Blackhawks (then the Black Hawks) at age 26. The hard-hitting 5’10”, 205-lb lefty impressed as a rookie, finishing second in Calder Trophy voting in the final season of the Original Six era with an 8-11–19 scoring line, a +29 rating, and a team-leading 111 PIMs in 61 games.

Van Impe was drafted by the Flyers in the expansion draft the following offseason, marking the beginning of where he spent the vast majority of his career. The Saskatchewan native appeared in 620 regular-season games for the Flyers over the next nine seasons, posting 19 goals, 107 assists, 126 points, and a +68 rating with 891 PIMs. He was part of the team’s back-to-back Stanley Cup wins in 1974 and 1975, posting seven points and a +18 rating in 34 games across the two championship runs.

A three-time All-Star Game participant, Van Impe spent the final season and a half of his NHL career with the cross-state rival Penguins following a 1976 trade deadline deal. He finished his NHL career with 27 goals, 126 assists, 153 points, and a +99 rating in 703 games. Even today, he’s still fourth on the Flyers’ all-time list of games played among defensemen.

All of us at PHR send our condolences to Van Impe’s friends and family and the Flyers organization.

Chicago Blackhawks| Newsstand| Philadelphia Flyers| Pittsburgh Penguins Ed Van Impe

6 comments

Philadelphia Flyers Extend ECHL Affiliate

April 29, 2025 at 7:26 pm CDT | by Brennan McClain Leave a Comment

  • According to a team announcement, the Philadelphia Flyers have extended their affiliate agreement with the ECHL’s Reading Royals. The extension will run through the 2026-27 ECHL season, and will serve as the 12th consecutive season the two organizations have held a partnership.

    [SOURCE LINK]

ECHL| Mike Sullivan| New York Rangers| Philadelphia Flyers| Pittsburgh Penguins Harrison Brunicke

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