Wednesday, July 01, 2026

Flyers make contract extension for Vladar official

What had been rumored since late last week became official today, as the Philadelphia Flyers announced a contract extension for goaltender Dan Vladar on Wednesday, just after the 12 p.m. free agent deadline.

During the draft last weekend, the one and only report about the new pact came from Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic, which cited the deal as for 5 years at $5.5 million average annual value. 

The official pact, which is set to kick in one year from now and expire in 2031, was revealed to be the same term and amount. 

"From the moment Dan arrived in Philadelphia, he exceeded our expectations. He earned this contract extension by the way he competed every time he stepped in net," said Flyers GM Danny Briere. "Beyond his play on the ice, he was an exceptional addition to our locker room, becoming a big leader and positive force for our group. He's a valuable teammate who really gained the trust and respect of his teammates and coaching staff right from the get-go."

While no details were made publicly available by the club, multiple reports citing "Flyers team sources" reported it contains a full no-movement clause over the first 2 years of the deal with a limited no-trade clause over the final 3 seasons. 

For Vladar, who was set to become a restricted free agent next summer, that's both a huge relief and a large chunk of pressure laid on his shoulders. 

The soon-to-be-29-year-old native of Czechia finished his first full NHL season by going 29-14-7 with a 2.42 goals-against average and .906 save percentage across 52 appearances. Vladar shook off an injury sustained in the opening round to finish the postseason at 4-6 with a 2.18 GAA, .922 save pct and a pair of shutouts.

During a 6-game first-round triumph over the rival Pittsburgh Penguins, Vladar became the 6th goalie in franchise history to record at least 2 shutouts vs. a single opponent, joining Bernie Parent, Pelle Lindbergh, Ron Hextall, Roman Cechmanek and Michael Leighton.

Vladar was entering the final season of a 2-year deal worth $3.35M AAV. While the number and term suggest Vladar would be the Flyers' true No. 1 going forward, the acquisition of Joe Woll from the Toronto Maple Leafs for RFA Sam Ersson 2 weeks prior, and GM Danny Briere's suggestion that he work "in tandem" with Vladar suggest a 1A/1B situation. 

What that might signal, is that the club is offering more term to see if Vladar can gradually grow into the role. Other, cheaper veteran backup options were on the table, such as James Reimer, Jonathan Quick and Matt Murray. 

Heading into his 7th NHL season, Vladar has logged only 157 regular-season games for the Bruins, Flames and Philadelphia.

In a shocking move given the expected rise in salary-cap space for the upcoming season, the Orange and Black also reportedly completed a contract extension for forward Tyson Foerster. Elliotte Friedman was first on this just before the noon frenzy, reporting his new deal would be for 8 years with an approximate AAV of $7M per year. 

Foerster is still owed 1 more year on his current contract at $3.75M for this season, then becomes an RFA next July 1.

Stay tuned for more as the day develops.


Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Clean-up in Aisle '26: Flyers' draft looks more like shopping list

by Bob Herpen

Phanatic Hockey Editor

At this weekend’s NHL Entry Draft in Buffalo, Philadelphia Flyers GM Danny Briere and assistant GM Brent Flahr identified needs and selected players which best fit their profile and ready-made template across six picks through seven rounds.

Among the haul were multiple defensemen and a pair of goaltenders. Only one of the bunch were under 6 feet tall and just three picks were under 200 pounds – even as teenagers. No wingers, no centers, no scoring. No chances. No risks. Just purchasing in bulk.

When asked on Friday night why they passed on a puck mover with the first-round slot, Briere had this strange, cryptic response: “I think it’s knowing the board and there’s more out there, too. It doesn’t mean that we’re done, that we’re not gonna draft a puck moving defenseman.”

Even stranger, he cracked a crooked smile and forced a laugh at the reporter who asked the question, then added, “We’d like to have that as well. Let’s see what tomorrow brings, hopefully we can bring you a smaller puck defenseman after losing Emil (Andrae) obviously. At the moment, we felt the value was more on that side.”

Spoiler alert: they did not.

Even if head coach Rick Tocchet continues to pine for bigger, tougher bodies – which is a bit of an oxymoron since he’s publicly come out *against* scrums and other after-the-whistle nonsense but actually makes sense if you want to play a bunch of dudes who can pound the opposition – their choices are as specific as they are bizarre. 

Maksim Sokolovskii from the London Knights of the Ontario Hockey League was taken as the No. 27 pick after Briere chose to punt on the verge of making the 21st overall selection. Built like an AT-AT at only 17 years old. 6-foot-7, 240 pounds. 

Even the pair of goalies had significant bulk behind them as teenagers: Martin Psohlavec from Czechia clocks in at 6-foot-5 despite his 185-pound frame, while fellow netminder hopeful Marek Sklenicka from Seattle of the Western Hockey League stands 6-foot-3 on a wiry 175-pound body.

It’s like Briere and Flahr wanted less to conduct a draft and instead opted to spend some quality time together gossiping and browsing in the supermarket and it just took some time to come upon the right aisle. Over 6-foot? Check. Over 200 pounds? Check. Another NHL-ready body in the mid-range of the first round? Check. Just like Porter Martone, Jack Nesbitt, Oliver Bonk, Carson Bjarnasson. 

Grab your coupons, ladies. Head to checkout.

For the first time in the 4-year Briere regime, no players were selected who are either currently on D1 college rosters or would head there in the fall. It was also the first time since 2008 (under Paul Holmgren) there were no wingers selected – that year it was 2 defensemen, 2 goalies and 1 center with just 5 picks. 

It may be the first time EVER not a single offensive player was chosen in the 60-year history of the franchise – if you believe one prospect site, Kent Sauer is a center and another says he’s a d-man.

Humangous Beeg

How ridiculous was the scope of the Sokolovskii pick? BoopStats himself, Bob Vetrone, Jr. tweeted that, for just the 6th time since 1967 and first since 2003, the Flyers’ first pick of the draft was actually taller than the Sixers’ first selection. 

With the draft complete, here’s a brief rundown at a majority of the club’s rostered and prospective defensemen and their respective dimensions:

Rasmus Ristolainen: 6-foot-4, 208 pounds Travis Sanheim: 6-foot-4, 222 pounds Simon Benoit: 6-foot-4, 210 pounds Nick Seeler: 6-foot-3, 200 pounds David Jiricek: 6-foot-4, 205 pounds Helge Grans: 6-foot-4, 205 pounds Adam Ginning: 6-foot-3, 200 pounds Oliver Bonk: 6-foot-2, 185 pounds Maksim Sokolovskii: 6-foot-7, 240 pounds Carter Amico: 6-foot-5, 225 pounds Spencer Gill: 6-foot-4, 213 pounds Kent Sauer, 6-foot-3, 200 pounds The only outliers in the bunch are: Cam York: 5-foot-11, 195 pounds Jamie Drysdale: 5-foot-11, 185 pounds Brek Liske: 6-foot-4, 190 pounds Max Laaitikainen: 5-foot-11, 173 pounds Paradoxically, when asked on Saturday about the continued size differential on the back end, Flahr said, “I don’t think it’s as much of a focus any more. I think we’re a smaller team and I think we addressed that last year and some of that was just circumstance.”

I’m unsure what part of the Flyers’ journey this past season made it a priority in either Tocchet or Briere’s eyes to go this big and this brawny on the blue line. It’s all too reminiscent of the darkest period in modern NHL history, known as the Dead Puck Era.

Or as Tocchet might say, the “Low-Event Period.”

There are many threads which led to the tanking goal totals league wide between 1995 and 2004, but for our purposes the principal reason was the size, strength and skill of the Legion of Doom. Eric Lindros, John LeClair and Mikael Renberg were such a menace for a 3-year period that it gave birth to the neutral zone trap but also gave rise to NHL GMs scrambling to draft the biggest, heaviest defenders who could simply impede progress.

First on the slab was Hal Gill. Selected in 1993 out of Providence College, Gill entered the league in 1997 for the Boston Bruins at 6-foot-7 and more than 240 pounds. At the time, then-coach Pat Burns instituted a strict defensive mindset that shrunk the B’s goals-against by 106 goals in one season, thanks in large part to Gill’s ability to get in the way. Then, Zdeno Chara. A true freak of nature at 6-foot-9, 250 pounds, he was taken by the Islanders in the 3rd round back in ‘96 and loosed on the world.

That, in turn, bred the likes of power forwards such as Todd Bertuzzi and Jarome Iginla, while forcing established stars like Keith Tkachuk, Brendan Shanahan and Jeremy Roenick to increase their mass in offseason training.

It was an arms (and hips and legs) race which eventually exploded in the mid 2000s when the league obliterated its 2004-05 season and returned by embracing more opportunistic offense. It took another half decade before touts, scouts and team braintrusts switched to focusing on prospects under 6 foot and under 200 pounds, however.

When assessing this organizational mindset, I couldn’t help but think back to the summer of 2005. Then-GM Bob Clarke took two steps back after the leap forward in bringing 1991 draftee Peter Forsberg home by heralding two major free-agent defensive signings: Derian Hatcher and Mike Rathje – both straight out of the caveman era. Neither player lasted more than 3 years here due to aggressive wear and tear.

It was the signal, before forgetting Claude Giroux’s name at the podium during the next summer’s draft, that Clarke was resistant to change and checked out.

Briere and Flahr look similarly out of step with a league that has done so much to highlight skilled players, embrace more goals, better and more frequent scoring chances alongside increased offense (expansion aside) over the last 10 years.

Yes, the need for defensemen and goaltending was obvious, but what does he and the rest of the Flyers hockey ops expect – that the current bumper crop of winger/centers is going to last forever without injuries or trades?

Or that the guys good enough to advance will either hook on or fade out?

Let’s not forget, it’s a game of Russian roulette to guess which of these prospects, if any, would be ready to be impactful in 3-to-4 years – which is about the typical time Tocchet would wear out his welcome if he’s allowed to stay close to the terminus of his 5-year deal. Then, the next regime is saddled with the previous coach’s wet dreams.

When pressed on the perceived “wide variance” of development projections for his defensive and goaltending picks, Flahr punted on an explanation, instead mumbling nonsense about a clean draft board, the rationale for trading down in the first round and Briere’s desire to keep feeding the pipeline with goalies.

If the strategery works, I’m afraid the Flyers front office may have accidentally kicked off a disturbing league-wide trend. If it fails, well, the worst is that we’ll suffer through some more traffic cones like Randy Jones.

Saturday, June 27, 2026

Flyers picks in rounds 2-7 of the NHL Entry Draft

The 2026 NHL Entry Draft  from Buffalo concluded on Saturday with rounds 2 through 7. Here are the remainder of the Philadelphia Flyers' selections:

Another low-range pick, in the second round (No. 53) Brek Liske, defenseman, Everett Silvertips was the choice. 

Liske completed his third season in the Western Hockey League of Canadian juniors by collecting 24 points (7G, 17A) and a plus-36 rating over 52 regular-season games. He added 17 points across 18 playoff games for the WHL champions, including the Memorial Cup, which the Silvertips lost to Kitchener of the Ontario Hockey League. A 6-foot-1, 190-pound right-handed shooter, Liske -- apparently a lifelong Flyers fan through his father -- has totaled 10 goals and 27 assists across 121 games in juniors.

With the 62nd pick (29th in 2nd round), they chose goaltender Martin Psohlavec from Karlovy Vary Jr. in his native Czechia.

In the fourth round, at pick No. 120, the Orange and Black went back into Canadian juniors to snag WHL Seattle Thunderbirds goaltender Marek Sklenicka. Only 17 years old during his first North American season, the lefty-catching native of Czechia posted a 20-12-6 record, 3.21 goals-against average, 3 shutouts and .902 save percentage over 42 regular-season appearances.

At 136 in the 5th round, the Flyers took 18-year-old Kent Sauer, a 6-foot-3, 200-plus-pound right shooting center. Sauer, whose uncle is former NHL defenseman Kurt Sauer, will skate for the Edmonton Oil Kings of the WHL for the upcoming season, per Elite Prospects. Sauer's final high school campaign was delayed until January due to a serious knee injury suffered at the end of his junior season. 

With their final pick on Saturday, the club dipped into the European prospect pool to select 17-year-old defenseman Max Laatikainen from Kiekko-Espoo of Finland's top professional league. A clear work-in-progress, the right-handed shooter -- diminutive compared to the pipeline at 5-foot-11 and 173 pounds -- and who was born more than a month prior to the Phillies winning the 2008 World Series, racked up 2 assists in 6 appearances.


Flyers trade down, select oversized, underage defenseman from Canadian juniors

The Philadelphia Flyers originally held the No. 21 pick heading into Friday night's NHL Entry Draft, but just ahead of making the pick, traded with the San Jose Sharks to move down the board and take the No. 27 spot.

More than 3 hours into the evening, they eventually selected defenseman Maksim Sokolovskii from the London Knights of the Ontario Hockey League.

Sokolovskii, born in July 2008 in Petropavlovsk, Kazakhstan, collected 2 goals and 6 assists across 44 games during his first North American season. The 6-foot-7, 240-pound backliner is a left-handed shooter. He has one more season of juniors remaining ahead of committing to the University of Maine for the 2027-28 season. 

"We felt (Sokolovskii) was a guy we could get if we moved back," said Flyers GM Danny Briere late Friday. "There was a little bit of a risk that he could be taken, but we felt it was worth it. Something we don't have, especially, left shots we don't have a lot in the organization so that was a plus."

"We don't expect him to be the next big point producer. That wouldn't be fair. We see him as a big physical force, a defenseman that's gonna be tough to face. What pairing, I don't know yet, it's too early to tell, he could become a top-four defenseman if things fall into place," Briere added. 

Briere cited Sokolovskii's reach as an asset, but noted that his "puck game" needs more improvement. He additionally praised the rangy youngster's skating as a point of improvement over the previous season.

The Flyers previously dipped into the Hunter brothers' blueline largesse in 2023, taking Oliver Bonk with the 22nd overall pick. Since taking the reins in 2002, Knights head coach and former NHL master pest Dale Hunter has led his club to six OHL league championships and three Memorial Cups as the top development franchise in all of major Canadian juniors -- including 2025 when Bonk scored 31 combined goals between the regular season and playoffs.

"It's not a secret, they're one of the better organizations in the CHL. They seem to be able to build winners. There's a lot of guys that go through their program that end up in the NHL. They have a knack for raising those players to become pros," Briere said when asked what drew the front office to consistently choose prospects from London. "For us, it's a no-brainer when we have the chance to take someone, it obviously feels comfortable."

Other defensemen the franchise had previously selected in the first round in recent years include Cam York (14th overall, 2019), Ivan Provorov (No. 5, 2015), Travis Sanheim (No. 7, 2014), Sam Morin (11th overall, 2013) and Luca Sbisa (No. 19, 2008).

Stay tuned for additional coverage of rounds 2-7, which take place on Saturday.