Tuesday, June 02, 2026

Calculated gamble on Tocchet pays even odds in first year

by Bob Herpen

Phanatic Hockey Editor


Signed to a reported 5-year contract with a mandate to get the Philadelphia Flyers over the hump of also-rans and turn them into playoff contenders and ready-for-primetime players, Rick Tocchet’s first year as a head coach for the team which drafted him can be called a qualified success.


Exactly 382 days ago, my first offering at the resurrected Phanatic concerned the Tocchet’s hiring, the cherry on top of Comcast Chairman and Chief Executive Officer/Flyers governor Dan Hilferty’s nostalgic fever dream. 


It was another dip into the well of former Flyers in close-quartered hockey decision making which already included GM Danny Briere, president of hockey ops Keith Jones, alongside John LeClair and Patrick Sharp.


Looking back, much of the column was a string of cogent, but runaway thoughts and projections based on a press conference long on good feelings but short on insight into Tocchet’s selection. None of that matters, for the moment. 


After a mad dash to a playoff berth on the heels of a deep trough in mid-season, Tocchet appeared on the franchise ledger as the 7th head coach to complete a full first season behind the bench and guide his club to a playoff berth – following Keith Allen, Mike Keenan, Paul Holmgren, Ken Hitchcock, Dave Hakstol and Alain Vigneault. Among these, only Keenan, Holmgren, Hitch and AV won a round. 


What’s more, he received the good kind of public vote of confidence from Briere on front office break-up day, May 14.


“I think he did a great job,” Briere admitted. “I knew him as a teammate, I watched him from afar when he was coaching (in Pittsburgh & Arizona). I was really impressed by how involved he was with the players.”


Time will tell what the front office expects from Tocchet next year. Though Briere cautioned against the inflation which infected previous regimes, expectations will be raised and will be based on the work on and off ice Briere apparently observed from Tocchet since he took over.


“The amount of time he was spending on the ice, after practices, other coaches are gone, it was really impressive how he stayed and worked with guys individually,” Briere noted. “The relationship that he had with the players, you saw some of the clips that were played in the dressing room after games. There’s a connection there.”


A caveat: among the five, including Tocchet, to make the playoffs following a full first year at the helm, only Keenan and Hitchcock returned to the postseason the next year. 


With apologies to a former colleague who’s still plugging away in the same fashion after all these years, here’s the Good, the Bad & the Ugly of Tocchet’s initial season.


Good - Philly on the radar


If you believe the sports-talk-radio-fueled philosophy that an NHL city needs to be “relevant” to attract free agents, prospects and other high-end talent, Tocchet might have created a haven here. Briere seemed all too eager to back his bench boss.


“He’s known as a ‘player’s coach,’ I’ve heard that from many agents,” Briere continued. “I’ve gotten a lot of comments from agents that their players would certainly be open to playing here because of Rick Tocchet.” 


That confidence apparently also stretched to Tocchet's recognition that players like Denver Barkey and Alex Bump -- both of whom started the year in Allentown -- were an integral part of the club's late-season success. Briere even admitted Tocchet's belief in Bump saved him from an early trip back to the AHL after his early March call up.

Courtesy of the Associated Press

Given plenty of operating room within the salary cap thanks to its expected increase, some badly-needed money off the books and a burning need to address that perennially nagging 1C need, Briere should set out to help Tocchet ASAP. 


Whether intended or unintended due to the flood of young players who comprised the NHL roster by the end of the regular season, the atmosphere in the room seems to be an exciting, collegial one. A late-season charge to an unexpected playoff spot helps foster that atmosphere in a bubble, but the full-season grind starting in September will go a long way towards determining if that was a mirage. 


Defensively sound, differently


John Tortorella’s methods were clear: at all costs and at all times, clog up the passing lanes and shooting lanes whenever and wherever possible with no fear of the puck. 


Tocchet’s system which aided goaltender Dan Vladar by “cutting the net in half” and reducing the number of shot attempts and shots on goal without physically wearing on the roster, worked wonders for his and the club’s overall up front numbers. 


The Flyers surrendered just 25.5 shots per contest (only Carolina, Vegas & Ottawa yielded fewer) and ranked 9th in total goals allowed with 243. Vladar met his career-best workload with regular-season highs in total saves (1162 on 1283 shots) goals-against average (2.42), tied in save percentage (.906), while personally facing 24.6 shots per appearance. In the playoffs, those were 271/294 (.922) and two shutouts among his 4 victories.


Their 243 total goals surrendered were the fewest for an uninterrupted season since Dave Hakstol’s last full season of 2017-18 (also 243).


Bad - More offense required


The same philosophy which helped Vladar by “cutting the net in half” and reducing the number of shot attempts and SOGs unfortunately provided an obstacle for generating chances where it counts.


The Flyers finished 28th in the league (only the Blues, Stars, Rangers & Blackhawks averaged fewer) with 25.5 SOG per game. Their 250 total goals – most for a full season since 2017-18 (251) ranked 10th in the East. In an era of boosted offense, However, their 240 goals in regulation/overtime push that average down from 3.04 to a pedestrian 2.92. 


Plus, among the eight Eastern playoff teams, the Flyers’ total goals ranked last, a whopping 22 behind Ottawa.


The Orange and Black haven’t seen a season’s average end well above three goals per, since 2011-12 (264 total goals, 3.21 per game; 260 reg/OT goals, 3.17 per game) and will need both a tweak in philosophy and more confidence in their puck release to increase their scoring in all phases. The hope over here is that longer-term solutions to this issue, like inclusion of Bump and Porter Martone onto the roster from the start of the season, as players who are more willing to shoot no matter where, will boost these numbers.


Keeping Focus


You can actually pinpoint the second the Flyers’ season ripped in half. On Jan. 6, they were relatively healthy at 22-12-7, 4 points out of first in the Metro and in solid playoff position. Then, the Old Time Hockey circus atmosphere consumed the hosts as they beat Anaheim, 5-2, while Stepford Fans piled on Ducks winger William C. Gauthier. 


Tocchet said he loved the home response. The players had shit-eating grins postgame. 


From all the energy expended to gain that meaningless, out-of-conference win, a freefall of 3-9-4 up to the Olympic break featured key injuries, lotsa fatigue and questionable decisions beyond roster roulette from Tocchet like that last-minute practice on Jan. 14 ahead of travel to – and a loss against – Buffalo.


That, right there, is the reason the Orange and Black needed a mad dash to a playoff berth in the first place. It worked this year. Odds are against them if they wind up on the same trajectory next year.


It’s up to the coaching staff and Tocchet as the head of the spear, to understand that an even keel at all times is the way. Perhaps this will be Briere’s greatest test of communication between off-and-on-ice philosophies: any change in culture has to extend to correction of a head coach who’s mentality on certain issues remains stuck in the 1980s.


Ugly - Странный человек


Say what you want about the internal mechanisms of an overwhelmingly English-speaking locker room and the external drama exposed and fostered by the regular beats at suspicious intervals about the relationship between Tocchet and Matvei Michkov. 


Following the break-up pressers several weeks ago, there are more questions about the ebb of this relationship than answers, given the overwhelming responses from the rest of the young core that the atmosphere “in the room” is great for development because so many players have peers their age and experience to work with and learn alongside.


Tocchet can’t really claim to be so much of an open-minded, input-friendly players’ coach if even one player seems to be left behind – whether it be due to long-term injury, differences in temperament or a language barrier – especially if it happens to be a high-level draftee tagged as a franchise cornerstone whose rookie season under the previous regime looked far more promising. 


Perhaps it’s even as simple as majority rules and with Michkov the loose end that needed to make more effort to gain the head coach’s trust, but we’ll never know. We got plenty of almost-certainly-leaked news bites through the beats plenty of times from the start of the season until the end, when he was benched for Jett Luchanko in an elimination game.


We never got Michkov’s side of the story and most likely never will. Concurrent with being a petty, snide way to conduct business, it must have had the intended effect, as we found out in Tocchet’s presser that Michkov was already doing laps. 


I’d put the breakdown of responsibility for improving the relationship going forward at 80/20 for Tocchet, with Michkov’s 20 percent revolving around mandatory offseason English lessons while he’s skating like a madman to watch that chicken fat go.


The power play


Although this particular task was delegated to Yogi Svejkovsky, Tocchet brought him on as an assistant and stuck him with the responsibility, so his name goes with the blame. The raw numbers: 37-for-235 during the regular season (15.7%, 32 out of 32 teams); 3-for-36 (8.33%; 14 out of 16 teams) in the playoffs.


These issues are not acutely Flyers specific. Both the high-scoring Buffalo Sabres (21st at 19.5%) and Colorado Avalanche (27th at 17.1%) suffered through inexplicably awful regular seasons and tepid playoffs with the man advantage.


Not having the requisite shooters rests on GMs Chuck Fletcher and Briere – including the late-season trade of one-time NCAA scoring leader Bobby Brink; a chronic inability to shoot lies with the players themselves where confidence can’t be taught; the system itself and its ineptitude points directly at Svejkovsky.


Tocchet may not have an answer to fixing the acute on-ice issues, but during his farewell conference, he laid down a comprehensive method to overhauling hearts and minds which convinced me he’s at least committed to seeing the potential resolution of a nagging issue from all angles. Interesting that it was not an organic response, but one that was prompted by a local writer. More on that in later posts this summer.


The inclusion of Bump and Martone more often in the mix on either PP unit might be the ice-level spur needed.


Next week, be sure to check in as The Phanatic examines Danny Briere's third season at the helm.


 

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Sanchez snaps 115-year-old Phillies record for consecutive scoreless innings

Courtesy of the Phillies
 With his clean sheet through the end of the bottom of the fourth inning at Petco Park in San Diego, Phillies starter Cristopher Sanchez set a new franchise record for consecutive scoreless innings at 41 2/3.

The original record of 41 straight scoreless was set by Grover Cleveland Alexander in 1911 -- a mere 18 years since the pitcher's mound was codified as 60 feet, 6 inches from home plate. 

Sanchez' streak officially sits at 44 2/3 innings after he worked 7 scoreless frames innings in an eventual 3-0 victory over the Padres to close out a 3-game sweep on Wednesday afternoon.

Sanchez ended his outing with exactly 100 pitches, 67 for strikes. He struck out 9 and walked none, yielding just 6 hits. It is the ninth time this season in 12 starts Sanchez has worked at least 6 full innings.

"It's something special. Something really important. I never imagined something like this so I'm just really happy and proud of myself," Sanchez told Phillies broadcasters Tom McCarthy and John Kruk immediately following the conclusion of the contest through his interpreter, 

On surviving a couple close calls with balls hit deep int the outfield, requiring expert plays: "It was crazy today. (Padres infielder Manny) Machado was really going for me, but he couldn't." 

"Just staying calm and thinking about one pitch at a time," he added when asked about working through those rare times runners were on base. "If you take it one pitch at a time and try not to be over aggressive."

Current Phils radio color commentator Larry Andersen still holds the record for consecutive scoreless innings from a relief pitcher, tossing 32 2/3 innings without a blemish back in 1984.

Other Phillies pitchers to toss a significant amount of scoreless innings include, according to Sarah Langs of MLB.com: 

Cliff Lee 34 IP (2011)

Dick Farrell 32 2/3 IP (1957-58)

Ranger Suarez 32 IP (2024) 

Robin Roberts 32 IP (1950) 

Ken Heintzelman 32 IP (1949) 

In addition, according to longtime baseball writer Jayson Stark, Sanchez now ranks third among all MLB left-handers for consecutive scoreless innings. The others: Doc White (45 IP, 1904) and Carl Hubbell (45 1/3 IP, 1933).

Sanchez did not allow a single run of any kind in the month of May, across 5 starts and 39 innings, going 4-1.

The all-time record for consecutive scoreless innings by any pitcher is 59 innings, accomplished in 1988 by Cherry Hill High School East graduate and veteran hurler Orel Hershiser, for the Los Angeles Dodgers. 

Per Langs, after Hershiser, the record of scoreless innings for all pitchers are as follows: Don Drysdale (58 IP, 1968) Bob Gibson (47 IP, 1968) Zack Greinke (45 2/3 IP, 2015). 

"He's been really good for quite a long time now," said Phils shortstop Trea Turner following the game, which featured the rest of the club toasting Sanchez in the locker room. "When you're that consistent, you're going to start putting your name up there with those other guys. He deserves it."


Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Can Dan Vladar handle being a No. 1 goaltender?

by Bob Herpen

Phanatic Hockey Editor


If nothing else, Flyers goaltender Dan Vladar is direct and to the point. 


It is a hallmark of a significant number of Slavic peoples. Evidence of this, as far as the franchise is concerned, stretches back at least as far as former defenseman and Czechia native Petr Svoboda’s assessment of Buffalo upon his acquisition by Philadelphia in the spring of 1995, as told by long-time backliner Chris Therien.


So when Vladar told an assembled throng of team personnel and media on players’ breakup day, May 12, that he’s intensely ruminating over the final goal of the Flyers’ season – a less-than-classic tally scored by Carolina forward Jackson Blake roughly 5 ½ minutes into overtime of a season-ending Game 4 just 17 days ago – with roughly 60-odd hours between the red light and the interview, you gotta believe him. 


“I probably watched it 150 times, getting more and more mad and it’s still in me,” he admitted. “That’s another fire that’s going to be driving me forward. Goals happen. They happen every single day around the league. For me, (it’s about) that mentality to give myself a better chance to be a better goalie next year.”


When asked what it was like failing to stop the last shot he faced? “Tough.”


Onto the offseason, and there was more compact communication. 


When asked if the undisclosed injury that is definitely in the hand and/or arm area suffered when Penguins winger Bryan Rust strafed him in the first round would affect training over the summer, he offered just five words: “No, I don’t think so.”


When pressed on what, specifically, he could work on this summer, he chose the politician’s route, saying: “We can always get better and obviously there’s gonna be little things that I’m gonna go meet with Dilly (Kim Dillabaugh) our goalie coach here and have a long conversation,” he hedged, but then struck back with this nugget: 


“I’m not sure I’m gonna give you any hints right now but there’s gonna be stuff, for sure.”


One of those things that screams out on video, his occasional ability to lose focus when playing the puck. We all know about the twin gaffes against the Penguins and Hurricanes which cost goals. But this is something that goes back to his days with the Flames:




Asked about a contract extension, as Vladar is an unrestricted free agent in July 2027, heading into the final year of his current 2-year, $6.7M deal: “If you ask the same question to Danny B, I’m gonna be watching, so we’ll see what he says.”


Danny B apparently heard him and, two days later, offered little in the way of truthiness. Nonetheless, it’s still curious that rumors of an extension started wafting about a week after the breakup. As reported by at least one beat, the new contract would be in the range of 3-to-6 years, with a shorter term meaning higher average annual value. And if you believe some internet radio host whose face keeps popping up on my YouTube feed for no good or apparent reason, Vladar has some kind of clue, from somewhere, that the Flyers are interested in retaining his services.


If these feelers are true and not just leaks intended to keep the fanbase attuned after the Flyers were eliminated, Briere is about to fall into the trap of extending based on potential and not reality. As true today as it was when I first mentioned it around 2015; hockey logic and human logic don’t often intersect.


Other than not wanting to negotiate or sign in-season, what’s wrong with waiting until, let’s say, next All-Star break to have more data, statistics and trends from which to make a decision?


Vladar appears to have the internal drive and temperament, as well as an advanced standing in media relations, to be a long-time starter for the Flyers. The (multi) million dollar question is, will Vladar be ready to be a true No. 1?


Vladar made some history this past postseason. He joined Bernie Parent, Pelle Lindbergh, Ron Hextall, Michael Leighton and Carter Hart as the only netminders to record more than one shutout within a playoff series. 


When the day eventually arrives, he will also become the first, among goaltenders to play at least 40 games in any single year, to record at least one postseason clean sheet before doing so in the regular season.


Vladar laid the foundation for that success with a slew of career bests: highs in wins (29), total minutes (2995:13), tying a career high in save percentage (.906), setting a career low in goals against average (2.42). Saves like these, in Columbus in late January – where flexibility and timing are required – aren’t the kind we need to see often, but it’s good to have in the repertoire:




He ended the year having surrendered 3 or fewer goals in 20 of his final 23 starts since a stinker on March 9 at home vs. the Rangers, also racking up a .922 save pct. and 2.18 GAA across 10 playoff starts. Those stats helped, no doubt, by head coach Rick Tocchet’s system of shot suppression, where the 27-year-old faced 25.16 per game in the regular season.


How does Vladar’s workload measure up to other starters over the last decade?

  • In 2025-26, he played a total of 62 contests: 52 regular season, 10 playoffs.
  • In 2024-25, Sam Ersson logged the most with 47 games on his ledger. 
  • Two years back, Ersson appeared 51 times, as Carter Hart, the October starter, played 26 games before his release.  
  • Hart saw action in 55 games in 2022-23.  
  • In 2021-22, Hart appeared 45 times while insurance backup Martin Jones played in 35. 
  • During the COVID year of 2021, Brian Elliott played in 30 of the mandated 56-game slate. 
  • In Alain Vigneault’s first full season, 2019-20, Hart was called on 43 times. 
  • During 2018-19, 8 goaltenders played at least one game, with Hart logging the most at 31 games and Elliott adding 26. 
  • Dave Hakstol’s last full season behind the bench, 2017-18, Elliott got the nod 43 times. 
  • During Hak’s first two seasons, it was Mason as the clear starter, playing in 54 and 58 games, respectively.

Nobody will touch the Flyers’ all-time record for appearances in one season by a goaltender, set by Parent (73 games over a 78-game schedule, 1973-74). A future starter might never even get close to Parent’s 68 appearances in 1974-75 or Martin Biron's same number in 2007-08.


After that:

65 games - Lindbergh (1984-85)

61 games - Mason (2013-14)

60 games - Dominic Roussel (1993-94)

59 games - Ilya Bryzgalov (2011-12)


When asked about the Flyers’ historical lack of maintaining the presence of a No. 1 goaltender, Vladar said that one of the reasons he chose Philadelphia was the opportunity to play and claim the starter’s role. He’s got the reins now. It’s up to the coaching staff and his own performance. 


While Briere said during his final presser that he’d have to evaluate whether Ersson would be back next year, here are the financials: Ersson’s current deal expired with restricted free-agent status after earning $1.45M last season. Alexei Kolosov was signed in mid-May to a “show us something, please, we’re begging you” 1-year contract at $850K after earning $925K last year into his own RFA season. 


Ersson is a logical choice to be brought back, albeit at a discount. Educated guess, he’d get up to one-third of the work – which would set him up for 25-27 starts and roughly 28-30 appearances. If Ersson is either low-balled or flat-out non tendered, it’s another headache for Briere to have to comb the free-agent market to find a veteran stopgap, because nobody thinks Kolosov is an answer.


That means Vladar would shoulder the burden of 55-57 starts, brushing up against the threshold of the above-mentioned No. 1 guys from the past. Assuming one playoff round, we’re at anywhere from 59-69 appearances if Ersson or another choice falters, it might be more. 


“Obviously I’m not satisfied with (last) season. I want more,” Vladar said. “But at the same time I know we have great team staff around here in Philly and also I trust my guys back home in the summer. I think everybody’s on the same page and it’s going to be a conversation we’re gonna have to get me as ready as possible.”