Thursday, July 16, 2026

Flyers 2026-27 schedule announced

The National Hockey League revealed the respective schedules for its 32 member franchises on Thursday afternoon, which for the Philadelphia Flyers, means an 84-game slate to commemorate the club's 60th season.

While no times or broadcast schedule were disclosed with the announcement, here's what we know about the full slate at this time:

The Flyers will open up in September for the first time in their history, a Sept. 30 home opener vs. the rival Pittsburgh Penguins -- followed by a road game the next night as the opponent for the New Jersey Devils' home opener.

Previously, the earliest the Orange and Black began a regular season was Oct. 1, 1997, when the NHL paused for 3 1/2 weeks to send its best players to international Olympic competition for the first time. In addition, this season is expected to be the first full 84-game regular season since 1993-94, with the planned 84-game schedule shortened to 48 games per team due to the lockout which wiped out games from Oct. 1 through Jan. 19.

The club will play its most games in the month of January, with 16 scheduled and split evenly between home and road dates.

The season is set to conclude on Apr. 10 with the second of two matchups with the Washington Capitals -- which may be the final regular season game in the storied career of all-time goals leader Alex Ovechkin.

Key dates and matchups are as follows:

  • The defending Stanley Cup champion Carolina Hurricanes come to Philly on Oct. 3, the third scheduled game of this upcoming season.
  • There is a Black Friday home slot open for Nov. 27 against the Vancouver Canucks, which is typically played in the afternoon since the league began to regularly schedule home games on this date since 1989. 
  • There will be no New Year's Eve game, but instead a New Year's Day contest at San Jose.
  • Embedded in the schedule is a 10-day break for the Flyers between Feb. 3 and Feb. 13, presumably an extended pause for All-Star festivities. 
  • Nathan McKinnon and the Presidents' Trophy winning Colorado Avalanche make their lone visit on Oct. 19, while the Anaheim Ducks return to Philadelphia on Oct. 24. 
  • Mike Babcock, Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl head to Philly with the Oilers on Nov. 15.
For more information on the full schedule, head to the official team page.

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

No hearing for Zegras, who becomes Flyers' highest paid player with 4-year extension

Late Wednesday night, the Philadelphia Flyers announced a deal securing one of their two remaining arbitration-eligible players, with center/winger Trevor Zegras signed to a 4-year pact worth an average annual value of $9.125 million.

Zegras, whose contract status was up in the air as GM Danny Briere began to sift through the rubble of some unrestricted free agents and other RFAs to shape next year's roster, was set to have a hearing next Wednesday, July 22, if no deal could be finalized. 

"We're thrilled to have Trevor committed to our organization for the next 4 years," Briere said in a team-issued statement which accompanied the extension. 

"The growth he showed this past season, proving that he is the skilled player he entered the league as, reinforced our belief that he will be an impact player for the Flyers for the years to come. He's the type of player who can help take our team to the next level and we're excited to continue building alongside him."

For Zegras -- now the highest paid player per AAV on the club, eclipsing Konecny's $8.75M AAV -- this new deal is set to expire in July 2030 when he will become a UFA, when he will be 29 years old. Coincidentally, termination of the extension occurs at the same time as long-time center and team captain Sean Couturier's $7.75M deal as well as defenseman Cam York's $5.15M AAV contract. 

"When we negotiated with Trevor ... we looked at everything from 1 to 8 years, going back and forth. Four seemed to be the sweet spot. There was some give and take on both sides," Briere noted about the progression of contract discussions during a Thursday morning video press conference. "There's a lot of details that goes into a negotiation. That's where we ended up with 4 (years) with more traction in this case."

No additional terms of the contract were made publicly available, but multiple reports suggest it carries a 10-team no-trade clause in the 3rd year, with an additional 6-team NTC in the final year of the deal.

Although suffering through some rough patches in terms of production at the beginning of his first season here as well as a pre-Olympic slump, the 25-year-old put together career highs of 26 goals and 67 points over 81 regular-season games, including team highs of 23 points (10G, 13A) on an eternally struggling power play. 

His point total, second only to Travis Konecny's team-high 68, arrived despite periods when head coach Rick Tocchet would slot him in as both center and wing, sometimes both in the span of a single game when necessary. 

This, along with stretches of team-wide goal droughts and injuries which stretched the forward lines thin during the winter, affected his game-to-game output with respect to shot totals; although Tocchet favors "low event games" which solidified Zegras' two-way play, that purposeful lack of offensive force was another factor in Zegras' relatively low shot totals and shooting percentage. 

While hampered by injury like many of his teammates in brutal series against the Penguins and Hurricanes, Zegras added 6 points (2G, 4A) and 26 penalty minutes while participating in all 10 postseason outings.

In the wake of the Ducks matching Briere's offer sheet to RFA Leo Carlsson late last week, as well as the known unknowns of the remainder of the summer, it is unclear whether Briere will try to find another top center. It also remains to be seen whether Tocchet would install Zegras or Christian Dvorak as a permanent 1C if no further impactful roster moves are made.

"That's not up to me to decide," Briere admitted in the video presser, while also later revealing, "The Leo Carlsson offer sheet and Trevor Zegras contract had nothing to do with each other."

On Tocchet's challenge to Zegras to de-emphasize the highlight reel and become a more complete player, Briere said: "He wanted to prove to 'Tocc' that he's more about winning. Even in this negotiation, he took charge. He said he wanted to be in Philly. Trevor was really involved. I have to give him a lot of credit for how he carried himself last year."

Heading into his 7th NHL season, the native of Westchester County, New York and one-season wonder at Boston University has totaled 253 points (93G, 160A) over 349 regular-season appearances, which includes 37 PPGs and 15 game-winning tallies for Anaheim and Philadelphia.

Briere has one more loose end remaining, that of the pending arbitration hearing of defenseman Jamie Drysdale, scheduled for next Monday, July 20. In addition, RFA Nikita Grebenkin's contract status is also as yet unresolved, but he, unlike Zegras and Drysdale, is not arbitration eligible.

"I'm glad it's done," Briere said. "It's much nicer to get a deal done, and a long-term deal done, rather than go through arbitration."

Monday, July 13, 2026

Pair of locals selected to lead off Tuesday's All Star Game

On Tuesday night in Philadelphia, two household names were given the honor of snagging the leadoff spot for each league.

Angels outfielder Mike Trout, a native of Millville, New Jersey, will finally see the bright lights in his hometown as the first batter for the American League. Trout, now in his 16th Major League season, earned a nod by compiling a 13 doubles, 18 home runs and 39 RBI with a .23 average over 78 games for the Southern California franchise. 

For the oft-injured soon-to-be-35-year-old, it is his 11th ASG nod and first since 2023. Trout a 3-time AL MVP and Rookie of the Year in 2012, had a streak of 8 consecutive Midsummer Classic bids from 2012 through 2019.

The home squad will have Kyle Schwarber as the leadoff man. Schwarber, 33, leads the entire majors with 32 longballs this year, and also tops the list with 144 strikeouts. Now in his 12th season and fifth in Philadelphia, the 4-time All Star (3 with the Phillies) is batting .254 with 59 RBI and 59 walks.

Sanchez to start All-Star Game for National League

Major League Baseball announced on Sunday that Dylan Cease would be the starting pitcher for the American League and Cristopher Sanchez would take the hill first for the host National League for Tuesday's All Star Game.

Sanchez, who ended the first half by working 7 innings for the win on Saturday, a 4-2 decision in Detroit, during which he struck out 7 and walked 1 while allowing 2 runs on 10 hits. The left-hander improved his record to 11-4 with a 2.62 earned-run average across 127 1/3 innings over 20 starts.

The left-hander, who earlier in the season gained a place in the record books by throwing more than 50 scoreless innings, will become the first Phils' hurler to kick off a Midsummer Classic since Roy Halladay at Chase Field in 2011. Halladay tossed 2 scoreless innings in a 5-1 victory for the Senior Circuit.

Arbitration dates for pair of Flyers RFAs finally known

Taking over for the dear, departed Cap Friendly -- which allowed thousands of hockey fans pretend they're amateur armchair GMs and let loose thousands of endless conversations on social media -- PuckPedia managed to pull off a coup over the weekend. 

The comprehensive site listed the entirety of the restricted free agent class in the NHL, as well as their presumed arbitration hearing dates with their respective teams.

For the Philadelphia Flyers, there are two players with a pending meeting: forward Trevor Zegras and defenseman Jamie Drysdale. The latter is set for a meeting with GM Danny Briere next Monday, July 20, while the former is scheduled for Wednesday, July 22.

Zegras is coming off a career season where he posted 67 points (26G, 41A) over 81 games while in the final season of a 3-year deal worth an average annual value of $5.75 million inked with his former club, the Anaheim Ducks.

Drysdale racked up 32 points (8G, 24A) across 78 games a season ago, while also finishing up a 3-year deal worth $2.3M AAV also signed with the Ducks. 

There has been no indication from the Flyers front office as of yet how either contract situation would progress, and no word from either the local, national or international insiders on what might lie ahead.