Danny Briere spent most of his Day 1 free-agency media session talking about the Flyers’ newest pieces and the group he believes is still coming together. He pointed to the eight-year extension for Tyson Foerster, the deal for Dan Vladar, and the addition of veteran forward Noel Acciari. He also left the door open, at least a crack, on John Carlson and Claude Giroux, two names tied to Philadelphia on the opening day of the market.
That part was easy enough to follow. The line that lingered came at the end.
Asked whether he was disappointed that the Flyers didn’t land anything bigger on the first day, Briere started on a positive note.
“Not yet, no, I’m excited,” Briere said. “I’m excited about the way our team played in the second half last year.
It’s dangerous because, from the fan standpoint, it was so good the way the season ended, it was on a high, so you’ve got to be careful even from our side to not get disappointed because there’s nothing that happened today that was a huge flash. If we have a chance, we’ll jump on it.”
He followed that by making the case that the Flyers are still moving in the right direction.
“I think this team is going in the right direction. I’m really excited about the future of this team. We’re still one of the youngest teams in the NHL.”
Then came the sentence that hit hardest.
“We took a big step forward last year, and there’s a chance, a good chance, that we take a little bit of a step back this year. We’re ready for that. But I’m excited where this young group of guys are going.”
That “step back” line is where the conversation turned. The phrase can mean something mild, like getting back to the playoffs without advancing past the first round. But it also opens the door to something much harsher: missing the playoffs entirely, which would send the Flyers right back to the familiar cycle fans have lived through for years.
What Briere said fits with the way Philadelphia approached the offseason. The Flyers made their bets on internal growth and avoided major moves that would have involved Porter Martone, Matvei Michkov, Tyson Foerster, or Owen Tippett. They also didn’t spend draft capital chasing a mid-tier name in hopes of forcing a bigger splash.
When free agency opened, it became clear they weren’t yet in position to attract the kind of player they might have wanted. Carlson wound up signing with Tampa Bay, and the Flyers’ day never really turned into the kind of headline-grabbing push that changes the conversation.
Maybe the patience pays off later. But Briere’s comments also raised a fair question: if the team just gave fans a playoff run to latch onto, why walk them back so quickly?
If the message had stopped at confidence in a young roster and belief that the next step is coming, it likely would have landed better. Instead, the “little bit of a step back” line made it sound like the Flyers are asking for more time when the fan base has already tasted what progress looks like.
That’s why the final answer stung. It wasn’t a big trade, a missed signing, or a failed chase that set people off. It was the idea that after finally getting somewhere, the Flyers may be preparing to retreat before they move ahead again.
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