Flyers May Have Another Blue Jackets Difference Maker In Sight

Amidst a challenging free agency market, the Philadelphia Flyers are eyeing trade opportunities with the Columbus Blue Jackets, setting their sights on securing stars like Zach Werenski and Kirill Marchenko to bolster their roster.

The Flyers’ search for a difference-maker in Columbus may not stop with Zach Werenski.

Philadelphia has been tied to the Blue Jackets defenseman for a while now, especially after reports surfaced that Werenski and Columbus were set to meet after the NHL Draft to discuss his future. Once it was reported that he was noncommittal about what happens when his contract runs out in 2028, trade chatter picked up fast.

But Werenski may not be the only Blue Jackets star drawing Flyers interest. According to David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period, Columbus trade talks are also involving winger Kirill Marchenko, with Philadelphia among the teams in the mix. Montreal, Utah, and Seattle are also in those discussions.

Trade conversations in Columbus seem focused on Zach Werenski (Dallas chats continue), but teams are still discussing Kirill Marchenko - teams like Montreal, Utah, Seattle, Philly, among others.

  • David Pagnotta (@TheFourthPeriod) June 30, 2026

That adds a new layer to a situation that was already getting plenty of attention during the first round of the 2026 NHL Draft. On the ESPN broadcast, analyst and former NHL goalie Kevin Weekes reported that Marchenko, who becomes a restricted free agent after next season, has no desire to re-sign with the Blue Jackets. Weekes also said Marchenko is looking for a contract similar to the one the New York Rangers gave Pavel Dorofeyev: seven years and $77 million.

Marchenko is the kind of player teams don’t just casually pass on. He’s 25, has four seasons behind him, and has built a track record as a steady 20-plus goal scorer.

His best year came in 2024-25, when he posted 31 goals, 43 assists, and 74 points, all career highs. This past season, he finished with 27 goals and 40 assists in 76 games.

Philadelphia doesn’t exactly need another winger on paper, but the Flyers’ power play gave them plenty of reason to look for help. In the playoffs, it was rough: just three goals on 36 chances. Marchenko has never hit double digits in power-play goals in a season, but his scoring touch would still be a real boost if the Flyers are serious about him.

The bigger questions are the same ones that hang over any move this big: what would Columbus want back, and would Philadelphia be willing to go near $11 million per season on a new deal? Those answers may have to wait until later this offseason, especially if the Blue Jackets decide to keep taking calls on two of their top players.

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