Claude Giroux’s next move is still up in the air, but the case for a Flyers reunion is hard to miss.
NHL free agency opens on Wednesday, July 1 at 12:00 PM ET, and Pierre LeBrun reported that Giroux is being patient while he weighs his options. If he reaches the open market, the idea here is simple: Philadelphia should be ready to bring him back.
This isn’t framed as a ceremonial homecoming for a player winding down at the end of the bench. The argument is that Giroux still has real hockey left in him.
He is 38 years old and is set to play in his 20th NHL season in 2026-27 if he decides to continue. Since the Flyers traded him on March 19, 2022, after he hit 1,000 NHL games, he has gone from Florida to the Ottawa Senators, where he has remained ever since.
On the ice, the fit is laid out as a practical one. Giroux played in a top-9 role in Ottawa, but the belief here is that Philadelphia could use him in a different way, with Garnet Hathaway’s spot on the fourth line presented as the best landing spot.
Even with 15 goals and 49 points in his 37/38 season, the idea is that he could give the Flyers a flexible winger who can move up and down the lineup as needed. That matters for a team that needs more scoring from its fourth line.
A reunion with Sean Couturier is also part of the appeal.
He is not the same hitter he once was, and that part of his game has faded with age. But the offensive value is still there, and the thought is that he could help turn the Flyers’ fourth line into a real scoring threat. If Nikita Grebenkin develops into the enforcer he flashed as last season, the fit could get even cleaner.
The bigger argument goes beyond shifts and line combinations. Giroux was the face of Flyers hockey for much of the 2010s, the player who sold jerseys, captured the imagination of young fans, and played with edge every night. He also wore the captain’s “C” for more than nine seasons, which only deepens the connection.
That matters now because the rebuild is entering a new phase. The youth is arriving: Porter Martone, Matvei Michkov, Tyson Foerster, Denver Barkey, Alex Bump, Jett Luchanko, and Oliver Bonk on defense are all part of the picture.
Around that group, there are already established veterans in the locker room like Sean Couturier, Travis Konecny, and Travis Sanheim. Adding Giroux to that mix is presented as a move that could help shape what comes next.
So this is not about a victory lap. The belief is that Giroux can still contribute on the ice and still matter plenty off it.
In that view, the Flyers should not overthink it. They should sign Claude Giroux.
In Other News...
Flyers Suddenly Have A Bobby Brink Question Nobody Saw Coming
Bobby Brinks move to Minnesota has already turned into one of those NHL stories that could boomerang quickly, and the Flyers are suddenly in a position where patience might matter as much as the original trade. Philadelphia dealt Brink for David Jiricek, but Brink is now nearing free agency, and the Flyers still have the kind of cap flexibility that keeps them in the conversation if the Wild cannot lock him up first.
From the Flyers side, the fit is more interesting than it looked at the time of the trade. They are also chasing other roster upgrades, which means the summer could still reshape the depth chart in ways that leave room for familiar names to come back into the picture. Brinks value, meanwhile, is tied to what he might command elsewhere and whether Minnesota can get its own business done before the market opens. [Read more 🡒]
Flyers May Have Another Blue Jackets Difference Maker In Sight
The Flyers have been linked to another look at Columbus as they try to add a difference-maker on the back end, with Zach Werenski a name that keeps surfacing in trade conversations. For a Philadelphia roster still searching for more impact and more finish from the blue line, the appeal is obvious: a defenseman who can help tilt the ice and give the power play a needed jolt is exactly the sort of swing this front office has been weighing.
There is also a broader sense that the Flyers are not limiting their attention to one avenue as they explore ways to sharpen the lineup. Columbus has the kind of talent that can change the conversation around a rebuilding or retooling club, and Philadelphias interest reflects how urgent the need remains after a power play that sputtered badly in the playoffs. Whether those talks lead anywhere is still unclear, but the Flyers are clearly looking for more than just depth pieces as they map out the next step. [Read more 🡒]
