The Flyers have a roster that looks pretty crowded on paper, but Monday’s qualifying-offer deadline created a fresh pool of younger players who could still fit into the mix. Philadelphia kept the rights to just four of its 10 restricted free agents, which opened the door for a handful of former RFAs who are now available and young enough to at least make you think twice.
None of these are franchise-changing swings. But for a team that still has spots to sort out, they’re the kind of low-cost bets that can make sense if the fit is right.
Paul Cotter is the cleanest match.
The 26-year-old center spent his last two seasons with the Devils after earlier being part of a strong Vegas Golden Knights group, and he brings a little bit of everything the Flyers could use. Last season he had nine goals and 15 points in 79 games.
The year before, he finished with 16 goals and 22 points. That kind of scoring pop matters for a depth player.
Philadelphia has been searching for more help down the middle, to the point that bringing back Luke Glendening is even part of the conversation. Cotter could slide into that same general lane as a fourth-line center, a 13th forward, or an insurance option who gives the team some cover if it wants to avoid leaning on Jacob Gaucher or pushing young prospects into important games too early.
He’s not known as a strong playdriver - he’s finished above 50 percent in on-ice shot attempt share in only one of his five seasons - but the appeal is simple: he can score. If that means giving up a little possession to get a depth guy who can finish, that’s a tradeoff the Flyers can live with.
There’s even a path where he plays wing with Sean Couturier and helps create a fourth line that can actually chip in double-digit goals.
Matias Maccelli is the biggest swing on the list, at least from an upside standpoint.
At 25, the left winger just posted 39 points for the Toronto Maple Leafs, and no one else on this group comes close to matching that offensive ceiling or the way he drove play to above-average results. He’s a pure playmaker, and that’s the kind of skill that can change the feel of a lineup fast. The drawback is obvious: he’s 5-foot-11 and 187 pounds, and he’s a winger.
For the Flyers, landing him would probably require moving out a couple of wingers in separate deals, maybe as part of a larger reshuffle that brings back a bigger blue-line upgrade or even lands a top-six center. If Maccelli is still out there after that, he becomes a very appealing option.
Given how rough Toronto was offensively last season and how little top-six runway he actually got, there’s a real case that he could be the best wing addition Philadelphia can make this summer. And he wouldn’t cost an asset.
That’s the kind of free-agent wrinkle teams love to pounce on.
Vladislav Kolyachonok is the most nomadic name here, but also one worth circling for a different reason.
The 25-year-old left-shot defenseman has bounced around plenty: drafted by Florida in the second round, traded to Arizona before really getting into the Panthers’ organization, claimed off waivers by Pittsburgh from Utah, signed with Dallas, then claimed off waivers by Boston last season. In all, he’s appeared in NHL games for five different organizations. That’s a lot of movement for a player who just turned 25.
Still, there’s a reason teams keep giving him a look. He’s 6-foot-2, speedy, mobile, and left-handed, which gives him a profile that can still be useful on the back end.
The issue is that he’s mostly been a bottom-pair defenseman whenever he’s gotten NHL chances, and he hasn’t averaged more than 15 minutes a game since his rookie season. For the Flyers, that makes him more of a league-minimum experiment than a real upgrade.
But if Rick Tocchet wants to carry eight defensemen, the idea is easy to see: Simon Benoit can handle the extra physical presence, while Kolyachonok could serve as the other spare and add a bit more puckmoving ability. He also grades out as a similar player to Emil Andrae, just without the size concern.
Bobby Brink would be the reunion play.
There’s a certain logic to it, especially if the Flyers are thinking along the same lines as they would with Maccelli: add a winger who can help offensively and see if the fit works. But this one feels a little trickier.
If Philadelphia wanted to move him out again later, that could get awkward. And if the Flyers are making a separate trade involving Travis Konecny or Tyson Foerster, bringing back a winger fans already know may not have the same jolt as adding someone new with more obvious upside.
Even so, Brink is a worker, and that matters. The Minnesota Wild are reportedly still interested in bringing him back, though they were wary of his $4 million arbitration number, which is why they didn’t qualify him. That situation could still change quickly, but for now he belongs on the list.
Jordan Harris rounds out the group as more of a depth add than a true lineup solution.
The 25-year-old defenseman barely saw the ice last season, playing eight games for the Boston Bruins and four for Providence. But he had shown some solid promise earlier in his time with the Montreal Canadiens organization, and that history is enough to make him a reasonable fallback if the Flyers want another body on the left side. He looks like the kind of player who could give them a little more NHL readiness than Ty Murchison or Hunter McDonald if injuries hit and the blue line needs help.
Not every name here is a perfect fit. Some are longer shots, some are insurance, and some depend on other moves falling into place. But with the Flyers still sorting through a few roster questions, these former RFAs are the kind of younger, low-risk options worth checking out.
In Other News...
Flyers Address Concerning Jett Luchanko Development Camp Absence
The Flyers development camp opened without two of their more notable young prospects on the ice, as first-round pick Jett Luchanko and Jack Berglund were kept out of on-ice work for injury management. For a camp built around giving the organization a first real look at its newest talent, the absences were enough to draw attention right away, even if the team has tried to frame the situation as precautionary rather than alarming.
Luchankos case is the one that matters most to Philadelphia, because the 2024 first-rounder is still on the radar for an NHL job this fall. He is expected to be ready for training camp, and the Flyers will be watching closely as he works his way back into skating and tries to keep his momentum intact after a summer that has already had him on the sidelines. [Read more 🡒]
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Claude Girouxs next move is suddenly back in the picture, and for Flyers fans it comes with the kind of emotional pull that never really went away after his 2022 departure. After stops in Florida and Ottawa, the former captain is now at a point in his career where the 2026 offseason could send him to free agency, which has naturally reopened the door to a possible Philadelphia reunion. He is still producing at a level that keeps him in the conversation, too, coming off a season in Ottawa that showed he can still help a lineup.
For the Flyers, the question is no longer just about nostalgia, but fit and timing. A return would invite all the familiar storylines around Giroux and Sean Couturier, while also forcing the team to decide how much room it wants to make for a veteran who could slide through different roles as needed. If Giroux does reach the market, Philadelphia may not be able to ignore the possibility for long. [Read more 🡒]
Flyers Camp Already Raised One Big Prospect Question
The Flyers Development Camp opened this week with a familiar summer theme in South Philadelphia: skating first, questions second. The first day was built around drills on the ice, and the group included a mix of recent draft picks and young players who have already made their NHL debuts, giving the sessions a little more edge than your usual prospect tune-up.
Even with camp running through July 3 and open to the public, the bigger point for the Flyers is how quickly these summer practices can sharpen the conversation around the organizations future. With several of the most recognizable young names already on the ice, attention naturally shifts to which prospects are ready to make the next leap, and which ones still need more runway before they become part of the NHL picture. [Read more 🡒]
