Phantoms Fans Finally Have The Road Map For A Bounce-Back Season

The Phantoms' 2026-27 season schedule promises an exciting lineup of games and challenges as they seek redemption with fresh talent and revitalized strategies.

The Phantoms now have their 2026-27 regular season map, and it gives fans a first real chance to start penciling in hockey plans before the NHL schedule even drops.

The season begins at home on October 3, when the Phantoms open against the Hartford Wolf Pack in the first of six meetings between the teams. That Saturday is the only game on the calendar that weekend, which gives the club a full week of practice before it dives into a demanding run of five games in eight days.

Before the regular season gets going, the PPL Center will see some action in September. The rookie games are set for September 12 and 13, and preseason games will follow at the end of the month, though those dates are still pending.

There will also be a little variety on the schedule this year. After spending last season facing only in-conference opponents, the Phantoms will get back to seeing a few different looks. They’ll head to Iowa in December to face the Wild’s farm team, then see that same club again on home ice in February.

The divisional grind is still very much intact, though. The Phantoms are scheduled to play the Penguins and the Bears 12 times each, the Checkers eight times, and both the Wolf Pack and the Thunderbirds six times apiece. That heavy dose of division games is tied to a smaller division, with the Islanders moving to Hamilton and the new Hammers joining the North Division.

One other trend continues as well: the three-in-three weekend is fading fast. Once a regular fixture, it has become much less common, and the Phantoms will have just five of them over the course of the season for the third straight year.

There’s still a long wait before puck drop, but the buildup is already underway. The Phantoms finished last season without a playoff berth, and now they’ll try to reset with some new faces and a coaching staff that has a full season of experience with this group.

In Other News...

Leo Carlsson Just Opened Up About His Ducks Offer Sheet Scare

Leo Carlssons comments add a little more texture to a summer storyline that already told you plenty about where the Flyers were trying to go. Philadelphia made a serious push to pry the young center loose, but Carlsson made clear he wanted to remain with Anaheim, and the Ducks ultimately kept him in place by matching the offer. For a Flyers front office still trying to accelerate its rebuild, it was a reminder that the market for elite young talent is expensive, competitive and rarely clean.

The ripple effect matters too, because Philadelphia is not expected to simply chase the next shiny name on the board. Adam Fantilli does not appear to be the fallback plan, and the Flyers seem to understand the same problem would follow them there: the cost would be steep and the other club would likely be ready to respond. It leaves the Flyers in the familiar spot of needing to keep searching for a difference-maker, even after making one of the bolder swings of the offseason. [Read more 🡒]

Leo Carlsson Just Twisted The Knife On Flyers Fans

The Flyers summer hopes took another hit as Anaheim moved to keep Leo Carlsson in orange and black, matching the offer sheet and locking up the Swedish center on a deal that reshapes the Ducks financial picture. It is the kind of move that can sting from afar, because Philadelphia had clearly identified Carlsson as a player worth chasing, and now the Ducks have chosen to pay to make sure he stays put.

For Anaheim, the decision comes with real consequences beyond simply keeping a prized young forward. Matching the deal leaves the Ducks with less than $10 million in cap space, and it adds pressure to every other negotiation on the docket, including talks with restricted free agents such as Cutter Gauthier. The roster looks more secure in the short term, but the squeeze on flexibility is the part Flyers fans will notice most. [Read more 🡒]

Flyers Face Another Franchise Center Crossroads After Brires Biggest Swing

The Flyers search for a true top-line center has already taken one major swing this summer, and it ended with Anaheim matching Philadelphias record offer sheet for Leo Carlsson. Even so, the move underscored how aggressively Danny Brire is trying to solve the same problem that has lingered through the roster build, with the front office still hunting for a pivot who can change the shape of the lineup.

Now the focus shifts to what comes next, and the list of possibilities is broad enough to keep the Flyers active in both the trade and offer-sheet markets. Adam Fantilli is among the names being considered, with other fallback options also in the conversation, while the team continues to weigh defensive and depth additions as part of a busy offseason plan. [Read more 🡒]