Tyson Foerster Just Sent A Massive Message About The Flyers Future

Tyson Foerster's enduring passion for Philadelphia drives his decision to commit to the Flyers with an extensive contract extension.

Tyson Foerster didn’t need much convincing when the Flyers came back with a long-term deal.

With a year left on his contract, the 24-year-old winger could have let things play out and tried to cash in later. Instead, when general manager Daniel Briere approached him with an eight-year, $56.8-million extension, Foerster’s answer was immediate: “Where do I sign?”

For Foerster, the decision wasn’t just about security. It was about Philadelphia itself.

“For me, I love Philadelphia,” the 6-foot-two, 215-pound forward said on a media Zoom call Monday. “And I love playing with these guys.

They asked me if I looked to extend this year and it was a no-brainer. I don’t play hockey for the money.

It’s all fun. I’m just happy to help for the next nine years.”

He pointed to the full path that brought him here as part of the reason the city feels like home.

“Everything about it,” Foerster said. “They picked me when I was young, went up in the ranks, Lehigh (Valley) first - just everything about it (Philadelphia), the fans, the city.

“It’s a great spot to play and I think we’re on the come-up. It’s super exciting. I’m happy to be here for hopefully the next nine years.”

The Flyers selected Foerster in the first round in 2020, 23rd overall, and he reached the NHL for the 2022-23 season. He followed that with a 20-goal season in 77 games, then bumped that up to 25 goals in 81 games the next year.

This past season, an upper-body injury cut into his year and kept him out for 49 games. Even so, he still scored 13 goals in 29 games and finished plus-8.

Now the focus shifts to getting ready for a full season, and Foerster knows exactly what he wants to sharpen.

“Obviously keep working on my skating,” he said. “Everything overall.

Hopefully work on my hands a little bit. I think my shot is pretty good from a decent ways out.

I think if I can get in tighter around the net, get it upstairs quick enough. . .little things like that.”

That kind of finishing touch would matter plenty for a Flyers power play that has been a problem area for years. Philadelphia has finished last in the NHL in that special teams category four times in the last five seasons, and Foerster has already shown he can help there with nine power-play goals over the past two years.

His extension also comes at a time when Briere is clearly pushing to move the roster forward. The Flyers recently put a five-year, $90-million offer sheet on Anaheim’s Leo Carlsson, and Foerster said that kind of move reinforced why he wanted to stay.

“Danny, that’s one of the reasons I signed long-term here,” Foerster said. “You know he’s going to push to try to make us better. I’m kind of in the same boat as you guys (media) were, excited but waiting to see what’s going to happen.”

Foerster’s first playoff run with the Flyers didn’t go the way he wanted. He scored one goal in 10 playoff games last season, and he admitted he still wasn’t fully back after the injury layoff.

“I missed a long stretch there,” he conceded. “Right at the peak of the season, that’s where the grind really kicks in. I think the guys did a great job grinding through that.

“I came in at the end, I thought I started off pretty well. I was doing everything I could but I think it was more mental.

You miss so much time and it’s like, ‘can I still do it? Can I still do it?’

I could still do it but it wasn’t the way I wanted it to be. So it was more mental.”

The Flyers snapped a five-year playoff drought, but that wasn’t enough to satisfy him.

“We’re not satisfied with how last year went,” he said. “I think we got a taste and now, hopefully, next year we’re right back in it. Going farther and deeper.”

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