
The Philadelphia Flyers have shown they can hang. Now it’s time to prove they can finish.
After opening the season with a tight, competitive 2–1 loss to the defending champion Florida Panthers, the Flyers roll into their second matchup of the year with a blend of cautious optimism and quiet determination. Their structure held up against one of the NHL’s most punishing teams; their goaltending, led by Dan Vladar, looked sharp; and their energy never wavered.
But moral victories don’t move the standings. Against the Carolina Hurricanes—a team that’s been a model of consistency and relentlessness—the Flyers face another test of both identity and endurance.

There’s a reason the Hurricanes have been a postseason fixture under Rod Brind’Amour. They play hockey like a rolling wave—fast, systematic, and endlessly suffocating. Every shift is a grind, every retrieval a race, every zone exit contested. Their hallmark is their forecheck—a full-commitment, two-man press that punishes any team that hesitates even a fraction of a second in transition.
At their best, Carolina wears you down with volume and precision. They fire pucks from everywhere, and their blue line is built to feed that tempo. Their defense keeps the defensive zone tidy, while also being able to push play with pace.
Up front, they boast a devastating top six. Sebastian Aho and Andrei Svechnikov headline the attack, with Seth Jarvis adding his energy and pace to the mix (he's occasionally drawn comparisons to the Flyers' Travis Konecny). Logan Stankoven can bring finesse and intelligence, while Jesperi Kotkaniemi anchors the middle with an improving two-way game.
Simply put: there’s no easy shift against Carolina. They don’t give you room to breathe, and if you let them dictate pace, they’ll run you into the ice before you realize what hit you.
Carolina’s forecheck is one of the most relentless in the NHL, and it’s not close. The Flyers can’t afford to get pinned down, especially with a blue line still feeling out its chemistry.
That means short, clean support passes, and wingers presenting options up the wall instead of stretching for low-percentage plays. The Flyers' defensemen will need to be particularly sharp with their reads; one bad touch and Carolina turns it into chaos.
That’s where Luchanko and Grebenkin come in. Both bring fluid skating and deceptive playmaking—the kind that can disrupt Carolina’s structure. If the Flyers can break through the neutral zone with pace, they’ll force Carolina’s defense to back off, creating pockets of space for Owen Tippett and Travis Konecny to operate.

Not many teams in the league make you earn your ice like the Hurricanes do. If there’s one thing Rick Tocchet will hammer home, it’s effort—sustained, disciplined effort. Every backcheck has to be full-speed, every puck battle has to be contested. The Flyers showed that kind of buy-in against Florida, and they’ll need it again here.
The Hurricanes’ defensemen retrieve and reverse the puck better than anyone. Blind dump-ins only fuel their transition. Instead, the Flyers need purposeful placement—soft chips to the corners, rims that force Carolina’s defenders to turn, and retrieval pressure from the likes of Noah Cates and Sean Couturier to create turnovers in high spots.
The Flyers didn’t score against Florida, but their puck movement showed promise. Against Carolina, they’ll need to strike when they can. Bobrovsky isn’t in net tonight—Frederik Andersen will be—but Carolina’s penalty kill still thrives on aggressive pressure. The Flyers’ top unit must stay composed, move the puck quickly, and make the Hurricanes chase.
Success against Carolina will, obviously, mean getting a win. That's always the goal.
But it also means Ersson looking calm and in command, tracking the puck through traffic and controlling rebounds. It means the defense cleaning up the details, especially in the middle pair where miscommunications hurt them last game. It means the forwards sustaining offensive-zone time, not just generating one-and-done rushes.
If the Flyers can withstand Carolina’s early push, settle into their rhythm, and make this a grind instead of a track meet, they’ll give themselves a chance.
Philadelphia Flyers
Forwards:
Travis Konecny - Sean Couturier - Matvei Michkov
Christian Dvorak - Trevor Zegras - Owen Tippett
Tyson Foerster - Noah Cates - Bobby Brink
Nikita Grebenkin - Jett Luchanko - Garnet Hathaway
Defense:
Nick Seeler - Travis Sanheim
Adam Ginning - Jamie Drysdale
Egor Zamula - Noah Juulsen
Goalies:
Sam Ersson
Dan Vladar
Carolina Hurricanes
Forwards:
Nikolaj Ehlers - Sebastian Aho - Seth Jarvis
Andrei Svechnikov - Logan Stankoven - Jackson Blake
William Carrier - Jordan Staal - Jordan Martinook
Taylor Hall - Jesperi Kotkaniemi - Eric Robinson
Defense:
Jaccob Slavin - Sean Walker
K'Andre Miller - Jalen Chatfield
Alexander Nikishin - Shayne Gostisbehere
Goalies:
Frederik Andersen
Brandon Bussi