At 27-32-8, the Philadelphia Flyers are 27th in the NHL and once again one of the league’s worst teams.

Head coach John Tortorella impressively managed to bring the Flyers to the brink of a playoff spot last season, only for the team to suffer a rash of injuries, lose a key player in Sean Walker to a trade, and crash and burn out of the postseason picture.

Expectations were higher this season, of course, with star rookie Matvei Michkov essentially serving as a 1:1 replacement for the aging, ineffective Cam Atkinson, who was bought out by the Flyers in the offseason.

The problem for Tortorella is that, one way or another, he and his team fell decidedly short of those expectations.

At forward, Travis Konecny, the Flyers’ main proprietor of offense, has five goals in 30 games in 2025. Owen Tippett, still battling inconsistency in the offensive zone, is on pace for the least prolific full season of his Flyers career. Tyson Foerster is producing at a rate virtually identical to last season and was a healthy scratch earlier this year.

On defense, Travis Sanheim and Cam York are producing far less offense than they were a year ago. The latter was recently benched by Tortorella, and his eyebrow-raising comments about a lack of communication from the coach echo those made by Sean Couturier after his bizarre benching last season, which came shortly after being named the Flyers’ captain.

Players like Emil Andrae and Egor Zamula have stagnated or leveled off, though Jamie Drysdale is starting to put the pieces of the puzzle together.

Accounting for the vast regression and apparent turmoil with some players, Tortorella’s message still seems to be striking a chord with the Flyers–the wrong one, though. When you play the wrong notes, the music turns from a song to noise.

Could, or should, Rick Tocchet return to the Flyers?

If the Flyers wish to go with a new voice and head in a new direction in the offseason, not much is preventing them from doing so.

Tortorella’s contract is set to expire next summer, while Vancouver Canucks head coach Rick Tocchet, who signed a two-year contract after replacing Bruce Boudreau, is up this summer.

The Flyers would owe Tortorella very little at the expense of moving forward. And if the Flyers want Tocchet, they’ll have to strike quick.

That’s because Tocchet, according to Canucks insider Rick Dhaliwal, is no guarantee to extend his stay in Vancouver, either.

“Here’s what I can say: the Canucks are trying to extend him. They do like the guy and they want him back,” Dhaliwal said on “Kyper and Bourne” Wednesday. “But as [Canucks GM] Patrik Allvin says, it takes two to tango. Maybe Tocchet’s taking his time. So, let me throw this at you: Tocchet’s franchise goalie has got four injuries in his last 11 months. His franchise defenseman could leave in two years. His franchise center is on pace for 50 points and signed for seven more years.

“I know the media’s getting to Tocchet. He made a couple of comments the last two games, it tells you the media’s getting to him. . . It’s been a really trying year. He’s had to babysit Miller, Pettersson, the feud. Media’s all over him now, and if this team doesn’t make the playoffs, what’s gonna happen then? He’s got a decision to make, Rick Tocchet. I’m really surprised there’s 18 games left in the regular season and he’s not signed.”

Tocchet, a former Flyers captain played a total of 11 years in Philadelphia, was teammates with Flyers GM Danny Briere under Tortorella on the Phoenix Coyotes, and has spent a number of years working alongside successful NHL coaches, such as Mike Sullivan, Rick Bowness, and Jacques Martin.

A three-time Stanley Cup champion–once as a player and twice as a coach–Tocchet, like Tortorella, knows what it takes to win. The Flyers won’t sacrifice that valuable experience without being able to replace it.

The Canucks boss has reached hockey’s pinnacle more recently than Tortorella, and the reigning Jack Adams Award winner’s best coaching job might still be in progress.

Despite a rift between Elias Pettersson and J.T. Miller blowing a hole in the hull of Vancouver’s locker room and losing captain Quinn Hughes and starting goalie Thatcher Demko for large parts of the season due to injury, the Canucks are still alive in the playoff race.

In fact, the Canucks are actually in a playoff spot at the time of this writing, even with a player like Pettersson only on pace for 52 points, which would be the fewest he’s scored in a full season in his entire professional career.

Rather than argue with Pettersson on the bench or yank him from the lineup, Tocchet’s conservative approach with Pettersson has seen the former 100-point-scorer start to trend upward with four goals and six points in his last five games.

“I always tell guys, you can have an average first two periods, but rise to the occasion, which [Pettersson] did. Good for him.” Tocchet told the media after the Canucks’ recent win over Chicago. “That’s what we need from him when things are just kind of neutral, that he can just elevate his game.”

This is an approach that would work well with Michkov, for example. Today’s stars respond to coaching differently than they did even 10 years ago.

If Tocchet wants the Flyers job in the summer and the two sides agree there’s a mutual fit, the organization has a ton of ammo to freshen the atmosphere and begin to build a more competitive roster.

A new voice could lead the Michkovs, Konecnys, and Sanheims and reel them back in, while three first-round picks in 2025 can be weaponized to build towards the future and/or acquire a building block for the present.

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