Tyson Foerster originally was projected to miss 2-3 months with his arm injury. Now, he's likely to miss the remainder of the regular season for the Flyers.
Originally, the Philadelphia Flyers‘ belief was that Tyson Foerster would be able to avoid undergoing surgery for the arm injury he suffered back on December 1 against the Pittsburgh Penguins, and could return to their lineup as soon as early February.
Upon further review, surgery will indeed be necessary after all.
The Flyers announced today that Foerster did require surgery, which was performed on Monday, December 15. He’ll now miss five months, which from the date of the surgery would keep him out through mid-May. Given the fact that the Flyers play their final regular season game on April 14, the updated timeline likely knocks Foerster out for the remainder of the 2025-26 regular season.
In theory, the new timeline does leave the door open for a dramatic postseason return, and the Flyers do currently hold one of the two Eastern Conference wild card spots and have the second-best points percentage in the conference. But such a scenario is far from a guarantee to occur, and would obviously require the Flyers to qualify for the postseason in the first place — which they have not done since 2020 — and then likely advance as well.
In the here and now, it changes little for the Flyers. They expected to be absent Foerster for at least the next month and a half, and likely weren’t going to get him back in their lineup until after the Olympic break. Head coach Rick Tocchet and his staff originally tried rookie Nikita Grebenkin in Foerster’s vacated top-nine forward spot, but after six largely underwhelming games (just one assist in the role), he was scratched for Tuesday’s matchup with the Canadiens in Montreal, and replaced by Carl Grundström, who took advantage of the opportunity and scored a key goal.
Presumably, Grundström will retain his spot in the Flyers’ top-nine for now; he’s earned the spot. But Foerster’s longer-than-expected absence makes it more likely that at some point, one of the organization’s many top wing prospects will receive an opportunity with the big club in a scoring role. Alex Bump (six goals and 19 points in 25 AHL games this season) is the leading candidate, but Denver Barkey (seven goals and 15 points in 25 games) could also be an option down the road, if he continues his strong first pro season.
Even 2025 sixth overall pick Porter Martone could factor in. Martone is currently thriving as a freshman at Michigan State, but he could sign an NHL entry-level contract once his college season comes to a close. If the Spartans make it all the way to the NCAA title game — and given their play over the first half of the season, that’s a real possibility — Martone would join the Flyers too late to have a serious impact. If Michigan St. loses early in the NCAA tournament (or doesn’t make it at all, as unlikely as that seems now), though, Martone could get a multiple-week look with the big club and help replace Foerster — if he signs his ELC.
For Foerster, today’s news surely stands as a major disappointment. Prior to the injury, he appeared to be in the midst of a breakout season, scoring 10 goals in his first 21 games and pacing for his first 30+ goal campaign. Now, he can only hope for a heroic playoff return, knowing that he almost certainly has already played in his final game of his third full NHL season.
For the Flyers, it means that they’ll spend the final 50 games of the season without one of their prized pieces up front — a big goal-scoring, play-driving winger who appeared to be in the midst of a breakthrough. That full-fledged breakthrough will now have to wait until at least 2026-27.
Category: General Sports