On Monday night, the Flyers locked up 29-year old center Christian Dvorak to a five-year, $25.75 million contract lasting through the 2030-31 season.
When Philadelphia Flyers general manager Daniel Briere signed Christian Dvorak last July, it was to a short-term, one-year contract that came with no concrete guarantee that he would even finish the season as a member of the club.
Briere’s second contract with Dvorak comes with just a bit more commitment.
On Monday night, the Flyers announced that they had locked up the 29-year old Dvorak to a five-year deal worth $25.75 million, with a $5.15 million cap hit.
“We’re very happy to have Christian be a part of the Philadelphia Flyers for the foreseeable future,” Briere said in a press release that accompanied the deal. “He has played a pivotal role in our team’s success this season and proven to be a reliable, two-way center that can be trusted in all situations. More importantly, he plays a big role in our locker room and has fit in seamlessly to our group and what we are building.”
Had Dvorak underwhelmed in his first season in Philadelphia, it easily could have become his only season in the city of Brotherly Love, and Dvorak might have been shipped out to another club by the trade deadline — especially if the Flyers were floundering the NHL’s basement. Instead, the Flyers remain in the playoff mix with 2025-26’s midpoint rapidly approaching, and Dvorak’s strong work has been a not insignificant part of why. With nine goals and 25 points in 39 games, Dvorak is pacing for 19 goals and 53 points over 82 contests — which would both be career highs.
Dvorak also has formed a successful partnership with Trevor Zegras, the team’s big trade acquisition from the summer. With Zegras largely playing the wing (in a “hybrid” center/wing role that gives him the opportunity to take up center duties more than usual for a winger), the two have spent over 449 minutes together at 5-on-5, with the two directly connecting on 12 Flyers goals so far.
Dvorak’s new contract kicks in starting in 2026-27, and lasts through the 2030-31 season, beginning with Dvorak at age 30 (he turns 30 in February) and ending at age 35. Only Travis Konecny (2032-33) and Owen Tippett (2031-32) are currently locked up further into the future on the Flyers’ books. It’s a legitimate long-term commitment.
And most likely, the Flyers and Dvorak won’t be seeing their partnership end any time soon, either. The Athletic’s Kevin Kurz reported that Dvorak’s deal does include no-trade protection: a no-trade clause in Years 1 & 2, a limited no-trade clause in Years 3 & 4, and no protection in Year 5. A team source confirmed to PHLY that the bulk of Dvorak’s trade protection in the new contract ends after Year 3.
For Dvorak, it’s logical move. He’s fit in well in Philadelphia, forging fast friendships in the Flyers’ locker room and emerging as the team’s most productive and second-most-used (just 23 seconds per night behind Sean Couturier) center.
As for the Flyers, their satisfaction with Dvorak’s play through 39 games and their view of the offseason center market as a thin one likely drove their decision to aggressively move to retain him. They’ve deployed Dvorak in all three situations — even strength, penalty kill and (sparingly) power play — and per Briere, found the prospect of replacing those minutes an impossible one to swallow.
Now, Dvorak no longer is a potential rental player for opposing clubs at the deadline, one likely to be the subject of endless trade rumors through early March. Instead, he’ll remain with the Flyers through the entirety of their playoff push, and beyond, as the club looks to pivot from rebuild to true contention in the coming years.
Category: General Sports