NHL, Flyers and Stanley Cup
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The Philadelphia Flyers announced today their full 2025-26 National Hockey League (NHL) regular season schedule.
NHL free agent market was not one conducive to the Philadelphia Flyers saving money or driving bargains, but, historically, the Flyers haven't negotiated favorable contracts anyway.
An 84-game schedule, tweaks to the long-term injured reserve rules, and the elimination of the players' dress code are among the highlights from the new CBA, which takes effect in the 2026-27 season.
The NHL released its 1,312-game, 2025-26 regular-season schedule on Wednesday. The season starts on Oct. 7 with a nationally televised tripleheader on ESPN in the United States and Sportsnet and TVA Sports in Canada.
The Panthers have beaten the Oilers in back-to-back Stanley Cup Finals, and the regular-season rematches of the past two Cup Finals between the Panthers and Oilers are set for Nov. 22 in Florida and March 19 in Edmonton.
As the Flyers look to return to playoff hockey, their 2025-26 schedule offers both opportunity and challenge. With a bolstered roster, high expectations, and Olympic-sized motivation, Philadelphia’s path to the postseason will be paved with intensity from start to finish.
The Flyers made a handful of signings this summer that will be key to their future, then a handful of shorter ones that will help them get there.
This will be the final season under the current NHL scheduling rules. The Carolina Hurricanes’ 2025-26 slate of regular-season games begins with their opener against the New Jersey Devils on Oct. 9
Martone comes in at No. 9 on the annual list, while Oliver Bonk and Jett Luchanko also made the cut.
There are still some trades and smaller free-agent signings to be made around the NHL this summer, but the bulk of the major moves have already been made.
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Yardbarker on MSNFlyers’ Prospect Grebenkin on NHL Pressure, Toronto Trade & Earning His SpotNikita Grebenkin had a busy 2025-26 campaign, starting in the Toronto Maple Leafs system and ending with the Philadelphia Flyers’ farm team in the American Hockey League (AHL), the Lehigh Valley Phantoms.