Flyers Daily: Mondays with Meltzer (April 28, 2025)
Flyers Daily host Jason Myrtetus underwent his final chemotherapy treatment on Thursday. He didn’t feel well at all on Sunday.
Flyers Daily host Jason Myrtetus underwent his final chemotherapy treatment on Thursday. He didn’t feel well at all on Sunday.
President of Hockey Operations Keith Jones, assistant general manager Brent Flahr and others in the Hockey Ops’ scouting and player personnel staff are currently in Frisco, TX, for the Under-18 World Championship tournament.
Isaiah and Chef return to recap the Philadelphia Flyers season, marking the team’s fifth consecutive year missing the NHL playoffs. The crew breaks down key stats, analyzes roster players vs expectations, and previews an off-season that promises to be the most anticipated in recent memory. The episode concludes with Isaiah’s one-on-one interview with Philadelphia Flyers writer Bill Meltzer.
The Toronto Maple Leafs to the surprise of many of their devoted and cynical fans, covered with scar tissue from
Flyers general manager Daniel Briere announced that three assistant coaches would not be retained for the 2025-26 season.
There is mixed news for the Stars on the injury front heading into Game 3. Top-pairing defenseman Miro Heiskanen accompanied the team on the trip to Dallas. High-scoring winger Jason Robertson, however, remains unavailable
In this week’s “Mondays with Meltzer” edition of Flyers Daily, Jason Myrtetus and Bill Meltzer recap the Flyers Exit Day weekend press conferences. There is also a segment on Matvei Michkov’s outstanding rookie season and what lies ahead for the NHL’s top rookie goal scorer.
Colin Blackwell’s rebound follow-up of his own initial shot lifted the Stars to a desperately needed win. The Stars trailed 1-0 in the first period, very briefly (for 58 seconds) led 2-1 early in the second period and trailed 3-2 heading into the final 20 minutes of regulation.
The Toronto Maple Leafs could not have asked for anything more in Game 1 of the Battle of Ontario against
In the end, it wasn’t quite enough. The Calgary Flames played meaningful hockey games for 81 of the 82 calendar