IT’S THE BIGGEST MYSTERY surrounding the Philadelphia Flyers, one whose answer could make or break their season:
“Can they coexist?”
Can Matvei Michkov, the 19-year-old Russian-born rookie whose offensive dexterity is only eclipsed by his boundless enthusiasm, find harmony with coach John Tortorella, whose legendary adherence to “playing the right way” has seen him bench or scratch young talent when they failed to meet his standards?
“I have no doubt that there’s going to be some fireworks here and there, just like he has with almost every single player,” Flyers general manager Danny Briere predicted. “At the end of the day, Torts is the coach and he’s going to manage him. He’s going to teach him to be a pro. Torts’ goal is to make Matvei the best player he can be.”
The ends may justify the means, but the means can be frustrating for his players. Just ask any player who has received some of Tortorella’s trademark tough love while being deprived of playing time.
While Tortorella is a demanding coach, he’s also a realist. The Flyers were 27th in the NHL in goals per game last season (2.82). Michkov can score goals as well as he can create them for others, hitting the highlight reel with frequency. Tortorella and Michkov connected over the summer to establish expectations for his rookie season.
“I can’t wait to see how he is going to create offense [in the NHL]. I think his brain is pretty special,” Briere said. “We haven’t had this type of player in a long while here.”
Out of offensive necessity — and in defiance of his reputation — Tortorella seems ready to let Michkov be Michkov, for the betterment of the Flyers.
“We are starving for the types of instinctive plays that he can make,” said Tortorella, in his third year coaching in Philadelphia. “I’m not interested in turning him into a checker. We want to lay the foundation. It’s going to take time. But are we going to beat him over the head with it? No.”
The Flyers don’t just need the goals that Michkov can generate. They need the vibes. At least that’s how Tortorella sees it.
Like when Michkov scored his first goal of the preseason into an empty net. He skated over and jumped into the glass near the fans, before enthusiastically hugging his teammates, in what was essentially a practice game.
“He scored an empty-netter in an exhibition game, and it was like it was Game 7,” Tortorella said. “I love that about him. I think it rubs off on the team.”
MICHKOV WAS AN INTERNATIONALman of mystery heading into the 2023 NHL draft.
Some scouts claimed the winger had the highest talent ceiling outside of No. 1 pick Connor Bedard. But some questioned why Michkov skipped the scouting combine and met with only certain teams, fueling speculation that he was trying to maneuver his way to a specific landing spot — something the player has denied.
There was another wrinkle: Michkov was under contract with SKA St. Petersburg of the Kontinental Hockey League for the next three seasons, meaning that his NHL debut wouldn’t theoretically come until 2026-27.
“I do have a contract, but I’m hoping as soon as I can get out, I’m going to come here,” Michkov said after being drafted.
“It is what it is,” Briere said at the time. “We know he has a contract for three more seasons. But we just felt after watching him play and meeting him, we felt he’s a talent we can’t pass up. If we have to wait, we’ll wait.”
The wait wasn’t long. Michkov spent one more season in the KHL and then jumped to the NHL this summer.
It was the second high-profile Russian player that Briere’s front office managed to bring over to North America. Goalie Ivan Fedotov, whom the team drafted in 2015, finally arrived with the Flyers last season after a rather circuitous journey. He’s expected to form a goaltending battery with Samuel Ersson this season.
Fedotov put up strong numbers in the KHL and helped the athletes from Russia win Olympic silver in the 2022 Beijing Games. The Flyers signed him in 2022, but Fedotov was reportedly taken by Russian authorities to a remote military base in the Arctic Circle for a year of service, which they claimed he was trying to avoid by going to the NHL.
“The military took him back. So it took a little longer for him,” Briere said.
Philadelphia tolled Fedotov’s NHL contract, assuming that he’d report one year later. Instead, the KHL announced he had signed a two-year contract with CSKA Moscow.
In 2024, after the CSKA Moscow season ended, it was announced that Fedotov’s KHL contract had been terminated, and he joined the Flyers for three games last season.
The Flyers have been guarded about how they managed to get Fedotov and Michkov under contract.
When asked about Michkov specifically, Briere said it was the young standout’s desire to compare his talents with the best in the world.
“You need a willingness from the player as well. Ivan wanted to be here. Matvei wanted to be here,” he said. “Matvei’s so competitive. He wants to show the world that he belongs up there with them.”
Michkov and Fedotov are critical players for the Flyers this season. They’re also products of Russia, entering the NHL at a time when the international hockey community’s relationship with the country is strained.
Russia and Belarus have been banned from the IIHF world championships for three years because of the invasion of Ukraine. The International Olympic Committee will decide about their eligibility for the 2026 Winter Olympics in Italy by May. In February, the NHL is holding a tournament that features four nations but doesn’t involve Russia, as the league couldn’t figure out how to move forward with another World Cup without its participation.
The focus for the Flyers remains on the ice, according to the GM, where the Flyers are pushing for their first playoff berth since 2020 and their first Stanley Cup since 1975.
The Michkov-Tortorella partnership will be a crucial component to that push.
MICHKOV UNDERSTANDS HOW MUCH buzz surrounds his arrival in Philadelphia. Like when he showed up to training camp and saw dozens of fans already wearing his jersey, which is something he said he’s never experienced before as a player.
The Flyers are doing what they can to temper expectations on Michkov’s first NHL campaign.
“I’m realistic. It’s going to be a tough season for him. This is the best league in the world. It’s a big step. It’s not going to be easy,” Briere said. “So my expectations are actually pretty low. I’m excited to watch him play, but he’s going to have to go through a lot before he’s the player that he expects to be.”
Tortorella has a menu of things Michkov will need to work on as a rookie.
“Shift length is something we’re going to concentrate on with him,” he said. “He hasn’t played 82 games.”
Tortorella drew a comparison between Rangers star Artemi Panarin — whom he coached with the Columbus Blue Jackets — and Michkov, in the way they can quickly accelerate when their team gains possession of the puck.
“It’s funny how you watch a guy like [Panarin], where it might be a little bit of a struggle to get back when you don’t have the puck, and how quickly it comes back when they do have the puck,” the coach said. “Bread is one of the best at it, and I think Mich has a little bit of that.”
Tortorella said there’s a discernible jump in quality of play from exhibition season to the regular season that Michkov will have to handle, and that “situational play” will be one of the biggest learning curves for him.
“I think that’s the key thing when you’re dealing with offensive players. There are certain times in the game when you’ve just got to be simple. You may have to fight another day to make that play,” he said. “That’s something I know we’re going to have to teach him. But I want to let him go. We’re not going to try to stifle him in any way as far as his creativity.”
For all the concerns about the coexistence between Michkov and Tortorella, the coach says he wants to just let him fly.
“You get happy for a 19-year-old kid, coming from overseas, spotlight on him a little bit, and he just goes and plays,” he said. “When I think of myself at that age, there’s not a chance I could be doing the things he’s doing. I was never mature enough. So it’s fun for an older person to look at a young kid enjoying himself and handling the situation like he has.”
John Tortorella, living vicariously through Matvei Michkov. Who knew?
College football reporter; joined ESPN in 2008. Graduate of Northwestern University.
Notre Dame coach Marcus Freeman said he had to “trust my gut” in selecting freshman CJ Carr to be the Fighting Irish’s starting quarterback for Sunday’s opener at No. 10 Miami, following a competition with Kenny Minchey that showed few statistical differences.
Carr, the grandson of former Michigan coach Lloyd Carr, will make his first career start after appearing in only one game last season and not recording any statistics. Minchey, a third-year player, has appeared in only four games for the Irish.
“Statistically, as close to any quarterback competition I’ve ever been a part of,” Freeman said Tuesday, speaking for the first time since naming Carr the starter last week. “I was looking for that to be the reason to make a decision, and it wasn’t clear.”
Carr, who grew up near Michigan’s campus in Saline, Michigan, was ESPN’s No. 2 pocket passer and No. 36 overall recruit in the 2024 class. He sustained an injury to his throwing elbow in practice last September that limited him for much of the season, but did not require surgery.
Carr, Minchey and Steve Angeli, Notre Dame’s primary backup the past two seasons, competed during spring practice. Angeli then transferred to Syracuse, where he won the starting job in camp. Carr only saw the field briefly in Notre Dame’s blowout win at Purdue last September.
“He’s as intelligent of a football player you’ll be around, works extremely hard in his preparation,” Freeman said. “He’s a guy that’s very confident — at some points, you may be a little bit overconfident — but you want that in your quarterback. You want the quarterback to say, ‘I want the ball in my hands every play when the game is on the line, and I believe that I’m going to make the right decision.'”
Freeman said Carr’s decision-making will be paramount in a difficult road setting at Miami, noting that Notre Dame has other strengths, such as its run game and defense, that should help a young quarterback.
“Every play, it can’t be a bomb,” Freeman said. “Trust the game plan, trust what you see, be who you are and win this play. I don’t want to put a numerical expectation on him. Be the best version of CJ Carr, make those guys around you better. That’s something that he does really well.”
Freeman also was very complimentary of Minchey, noting that arguably no Notre Dame player has gained more trust since the start of spring practice until now. Minchey had some expected disappointment with Freeman’s decision but has shown his maturity in how he has practiced the past week.
“He’s good enough to be the starting quarterback at Notre Dame,” Freeman said. “I didn’t expect him to be happy with my decision, but I did expect, after a day or so, to see the maturity of Kenny Minchey, in terms of being able to go back to work, understand and delay gratification.”
Notre Dame defensive end Jordan Botelho, who missed all but three games last season with a knee injury and sustained a torn pectoral while training in June, will be available against Miami. Botelho started throughout 2023 and the first three games last fall before the knee injury.
College football reporter; joined ESPN in 2008. Graduate of Northwestern University.
Virginia Tech junior linebacker Caleb Woodson, a team captain, was arrested Saturday on a charge of misdemeanor driving while intoxicated.
Woodson, 21, was jailed and released Saturday on $2,500 unsecured bond. He has a court date scheduled for Sept. 9. According to online court records, this is his first DWI offense.
Coach Brent Pry said Woodson will face internal discipline following his arrest, and that his status for Sunday’s opener against No. 13 South Carolina in Atlanta has not been determined.
“There’s been a lot of discussions over the last few days regarding this matter,” Pry said. “And there’s certainly internal program consequences at play, measures at play, and then the university’s policy, the athletic department policies, we’re committed to seeing that out.”
Pry also told reporters that Woodson’s status as a team captain, which he earned last week, has been removed, although he will have the chance to earn it back.
Woodson started 11 of 13 games for the Hokies last season, finishing second on the team with 72 tackles while recording 7.5 tackles for loss, two sacks and an interception.
Woodson, from Haymarket, Virginia, started one game and played in all 13 during his 2023 freshman season, when he had 22 tackles.
Alabama and West Virginia mutually agreed to cancel their home-and-home series that had been scheduled for 2026 and 2027, the schools announced Tuesday.
Alabama said it was making adjustments to its nonconference schedule in response to last week’s announcement that the Southeastern Conference would go from playing eight to nine league games starting in 2026.
West Virginia said it wanted to align with the scheduling philosophy followed by many teams contending for a College Football Playoff berth. That means playing a fellow power-conference opponent, one from the Group of Five and one from the second-tier Football Championship Subdivision.
Alabama will now play East Carolina on Sept. 5, 2026, as well as South Florida on Sept. 12 and Florida State on Sept. 19. West Virginia now plays Coastal Carolina on Sept. 5, UT-Martin on Sept. 12 and Virginia on Sept. 19.