Oct. 22: Seeler is officially off IR and will play tonight, the team announced.
Oct. 21: The Flyers have returned defense prospect Emil Andrae to AHL Lehigh Valley, a move made official this morning but reflected in the AHL’s transactions log over the weekend. It’s a strong indication that Nick Seeler, who’s yet to play this season after taking a puck to the knee late in their exhibition schedule, will come off injured reserve ahead of tomorrow’s game against the Capitals and will enter the lineup, per Adam Kimelman of NHL.com.
Andrae, 22, had a strong training camp by all accounts but fell just short of making the opening night roster. The 2020 second-round pick has four NHL games under his belt, all coming with Philly last season. He was recalled to give the Flyers injury insurance on the back end earlier this month, shortly after Seeler landed on IR, but he hasn’t played. He sat in the press box for all five of Philadelphia’s games this season.
The Swede will get the chance to hit the ice soon in Lehigh Valley, where he had 32 points (5 G, 27 A), 66 PIMs, and a -10 rating in 61 games last year. It was his first full campaign in North America after spending parts of four seasons in the Swedish Hockey League and HockeyAllsvenskan with HV71 and Västerviks IK. He won the latter league with HV71 in 2022, posting 33 points in 41 regular-season games and 11 points in 10 qualification games to lead their blue line and help them gain promotion back to the top-level SHL.
Andrae will likely get a legitimate NHL look later on in the season. In his four appearances with the Flyers last year, he posted a -1 rating, six blocks, and five hits while averaging 13 minutes per game. He still has one season left after this one on his entry-level contract and won’t be an RFA until 2026.
Meanwhile, Seeler’s return gives the 1-3-1 Flyers a much-needed boost. He’s expected to anchor the team’s second pairing alongside Jamie Drysdale, according to Jordan Hall of NBC Sports Philadelphia. The 31-year-old was deployed in top-four minutes at even strength for the first time last season, posting a career-high 12 assists with a +9 rating and 78 PIMs in 71 appearances. He averaged nearly 17 minutes per night and had some of the best possession quality metrics on the team, logging a 56.0 xGF%. That performance earned him a four-year, $10.8MM extension back in March, easily the richest deal of his career.
That stable presence will aid a Philly squad that’s really struggled to keep the puck out of their own net, allowing 4.20 GA/GP. Their possession play hasn’t been great, only controlling 47.5% of scoring chances and an abysmal 40.4% of high-danger chances at even strength. Seeler’s return will help get those numbers closer to 50 if his performance over the last two seasons is any indication.
Inside Out
When a team’s answer to sucking is activating Seeler you know they are playing for a high draft pick. Not a bad strategy given how bad this team is and little high end talent beyond Mickhov