Flyers NHL Trade Deadline Recap: Grading Danny Briere’s Moves
The Philadelphia Flyers made three deals ahead of the NHL Trade Deadline on March 7. Danny Briere flipped Scott Laughton, Andrei Kuzmenko, and Erik Johnson in seller’s moves that shrink…

The Philadelphia Flyers made three deals ahead of the NHL Trade Deadline on March 7. Danny Briere flipped Scott Laughton, Andrei Kuzmenko, and Erik Johnson in seller’s moves that shrink the dwindling playoff odds for the 2024-25 season.
The Flyers also subtracted Joel Farabee and Morgan Frost five weeks ago. They held onto Rasmus Ristolainen despite circulating rumors leading up to the deadline and throughout the past two seasons.
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- What value did the Flyers acquire after moving three veterans and two developing younger roster players?
- How do the return packages impact the offseason plans with additional draft picks and salary cap flexibility?
- What do the trades mean for the big picture of the organization’s rebuild?
Flyers at 2025 NHL Trade Deadline
Joel Farabee/Morgan Frost Trade
Flyers Get: Andrei Kuzmenko, Jakob Pelletier, 2nd-Round Pick in 2025, 7th-Round Pick in 2026
Calgary Flames Get: Joel Farabee, Morgan Frost
Moving Farabee and Frost created significant offseason flexibility for the Flyers.
Briere shed Farabee’s $5 million annual cap hit through 2028 and eliminated the need to extend Frost as a pending restricted free agent. The trade also added to Philadelphia’s stockpile of draft picks and improved the likelihood of acquiring top-end talent while losing only two middling players.
“The biggest thing in all of this is the cap flexibility that it gives us moving forward. Maybe not this year per se but moving forward. It's no secret that, especially in Joel's case, the cap hit moving forward was tough. Most of the discussions we had, teams were not willing to take on his full salary. Especially with the term left on it. Morgan was also getting closer to getting paid a lot more money.” -Danny Briere
Briere already dealt Kuzmenko after only seven games with the Flyers. The ensuing deal added to the draft compensation and underscored the focus on the bigger picture rather than Kuzmenko and Pelletier’s fit in Philadelphia.
The Flyers are missing the center who will play on the top line with Matvei Michkov during the time period when they intend to grow into a Stanley Cup contender.
The trade appears to have brought them one step closer to finding that center, but until it happens, Danny Briere won’t relish in the credit for the overall outlook of a deal that immediately weakened his roster significantly.
Grade: B

Andrei Kuzmenko Trade
Flyers Get: 3rd-Round Pick in 2027
Los Angeles Kings Get: Andrei Kuzmenko (with 50% salary retention), 7th-Round Pick in 2025
Kuzmenko spent five weeks with the Flyers. The 4 Nations Face-Off break limited him to seven games.
His inclusion in the January trade with the Flames had more to do with salary cap maneuvering than his fit with the Flyers.
The Flyers didn’t intend to re-sign the impending unrestricted free agent. They took the available compensation.
Briere’s decision to deal Kuzmenko to the Kings indicates a lack of interest in the outcome of the 2024-25 season. He dealt a player with legitimate NHL pedigree who might’ve improved a disastrous power play for a future draft choice that will likely be spent (by whichever NHL team uses it) on a player who is currently 15 or 16 years old.
The Flyers retained 50% of Kuzmenko’s $5.5 million salary, prorated until the end of the season. Despite the fan base’s consistent criticism of Comcast, their deep pockets opened up an opportunity that small market ownership probably wouldn’t have approved.
The financial flexibility increased Kuzmenko's trade value and landed the Flyers higher compensation than most experts projected before the NHL Trade Deadline.
The Russian winger played briefly with Matvei Michkov in the KHL, but John Tortorella spoke optimistically about Michkov’s progress with the English language. The organization’s willingness to deal a native Russian speaker reflects well on Michkov’s assimilation to life in North America.
Grade: A-

Photo by Scott Taetsch/Getty Images
Scott Laughton Trade
Flyers Get: Conditional 1st-Round Pick in 2027 (top-10 protected), Nikita Grebenkin
Toronto Maple Leafs Get: Scott Laughton, 4th-Round Pick in 2025, 6th-Round Pick in 2027
The Flyers finally pulled the trigger.
Not many people inside or outside the organization have a bad word to say about Scott Laughton. He commands respect for withstanding the ups and downs of his professional career since the Flyers selected him in the first round of the 2012 NHL Draft.
The 30-year-old has survived the trade rumor mill annually, but Briere dealt the Ontario native and former OHL star to the Maple Leafs ahead of the 2025 NHL Trade Deadline. He is fathering a newborn, and he recently lost his father-in-law. He’ll now play about an hour away from his hometown in Oakville.
The Flyers own six first-round picks in the next three NHL Drafts. They’re more likely to package the picks in a larger deal than make each selection.
Although first-round compensation for a third-line player is a solid return on the surface, don’t ignore the qualifiers.
The Flyers will pay 50% of Laughton’s salary through the 2025-26 season. They also sent two future picks to the Leafs.
Flyers fans offered Briere oversimplified praise for trading Sean Walker for a first-round pick one year ago, and they should look more carefully beyond the lure that the phrase "first-round pick" carries on social media this year. The pick won't land in the top 10, and the player taken is a long way off from contributing at the NHL level.
The development of Nikita Grebenkin will play a major role in evaluating the trade. The 6-foot-2 winger has spent most of his first season in North America in the AHL.
The Leafs drafted Grebenkin in the fifth round of the 2022 NHL Draft. He spent the early seasons of his professional career in the KHL.
Briere’s decision to move Laughton indicates the most impactful shift in the timeline of the organization’s rebuild.
The newly-constructed front office has heavily emphasized and repeatedly reinforced culture as a key foundation since they announced their plans for the New Era of Orange.
The front office has determined the future of Nick Seeler, Garnet Hathaway, Travis Konecny, and Rasmus Ristolainen with consideration to their impact on the culture (to highly-varying extents).
They’ve finally shown a significant willingness to trade players who contribute to the culture. Briere began the shift by moving Farabee and Frost in January, but Laughton was the most integral symbol of the culture they’ve looked to build.
“We can’t have soft skin here because you get stuck in the mud, and I think this organization has been stuck in the mud for a number of years. We have to stay true to what Dan Hilferty, Jonesy, myself, and Danny have talked about that we can’t fall in love. If we think we can make our team better and keep progressing to be a more competitive team, we’re going to do it, and there’s going to be some casualties.” -John Tortorella
The added draft capital and shift away from middling players who add to the culture suggests the search for top-line players is about to take shape.
Grade: B+

Retaining Rasmus Ristolainen
Briere set a high asking price for Ristolainen. According to Darren Dreger of TSN in Canada, interested teams fell short of the desired first-round pick, prospect, and roster player package.
Ristolainen’s contract runs through 2027. The Flyers held the leverage that teams trading impending UFAs don’t have.
Briere used sound logic by attempting to maximize the return package for a player who still brings value to the Flyers on the current roster.
However, he passed on the perfect confluence of health, effective play on the ice, and the desire that contenders have for a player of Ristolainen’s style entering the Stanley Cup Playoffs.
If no other teams met the asking price at the 2025 NHL Trade Deadline, it’s unlikely they’ll meet it at any point in the future.
Grade: C

Erik Johnson Trade
Flyers Get: Givani Smith
Colorado Avalanche Get: Erik Johnson
Laughton contributed on the ice in 60 games in 2024-25. Johnson was on the Flyers almost entirely to maintain the culture.
The 36-year-old defenseman skated in his 1000th career NHL regular-season game in November. He took on a mentorship role for younger players on the team since Briere acquired him at the 2024 NHL Trade Deadline.
Johnson played 13 seasons in Colorado through the prime of his career. The idea of sending him for a chance to win a Stanley Cup in what might be his final NHL season isn’t separate from the respect he’s earned within the organization.
Johnson attended the NHL broadcasting camp in New York last summer. Don’t be surprised if he finds his way back to Philadelphia to utilize that experience in a city where the media latched onto him during a short stop for a cup of coffee.
Givani Smith will hit unrestricted free agency after the season. The journeyman will likely join the NHL roster, but doing right by a respected veteran is a bigger takeaway from the trade.

Danny Briere: Final Grade
The Flyers began their rebuild searching for top-end talent that will lead the franchise’s next Stanley Cup contending team.
They’ve spent recent seasons accumulating resources to acquire those players and evaluating middling talent internally. The heavy emphasis on culture has played a close part in their plan to enable player development and prevented the Flyers from finishing at the bottom of the NHL standings.
Briere’s moves ahead of the NHL Trade Deadline align smoothly with Philadelphia’s plan in the big picture more than their characteristics of the front office’s first two years.
He continued to stockpile draft capital in the organization’s fifth consecutive deadline as a seller. The picks look increasingly likely to play a part in a major offseason trade to fill the void of a top-line center.
Briere also brought the Flyers closer to escaping their sentence in salary cap jail.
While trading Farabee and Frost indicated a new direction, losing Scott Laughton symbolizes the shift more emphatically. The Flyers are no longer primarily focusing on internal evaluations enabled by culture.
They’re ready to enter the next phase of the rebuild during the 2025 offseason.
Briere’s maneuvering has increased his flexibility to make the necessary splash. However, the evaluation of rebuilds becomes particularly complicated under these circumstances.
Any credit the Flyers get comes with an asterisk. Draft picks and salary cap flexibility create the prospect of future success.
The theoretical moves haven’t materialized yet. NHL GMs who deliberately weaken their NHL roster immediately don’t deserve grades at the A level before they execute with the acquired resources.
Grade: B+

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