Flyers Prospects
Should Flyers Keep Jett Luchanko on NHL Roster? Pros and Cons
After some impressive development camp, training camp, and preseason performances, the Philadelphia Flyers will soon have a tough decision to make on 2024 first-round pick Jett Luchanko.
Based on merit – and it’s still early – Luchanko has earned the right to continue to battle for an NHL roster spot. The Flyers themselves have said that they won’t deny Luchanko that chance.
But is time in the NHL wise for the Guelph Storm ace, who turned 18 only a few weeks ago?
The Flyers’ main concern is developing Luchanko’s offensive game, not necessarily helping him develop good habits defensively or things of that nature. The 18-year-old already plays with good details, but the question is more about if or when he becomes a finished product at both ends of the ice.
We live in an age when athletes are getting better earlier, and more top draft picks are making early debuts in the NHL.
One example that best fits Luchanko is how New Jersey Devils center Nico Hischier broke into the league immediately after being drafted.
Yes, Hischier was the No. 1 pick in the 2017 draft, but the situation he walked into is similar to the one Luchanko is in the middle of with the Flyers.
Taylor Hall had been tasked with carrying the Devils’ offense, which was so dismal that it almost single-handedly prevented the team from making the playoffs every year. Does that remind you of Flyers All-Star Travis Konecny at all?
Hischier never had to shoulder the burden of tough defensive minutes on his own, either. Veteran center Travis Zajac was second to only Hall in ice time amongst Devils forwards in the 2017-18 season and comfortably led the team in faceoff wins and faceoff attempts.
By the end of the 2017-18 season, Hischier attempted 983 faceoffs, won 422 of them (42.9%), and averaged only 16:19 of ice time. The Swiss center, who was stapled to Hall for virtually the entire season, finished with 20 goals, 32 assists, and 52 points, with only six of those points coming on the power play.
Since then, Hischier has reached the 30-goal and 80-point milestones as he developed into a perennial Frank J. Selke trophy candidate and one of the league’s best minute-eating two-way centers.
Flyers Parallels
Although Hall won the Hart Trophy with 93 points and the Devils reverted to being a bad team after the 2018 Stanley Cup playoffs, New Jersey still managed to put Hischier in a good situation.
Hischier was insulated by a number of veterans, including Hall, Zajac, Adam Henrique (traded midseason), Kyle Palmieri, Andy Greene, Brian Boyle, Drew Stafford, Ben Lovejoy, and others.
Flyers captain Sean Couturier is effectively Philadelphia’s Zajac who can serve as the go-to guy in certain high-pressure situations. The Flyers, too, have plenty of other veterans to assist Luchanko, including Konecny, Joel Farabee, Erik Johnson, Travis Sanheim, Rasmus Ristolainen, Garnet Hathaway, Scott Laughton, Ryan Poehling, and more.
It’s important to note, too, that Hischier wasn’t the only youngster on that Devils team. Jesper Bratt also made the Devils as a teenager, and former top draft pick Pavel Zacha cracked the roster just before Bratt and Hischier arrived.
Together, the three young players developed some strong chemistry, though Zacha never fully realized his potential and later turned the corner after being traded to Boston.
Luchanko will have the chance to experience the same thing in Philadelphia with fellow Flyers rookie Matvei Michkov and young cornerstones like Jamie Drysdale and Tyson Foerster.
The obvious downside is that Luchanko struggles with consistency and scoring like Zacha did, though Zacha was moved back to center after arriving in Boston and excelled there. If John Tortorella and the Flyers are more patient with Luchanko, it could pay dividends in the short and long term.
It’s entirely possible that Luchanko doesn’t reach the same heights Hischier reached, but his floor should be close. Playing with NHL-quality players will almost assuredly help the London, Ont., native develop his offensive instincts and bravado with the puck, and Luchanko’s defensive instincts are already high-end.
Further to that point, Jack Hughes only scored seven goals in his rookie season. This is just to say that the process of developing young NHL players isn’t always linear and two career arcs usually aren’t the same. Hard work and self-awareness are virtues that are required of the athlete in these situations, too. If Luchanko works relentlessly at developing his shot, who’s to say he can’t score 30 goals in the NHL?
The risk assessment is ultimately up to the Flyers to conduct, but the decision to send Luchanko back to Guelph rather than keep him and develop him in Philadelphia might not be as clear-cut as some think.
There’s a very easy solution. Let him start the season with the team and as he progresses through the first possible nine game stint they can reevaluate and then determine whether to send him back to Guelph or keep him up with the club.
It would be foolish to automatically send him back to the juniors.
Agree….give him nine and re-evaluate….though prefer he go back down to juniors after the 9th game….he can be called back up after Guelph’s season is completed which should be in March sometime.
Not sure if bringing him back in late March would cause the burning of year one from his ELC since that would constitute 10+ games.
Whatever is best for Jett. This season doesn’t matter for us . What’s important for both us and Jett himself what’s best for 3 years from now . This league is VERY tough for a rookies . Especially for a center , although he can be bottom 6 we are talking about playing agsinst grown men in most cases even they don’t have skill
what matters is he’s developed enough to play center #3 for our cup team in 3 years
wouod love to see him and bonk both up . But I can wait another year. We have already all lived thru 3 years of a tank to get the required players needed . What’s one more year . We have drysdale and michkov to watch grow along with foerster .
its unthinkable for a 17 or 18 year old kid to join the league from the wow 🤩 factor . Amazing feat !!
Don’t know why you underestimate Jett. Were you upset they didn’t pick Gauthier’s buddy Buium? Who are you to say that Jett is going to top out as a #3 center and be bottom six?
Speed kills and he has it in spades. At the junior level he was a one man team entering the offensive zone on the pp. Just what the Dr. ordered for the Flyers. I trust their scouts and think that he can be a #2 centerman, with the outside possibility of #1 if things develop properly.
Middle 6 C was the consensus of almost all the league scouts. The Flyers view him as more than that and they’ll look like geniuses if they’re right, but outside of Philadelphia nobody was touting him as 1C.
Back in the day the Flyers reached for a kid out of Sweden that eventually made it to the HOF based on the recommendation of their scouts. His name was Peter Forsberg.
Another consideration in the decision is salary cap space, and future contracts. I don’t think you want Luchanko and Michkov due new contracts at the same time. With Johansen now of the CAP they have CAP room to carry him but 22 of 23 roster spots are filled, so some players will need to clear waivers.
I agree with GMan. Play him to start the season and reevaluate.
If he can earn a spot, he deserves to stay. Having him sent back because of some arbitrary “plan” is contrary to what young players were told at the start of training camp and will demoralize young players. They deserve the chance and the fair competition they were promised.
Also, I’m getting a little tired of hearing some people talk about a Cup run in a few years as if it’s a given. There are thirty other teams saying the same thing.
Do you know what wins you a Cup? Establishing from top to bottom of the organization that winning is expected, and making the playoffs each year. Let’s start with that, and stop throwing seasons away.
I think GMan and Mike from Allentown stated their positions well. Let him start the season and evaluate his performance and willingness to adapt through the nine initial games. I recognize having Jett and Matvei looking at new contracts at the same time may not be most desirable, but that’s why the front office has personnel to work out cap solutions.
If he earns a spot in the top six every night than keep him on the roster. Otherwise send him back to Juniors. It is a lot harder to develop skills playing limited minutes at the NHL level. No sense in rushing the kid into a checking role.