Flyers Preseason Game 5 Takeaways: Shootouts and Roster Spots Won in Boston

The Philadelphia Flyers’ 3–2 shootout win over the Boston Bruins on Monday night might read like another modest preseason victory in the box score. But in reality, it was something much more telling.

The Philadelphia Flyers’ 3–2 shootout win over the Boston Bruins on Monday night might read like another modest preseason victory in the box score. But in reality, it was something much more telling.

It was the kind of game that reveals identity, chemistry, and momentum—three qualities that can’t be faked in September, no matter how meaningless the schedule may look on paper.

This was not a perfect performance. There were mistakes, defensive breakdowns, and plenty for Rick Tocchet and his staff to nitpick on video. But it was also one of those rare preseason contests that seemed to give shape to the bigger picture: which players are forcing themselves into the conversation, which lines can’t be touched, and which lessons are sticking.


The Foerster–Cates–Brink Line: Chemistry That Transcends Preseason

There are lines you experiment with in camp, lines you deploy to eat minutes, and then there are lines that simply belong together.

Tyson Foerster, Noah Cates, and Bobby Brink fall into the last category.

In their preseason debut as a trio, they looked every bit like the unit that coaches and fans raved about last year. The highlight was a beautifully constructed goal finished by Cates, assisted by both Foerster and Brink—a sequence that encapsulated exactly why this line works so well.

Cates anchors the middle with defensive reliability and understated playmaking. Brink brings pace and sharp reads on the wing. And Foerster, equal parts sniper and workhorse, ties it all together with skill and finishing touch.

Rick Tocchet has not shied away from shuffling lines this September—testing chemistry, pushing players into new spots, and looking for hidden sparks. But some combinations make their own case, loudly and repeatedly. This is one of them. Around the league, opponents have already come to recognize how suffocating the trio can be: hard to outwork, harder to outthink, and quietly lethal when opportunities arise.

Breaking them up now would feel almost negligent. The Flyers have stumbled upon something here that isn’t just good for the preseason—it’s good for the grind of 82 games.


Rodrigo Abols: From Bubble Watch to Roster Lock

Every preseason, a player forces his way from long shot to legitimate lock. This year, it’s Rodrigo Abols.

The 29-year-old forward entered camp as something of a depth option, the kind of versatile piece who could just as easily start the year in Lehigh Valley as in Philadelphia. But five games in nine nights—every single one of the Flyers’ preseason contests so far—has completely shifted the calculus.

In Boston, what should have been a fatigued outing, Abols instead looked sharper than ever. He scored a goal, made several crafty plays in transition, and continued to prove that he can handle just about any role Tocchet throws at him. It wasn’t just his productivity—it was his consistency. You don’t notice him take nights off. You don’t see him cutting corners. You see a player who simply belongs.

Tocchet himself has pointed out the value of Abols’ versatility: “When a guy can play dual, he usually gets the extra games,” he said after Monday's morning skate. And it’s that positional flexibility—comfortable at both center and wing—that only strengthens Abols’ case.

At this point, there’s little left to debate. He has earned his roster spot. Preseason isn’t always fair, but in Abols’ case, merit has met opportunity.


Dan Vladar: Calm, Composed, Convincing

Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's only his first full game in Flyers colors, but Dan Vladar did everything he needed to do to show fans exactly who he is and what he's here to do. 

Vladar was everything the coaching staff could have hoped for: steady, athletic, and composed in traffic. Boston threw plenty of rubber his way, particularly in the third period when they pressed to tilt momentum. Vladar answered with positioning that cut down angles, quick reactions on rebounds, and poise in scrambles around the blue paint.

And then, in the shootout, he shut the door. For a team that has lived through more than its share of goaltending instability, there was something almost soothing about the way Vladar handled himself—like he’d been here before, like he was built for these moments.

No one’s crowning him the starter off one game, but if Monday's performance was any indication, the Flyers may have found the reliable second half of their goaltending tandem.


Adam Ginning Finally Stands Out

The battle for the final defensive roster spots has been muddy. Tocchet himself admitted that none of the bubble defensemen had truly separated themselves. That changed, at least temporarily, in Boston.

Adam Ginning put together his strongest performance of the preseason, playing the kind of quietly effective game that the Flyers need at the bottom of their blue line. He read plays well, stayed pretty disciplined in his gaps, and resisted the temptation to overextend himself in transition.

It wasn’t spectacular—Ginning doesn’t wow you with end-to-end rushes—but it was steady, and steady goes a long way when you’re trying to make an NHL roster. In a field of defensemen that have struggled to distinguish themselves, Ginning’s showing may have been enough to nudge him ahead.

Adam Ginning (13). (Megan DeRuchie-The Hockey News)

The Bigger Picture: Tocchet’s Lessons in Action

Tocchet has been preaching two consistent themes throughout camp: discipline in keeping opponents to the outside, and the ability to “play tired” without compounding mistakes. Friday’s win didn’t deliver perfection on either front, but it showed progress.

The Flyers were calmer in their defensive posture, less prone to overcommitting or leaving their feet in desperation. And while fatigue did creep in during stretches, the group didn’t collapse. They absorbed pressure, leaned on Vladar, and forced overtime.

In a preseason defined more by teaching moments than by results, that’s exactly the kind of growth Tocchet wants to see.

Category: General Sports