

Back on draft day in 2022, the Philadelphia Flyers were staring at both Cutter Gauthier and David Jiricek on the board at pick No. 5. Then-general manager Chuck Fletcher decided to select Gauthier, while the righthanded shooting defenseman Jiricek went sixth overall to the Columbus Blue Jackets.
Now, Gauthier is long gone, and David Jiricek is a Philadelphia Flyer.
On Friday morning, just hours before the trade deadline, the Flyers acquired Jiricek in a one-for-one trade for winger Bobby Brink. Brink was rumored to be on the trade block in the lead-up to the deadline, despite establishing himself as a quality NHL middle-six winger. He hit his career-high in points last season with 41 in 79 games, and reached a new high in goals already this season with 13.
But given Brink’s age — 24 going on 25 — he was close to a finished product, with the most likely scenario being that Brink was going to top out as a middle-sixer and nothing more. And the Flyers are poised to have a surplus of NHL wingers, especially with the emergence of Denver Barkey, the looming arrival of 2025 fifth overall pick Porter Martone, the coming promotion of Alex Bump, and Tyson Foerster’s return from injury in 2026-27. There just weren’t enough spots for all of the team’s wingers — especially wingers who favor playing on the right side (Foerster, Travis Konecny, Matvei Michkov, Owen Tippett, Martone).


Jiricek, on the other hand, plays a premium position and comes with plenty of plausible upside. Given his draft pedigree, expectations were high for the defenseman in Columbus, and he appeared to be meeting them in his Draft+1 season, scoring 38 points in 55 AHL games as a 19-year old. But then, his progress stalled, as he bounced between the AHL and NHL for the next one-and-a-half seasons before getting shipped to Minnesota for a haul of draft picks (first, second, third and fourth round picks, and defenseman Daemon Hunt).
But it didn’t work out in Minnesota for Jiricek, either. Jiricek comes with plenty of strengths — a powerful slapshot, strong puck skills, a physical edge, and great size — but his weaknesses held him back. Skating has always been an issue for the 6’4 blueliner, and while it is NHL-caliber, his stride remains on the awkward side. But it was inconsistency and decision-making that ultimately soured the Wild on the defenseman — who just last season they paid a massive price to pry out of Columbus. Jiricek is prone to the “big mistake,” and given Minnesota’s designs on Stanley Cup contention this year, that was enough to get him sent back down to the AHL.
The Flyers clearly see a potential reclamation project, a formerly highly-touted prospect at a position of scarcity (RHD) that they can develop into an impact player. There’s lots of risk involved — Jiricek’s NHL results thus far in 84 games aren’t pretty — and it’s possible Jiricek’s flaws prevent him from being more than a depth defenseman at the highest level. But his natural skill and physical advantages give him the opportunity to be far more than that.


Right now, Jiricek doesn’t have a clear cut path to NHL playing time, given the Flyers’ logjam on the back end. But that’s a logjam that could be resolved as soon as today, if Rasmus Ristolainen is shipped out before the 3 PM deadline. Long-term, however, the Flyers now have three under-25 righthanded shooting defensemen that were selected in Round 1 in their organization — Jiricek, Jamie Drysdale and Oliver Bonk. It’s not hard to guess that they now see that as the foundation of their future defense corps.
As for Brink, he joins a Minnesota club that expects to make a title push, especially after trading for Quinn Hughes back in December. Brink is a Minnesota native, so he’ll be returning home to play for a true contender. His exit opens the door for a number of potential lineup and roster moves for the Flyers — Matvei Michkov could be returned to RW, Alex Bump could be called up, Nikita Grebenkin could get another extended look in the top-nine, and eventually, Porter Martone could slide into the newly opened spot.
There remains time for Daniel Briere to make further moves before the 3 PM deadline. But he’s already put his stamp on the team’s future with this morning’s Brink/Jiricek trade.

9 Comments (7 conversations)
Chris
Not a bad swing IMO. We’re giving up a sure-thing in Brink as a NHL player for one that may not make it in Jiricek, but boy if he does…
Vandit Kalia
38 minutes to go,
Come on Danny, trade Risto. If for no other reason than to give him a chance at making the playoffs. 800 games without the playoffs is just rubbish – and the guy plays hard, never complains.
jonas
Swing and miss from DB. He traded a good player who continues to trend up for a bad player who continues to trend down.
Matthew
Brink is who he is. A fine third liner. We have plenty of them and he was blocking players with higher upside and (wrongly and thru no fault of his own) potentially contributing to Michkov being forced to play on the left. Re-signing Brink would have been a mistake, but trading him for a potential high upside RHD is good. I’m fine with this even if Jiricek turns into nothing.
Matthew
Charlie, I yearn for the day when I can read your articles and listen to you and Bill while the Flyers are contending. Some day, hopefully. The first season I really paid attention was the 2003-04 season, which was an incredible run. I can’t believe it’s been so long without a cup.
David LaVeck
I absolutely love this trade for a number of reasons. First, it gives the Flyers a young top prospect at a position of need. Second, it helps to free up the log jam at winger and especially RW! Lastly, it is the type of trade a rebuilding team should be making, trading a position of strength for one of weakness and getting a coveted right shot defenseman with high ceiling potential and he has size at 6’4” to boot! Looking back at his draft, he was a top prospect that maybe should have been picked over Cutter in hindsight?
Robert Savino Jr
This trade sucks in my opinion. I am tired of taking on players with sub par skating abilities. Danny had a chance to go all out and dismantle this failed rebuild and start from the bare bones and didn’t.
Derrick Stagliano
The Flyers can be questioned for overall player development, however they have a very good track record in turning bad skaters into quality NHL players (see Couturier and Lindblom)
Zach
How would you rank this group of flyers prospects in comparison to prior Flyers regimes. Are Danny and Brent Flahr doings a good job of filling the cupboard? I know we need top 6 centers