Hockey

Is Blue Jackets' Fantilli Next After Flyers' Bold Move For Carlsson?

Maybe it was because the NBA's Philadelphia 76ers made a big splash this week – acquiring veteran star Jaylen Brown - and showed they were in win-now mode while pushing the city's upstart hockey team to the media's background.

Or maybe the Philadelphia Flyers are still fuming about Cutter Gauthier forcing his way out of Philly. He was dealt to the Anaheim Ducks in 2024, and now the Flyers are on the verge of taking away one of his top teammates.

Or Flyers GM Danny Briere just thought it was time to address perhaps Philadelphia's biggest need, which is a young No. 1 center.

 Breaking: Philadelphia Flyers Sign Anaheim Ducks Center Leo Carlsson to Five-Year, $18 Million AAV Offer Sheet
Breaking: Philadelphia Flyers Sign Anaheim Ducks Center Leo Carlsson to Five-Year, $18 Million AAV Offer Sheet Gary A. Vasquez Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

Breaking: Philadelphia Flyers Sign Anaheim Ducks Center Leo Carlsson to Five-Year, $18 Million AAV Offer Sheet

Daniel Briere's aggressive gamble forces a historic standoff, leveraging four first-round picks to make the young Swede the NHL's highest-paid star and reshape Anaheim's financial future.

Briere said the team would not have any comment until after the Ducks make a decision to retain Carlsson or let him go to Philly.

This is reminiscent of a move made by then Flyers GM Paul Holmgren in 2012, when he tried to lure Nashville Predators defenseman Shea Weber to Philadelphia by signing the RFA to a 14-year, $110-million-per-year offer sheet. Nashville matched it.

Holmgren later said other GMs were more reluctant to deal with him after the move. GMs have sort of a gentleman's agreement not to sign RFAs, but there is nothing illegal about it.

Offer sheets don't happen very often, but good on Briere to push the envelope for a much-needed piece.

 The Anaheim Ducks Must Put Their Money Where There Mouth Is After Historic Leo Carlsson Offer Sheet
The Anaheim Ducks Must Put Their Money Where There Mouth Is After Historic Leo Carlsson Offer Sheet

The Anaheim Ducks Must Put Their Money Where There Mouth Is After Historic Leo Carlsson Offer Sheet

The Philadelphia Flyers made a shockingly bold move Friday, signing Leo Carlsson to a massive offer sheet that will give him the NHL's highest cap hit. The Ducks have said they'd match any offer sheet to Carlsson in the past, so they must prove it.

The young Flyers made the playoffs last season for the first time in six years, then upset the Pittsburgh Penguins in the first round, sprouting optimism.

But the team knew it needed a No. 1 center and a quarterback on their woeful power play before it could be considered a legitimate Stanley Cup contender.

Briere has tried to make some moves to fill those spots, but has shot blanks. Enter the brave world of free agency, particularly on the RFA front.

Carlsson, 21, the second overall draft pick in 2023, would fill one of the Flyers' glaring needs. The 6-foot-3 center had 29 goals and 38 assists for 67 points in 70 games this past year. He then added four goals and 11 points in 12 playoff games.

Even if Anaheim retains Carlsson, the signing would hurt its salary structure. The Ducks have several players they need to sign, including Gauthier, who had 41 goals this past season and who once demanded a trade from the Flyers.

Could the Ducks end up paying Carlsson and Gauthier more than a combined $30 million a season in 2026-27? Absolutely.

 Did The Philadelphia Flyers Just Make Adam Fantilli A Rich Man?
Did The Philadelphia Flyers Just Make Adam Fantilli A Rich Man? Kirby Lee Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Did The Philadelphia Flyers Just Make Adam Fantilli A Rich Man?

The Philadelphia Flyers may have just set the market for the 2023 draft class that includes Adam Fantilli, Connor Bedard, and Leo Carlsson.

So what happens if Carlsson ends up staying in Anaheim? Well, now that Briere has shown he is all in on trying to make a big splash, he might turn his attention to RFA Fantilli if he is unable to land Carlsson.

Like Carlsson, the 6-foot-2 Fantilli is 21 years old and an RFA. He had 24 goals and 59 points this past season, and his career numbers of 140 points in 213 games are eerily similar to Carlsson's 141 points in 201 games.

Fantilli was drafted No. 3 overall by Columbus in 2023 – one pick after Carlsson went to Anaheim.

Also, the Ducks have $35.17 million in cap space if they don't retain Carlsson, while Columbus has $21.46 million in cap space, per puckpedia.com.

If you do the math, the Flyers ($29.6 million in cap space) would seemingly have a better chance to get a deal done for the Blue Jackets' center.


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Copyright The Hockey News, Roustan Media Ltd.

This story was originally published July 4, 2026 at 10:43 AM.

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