Tyson Foerster talks lucrative extension with the Flyers: ‘It was a no-brainer for me’
Foerster missed 49 games because of injury a season ago, but cited his love of the Flyers and his teammates for why he inked an extension perhaps ahead of schedule.

Fresh off the first playoff berth of his career, Tyson Foerster locked in his future with the Flyers and signed an eight-year extension with $7.1 million average annual value last week.
Foerster was leading the team in goals before he missed 49 games last season with an upper-body injury and returned just in time for the playoffs. But instead of waiting a year to potentially increase his value with a healthy season, Foerster chose to extend now.
“For me, I love Philadelphia, and I love playing with these guys,” Foerster said. “They asked me if I would look to extend this year, and it was a no-brainer for me. I mean, I don’t play hockey for the money, so it’s all fun, and just happy to be here, hopefully, for the next nine years.”
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Even with wing prospects pushing up the lineup for spots, Foerster projects to be a top-six fixture for much of his contract’s duration. The Flyers’ 2020 first-round pick scored 20 goals in 2023-24 and 25 goals in 2024-25 and was on pace to set a career-high before his injury.
Foerster didn’t have the playoff run he may have wanted to, netting just one goal in 10 games. With a mostly healthy offseason ahead, he has plenty to work on as the Flyers continue to build.
“Keep working on my skating, everything overall, but hopefully work on my hands a little bit,” Foerster said. “I think my shot’s pretty good, and I can score from a decent ways out, but I think if I can get in tight around the net, get it upstairs quick enough, little things like that, maybe try and beat a guy one on one with a skill play, just something along those lines. That’s what I’m starting to work on here.”
The Flyers hope signing Foerster is just the beginning of an offseason of upgrades. General manager Danny Briére tendered an offer sheet to Ducks center Leo Carlsson in an effort to land the top-line center the Flyers have been missing.
Regardless of whether the Ducks match, the move provides evidence to the fan base and players that Briére is ready to be creative and aggressive to improve the team.
“Danny, that’s one of the reasons I signed a long-term here, because he’s going to try and push to make us better,” Foerster said.
