The great debate for the Philadelphia Flyers so far this season has been whether or not star sophomore forward Matvei Michkov is getting a fair shake under new head coach Rick Tocchet and being put into positions to truly succeed.
Virtually every young draft pick, like Michkov, has to spend time learning the ropes during their rookie season. That is why it wasn't a real surprise to see the 20-year-old Russian finish the 2024-25 season averaging 16:41 a game.
This season, though, under Tocchet, that number has plummeted nearly two full minutes down to 14:53, and, as a result, Michkov's offensive production has suffered.
With five goals, five assists, and 10 points in 21 games, Michkov is on pace for a measly 20-goal, 40-point season.
That said, though, despite a 33% regression from Michkov, Tocchet still has his supporters who believe the Flyers' franchise player hasn't earned further opportunities.
For example, former NHLer Colby Cohen argued for Daily Faceoff that, because Michkov doesn't kill penalties, "he's never going a 20-minutes-a-night guy."
The argument is inherently flawed, as Michkov has already been and succeeded as a 20-minute player for the Flyers this same calendar year.
In the nine games that remained after John Tortorella was fired by the Flyers, Michkov played 20 or more minutes five times, excluding a game that he finished at 19:59.
The Russian phenom had two goals and an assist in two of those games, and recorded a point in three of the five. Overall, over the final stretch of the ill-fated 2024-25 season, Michkov finished with six goals, six assists, and 12 points in nine games.
Now, he has 10 in 21. How does that happen?
Simply put, Michkov just needs to play, and the Flyers need to put in as much effort into finding a line combination that works for him as they do with Noah Cates and Tyson Foerster; the latter has been pigeonholed into a checking role despite his own offensive talents.
Nikita Kucherov, in his second full NHL season, was averaging 18:13 a night. Jack Hughes, 19:04. Trevor Zegras, 18:50. Lucas Raymond, 17:23.
And, while Raymond's ice time did actually decrease from Year 1 to Year 2, he still played more on average than Michkov ever has in his NHL career.
Directly counter to Cohen's argument, the best way to learn is sometimes by doing and not by watching.
Stifling Michkov's offensive creativity by making him forecheck as an F1 on a 6-on-5, or by putting him with grinders on 6-on-5, isn't going to help, either.
This is the Flyers' franchise player we're talking about, after all, and to dismiss the concerns and observations of desperate fans is to be disingenuous at best.