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Terrible injury has the Flyers losing a key forward for the rest of round 2

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Jonathan Ouimet
May 8, 2026  (2:08)
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Apr 22, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Flyers left wing Noah Cates (27) celebrates his goal with right wing Tyson Foerster (71), center Trevor Zegras (46) and right wing Porter Martone (94) against the Pittsburgh Penguins during the third period in game three of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Xfinity Mobile Arena.
Photo credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images

Noah Cates is done for the second round, and Rick Tocchet just lost the one Flyers forward built to slow down Carolina's hottest line.

The 27-year-old centre got hurt during a 3-2 overtime loss in Game 2 on Monday. He logged 20:53 that night, including 3:23 of overtime, before the lower-body injury caught up with him.

Philadelphia trails 0-3 in the series after Thursday's 4-1 loss in Game 3. Saturday is elimination night at home, and Cates won't be in the lineup for any of it.

Sean Couturier put it bluntly to reporters Wednesday.

The captain called Cates a player you can rely on to never make a mistake, the guy on the right side of the puck, the definition of reliable.

The numbers say the same thing. Cates put up 47 points in 82 regular-season games while finishing +26, and added 4 points in 8 playoff games on a $4M cap hit.

His usage is what hurts most.

He's the only Flyers forward averaging more than 2:00 per game on both special teams units, sitting at 2:53 on the power play and 2:19 on the penalty kill.

Tocchet called him "Mr. Consistency." That's a coach trying to stay calm in front of a microphone while staring at a depth chart that just lost a top-nine centre and a special-teams anchor.

Tocchet flips Trevor Zegras back to centre and adds Jett Luchanko

The bench boss confirmed Trevor Zegras moves back to the middle. Denver Barkey gets more centre minutes after a solid Game 2. Couturier and Christian Dvorak hold the top two spots.

Carl Grundstrom could see extra penalty kill time, though he played just 40 seconds short-handed in Game 3. Not exactly a like-for-like replacement.

The biggest curveball is Jett Luchanko. Philadelphia recalled the 19-year-old Wednesday after his junior season ended with Brantford in the OHL.

Luchanko produced 43 points in 38 OHL games this year and added 7 points in 15 playoff games. He didn't dress for Game 3, but Tocchet called him fast and floated him as a possibility.

The matchup nightmare is real. Logan Stankoven, Taylor Hall, and Jackson Blake have combined for 8 points through the first two games.

Stankoven scored the Game 1 winner. Hall scored the Game 2 winner.

Cates was the obvious matchup centre against that line, especially with Philadelphia owning last change at home. Tocchet now has to manufacture a new combo on a 48-hour turnaround.

Stankoven alone has 6 goals in 6 playoff games. Blake has added 8 points.

The Hurricanes' second line has been the difference in this series, and the Flyers' best defensive forward just disappeared from the bench.

Whether Tocchet finds the right combination Saturday or watches the season end on home ice, the truth is bigger than one game.

A team that prides itself on structure just lost the player who held it together in the toughest minutes.