Who the Flyers will actually select in the first round is now just hours away from being revealed, with the 2026 NHL draft kicking off at 7 p.m.

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Philly picks at No. 21, so there is a lot of intrigue to see who they can get that deep in the draft. And that’s the crux and the reasoning behind why, in the fourth and final draft for The Inquirer, we have the Flyers picking a fourth different player.

In the first mock draft, compiled before the NHL scouting combine, we had the Flyers taking small defenseman Tommy Bleyl. Although he could help on the power play, it doesn’t sound like the Flyers are 100% behind picking an under-6-foot-tall blueliner, as general manager Danny Brière has noted a player picked today will not impact the team for a few seasons — and the power play needs help immediately.

After the scouting combine in Buffalo, our second mock draft had Alexander Command. The Swedish center expressed a connection with the organization and just oozed Flyer during his time in Western New York; however, the consensus is that he will be long gone.

So with that, we went for another center in the third mock draft, taking Jack Hextall, a player many see as already having pro habits. And, no, he’s not closely related to Ron, the former goalie and GM; they are distant cousins, and according to Jack, have never met.

And now we come to the final mock draft, where none of these players are on the list in the first round.

First round: Maksim Sokolovskii, LHD, London (OHL)

Meet Sokolovskii, who checks several boxes for the Flyers’ usual modus operandi at the draft and is the targeted pick for several outlets and insiders.

For background, since assistant general manager Brent Flahr took over, he has drafted 50 players, with general manager Danny Brière by his side for 26 of those.

The position Flahr has drafted the most across his tenure is defense, at 15, and he did mention during his sit-down in Buffalo that the Flyers need defensive depth. He added during his pre-draft presser last week that the Flyers could use some more depth down the left side in particular — he did add “not necessarily being the first round” — and Sokolovskii is a left-handed defenseman.

Unlike other teams lately, the Flyers are not afraid to draft Russian players, with three taken in the last three drafts. The difference here with Sokolovskii, compared to Matvei Michkov, Egor Zavragin, and Aleksei Kolosov, who is Belarusian and also played in the Kontinental Hockey League, is that while Sokolovskii was born in Kazakhstan and raised in Russia, he spent the past two years playing in the United States. And the Flyers tend to stick with North American-based teams under the Flahr-Brière tandem (74%).

Now here’s where the eyebrows will get raised. After spending the 2024-25 season with the Atlantic Coast Academy, Sokolovskii played this past season for London of the Ontario Hockey League. Yes, that London, where Denver Barkey and Oliver Bonk won a Memorial Cup one June ago. That London where team president Keith Jones has a connection with Mark and Dale Hunter. The Flyers like the system and how they prepare players. Could this be a match just for that reason?

And then there’s the height. And Sokolovskii is, to put it mildly, a big boy at6-foot-7¼, 240 pounds. The Flyers like tall dudes, drafting 6-5 Jack Nesbitt, Carter Amico, Luke Vlooswyk, and Matthew Gard all last year. Since Flahr took over, 31 of 50 players are over 6-feet, and 17 of those were taken with Brière as GM.

The biggest difference compared to several previous prospects is that Sokolovskii is a pretty good skater for a guy his size and isn’t the big project that other draft picks have been.

“He’s 6-foot-8, and he skates like he’s 5-foot-8,” Mike Taylor, the owner and one of Sokolovskii’s coaches at Atlantic Coast Academy, told The Inquirer recently. “… He came here, and I had a skating coach once a month come up and do power skating with our guys, and he does it like with UMass Amherst, and all these other schools. And he saw him skate, and he’s like, ‘Oh my God.’ He couldn’t believe how good his edge work was, and stuff, for being the size that he is.”

Considered a mean guy with some bite on the ice, Sokolovskii likes to be physical, throw the body around, and play tough. Although Taylor says there is an offensive dimension to his game — as seen from his numbers at Atlantic Coast — he is considered a shutdown defender.

He had eight points (two goals, six assists) in 44 regular-season games with London; however, everyone agrees there was a ton of improvement in his game as he got more comfortable in the OHL.

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But like most in the draft class, Sokolovskii has his warts, and there are question marks surrounding his game in his decision-making and puck play. He told The Inquirer at the NHL scouting combine that he wants to keep working on his foot speed and make his feet quicker. He’ll need some time to grow into his game, and the Flyers have the time for that.

Sokolovskii’s name was mentioned to this reporter at the combine as someone the Flyers were interested in, and some pundits think this is their guy. But it does make one wonder that if the two are being connected … is it all smoke and mirrors and sleight of hand? Because outside of maybe Craig Button, no one had Jett Luchanko for the Flyers in 2024. And Jack Nesbitt wasn’t seen as on the radar either, although they did trade up for him.

So with that, let’s add in that Maddox Dagenais, Jack Hextall, and Ilia Morozov are three players we see the Flyers considering at 21, too.

Second round: Charlie Morrison, LHD

The Athletic’s NHL draft and prospects reporter Scott Wheeler’s final mock draft has the Flyers taking Sokolovskii in the first round and right-handed Finnish defenseman Samu Alalauri in the second.

Wheeler’s colleague, senior NHL prospects writer Corey Pronman, has the Flyers taking 6-4 right-handed defenseman William Håkansson in the first and small but dynamic lefty defenseman Xavier Villeneuve — our pick in version 3.0 — in the second.

Elite Prospects’ Cam Robinson has Oliver Suvanto in the first and defenseman Måns Gudmundsson in the second. And Daily Faceoff’s Steven Ellis had the Flyers taking center Suvanto in the first and Timmy Runtso, an overager who is heading to the University of Miami (OH) this fall, in the second.

It feels like everyone is leaning toward defensemen in the second round, as everyone has the Flyers pegged for stocking the blue line cupboard.

A few names pop here for us, like Juho Piiparinen, who says he grew up a Flyers fan in Finland, Runtso, who brings some offensive punch and attention to detail the Flyers like, and Ben Macbeath, our pick in version 2.0. Macbeath plays for Calgary of the Western Hockey League, the same team Travis Sanheim was drafted from in 2017.

For our final draft, we’re going with a defenseman, too, but it’s Morrison, a 6-3½, 200-pound physical left-shot blueliner who plays for Québec of the Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League. Pronman has him going at 44 to the New Jersey Devils, Wheeler at 50 to the Ducks, and Ellis has him at 65 to the Flames.

And guess who the GM of that team is? Simon Gagné.

The Inquirer recently spoke with the Flyers legend, and he gave his scouting report on Morrison.

“A big, strong defenseman. Likes to hit. Likes to cut guys [with their] head down, middle of the ice type of defenseman that you don’t see too often in the league anymore. They’re seeing, sure, that Charlie needs to improve — he’s only played two years in our league — but he’s getting better and stronger, and that’s definitely a guy that could be a good pick for the Flyers.”

The Flyers have done their homework on the Québec players, which also includes potential first-round pick Maddox Dagenais and late-round option and defenseman Alexandre Taillefer. This past season, Morrison had 13 points in 41 regular-season games before adding another four points in 10 playoff games.

Morrison does have some pedigree, as Elite Prospects lists his great uncle as Dan Bouchard, a goalie who played 656 NHL games, and Morrison is heading to the University of Connecticut in 2027.

And one interesting note: last season, the four Flyers taken in the second were listed at 30 (Jack Murtagh), 33 (Vansaghi), 37 (Matthew Gard), and 41 (Carter Amico) in Central Scouting’s final rankings for North American skaters. Morrison is right there, too, at No. 39.

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