‘Extremely emotional' moments have Murchison ready for NHL debut with Flyers originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
Ty Murchison will never forget FaceTiming his parents and sharing the news he had always dreamed of breaking to them.
He was headed to the NHL.
“It was early morning back in Arizona, so I woke them up,” Murchison said. “I was choked up trying to get the words out. As soon as I told my mom, she was screaming for my dad to get in the room.”
The 22-year-old prospect will have his mother Allyson and father Ken on hand for his NHL debut. Murchison will be on the Flyers’ third defensive pair Tuesday against the Sharks at Xfinity Mobile Arena (7 p.m. ET/NBCSP).
He’ll have around 20 people in attendance.
“I’ve got a big entourage coming from all over the place,” Murchison said Tuesday with a smile after morning skate. “California, Arizona, Prince Edward Island.”
Murchison grew up in California and was drafted by the Flyers out of the U.S. national team development program. He spent four seasons at Arizona State before signing his two-year entry-level contract in March.
He has gone from a fifth-round pick in 2021 to a shot with the Flyers.
“Extremely emotional,” Murchison said Monday after practice. “There have been a lot of periods throughout the last 48 hours where I’ve been getting a bit choked up just thinking about it because I’ve been thinking about this every day of my life.”
The 6-foot-2, lefty-shot defenseman earned his opportunity with the big club. He plays with a hard-nosed style and definitely opened some eyes in training camp. With AHL affiliate Lehigh Valley, Murchison has recorded a goal, three assists and a plus-9 rating in 21 games.
“He’s the type of guy that’s a culture guy,” Rick Tocchet said Monday. “I thought from Day 1 — and I don’t think we gave him an exhibition game — he was really impressing me in practice. He was pissing guys off, he was blowing up guys on cycles and stuff like that. And he has played really well.
“That’s what we’re trying to build around here, guys that are competitive. I don’t know how he’s going to play, but I do know he’s competitive and he skates well. I think he deserves a shot. That’s how we build the crest around here.”
Flyers’ defensive pairs
Nick Seeler-Travis Sanheim
Emil Andrae-Jamie Drysdale
Ty Murchison-Noah Juulsen
Murchison said he likes to play “a fast-paced, physical game.” The Flyers are hoping he can help them squash plays quickly, an aspect of defending that Tocchet has wanted improvement from his team.
The Flyers have had some competition on their back end. Murchison will become the ninth defenseman to suit up for them this season.
“It’s good for the room, they see a guy like that working his way up, it puts other people on notice,” Tocchet said. “That’s how you build the competitive balance in the locker room.”