
Standout Philadelphia Flyers winger Tyson Foerster could miss the start of the new season with an offseason bicep injury, and that's ok.
Recent reports have indicated that Foerster, 23, suffered a potential long-term bicep injury while training last month, and even so, they're built to survive any potential extended absence from one of the cornerstones of the rebuild.
Update: Flyers GM Danny Briere has clarified that Foerster suffered an injury while playing at the summer World Championships, came down with an infection, and needed to have the infection surgically removed. No recovery timeline has been established at this time.
As has been discussed ad nauseam, the Flyers have an overabundance of right wings, which had pigeonholed Foerster into a left-wing role anyway.
The former first-round pick's growing presence on the Flyers' special teams and defensive impact will be sorely missed for however long he's out, but the injury, at worst, just creates more opportunities for other players.
For example, Owen Tippett ended the season on the Flyers' third line, and prospect Devin Kaplan made his NHL debut in Game 82. Bobby Brink, of course, played alongside Foerster for a prolonged period last season.
Right wing prospect Samu Tuomaala made a solid case for making the roster last training camp, only to suffer an injury towards the end, have an underwhelming season, and ultimately suffer a season-ending injury for the second year in a row.
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Other prospects who could reasonably push for an NHL role to fill in the void of Foerster include NCAA champ Alex Bump, who the Flyers love, and the affable-but-menacing Nikita Grebenkin.
And, to his benefit, Grebenkin already has a handful of games of NHL experience, which endeared him to former Flyers coach Craig Berube during his short time with the Toronto Maple Leafs last season.
There's also the unlikely but perfectly plausible scenario where top prospect Porter Martone wows Rick Tocchet in training camp and makes the Flyers outright.
Martone will turn 19 shortly after opening night, and you'll remember that the Flyers, albeit with a completely different coaching staff, gave Jett Luchanko a four-game tryout at the start of this past season. It's not out of the question for Martone, especially given his size and skillset that the Flyers don't have much of.
That all said, it's not like the Flyers are hurting for wingers or pieces to fill in the gaps without Foerster.
In the worst case, Foerster tore his bicep, and the recovery for this typically ranges between three and six months depending on severity and rehab. Assuming this injury happened a few weeks ago, an early outcome would see Foerster return towards the end of the NHL preseason.
A six-month recovery timeline takes Foerster and the Flyers into December, which could make for a 30-game absence, give or take. So, a little more than a quarter of the season, in other words.
The Flyers are in a rebuild, after all, and the "next man up" mentality will help carry them through Foerster's injury.