Veteran NHL defenseman Ryan Ellis will likely miss the entire 2022-2023 season with a "multifaceted" back injury that could potentially be a career-threatening one, Philadelphia Flyers general manager Chuck Fletcher revealed Thursday.
Fletcher made the announcement on the first day of Flyers training camp, adding that Ellis’ status isn’t definite.
"Ryan Ellis is out indefinitely, no timetable for his return to play," Fletcher said, via NHL.com. "My assumption is he won't play this season. If he does, it'll be a bonus."
CZECH GOVERNMENT WON’T ISSUE RUSSIAN NHL PLAYERS VISAS AHEAD 2022 GLOBAL SERIES IN PRAGUE
Ellis, 31, was traded to the Flyers last year after 10 seasons with the Nashville Predators, but he only played four games before being ruled out for the season in November with a pelvic injury.
Fletcher said Thursday that the injury affects his back and abdominal area. Asked if it could be career-threatening, Fletcher replied, "Certainly that's a possibility."
"I know we've been probably vague with describing the injury. I think we've called it multifaceted, which it is," Fletcher explained. "There's a psoas component of this, there's a hip component, there's an adductor component. So, I'm not sure that if you go in and repair one part, it's going to fix everything we're trying to work with. Trying to get everything back, rehab everything back.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
"I've never heard of an injury like this. It's very complicated. A torn psoas is a very significant injury for a hockey player, a very rare injury, so we're doing the best we can, and we'll just leave it up to the medical experts."
Ellis has 275 points — 76 goals and 199 assists — in 566 regular-season NHL games. He has 38 points in 74 playoff games.
Fletcher said the veteran defenseman showed progress early in the offseason, but the last two months showed no "visible signs of progress."
"It's been a frustrating injury. Nobody's more frustrated than Ryan, nobody wants to play more than Ryan. But we're dealing with reality now, and he's not skating, so clearly he is a long way away from playing."