What more can the Flyers say?

They seem to have very few answers for this troubling — perhaps defining — stretch of their 2025-26 season. They stumbled to the Bruins, 6-3, Thursday night at TD Garden.

Travis Konecny, Nikita Grebenkin and Matvei Michkov provided the team’s goals. The Flyers were down 3-0 when Konecny scored, 5-1 when Grebenkin got on the board and 6-2 when Michkov put one home on the power play.

After upending the juggernaut Avalanche, 7-3, last Friday night, the Flyers (24-20-9) have lost three straight by a combined score of 15-6. They’ve dropped 10 of their last 12 games (2-8-2) and have allowed 4.58 goals per game over that span.

Rick Tocchet’s club has given up four or more goals nine times this month.

The Bruins (32-20-3) are trending in a totally different direction, having won 10 of their last 12 games (10-1-1). This was the first of three meetings this season between the Flyers and Boston.

The Flyers are 2-8-2 over their last 12 games after a 6-3 loss Thursday night to the Bruins. The Flyers Postgame Live crew discussed its concerns with only three games left until the Olympic break.

• The Flyers are in a real precarious spot.

This maybe wasn’t a playoff-or-bust season, but the Flyers wanted to get better. And part of getting better should be avoiding these lengthy stretches of head-scratching play, these lopsided, uncompetitive games.

The Flyers made it clear before the season that they did not want to be in selling mode unless they had to be. They showed that with a five-year commitment to Christian Dvorak earlier this month.

While the Flyers weren’t going to be a major buyer at the March 6 trade deadline, you have to wonder what their motives will be if they can’t stop this slide.

The Flyers entered Thursday with a 21.1 percent chance to make the playoffs, according to Hockey-Reference.com’s probabilities report. They’re in seventh place of a tight Metropolitan Division.

• Samuel Ersson registered 15 saves on 20 shots through two periods of work.

He didn’t return to the game for the third period because of a lower-body injury. The 26-year-old was making his eighth appearance in the last nine games.

Dan Vladar turned away the six shots he faced in relief. The Bruins’ final goal was an empty-netter.

Boston netminder Jeremy Swayman stopped 33 of the Flyers’ 36 shots.

The Flyers were dealt a blow when Dvorak had a first-period goal wiped away because of goaltender interference on Grebenkin. It was a tough call on Grebenkin, who was making a play toward the net and created a rebound opportunity for Dvorak.

The goal would have cut the Flyers’ deficit to 2-1. Instead, the Flyers trailed by two at intermission.

The Bruins struck just 2:27 minutes into the second period on a Fraser Minten shot that Ersson could have denied. At that point, the Flyers, already fighting their confidence, were behind 3-0, which felt insurmountable.

Travis Konecny had scored the Flyers’ last four goals, dating back to Wednesday night. He got the team on the board with his 21st of the season.

• The struggling Sean Couturier centered Nicolas Deslauriers and Garnet Hathaway on the fourth line.

The Flyers’ captain has gone 26 straight games without a goal. He has nine assists and a minus-9 mark over that time. Couturier had four shots in 13:57 minutes Thursday night.

Tocchet clearly had to try some adjustments up front, especially with Couturier not producing offensively. Trevor Zegras was moved to the middle as Lane Pederson came out of the lineup.

Zegras, though, had no shots and went 1 for 12 in the faceoff circle.

• The Flyers got good news before the start of the game as Rasmus Ristolainen was able to play. The 31-year-old defenseman had to exit Wednesday night with a lower-body injury after just 1:01 minutes of ice time.

Against Boston, Ristolainen finished with 21:53 minutes.

Emil Andrae was healthy scratched for a second straight game.

• The Flyers are back in action Saturday when they host the Kings (12:30 p.m. ET/NBCSP).