The two years before he was drafted were the leadup to and immediate aftermath of Russia's war with Ukraine, during which time many NHL teams reportedly reduced or removed their scouts from Russia. A big narrative leading into the draft surrounding Michkov was taht many teams in the league had only scouted him on video.
I think in addition to all this, it's under-discussed that Michkov may not be living the most standard rich-hockey-kid experience. His father passed months before the draft under suspicious circumstances.
For one thing, that's absolutely devastating and horrible for a teenager, and who knows where that left him in life—whether you want to spend all your time taking translated phone calls with rando Canadian guys asking you stupid-ass scouting questions at that point.
For another, it may well play into why he was choosy about the team he went to. Take this quote from Rotenberg, explaining why SKA is considering letting him go:
Between the volatile international situation and his father passing under suspicious circumstances, it sounds like this kid might not feel the most secure or comfortable or whatever it may be. I think he might have been choosy about the team he went with because he was looking for an employer with deep pockets, loyalty, and a willingness to get a little greasy to get him what he wanted/needed for himself and his family.
And say what you will about the Flyers, but that's them to a tee. Dirty Comcast dollars and a shitload of loyalty. So, he met with them, they said whatever they said, and they went out there and proved it this last year. They worked their dicks off to bring over Fedotov, who had his own rough treatment trying to get here, and paid him $6.5m after 3 terrible appearances for his troubles. Think they did that because it was fair market value?