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Sure, the league proceeded without the participation of the Madison Capitals (regional COVID restrictions) or the Cedar Rapids Rough Riders (a Derecho huffed and puffed and blew the arena down), but the rest of the league played (an approximately) 54 game schedule with rather few disruptions.
Not only that, but in terms of quality, the league was better than ever, as a number of players who had expected to suit up for Canadian teams – both CHL and Jr. A – were given an opportunity to play for various USHL teams as their regular leagues were delayed indefinitely, or outright cancelled. Those bonus players included some that were drafted already, including Cross Hanas, Bear Hughes, and Danil Gushchin*. Other drafted players came in from the Ivy League schools, who did not play a hockey schedule this year. In addition to the likes of Henry Thrun, Jack Malone, and Austin Wong coming to the USHL after some time in college, others like Sean Farrell and Alex Laferriere, who had intended to start collegiate life this year, were forced to stay back for one more year in the Midwest.
*Gushchin, who had played the previous two seasons with Muskegon, was expected to play in Ontario with Niagara for the 2020-21 season, but with the OHL in permanent statis, he was loaned back to the Lumberjacks, where he put up his best season yet.
And then there were the draft-eligible ringers who unexpectedly joined the league and played so well that they have legitimate first round consideration at the end of it. I am thinking, of course, of Cole Sillinger, who joined Sioux Falls, before it was known when, or if, the WHL would get going, and Ayrton Martino and Jack Bar, who had played in Ontario last year and had been planning on playing in the BCHL this year before Canadian restrictions pushed them to the USHL, with Omaha and Chicago, respectively.
Of course, there were many other unexpected players in the league this year, with those mentioned only scratching the surface of the most famous names.
So, before we preview the postseason, which begins this Friday (Apr. 30), let’s pour one out for the six teams that didn’t make, and give a word to the top 1-3 draft eligible players from those squads.
One point behind Dubuque for the final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference – although far further back via points percentage (.510-.481), the USNTDP team that would have played in the USHL playoffs had they made it would have been the U17 team. The best of that group – Rutger McGroarty, Isaac Howard, Ryan Chesley, Lane Hutson, Charlie Stramel and others – are playing with the U18 team in Texas at the WU18 tournament. No draft eligibles but remember those names for next season.
By points percentage, easily the weakest team in the league. The aforementioned Jack Malone, a Vancouver draft pick, was far and away the top performer on the team, which is to be expected from a player with a year at Cornell under his belt. Among first year draft eligibles, Japanese import Yusako Ando was the most notable, although his second year in the league was worse than his first. He can create for others, but he doesn’t skate well enough to make up for his slight 5-7” frame. The only other draft eligible who ever made a positive impression on me from this roster was blueliner Austen May. The Providence commit is on the small side, but he is really fleet of foot and shows decent attention to detail off the puck.
Despite the presence of three drafted players – Alex Laferriere (LA), Noah Ellis (Vgk), and Lucas Mercuri (Car), the Buccaneers struggled this year, particularly in terms of putting the puck in the net. The drafted guys were all solid, but too few of the rest of the roster could match their output. Perhaps things would have been different if Paul Davey hadn’t of left mid-season for a stint back home in Connecticut. Davey and Scout Truman were the two most notable first time draft eligible on the roster, but neither really put their stamp on the season. If there are to be any Buccaneers drafted this year, they will be among the redraft candidates. To that end, file away the names of Matt Choupani and Remington Koepple. Choupani is a forward who lacks much in the way of physical tools but can play the puck well. Koepple is a goalie who had decent numbers in his first year in the league, although he has only average size and athleticism and he chocked in the BioSteel game, hurting his standing for some.
The Stars went heavy on the ringers partway through the season. Cross Hanas was already mentioned, but he was just one of four players brought in from the WHL Portland Winterhawks, joining Clay Hanas (no relation), Jack O’Brien, and James Stefan, as well as Charles-Alexis Legault from West Kelowna in the BCHL and Michael Mastrodomenico from AAA hockey in Quebec. Simply put, the shuffled team never gelled, and the newcomers couldn’t get into the swing of the USHL.
O’Brien was the biggest disappointment. There was some expectation that he could be a high round pick this year, but one goal and six assists in 23 games ended that sentiment. Blueliner Legault didn’t hurt his stock too much, as he still has great size and skates well and shoots from his right side. Stefan, son of former first overall pick Patrik Stefan, had enough moments to maybe convince some team to call his name in the late rounds. A kind word also to big bruising winger Gleb Veremeyev. Veremeyev isn’t an offensive threat, but one of the top PIM players in the league is a threat, nonetheless. The USHL is not a very physical league, and when a player has that size and plays with that snarl, he sometimes gets drafted, such as we saw with Nick Capone last year and Martin Pospisil in 2018.
Generally contenders, the Black Hawks find themselves out of the playoffs for the first time since 2014-15, and only the second time in 14 seasons for which there were playoffs. Fielding one of the smaller and least experienced lineups in the league, this just wasn’t their year. Their one drafted player, Toronto’s Wyatt Schingoethe, regressed heavily from his strong draft year. The team cycled through goalies, with three seeing significant minutes. Remember the name of Emmett Croteau, the best performing of their netminders, as he won’t be draft eligible until 2022.
Among players eligible this year, the most impressive were second time eligible defenseman Cooper Wylie, a USHL rookie, who can play the puck and skate well enough to make his ornery game effective, if not spectacular. He could be drafted. On the other hand, David Gucciardi, acquired in an early season trade from Youngstown, will be drafted. His game is raw, and his mistakes are often critical, but he has tools, and his instincts are good enough to think he can be a good one if he relies on his instincts all the time.
The Western Conference bottom feeders are a mystery. In the last USHL playoffs, the Stampede took home the title. In addition to their usual solid team, this year they brought in the highest profile ringer in Cole Sillinger, who didn’t disappoint, with a team leading 46 points despite only playing in 31 games. He is a sniper with an NHL style game who will be back in the WHL next year. The USHL rarely sees a player of his caliber, whether talking about skill or about reading the game, yet he couldn’t drag the Stampede upwards on his own. I would be surprised if he isn’t the first player from this year’s USH: crop to play in the NHL.
Defender Brent Johnson was one of the better draft eligible defenders in the league as well. A power play specialist with good wheels and an ornery side, his season ended right before the BioSteel All American Game due to a shoulder injury, but could hear his name called in the 50-80 range of the draft if his medicals hold up.
Although not as high profile, I also have time for second time eligible, defenseman Nate Schweitzer, who can do a lot well, but nothing spectacularly, and winger Mike Citara, who can skate and shoot. I don’t expect either to be drafted, but I wouldn’t be surprised if either was.
The Playoffs
The format this year is simple. The top four teams from each conference made it in. All series are best-of-threes. Top seed plays the fourth seed, and second seed plays the third seed. All games are hosted by the higher seed. One series per weekend until one team lifts the Clark Cup. Let’s go!

The Western Conference was incredibly tight at the top with the playoff picture not being settled until the final weekend of the regular season. The points percentage difference between Tri-City and Fargo (32 percentage points) was less than between Fargo and fifth place Des Moines (34 percentage points).
Fargo was the third best defensive team in the league, although Tri-City was the best at keeping the puck out of its net. Neither team is known for filling their opponents’ nets either, but both had generally done enough to walk away with points more often than not. In fact, they are quite evenly matched. The difference in these three games (outside of home ice advantage) is likely to rest in special teams. Fargo was mediocre on both the power play and the penalty kill, while the Storm were strong with the man advantage and almost impregnable on the penalty kill, leading the league with a breathtaking 88.3% kill rate. To Fargo’s credit, they have played far more of their season at 5-on-5 than Tri-City. And they will have to do that again this weekend to keep their season alive.
Beyond the expected close games, another reason to watch this series is the head-to-head matchup between two very interesting and talented draft eligibles. On Fargo, that would be Tristan Broz, a two-way center with a good motor and the vision to be a power play weapon. The Minnesota commit ran away with the scoring lead on his team. His numbers would be even more impressive if he had more talented teammates to play with. On Tri-City, the man of the hour is Matthew Knies. Knies started his season painfully slow, but ended it on fire, with 20 points in his final 11 games. Knies has heavier feet, but a very mature build and at his best, can take over the game. He will join Broz with the Golden Gophers next year.
Knies and Broz are not the only intriguing draft eligible players in this series. In fact, Fargo blueliner Jack Peart has a very good chance to be the highest drafted player in this series. The St. Cloud State commit split his season between Fargo and Grand Rapids High School (Mn). He is a good skater with a very strong first few steps, who plays with preternatural poise. He controls the puck like a much older player and plays a strong 200-foot game. Had Peart spent the entire season in Fargo, the final standings may have looked very different. For Fargo, also keep an eye on Aaron Huglen, a Buffalo draft pick who returned from over a full year on the sidelines after around a third of this season was done and has played a skilled game ever since.
On Tri-City, Knies is joined by a pair of intriguing draft eligible players in Hunter Strand and Carter Mazur, the latter of whom is a second time eligible player. Strand is a USNTDP alum, whose late birthday prevented him from being drafted last year. The Alaska native is a great skater and plays a patient game with the puck. Mazur has more of an East-West style game, helped along by plus edges. He can play the pest role as well and retains utility off the puck. Strand and Mazur both outscored Knies this year, but Knies already had a big reputation through his big pre-draft year and his run to end the year keeps him top of mind.
Prediction: Fargo in three. A mild upset to be sure. The return of Peart helps Fargo just as much as the loss of top blueliner Guillaume Richard hurts Tri-City. Richard is currently representing Team Canada at the WU18s in Texas. Neither team has stellar goaltending, but Fargo’s Brennan Boynton should be able to roughly match Tri-City’s Todd Scott.
Both Omaha and Sioux City put up 63 points in 53 games, but their paths to getting there could scarcely have been more different. Consider that Omaha’s goal differential was a mediocre +13, while Sioux City outscored their opponents on aggregate by 35 goals, with the league’s best – by far – defense.
The two teams are both led by high end goaltending, each starting one of the three drafted netminders in the league. For Sioux City, that man is the Swiss Akira Schmid, a New Jersey prospect, while Montreal draftee Jakob Dobes, from Czechia, mans the pipes for Omaha. Dobes was a true workhorse for the Lancers, playing in 47 of the team’s 53 games, while Schmid played roughly two-third of the time for Sioux City, as his back up was more reliable.
Schmid will need to be at his best in this series, however, as Omaha has one of the biggest offensive weapons in the league at their disposal in Ayrton Martino. Martino joined the club shortly after the calendar flipped into 2021 and took the league by storm, with the fifth best points-per-game ratio in the USHL (1.47). A great skater with a fantastic shot, Martino did not let his slight frame prevent him from dominating, and his playmaking game is just as strong as his finishing ability. If Sioux City can shut Martino down, the Lancers don’t have too many other weapons at their disposal as their secondary scoring is largely in the hands of USHL veterans like Ryan Lautenbach, Nolan Renwick and Zach Dubinsky. The Omaha roster is one of the oldest in the league.
Sioux City, on the other hand, has a few more weapons at its disposal. Detroit draft pick Chase Bradley and New Jersey pick Ethan Edwards were both in the team’s top four in scoring, while Buffalo pick Matteo Costantini showed well after joining the league mid-season. Although the Musketeers don’t have a draft eligible player the likes of Martino, don’t sleep on defenseman Shai Buium. A USHL rookie out of the Shattuck-St. Mary’s program, he combines quick hands with smooth, if not quick, feet. He plays a strong two-way game and if he were a better skater (he isn’t bad, but he isn’t great), we would be hearing more people call for him as a first round type of talent. As is, he has enough raw skill to dream on a big, late-blooming future. I am also keeping an eye on redraft candidates defenseman Daniel Laatsch and center Justin Hryckowian. Laatsch is a USNTDP alum who has great size and some burgeoning skill, but is still raw, while Hryckowian has a fun skill game, but an injury-filled history and a sub-optimal build.
Prediction: Sioux City’s depth overcomes Martino’s solo skill in three games.
Western Conference Final Prediction: Sioux City over Fargo in three games. Sioux City is just too difficult to score against and has enough offensive weapons to get the job done.

#1 Chicago Steel vs
#4 Dubuque Fighting Saints
By all accounts, this should be a washout. Chicago is, by great lengths, the top team in the USHL. They enter the postseason on an eight-game undefeated streak, and won 38 of 54 games this year, often by wide margins. Their goaltending has been shoddy at times, but far more often than not, they were able to outscore their troubles and their total of 265 goals scored was 24 more than the runners-up. Dubuque, on the other hand, won only 24 of 51 games, securing the final playoff spot in the east thanks to a win in their final game coupled with a loss from the U17 USNTDP squad.
If Dubuque is to have a hope in this series, look to their defensive players. Goalie Lukas Parik, a Los Angeles draft pick, struggled since joining the team, in late-January from the Czech second division, but shut out Green Bay in his final game, reminding us of what he is capable. On the blueline, fellow LA pick Braden Doyle teams up with Anaheim draft pick Henry Thrun to give the Fighting Saints a pair of weapons. Up front, Dubuque has a balanced attack, but the man to watch is Robert Cronin. While too old to be drafted this year Cronin is a late bloomer with speed and skill who will be a good follow next year once he joins the University of New Hampshire. The boy to watch, on the other hand, is Matthew Savoie. The 17-year-old is a 2022 draft eligible, who should have been playing in the WHL, but the uncertainty in that league led him to Dubuque, where he immediately played a central, and at time dominating, role. He’s going to be really fun to watch next year.
Looking at draft eligibles for this summer, keep your eyes on Connor Kurth and Andrei Buyalsky. Buylasky is actually the same age (born three days later) as Cronin, but as he is considered a foreign player (this is his first season in North America), the Kazakhstani forward is draft eligible while the American Cronin is not. Buyalsky is an impressive skater with impressive finishing ability. Kurth, on the other hand, has no particular big attributes to his game, but he finds a way to put up good numbers. He has a very stocky build but moves well enough regardless.
Moving on to Chicago, almost every skater on the roster is worthy of mention. Start with Montreal draft pick Sean Farrell, a USNTDP alum who would have been with Harvard this season had the Crimson actually played. Instead, he put up a breathtaking 101-point season for the Steel. His playmaking ability is simply unfair to most opponents on most nights. Then there is Matthew Coronato, a likely first round pick, who scored 48 goals in 51 games. Sure, it helps to have Farrell playing on your team, but the two actually rarely played together at even strength. Coronato is an offensive dynamo, who is content to cycle on his own for multiple full loops of the offensive end before he sees a seam to exploit.
Then there is Jack Bar, a late add to the roster from the BCHL. After a brief period acclimating to the league, he began to dominate. The defenseman likes to get deep into the offensive zone but is also a physical and committed defender. He has some first round upside. Of course, I also have to mention Mackie Samoskevich, who at one time was seen as a better draft prospect than Coronato. Samoskevich struggled somewhat after a midseason injury but is another gifted playmaker and a fantastic skater to boot.
I don’t want to get into the weeds too much, but I also expect Josh Doan (son of Shane), Ryan Ufko, and Jackson Blake to be drafted this summer, and Jack Harvey being drafted wouldn’t surprise me either. Anaheim draft pick Ian Moore has been impressive in his first season in the USHL, and 2023(!!) eligible forward Adam Fantilli is a burgeoning superstar. As good as everyone else already mentioned on this roster is, Fantilli’s upside is the highest. I am talking top three in the draft upside.
Prediction: Chicago in two, barring a complete breakdown in net. Chicago in three if the goalies stumble.
A testament to how tight the West is, the Muskegon-Green Bay series is the second most lopsided duel after Chicago-Dubuque, with .040 percentage points separating the Lumberjacks and the Gamblers. Muskegon plays an up-tempo, high-event game with red lights going off at both ends. Green Bay is best when they keep goals to a minimum, and actually ended the season with the fewest goals allowed in the conference.
Green Bay’s chances are led by a pair of Boston Bruins’ draft picks in defender Mason Lohrei and center Jake Schmaltz. The latter is a two-way forward, who after three seasons in the USHL, has figured out how to be a factor offensively. He does a lot of little things well but lacks any dynamic elements. Lohrei was a surprise second rounder last season but has grown his game even more this year. He is big, skates very well, has a big point shot and plays a tough game at all ends. The Gamblers will go as far as he can take them. Vancouver draft pick Jackson Kunz and Vegas pick Jackson Hallum are also on the roster, and while both have shown the ability to provide secondary offense, neither can make things happen on their own. 2022 eligible Ryan Greene is an interesting player, but if there is a wild card in Green Bay, it is Camden Thiesing. The Tennessee native combines skill with grit, finishing third in the league in PIMs. He will work to make things happen on his own, and when he stays out of the penalty box, he is dangerous.
Led by San Jose draft pick Danil Gushchin, Muskegon is incredibly entertaining. Gushchin is a dynamo, who is not the most consistent player, but when he is involved and engaged, is one of the top handful of forwards in the league. He is joined by a deep roster of talented players, a few of whom should be drafted this summer, many of those in their second year of eligibility. The best of that secondary bunch is center Cameron Berg. Berg finished last year hot after a slow start and didn’t miss a beat coming into this year. He has a high-end wrist shot and knows how to create space for himself to rip one off. Winger Quinn Hutson is another second-year eligible forward who made waves this year. The type of player to get to the right spot at the right time, he knows how to finish what his linemates create. On the blueline, there are a trio to watch. The offensive blueline is Jacob Guevin, a power play specialist, whose production overshadows his average tools. Alex Gagne and Hank Kempf are bigger, more physical blueliners who make life difficult for attacking forwards. I could see all three drafted this summer.
Prediction: Muskegon in three games.
Eastern Conference Final prediction: Chicago in three games over Muskegon. This would be an immensely entertaining series.
Clark Cup Final Prediction: Chicago over Sioux City in three games. It’s really hard to bet against the Steel this year.
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As is now customary in the USHL, the league season opened in the outskirts of Pittsburgh, at the UPMC Lemieux Sports Complex. Over a four day period, when one of the main ice sheets was not being used by the pre-season Pittsburgh Penguins, or one of many elite youth tournaments featuring teams from around the country, all 16 teams* in the league gathered in Cranberry Township, Pennsylvania, around 50 miles away from the nearest USHL franchise (Youngstown, Ohio), to play their first two games of the regular season.
*The USNTDP U-17 and U-18 squads play different schedules, but their combined records are used in the league standings. Also, only the U-18 team featured here.
The USHL is a funny league. Like the OHL, WHL, or QMJHL, it is a great league for high end under 20 hockey players. The USHL has close to a 100% graduation rate for its players either going to play for Division I NCAA programs, or turning pro in Europe. There is, however, a critical difference between the USHL and the CHL leagues.
Whereas the CHL will only lose two or three players directly to the pros after their age 17 year, and maybe 6-10 more after their age 18 seasons, the vast majority of players stick around until their eligibility is exhausted. On the other hand, around 35-60% of the best 17 year old’s in the league move on to play college hockey as true freshman. Half or more of the rest go to school after their age 18 season. For the most part, the only players who use up their eligibility are the depth player of whom their commitment schools do not have as high hopes and push for a delay in enrollment so as to get a player who is at least physically mature, even if he will not be a top end collegiate player.
What that leaves us with is a league that sees a tremendous amount of year-over-year turnover, particularly among the high end of the league. It is very difficult to not only know the various rosters before the puck drops, but to know who to look out for in any given year as development is rapid.
While I was not able to get to the arenas in time to see the opening game, missing a chance to see the Dubuque Fighting Saints take out the Muskegon Lumberjacks by a 4-1 margin. I also had to leave before the games of the final day commenced, but over three days of attendance, I got to see each team play at least once, seeing all or parts of 12 games in under 72 hours. I say “parts of” games, as there was some overlap around midday each day, forcing me, and scouts from every NHL and seemingly every NCAA Division I school, to jump back and forth between arenas. As much as the event is great for NHL scouts to familiarize themselves with the new batch of talent from one of the better prospect leagues in the world, it is also a great chance for college recruiters and coaches to look for late blooming talent that have not yet committed themselves to one program or another.
With the caveat that the teams will change markedly as the season progresses, due to injuries, trades, and players leaving or leaving for high school programs, imperfect information is always better than no information and I’d rather share what I know about the early 2019-20 season in the USHL with you than not do it.
For those who just want to know which teams are best/worst, I was most impressed with Waterloo, Chicago, and Cedar Rapids. Des Moines, Sioux City, and Muskegon had it roughest. For everybody else, keep reading.
Cedar Rapids RoughRiders (Prediction – 1st in the Eastern Conference)
I am going alphabetically, so it is just a coincidence that the team I had as the best on the weekend is going first. After getting past the first round for the first time in nine years last season, the RoughRiders are positioned to go further in 2019-20. Outscoring opponents 10-3 on the weekend, it was the defense that stood out to me most consistently. The name everyone knows is Will Francis, a sixth round pick of Anaheim’s last summer. He was always a good skater for his size, but he looks to be a bit more assertive with the puck this year. He is joined on the blueline by a number of other sizable, mobile blueliners, several of whom should be watched closely by NHL scouts this season. 17 year olds among them include Alex Gagne, a big player who can help to push the pace, and Bennet Zmolek, who is more of a first pass kind of player. Most impressive though was Ben Meehan, an 18 year old who spent his draft year playing New England prep school hockey. Although not as big as his teammates, he has dynamic elements to his puck game and isn’t exactly small. He could be a game breaker.
The forwards are solid, but there might not be a future NHLer among them, although I wouldn’t put it past Grant Silianoff to have a big second year of eligibility. He is a very good skater with solid hockey IQ. Instead, look in net. I’d also keep half an eye on Justin Hryckowian, an 18-year old who joins the team after a year at prep school, who brings pace and energy, blended with some puck skills. The RoughRiders will probably split the crease, at least in the early going, but at least on one out of every two games, giant Colorado draft pick Shamil Shmakov will fill up the space between the pipes. His limbs are so long, I have taken to calling him Shamil the Shpider. Unlike most big netminders, he is aggressive in the crease. According to Alessandro Seren Rosso, he had been inconsistent in Russia, but it’s easy to see what the Avalanche like about him.
Chicago Steel (Prediction – 2nd in the Eastern Conference)
Once again, the fact that another of our expected front-runners comes near the top of our list is coincidental. Despite the loss of top scorers Nicholas Abruzzese and Robert Mastrosimone to the college ranks, the Steel should once again be one of the strongest teams in the league, and may in fact be a more well-rounded team this year than the squad that made it to the Clark Cup finals last year.
The biggest change is in net, as the graduation of inconsistent incumbent Justin Robbins has paved the way for a pair of newcomers to the league in Victor Ostman from Sweden and Ian Shane from California. Both were steady in their debut games, allowing a pair of goals apiece. The blueline should also be stronger than the youthful crew in place last year. While Luke Reid is the only defender likely to be observed closely for draft reasons this year, the North Dakota commit has some flaws to iron out in his own end. On the other hand, 2021 eligible Owen Power is ready to lead the charge from the back. He is large, mobile and his game grew by leaps and bounds as a 16 year old rookie in the league last year. He is trending to be a high pick when his time comes.
The offensive attack will be led by a trio of intriguing draft eligible forwards in late-‘01 birthdays Sean Farrell (late of the USNTDP) and Brendan Brisson (son of super-agent Pat Brisson), and Sam Colangelo. Farrell and Brisson both play skilled games with pace and hockey IQ. Neither have great size, but make things happen on the ice. Colangelo has similar attributes, but better size in his package. Also worth keeping an eye on are Gunnarwolfe Fontaine, whose overall game is almost as much fun as his name, and Matthew “Mackie” Samoskevich, a late-’02 birthday who looks like a probable draft pick in the 2021 draft. Famously under the tutelage of star skills coach Darryl Belfry, the Steel have talent up and down the lineup and will be a tough out all season, even though their roster is the youngest (excepting the USNTDP, which has age limits) in the league.
Des Moines Buccaneers (Prediction – 7th in the Western Conference)
While the Buccaneers were pretty rough in their opening weekend, all hope is not lost for the Iowan squad. Their team is at an odd juncture of being among the oldest in the league, but only in the middle of the pack in terms of experience at this level. It is fair to expect more out of imports Yaroslav Alexeyev, who has already seen success at the QMJHL level, as well as from third year USHLer Jan Kern, who played for his native Czech Republic at last year’s WJC. I would also assume there is more offense to come from 2001 borns Mason Nevers and Michael Mancinelli, who have flashed their skills in the past.
A lot of their hopes to turn around the tough beginning will rest on the shoulders on former USNTDP backup netminder Cameron Rowe. He has the requisite athleticism you want in a top goaltender, but needs to take a few steps forward in terms of his consistency and focus. Rowe will need the blueline to step up and minimize Grade A scoring chances against and I will be keeping my eyes on a pair of 2001s to play key roles in that endeavor in Nicklas Andrews, an undersized puck mover, and John Driscoll, a much bigger, rangier player who is more of a stay-at-home type.
For those interested in first year draft eligible players, I will be focused on Iowa native Noah Ellis, a UMass (Amherst) commit who is entering his first year in the league and is being given a chance to prove himself on the power play, as well as center Matt Choupani, who has come to the USHL from the AAA ranks in Quebec. He has solid wheels, some puck protection ability, and brings energy to all three zones.
Dubuque Fighting Saints (Prediction – 3rd in the Eastern Conference)
The Fighting Saints always build talented rosters, even if most of their players are on the older side (oldest roster in the league) and many are not necessarily on the forefront of NHL scouting radars. Exhibits 1A and 1B to that point are the Jackson twins, Ty (a center) and Dylan (RW). A pair of waterbugs on the top line, Dylan is the bigger of the two, at 5-9”, 155. They are both quick and talented, playing a creative, instinctive game. Had they been born 10 days later, they would have been first time eligibles next June, but were passed over last season. In a similar boat, but one year older, is Riese Gaber, tiny yet one of the most talented stick handlers in the league. Gaber could be a potential free agent signing out of college like recent signings Blake Lizotte and Mason Jobst, but he is going to turn 20 this week and 5-8” is still small, even in the modern NHL.
Dubuque also has a pair of already drafted players in the lineup in Swedish netminder Erik Portillo, who aced his debut, holding Muskegon to a single goal on 23 shots. Jimmy Hamrin was very high on this mountain man from his time in the Swedish junior ranks and the Buffalo Sabres were intrigued enough to use their third round pick on him. Blueliner Braden Doyle looked overwhelmed late last season after his prep schedule ended, but Los Angeles saw enough potential to use a late pick on him and he looks much better in the early going, with his stickhandling and puck rushing abilities more able to come to the fore. Both Portillo and Doyle will be critical to Dubuque’s chances this year.
In terms of first time draft eligible for this season, look back to the Jackson line where Stephen Halliday is being tasked with creating room for his talented linemates. Already standing 6-4” and over 210 pounds, he has the size to play a power game and the speed and puck skills to keep up in the modern game. The first overall pick in the USHL Futures draft in 2018, he was stuck on a now-defunct Central Illinois team last year and now has the chance to establish his draft stock in light of his natural gifts. First, he will need to play with some snarl to match his skill as he was getting pushed around too easily by smaller players for my liking.
Fargo Force (Prediction – 6th in the Western Conference)
A team with age and size on its side, Cary Eades’ team is set to compete now. The most well-known names on the roster belong to netminder Cole Brady and forward Aaron Huglen, both entering their first full seasons in the USHL but with NHL affiliations already in place. Brady was a late round pick of New Jersey and Huglen of Buffalo in last June’s draft. Brady impressed in his debut games. He takes up a lot of room in the crease, has his movements under control, stays square to the shooter and flashes a quick glove. Huglen missed the USHL Classic due to injury but his high end skill set is expected to make him one of the Force’s offensive leaders.
Fargo’s chances will rest on their ability to limit the scoring chances provided to the opposition, which they looked more than capable of doing in the opening weekend. Their blueline crew is relatively anonymous, although big Cedric Fiedler played for Switzerland at last year’s WU18 tournament. Their first pairing for the moment consists of Noah Beck and Colton Huard, who are both reliable defenders with plus size but without any remarkable tools to their name. In the absence of Huglen, their top offensive threats look like a pair of 18 year olds who passed over at the draft last year in Lynden Breen and Kaden Bohlsen. The former brings the skill and play driving ability and the latter brings the size and trigger. 16-year old Tristan Broz is also worth noting, although his draft date won’t be until 2022.
While any of the names mentioned in the last paragraph can make enough noise in their respective second years of draft eligibility to hear their names called next June (I would say that Bohlsen is the odds-on favorite in that duck race), the only first year eligible player who played a regular shift at the USHL Classic was Kyle Smolen, who was essentially their extra skater.
Green Bay Gamblers (Prediction – 8th in the Eastern Conference)
In the absence of much in the way of 2002 born talent, the primary point of interest in scouting the Gamblers this year is to see how a trio of drafted forwards continue their development. Big Texan Ryan O’Reilly is the rare player who is still gracing the rinks of the USHL in his draft + two season. He has always had talented mitts and good shot, but has struggled with his consistency throughout his time in the league and his first few steps have remained below average. The other two drafted players were more surprising that they were selected in the first place. In the seventh round last year, Boston drafted Jake Schmaltz and Tampa took McKade Webster. The Schmaltz selection was odd in that he was a bottom six player without any discernable high end tools in his draft year as a member of the Steel. For Webster, it was his second year of eligibility, but he missed most of the season to injury. Schmaltz should take on a bigger role this year and we will get the chance to see if there is any latent skill lying beneath the two-way responsibility. Webster is healthy and brings energy, but can his early point pace be sustained over time?
Green Bay’s ability to compete will rest on a group of undrafted, yet talented late 2000 and 2001 born players. Up front, I would look to Tyler Paquette, Nicholas Zabaneh, and Camden Thiesing. Paquette is big and skates well, although his hands haven’t yet caught up to his feet. Zabaneh and Theising are both undersized and have flashed the ability to execute skill plays, but without the necessary consistency to be of pro interest. On the blueline, the top two left side players, Dylan Moulton and Chris Giroday, are all situations players with solid all around games. Moulton, in particular, has the look of a promising late bloomer, after spending last season in the NAHL.
Thus far, the only first year eligible on the roster are wingers Luke Mylymok and Alex Servango. Servango has scored twice in his first three games at the level, but standing 5-8”, he will have to prove himself continuously all year. Mylymok had a decent rookie season in the USHL last year, but hasn’t shown much yet in 2019-20. I would posit that one of the players in the previous paragraph is more likely to earn the affections of NHL scouts, with Giroday and Paquette the most primed.
Lincoln Stars (Prediction – 4th in the Western Conference)
After a terrible 2018-19 campaign, which saw the team sell off many of its better players at the trade deadline, the Stars seem to have regrouped with much better things expected for 2019-20. The lineup is stocked with players with USHL experience, with only Green Bay and Omaha have more on hand. This type of team-building is easiest to recognize with their goaltenders. Neither Ryan McInchak nor Jacob Mucitelli look like future NHLers, but neither are prone to coughing up games behind their squad.
The Stars feature four veteran forwards leading the charge, including three who all played with the Chicago Steel last season in Travis Treloar, Josh Groll, and Christian Sarlo. Groll may be recognized as a depth player for the Team USA outfit at the 2018 Hlinka, although he struggled to produce for the Steel. Treloar and Sarlo were productive, and Treloar looked, at times, like a potential NHL draft pick in the first half, before slowing down considerably in the second half. They played as a first line at the USHL Classic and could collectively be primed for a strong season now. Joining them as a critical forward is holdover Josh Lopina. He has gained in mass since last year and flashes a promising wrist shot. Through their first two games, the Stars blueline corps did not add a single point, although players like Jordan Power and Jake Boltmann should change that in short order.
Speaking of Boltmann, he is one of the few first year draft eligible players on the roster. He plays in all situations and has a solid point shot from the right side. He also plays a promising physical style. Two other draft eligibles of note are left winger Zach Urdahl and blueliner Jacob Bauer. Urdahl impressed for the Stars in a brief cameo last year. His first few steps are fine, but his top speed needs an extra gear. Bauer is a right handed shot with good size, but none of his tools flashed overly brightly on the weekend.
Madison Capitols (Prediction – 6th in the Eastern Conference)
Ever since I began covering the USHL, the Capitols have been the dregs of the league. They would have the occasional high end prospect in their ranks, but more often than not, they were drastically outmanned by the other teams in the league. While I am not ready to state that Madison will play in the postseason for the first time in its six year history, they could be a .500 team for the first time. The roster is still too shallow for me to project for more, but progress is apparent.
My general optimism comes from the first line of forwards, with Hungarian center Kristof Papp flanked by two first year draft eligible wingers in Carson Bantle and Reid Pabich. I will start with a word on Pabich, a Madison native who helps to keep things moving along, but is the clear third wheel on this unit. If the Capitols wanted to maximize their top line, Pabich would be subbed out for another first year draft eligible in Ryan Kirwan, who had a good showing for Team USA at this summer’s Hlinka Gretzky Cup. Regardless of how they move the right wing forward, the player to watch here is left winger Bantle, also a Hlinka alum. In his second season in Madison, Bantle has started the season hot, with six points through his first three games. He has ideal size, good touch, a nice top gear and a strong stick. I would like to see more aggression, but so far he looks like one of the top draft eligible prospects in the league. The line is centered by Papp, the team’s second leading scorer last season. He has very soft hands and plays creatively and now with added confidence. His size is only average and he may not have the speed to be of great NHL interest, but if he continues to push the pace as he did in the USHL Classic, he will force teams to take notice.
Although most of the attention on Madison will be placed up front, there is one blueliner who should also be minded in right handed shooting Stephen Davis, a Boston College commit. Although offensively inclined for the most part, the puck mover puts in good effort in his own end and could do enough to keep himself on the radar. Starting netminder Simon Latkoczy is also a 2002-born player, but at 5-11”, he is too small to be a draft target. That said, if he can provide Madison with at least average performance in net, the team will be competitive.
Muskegon Lumberjacks (Prediction – 5th in the Eastern Conference)
One of the most surprising facets of the USHL this year is that Daniil Gushchin is still a part of it. The Lumberjacks have a knack for developing Russian players, with high draft picks Andrei Svechnikov and Yegor Afanasyev both recently gracing the team roster. Gushchin played with Afanasyev last year and was very impressive as a 16-year old in the league, so when the Regina Pats used the seventh overall pick in the CHL Import Draft on the pint sized winger, it was widely expected that the player would be moving to Saskatchewan. Perhaps not. Although Gushchin has not recorded a point through three league games, he is widely expected to spearhead the Lumberjacks offense as the season progresses.
Coming up behind the talented Russian is another talented left winger who is small enough to make the 5-8”, 165 lbs Gushchin look big. I am referring to 5-7”, 158 lbs Alex Gaffney, who held his own as a rookie last year, but will need to do far more than that to garner NHL attention this year. Gaffney was strong at the Hlinka, but with his frame, the Harvard commit will need to prove that he can handle the grind. Another first year draft eligible winger of note for Muskegon is Jack Williams (one of two Jack Williamses on the roster). After crushing at the Selects Hockey Academy for two years, he was electrifying in a short stint with Muskegon at the tail end of last year. He has already shown that he can bring a lot of energy to his shifts this year, but the offense will need to follow.
There are enough interesting players on the Lumberjacks to expect them to overcome their rough start to the season (5 goals through 3 games), but the only one who seems likely to be followed for draft purposes is netminder Jonathan (Jack) Williams. Passed over last year after an uneven NAHL campaign, he has the size and athleticism that teams look for. He needs the minutes and the consistency. They are the smallest team in the league, and one of the least experienced to boot, so a slow start is not all that surprising, but better days should be ahead.
Omaha Lancers (Prediction – 2nd in the Western Conference)
Muskegon has the least experienced roster in the USHL. Omaha has, by far, the most experience, with nearly 200 more cumulative games to its players’ credit than the runner-up. Among those experienced players, none will play as critical a role in Omaha’s fortunes as that of starting goalie Akira Schmid. The 6-5” behemoth led the league in save percentage after coming over from the WHL, by way of the NAHL, and allowing for a mid-year break to represent his native Switzerland at the WJC. Considering the gap in ability between New Jersey draft pick Schmid and his backup, he should receive the lion’s share of playing time.
The Lancers’ offensive attack will reply on two 18 year olds who actually have very little USHL experience in Alexander Campbell a Nashville draft pick, and Rhett Pitlick, a Montreal selection. Campbell is coming over off a fantastic draft year in the BCHL, while Pitlick spent the bulk of his draft year playing Minnesota high school hockey. At the USHL Classic, they were generally playing opposite wings on the same line, with Pitlick playing as a trigger man on his off wing. Both players are above average skater and exciting puck players. When they are on the ice, especially playing together, the opposition should expect to be playing mostly in its own end.
Similar to the gap between Schmid and his backup, the level of talent on Omaha sees a big drop off after Campbell and Pitlick. With a plethora of 1999 and 2000 borns, there is little room o the roster for first year draft eligible, and only three played at all at the Classic. Neither Cameron Berg, Michael Cameron, or Matt Basgall did much to separate themselves. Omaha will go only as far as its three drafted players can take them.
Sioux City Musketeers (Prediction – 8th in the Western Conference)
Eeli Tolvanen is long gone. Last year’s hero, Bobby Brink is gone now, too. Draft picks Martin Pospisil and Marcus Kallionkielli are also gone. In fact, all of the top eight on the scoring list from last year’s squad are now gone. So are the two main netminders. I have already mentioned how high the level of turnover is in this league and the Musketeers are the prime example of that trend. It isn’t all bad though. For one thing, Sioux City could have even better netminding this year as Ben Kraws and Jake Sibell have been replaced by Nashville draft pick Ethan Haider, coming off a fantastic campaign in the NAHL, where he was named the Goaltender of the Year for the Midwest region of that league.
Additionally, even though they didn’t factor into the scoring leaders last year, the team added a pair of defensemen from high end college programs around midseason and both Adam Samuelsson and Dominic Vidoli are back. The former provides a gigantic body on the blueline with enough snarl to make himself useful even without much in the way of offensive contributions. The latter is six inches shorter and 55 pounds lighter, but looks to be one of the more dynamic offensive defensemen in the league this year. As a 20 year old, he is not draft eligible, but could work his way into consideration as an undrafted free agent after more time in college at Ohio State.
The Musketeers may be a weaker squad this year, but with a plethora of 2002 borns in the lineup, the stands will always have a lot of NHL scouts in attendance. Among the first year eligible, Jackson Nieuwendyk, son of Hall of Famer Joe is currently more curiosity than legit draft prospect, but that may yet change. Offensively inclined blueliner Christian Jimenez is a decent puck mover, but his reads are still a little rough. Center Blake Biondi comes with glowing advance clippings, considering his past production for Minnesota high school powerhouse Hermantown, which last year culminated in his being named an All-USA Hockey First Teamer, along with four players who were drafted last June. There is some thought that he will yet return to play for Hermantown this year, and his early play this season in the USHL has been underwhelming, but leaving for high school will leave his prospect status with more questions than answers, even if he excels for Hermantown once again. At this point though, the top scouting draw is following in a hallowed Sioux City tradition as a high end Finnish scorer. Tolvanen begat Kallionkieli. Kallionkieli has begat Joel Maatta. Maatta has started his USHL career on fire, with the ability to control the offensive attack from the half-wall, getting right to the net on rushes and making sure his stick is ready to play the puck. Between his hands, size and solid stride, he has the makings of a top half of the draft candidate.
Sioux Falls Stampede (Prediction – 3rd in the Western Conference)
Winning the Clark Cup last year was very nice. Starting again with only two players who contributed even 10 points to the championship team is not as nice, but flags fly forever. The goalies have turned over, too. So let’s give a quick shout-out to returning champions Jared Westcott and Ryan Sullivan, as they spend one more season in the USHL before going to school, but the simple matter is that any chance of repeating that the Stampede have will be reliant on new players. Starting in the crease, both netminders are new to the league, and neither Nathan Reid nor Grant Adams (both 2000-borns) has yet to claim a stranglehold on the starting job.
The biggest drop off from year to year for Sioux Falls is most likely on the blueline, though, as the championship team starred NHL draft picks Ryan Johnson and Max Crozier in the back in addition to other veterans of the league. The only defender on the current squad to have entered the new season with over 10 USHL games under their respective belts is the undersized Chase Foley, who held his own last year as a member of the defunct Central Illinois Flying Aces. For draft purposes, I will be keeping an eye on Evan Bushy, who joined the Stampede late last year after a strong showing for his hometown Thief River Falls High School team. Bushy didn’t record a single point in 10 regular season or four postseason games last year with Sioux Falls, but is being given a bigger role for the moment.
The forward group is also young and relatively inexperienced, but through three regular seasons, they have combined to score 12 goals, with eight different players lighting the lamp. Having a roster that can contribute from every line can only be a positive, even if it means that there isn’t a single offensive play driver, or focal point to lean on. That said, there are two first year eligible players that have earned a follow already. One is right winger Luke Weilandt, who the Stampede nabbed in the 13th round of the most recent USHL entry Level Draft. The Chicago native leads the way with five points through three games, although he is undersized and hasn’t yet shown any high level tools. The other player of note is Poland import Jakub Lewandowski, a rangy winger who comes over after a strong season in the Czech U19 league. He has good balance on his skates, can control the puck nicely and shows a touch of creativity to boot.
Tri-City Storm (Prediction – 5th in the Western Conference)
Although they have yet to come away with two standings points from any of their three first games, scoring only six times in the process, there are a lot of pieces on the Tri-City roster who should be interesting follows as the season plays on. Despite losing four NHL picks to the college game in netminder Isaiah Saville, defensemen Ronnie Attard and Zac Jones, and forward Shane Pinto, a fifth draft pick, Mike Koster, who only played with the Storm in the final quarter of the season, returns. His early absence due to injury has not helped the Tri-City offense find its legs.
Even without Allard, Jones, Koster (for now), or Ruben Rafkin, upon whom high hopes were placed, but who left for an opportunity with Windsor in the OHL, the Tri-City blueline once again should provide a lot of eye candy for scouts. Most prominent among that crew is Mitchell Miller, who came over in an off-season trade from Cedar Rapids. Miller is undersized, but is a composed puck mover, who plays with a pleasant physical side away from the puck. He has a full tool kit and may be one of the better first time eligible defenders in the league this year. He is joined on the blueline by a pair of rookies who join Tri-City together from the Chicago Mission program in Kyle Aucoin and Nicholas Donato. I am not sure if Donato is part of the famous Donato hockey clan, but Aucoin is the son of longtime NHLer Adrian. He showed a few flashes of high hockey IQ during the USHL Classic, and a few reminders that he was still very raw as well.
Despite not being able to score much yet, it seems the issue is not one of a lack of talent, but more likely a matter of some bad luck over a small sample. The forwards are very young, with four first year eligibles among the season opening lineup, in addition to two more who won’t be draft eligible until 2021. The four first year eligible include Colby Ambrosio, Mark Estapa, Carter Mazur, and Nick Capone. Estapa and Ambrosio are good shooters. The latter has a knack for hitting the twine and will likely be an offensive leader for Tri-City this year, while the former looks like more of a depth, energy player for now. Capone chose the USHL over strong overtures from the QMJHL and is ready for a full season in the league after two partial years previously. He has fantastic power forward size and plays a rough game to boot. He is a strong skater for his size and shows the hands to win puck battles in the corners. He has yet to find the scoresheet, but he is the type of player who can have a big impact on the game even without scoring.
Waterloo Black Hawks (Prediction – 1st in the Western Conference)
Three games, three wins with only four goals allowed (although only eight scored), and Waterloo is easily the early favorite in the Western Conference. Rookie goalie Gabriel Carriere has played in all three games for the Black Hawks, ignoring the lure of the OHL for the lure of Hockey East. He has been steady, but not spectacular. That said, if he keeps his numbers even close to his current .947 save percentage, NHL teams will be forced to consider the third year eligible from Ottawa.
The blueline in front of Carriere that has been so far so good at keeping opponents to the outside, is mostly young and small. It includes two first year eligible and four players who are 6-0” or smaller. The Venn diagram of young and small is basically a circle within a circle, as all three first year eligible are on the small side. Ethan Szmagaj would have been draft eligible last year were he born three days earlier, and he held his own as a USHL rookie at the time. More of a first pass than an offensive driver, he shows some grit along the boards and the quiet effectiveness of a potential late round selection. The other first year eligible also has a year of USHL experience under his belt as Nic Belpedio (brother of Minnesota’s Louie) played a solid season with Muskegon.
Szmagaj and Belpedio aside, scouts will flock to Waterloo this year as the forward units have a number of intriguing draft eligible players. The biggest name among that group is Ryder Rolston (son of Brian) who played with the USNTDP U18s last year, but was not draft eligible as a late birthday, so gets another year in the league before getting the chance to hear his name called by an NHL team. Like his father, he is a brilliant skater and plays a responsible two way game. He is an opportunistic player with a big wrist shot. He has the tools and the big game background to be one of the first players from the league to be drafted next June. The other notable first year eligible include Patrick Guzzo, Dane Montgomery, and Wyatt Schingoethe. Guzzo is a big center who can skate and was a former USHL first round pick. Montgomery is undersized, but quick, and has a nice wrist shot. He currently straddles the line between being responsible, but barely in control. Schingoethe had a great season as a 16 year old last year, trailing only Daniil Gushchin and Stephen Halliday in points in his age group. He has exceptional hockey IQ and is the type of player who can lengthen offensive zone time and can punctuate the attack with a great wrist shot, but I would like to see a touch more burst to his first few steps.
Team USA (Prediction – 7th in the Eastern Conference)
For the purposes of this introduction, I will be completely ignoring the U17s. Sorry, fellas, we’ll talk about you next year. The U18s are not nearly as deep as last year’s team, but there is still a ton of talent here. With the exceptions of forwards Hunter Strand and Matthew Beniers, both with November birthdates that push their draft eligibility off to 2021, the rest of the lineup will be draft eligible next June. Unlike last year, where all but two draft eligible players were selected, there will be a few more from this year’s class who will enter college without NHL affiliation. I was only able to see the first Team USA game at the USHL Classic, so I won’t be so bold as to predict which players will and will not be drafted, but I saw enough to highlight some elements from some players that stuck out. Also of note, forward Ty Smilanic, who some see as the top draft prospect from this class, missed the Classic due to injury. He played the following weekend, so this isn’t a long term issue, but I will not be commenting further on him at this time.
The goaltending situation for the Program is currently blurry, with Noah Grannan and Drew Commesso splitting the net at the Classic. I saw Grannan, and he was fine and reports on Commesso were also generally positive, but neither will be following in the footsteps of Spencer Knight or Jake Oettinger as first round picks. In fact, there were reports that the Program may consider bringing in a goalie from somewhere else to augment their group when it comes time for international play.
There are several interesting blueliners in this group and Eamon Powell was most impressive to there eyes, with his dynamic skating ability and propensity to lead the rush and activate in the offensive end. He is an impressive puck handler and has a good right-handed point shot to boot. On the other hand, he is smallish and can be a bit rough in his own end. Jake Sanderson (son of Geoff) has a more traditionally desirable tool kit from a scouting perspective. He is tall and rangy, is central at both ends, and has plus edge work. Brock Faber plays a quieter game, within the team structure, and not chasing a play at either end. He has good strength and is a goalie’s friend in his own zone, working to keep the crease clear. A shout out also to big Daniel Laatsch, who can fire one from the point.
Once we get past the late birthdays up front, the most interesting draft candidate among the forwards looks like Luke Tuch, who looks a fair bit like older brother Alex, now with the Vegas Golden Knights. He is big and beefy and has good hands and decent quickness. Hunter McKown also impressed from the fourth line, thanks to his plus speed, and great hands. He has ankle breaking puck skills. Center Chase Yoder is an exceptional skater, although there are open questions about his offensive ability. Landon Slaggert is a muscular winger following in the footsteps of his older brother Graham. Landon is more likely than his brother to be drafted, as he has plus hands, and plays a much chippier game. Dylan Peterson is very big and skates well for his size with a discernable second gear. Thomas Bordeleau led the team in scoring last ear and has the early lead in goals this season. He is smallish, but plays with jam and skill. Many more views are needed.
Youngstown Phantoms (Prediction – 4th in the Eastern Conference)
I really like the new orange uniforms, although I would appreciate them more if they put the player numbers on the shoulders. Whose idea was it to only have player numbers on the back? The first place I looked to on this team was in net, as they were debuting Chicago draft pick Dominic Basse, a gigantic puck stopper who spent his draft year playing midget hockey at the Selects Hockey Academy. His first game stepping up two levels to the USHL was brutal, though. He gave up way too many goals, including a few bouncers. To his credit, his first game after the USHL Classic was much better, stopping 22 of 24 in a victory against Muskegon. Even with that rebound, he may end up playing second fiddle to crease mate Colin Purcell. Purcell spent some time last year with the NTDP program, but spent most of his year playing Tier 1 hockey in the Cleveland area. Just as big as Besse, Purcell plays a much calmer game, is sharp from post to post, and keeps a stiff back, allowing him to cover more of the top of the net. Purcell is the early favorite to be the first goalie drafted out of the USHL, including the USNTDP stoppers.
The Phantoms’ postseason chances will be aided by a veteran blueline, with only one regular under the age of 19, unless 16-year old Austin May works his way into the regular rotation. While there are unlikely to be any future NHLers in this blueline crew, there is a ton of size, with three regulars standing at least 6-3”, while UMass (Amherst) commit Jayson Dobay brings offensive wherewithal.
While scouts will not be looking for miracles from the defensemen, the forwards have a lot to recommend them. Looking to the future, there is Japanese wunderkind Yusaku Ando, who comes to Youngstown from an elite hockey school in Western Canada. He turned 16 around one month ago and scored three goals in his first five USHL games. For the current draft, remember the name of Ben Schoen. He is small, but a gifted playmaker. He is the go-to player for his team and controls the game like a veteran from the half-wall. He has great offensive instincts and vision and could be a sleeper if he adds some muscle to help him withstand physical play.
Also fighting for scouting attention on the Phantoms are a pair of second time eligible forwards in Trevor Kuntar and Reilly Funk. This is Kuntar’s third year in the USHL, and the Harvard commit is starting this season hot. He is a solid skater with a plus top speed and a good shot. He can also flash high end puck skills, such as the play leading up to a goal scored late against Tri-City. Funk is new to the USHL, having played in the MJHL for the past two seasons. He has a great frame (6-3”, 190), which he uses to good effect along the boards. He skates well for his size and attacks the net on offense. He is coordinated and athletic and has a knack for creating room for himself with the puck with a shoulder check. With eight points in his first five games at the new level, he has put the league – as well as NCAA recruiters (he is without a college commitment) - on notice.
Top ten draft eligible players in the USHL
Bonus, second time eligible draft prospects
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The score will consist of 1 point per first round player taken, .85 for second rounders, .75 for third rounders, .65 or fourth rounders and .5 points for players taken in the fifth, sixth and seventh rounds. Add to that the drafted player’s OFP, divided by 100. So first overall pick Jack Hughes would be worth 1.645 points to the Devils, while Massimo Rizzo, taken with second to last pick, would be worth 1.025. Players for whom we don’t have OFPs available will be assigned an OFP 48.5.
| 2019 NHL Draft Review Scores | Atlantic |
|---|---|
| Detroit Red Wings | 13.24 |
| Montreal Canadiens | 11.56 |
| Florida Panthers | 11.01 |
| Tampa Bay Lightning | 8.46 |
| Buffalo Sabres | 7.64 |
| Ottawa Senators | 7.51 |
| Toronto Maple Leafs | 7.09 |
| Boston Bruins | 5.81 |
Boston BruinsThe Bruins’ draft class consisted of five players, taken in the first, third, fifth, sixth and seventh rounds. As has often been the case under GM Don Sweeney, the Bruins like to draft players who are college bound. Their first, second and fifth picks are all college bound, with the first and last picks both having spent this past season in the USHL and the second pick coming from the AJHL, the only skater to be drafted from that circuit this year. The other two picks came from the junior leagues in Russia and Finland, in order. There were four forwards and one defender drafted. Draft classes are small samples from which to try to derive trends, and the Bruins’ 2019 draft class was smaller than usual.
Other than first rounder, a literal Bruin in size, John Beecher, the other picks were all either undersized, or, like seventh rounder Jake Schmaltz, tall but very thin. All of their picks were on the younger side, with no re-drafts or even late 2000-borns picked. One notable trend to this draft class is that outside of Beecher, all of the players picked are long-term projects. Beecher could be ready within two years at Michigan, as he has tremendous size and strength already and is an above-average skater, even by NHL standards. He needs to round out his skill game and could and should get a shot on the Wolverines top six to work on his offensive game. To their credit, the players drafted all share the characteristic of having advanced hockey smarts and I can expect them to maximize their physical skill sets in time.
First Round Pick: John Beecher, C, 1/30, USNTDP, USHL
The biggest legitimate criticism I can make of Beecher’s prospectdom is that he isn’t as skilled as Jack Hughes, Alex Turcotte, or Trevor Zegras, all three of which were also centers with the USNTDP U18 team, relegating Beecher to a bottom six role. He rarely saw time on the power play and generally played fewer than 15 minutes per game. He is a wonderful skater, has very high hockey IQ and can get mean in an effective way. His offensive upside is higher than he has been allowed to show thus far in his career, but it is very unlikely to be more than a decent second liner in terms of points production.
Best Later Value Selection: Roman Bychkov, D, 5/154, Yaroslavl 2, MHL
We liked Bychkov’s game enough to rank him as a potential third round pick, as in addition to hockey sense, he is an above average skater with good puck moving ability. He played well at both the Hlinka Gretzky Cupand the WJAC and had a solid season in the Russian junior leagues.
Biggest Head Scratcher: Jake Schmaltz, C, 7/192, Chicago, USHL
Living in the Chicago area, I saw Schmaltz play at least a dozen games this year. Not once did Schmaltz do anything to suggest that he has pro upside. The Bruins’ brass complimented his skating and hockey IQ, and those aren’t bad, but they aren’t good enough to make up for his inability to drive play even against USHL bottom six lines.
Also selected: Quinn Olson, LW, 3/92, Okotoks, AJHL; Matias Mantykivi, C, 6/185, SaiPa U20, Jr. A SM-liiga
Draft Score: 5.81
Buffalo SabresWell, we can no longer say about Sabres’ GM Jason Botterill that he will not draft a player from the CHL. He disabused us of that notion pretty early on, drafting the big center from Whitehorse (which would be a fantastic nickname, by the way) Dylan Cozens out of Lethbridge of the WHL seventh overall. And then Botterill went right back to type, spending the rest of his draft searching elsewhere for talent. So we can’t say “never”, but we can say “rarely”. Of the other five Sabres picks, two were from the USHL, two from Sweden and one from the Czech Republic.
One notable pick was the selection of massive Swedish netminder Erik Portillo in the third round. Despite the great steps taken by 2017 second rounder Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen this year in Sudbury, the rest of the system is bare of goalie prospects. After Portillo and second first rounder Ryan Johnson, the other Sabres’ picks were all forwards. There were no overriding characteristics that seem to have been sought out. The first rounders had both high-end tools and had multiples of them. Fourth rounder Aaron Huglen is hands over feet at the moment. Fifth rounder Filip Cederqvist is feet over hands. One interesting aspect of the Buffalo draft class is that fully half of their six picks were re-drafts. Potillo and Cederqvist were both in their second years of eligiblity, while sixth rounder and third year eligible Lukas Rousek is already in his 20s.
First First Round Pick: Dylan Cozens, C/RW, 1/7, Lethbridge, WHL
Outside of the shock value of Botterill taking a player out of the CHL, there is no surprise to see Cozens go in this range of the draft and we had him ranked fifth. A dominant junior level player from the minute he reached Lethbridge, Cozens capped off his pre-draft life with a star turn for Team Canada at the WU18. More of a playmaker than a scorer, he moves very well for his size and can bring the physical attack. He could use another year of junior hockey to fill out his frame and perhaps strut his stuff at the WJC, but he has top line upside, whether at center or on the wing.
Second First Round Pick: Ryan Johnson, D, 1/31, Sioux Falls, USHL
Son of longtime NHLer Craig, Ryan Johnson started the year, his first in the USHL, on all watch lists mostly due to his exceptionally smooth skating. By years’ end, he had proven himself to be a true shutdown defender, even if he is painfully slight. He melts opposing rushes with a great stick and a mature sense of positioning. His offensive game is still in development, but I suspect there is enough there to fit on a second pairing down the road. He will need more development time than Cozens.
Best Later Value Selection: Aaron Huglen, C, 4/102, Fargo, USHL
While we did not have Huglen ranked in our top 217, he was on our honorable mention list and we may have been too consumed by his play in snippets in the USHL, instead of his visions of grandeur with Roseau in the Minnesota high school ranks or his appearances in the highlight reels from the pre-season Hlinka Gretzky Cup. Not many could have pulled off the lacrosse goal he did against a strong Canada team. He is definitely a gamble, but the upside is worth the risk, even if I think he might have still been on the board in the fifth round.
Biggest Head Scratcher: Lukas Rousek, LW, 6/160, HC Sparta Praha, Czech
To Rousek’s credit, he spent much of this past season playing in the Czech Republic’s top league and was selected by his national team for two WJAC tournaments. On the other hand, he didn’t do much in either international tournament, and was never selected to represent his county at either the WU18 or the WJC, even though he led the Czech U18 league in scoring in his first draft eligible season. Still physically underdeveloped at 20 years of age, he doesn’t make sense as a long-term project and hasn’t accomplished enough yet to see him as a quick turnaround either.
Also selected: Erik Portillo, G, 3/67, Frolunda J20, SuperElit; Filip Cederqvist, LW, 5/143, Vaxjo, SHL
Draft Score: 7.6425
Detroit Red WingsSpeaking purely subjectively, I really like how the Red Wings approached their first draft under Steve Yzerman’s leadership. Their use of the sixth overall pick on towering German defender Moritz Seider drew gasps throughout the Rogers Arena, as many, if not most other teams and media saw him as more of a 10-15 pick than six. Despite the uncertainties in Seider’s projection, largely stemming from his unorthodox development path, never having played outside of his native Germany, he absolutely has the tools and hockey IQ to be a first pairing blueliner in the NHL in the near future. At the time of this writing, the CHL Import Draft has not yet occurred, but many expect Seider to play – somewhere – in North America next season.
Into the middle rounds, the Wings made their picks count, swinging for the fences time after time. We had two of their three second rounders, Robert Mastrosimone and Albert Johansson, ranked as first rounders. The other second, third and fourth rounders, Antti Tuomisto, Albin Grewe, and Ethan Phillips respectively, combine high floors and high ceilings in a way that suggests a big future impact on the organization. They drafted big players (Seider and Tuomisto are both 6-4”, while sixth round center Elmer Soderblom is 6-7”) and small ones (both fourth rounder Phillips and seventh rounder Kirill Tyutyayev are listed at 5-9”, 146). The Wings mixed things up positionally, drafting five defensemen and five forwards before ending their draft with a project netminder in Carter Gylander from the AJHL.
The Red Wings also scouted from everywhere, although it is notable that not a single one of their 11 picks were drafted from a CHL league. They drafted four players from Sweden and one each from Germany, Russia and Finland. Their other four picks are all NCAA bound, covering two players from the USHL, one New England prep schooler and one from the AJHL. Yzerman has injected a ton of talent into the Red Wings system that had wasted more than a few picks in recent years, and he has given himself more time to let those young players develop before he will be forced to make a decision on them.
First Round Pick: Moritz Seider, D, 1/6, Adler Mannheim, DEL
Between his high-end hockey IQ and his great size, Seider can reach his floor as a bottom pairing NHL defender as soon as 2020-21. Based on what he showed during international tournaments, including the second tier of the WJC, the Men’s World Championships, and the German league playoffs, he has shown enough skating and puck moving ability and leadership beyond his years, he could be the understated member of a top pairing. I’m not convinced that he was great value at #6, but I appreciate the arguments.
Best Later Value Selections: Robert Mastrosimone, LW, 2/54, Chicago, USHL; Albert Johansson, D, 2/60, Farjestad J20 SuperElit
I have to include both of these players here as we had them both ranked as first round talent and are very impressed that the Red Wings snagged both with late second round picks. Mastrosimone is a smaller, feisty winger with a high end, dynamic element to his game. The first forward selected by Detroit this year, he has good speed, but his overall skating needs some refinement. He is heading to Boston University in the fall. Johansson is a high-end skater with great puck moving ability and impressive hockey IQ to boot. He still has a lot of physical development ahead of him, but his game took major strides this year and he adapted fantastically to every new challenge thrown his way.
Biggest Head Scratcher: Cooper Moore, D, 5/128, Brunswick School, USHS-CT
I might be a bit biased here, but players with purely prep experience are longer long shots than most. Moore was fine as far as prep school defenders, and has impressed others enough such that he has a scholarship in the queue from North Dakota and was selected fourth overall in the USHL draft by Lincoln, although he is currently expected to play for Chilliwack in the BCHL next season. He earned notice early in the season in a multi-team prep tournament, but it is difficult not to think that he would have been available one or two rounds later.
Also selected: Antti Tuomisto, D, 2/35, Assat U20, Jr. A SM-liiga; Albin Grewe, RW, 3/66, Djurgarden J20, SuperElit; Ethan Phillips, RW/C, 4/97, Sioux Falls, USHL; Elmer Soderblom, LW/C, 6/159, Frolunda J20, SuperElit; Gustav Berglund, D, 6/177, Frolunda J18, J18 Elit; Kirill Tyutyayev, LW, 7/190, Avto Yekaterinburg, MHL; Carter Gylander, G, 7/191, Sherwood Park, AJHL
Draft Score: 13.2375
Florida PanthersScouting is tremendously hard, and I am loathe to criticize a scouting staff at any level, much less an NHL scouting staff with as much bonafides as the Panthers have. And yet, I find myself compelled to speak up here. Philosophically, if for no other reason. For starters, the Panthers began their draft committing what I consider to be a cardinal sin of drafting a goaltender in the first round.
Yes, a good goalie is the most valuable asset a team can have, and yes, Spencer Knight is the best draft eligible goaltending prospect in years, but to put your first round eggs in the basket of a player who has never played in 40 games in a single season, no matter how stupendous of an athlete he is and no matter how well refined his technique is. It is just so risky. I accept that if the Panthers didn’t take Knight where they did, he may not have been available four picks later, much less for Florida’s second round pick, but the level of risk is more than I would willingly accept.
There is a second philosophical difference that I have with Florida’s draft class. I preach the value in drafting for upside. We have all seen how well things turned out for Edmonton during their interminable bottom line picks. A top line player in junior could lose some skill advantage as he climbs the ranks and still be a decent bottom sixer if he adapts his game. A lower skilled player who falls off his pace is no longer even a fourth line plugger, but a player who is struggling to make good in the AHL, much less the NHL.
Even though Florida is proof positive that some second-year eligible players still contain great dynamic talents (think Henrik Borgstrom), I would say they took that approach too far this year. Of their nine draft picks, four were players in their second or third year of eligibility. So that makes five players with whom I have philosophical concerns. And I would hazard that only one of the four overagers (Carter Berger) really took a huge step forward this year, indicating the possibility of being a late bloomer.
Other than those items, it is notable that all nine of the Panthers’ picks were domestic players, with two members of the USNTDP and one from the BCHL and three picks each from the OHL and the WHL. The Panthers drafted three defensemen and five forwards, although only one of the team’s first five picks plays up front. If Knight becomes the top flight starting goalie in the NHL that many expect (and such an outcome would not surprise me) then this draft class will be looked upon at least relatively fondly. But if he is anything less than a top 15 netminder on the NHL, there may not be enough among the other eight players to overcome it.
First Round Pick: Spencer Knight, G, 1/13, USNTDP, USHL
The only real weakness I have noticed in Knight’s game this year, across at least ten viewings, is that he can be prone to giving up a goal in the first few seconds that an opponent is in his zone. Once he gets his bearings and begins to track the play, he is incredibly difficult to beat cleanly. He was one of the stars of the NHL Draft Combine, showcasing amazing athleticism, particularly in the leg exercises. He is headed to Boston College next year and should not need more than two seasons on campus before being ready for his professional reveal. He could even be a one and done candidate.
Best Later Value Selection: Owen Lindmark, C, 5/137, USNTDP, USHL
Lindmark was one of the least distinguished members of last year’s star-studded USNTDP class, but he has a number of attributes that suggest that he may have more game in him than he has thus far let on. He skates well enough to make himself a threat and is an accomplished penalty killer. He thinks the game well and if given a spot higher up the lineup at his next stop in Wisconsin, he could surprise a few people. The upside isn’t tremendous, but he has enough in the way of tools to make it anyway. An honorable mention to blueliner Carter Berger, who nearly doubled his offensive output in the BCHL from his first draft eligible year to this year. If he were two days older, he would have been a third year eligible, but he is good enough in the offensive zone and a fine enough skater to hold out hope that he will be one of the better members of this draft class.
Biggest Head Scratcher: John Ludvig, D, 3/69, Portland, WHL
Ludvig has a solid frame and is tough to play against without necessarily being a dirty player, but he offers very little outside of his own zone. Another one of the second-year eligible players selected, he very much fits into the mold of the copycat pick, one of several tougher defensemen picked higher than anticipated in light of the Stanley Cup Champion St. Louis Blues style of play. He has been injury prone in his two years of WHL action and last year’s 18 points in 58 games was more than double his previous mark, as meagre as that is. I would have understood this pick in the seventh round, even if I could not be enthused about it. But early in the third round? Pass.
Also selected: Vladislav Kolyachonok, D, 2/52, Flint, OHL; Cole Schwindt, C/RW, 3/81, Mississauga, OHL; Carter Berger, D, 4/106, Victoria, BCHL; Henrik Rybinski, RW, 5/136, Seattle, WHL; Greg Meireles, C, 6/168, Kitchener, OHL; Matthew Wedman, C, 7/199, Seattle, WHL
Draft Score: 11.005
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American center Jack Hughes or Finnish Winger Kaapo Kakko?
That is the decision facing the New Jersey Devils who won the draft lottery for the second time in the past three seasons and hold the top pick in the 2019 NHL Entry Draft.
Hughes (5-foot-10, 170 pounds) led the USA Hockey National Team Development Program under-18 team in scoring while setting the NTDP career record for assists (154) and points (228) in two seasons (110 games) with the program.
He earned the highest Overall Future Projection (OFP) score of 64.50, as per the 20/80 grading system developed by McKeen's Director of Scouting Ryan Wagman.
Skating, shooting, puck skills, hockey IQ, physicality - these are the attributes measured for skaters using the 20/80 grading system to arrive at an Overall Future Projection (OFP) score.
Six areas are assessed for goalies: athleticism/quickness, compete/temperament, vision/play reading, technique/style, rebound control and puck handling.
BROADWAY KAAPO
Kakko (6-foot-2, 195 pounds) earned the next highest OFP score at 64.00.
The Turku, Finland native will go to the New York Rangers with the second pick, their highest draft position since taking Brad Park in 1966 before expansion (1967-68).
Kakko led Finland with six goals while winning gold at the 2019 World Championships at just 18 years, 102 days old to become the youngest player in IIHF history to win gold at the Under-18, Under-20, and WM (World Men) levels, supplanting Connor McDavid of Canada (19 years, 130 days) from the record books.
The Chicago Blackhawks have the number three pick with the top defenseman Bowen Byram of the Vancouver Giants next on the McKeen's OFP scale (63.40).
Seven players in total received OFP scores of at least 60.00 this season, up from five in 2018 - and just two in 2017 when the Devils selected Nino Hischier first overall.
The next five spots in the rankings are all centers - Kirby Dach of Saskatoon (63.20 OFP), Dylan Cozens of Lethbridge (61.40), the NTDP duo of Trevor Zegras (61.25) and Alex Turcotte (60.00), and Peyton Krebs of Kootenay (59.65).
ALL AMERICAN

Spencer Knight of the NTDP is the top-rated goaltender available (55.75 OFP) at No. 32 in the McKeen's rankings.
Knight will likely go in the opening round of what will be a record haul for the U.S. National Team Development Program as upwards of eight players could be taken in the top 31 selections.
As for past records, the Brandon Wheat Kings (WHL) had four players taken in the opening round of the 1979 NHL Draft - as did the Toronto Marlboros (OHA) in 1972 and the Montreal Junior Canadiens (OHA) in 1969.
Along with Hughes (1st), Zegras (6th), and Turcotte (7th), wingers Matthew Boldy and Cole Caufield are ranked at No. 12 and 13 on the McKeen's list, with defenseman Cam York at No. 17 and center John Beecher at 30th.
Caufield (5-foot-7, 165 pounds) scored 14 goals at the U18 World Junior Championship, tying Alex Ovechkin's single-tournament goals record. However, the United States lost in a shootout to Russia in the semi-finals.
There are also four others in the program ranked in the 32 to 62 range (second round) - all defensemen - Marshall Warren (35th), Alex Vlasic (54th), Henry Thrun (58th) and Drew Helleson (62nd).
In total, 16 players from the NTDP are ranked among the top 100.
SWEDE GOLD - SWEET SEIDER

Sweden won a first-ever gold medal at the U18 World Juniors.
Four blueliners on that Swedish team are first-round candidates led by Philip Broberg of AIK, named 'Top Defenceman' at the U18 tournament, and Victor Soderstrom of Brynas, ranked No. 9 and 10 respectively on McKeen's.
U18 captain Tobias Bjornfot of Djurgardens is ranked 19th and Albert Johansson of Farjestads is 26th.
Following Dominik Bokk's selection in 2018 (25th to St. Louis), Germany will produce another first-round pick this year in Adler Mannheim defenseman Moritz Seider.
The 6-foot-3, 185-pound, right-shot blueliner displayed impressive skills and maturity for his age while appearing at the 2019 World Championships (5-2-0-2).
Seider earned an OFP score of 57.50 and is ranked No. 15.
He will become the highest-selected German-born player at the NHL Draft since the Edmonton Oilers took Leon Draisaitl third overall in 2014.
Here are our final 2019 NHL Draft Rankings. They are a culmination of a season’s worth of prospect analysis and coverage on mckeenshockey.com and the tremendous work put in rinks and looking at screens and numbers from our committed team. Enjoy!
| RANK | PLAYER | POS | TEAM | HT/WT | DOB | Nation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jack Hughes | C | NTDP (USA) | 5-10/170 | 14-May-01 | USA |
| 2 | Kaapo Kakko | RW | TPS Turku (Fin) | 6-2/195 | 13-Feb-01 | Finland |
| 3 | Bowen Byram | D | Vancouver (WHL) | 6-0/195 | 13-Jun-01 | Canada |
| 4 | Kirby Dach | C | Saskatoon (WHL) | 6-3/200 | 21-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 5 | Dylan Cozens | C | Lethbridge (WHL) | 6-3/185 | 9-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 6 | Trevor Zegras | C | NTDP (USA) | 6-0/170 | 20-Mar-01 | USA |
| 7 | Alex Turcotte | C | NTDP (USA) | 5-11/185 | 26-Feb-01 | USA |
| 8 | Peyton Krebs | C | Kootenay (WHL) | 5-11/180 | 26-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 9 | Philip Broberg | D | AIK (Swe 2) | 6-3/200 | 25-Jun-01 | Sweden |
| 10 | Victor Soderstrom | D | Brynas (Swe) | 5-11/180 | 26-Feb-01 | Sweden |
| 11 | Vasili Podkolzin | RW | SKA-1946 St. Pete. (Rus Jr) | 6-1/190 | 24-Jun-01 | Russia |
| 12 | Matthew Boldy | LW | NTDP (USA) | 6-1/190 | 5-Apr-01 | USA |
| 13 | Cole Caufield | RW | NTDP (USA) | 5-7/165 | 2-Jan-01 | USA |
| 14 | Raphael Lavoie | RW | Halifax (QMJHL) | 6-4/195 | 25-Sep-00 | Canada |
| 15 | Moritz Seider | D | Adler Mannheim (DEL) | 6-3/185 | 6-Apr-01 | Germany |
| 16 | Simon Holmstrom | RW | HV 71 (Swe Jr) | 6-1/185 | 24-May-01 | Sweden |
| 17 | Cam York | D | NTDP (USA) | 5-11/175 | 5-Jan-01 | USA |
| 18 | Alex Newhook | C | Victoria (BCHL) | 5-10/195 | 28-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 19 | Tobias Bjornfot | D | Djurgardens (Swe Jr) | 6-0/200 | 6-Apr-01 | Sweden |
| 20 | Philip Tomasino | C | Niagara (OHL) | 5-11/180 | 28-Jul-01 | Canada |
| 21 | Arthur Kaliyev | RW | Hamilton (OHL) | 6-2/190 | 26-Jun-01 | USA |
| 22 | Ryan Suzuki | C | Barrie (OHL) | 6-0/180 | 28-May-01 | Canada |
| 23 | Samuel Poulin | LW | Sherbrooke (QMJHL) | 6-1/205 | 25-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 24 | Thomas Harley | D | Mississauga (OHL) | 6-3/190 | 19-Aug-01 | Canada |
| 25 | Ryan Johnson | D | Sioux Falls (USHL) | 6-0/175 | 24-Jul-01 | USA |
| 26 | Albert Johansson | D | Farjestads (Swe Jr) | 5-11/165 | 4-Jan-01 | Sweden |
| 27 | Robert Mastrosimone | LW | Chicago (USHL) | 5-10/160 | 24-Jan-01 | USA |
| 28 | Connor McMichael | C | London (OHL) | 5-11/175 | 15-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 29 | Matthew Robertson | D | Edmonton (WHL) | 6-3/200 | 9-Mar-01 | Canada |
| 30 | John Beecher | C | NTDP (USA) | 6-3/210 | 5-Apr-01 | USA |
| 31 | Pavel Dorofeyev | LW | Magnitogorsk (KHL) | 6-1/170 | 26-Oct-00 | Russia |
| 32 | Spencer Knight | G | NTDP (USA) | 6-3/195 | 19-Apr-01 | USA |
| 33 | Bobby Brink | RW | Sioux City (USHL) | 5-10/165 | 8-Jul-01 | USA |
| 34 | Brett Leason | RW | Prince Albert (WHL) | 6-4/200 | 30-Apr-99 | Canada |
| 35 | Marshall Warren | D | NTDP (USA) | 5-11/170 | 20-Apr-01 | USA |
| 36 | Egor Afanasyev | RW | Muskegon (USHL) | 6-3/205 | 23-Jan-01 | Russia |
| 37 | Ville Heinola | D | Lukko Rauma (Fin) | 5-11/180 | 3-Feb-01 | Finland |
| 38 | Nolan Foote | LW | Kelowna (WHL) | 6-3/190 | 29-Nov-00 | Canada |
| 39 | Samuel Fagemo | RW | Frolunda (Swe) | 6-0/195 | 14-Mar-00 | Sweden |
| 40 | Nick Robertson | LW | Peterborough (OHL) | 5-9/160 | 11-Sep-01 | USA |
| 41 | Nils Hoglander | RW | Rogle (Swe) | 5-9/185 | 20-Dec-00 | Sweden |
| 42 | Jamieson Rees | C | Sarnia (OHL) | 5-10/175 | 26-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 43 | Jakob Pelletier | LW | Moncton (QMJHL) | 5-9/165 | 7-Mar-01 | Canada |
| 44 | Antti Tuomisto | D | Assat Pori (Fin Jr) | 6-4/190 | 20-Jan-01 | Finland |
| 45 | Lassi Thomson | D | Kelowna (WHL) | 5-11/190 | 24-Sep-00 | Finland |
| 46 | Michal Teply | LW | Bili Tygri Liberec (Cze) | 6-3/185 | 27-May-01 | Czech |
| 47 | Brayden Tracey | LW | Moose Jaw (WHL) | 6-0/175 | 28-May-01 | Canada |
| 48 | Arseni Gritsyuk | RW | Omskie Yastreby (Rus Jr) | 5-10/170 | 15-Mar-01 | Russia |
| 49 | Yegor Chinakhov | RW | Omskie Yastreby (Rus Jr) | 6-0/175 | 1-Feb-01 | Russia |
| 50 | Mattias Norlinder | D | MoDo (Swe Jr) | 5-11/180 | 12-Apr-00 | Sweden |
| 51 | Karl Henriksson | C | Frolunda (Swe Jr) | 5-9/165 | 5-Feb-01 | Sweden |
| 52 | Vladislav Kolyachonok | D | Flint (OHL) | 6-1/185 | 26-May-01 | Belarus |
| 53 | Nikola Pasic | RW | Linkopings (Swe Jr) | 5-10/185 | 16-Oct-00 | Sweden |
| 54 | Alex Vlasic | D | NTDP (USA) | 6-6/200 | 5-Jun-01 | USA |
| 55 | Pyotr Kochetkov | G | HK Ryazan (Rus 2) | 6-1/175 | 25-Jun-99 | Russia |
| 56 | Albin Grewe | RW | Djurgardens (Swe Jr) | 5-11/190 | 22-Mar-01 | Sweden |
| 57 | Trevor Janicke | C | Central Illinois (USHL) | 5-10/195 | 25-Dec-00 | USA |
| 58 | Henry Thrun | D | NTDP (USA) | 6-2/190 | 12-Mar-01 | USA |
| 59 | Yegor Spiridonov | C | Stalnye Lisy Mag. (Rus Jr) | 6-2/195 | 22-Jan-01 | Russia |
| 60 | Patrik Puistola | LW | Tappara (Fin Jr) | 6-0/175 | 11-Jan-01 | Finland |
| 61 | Ilya Nikolayev | C | Loko Yaroslavl (Rus Jr) | 6-0/190 | 26-Jun-01 | Russia |
| 62 | Drew Helleson | D | NTDP (USA) | 6-3/195 | 26-Mar-01 | USA |
| 63 | Graeme Clarke | RW | Ottawa (OHL) | 5-11/175 | 24-Apr-01 | Canada |
| 64 | Ronnie Attard | D | Tri-City (USHL) | 6-3/210 | 20-Mar-99 | USA |
| 65 | Mads Sogaard | G | Medicine Hat (WHL) | 6-7/195 | 13-Dec-00 | Denmark |
| 66 | Oleg Zaitsev | C | Red Deer (WHL) | 6-1/185 | 7-Jan-01 | Russia |
| 67 | Isaiah Saville | G | Tri-City (USHL) | 6-1/190 | 21-Sep-00 | USA |
| 68 | Kaedan Korczak | D | Kelowna (WHL) | 6-3/190 | 29-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 69 | Adam Najman | C | Benatky nad Jizerou (Cze 2) | 5-11/175 | 23-Jan-01 | Czech |
| 70 | Mikko Kokkonen | D | Jukurit (Fin) | 5-11/200 | 18-Jan-01 | Finland |
| 71 | Michael Vukojevic | D | Kitchener (OHL) | 6-3/210 | 8-Jun-01 | Canada |
| 72 | Patrick Moynihan | RW | NTDP (USA) | 5-11/185 | 23-Jan-01 | USA |
| 73 | Michael Gildon | LW | NTDP (USA) | 6-1/195 | 21-Jun-01 | USA |
| 74 | Judd Caulfield | RW | NTDP (USA) | 6-3/205 | 19-Mar-01 | USA |
| 75 | Vladislav Firstov | LW | Waterloo (USHL) | 6-1/180 | 19-Jun-01 | USA |
| 76 | Hugo Alnefelt | G | HV 71 (Swe Jr) | 6-3/195 | 4-Jun-01 | Sweden |
| 77 | Gianni Fairbrother | D | Everett (WHL) | 6-0/195 | 30-Sep-00 | Canada |
| 78 | Jackson Lacombe | D | Shattuck-St. Mary's (USHS-MN) | 6-1/170 | 9-Jan-01 | USA |
| 79 | Ethan Keppen | LW | Flint (OHL) | 6-2/210 | 20-Mar-01 | Canada |
| 80 | Anttoni Honka | D | JyP Jyvaskyla (Fin) | 5-10/180 | 5-Oct-00 | Finland |
| 81 | Roman Bychkov | D | Loko Yaroslavl (Rus Jr) | 5-11/160 | 10-Feb-01 | Russia |
| 82 | Ryder Donovan | C | Duluth East (USHS-MN) | 6-3/185 | 4-Oct-00 | USA |
| 83 | Nathan Legare | RW | Baie-Comeau (QMJHL) | 6-0/205 | 11-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 84 | Billy Constantinou | D | Kingston (OHL) | 6-0/185 | 25-Mar-01 | Canada |
| 85 | Vojtech Strondala | C | Slavia Trebic (Cze 2) | 5-7/155 | 17-Dec-00 | Czech |
| 86 | Case McCarthy | D | NTDP (USA) | 6-1/195 | 9-Jan-01 | USA |
| 87 | Simon Lundmark | D | Linkopings (Swe) | 6-2/200 | 8-Oct-00 | Sweden |
| 88 | Zac Jones | D | Tri-City (USHL) | 5-10/175 | 18-Oct-00 | USA |
| 89 | Erik Portillo | G | Frolunda (Swe Jr) | 6-6/210 | 3-Sep-00 | Sweden |
| 90 | Daniil Misyul | D | Loko Yaroslavl (Rus Jr) | 6-3/180 | 20-Oct-00 | Russia |
| 91 | Daniil Gutik | LW | Loko Yaroslavl (Rus Jr) | 6-3/180 | 31-Aug-01 | Russia |
| 92 | Hunter Jones | G | Peterborough (OHL) | 6-4/195 | 21-Sep-00 | Canada |
| 93 | Michael Koster | D | Chaska (USHS-MN) | 5-9/175 | 13-Apr-01 | USA |
| 94 | Aliaksei Protas | C | Prince Albert (WHL) | 6-5/205 | 6-Jan-01 | Belarus |
| 95 | Blake Murray | C | Sudbury (OHL) | 6-2/190 | 5-Jul-01 | Canada |
| 96 | Cole MacKay | RW | Sault Ste Marie (OHL) | 5-10/190 | 13-Jun-01 | Canada |
| 97 | Trent Miner | G | Vancouver (WHL) | 6-0/185 | 5-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 98 | Semyon Chistyakov | D | Tolpar Ufa (Rus Jr) | 5-10/170 | 7-Aug-01 | Russia |
| 99 | Leevi Aaltonen | RW | KalPa (Fin Jr) | 5-9/175 | 24-Jan-01 | Finland |
| 100 | Antti Saarela | C | Lukko Rauma (Fin) | 5-11/185 | 27-Jun-01 | Finland |
| 101 | John Farinacci | C | Dexter (USHS-MA) | 5-11/185 | 14-Feb-01 | USA |
| 102 | Marcus Kallionkieli | LW | Sioux City (USHL) | 6-2/195 | 20-Mar-01 | Finland |
| 103 | Andre Lee | LW | Sioux Falls (USHL) | 6-4/200 | 26-Jul-00 | Sweden |
| 104 | Kirill Slepets | RW | Loko Yaroslavl (Rus Jr) | 5-10/165 | 6-Apr-99 | Russia |
| 105 | Shane Pinto | C | Tri-City (USHL) | 6-2/190 | 12-Nov-00 | USA |
| 106 | Jordan Spence | D | Moncton (QMJHL) | 5-10/165 | 24-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 107 | Keean Washkurak | C | Mississauga (OHL) | 5-10/185 | 16-Aug-01 | Canada |
| 108 | Owen Lindmark | C | NTDP (USA) | 6-0/195 | 17-May-01 | USA |
| 109 | Matej Blumel | RW | Waterloo (USHL) | 5-11/200 | 31-May-00 | Czech |
| 110 | Jack Malone | RW | Youngstown (USHL) | 6-1/190 | 13-Oct-00 | USA |
| 111 | Jayden Struble | D | St. Sebastian's (USHS-MA) | 6-0/195 | 8-Sep-01 | USA |
| 112 | Artemi Knyazev | D | Chicoutimi (QMJHL) | 5-11/180 | 4-Jan-01 | Russia |
| 113 | Maxim Cajkovic | RW | Saint John (QMJHL) | 5-11/185 | 3-Jan-01 | Slovakia |
| 114 | Matvey Guskov | C | London (OHL) | 6-1/180 | 30-Jan-01 | Russia |
| 115 | Nikita Okhotyuk | D | Ottawa (OHL) | 6-1/195 | 4-Dec-00 | Russia |
| 116 | Valeri Orekhov | D | Barys Astana (KHL) | 6-1/190 | 17-Jul-99 | Kazakhstan |
| 117 | Zdenek Sedlak | RW | Karpat Oulu (Fin) | 6-2/205 | 23-Mar-00 | Czech |
| 118 | Alexander Yakovenko | D | Muskegon (USHL) | 5-11/175 | 22-Feb-98 | Russia |
| 119 | Yannick Bruschweiler | C | GC Kusnacht Lions (Sui 2) | 5-10/175 | 29-Aug-99 | Switzerland |
| 120 | Ilya Mironov | D | Loko Yaroslavl (Rus Jr) | 6-3/200 | 15-Mar-01 | Russia |
| 121 | Albert Lyckasen | D | Linkopings (Swe Jr) | 5-10/180 | 29-Jul-01 | Sweden |
| 122 | Keegan Stevenson | C | Guelph (OHL) | 6-1/185 | 31-Dec-00 | Canada |
| 123 | Ilya Konovalov | G | Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) | 6-0/195 | 13-Jul-98 | Russia |
| 124 | Cole Schwindt | RW | Mississauga (OHL) | 6-2/185 | 25-Apr-01 | Canada |
| 125 | Domenick Fensore | D | NTDP (USA) | 5-7/155 | 7-Sep-01 | USA |
| 126 | William Francis | D | Cedar Rapids (USHL) | 6-5/210 | 16-Nov-00 | USA |
| 127 | Simon Gnyp | D | Kolner (Ger Jr) | 5-11/180 | 10-Sep-01 | Germany |
| 128 | Tuukka Tieksola | RW | Karpat Oulu (Fin Jr) | 5-10/150 | 22-Jun-01 | Finland |
| 129 | Ethan Phillips | C | Sioux Falls (USHL) | 5-9/150 | 7-May-01 | Canada |
| 130 | Linus Pettersson | RW | MoDo (Swe) | 5-7/145 | 11-Apr-00 | Sweden |
| 131 | Matias Maccelli | LW | Dubuque (USHL) | 5-11/170 | 14-Oct-00 | Finland |
| 132 | Anthony Romano | C | Sioux Falls (USHL) | 5-11/185 | 7-Oct-00 | Canada |
| 133 | Nikita Alexandrov | C | Charlottetown (QMJHL) | 6-0/180 | 16-Sep-00 | Germany |
| 134 | Arturs Silovs | G | HS Riga (Lat) | 6-4/205 | 22-Mar-01 | Latvia |
| 135 | August Hedlund | G | AIK (Swe Jr) | 6-4/185 | 7-Jan-00 | Sweden |
| 136 | Nicholas Porco | LW | Saginaw (OHL) | 6-0/175 | 12-Mar-01 | Canada |
| 137 | Joe Carroll | C | Sault Ste Marie (OHL) | 6-2/200 | 1-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 138 | Alex Beaucage | RW | Rouyn Noranda (QMJHL) | 6-1/195 | 25-Jul-01 | Canada |
| 139 | Luke Toporowski | C | Spokane (WHL) | 5-11/180 | 12-Apr-01 | USA |
| 140 | Sasha Mutala | RW | Tri-City (WHL) | 6-0/200 | 6-May-01 | Canada |
| 141 | Harrison Blaisdell | C | Chilliwack (BCHL) | 5-11/180 | 18-Mar-01 | Canada |
| 142 | Valentin Nussbaumer | C | Shawinigan (QMJHL) | 5-11/165 | 25-Sep-00 | Switzerland |
| 143 | Dustin Wolf | G | Everett (WHL) | 6-0/155 | 16-Apr-01 | USA |
| 144 | Ondrej Psenicka | RW | Sparta Praha (Cze Jr) | 6-5/195 | 7-Jan-01 | Czech |
| 145 | Juuso Parssinen | C | TPS Turku (Fin Jr) | 6-2/205 | 1-Feb-01 | Finland |
| 146 | Mitchell Brewer | D | Oshawa (OHL) | 6-0/205 | 20-Mar-01 | Canada |
| 147 | Lukas Parik | G | Liberec (Cze Jr) | 6-4/185 | 15-Mar-01 | Czech |
| 148 | Grant Silianoff | RW | Cedar Rapids (USHL) | 5-11/170 | 4-Jan-01 | USA |
| 149 | Josh Nodler | C | Fargo (USHL) | 5-11/195 | 27-Apr-01 | USA |
| 150 | Bryce Brodzinski | RW | Blaine (USHS-MN) | 6-0/195 | 9-Aug-00 | USA |
| 151 | Colten Ellis | G | Rimouski (QMJHL) | 6-1/190 | 5-Oct-00 | Canada |
| 152 | Rhett Pitlick | LW | Chaska (USHS-MN) | 5-9/160 | 7-Feb-01 | USA |
| 153 | Dillon Hamaliuk | LW | Seattle (WHL) | 6-3/190 | 30-Oct-00 | Canada |
| 154 | Aleksei Sergeev | C | Quebec (QMJHL) | 5-9/185 | 22-May-00 | Russia |
| 155 | Jack York | D | Barrie (OHL) | 6-0/190 | 17-Sep-00 | Canada |
| 156 | Jacob LeGuerrier | D | Sault Ste Marie (OHL) | 6-1/200 | 22-Nov-00 | Canada |
| 157 | Zach Uens | D | Wellington (OJHL) | 6-1/180 | 13-May-01 | Canada |
| 158 | Josh Williams | RW | Edmonton (WHL) | 6-1/195 | 8-Mar-01 | Canada |
| 159 | Elmer Soderblom | RW | Frolunda (Swe Jr) | 6-6/220 | 5-Jul-01 | Sweden |
| 160 | Kyle Topping | C | Kelowna (WHL) | 5-11/185 | 18-Nov-99 | Canada |
| 161 | Albin Sundsvik | C | Skelleftea (Swe Jr) | 6-1/185 | 27-Apr-01 | Sweden |
| 162 | Cameron Rowe | G | NTDP (USA) | 6-2/200 | 1-Jun-01 | USA |
| 163 | Filip Lindberg | G | Massachusetts (HE) | 6-0/180 | 31-Jan-99 | Finland |
| 164 | Liam Svensson | C | Frolunda (Swe Jr 18) | 6-3/195 | 2-Feb-01 | Sweden |
| 165 | Xavier Simoneau | C | Drummondville (QMJHL) | 5-6/170 | 19-May-01 | Canada |
| 166 | Pavel Gogolev | RW | Guelph (OHL) | 6-0/175 | 19-Feb-00 | Russia |
| 167 | Danil Antropov | LW | Oshawa (OHL) | 6-1/185 | 20-Dec-00 | Canada |
| 168 | Daniel D'Amico | LW | Windsor (OHL) | 5-9/185 | 26-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 169 | Vladimir Alistrov | LW | Edmonton (WHL) | 6-2/175 | 12-Feb-01 | Belarus |
| 170 | Reece Newkirk | C | Portland (WHL) | 5-11/175 | 20-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 171 | Sergei Alkhimov | LW | Regina (WHL) | 6-0/210 | 3-Jul-01 | Russia |
| 172 | Adam Beckman | LW | Spokane (WHL) | 6-1/170 | 10-May-01 | Canada |
| 173 | Alexander Campbell | LW | Victoria (BCHL) | 5-10/150 | 27-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 174 | Taylor Gauthier | G | Prince George (WHL) | 6-1/195 | 15-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 175 | Max Crozier | D | Sioux Falls (USHL) | 6-1/195 | 19-Apr-00 | Canada |
| 176 | Santeri Hatakka | D | Jokerit (Fin Jr) | 6-0/175 | 15-Jan-01 | Finland |
| 177 | Kalle Loponen | D | Hermes (Fin 2) | 5-10/185 | 13-Mar-01 | Finland |
| 178 | Eric Ciccolini | RW | Toronto Jr Canadiens (OJHL) | 5-11/160 | 14-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 179 | Aku Raty | RW | Karpat Oulu (Fin Jr) | 5-11/170 | 5-Jul-01 | Finland |
| 180 | Arvid Costmar | C | Linkopings (Swe Jr) | 5-11/180 | 7-Jul-01 | Sweden |
| 181 | Matt Brown | LW | Des Moines (USHL) | 5-9/180 | 9-Aug-99 | USA |
| 182 | Sven Leuenberger | C | Zug (Sui) | 5-10/185 | 18-Feb-99 | Switzerland |
| 183 | Jasper Patrikainen | G | Pelicans (Fin) | 6-0/175 | 1-Jul-00 | Finland |
| 184 | Jack Williams | G | Springfield (NAHL) | 6-3/175 | 21-Jun-01 | USA |
| 185 | Mikhail Abramov | C | Victoriaville (QMJHL) | 5-10/160 | 26-Mar-01 | Russia |
| 186 | Ben Brinkman | D | Minnesota (B1G) | 6-0/215 | 4-Oct-00 | USA |
| 187 | Chris Giroday | D | Green Bay (USHL) | 6-1/175 | 13-Dec-00 | Canada |
| 188 | Petr Cajka | C | Erie (OHL) | 6-0/170 | 11-Dec-00 | Czech |
| 189 | Mark Kastelic | C | Calgary (WHL) | 6-3/215 | 11-Mar-99 | USA |
| 190 | Kevin Wall | RW | Chilliwack (BCHL) | 6-0/190 | 1-Feb-00 | USA |
| 191 | Lucas Edmonds | RW | Karlskrona (Swe Jr) | 5-11/175 | 27-Jan-01 | Sweden |
| 192 | Carter Gylander | G | Sherwood Park (AJHL) | 6-5/175 | 5-Jun-01 | Canada |
| 193 | Ethan de Jong | RW | Quinnipiac (ECAC) | 5-10/170 | 12-Jul-99 | Canada |
| 194 | Wiljami Myllyla | RW | HIFK Helsinki (Fin Jr) | 6-0/170 | 9-Apr-01 | Finland |
| 195 | Yaroslav Likhachyov | RW | Gatineau (QMJHL) | 5-10/170 | 2-Sep-01 | Russia |
| 196 | Layton Ahac | D | Prince George (BCHL) | 6-2/195 | 22-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 197 | Alfred Barklund | D | Orebro (Swe Jr) | 6-2/200 | 21-Oct-00 | Sweden |
| 198 | Radek Muzik | LW | Lulea (Swe Jr) | 6-3/180 | 25-Mar-01 | Sweden |
| 199 | Marcus Pedersen | RW | Linkopings (Swe Jr) | 6-2/165 | 25-May-01 | Sweden |
| 200 | Filip Koffer | RW | Pardubice (Cze Jr) | 5-11/175 | 4-Mar-01 | Czech |
| 201 | Henri Nikkanen | C | Jukurit (Fin Jr) | 6-3/200 | 28-Apr-01 | Finland |
| 202 | Marc Del Gaizo | D | Massachusetts (HE) | 5-9/190 | 11-Oct-99 | USA |
| 203 | Tag Bertuzzi | LW | Hamilton (OHL) | 6-0/200 | 18-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 204 | Martin Hugo Has | D | Tappara (Fin Jr) | 6-4/190 | 2-Feb-01 | Czech |
| 205 | Jet Greaves | G | Barrie (OHL) | 5-11/165 | 30-Mar-01 | Canada |
| 206 | Mason Millman | D | Saginaw (OHL) | 6-1/175 | 18-Jul-01 | Canada |
| 207 | Janis Jerome Moser | D | Biel-Bienne (Sui) | 6-0/160 | 6-Jun-00 | Switzerland |
| 208 | Nick Abruzzese | C | Chicago (USHL) | 5-9/160 | 4-Jun-99 | USA |
| 209 | Logan Barlage | C | Lethbridge (WHL) | 6-4/200 | 7-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 210 | Carter Berger | D | Victoria (BCHL) | 6-0/200 | 17-Sep-99 | Canada |
| 211 | Nando Eggenberger | LW | Oshawa (OHL) | 6-2/205 | 7-Oct-99 | Switzerland |
| 212 | Tyce Thompson | RW | Providence (HE) | 6-1/180 | 12-Jul-99 | USA |
| 213 | Nolan Maier | G | Saskatoon (WHL) | 6-0/175 | 10-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 214 | Massimo Rizzo | C | Penticton (BCHL) | 5-10/180 | 13-Jun-01 | Canada |
| 215 | Matthew Steinburg | C | St. Andrew's (CHS-O) | 6-1/185 | 7-Oct-00 | Canada |
| 216 | Jake Lee | D | Seattle (WHL) | 6-1/215 | 13-Jul-01 | Canada |
| 217 | Luke Bast | D | Brooks (AJHL) | 5-9/170 | 20-Nov-00 | Canada |
100 HONOURABLE MENTION IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER:
| PLAYER | POS | TEAM | HT/WT | DOB | Nation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HM | Nathan Allensen | D | Barrie (OHL) | 5-11/180 | 3-May-01 | Canada |
| HM | Ethan Anders | G | Red Deer (WHL) | 6-1/175 | 26-Sep-00 | Canada |
| HM | Nicklas Andrews | D | Des Moines (USHL) | 5-10/185 | 6-Jul-01 | USA |
| HM | Tyler Angle | C | Windsor (OHL) | 5-9/165 | 30-Sep-00 | Canada |
| HM | Marcel Barinka | C | Halifax (QMJHL) | 6-0/165 | 3-Jan-01 | Czech |
| HM | Roman Basran | G | Kelowna (WHL) | 6-1/195 | 26-Jul-01 | Canada |
| HM | Luke Bignell | C | Barrie (OHL) | 6-0/170 | 3-Nov-00 | Canada |
| HM | Mathieu Bizier | C | Gatineau (QMJHL) | 6-1/185 | 13-May-01 | Canada |
| HM | Oscar Bjerselius | C | Djurgardens (Swe Jr) | 5-11/185 | 18-Feb-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Kaden Bohlsen | C | Fargo (USHL) | 6-3/190 | 10-Jan-01 | USA |
| HM | Samuel Bolduc | D | Blainville-Boisbriand (QMJHL) | 6-3/210 | 9-Dec-00 | Canada |
| HM | Jakob Bondesson | D | Rogle (Swe Jr) | 6-1/185 | 22-May-00 | Sweden |
| HM | Cole Brady | G | Janesville (NAHL) | 6-5/165 | 12-Feb-01 | Canada |
| HM | Alex Brannstam | D | Djurgardens (Swe Jr) | 5-11/170 | 3-Jun-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Lynden Breen | C | Central Illinois (USHL) | 5-9/165 | 31-May-01 | USA |
| HM | Jonas Brondberg | D | Vaxjo Lakers (Swe Jr) | 6-4/190 | 26-Jan-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Jeremie Bucheler | D | Victoria (BCHL) | 6-4/200 | 31-Mar-00 | Canada |
| HM | Brett Budgell | LW | Charlottetown (QMJHL) | 5-11/190 | 1-Jun-01 | Canada |
| HM | Luka Burzan | RW | Brandon (WHL) | 6-0/190 | 7-Jan-00 | Canada |
| HM | Felix Carenfelt | LW | Djurgardens (Swe Jr) | 5-10/185 | 13-Feb-00 | Sweden |
| HM | Luke Cavallin | G | Flint (OHL) | 6-1/190 | 29-Apr-01 | Canada |
| HM | Filip Cederqvist | LW | Vaxjo Lakers (Swe) | 6-1/185 | 23-Aug-00 | Sweden |
| HM | Cole Coskey | RW | Saginaw (OHL) | 6-0/190 | 1-Jun-99 | USA |
| HM | Braden Doyle | D | Lawrence Academy (USHS-MA) | 5-11/170 | 24-Aug-01 | USA |
| HM | Justin Ducharme | LW | Chicoutimi (QMJHL) | 5-10/180 | 22-Feb-00 | Canada |
| HM | Nathan Dunkley | C | London (OHL) | 5-11/195 | 3-May-00 | Canada |
| HM | Pontus Englund | D | Timra (Swe Jr) | 6-3/205 | 15-Jul-00 | Sweden |
| HM | Lucas Feuk | LW | Sodertalje (Swe Jr) | 6-0/185 | 19-Feb-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Parker Ford | C | Sioux City (USHL) | 5-8/170 | 20-Jul-00 | USA |
| HM | Ethan Frisch | D | Fargo (USHL) | 5-11/190 | 29-Oct-00 | USA |
| HM | Maxim Golod | LW | Erie (OHL) | 5-11/175 | 18-Aug-00 | Canada |
| HM | Jacob Gronhagen | C | HV 71 (Swe Jr) | 6-6/215 | 18-Jan-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Maxence Guenette | D | Val d'Or (QMJHL) | 6-1/180 | 28-Apr-01 | Canada |
| HM | Hugo Gustafsson | C | Sodertalje (Swe 2) | 5-10/160 | 23-Feb-00 | Sweden |
| HM | Mack Guzda | G | Owen Sound (OHL) | 6-4/215 | 11-Jan-01 | USA |
| HM | Aidan Harper | G | Skipjacks HC 18U (USPHL) | 6-2/170 | 28-May-01 | USA |
| HM | Ludvig Hedstrom | D | Djurgardens (Swe Jr) | 5-11/175 | 14-Apr-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Konsta Hirvonen | LW | HIFK Helsinki (Fin Jr) | 5-11/165 | 1-Nov-00 | Finland |
| HM | Eric Hjorth | D | Linkopings (Swe Jr 18) | 6-3/190 | 8-Jan-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Samuel Hlavaj | G | Lincoln (USHL) | 6-4/185 | 29-May-01 | Slovakia |
| HM | Krystof Hrabik | C | Tri-City (WHL) | 6-4/220 | 24-Sep-99 | Czech |
| HM | Rickard Hugg | C | Kitchener (OHL) | 5-11/190 | 18-Jan-99 | Sweden |
| HM | Aaron Huglen | RW | Roseau (USHS-MN) | 5-11/165 | 6-Mar-01 | USA |
| HM | Aarne Intonen | C | TPS Turku (Fin Jr) | 5-11/180 | 17-Jul-01 | Finland |
| HM | Michal Ivan | D | Drummondville (QMJHL) | 6-1/185 | 18-Nov-99 | Slovakia |
| HM | Dylan Jackson | RW | Dubuque (USHL) | 5-9/175 | 6-Sep-01 | Canada |
| HM | Ty Jackson | C | Dubuque (USHL) | 5-7/150 | 6-Sep-01 | Canada |
| HM | Taro Jentzsch | C | Sherbrooke (QMJHL) | 6-1/155 | 11-Jun-00 | Germany |
| HM | Samuel Johannesson | D | Rogle (Swe Jr) | 5-11/175 | 27-Dec-00 | Sweden |
| HM | Wilson Johansson | RW | Farjestads (Swe Jr) | 5-11/175 | 11-Oct-00 | Sweden |
| HM | Brooklyn Kalmikov | C | Cape Breton (QMJHL) | 6-0/165 | 21-Apr-01 | Canada |
| HM | David Karlstrom | C | AIK (Swe Jr) | 6-1/185 | 12-Mar-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Mans Kramer | D | Frolunda (Swe Jr) | 6-2/180 | 6-Mar-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Jami Krannila | C | Sioux Falls (USHL) | 5-10/160 | 3-Oct-00 | Finland |
| HM | Grayson Ladd | D | Windsor (OHL) | 6-1/175 | 1-Mar-01 | Canada |
| HM | Martin Lang | LW | Kamloops (WHL) | 5-11/170 | 15-Sep-01 | Czech |
| HM | Oscar Lawner | LW | Farjestads (Swe Jr) | 5-11/185 | 13-Feb-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Jonathan Lemieux | G | Val d'Or (QMJHL) | 6-0/185 | 8-Jun-01 | Canada |
| HM | Hugo Leufvenius | LW | Sarnia (OHL) | 6-3/230 | 26-Mar-99 | Sweden |
| HM | Ethan Leyh | LW | Langley (BCHL) | 6-0/190 | 7-Sep-01 | Canada |
| HM | Josh Lopina | C | Lincoln (USHL) | 6-1/175 | 16-Feb-01 | USA |
| HM | Emil Malysjev | D | Saskatoon (WHL) | 6-3/190 | 1-May-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Matias Mantykivi | C | SaiPa (Fin Jr) | 5-11/160 | 21-Jun-01 | Finland |
| HM | Jeremy McKenna | RW | Moncton (QMJHL) | 5-10/175 | 20-Apr-99 | Canada |
| HM | Billy Moskal | C | London (OHL) | 6-0/185 | 22-Mar-00 | Canada |
| HM | Derek Mullahy | G | Dexter (USHS-MA) | 6-0/180 | 20-Mar-01 | USA |
| HM | Kim Nousiainen | D | KalPa (Fin Jr) | 5-9/170 | 14-Nov-00 | Finland |
| HM | Zachary Okabe | RW | Grande Prairie (AJHL) | 5-8/165 | 4-Jan-01 | Canada |
| HM | Oliver Okuliar | LW | Sherbrooke (QMJHL) | 6-1/190 | 24-May-00 | Slovakia |
| HM | Quinn Olson | LW | Okotoks (AJHL) | 5-10/170 | 9-May-01 | Canada |
| HM | Xavier Parent | LW | Halifax (QMJHL) | 5-8/170 | 23-Mar-01 | Canada |
| HM | Tommy Pasanen | D | Sioux City (USHL) | 6-3/220 | 30-Jul-01 | Germany |
| HM | Thomas Pelletier | D | Drummondville (QMJHL) | 6-2/195 | 23-Aug-01 | Canada |
| HM | Andrew Perrott | D | Owen Sound (OHL) | 5-11/205 | 24-Aug-01 | USA |
| HM | Kari Piiroinen | G | Windsor (OHL) | 6-0/175 | 1-Jul-01 | Finland |
| HM | Lukas Pilo | D | Orebro (Swe Jr) | 6-1/185 | 7-Sep-99 | Sweden |
| HM | Garrett Pinoniemi | C | Holy Family Catholic (USHS-MN) | 5-11/150 | 15-Jun-01 | USA |
| HM | Mason Primeau | C | North Bay (OHL) | 6-5/205 | 28-Jul-01 | Canada |
| HM | Kirby Proctor | D | Des Moines (USHL) | 6-3/190 | 19-Apr-01 | Canada |
| HM | Liam Ross | D | Sudbury (OHL) | 6-2/195 | 13-May-01 | Canada |
| HM | Henrik Rybinski | RW | Seattle (WHL) | 6-0/175 | 26-Jun-01 | Canada |
| HM | Nikita Sedov | D | Regina (WHL) | 6-1/185 | 5-May-01 | Russia |
| HM | Egor Serdyuk | RW | Victoriaville (QMJHL) | 5-10/160 | 3-Jun-01 | Russia |
| HM | Nikita Shashkov | LW | Sibir Novosibirsk (KHL) | 5-11/180 | 26-Mar-99 | Russia |
| HM | Ryan Siedem | D | Central Illinois (USHL) | 6-2/190 | 25-Feb-01 | USA |
| HM | Samuel Sjolund | D | AIK (Swe Jr) | 6-1/175 | 19-May-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Hunter Skinner | D | Muskegon (USHL) | 6-2/175 | 29-Apr-01 | USA |
| HM | Dominik Sojka | C | Banska Bystrica (Svk Jr) | 6-5/210 | 16-Feb-01 | Slovakia |
| HM | Kyen Sopa | RW | Niagara (OHL) | 5-9/185 | 30-Sep-00 | Switzerland |
| HM | Tyler Spott | D | Green Bay (USHL) | 5-10/170 | 17-Jun-00 | Canada |
| HM | Matthew Struthers | C | North Bay (OHL) | 6-2/210 | 26-Dec-99 | Canada |
| HM | Roope Taponen | G | HIFK Helsinki (Fin Jr) | 6-0/165 | 14-Mar-01 | Finland |
| HM | Jacob Tortora | LW | Barrie (OHL) | 5-6/165 | 25-Jul-99 | USA |
| HM | Bobby Trivigno | LW | Massachusetts (HE) | 5-8/155 | 19-Jan-99 | USA |
| HM | Eric Uba | RW | Flint (OHL) | 6-0/195 | 17-Dec-00 | Canada |
| HM | Max Wahlgren | RW | MoDo (Swe) | 6-1/185 | 9-May-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Carl Wang | D | Sodertalje (Swe Jr) | 6-2/195 | 28-Mar-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Matteus Ward | G | Linkopings (Swe Jr) | 6-0/170 | 7-Mar-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Lukas Wernblom | C | MoDo (Swe 2) | 5-9/170 | 22-Jul-00 | Sweden |
| HM | Jonathan Yantsis | RW | Kitchener (OHL) | 6-2/210 | 28-Apr-99 | Canada |
| Arlo Merritt | 2019 NHL Draft Eligible |
|---|---|
| Position C, Shoots L | H/W: 6-3", 190 lbs |
| Stats to date (GP-G-A-P-PIM): | Kimball Union Academy (NH), USHS: Stats unavailable |
| Lincoln Stars, USHL: 1-1-0-1-0 |
Grades: Skating: 45, Shot: 50, Skills 45, Smarts: 55, Physicality: 55
Notes: Not a great skater, doesn't have the best balance on his skates due to massive frame ... decent top speed with high-grade smoothness to his cuts and acceleration that plays up otherwise subpar skating package ... very gritty forward with a checking-line grinder feel to him, although he plays mostly on Kimball's top attacking line ... great at hitting and retrieving the puck in the corners and against the boards, very poised and exerts a lot of effort in playing a physical brand of hockey ... shallow shot wind-up and pocket fails to generate more than average shooting speed, but the accuracy of such plays it up some ... very active on defense, discipline and hockey IQ exhibited by him are both pretty high ... decent hands and skill set, but not the focal point of his gameplay style ... like his Kimball teammate Tomas Mazura, Merritt might get a chance in the high-to-mid rounds of the draft based solely on his size and smarts that play up his ceiling.
Overall Future Projection (OFP): 49.5
| Jackson Jutting | 2019 NHL Draft Eligible |
|---|---|
| Position C, Shoots L | H/W: 5-10", 185 lbs |
| Stats to date (GP-G-A-P-PIM): | Prior Lake High School, USHS-MN: 24-14-28-42-11 |
| Minnesota Magicians, NAHL: 21-7-8-15-8 |
Committed to Colorado College (NCAA).
Grades: Skating: 50, Shot: 55, Skills: 50, Smarts: 45, Physicality: 45
Notes: Solid skater with average top speed, above-average pivots and turns, but flawed acceleration and first-two step movement ... great hand-eye coordination that supports a decent set of overall skills, which features fast tape-to-tape passing ... his rapid and deceiving shot is the biggest and brightest weapon in his arsenal, with a quick and tricky release point that is very hard for goaltenders to read, shot-readiness and overall windup preparation is at a high level as well ... looks focused and engaged out there at all times, but needs to work on his skating and decision-making, often times opting for a risky pass instead of the safe ones and having to extend his shift ... could be a late-fifth rounder, early-sixth rounder in the draft.
Overall Future Projection (OFP): 49.25
| Aaron Huglen | 2019 NHL Draft Eligible |
|---|---|
| Position F, Shoots R | H/W: 5-11", 176 lbs |
| Stats to date (GP-G-A-P-PIM) | Roseau High School, USHS-MN: 24-17-35-52-33 |
| Fargo Force, USHL: 19-4-5-9-10 |
Committed to University of Minnesota (NCAA).
Grades: Skating: 45, Shot: 55, Skills: 60, Smarts: 50, Physicality: 45
Notes: The first thing that jumps out to you is his crazy puck skill; incredibly swift hands, very evasive one-on-one moves, and the ability to make every imaginable pass from anywhere on the ice ... he is very patient and poised, both with and without the puck, in all situations ... not the best technical skater, as his footwork is kind of mushy, but is pretty fast once given time to accelerate ... likes to help out on defense, especially against the walls, where he pins opposing attackers and forces poor plays out of them ... great wrist shot with speedy delivery and dragged angle; likes to shoot against the grain ... his skill set looks like a player who could anchor a depth scoring line with his playmaking and shooting ... needs to work on technical skating aspects to be an impact player ... could be a fourth-round pick.
Overall Future Projection (OFP): 52
A note on the 20-80 scale used above. We look at five attributes (skating, shooting, puck skills, hockey IQ and physicality) for skaters and six for goalies (athleticism/quickness, compete/temperament, vision/play reading, technique/style, rebound control and puck handling). Each individual attribute is graded along the 20-80 scales, which includes half-grades. The idea is that a projection of 50 in a given attribute meant that our observer believed that the player could get to roughly NHL average at that attribute at maturity.
]]>Of course, I didn’t make the 15 hour-plus round-trip to watch Sidney Crosby do a bag skate. Instead, I made the journey to watch the opening of the 2018-19 USHL season. The league, which stretches from Youngstown, Ohio in the East to Kearney, Nebraska in the west, had all gathered in the Pittsburgh suburb to play a series of games, such that each club in the circuit would play two regular season contests between Thursday and Sunday.
I only arrived on Friday evening, but was able to watch seven and a half games, seeing at least one full game from 12 of the 17 teams in the league. 12 of 18 if you consider the USNTDP U17 and USNTDP U18 squads as different teams, which the league standings do not. Besides, the U17s weren’t there.
When I do the math and note that I drove around two hours per game, the investment was pretty good. Factor in the ability to purchase two hard drinks after the games for a grand total of $8 (US), and let’s just say I’d do it again.
The only downsides to the weekend were an arena announcer who struggled, mightily in some cases, to pronounce player names, and sightlines that were not ideal, with netting that extends to the ceiling throughout the side of the ice on which there were stands.
While these were regular season games, as is the case with any league, a team’s first few games of any campaign are bound to be on the sloppy side. Players are still getting accustomed to their line mates. Not everyone can ramp out their focus and intensity level at the same pace. Also, while the Youngstown Phantoms were pretty close to home, around 50 minutes’ drive west of Cranberry Township up the I-76, none of the teams were playing home games.
In an event like this, where all games are regular season games, and there is no tournament feel, there are no winners and losers, although Team USA, Muskegon, Des Moines and Tri-City each won both of their games, while Youngstown, Madison, and Omaha returned home without any points in the standings.
Instead, in a scout-heavy affair, a large number of undrafted players, mostly those entering their first year of eligibility but also a few second and third timers, put out notice that they all deserve to be watched very closely by NHL scouts and people like me over the next six months or so. For a few lesser prospects, the event helped more than a few receive offers for NCAA scholarships.
For the sake of transparency, I will start the season preview portion of this article with a few words about the teams that I have not yet watched more than half a game of hockey.
The defending champion Fargo Force split the weekend, with a win and a loss. Four of their top five scorers from last season have moved on to college, but there are some players of note who have begun to audition for the 2019 draft. Michael Mancinelli, was a smaller, skilled forward who impressed me in viewings last year. A few others who have gained some notice include Swiss-American defender Cedric Fiedler, and forwards Kyle Bettens, Aaron Huglen, and Josh Nodler. The latter spent some time last year with the U17 team, but will spend this year with the Force. He also drew the most positive feedback when I discussed the team with others who were able to see them.
The Des Moines Buccaneers scored 15 goals in their 2 games, including 10 in a game that I saw a portion of against Chicago. Both of the team’s goalies have been drafted by NHL clubs and Roman Durny (Anaheim) was impressive, although Jake Kucharski (Carolina) was not. There are also a pair of affiliated players on the blueline with Michael Kesselring (Edmonton) and Arvid Henrikson (Montreal) both getting their first tastes of the league. Both are physically imposing players who move well for their size. Their most impressive player was probably 18 year old TJ Walsh, who will always be small, but is moving better than he did in previous viewings. Draft eligible to watch include blueliner Kirby Proctor, who showed good vision, and forwards Brady Meyer and Kaden Bohlsen. All three have plus size.
The Madison Capitals lack drafted players, first time draft eligible of note, and points in the standings. When I asked around, the only player who was even mentioned was defender Christian Berger, whose three older bothers all play, or have played, at the NCAA level.
The Central Illinois Flying Aces have a drafted goaltender in Mitchell Gibson (Washington) who had a rough first game at this level. After a few years as an also-ran, they look like a team worth watching this year. Winger Trevor Janicke played with the USNTDP last year, but as a late 2000 birthdate, he has aged out of the program without yet being eligible for the draft. Lynden Breen is another forward of note with the Aces. Brehdan Engum (how is this guy not playing in the WHL?) is in his second year of draft eligibility, but turned some heads after spending most of his draft season playing Minnesota high school hockey.
The Chicago Steel always draft well and while defender Casey Staum was once drafted by Montreal, the fact that he has yet to start a collegiate career means that his draft rights have expired. The team has a few sons-of and brothers-of on the roster, including draft-eligible forward Jake Schmaltz, brother of Nick and Jordan, and Matthew Barnaby, son of…also Matthew Barnaby. They also have a really interesting 2021 draft eligible in Owen Power, a preternaturally large defenseman who has game. But when scouts go to see the Steel this year, they will be going to watch Robert Mastrosimone, who is small, but plays with some snarl and thinks the game a step or two ahead of most of his peers. He may be the top prospect in the league who is not in the USNTDP.
The Cedar Rapids RoughRiders seem to have emerged from a few rough years in the wilderness, and their current roster is led by Winnipeg draft pick Nathan Smith. You may have noted that we were not very high on Smith in our draft previews and reviews last year. He has promising puck skills, but I am still not convinced that his feet work well enough, which may not be surprising considering he is still somewhat new to ice hockey, having grown up as a roller hockey player. He is also penalty prone. Of note for the 2019 draft, defender William Francis needs to work on his pivots, but has a big point shot. I am more interested in winger Grant Silianoff, who has patience with the puck and is very comfortable playing in the dirty areas despite his small frame. He could be a big point producer for the Rough Riders.
Moving on to the Lincoln Stars, we have a team with more than a little bit of NHL representation with Chicago picks Josiah Slavin and Wouter Peeters, as well as Carolina pick Ville Rasanen patrolling the blueline. Slavin is a hard working winger who has quick hands but still has to answer questions about his skill level. Peeters has a big frame in the crease, covers his posts well, but made a few questionable decisions. More regular time in net will surely help define his future prospects. Rasanen is tall and thin and never produced much in the Finnish junior ranks. He is still a bit of a wild card. The team also has some draft eligible players of note in defenders Declan Carlile and Jordan Power and forwards Josh Lopina and Shane Pinto. Lopina showed me a promising energy game, replete with strength and size and a shot with potential. Power impressed me most from this roster. He is a very good skater, enabling him to prowl with confidence. He also has a decent defensive game, standing up opponents who try to enter his zone on his side of the ice. This is a plyer I want to see more of.
Anaheim pick Jackson Perbix is the most skilled player on the Green Bay Gamblers roster. A very good skater who shows 200-foot commitment and has some skill, he is worth a follow. Looking to the future, there are a pair of late 2000s on the blueline in Christopher Giroday and Ethan Frisch. Both played with an offensive bent before joining the USHL, while the latter showed a gritty side that will serve him well as he attempts to move up the ranks. There is another smaller, skilled forward to note in Nicholas Zabaneh, himself a USHL rookie. He is the type of player who adds enough away from the puck, that he is still worth rostering even on his off days. For a sleeper, I will keep an eye on netminder Evan Fear, a 1999 to be sure, but he was among the top netminders in the NAHL last year and looked very sharp in the game I saw of him.
The Dubuque Fighting Saints have an older, more experienced roster. There are a few players who have a couple of years of NCAA experience under their respective belts already but are taking a year to refresh, including Toronto draft pick JD Greenway. Jordan’s younger brother has great size and strength, can skate and has really good puck skills for a blueliner. His decision making is questionable. Also patrolling the Dubuque blueline is Rangers pick Simon Kjellberg. For as raw as Greenway is, Kjellberg makes him look refined. The American-born Swede is big and skates reasonable well, but lacks puck skills and can be ineffective in his own zone. As his North American career has only just begun, I am willing to withhold judgement for the moment. Netminder Matthew Thiessen (Vancouver) is also moving his development forward after being drafted last year out of the MJHL. He looked much better in his second game than in his first. He keeps his glove up, has decent athleticism and absolutely loves playing the puck up the ice. There is one first year eligible of note in winger Matias Maccelli. Although very small, he has nice hands, can create plays for his teammates, and has good edges. In short, a fun player to watch. One last player to follow this year on the Fighting Saints is second year eligible blueliner Jacob Semik. A smooth skater and puck mover, he plays a fearless yet quiet game, is a trusted penalty killer and can play in all situations. What he lacks in flash, he makes up for in smarts. I suspect that over the length of the season, this here is the team to beat.
The Sioux Falls Stampede have a few interesting draft eligible players to pay attention to this year. Defenseman Ryan Johnson is trying to follow in the footsteps of fellow Southern California product Jack St. Ivany, who went from the USHL to the NHL draft. Big, versatile forward Andre Lee started hot after being overlooked in his first draft eligible season as a Swedish junior. Rangy blueliner Anthony Follmer is a St. Louis area product who impressed with his reads and decision making. Winger Anthony Romano is one to watch closely as he has a great deal of skill, offensive instincts and skating as well as a decent amount of physicality. That said, the most impressive player on the Stampede for my money was Finnish import Jami Krannila. The Sioux Falls offense runs through him as his puck skills are high end. He lacks size and needs to get stronger but his game will take him places.
The Waterloo Black Hawks are always a contending team in the USHL. Netminder Jared Moe was drafted by Winnipeg last year and had an up and down weekend, showing good movements at his best, and a lack of focus at his worst. Czech winger Matej Blumel was better in international play than league play last year, and was thus passed over in the draft. If he brings more of the offense to the USHL, he could get back on the radar this time. Among first time eligibles, big Texan winger Ryan Drkulec is an effective 200-ft player. Center Austen Swankler has enough speed to be dangerous if the rest of his game catches up. Their most intriguing prospect looks like Russian forward Vladislav Firstov, who has a nice blend of offensive tools and needs only to gain strength to be a real impact player.
The Omaha Lancers had a rough weekend and they similarly lack any drafted prospects or high end 2001 borns. A few second or third year eligible will have to suffice. Winger Tyler Carpenter may be ready to take a step forward. He plays a two-way game, with patience and poise on the puck. Defender Travis Mitchell is big and mean and uses his stick well to break up opposing rushes. Finally, netminder Vinnie Purpura plays a composed goal. He skates well for a goalie and is not afraid to come way out to play a puck. He single-handedly kept his team in one of their games and is expected to play the bulk of the games this year for the Lancers before going to Boston University.
The Sioux City Musketeers have a pipeline for talented Finnish forwards. Two years ago, it was Eeli Tolvanen drawing the scouts. Last season, the man was Sampo Ranto. This year, his name is Marcus Kallionkieli. An opportunistic winger with size and strength, he has a good first few steps and pair of plus shots to his name. His name is a mouthful, but at some point soon we will need to learn to pronounce it. Undersized winger Bobby Brink received some attention last year from the national program thanks to his plus skating and work rate, but needs to show better puck control skills. Tommy Pasanen is a gigantic defender from Germany. He plays with a huge stick and is a beast in the corners but his play with the puck can be rough. His mobility is very impressive for his size and he can pass well enough despite hard hands. Finally, Flames pick Martin Pospisil has a very good shot if he can stay on the right side of the rulebook. It is a fine line between being heavy on the forecheck and heavy in the penalty box.
The Muskegon Lunberjacks, recently the proving grounds for one Andrei Svechnikov, have another 16 year Russian wunderkind to enjoy this year in Daniil Gushchin. He is incredibly talented, but who knows where he will be playing in his draft year. Although he did not play on the weekend, netminder Keegan Karki is one more year removed from the troubles that saw him leave the USNTDP and seemingly prevented him from being drafted last year. If he keeps his nose clean, he has a number of fans among USHL scouts. Hunter Skinner is a big-bodied stay-at-home blueliner who has never scored at any level. If he can show a modicum of ability to contribute to the offensive game, he might have a chance. As far as the 2019 draft goes, Gushchin’s countrymate Egor Afanasyev is the player to watch. He played a smaller role last year, but showcased some very impressive puck skills on the weekend, scoring four times, including one beauty off a spinorama.
After close to two seasons at Penn State, Buffalo draft pick Brett Murray needed a reset and returned to the USHL with the Youngtown Phantoms. He is a very big boy, with a decent first few steps, but subpar top speed. He should be an impact player at this level and once he returns to the collegiate game, but needs better wheels to have professional impact. Winger Jack Malone plays a solid two-way game, but has yet to show the dynamic skills that would cause an NHL team to sit up and take notice. The player I expect to see take a step forward is right winger Trevor Kuntar. He is skilled with the puck, able to create room for himself to shoot and has a quick release on a hard snap shot.

Finally, we come to the USNTDP. I will not mention every 2019 eligible player on the roster, but suffice it to say that the majority of them will be in scouting crosshairs all season. Everyone knows of Jack Hughes. He has eyes in the back of his head and sticking out from his ears as well. He is a supremely talented playmaker and can dominate shifts on his own. He doesn’t shy away from the physical stuff either. He is the odds-on favorite to be selected first overall next June. I will leave the comparisons with other recent top picks for later in the season. Another first round talent on this squad is Matthew Boldy. A big winger with a big, big shot, he is in the mold of recent USNTDP graduates Kieffer Bellows and Oliver Wahlstrom. He can be more of factor in getting the puck back, but he is deadly in the offensive zone. Competing with Hughes in the fun quotient is tiny winger Cole Caufield. Think Alex DeBrincat with this one. He has amazing offensive instincts, speed and acceleration. Someone will overlook his size deficiencies and take him in the first round. Blueliner Cam York played with the U18s last year and the maturity in his puck moving game is apparent. His puck skills are also high end for a blueliner. Alex Vlasic has ideal size at 6-6”, and a good boomer from the point to boot. His skating is fine at his size as well. He needs to improve his overall decision making, but the tools are there. Spencer Knight is the early favorite to be the first netminder selected next summer. He is composed, does not overcommit and responds impressively to broken plays. He is comfortable playing the puck and keeps second chances to a minimum. Marshall Warren really opened my eyes before being removed from competition with a suspected concussion. He has excellent puck control, plays with great poise, and is superb at defending his line from entry attempts. The last player from this veritable All Star squad I want to call out is tiny blueliner Domenick Fensore. Despite looking up to Cole Caufield, he is exceptionally dynamic from the back end. He is exciting with the puck, waiting out the Omaha defense in the second game to score the winner with 10 seconds remaining. He can even play a physical game, raising his arms into a hit to blow the opponent up. Players his size – especially defenders – are few and far between. Scouts will be asking themselves all year if the size of his skillset is big enough to overlook the size of his skates.
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