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#27 Vancouver - Too many low upside picks limit the overall upside of the Vancouver system.

Podkolzin had a rather uneven season last year, as he was not able to fully convince his KHL coaches that he could be a key player for the team and therefore was given a rather limited role and opportunity. He was a true leader and captain of the U20 Team Russia at the World Juniors though; however, it would be fair to say that his offensive production underwhelmed in the same way that it did in the KHL. In general, the season showed that he is still undergoing some "growing pains" and has some deficits in his attacking game, making people question his overall upside as a skill-based player.
Next season will be an interesting one for him as he begins his journey in North America with the Canucks, after signing his ELC. With some unanswered questions about his potential, he will look to earn the trust of the coaches in training camp to earn a roster spot with the Canucks to further his development at the NHL level. However, he may have to start in the AHL. Given his high energy level and strong two-way abilities, Podkolzin should have little difficulty transitioning. However, just how much he produces offensively remains to be seen. At this point, Podkolzin is beginning to look more like a high end third line center than a top six forward, but this year will tell us more. - VF
A scouting find for the Canucks, Rathbone was a pre-school wunderkind who actually stayed at school for an extra year after being drafted, before finally moving on to Harvard. While Ivy League schools usually keep their players on campus for at least three, if not four years before they turn pro, Rathbone left after only two seasons, partially because the school wouldn’t be playing hockey this year anyway, in light of the pandemic, and partially because he had little left to learn by playing against collegians. He was very good as a freshman, but as a sophomore, Rathbone was a First-Team All-Star among his conference peers, finishing the season with over one point per game as a defender.
His rookie pro season was a little up-and-down, but the downs only meant that he spent the first chunk of the abbreviated campaign on Vancouver’s taxi squad, not seeing game action until he was sent down to the AHL in late February. He was immediately too good for the AHL and by May, he was in the NHL. Rahtbone’s speed and dynamic puck game are reminiscent of another young Vancouver defender, Quinn Hughes, although it is hard to assume that kind of upside for anyone. The additions of Ekman-Larsson, Schenn, and Poolman will have eased the pressure on Rathbone to make the NHL roster right away, but he just might get there anyway. - RW
It was a very weird year for DiPietro’s development in 2020/21. He spent the majority of the year on Vancouver’s taxi squad, rather than getting in games with Utica to aid in his development. This brought forward a lot of criticism towards Vancouver’s development model. The reality is that the pandemic situation (coupled with the US/Canada border issue) forced the Canucks’ hand as they needed a third goalie up with them and could not risk the quarantine policy in place given possible emergency situations. What effect playing four games in his second year as a pro has on his development remains to be seen.
When he did play with Utica towards the end of the year, DiPietro performed well. His performance even earned him a spot on Team Canada at the World Championships, where he was the third goalie. Always lauded for his athleticism and professionalism, DiPietro has the work ethic and the talent to be an NHL netminder and is one of the top goalie prospects on the planet for a reason. With the Canucks’ AHL team moving North to Abbotsford this season, he will get in another full year as a starter at that level and will be ready to contribute in the NHL should Demko or Halak get injured. - BO
It was a year of transition for Woo, who embarked on his pro career with a shortened season for the AHL’s Utica Comets, posting five points in 28 games. It was a solid start for the young blueliner, who brought his physical brand of hockey to the pro level and finally began to see some secondary powerplay duties towards the end of the season.
A throwback style defenseman, Woo is known most for his aggressive, physical style that gets in the face of opponents. He is an excellent skater who can move the puck effectively and likes to jump into the rush. He has good instincts offensively but needs to continue to improve positioning without the puck and gain a better understanding of when to go for the big hit. In junior, he was able to recover from these situations due to his great mobility, but the pro level doesn’t afford those mistakes to the same degree. Additionally, his shot is accurate but lacks velocity from the point. Woo projects to be a solid #4-5 at the NHL level if he can continue to develop his game in the next couple of seasons. A full AHL campaign awaits. - AS
It is hard to believe that Juolevi still has prospect eligibility as it feels like the 23-year-old former fifth overall selection has been around forever already. However, injuries have really derailed his development. Last year, Juolevi did spend the whole year with the Canucks, but was in and out of the lineup (as a scratch). In 23 games, he played relatively sparingly as part of Vancouver’s third pairing.
A competent two-way defender, the key for Juolevi is finding that niche at the NHL level. He skates well. He shows promise as a puck mover. He can be an effective player in the defensive end with his four-way mobility and transitional strengths. However, his decision making needs to tighten up and he needs to increase his physical intensity level. A long shot to be the kind of impact player normally expected of fifth overall selections, Juolevi still has a chance to develop into a serviceable #4-5 defender for Vancouver. However, he needs to stay healthy, and he needs to re-discover his confidence as a puck mover. There is an opportunity for him to grab an everyday lineup spot this season, but without significant progression, he runs the risk of being passed by others like Jack Rathbone and Jett Woo soon. - BO
After tearing up the Belarussian junior league last season, Klimovich went to the World U18 Championships and put himself firmly on the draft radar, with six goals in five games. An offensive machine, both his shot and puck skills stand out as high-end. While the rest of his game is raw and in need of development, his strengths are strong enough to work with him to get his weaknesses mitigated enough to play. That is why the Canucks made him an early second round pick in 2021.
Like many players with his obvious offensive tools, Klimovich’s play off the puck needs some work. He will work hard in his own zone, but he is too often in the wrong spot to be really effective. He is very much a shoot-first forward, so his decision making with the puck is also at times lacking. Playing with a more uniformly higher quality of teammate and against a more uniformly higher quality of opponent will be necessary for him to begin to eliminate those bad habits. Despite the flaws in his game, Klimovich’s upside is rare, with easy top six potential. Vancouver will need to be patient, but the payoff is possibly immense. He was drafted in the CHL Import Draft last year by Rouyn-Noranda, but the pandemic prevented most imports from coming over for the 2020-21 season. Playing in the Q is an option this year, but he does look to be playing in the KHL with Dinamo Minsk. - McKeen’s Draft Guide 2021
The Vancouver Canucks have to be really happy with the way Gadjovich has steadily improved in each of his first three pro seasons in the organization. His goals per game mark have steadily risen each season (0.09, to 0.34, to 0.79). The big power forward finally looks like he is ready for an NHL role this upcoming season, where he will compete for a bottom six role in training camp.
The key to Gadjovich’s improvement on the ice has been directly tied to his ability to become quicker. A big power forward, Gadjovich has always found his way to the net and brought a physical element, however with improvements to his explosiveness and agility, he has become a consistent scoring threat. Armed with an extremely heavy shot and great scoring instincts, the next test will come at the NHL level. Can Gadjovich keep up? Just how much has his skating improved? Vancouver will have a tough choice to make, as Gadjovich is out of options and will need to be rostered in order to avoid waivers. The hope is that he can play a consistent fourth line role this upcoming season and then slowly become more involved offensively as he gains confidence. His high-end upside is that of a middle six scoring winger and powerplay threat. - BO
With the possible exception of his junior year in Ann Arbor, Lockwood has always shown himself to be an energy winger with just enough skill to allow teams to hope for more than bottom line production at his best. The junior year was an exception (maybe), as it was the only season since his U16 days in which he even approached point-per-game production. Lockwood’s senior season with Michigan saw his numbers regress back to his normal range (23 points in 33 games) and his rookie professional season last year was even lower, although the smaller sample size may have prevented him from showing adjustments, and in fairness, he did end the year on a three-game point streak.
At the end of the day, though, Vancouver will not be looking to Lockwood for more than moderate, supporting offense. They would be happy for him to be effective as a disruptor and agitator on a bottom six line, possibly supporting the penalty kill while he’s at it. He is a solid skater, plays a ‘hit first, ask questions later’ style game, and has just enough skill with the puck that the opposition can’t take him for granted. Given the Canucks’ lack of forward depth, he will likely have a chance to open the season in the NHL, but his general lack of professional experience indicates that more AHL time would be ideal. - RW
Going from a depth role with a strong USNTDP to a depth role in a ridiculous Michigan program, Truscott has seen his chances to show what he can do limited of late. Our belief in him stems from the variety of things he showed as capable during his pre-draft year, indicative of a player with a broad skill set, if not the deepest skill set, and the creativity and quickness of thought to always be capable of surprising.
Watching him in his bottom pairing job last year, we saw a defender who was playing somewhat tentatively, overly carefully, trying to earn the trust of his coaching staff, and by extension, a greater role in the following seasons. He avoided overt displays of rugged physicality, seemingly to avoid spending time in the penalty box. To his credit, Truscott held his own in his own end, earning some regular penalty killing duties in the process, and hopefully setting the stage for an expanded role there next year. And every now and then, if you watched closely, he demonstrated that his offensive tools could work at this new level. Continued progress would mean the removal of his shackles – whether they were put on himself or placed upon him by the coaching staff – and working to expand his comfort zone. We will know more about his ultimate projection once we see him play more comfortably in college. - RW
Carson Focht seemingly plateaued over his WHL career. He never reached a point per game pace even in his last season. However, Focht is a hard nose player that brings a bit of grit and sandpaper to your line up. He seems destined for a bottom-line role where he can be an effective agitator and good sized player who can lean on opponents and patrol the center of the ice. He is a pretty sound player in his own end and plays a simple and effective game. His speed is fine, and he is willing to throw his body around, especially on the forecheck. His hands are average, but he doesn’t flash high end skill when he has the puck on his stick.
Certainly, his effort and attention to details away from the puck give him a shot at carving out a bottom six role. His production in his first AHL season while not spectacular was enough to show he can translate his game to a bottom six pro style role. He will return to the AHL this year, now with the newly minted Abbotsford Canucks and will look to improve his offensive production, while also becoming an elite level shutdown forward. - VG
Drafted in 2019, the Canucks are still looking for Plasek to find greater consistency in his game. He has all the tools to become a solid middle six winger, but his performance in the Czech men’s leagues has been underwhelming thus far. He will finally make the trek to North America to play in the AHL next season and Canucks’ fans are incredibly interested to see how he performs.
A third-round selection in 2020, Jurmo combines size and mobility on the back end and was drafted because of his projectable skill set. Most certainly a project, Jurmo will look to play full time at the Liiga level this coming season, joining the Jukurit organization.
Injuries were a bit of a problem for the competitive two-way center this past season, but he still managed to win an MHL Championship with MHK Dynamo Moskva. Next season, the Canucks will be looking for Zlodeyev to finally get some experience at the KHL level, in addition to making the Russian World Junior’s roster.
The first two seasons at Northeastern have gone swimmingly for McDonough as he has become a go-to offensive weapon for the program. A big winger with a goal scorer’s touch, McDonough is deadly in tight. As he returns to college for his junior season, the Canucks will be looking for him to take that next step and become one of the better offensive players in the Hockey East.
A strong two-way forward, Costmar has performed exceptionally well at the J20 level in Sweden since being drafted. However, his offensive production at the SHL level has been underwhelming. Costmar will attempt to breakthrough this season with Linkoping and take that next step to prove to Vancouver management that he is deserving of an NHL ELC.
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Podkolzin is a dynamic winger with a lot of good assets in his toolbox. He is a strong skater with terrific balance and is technically solid. He can get to top speed within a few strides. He is exceptionally good at puck protection and has a creative hockey mind. He works hard and plays a physical game. He still lacks a bit of consistency in his production, but he has been a teenager playing against men and he gets pushed out physically when he tries to create. He is not a typical transition player; he likes to play tight to the body and create from down low which makes a lack of physical strength a natural problem. Podkolzin also sometimes tries to be too creative instead of just making the easy play. He will always aid his team’s puck possession with elite skills and do good things with that possession. Although he did not score many points, his underlying numbers were good, and it is expected that he will receive a bigger role in the KHL this season. He has one more year with St Petersburg after which he could compete for a top six role with the Canucks. - JH
WJC star Hoglander plays intensively and is particularly strong in the corners and around the net. He will set up a power play or drive the play all over the ice. His passes to the slot were more frequent during the WJC than in the SHL as he was constantly trying to create. He is small and is not to able to break away from his opponents in the corners in the same way at the senior level as he did at the World Juniors, and that could be a concern as he prepares to transition to North America and the NHL, as his game prevails through stick handling, covering the puck and making quick turns and creative plays. That type of game will be tough for him in the NHL and he will need to vary his game. Hoglander was supposed to start the 2020-21 season with the Canucks organization, trying to earn a spot in the NHL; While he waits for the NHL to start, he has returned to the SHL, where his offensive game has begun to take off. - JH
After playing his first nearly full season as a professional with AHL Utica, Juolevi seemed to be playing back to the same high level as made him the fifth overall pick in 2016. He brings a high hockey IQ and composure to any situation and as he grew more comfortable facilitating more scoring chances as well. He is a good skater, a good puck handler, and the type of player you forget is on the ice until he helps out in scoring or putting the puck in the net himself. He should certainly be making his long-awaited debut with the Canucks’ bottom pairing in 2020-21, where he will stay until he has mastered the NHL game enough to move up the lineup. Juolevi will simply have to be more physical to differentiate himself and to earn added trust from the coaching staff, learning to protect himself better in an organization that is not known for their grit. - SC
Woo has the potential to play on a second pairing but lacks the offensive toolkit that many were expecting after his eye-popping seasons in Moose Jaw. He is an effective, physical, in-your-face defender who skates well and competes hard for every inch of ice. He is tenacious in his own zone using big hits, stick checks, good reads and aggression to minimize the opponent’s ability to get to his net. His gap control is good, and opponents know he will step up if they bobble the puck or show any hesitation in the neutral zone. He is a fine passer, capable of making good plays to start the transition, however his decision making in the offensive zone is concerning. His vision is good, but he frequently tries to do too much and turns over the puck at inopportune times. While Woo is capable of recovering better than most, he is more the complementary defender than the one the dictates the offense. He plays the game the right way and has an edge and abrasiveness in handling himself. He is willing to jump into the rush and has the speed to get himself into the play as a trailer. - VG
From the moment Rathbone stepped on the ice at Harvard, even as a freshman, he made an impact. While there is usually an adjustment period for rookies when transitioning to college hockey, especially for those who come straight from prep school as he did, some, like Rathbone, are exceptions. An offensive defenseman, last year he ranked fourth on the team in scoring, leading all Crimson defenders. His shot is characterized by a quick release. He appeared on the team’s second penalty kill unit and the first power play unit. He was possibly the team’s best puck mover on the power play. He is excellent at running the unit from the point. Defensively, he has a very active and quick stick and is able to poke check effectively, minimizing the negative impact of his smaller stature. Rahtbone’s offensive capabilities as well as his solid defensive skills give him a legitimate chance at making the NHL in a top half of roster role, a journey which will move to the professional ranks next season. - JS
On the small side, but incredibly feisty, Lockwood spent the full four seasons at the University of Michigan, before finally signing an ELC with the Canucks shortly after COVID-19 paused play the world over. The former USNTDP grinder had an up-and-down collegiate career with the Wolverines, but his best two seasons were certainly his last two. He is a strong skater who can flash creativity with the puck in the offensive zone, can tend to play too deliberately as well, negating his inherent skill set. When he plays decisively, Lockwood has been a disruptive presence at the collegiate level. He plays a physical game, especially when he plays angry and relishes open ice checking. He is the type of player who could be ready for the NHL within one season of turning pro, but whose reasonable upside is never more than a bottom six winger, who could frustrate with the hints of more, but who can’t show it consistently enough for the possibility to be reasonable. - RW
DiPietro brings a new definition to the word ‘focus’ with an ultra-dialed-in and intense personality. He performs reliably well every game and gives maximum effort, no matter the opponent. He has a good track record for performing well under pressure and for keeping a good attitude, going above and beyond when it comes to athleticism, which he must due to his smaller size. He reads plays well and does well in one on one situations however he will have to battle harder to get to his position in net scrambles, as he works towards a permanent NHL role. The future is bright for DiPietro, who is so naturally gifted with the right instincts, attitude, and athleticism needed to be a top level goaltender, look for him to have a go at an NHL job within the next season should he start off the upcoming season the same way with Utica. - SC
MacEwen is not a cookie cutter smooth-skating type. Instead he is the hard working, crash and bang guy that brings a lot of energy to a roster. He is not the most graceful of skaters and does not stand out for skill either, but he does well at completing the little things. He is a steady net front presence, forces turnovers, and plays the body at the right times. A little clumsy at times, he has learned to be a good backchecker and defend well in his own zone, however he still needs to work on his passing in order to avoid turnovers and better contribute to the breakout. It is no surprise that MacEwen has earned a spot on the Vancouver Canucks 2020 playoff roster as he brings the right energy and can get the job done in a way that the other players cannot, which is why he is an asset to their bottom six, and should continue to play at the highest level as long as his cap hit remains low. – SC
In every game with the USNDTP, there will be one or two moments where Truscott authors a play that makes you take notice. And each of those moments were substantially different. Those good plays would not be at all possible if he were not an above average skater, with impressive acceleration, very good edges and pivots and top speed, and mostly incredible backwards skating. The package plays into his heads-up game. He reads and processes the game fast and is very decisive when the situation calls for action. He can react correctly to a broken play. He can also excel in driving the play, as he can set and alternately vary the pace. He plays with mature composure. On the other hand, Truscott lacks flash. He has a decent wrist shot from the point, but not a power play quarterback rocket. He can skate with the puck but doesn’t often execute high level trickery. He can time the odd big hit but lacks the big frame to play that style with regularity. At the end of the day, he can leverage what he has into a long and successful career on a good team’s second pairing. – RW
Jurmo is a big-risk/big-reward player. The physical tools are impossible to miss. He skates beautifully, with a fast and powerful stride. His edges are solid and his has four-way mobility, and the speed is remarkable. His carries out of his own end are thrilling. On the other hand, he is still incredibly raw. He has not often shown the ability to slow the game down, regroup and let the play come to him. He has shown significant improvement in his own zone work this year, to his credit, reading the play better and forcing opposing forwards to the outside, but he still has a way to go in this regard. There could also be some concern that he lacks experience at high levels, or at prestigious age-group tournaments. Jurmo recently moved from the Jokerit system to JyP, where he is expected to play in Liiga this season. If Vancouver can be patient, he represents a potential play on a future top four defender with dynamic qualities. He has come a long way in the last two seasons and still has room for added development. He might not get there, but it was a gamble worth taking. – RW
Lind has finally had the breakout confidence-replenishing year that staff and writers were hoping for. He is a good shooter and good at making quick plays and reacting to what is going on around him. He can be relied upon to play special teams, however he is not the smoothest of skaters, but he makes up for it in the way he gets to the net and his work ethic on the forecheck. Lind will certainly have to get faster and more agile on his blades, but his hands and his passing are good and lead him oftentimes to contributing to good scoring opportunities or assisting on plays. He will most likely earn his chance to crack the Canucks lineup this coming season as a potential third liner alternating in the bottom six if he finds another gear for his skating and on ice agility while continuing to work on his two way play. - SC
After leading the AHL Utica Comets in points for defensemen it is safe to say that Rafferty is a strong and dependable defenseman in the Vancouver pipeline. All of his skills are good, and his positioning and hockey IQ are what lead him to stand out, earning points in nearly every game. He will need to get a bit tougher when it comes to physicality and taking the body, but aside from that there is nothing of concern. He brings a great two-way game and is nearly always in the right position which could be an asset for the Canucks looking into next season, despite this past season only being Rafferty’s rookie year. A late bloomer, his potential may be surprisingly high because of the progression he has had so far, however when he gets the call up look to see him as part of the bottom four to start proving himself. - SC
McDonough’s value may turn out to be higher than his seventh-round draft pick status. After graduating from prep school at Thayer Academy, McDonough spent one season in the USHL with the Cedar Rapids RoughRiders before entering the collegiate ranks. As a freshman, he was one of the highest-scoring players for Northeastern and the highest-scoring freshman by a mile and earned the team’s rookie of the year award. He has a big frame but could be stronger on the puck, although he is not afraid to engage in puck battles. While he needs to pump his legs on his strides, he is very hard to contain in the offensive zone as he glides around. McDonough is a sharp passer and can score from multiple spots but buzzes frequently around the net. While he certainly held his own as a freshman, he is still raw and needs to refine his game more before turning pro. - JS
The NCAA’s top scorer over the past four seasons, Michaelis was a First Team WCHA All American through each of his four seasons at Minnesota State. The slight German winger already had a lengthy history of high-level international play, including two appearances at the World Championships for his homeland before signing as a free agent with Vancouver a few days into the COVID-19 lockdown. Michaelis makes himself seen through high end skating ability, which allowed him to skate laps around the WCHA competition, as well as very interesting playmaking potential, with vision and creativity. The skating will have to be his ticket to the NHL though, as his playmaking ability has been more a function of brains than pure skill, leaving in question how much those brains will allow him to play up as a pro. If Michaelis makes the adjustment to the pro pace and continues to make his presence felt in the offensive end, he could push himself up to the highest level for a lengthy stay. – RW
Zlodeyev is a strong two-way center who shows extremely well off the puck. He uses his strong skating to apply pressure on the forecheck and was one of the anchors of Russia’s penalty killing unit at the U18 level. Additionally, he excels at the faceoff dot. As an offensive player, he is at his best working the half wall, where he can use his quick feet to elude checks and create lanes to attack. He is more of a playmaker than a goal scorer but is willing to drive the net and can finish from in tight with a quick release. The remaining question is his upside. Zlodeyev is a skill player, but it is not clearly enough yet to project to a scoring line role in North America, and without the strength to play in a bottom six role, he may be stuck as a tweener. His early work this year in the VHL (Russia’s second men’s league) is promising enough that he might just make it work, even if he is only in the early stages of his journey. – BO
A big center with nice hands who was acquired in a pure Swedish prospect trade, as Jonathan Dahlen was sent the other way to San Jose. Karlsson is not as a big name in Sweden as Dahlen is but Karlsson is a decent prospect in his own right, and he scored 40 points in Allsvenskan as a 20-year-old. He is an offensive minded center with an above average shot and above average hands. He is not elite an any way but a decent depth prospect, and if everything goes well, he could be a good third line option in the future. He needs to work on his skating and play at a faster pace to reach the highest level. He will have a couple more years of development before he can be ready to compete for a spot. I would be surprised if he has a long NHL career, but I can definitely see him being a good SHL player in near future. – JH
The last three seasons with the Utica Comets for Brisebois have not gone as originally hoped since his near fifty-point final season in the QMJHL. Brisebois has struggled to produce a similar offensive output and anywhere near the success he had in major junior. He plays with grit and passion and brings a focus to every game that is admirable as he is always ready to make a play. The downside to his game is the fact that he has not been able to find the same confidence as he once had, and he has struggled to even get his passing game going. The hope is that next season Brisebois will finally find the extra gear he once seemed to have and reach his potential before it is too late. He will most likely be able to qualify for one more crack at a roster spot on the Canucks, hoping to find a home at the bottom of the defensive rotation. - SC
The 215th pick in 2019 took good steps during the season. He was a steady top line center for the junior team and played big minutes. His production went up and he doubled his goal total last season despite playing 15 games less than the year before. He received some cups of tea at the senior level as well, but without success. In Allsvenskan he had a more diminished role when he played. His skating speed needs to improve but is a skilled offensive-minded player with good hands. His puck skills excel well on the power play as he likes to set up the play. He is also skilled one-on-one and can make nice dekes. For next season, I would like to see him earn a top six role on an Allsvenskan team and compete for a WJC roster spot. To do so he will need to work on his all-around game and play at a higher pace. – JH
One of the smallest drafted prospects around, Palmu tore up the OHL as an Import player, but has spent the bulk of the past three seasons back in Finland. At every stop, he has left little doubt but that he is a dynamic, productive offensive player, with only the mild exception of his 12-game stint in the AHL in 2018-19. Just from a tools perspective, he isn’t the most impressive. He skates well, but questionably whether he is fleet enough to overcome his size concern. He has fast hands, and reads the game well, but neither approaching elite. He is not a sniper. But somehow, he has made it all work well together to give him an overall package that has been greater than the sum of his parts. Like all players of his stature, even ones who play with his courage, Palmu will need to prove himself anew at every new level, and next up is the AHL, to which he is expected to play this year. - RW
Drafted as a moderately offensive second year eligible, Focht’s post draft performance was somewhat disappointing, as he failed to take his game to another level in the WHL. Not meeting expectations is not new for Focht, the one-time seventh overall pick in the WHL Bantam Draft. This is not to imply that his professional prospects are dead, as his game has elements that could fit in a bottom six role. He has decent size, and he can play with some grit up and down the ice. When his team has possession, he some smooth hands and the wherewithal to keep the play moving in the right direction. On the right day, he can even look like a sniper, with a very quick release on his snapshot. He just doesn’t do it all at once, or consistently. Still unsigned, it is unclear where he will play this year, as he turns 21 in early February. - RW
]]>First off, even if many of Sweden’s players who won the U18 are playing, they will not have a team that, on paper, should be able to beat USA, Canada AND Russia for a gold medal in this tournament. Last year’s result, finishing with a bronze medal, would be a respectable result again considering the competition. Sweden will be competitive with good goalies, top class defense and high-end wingers. Sweden’s weak position is at center where they lack a top elite talent.

Goalies
Hugo Alnefelt (TBL) was a strong starter already last season, being named Best Goalie in the tournament, and he was strong when they won at the U18s too. If he gets to start in this tournament as well comes down to how much the younger Jesper Wallstedt (2021) has closed in on him or has even surpassed him at this point. They both play at the SHL level and so far, Wallstedt clearly has outplayed Alnefelt. Wallstedt has saved 92% of the shots he has faced and 91% of the shots from the scoring area. Alnefelt has played a bit more but has much worse numbers, with 90% of the shots saved and 86% from the scoring area. If we deep dive into those numbers, we can see that Alnefelt has the better or similar numbers in almost all areas except from near range where Alnefelt saves 72% versus Wallstedt’s 83%. We will also need take into fact that Wallstedt plays on a stronger team (Lulea) at the top of the league while Alnefelt’s HV71 has struggled. Wallstedt has faces 26 shots per game while Alnefelt faced 31 shots per game. Wallstedt has a lower xG per game figure though and the goals he has let in has a higher xG value than Alnefelt’s.
That sums up my mind that the net should be Jesper Wallstedt’s to lose in this tournament if we look at the current season. That said, coaches rarely picks the starter only by the rationality of stats on single digit games. Alnefelt has had strong performances every time he has been chosen internationally and that should be accounted for and will be in his favour as Wallstedt has not had that opportunity yet (U18 got cancelled last spring).
My pick for a starter still will be Jesper Wallstedt. He is the best Swedish goalie prospect I have seen in at least a decade and his hockey sense is truly something special. Picking the third goalie I think you should go with a player who will be available next year, too, and my pick will therefore be Calle Clang (PIT) who has played in Allsvenskan with strong numbers so far. The only other junior goalie playing senior hockey in the top levels (SHL and Allsvenskan) is undrafted 19-year-old Matteus Ward.
Defenseman
Victor Soderstrom (ARI), Philip Broberg (EDM), Tobias Bjornfot (LAK) and Albert Johansson (DET) are no-brainers. These are the clear top 4. Johansson may surprise some, but he is looking like a tremendous pick by the Red Wings in 2019. He skates fast and has come further in adapting his game to senior level than both Broberg and Bjornfot. Broberg has the highest ceiling of the bunch and has the potential for a monster tournament. Soderstrom will probably be the most reliant defenseman of the team with his outstanding hockey IQ.
After those four it becomes more interesting.
If we start with the 2001 born players: Albert Lyckasen (BUF) has had a rough start to his season and left his Allsvenskan club in october after being cut from the team and sent down to third senior league. He has only played 3 games all season. For that reason, he will be counted out for my roster. Ludvig Hedstrom and Alex Brannstam have been regularly picked for this team over the years. Neither are drafted and they are non-flashy defensive defensemen. They both play for Djurgarden and of the two, Brannstam has played more on the SHL team with 5 games and an average of 06:30 TOI. They both have a shot of being that non-sexy defensive defenseman that coaches want for their roster. I see better options for that though. Another option here could be Gustav Berglund (DET). He plays regularly in Allsvenskan. He has been stable but has not earned a big role on the team playing around 14 minutes per game. He is a big and mobile defenseman with some good puck skills but has not provided much offense yet at the senior level. I do not see him as a strong candidate for WJC.
The 2002 age group muster up some exciting names. Among others, the recent NHL Draft had William Wallinder (DET), Helge Grans (LAK) and Emil Andrae (PHI) selected and they could make waves. Wallinder has been up and down, playing in Allsvenskan. His team has struggled, and he has been occasionally sent down to the junior team. He has his size and impressive mobility but still has much to learn about how to use those traits effectively. Grans started the season impressively and put up 6 points in the SHL, but his team has also struggled and are at bottom of standings and he has been sidelined (unfairly in my opinion) for games, too. He bring size, mobility, and strong passing ability. He should have a strong chance to earn a spot on the team. Andrae has also earned a spot on an SHL team. His ice time has varied from 6 - 20 minutes per game. He has not been spectacular but has handled himself well for an 18-year-old in his first season at the top level. He usually is more involved but plays more of a safe game now to stay on the team.
I would also advocate for one 2003 born defenseman and that is Simon Edvinsson (2021). He has been amazing in the junior league and has now come up and played a few games in the SHL. He is 6-5” with speed and skill. He is strong both offensively and defensively. He would be a great 7th defenseman who can come in and stir things up.
All things considered, I will go for Victor Soderstrom, Philip Broberg, Tobias Bjornfot, Albert Johansson, and Helge Grans as locks. For the last two spots, Emil Andrae and Simon Edvinsson get the advantage for me. They are the most skilled players with the puck, and I think the team has strong defensive ability in the five guys named as locks to choose these options.
Forwards
Let’s start with the obvious names here. Lucas Raymond (DET) and Alexander Holtz (NJD) will be the offensive drivers for this team. They were the difference makers as underagers in the U18 gold medal and they were both contributors to the U20 bronze medal team already last season. The biggest question now is whether to keep them together on the same line or split them into two lines. The reason that has even come up as a question as they always have played together with success before is the fact that Holtz is playing with William Eklund (2021) in Djurgarden. Eklund (a probable first round pick) has taken the SHL by storm and that line (with former NHLer Jacob Josefsson in the middle) has been the team’s best line. Internationally Holtz and Raymond have had Karl Henriksson (NYR) to center their line and he is also an obvious inclusion to this roster. The smart hard-working center complements the two well. So how to solve this?
I would actually split Raymond and Holtz. I would keep Henriksson as Raymond’s center as they have played together more often historically, as both play for Frolunda. I will give Holtz and Eklund a strong two-way center like Albin Sundsvik (ANA). 6-2” Sundsvik is playing his second season as an SHL regular and although not a flashy player he would complement Holtz and Eklund fine. Raymond and Henriksson will need a new shooter to their line, and I can see Noel Gunler (CAR) fitting that profile well. Gunler has changed SHL teams since the draft and feels more confident on the ice again. At this level he will be a dangerous player having Raymond and Henriksson driving the play.
If Sweden is to succeed, they will also need some scoring depth in their bottom six with forwards who can take spots on the power play as well. Two players who I want to see get picked here are Theodor Niederbach (DET) and Oskar Olausson (2021). Both have been dominating in the junior league, Niederbach with 35 points in 19 games and Olausson with 27 points in 16 games. Also notable is that Olausson has gotten off to a strong start in SHL with 3 points in 7 games while averaging 8 min/game TOI. With Niederbach playing center the third player I would want for this line is 2019 first rounder Simon Holmstrom (NYI). He has not exceeded his development yet and took a questionable path by playing in the AHL at 18 last season. He has played in Allsvenskan this fall and has not impressed hugely there, either. All in all, he has a lot of potential and skill to use in this tournament.
That leaves only four spots for this group of 13 forwards and there are a lot of options to choose from. For the physical aspect, players like Emil Heineman (FLA) and Albin Grewe (DET) would do the job well and they also have some scoring touch to their game. Looking just at size and puck protection, players like Elmer Soderblom (DET) or Daniel Torgersson (WPG) would be good fits. All the four fit betters as wingers than centers in my opinion so to find a center for the fourth line I would look for either Arvid Costmar (VAN) or Daniel Ljungman (DAL). They both play on the same team and there Costmar is given more trust and he also has been used regularly on the PK for Linkoping’s SHL team. Costmar is more of a skilled player but he has shown that he can handle that role as well which will give him an edge here. I would not count out undrafted 2001 borns like Elias Ekstrom, Oskar Kvist or Jonathan Wikstrom for the final roster. All three have played SHL hockey this fall. In the roster for a since cancelled November event, 2003 born Simon Robertsson (2021) was picked for the team. He is a physically mature player but more of a goal scorer than a bottom six option for me. Maybe he could be the 13 forward to start.
Going back and forth, I believe I would pick Heineman over Grewe. Heineman is stronger and more mature in his game. I would pick Costmar over Ljungman, not long-term but for this tournament as I see him as being ahead as he has more experience at a higher level and has performed well this fall. I would also go with Elmer Soderblom in the 12th spot. A 6-7” forward who can skate and handle the puck will be beneficial in the North American rink and give opponents some trouble in handling him. Then for the 13th spot I would pick Daniel Ljungman over Grewe, Torgersson or any of the others mentioned. Ljungman can play both center and wing and is a smart player with a good shot who can be used well on a power play or in a shootout.
MY TEAM:
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Vancouver Canucks
As of the day of this writing (Jul. 10, 2020), there have been three truly notable occurrences in the world of Vancouver Hockey. From most recent to earliest:
You might have been able to guess that this space will focus on the third item in the above list, and not because of Brackett’s ties to our humble enterprise.
Brackett had been with Vancouver since 2008-09, starting as an Amateur Scout, and rising to the role of Director of Amateur Scouting in 2015-16. Brackett worked in the USHL before moving to the Canucks organization, and as a onetime collegiate player himself, was never averse to selecting players on the NCAA route. That started with his first ever pick, the aforementioned Boeser, at the time lighting it up for the Waterloo Black Hawks, and spent two strong seasons at the University of North Dakota before turning pro.
Boeser was the first of eight college-bound players drafted in Brackett’s five drafts. While it is too early to pass judgement on many of those, every single one of them is trending in the right direction and looking like they will provide great value for where they were drafted. Think Adam Gaudette and Quinn Hughes, in addition to Boeser, in the NHL, Tyler Madden who was the bait in the Toffoli trade, and top 15 prospects Will Lockwood, Jack Rathbone, and Aidan McDonough.
Brackett’s tenure was most notable for its draft day focus on players of skill, as opposed to size. Of the collegians, only Boeser and McDonough had average or better size. His five first round picks averaged a hair under 6-1”, and 185 pounds. Not small, but not bangers either. In fact, the Canuks were just as likely to look for grit as free agents, such as the signings of the unsigned CHL’ers Zack MacEwen and Jalen Chatfield. The former is on this list and spent 17 games up with the Canucks this season to boot.
If you can acquire good depth later on, why spend valuable assets at the draft on those same types who could end up as free talent acquisitions down the road? If anything, Brackett’s Canucks would seek players long on brains and intangibles (leadership types, gritty despite moderate size) in the later rounds, after the high skill players had already been taken off the board. Those types include the likes of the aforementioned Lockwood and Madden, but also Guillaume Brisebois, Kole Lind, Toni Utunen, etc.).
Based on comments from Vancouver GM Jim Benning, the replacement Director of Amateur Scouting in Vancouver will require more synergy with the rest of the Hockey Operations Department, particularly the GM himself. This doesn’t tell us how the Canucks will draft this October (presumably) but that second or third round pick might look less like Nils Hoglander, and more like Nikita Tryamkin or Cole Cassels. These were the last two third rounders selected by Vancouver before Brackett’s regime began. Vancouver’s loss will be Minnesota’s gain – the Wild just recently hired him to take on the same position he held with Vancouver – and the incoming Director of Amateur Scouting will lack the benefit of a first round pick to really give us a sense of what’s coming.

An elite NHL prospect who, as a teenager, plays on one the big clubs in the KHL, St Petersburg, where he had a limited role, playing less than nine minutes per game last season. Podkolzin is a dynamic winger with a lot of good assets in his toolbox. He is a strong skater with terrific balance and is technically solid. He can get to top speed with ease within a few strides. He is exceptionally good at puck protection and has a creative hockey mind. He works hard and plays a physical game.
He still lacks a bit of consistency in his production, and I can see two explanations for that. One is that he still is a teenager physically playing against men and he gets pushed out physically when he tries to create. He is not a typical transition player; he likes to play tight to the body and create from down low which makes a lack of physical strength a natural problem. When he gets stronger his style of play will fit well with the modern NHL game.
The other explanation is that he tries to be too creative and lacks instincts to just make the easy play, especially when his game is struggling, and he is lacking confidence. Podkolzin will always aid his team’s puck possession with elite skills and do good things with that possession. Although he did not score many points, his underlying numbers were good, and it is expected that he will receive a bigger role in the KHL this upcoming season. He has one more year with St Petersburg but after that I can see him competing for a top six role with the Canucks. - JH
Hoglander is exciting to watch and is an expert on the lacrosse-goal move, which he has used with success in both the SHL and the WJC. At the WJC he was excellent on the top line with and was one of the most productive players in the tournament. His production at the SHL level was not as impressive, at least not in line with the reputation of a soon to be NHLer.
Hoglander plays intensively and is particularly strong in the corners and around the net. He will set up a power play or drive the play all over the ice. At the WJC he showcased some nice playmaking ability and a fast thinking mind deep into the offensive zone. His passes to the slot were more frequent than in the SHL as he was constantly trying to create.
One obvious answer to the question why he was more dangerous at the WJC is his role. In the SHL he rarely played more than 12 minutes per game. Another issue is that he is small and is not to able to break away from his opponents in the corners in the same way at the senior level and that could be a concern as his game prevails through stick handling, covering the puck and making quick turns and creative plays. That type of game will be tough for him in the NHL and he will need to vary his approach.
Hoglander was supposed to start next season with the Canucks trying to earn a spot in the NHL; Now he will start in the SHL while he waits for the NHL to start. I don’t think he is ready to play in the NHL right away and when he makes it, I am not yet sure if he is dynamic enough for a top six role. - JH
In the last year or so, Juolevi had been highly associated with injury and speculation as to if he would – or could - ever make a comeback befitting a top five pick. After playing his first nearly full season as a professional with the AHL Utica Comets, earning 25 points in 45 games, he seemed to be playing back to the same high level as he was before.
Juolevi brings a high hockey IQ and composure to any situation and as he became more comfortable throughout the season, he ended up facilitating more scoring chances as well. He is a good skater, a good puck handler, and the type of player you forget is on the ice until he helps out in scoring or putting the puck in the net himself. With the Vancouver organization the potential is there for Juolevi to become a top two defenseman at some point, but the worry is simply that he struggles to remain healthy enough to do so in the future.
By next season he should certainly be making his long-awaited debut with the Canucks’ bottom pairing, where he will stay until he has mastered the NHL game enough to be moved up the lineup. Juolevi will simply have to be more physical to differentiate himself and to earn added trust from the coaching staff, meaning that he does not have to go out and kill his opponents but he will need to protect himself better in an organization that is not known for their grit. - SC
Woo regressed a bit this year production-wise and that has left expectations at a more realistic level as he starts his pro career. He has the potential to play on a second pairing but does not have the offensive toolkit that many were expecting after his eye-popping seasons in Moose Jaw.
He is an effective, physical in-your-face defender who skates well and competes hard for every inch of ice. He is tenacious in his own zone using a combination of big hits, stick checks, good reads and aggression to minimize the opponent’s ability to get to his net. His gap control is good, and opponents know he will step up if they bobble the puck or show any hesitation in the neutral zone.
He is a fine passer, capable of making good plays that start the transition, however his decision making in the offensive zone is concerning. His vision is good in that he sees the ice well, but he frequently tries to do too much and turns over the puck at inopportune times. While Woo is capable of recovering better than most, he is more the complementary defender on a pairing rather than the one that dictates the offense.
He plays the game the right way and has a real edge and abrasiveness to how he handles himself. Offensively he has some skills, his puck handling is pretty good, and he moves down the wall offensively well but his decision making when under pressure is a concern. He is willing to jump into the rush and has the speed to get himself into the play as a trailer where he is most effective generating offense. His even strength points were less than half of his production this year which is a bit concerning for anyone expecting him to be an offensively dynamic blueliner at the pro level. - VG
A fourth-round draft pick, Rathbone has improved well even in just two years at Harvard. The Massachusetts native was a captain at his prep school for two years. He entered college hockey as a freshman with nothing more than four games at the USHL level as far as high-level competition under his belt.
While in high school, he was named to the All-USA Hockey First Team in 2016-17 and the All-USA Hockey Second Team in 2017-18. As a freshman at Harvard, he was named to the ECAC All-Rookie team. As a sophomore, Rathbone was named to the ECAC First All-Star Team, the All-Ivy League First Team and the NCAA First All-American Team.
From the moment Rathbone stepped in, even as a freshman, he made an impact. While there is usually an adjustment period for rookies when transitioning to college hockey, especially for those who come straight from prep school, that didn’t hinder Rathbone. An offensive defenseman, he ranked fourth on the team in scoring and led all Crimson defenders. His shot is characterized by a quick release. He appeared on the team’s second penalty kill unit and the first power play unit. Rathbone was possibly the team’s best puck mover on the power play. He is excellent at running the unit from the point.
Defensively, Rathbone has a very active and quick stick and is able to poke check effectively. Rahtbone’s offensive capabilities as well as his solid defensive skills give him a legitimate chance at making the NHL in a top half of roster role, a journey which will move to the professional ranks next season, as Vancouver recently signed him to an entry level contract. - JS
On the small side, but incredibly feisty, Lockwood spent the full four seasons at the University of Michigan, before finally signing an ELC with the Canucks shortly after COVID-19 paused play the world over. The former USNTDP grinder had an up-and-down collegiate career with the Wolverines, but his best two seasons were certainly his last two.
He is a strong skater who can flash creativity with the puck in the offensive zone, can tend to play too deliberately as well, negating his inherent skill set. When he plays decisively, Lockwood has been a disruptive presence at the collegiate level. He plays a physical game, especially when he plays angry and relishes open ice checking.
He is the type of player who could be ready for the NHL within one season of turning pro, but whose reasonable upside is never more than a bottom six winger, who could frustrate with the hints of more, but who can’t show it consistently enough for the possibility to be reasonable. - RW
DiPietro brings a new definition to the word ‘focus’ with an ultra-dialed-in and intense personality. He performs reliably well every game and gives maximum effort, no matter the opponent. He has a good track record for performing well under pressure and for keeping a good attitude, going above and beyond when it comes to athleticism, which he must, due to his smaller size. He reads plays well and does well in one on one situations, however, he will have to battle harder to get to his position in net scrambles, as he works towards a permanent NHL role.
The future is bright for DiPietro, who is so naturally gifted with the right instincts, attitude, and athleticism needed to be a top level goaltender, look for him to have a go at an NHL job within the next season should he start off the upcoming season the same way with Utica. - SC
MacEwen is not a cookie cutter smooth-skating type. Instead he is the hard working, crash and bang guy that brings a lot of energy to a roster. He is not the most graceful of skaters and does not stand out for skill either, but he does well at completing the little things. He is a steady net front presence, forces turnovers, and plays the body at the right times.
A little clumsy at times, he has learned to be a good backchecker and defend well in his own zone, however he still needs to work on his passing in order to avoid turnovers and better contribute to the breakout. It is no surprise that MacEwen has earned a spot on the Vancouver Canucks 2020 playoff roster as he brings the right energy and can get the job done in a way that the other players cannot, which is why he is an asset to their bottom six, and should continue to play at the highest level as long as his cap hit remains low. - SC
Lind has finally had the breakout confidence-replenishing year that staff and writers were hoping for. He is a good shooter and good at making quick plays and reacting to what is going on around him. He can be relied upon to play special teams; however he is not the smoothest of skaters, but he makes up for it in the way he gets to the net and his work ethic on the forecheck.
Lind will certainly have to get faster and more agile on his blades but his hands and his passing are good and lead him oftentimes to contributing to good scoring opportunities or assisting on plays. He will most likely earn his chance to crack the Canucks lineup this coming season as a potential third liner alternating in the bottom six if he finds another gear for his skating and on ice agility while continuing to work on his two way play. - SC
After leading the AHL Utica Comets in points for defensemen it is safe to say that Rafferty is a strong and dependable defenseman in the Vancouver pipeline. All of his skills are good, and his positioning and hockey IQ are what lead him to stand out, earning points in nearly every game. He will need to get a bit tougher when it comes to physicality and taking the body, but aside from that there is nothing of concern.
He brings a great two-way game and is nearly always in the right position which could be an asset for the Canucks looking into next season, despite this past season only being Rafferty’s rookie year. A late bloomer, his potential may be surprisingly high because of the progression he has had so far, however when he gets the call up look to see him as part of the bottom four to start proving himself. - SC
The last three seasons with the Utica Comets for Brisebois have not gone as originally hoped since his near fifty-point final season in the QMJHL. Brisebois has struggled to produce a similar offensive output and anywhere near the success he had in major junior. He plays with grit and passion and brings a focus to every game that is admirable as he is always ready to make a play.
The downside to his game is the fact that he has not been able to find the same confidence as he once had, and he has struggled to even get his passing game going. The hope is that next season Brisebois will finally find the extra gear he once seemed to have and reach his potential before it is too late. He will most likely be able to qualify for one more crack at a roster spot on the Canucks, hoping to find a home at the bottom of the defensive rotation. - SC
McDonough’s value may turn out to be higher than his seventh-round draft pick status. After graduating from prep school at Thayer Academy, McDonough spent one season in the USHL with the Cedar Rapids RoughRiders before entering the collegiate ranks. As a freshman, he was one of the highest-scoring players for Northeastern and the highest-scoring freshman by a mile and earned the team’s rookie of the year award.
He has a big frame but could be stronger on the puck, although he is not afraid to engage in puck battles. While he needs to pump his legs on his strides, he is very hard to contain in the offensive zone as he glides around. McDonough is a sharp passer and can score from multiple spots but buzzes frequently around the net. While he certainly held his own as a freshman, he is still raw and needs to refine his game more before turning pro. - JS
The NCAA’s top scorer over the past four seasons, Michaelis was a First Team WCHA All American through each of his four seasons at Minnesota State. The slight German winger already had a lengthy history of high-level international play, including two appearances at the World Championships for his homeland before signing as a free agent with Vancouver a few days into the COVID-19 lockdown.
Michaelis makes himself seen through high end skating ability, which allowed him to skate laps around the WCHA competition, as well as very interesting playmaking potential, with vision and creativity. The skating will have to be his ticket to the NHL though, as his playmaking ability has been more a function of brains than pure skill, leaving in question how much those brains will allow him to play up as a pro. If Michaelis makes the adjustment to the pro pace and continues to make his presence felt in the offensive end, he could push himself up to the highest level for a lengthy stay. - RW
A big center with nice hands who was acquired in a pure Swedish prospect trade, as Jonathan Dahlen was sent the other way to San Jose. Karlsson is not as a big name in Sweden as Dahlen is but Karlsson is a decent prospect in his own right, and he scored 40 points in Allsvenskan as a 20-year-old.
He is an offensive minded center with an above average shot and above average hands. He is not elite in any way but a decent depth prospect, and if everything goes well, he could be a good third line option in the future. He needs to work on his skating and play at a faster pace to reach the highest level. He will have a couple more years of development before he can be ready to compete for a spot. I would be surprised if he has a long NHL career, but I can definitely see him being a good SHL player in near future. - JH
The 215th pick in 2019 took good steps during the season. He was a steady top line center for the junior team and played big minutes. His production went up and he doubled his goal total last season despite playing 15 games less than the year before. He received some cups of tea at the senior level as well, but without success.
In Allsvenskan he had a more diminished role when he played. His skating speed needs to improve but is a skilled offensive-minded player with good hands. His puck skills excel well on the power play as he likes to set up the play. He is also skilled one-on-one and can make nice dekes. For next season, I would like to see him earn a top six role on an Allsvenskan team and compete for a WJC roster spot. To do so he will need to work on his all-around game and play at a higher pace. - JH
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Frolunda - The reigning champions are a strong team this season as well. 32-year-old former NCAA-star, Ryan Lasch will be the offensive superstar on the team and in the league this season as well. The 5-7” former Hobey Baker nominee has made a strong European career and is a lethal weapon on the power play. There, he has good chemistry with veteran center and former NHLer Joel Lundqvist (twin brother to Henrik). Another big weapon on Frolunda’s team is winger Samuel Fagemo, who the LA Kings drafted this past summer. He scored 14 goals last season and is looking like a player who will go over 20 goals this season. The team is stacked with former or current NHL prospects like Johan Sundstrom, Max Friberg, Brandon Gormley, Rhett Rakshani, Julius Bergman, Jacob Moverare, and others, making them a strong SHL team. The most exciting to player to look out for though, is 17-year-old Lucas Raymond who plays regularly on a middle six-role for the club. His progression during this season will be very interesting to follow.
Djurgarden - Djurgarden established themselves as a contender last season and with the addition of former NHL center Patrik Berglund, they are definitely a contender this season. Berglund is coming back from a time out from hockey after he left Buffalo last year and terminated his NHL contract. Djurgarden also have other veteran players who have played in the NHL including Niklas Svedberg, Jason Garrison, Jacob Josefson, Tom Wandell and Niclas Bergfors. Prospect wise, Djurgarden is also very interesting. It looks like they might lose 18-year-old defenseman Tobias Bjornfot though, as he has started the year playing in the NHL with the LA Kings. We will know more after 9 NHL games if he comes back or not. Detroit drafted teenager, Albin Grewe is playing full time with the team as well as 2020 draft eligible star, Alexander Holtz. Other prospects to watch are Olle Alsing (OTT), Simon Johansson (MIN), Robin Norell (EDM) and Erik Walli Watherholm (ARI).
Farjestad - Farjestad has a strong team, without any big stars. Victor Ejdsell who was with the Chicago Blackhawks organization last year and is back for this season is one of the team’s key pieces. Michael Lindqvist, who had a short period with the NY Rangers organization last season, keeps on producing well at the SHL level. In goal they have veteran Markus Svensson who has been one of the best goalies in this league for many years now. Backing him up, Winnipeg Jets prospect Arvid Holm is getting his first chance at the SHL level. The biggest prospect on the roster is Detroit Red Wings 2019 pick, Albert Johansson. He isn’t a regular yet but has impressed in the games he has played and may earn a full-time spot soon.
Lulea - There is a “good news/bad news”-situation going on in Lulea so far. The good news is that NY Rangers defenseman prospect Nils Lundkvist has started the season exceptionally well. He is, in fact, the team’s leading scorer as of this writing. The bad news is that Pittsburgh prospect Filip Hallander, who also started well, has been sidelined with a long-term injury due to a broken foot. The team is quite strong and they are among the favorites to win if they can put it all together. Among the stars they have former NHLer Erik Gustafsson, former Hobey Baker winner in Jack Connolly and former AHLers Robin Kovacs and Petter Emanuelsson. Jesper Sellgren (CAR) is another interesting prospect to watch. 2020 draft eligible forward Noel Gunler is playing fourth line minutes, with hopefully the chance of earning more ice time along the way.
Skelleftea - Another prospect strong team. In their SHL roster Philip Broberg (EDM), Jonatan Berggren (DET), Albin Eriksson (DAL), Linus Lindstrom (CGY) and Filip Berglund (EDM) are all playing regularly with the team. The team as a whole still relies heavily on their veteran scorers in Joakim Lindstrom and Oscar Moller (both with NHL experience) to carry the offense. For the prospects, Berggren and Broberg have both started impressively and will be very interesting to follow throughout the season. They both have the potential to be difference makers already this season.
Modo - A big club and historically a big talent producer (Peter Forsberg, Markus Naslund, The Sedins, Victor Hedman, etc.) is playing in Allsvenskan for the fourth consecutive season since being demoted. The team has two interesting players to follow. One is NHL veteran Tobias Enstrom, who is home for the second season for the purpose of helping to get the club back to the SHL. The other one is Montreal prospect Mattias Norlinder, who plays a big role for this team and is looking more and more like a future NHL-defenseman.
Timra - Another big talent producer (Henrik Zetterberg, Mats Naslund, Fredrik Modin, Elias Pettersson, etc.) is back in Allsvenskan after getting demoted last season. They have received a big boost in their bid to return to the top flight, as San Jose prospect Jonathan Dahlen is back with his former team. He wasn’t happy with his situation in North America and felt that the Sharks roster was tough to break into, so he is back home to continue working on his development. Early on, he has been dominating the league with over two points per game.
Frolunda J20 - Frolunda is probably the most successful organization over the last decade when it comes to developing under 20 talents. They have a strong hockey academy with great facilities. This season their biggest stars are forwards Karl Henriksson (NYR) and Elmer Soderblom (DET). Their best draft eligible players to watch are center Theodor Niederbach and defenseman Theo Nordlund. They also have a strong 2021-group coming on with Fabian Lysell, Simon Edvinsson and Liam Dower Nilsson who all could have first round-potential.
HV71 J20 - Top ranked 2020-players in Zion Nybeck and Emil Andrae are the main players to watch on this talented team in addition to the already drafted Hugo Alnefelt (TBL) who will be splitting games between this team and the SHL team. They have lost last year’s best player in Simon Holmstrom to Bridgeport in AHL.
Leksand J20 - Leksand is destroying the northern division of SuperElit so far. They have won every game and are +54 over 12 games. They have a good team and play a great brand of hockey. Most fun to watch is 2021-prospect Isak Rosén who has the skills and hockey sense to be a top pick in next year’s draft. For 2020, forward Emil Heineman will be interesting to follow as he has started the season with 15 goals over the first 12 games. Columbus prospect Marcus Karlberg is also back with the team after a period on loan to Allsvenskan.
Linkoping J20 - A talented team with Vancouver-prospect Arvid Costmar as a big star and with strong 2019-snubbs in Albert Lyckasen and Marcus Pedersen, who both will have a shot of being drafted 2020 instead. There are also a lot of interesting 2020-eligible players like Elliot Ekmark, Daniel Ljungman and Mateusz Szurowski.
HM: Olle Lycksell (PHI), Samuel Ersson (PHI), Filip Hallander (PIT), Hugo Alnefelt (TBL).

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 |
U18 World Junior Championship 2019
- Not an overly exciting game by any means but a game that showed some flashy moves from both sides. For Slovakia, Maxim Cajkovic impressed. He was the driver for the team and worked hard all over the ice, playing with intensity and wanted to create every shift. He scored two power play goals from the point. His one-timer is an elite shot and the second goal was a beautiful slapper. The one thing I noticed about him on the downside in his game, it was the way he sometimes shied away from the physical play and lost the puck a bit too easily a couple of times. None of the “Swedes” Simon Jellus or Michal Mrazik made an impact in the game.
For Russia I watched a lot from Vasili Podkolzin. It got a bit scary when he got a bad hit in the third period and had to limp to the bench. Luckily, he went back later in the period. He showed his skills and how slippery he is with the puck at times. He has a creative touch to his game and reminds me a bit of players like Vitaly Kravtsov and Elias Pettersson in the way he can cover the puck and make quick turns. He possesses strong offensive hockey sense. There were some other Russians that showed flashes as well. With two impressive individual goals, smallish forward Arseni Gritsyuk shined. Quick and fast with soft hands.

- The big favorite crushed the host nation on the scoreboard, but the game was mostly evenly fought. Sweden had their best chances late in the second period when the 2002 born duo Lucas Raymond and Alexander Holtz dominated. Spencer Knight came up big and in the early third period USA jumped to a 5-1 lead. The best player in the game was Cole Caufield. He showed a great scoring touch and was able to find open spaces in the offensive zone impressively well. His skating and shot looks elite. Caufield scored three goals and had grade A chances for at least three more.
Hugo Alnefelt in the Swedish goal actually made a lot of strong saves despite letting in six goals. On the first Caufield goal, he and Matthew Boldy came in on a two-on-one and Boldy showed great patience with the puck and delivered a precise saucer pass to Caufield with exact timing. The most beautiful goal of the day.
Jack Hughes had an okay game and displayed some skilled moves, but he also got into some trouble with the puck. On the Swedish goal he had the turnover for example. One play that stood out was when he lost the puck on the offensive blue line to Alexander Holtz who got off to a breakaway but Hughes rushed back and made a fantastic takeaway just when Holtz was about to shoot.
The Swedish defense was a bit uneven and had trouble with the high-pressure forecheck from the USA at times but Albert Johansson, Victor Soderstrom and Philip Broberg also showed that they could play themselves out of such tight situations. Broberg shut the play down well multiple times in the game. Johansson got in some trouble with the physical play where it showed that he needs to get stronger, but he played well with the puck.
The Swedish goal was scored by Simon Holmstrom. He separated him self from his defender at a breakaway after a nice work by Arvid Costmar and a good pass from Zion Nybeck. Holmstrom's skating stood out but he needs to show more courage with the puck and also shies away from physical contact at times.
On a good injury news note, Alex Turcotte was back, and he scored in the game. On a bad note, Trevor Zegras was missing from the game.
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As the hosts of the tournament, Sweden will track a lot of attention at this tournament. The national broadcast station, SVT, will broadcast all Sweden’s games for example. That can create both pressure and stimulation for this Swedish team. As for all big international events, the quarterfinal game will be the big differential for fiasco or non-fiasco for the performance. The goal for the team is of course to win a gold medal, but I see a medal of any sort as a good tournament performance-wise.
The age group, 2001-borns, hasn’t tracked a lot of attention though. Last year, Sweden (2000-borns) had eleven players on their roster who had played most of their games at the elite senior level (SHL or Allsvenskan). This year that’s just the case for two of the Swedish players, defensemen Victor Soderstrom and Philip Broberg. With that said, I see more players with higher and somewhat hidden potential this year.
As usual, the defense is the core and strongest position for Sweden. Besides Soderstrom and Broberg, high skilled defensemen like Tobias Bjornfot and Albert Johansson will also be very exciting to watch. All four of them were ranked inside the latest McKeen Top 31. It will be very interesting to see how they’ll pair them up to make the team most efficient.
The biggest stars in the Swedish forward core are two underaged forwards who’ll be highly ranked for next year’s draft in Lucas Raymond and Alexander Holtz. They’ve both been scoring impressive numbers for the top two ranked J20 teams in SuperElit. Raymond has even scored two goals in the SHL. The two have been competing for a number of years as to who will be the known as the biggest forward talent in Sweden and to spice it up more, they both come from one of the two biggest cities (Stockholm and Gothenburg) as well.
Holtz and Raymond played together with great success at the Hlinka Gretzky Cup last August. Raymond as the driver and Holtz as the shooter. They played with smart center Karl Henriksson between them and I’ll guess that those three will be the leading line for this tournament as well.
Behind that trio, Sweden have two interesting elite talented forwards in Albin Grewe and Simon Holmstrom who’ll play a big part of Sweden’s offense. The depth after that isn’t strong though, which makes the decision of cutting high profile goal scorer Noel Gunler hard to understand. 2002 born Zion Nybeck could be a potential surprise player. He has been producing big numbers in J20 already and has played a lot with his club team with Simon Holmstrom down the stretch this season.
A weakness in the Swedish team is at the center position. If you put together the three top lines the center will probably be lowest ranked player on all three lines. Albin Sundsvik and Oscar Bjerselius are two of the players in the middle and they’re both solid two-way players but without flashy star power. Arvid Costmar has good offensive weapons but he lacks a bit in his two-way game and doesn’t always take the center-role in his club team.
In goal, Hugo Alnefelt is the probable starter and looks to be a solid mid-round pick in this year’s NHL Draft. His performance will, of course, be crucial to how well this Swedish team does at this tournament. If Sweden is going to win a medal, they’ll need strong goaltending. He is backed up by young (late 2002-born) Jesper Wallstedt, who also has surprise potential. Wallstedt has already played two seasons in the J20 league despite being only 16 years old.