[04-May-2026 15:31:54 UTC] PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Class 'WP_Widget' not found in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/widgets/mckeens_news_feed_widget.php:3 Stack trace: #0 {main} thrown in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/widgets/mckeens_news_feed_widget.php on line 3 [04-May-2026 15:31:55 UTC] PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Class 'WP_Widget' not found in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/widgets/mckeens_sidebar_menu_widget.php:3 Stack trace: #0 {main} thrown in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/widgets/mckeens_sidebar_menu_widget.php on line 3 [04-May-2026 15:31:45 UTC] PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Call to undefined function add_action() in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/shortcodes/mckeens_display_editorials.php:22 Stack trace: #0 {main} thrown in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/shortcodes/mckeens_display_editorials.php on line 22 [04-May-2026 15:31:46 UTC] PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Call to undefined function add_action() in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/shortcodes/mckeens_display_tabs.php:50 Stack trace: #0 {main} thrown in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/shortcodes/mckeens_display_tabs.php on line 50 [04-May-2026 15:31:47 UTC] PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Call to undefined function add_action() in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/shortcodes/mckeens_heading.php:15 Stack trace: #0 {main} thrown in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/shortcodes/mckeens_heading.php on line 15 David Reinbacher – McKeen's Hockey https://www.mckeenshockey.com The Essential Hockey Annual Sun, 19 Apr 2026 19:16:38 +0000 en-US hourly 1 NHL: Victor Nuño – Dynasty Stock Watch – Montreal Canadiens Edition https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/nhl-victor-nuno-dynasty-stock-watch-montreal-canadiens-edition/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/nhl-victor-nuno-dynasty-stock-watch-montreal-canadiens-edition/#respond Fri, 20 Mar 2026 14:12:45 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=198908 Read More... from NHL: Victor Nuño – Dynasty Stock Watch – Montreal Canadiens Edition

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MINNEAPOLIS, MN - JANUARY 16: Michigan Wolverines forward Michael Hage (19) skates with the puck during a college hockey game between the Minnesota Golden Gophers and Michigan Wolverines on January 16, 2026, at 3M Arena at Mariucci in Minneapolis, MN. (Photo by Nick Wosika/Icon Sportswire)

McKeen's Hockey: Dynasty Stock Watch

Montreal Canadiens Edition

Team Outlook

After their surprise run to the Stanley Cup Final in the COVID-shortened 2020-21 season, the Canadiens missed the playoffs for three straight years before returning in 2024-25, where they were eliminated in the first round. Now, Montreal appears to be entering its true competitive window, with Nick Suzuki and Cole Caufield in their prime years and a new wave of emerging talent led by Ivan Demidov, Lane Hutson, and Jacob Fowler. The prospects in this system will either push their way into that core or develop into important supporting pieces as the Canadiens work toward their 25th Stanley Cup championship.

Buy Candidates

Michael Hage, C

Hage has emerged as the best long-term center prospect in Montreal’s system. His game is driven by strong skating and high-end offensive awareness, allowing him to push pace through the neutral zone while consistently identifying and creating scoring opportunities. He processes the game quickly and uses subtle puck movement to manipulate defenders, traits that have translated into a standout NCAA season where he currently ranks sixth in points per game and has helped lead Michigan to the number one ranking in the country heading into the Frozen Four.

His pNHLe has climbed to around 80, suggesting legitimate top-six offensive potential, even if that level may come in peaks rather than sustained production. The bigger question for Montreal is whether Hage can solidify himself as their long-term second-line center, a role he is currently the best internal candidate to fill. While his development will still require patience, his trajectory, production, and underlying tools point to a player whose value could continue to rise, making him an appealing target in dynasty formats if there is still any skepticism tied to his timeline.

Alexander Zharovsky, LW

Zharovsky brings one of the more exciting offensive skill sets in Montreal’s pipeline, combining high-end puck handling with excellent edgework to create separation in tight areas and generate chances both off the rush and in sustained offensive-zone play. His creativity and ability to manipulate defenders make him a constant offensive threat, though like many skill-driven wingers, his long-term success will depend on continuing to refine his decision-making and consistency against higher levels of competition.

After not appearing in the KHL last season, Zharovsky has broken out in his draft-plus-one year with Salavat Yulaev Ufa, posting 41 points in 58 games, the top point-per-game mark among teenage players in the league. That performance has fueled a dramatic rise in his Hockey Prospecting profile, with his star probability jumping from 18% to 48%, a rare leap that signals legitimate upside. With that kind of trajectory, he is quickly becoming one of the more appealing high-upside targets in dynasty formats and a prospect worth investing in before his value climbs further.

Bryce Pickford, D

Pickford is in the midst of an excellent draft-plus-one season, currently leading WHL defensemen in points-per-game for the Medicine Hat Tigers. His production has been backed by strong underlying metrics, as his Fantasy Hockey Life skater card highlights strengths across play driving, transition, and puck battles, pointing to a well-rounded offensive profile rather than just inflated scoring totals.

He stands out as an offensive-minded defense prospect whose style translates well to fantasy formats. Pickford consistently activates into the play, joins the rush, and looks to create shooting lanes from the blue line, using his mobility to stay involved while maintaining enough defensive structure. If that offensive confidence and versatility carry over to higher levels and he earns power-play deployment, he has the potential to become a fantasy-relevant contributor from the back end.

Sell Candidates

David Reinbacher, D

Reinbacher is still widely viewed as one of Montreal’s safest defense prospects, and for good reason. He plays a composed, efficient two-way game, defends well, moves the puck cleanly, and brings the size and mobility NHL teams want in a top-four blueliner. He should help the Canadiens play more structured, reliable hockey as he matures, which gives him clear real-life value within the organization.

For dynasty managers, though, the concern is his offensive ceiling. Reinbacher’s game is built more on stability and efficiency than high-end creativity, and his pNHLe has trended downward since his draft year. His play-driving metrics in the AHL have also been poor, which adds another layer of concern when projecting his long-term fantasy upside. That does not mean he lacks value, but it does make it less likely that he develops into a strong fantasy asset, especially in formats that do not reward peripheral contributions. If his current dynasty value still reflects expectations of notable power-play production or top-end scoring from the back end, this may be the right time to sell before his profile settles in as a dependable but lower-scoring NHL defenseman.

Owen Beck, C

Beck has built a reputation as one of the more dependable two-way centers in Montreal’s prospect system. His strengths include faceoff ability, responsible defensive play, and strong positioning across all three zones, all traits that tend to earn trust from coaches. He has also been a reasonable producer in the AHL, which supports the view that he can become a useful NHL player. Still, his profile points more toward a reliable, play-driving bottom-six center than an offensive focal point.

For dynasty purposes, that limits the appeal. Hockey Prospecting gives him a zero percent chance of becoming a star, which may be a little harsh, but its NHLer probability has him at nearly a 50% chance of playing 200 games, a mark that feels realistic. Beck should have real-life value if he becomes the type of center who can drive play, handle tough minutes, and stabilize a lower line, but that role does not usually translate into strong fantasy value unless the league is especially deep. If another manager still views him as a potential top-six offensive contributor, this could be a good time to explore moving him.

LJ Mooney, RW

Mooney is one of the more entertaining skill prospects in Montreal’s system, relying on creativity, puckhandling, and offensive flair to generate scoring chances. He is tenacious, competes hard in every situation, and plays with the kind of energy that makes him easy to root for. His Fantasy Hockey Life skater card also highlights how effective he is in several key areas, especially puck battles won and loose-puck recoveries, which are particularly important traits for a smaller player trying to overcome physical disadvantages. Those details help explain why he has become such an intriguing prospect despite his lack of size.

That said, it is still difficult to ignore his stature. At just 5-foot-8, the barrier to entry to the NHL remains immense, and projecting smaller skill forwards into meaningful scoring roles always carries added uncertainty. As the competition gets stronger, faster, and more physical, players who rely on finesse have to consistently prove they can create space and hold up against bigger defenders. I would love to see Mooney succeed, but the odds are still working against him, and if his current dynasty value already reflects a top-six offensive projection, this may be the prudent time to sell while optimism remains high.

Summary

Player Role Key Insight
Michael Hage Buy Skilled center with strong offensive-driver potential
Alexander Zharovsky Buy Creative winger with under-the-radar upside
Bryce Pickford Buy Offensive-minded defense prospect worth monitoring
David Reinbacher Sell Excellent real-life defender but uncertain fantasy ceiling
Owen Beck Sell Reliable center whose role may limit scoring output
LJ Mooney Sell High-skill prospect with significant projection risk

 

 

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MCKEEN’S 2025-26 NHL YEARBOOK – MONTREAL CANADIENS – Top 15 Prospect Profiles – Organizational Rank #3 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2025-26-nhl-yearbook-montreal-canadiens-top-15-prospect-profiles-organizational-rank-3/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2025-26-nhl-yearbook-montreal-canadiens-top-15-prospect-profiles-organizational-rank-3/#respond Fri, 10 Oct 2025 14:55:59 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=195194 Read More... from MCKEEN’S 2025-26 NHL YEARBOOK – MONTREAL CANADIENS – Top 15 Prospect Profiles – Organizational Rank #3

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MONTREAL, QC - SEPTEMBER 25:Montreal Canadiens defenseman David Reinbacher (64) waits for a face-off during the New Jersey Devils versus the Montreal Canadiens preseason game on September 25, 2023, at Bell Centre in Montreal, QC (Photo by David Kirouac/Icon Sportswire)

Prospect System Ranking – 3rd (May 2025 - 1st)
GM: Kent Hughes Hired: January 2022
COACH: Martin St. Louis Hired: February 2022

The Ivan Demidov era has officially arrived. After posting the most points by a rookie in the KHL, McKeen’s second-ranked prospect made his NHL debut this spring and immediately captured the Bell Centre faithful with a goal and an assist. His arrival, coupled with the established presence of Lane Hutson and young NHLers Cole Caulfield, Nick Suzuki, and Juraj Slafkovský, signals that Kent Hughes’s rebuild is shifting into high gear—backed by one of the NHL’s deepest prospect pools.

David Reinbacher, their top prospect behind Demidov, was limited to just 10 regular-season games in his North American debut before returning for a stronger postseason showing. Still, his upside remains prevalent. Suiting up with him in Laval is a cluster of skilled forwards—Joshua Roy, Owen Beck, Luke Tuch, and Oliver Kapanen—who have all made good progress. Beck’s 44-point rookie campaign ranked ninth among all AHL freshmen, while Roy added 35 of his own. Both have seen NHL time and are close to securing full time spots.

Hughes wasn’t afraid to augment his system with established young NHLers, either. The addition of Noah Dobson gives Montreal a cornerstone defender to go alongside Hutson, even at the expense of back-to-back 2025 firsts. Meanwhile, Zachary Bolduc was acquired from St. Louis in a swap for Logan Mailloux, further deepening the forward group.

In goal, Jacob Fowler continues to emerge as one of the Habs’ biggest steals. The 2023 third rounder captured the Mike Richter Award as the NCAA’s top goaltender before joining Laval, where he carried over his success with a 3-3-0 playoff record. While he’s not guaranteed an NHL role in 2025-26, the battle between Fowler and Jakub Dobes—who emerged as a surprise NHL option—could provide Montreal with stability in net for years to come.

Montreal Canadiens Top-15 Prospects

1 - Ivan Demidov

Despite adversity, Demidov took advantage of every second he was given and proved why he was arguably the best prospect outside of the NHL. He is one of the most dynamic players in the world, dominating at the KHL level as he weaves through opponents with elite handiwork and impressive speed. He showed off his smarts, reading defensive schemes and setting his teammates up with highlight reel passes in situations that look impossible for a goal to be created. Defensively, he will still need to polish some timing and positioning issues, but he is a hardworking, disciplined player who will be able to hold his own against the world’s best. Ivan could have easily played on Montreal’s roster last season and immediately proved his worth, showing some flashy playmaking and even contributing in Montreal's return to the playoffs. Ivan will be a gamechanger in the Canadien’s top six for years to come and will be a perennial MVP challenger in the prime of his career.

2 - David Reinbacher

It’s unfortunate that David Reinbacher missed so much time due to injury this past season, as it may have postponed the expectation that Reinbacher would suit up for the Montreal Canadiens as a full-time defender as early as this coming season. Reinbacher was first sidelined after an awkward collision in an NHL preseason game against the Toronto Maple Leafs, which resulted in early-season knee surgery for the talented young defenceman. Reinbacher did later return to play for the Laval Rocket, and even looked quite good in important playoff minutes, but it looks like he will start this coming season with Laval. As for his game, the tools are still there; he defends very well with his stick, he can skate with the best, and he can break up plays before they happen. It may just take a bit more time, through no fault of his own, until he becomes a full-time top four defender at the NHL level.

3 - Jacob Fowler

Fowler improved greatly upon his already phenomenal freshman season after winning the Mike Richter award as the country’s top goalie in the NCAA. He’s an elite positional goalie who has exceptional footwork, play-reading and has surprisingly great quickness and athleticism. His consistency is incredible and is rarely seen from a 20-year-old goalie, only allowing more than three goals on two occasions this year in 35 games. He can get beat cleanly high, a product of subpar tracking and inactive hands, something to be concerned about but it isn’t detrimental. He plays a very projectable game to the NHL with few gaping faults and a lot of elite strengths. Even though he has chosen to leave Boston College to turn pro, he still shouldn’t be rushed into the NHL like fellow Mike Richter Trophy-winning goalie Devon Levi. He still needs to develop his hands and tracking, he will need time in the AHL or else he will get picked apart by NHL shooters, losing confidence and stunting his growth. If done right, he could turn out to be an elite goalie.

4 - Michael Hage

Michael Hage has adapted greatly to the college game, showcasing high-end speed, awareness, and stickhandling that enable him to drive play through controlled zone entries. His offensive impact is evident in his ability to pursue open space and maintain offensive zone time. He actively engages in loose puck battles and stick checks, leading to extended offensive pressure and aiding in defensive zone breakouts. Hage has also displayed solid defensive coverage and positioning, demonstrating growth towards a complete 200-foot game. While his offensive instincts and play-driving abilities are clear strengths, he can further improve by consistently supporting breakouts in the defensive zone. His deployment on the power play indicates his offensive potential, and his commitment to backchecking and staying engaged in puck play points to a well-rounded development path. As he continues refining his defensive consistency, Hage projects as a skilled forward with the potential to be a top six contributor in all situations at the NHL level.

5 - Owen Beck

Owen Beck was a very good player at both ends of the ice last season with the Laval Rocket, and he did it while being asked to play in all situations. When Beck’s playing his game, he utilizes his skating and physicality to hound opposing players for loose pucks. He’s also extremely trustworthy at both ends of the ice - when you need a goal, or need to prevent a goal, Beck can be counted on. Beck’s compete and battle level was on full display last season with both the Laval Rocket and Montreal Canadiens, albeit for the latter while playing in a bit of a lesser role, but his overall game screams a surefire NHL player. He probably won’t develop into a first-line offensive forward at the NHL level, as he has good but not great offensive skill, but he should enjoy a long career as a trustworthy, two-way middle six forward. Beck should be battling to carve out a full-time fourth-line role this fall with the Canadiens.

6 - Oliver Kapanen

Kapanen made the Canadiens out of camp but couldn’t quite stick it for very long. Rather than go to the AHL, Kapanen went on loan to Timrå of the SHL and absolutely lit it up. He was always a step ahead of the game, reading play near-perfectly and having a well-thought-out plan before touching the puck. His stellar hockey sense and work ethic drive a lot of good results offensively and defensively. However, despite scoring almost a point per game in the SHL, his offensive upside probably won’t be that great in the NHL. He can’t drive a line, but he can work well within space and compliment teammates with more dynamic playmaking qualities. Kapanen already looks like a capable young NHLer who will only look more comfortable as he gets more games under his belt. A player with Kapanen’s toolkit is better suited for a bottom six center role in the NHL but could play higher in the Canadiens line up if need be.

7 - Jakub Dobes

Jakub Dobes has made early headway into the NHL, solidifying himself as a reliable backup for Montreal this past year. Dobes is a very strong positional goalie, often opting for the Hellebuyck style to play deeper, allowing the play to come to him in place of it dictating his movement. However, his skating isn’t amazing or fluid, he often looks clunky, and while it’s passable, his speed and athleticism are on the weaker side for NHL goalies. To offset this, he has to have good play-reading capabilities, which luckily, he possesses. This, paired with his positioning, can hide his lack of physical talents, but it puts a cap on his ceiling. It’s questionable if Dobes could become a true starting level goalie, but he’s already shown to be an NHL capable goalie regardless of role at a young age, something that most have not been able to do. To break through his current ceiling, he will have to improve upon his skating, a very difficult thing to do at this point, but not impossible.

8 - Josh Roy

Josh Roy put together another solid professional season, where he split time in a number of different roles with the Laval Rocket and the Montreal Canadiens in 2024-2025. It was expected that Roy would make the Canadiens full time out of camp at the beginning of last season, but he was a final cut and began the year with the Laval Rocket. While playing in Laval, Roy put his offensive abilities on full display, where he was a constant scoring threat each time he entered the offensive zone. Roy also worked on his defensive game last season and can be counted upon to provide energy in a bottom six role. There’s debate over what kind of player Roy can be at the NHL level, but it’s looking right now that his ceiling appears to be that of a third line forward. He does have to continue to work on his compete level, especially if he hopes to make the Canadiens this fall, but he possesses the offensive abilities of a full-time NHL player.

9 - Adam Engström

Adam Engström was arguably one of the best rookies in the AHL last season, and he did it while playing significant minutes for a very good Laval Rocket team. What’s particularly impressive about Engström’s game is his hockey awareness at both ends of the ice. He’s a great passer, but he’s also an extremely capable defender off the rush. These skills allow Engström to turn good defence into good offence, where he can break up plays in transition and turn them into quick outlet passes, creating opportunities off the rush for his forwards. There’s no question that Engström carries the potential to become a top four NHL defenceman with his unique size and athleticism, but he will need to continue working on his game in Laval to reach that projection. There’s still room for Engström to improve his offence, and his defensive game could really use some increased physicality. Look for Engström to continue to play a big role with the Rocket this upcoming season and get some games in limited minutes with the Montreal Canadiens.

10 - Alex Zharovsky

Alexander Zharovsky may become one of the steals of the draft after Montreal was able to snatch him up at the start of the second round. Zharovsky’s hands are elite and allow him to maneuver through complex situations like very few others at the junior level. He slips around defenders with ease and at times, it looks like the puck is fastened to his stick with string as he is able to maintain possession through some heavy pressure. His playmaking is also very good. He is able to plan his decisions and execute them with precision to create dangerous looks. There is still a lot of work that needs to be done if we are going to see Alex reach his potential. He lags behind other top picks in skating and shooting and will need to improve his effort on the defensive side of the puck. He looks to have a top six ceiling who could be a game breaking playmaker for the Habs.

11 - Florian Xhekaj

Xhekaj turned heads in his rookie pro season thanks to 24 goals, and a whopping 175 penalty minutes. His competitiveness in puck pursuit is a standout trait, but he also has speed and an ability to generate scoring chances that could make him an intriguing depth player in the NHL. The next step for Xhekaj will be to continue to establish himself as a reliable pro.

12 - Filip Mesar

Mesar has not yet lived up to his first-round billing, especially with a disappointing rookie season in Laval from an offensive standpoint. However, the tools are still there, as Mesar’s quickness and hands in tight remained intact. Although he might not “wow”, Mesar still profiles as a solid pro and should see some improvement in Laval this year.

13 - Sean Farrell

Farrell took a step forward offensively this season, posting 20 goals in the AHL and carving out a bit of a niche in the bumper position on the power play. Farrell has an intriguing offensive toolkit, with good passing vision and a hard shot. To take the next step, though, he’ll have to continue to add strength and speed. He will compete for an NHL job this fall, likely returning to the AHL thereafter.

14 - Bogdan Konyushkov

Konyushkov logged heavy minutes in the KHL last season, playing nearly 23 minutes a night for Torpedo. He was featured both on the power play and on the penalty kill and has an ability to get involved offensively while making a solid first pass. He is under KHL contract through the end of the 2026-27 season, where he will be able to make the jump to North America.

15 - Yevgeni Volokhin

Volokhin made the jump to the KHL this season to mostly solid results after two very impressive seasons in the MHL. Despite not possessing elite size, he has active hands in the net that help him get to difficult shots. He has plenty of runway in the KHL to continue to improve his game.

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McKeen’s 2025-26 Hockey Pool Yearbook Feature – Fantasy Prospect Rankings https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2025-fantasy-prospect-rankings/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2025-fantasy-prospect-rankings/#respond Tue, 07 Oct 2025 19:47:09 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=195960 Read More... from McKeen’s 2025-26 Hockey Pool Yearbook Feature – Fantasy Prospect Rankings

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ST. LOUIS, MO - APRIL 12: Boston defenseman Cole Hutson (44) handles the puck during the championship game of the NCAA D1 Frozen Four between the Boston University Terriers and the Western Michigan Broncos on April 12, 2025, at Enterprise Center, St. Louis, MO. (Photo by Keith Gillett/Icon Sportswire)

When preparing for a fantasy draft or evaluating prospects for a trade in your fantasy league you need to understand the difference between rankings, and fantasy rankings. The difference can be subtle, or significant depending on your leagues scoring and format. Generally speaking, fantasy rankings are based on projected point production. I have found that the vast majority of readers who read and follow my work are in dynasty keeper leagues with peripheral stats, or bangers leagues. The following rankings are based on projected point production and include added value to players who can contribute other stats, such as hits, blocks, PIMs, and faceoff wins. In fantasy hockey, we have a limited number of prospect roster spots and as such I put higher value on prospects who have a quicker ETA to the NHL or have superstar upside. This will help you identify the top 30 forwards, 20 defencemen and ten goalies to target in your fantasy leagues. To be considered a prospect skaters must be under 26-years-old as of September 15th, 2024, and have played in under 60 career games, or less than 35 in a single season. For goalies, less than 30 career games played, or 15 in a single season.

Forwards

1 - Ivan Demidov, RW – Montreal Canadiens

Demidov made his NHL debut with much anticipation and expectations, and he did not disappoint with a two-point showing in his first game. There is a lot of hype surrounding Demidov and if he lives up to the potential, he could very well go down as one of the all-time scoring leaders in Montreal and flirt with 1,000 career points, joining the ranks of legends like Guy Lafleur, Jean Beliveau, and Henri Richard.

2 - Ryan Leonard, C – Washington Capitals

The big man on campus was the Hockey East Player of the Year and scoring champion with 49 points in 37 games at Boston College. He also captained Team USA to a WJC Gold Medal and then made his NHL debut in Washington scoring his first career goal. Leonard will be an NHL regular starting in the 2025-26 season and should be a Calder contender in his rookie season. His value in multi-category leagues is even higher.

3 - Isaac Howard, LW – Edmonton Oilers

Hot off a Hoby Baker Award winning season as a senior with Michigan State, Howard and the Lightning were at a contract impasse. Rather than lose him as an unrestricted free agent this summer, the Lightning traded him to the Oilers. Howard should see an opportunity to crack the Oilers roster in a top six role given their lack of prospect depth. His new ELC will fit in the Oilers budget and playing with either Connor McDavid or Leon Draisaitl could push Howard into the forefront of the Calder race.

4 - Beckett Sennecke, RW – Anaheim Ducks

A late season surge pushed Sennecke up the draft ranking all the way to third overall in his draft season. He has carried that momentum into hi D+1 season scoring 86 points in 56 games for the Generals. Don’t make the same mistake Team Canada made by erroneously omitting him from the 2025 WJC roster, Sennecke is a play driving forward with tremendous hockey sense and skill as well as size at 6-foot-4. Sennecke has another year of junior eligibility but could make the Ducks roster as soon as this season.

5 - Michael Misa, C – San Jose Sharks

Drafted second overall in the 2025 NHL Draft, Misa has been the first overall selection in all my fantasy drafts and mock drafts. Misa has been a highly anticipated fantasy prospect since becoming the latest OHL exceptional status recipient. He has a Memorial Cup Championship on his resume, is coming off a 134-point campaign and will spend his D+1 season developing in the NCAA against bigger, stronger, faster competition that will only make him more NHL ready for his ETA of 2026-27.

6 - Jimmy Snuggerud, RW – St. Louis Blues

After posting 51-points as captain of the Minnesota Golden Gophers and a finalist for the Hoby Baker, Snuggerud made a splash in the NHL with the Blues. Playing in the Blues final seven regular season games, he notched four points and then duplicated that performance in the playoffs. Snuggerud looks to be a lock for a top six role with the Blues and could be a solid Calder sleeper candidate if his early chemistry with Robert Thomas continues.

7 - Gabe Perreault, LW – New York Rangers

A lot of super-star players have come from the USNTDP, but Perreault holds the single season point record with 132 points in the 2022-23 season. Perreault just completed his sophomore season at Boston College and posted 16 goals and 32 assists in 37 games with the Eagles. He also was a key player in the USA WJC Gold Medal with 10 points in seven games. Perreault is a dynamic playmaker that also has a nose for the net and can finish. He played in five NHL games to close the season and while not a lock to make the Rangers out of training camp, he is their top prospect and a fantasy must own.

8 - Berkley Catton, C – Seattle Kraken

Catton was the 2024 draft class leading scorer with his 115-points, which puts him in the company of an elite group of players the likes of Sidney Crosby, Patrick Kane and Connor Bedard to post such lofty production in their draft year. I am not suggesting that Catton has that kind of NHL and fantasy value, but he is the Krakens most dynamically gifted offensive player and has tremendous upside.

9 - Ilya Protas, LW – Washington Capitals

When the Capitals drafted Alexei Protas’ younger brother in the third round, it might have appeared to be a pick motivated by nepotism. Then Ilya moved from the USHL to the OHL with the Windsor Spitfires and had a breakout season to the tune of 50 goals, and 124 points (second in OHL scoring) and now looks like a steal of a third-round pick. Since he was drafted from the USHL, he can move up to the AHL for the coming season and further his development. Look for the Protas brothers to be a force in the Nations capital for the foreseeable future.

10 - Tij Iginla, LW – Utah Mammoth

The first pick in Utah’s franchise history, Iginla was on pace for a stellar D+1 season with 14 goals and 31 points in 21 games with Kelowna before a hip injury ended his season early. After surgery, the expectation is that he will return to Kelowna for an important season of development in the WHL, and with Canada at the WJC before he joins the NHL. Tij was drafted higher than his father, Hall-Of-Famer and Calgary legend Jarome Iginla, can Tij match his old mans career status?

11 - Porter Martone, RW – Philadelphia Flyers

Two things stand out with Martone: his dynamic offensive game and his size. However, for all you banger leaguers reading, don’t be fooled to think he is going to rack up hits and PIM’s as that is not really his game. He is a finesse playmaking winger. Martone has committed to take his development to Michigan State in the NCAA for his D+1 season in hopes that playing against older, stronger and better competition will make him NHL ready for the 2026-27 season.

12 - James Hagens, C – Boston Bruins

The consensus number one ranked prospect heading into the 2025 draft was Hagens. He played his draft year in the NCAA with Boston College and despite posting solid numbers as a freshman, he was unable to keep pace with Macklin Celebrinis’ pace from the previous season, and he fell on draft day to the Bruins. It is quite possible that Hagens ends up being the best fantasy prospect from his draft class, but he will return for at least one more year in the NCAA. Look for a spike in his production and for him to challenge for a Hoby Baker nomination.

13 - Cayden Lindstrom, C – Columbus Blue Jackets

Lindstrom is a unicorn as a 6-foot-4, 214-pound center that scored 46 goals and 46 points in 32 games with Medicine Hat in his draft year. He combines skill, skating, smarts, and size in such a rare and dominant package. A well documented herniated disc back injury that ended his draft season after 32 games and all but eliminated his D+1 season minus a few playoff, and Memorial Cup games is the other side of his story. Lindstrom will play the coming season in the NCAA with Michigan State where he will try to regain his health, conditioning and further his development. If he can realize his massive potential, he has franchise upside and would be a dominant player in multi-category leagues. Or, he could have a set back from his back injury and follow Nolan Patrick’s career path. High risk, but high reward potential.

14 - Arseni Gritsyuk, RW – New Jersey Devils

Gritsyuk may be a sleeper prospect, but don’t sleep on the Russian sniper. He is coming in hot from the KHL where he posted 17 goals and 44-points in 49 games. While he was only a fifth-round pick from the 2019, the now 24-year-old is NHL ready and will step into a top six role in New Jersey. He may not have the same offensive upside as some of the players in the range of his ranking but given his advanced development the wait time is zero, which moves the needle.

15 - Dalibor Dvorsky, C – St. Louis Blues

The AHL can be a meatgrinder that chews up and spits out teenage hockey prospects. Despite that, Dvorsky played last year as a 19-year-old and posted 21 goals and 45 points in 61 games with Springfield and was second in league rookie scoring. Dvorsky also shone at the WJC last year with Slovakia, scoring nine points in just five games. His play earned him an NHL cup of coffee, two games but he failed to record any points playing limited minutes. Dvorsky still needs more AHL development, but his promising development suggests the 10th overall pick from the 2023 draft is well on his way to becoming an NHL regular and a fantasy must own player.

16 - Jonathan Lekkerimaki, RW – Vancouver Canucks

His first full season in North America was a success as the Canucks 2022 15th overall pick split time between the NHL and Abbotsford in the AHL. In the AHL he posted 28 points in 36 games and another seven in 16 playoff games en route to a Calder Cup Championship. In his 24 NHL games the Swedish winger posted six points while averaging 12:30 of ice time. Expect him to be a full time NHL player this year and to see elevated minutes, leading to numbers similar to what he produced in the AHL.

17 - Brad Nadeau, RW – Carolina Hurricanes

The Hurricanes must feel like the drafted a top ten player with their 30th overall pick from 2023. As a freshman in his D+1 season at University of Maine, Nadeau posted 19 goals and 46 points in 37 games. He followed up that with an impressive rookie season in the AHL to the tune of 32 goals and 58 points in 64 games with the Chicago Wolves. His underwhelming production at the WJC with Canada was curious, but the entire team underwhelmed. Nadeau made his NHL debut on April 16th and earned his first career point against Montreal. Look for his sophomore season to see more NHL opportunities as he plays his way into a top six role with the Canes.

18 - Anton Frondell, C – Chicago Blackhawks

Drafted third overall by the Hawks in 2025, the Swedish center brings size at 6-foot-1, 205 pounds, a high-level hockey sense, and skill level to his game. He would be better slotted as a second line center at the NHL level as his two-way game is more his calling card as opposed to a go-to offensive driver. The 18-year-old will likely play two more seasons in the SHL before crossing over to North America, meaning a little more wait time and a limited offensive ceiling compared to his draft status.

19 - Danila Yurov, RW – Minnesota Wild

The 21-year-old Russian saw his production dip from 0.79 to 0.54 points per game in the final year of his KHL contract. Despite the disappointing production, with 209 career KHL games of development he has signed with the Wild and will play in North America to the delight of fantasy managers who roster Yurov. With Yakov Trenin, Vlad Tarasenko, and Kirill Kaprizov providing some fellow Russian support, he should adjust quickly and could play his way into a top six role sooner than later.

20 - Caleb Desnoyers, C – Utah Mammoth

Desnoyers could be the most underrated player in the 2025 draft, which says a lot sine he was selected fourth overall. A 6-foot-2 center Desnoyers has excellent hockey sense, size, skating, skill and compete. He has played a key role and produced all season starting with a point per game to lead Canada to Gold at the Hlinka. He was the first line center for Team CHL at the Prospects Challenge and was a point per game again. With his club team in Moncton, he posted 84-points in 56 games and lead the Wildcats in playoff scoring with 30-points in 19 games to be named playoff MVP, and a league championship. He is the best two-way player, and that takes nothing away from his offensive game.

21 - Rutger McGroarty, C – Pittsburgh Penguins

After being acquired from the Jets for Brayden Yager, McGroarty made his pro debut and impressed, splitting time between the NHL and AHL. In Wilkes-Barre/Scranton he played 60 games, notching 14 goals and 39 points. While he only played in eight NHL games, he impressed with three points, playing a physical game as well showing he can have an impact away from the puck. With the Pens looking to rebuild, he is a corner stone player going forward, starting now.

22 - Quentin Musty, RW – San Jose Sharks

Musty had a frustrating season. It began by holding out for a trade from Sudbury in the OHL. A deal never happened so he resumed playing and scored 59 points in 33 games before an injury put him on the shelf until the playoffs. He returned for game two but despite four points, the Wolves were swept in four by Kingston. He will turn pro now and play his rookie season in the AHL. The 6-foot-2 winger has size and played a power game at the OHL; he could be an impactful top six winger with his size and shot.

23 - Calum Ritchie, C – New York Islanders

When the Islanders acquired Ritchie at the NHL trade deadline, he instantly became their top prospect. Ritchie started the season in the NHL with the Avalanche where he played seven games and scored his first career goal with his signature shootout move (a spectacular deke as he fakes the shoot like he fanned then quickly backhands it home). He returned to the Oshawa Generals where he dominated with 70 points and 50 PIM in 47 games and led the Generals back to a league championship rematch vs London. Ritchie should be a regular on Long Island this fall.

24 - Matthew Savoie, RW – Edmonton Oilers

The Oilers added Savoie in a trade with Buffalo, and he instantly became the Oilers top prospect. Savoie is an undersized forward at 5-foot-9, 179 pounds but he is also a prolific offensive player. He posted some hefty point totals in the WHL and in his first full pro season, he scored 19 goals and 54 points in 66 games in Bakersfield. He made his debut in Edmonton as well, playing in four games and recorded his first career point. He has the skill to play and produce in the NHL, but size is a concern.

25 - Igor Chernyshov, LW – San Jose Sharks

The big Russian winger made the move to North America after the Sharks selected him with the first pick of round two in the 2024 NHL Draft. His debut was delayed following an off-season shoulder surgery, but when he resumed playing with Saginaw in the OHL he dominated with 19 goals and 55 points in just 23 games. Saginaw was eliminated in the first round, and he was called up to play two AHL games with the Barracuda. It is expected he will play the coming season in the AHL, to further his development, but he has NHL top six winger upside with his size, skating and shooting ability.

26 - Easton Cowan, C – Toronto Maple Leafs

The Leaf's top prospect is poised to bring his game to the NHL for the coming season. In his final year in the OHL with the London Knights, Cowan led the OHL in playoff scoring (39-points in 17 games), added a second straight league championship, and led the Memorial Cup in soring to lead the Knights to victory. He is slightly undersized at 5-foot-11, 185 pounds but he plays a physical game to complement his dynamic skill and vision.

27 - Andrew Cristall, LW – Washington Capitals

A true boom-or-bust player. Cristall is as dynamic an offensive player as you will find. His career WHL point production is off the chart with 412 points in 248 games (1.66 points per game). He finished his WHL career with Spokane in the playoffs where he scored 21 goals and 41 points in 19 games. How could such a dominant player be a bust? He is just 5-foot-10 and 183 pounds as the NHL trends towards size again. Also, his defensive game and compete level is a liability. These factors kept him off the Canada WJC roster. If he plays in the NHL, he will be great, but there have been plenty of prolific junior scorers that never made the NHL.

28 - Cole Eiserman, RW – New York Islanders

“Goal” Eiserman is a polarizing player. His offensive upside is significant. He is the all-time NTDP goal scoring leader, was a key player for USA winning Gold at the 2025 WJC with seven points. As a freshman at Boston University, he scored 25 goals and 36 points in 39 games. His play away from the puck is where scouts have concerns with his game. Eiserman will return for his sophomore season with the Terriers where he will continue to score goals, and more importantly develop his overall game.

29 - Jake O’Brien, C – Seattle Kraken

Perhaps the player from the 2025 draft class with the most upside is O’Brien. The 6-foot-2 center has tremendous vision and hockey sense, a late June birthday means he has plenty of development road head where his potential can grow. While his physical game is lacking as his slender 176-pound frame needs to fill out, there are very few flaws in his game overall.

30 - Liam Ohgren, LW – Minnesota Wild

Ohgren made his North American debut last season and had a tremendously successful rookie season in the AHL scoring 37 points in 41 games on a poor Iowa Wild team. His play earned him an NHL audition of 24 games, but he was limited to an average of 11:06 in ice time and only managed five points. Ohgren should be ready for a bigger role in Minnesota, and his point production should increase with more playing time.

Defence

1 - Zayne Parekh, RD – Calgary Flames

Parekh dominated the OHL in his draft year and then returned for his D+1 season and posted 33 goals, 107 points and 96 PIM. He was an egregious omission from the Team Canada WJC roster and made his NHL debut on April 17th scoring his first career NHL goal in a 5-1 win over LA. Parekh is still junior eligible as a 19-year-old but is almost assured to be a full time NHL player this season. It should not take long for him to secure a top four pairing and first power play role in Calgary. Parekh could have a similar rookie season as Lane Hutson had and be a Calder candidate.

2 - Cole Hutson, LD - Washington Capitals

Hutson 2.0 is a similar player to his older brother Lane. Cole is developing in the NCAA at Boston University and posted 48 points in 39 games in his freshman season. His real breakout however was on the World stage with USA at the WJC where he led the tournament in scoring with 11 points in seven games. Cole has another season with the Terriers coming up before he is ready to join the Capitals in the NHL. When he arrives, it is not out of the question for him to have the same impact Lane Hutson had, or even better.

3 - Matthew Schaefer, LD – New York Islanders

The top pick from the 2025 Draft class has signed with the Islanders, and all signs point towards him making the Islanders out of training camp and becoming an NHL rookie. A shoulder injury limited him to just 17 games in Erie last season, so a return to the OHL would not be the worst scenario for his long-term development.

4 - Zeev Buium, LD – Minnesota Wild

All Buium does is win. At 19-years-old his trophy case already includes a World Championship, an NCAA Championship, two WJC Golds and a U-18 Gold. Buium made his NHL debut in the playoffs and recorded his first career point playing in four games. Buium is not only a lock to make the Wild roster, but he should also be a top pairing impact player right out of the gate.

5 - Alexander Nikishin, LD – Carolina Hurricanes

The 23-year-old Russian blueliner has been one of the most anticipated players to come from the KHL for several years. The 6-foot-4, 216-pound defender captained SKA St. Petersburg for two seasons and posted career KHL stats of 54 goals and 177 points in 288 games. He has signed in Carolina and made his NHL debut in the playoffs, earning his first career point in four games. He will have to compete with Shane Gostisbehere and K’Andre Miller for top power play deployment but count on Nikishin playing big minutes in his rookie season.

6 - Artyom Levshunov, RD – Chicago Blackhawks

The 2024 second overall pick only played 18 NHL games in his rookie season, but as a 19-year-old he produced 22 points in 52 AHL games with Rockford. Can he breakout as the Hawks top pairing and first power play quarterback in his sophomore season? He will have to outplay Sam Rinzel and Kevin Korchinski to do so, but it is a real possibility as soon as this fall.

7 - Luca Cagnoni, LD – San Jose Sharks

All Cagnoni is missing to be ranked higher is size and draft pedigree. At 5-foot-9 he comes up short by todays NHL standards, and as a fourth-round pick, he lacks the golden ticket first round picks get. However, his on-ice production speaks volumes, scoring 16 goals and 52 points in 64 games as a AHL rookie with the Barracuda. Cagnoni is the future first power play quarterback in San Jose on a unit that will include Macklin Celebrini, Will Smith and Michael Misa. Cagnoni could be a fantasy beast!

8 - Sam Dickinson, LD – San Jose Sharks

Where will Dickinson play in the 2025-26 season? He posted 91 points in 55 games, won a second consecutive OHL Championship and a Memorial Cup Championship. He has another year of junior eligibility remaining, so the AHL is not an option, but has signed an NHL contract so the NCAA is not an option either. He has nothing left to learn in the OHL, so he looks ready to make the jump to the NHL.

9 - Axel Sandin-Pellikka, RD – Detroit Red Wings

ASP is a rising star and the Wings top prospect. The 5-foot-11 right shot defender has tremendous poise on the ice, sees the ice very well, carries the puck and dictates the play with authority. After a solid SHL career of 52 points in 107 games including an SHL Championship, he made his debut in the AHL to close the season. A full year of AHL development is to be expected under GM Steve Yzerman, but a future blueline anchored by Mo Seider, Simon Edvinsson and ASP sets up the Red Wings for a decade.

10 - Tristan Luneau, RD – Anaheim Ducks

After injury limited Luneau to just 13 combined AHL and NHL games in his rookie season, he returned in 2024-25 to post near point per game production with the Gulls with 52 points in 59 games. The 6-foot-1 right shot offensive defenceman has great upside, but he also has his work cut out for him to crack the Ducks top four with competition the likes of Jacob Trouba, Jackson Lacombe, Olen Zellweger, and Pavel Mintyukov.

11 - Carter Yakemchuk, RD – Ottawa Senators

There were a lot of skeptics when Ottawa selected the 6-foot-4 right shot offensive defenceman at seven ahead of Zayne Parekh, Zeev Buium and Sam Dickinson at the ’24 Draft. A lot of those critics were silenced when Yakemchuk nearly made the Sens roster after a tremendous preseason performance. He was returned to the WHL for his senior year and was slightly underwhelming seeing his point totals dip and failing to be make the Canadian WJC roster. His pro career will begin, likely in Belleville for a season before assuming the top pairing role on the right side in Ottawa next to Jake Sanderson.

12 - Sam Rinzel, RD – Chicago Blackhawks

Rinzel had a breakout season in 2024-25. It was not just his 10-goal, 32-point performance as a sophomore at University of Minnesota, but his nine game NHL audition in which he averaged over 23 minutes of ice time including an average of 2:24 powerplay time on ice where he delivered five points. The 21-year-old is the early favorite to be the first power play quarterback heading into the upcoming season. Don’t sleep on Rinzel, he has some big upside.

13 - Seamus Casey, RD – New Jersey Devils

The 5-foot-10 right shot offensive defenceman had a strong rookie season starting in the NHL with an eight-game run with the Devils where he posted three goals before an AHL assignment. Overall, he racked up 18 points in 30 AHL games and finished the season back in the NHL with New Jersey. With Dougie Hamilton, Luke Hughes, and Simon Nemic in the fold, getting ice time, let alone power play time will be difficult barring injury.

14 - Scott Morrow, RD – New York Rangers

Acquired from Carolina along with a first and second round pick in the K’Andre Miller trade, Morrow could fill the gap from Miller out of camp behind Adam Fox on the Rangers second pairing. Morrow had a strong rookie season the year prior posting 39 points in 52 games with the Chicago Wolves and had a 14-game NHL run with the Hurricanes scoring six points.

15 - Logan Mailloux, RD – St. Louis Blues

Acquired from Montreal for Zac Bolduc this summer, Mailloux is now the top defensive prospect in the Blues system. Mailloux is NHL ready after a second AHL campaign with 80 points and 165 PIM in 135 career games, and five points in eight career NHL games. Mailloux will no longer be considered a prospect as he will make the Blues roster full time, and battle Justin Faulk and Cam Fowler for top power play deployment.

16 - David Reinbacher, RD – Montreal Canadiens

The 6-foot-2 Austrian defender made a splash in his AHL debut in 2023-24 when he posted five points in the final 11 games in Laval. Injuries kept him out of action until he returned for the Olympics with Austria and finished the season again in the AHL with Laval. His six points in 13 playoff games with the Rocket are promising but a nearly full season lost to injury suggest he may need a time in the AHL before he is ready for Montreal. The departure of Logan Mailloux improves his stature in Montreal.

17 - Oliver Bonk, RD – Philadelphia Flyers

Widely considered to be a shutdown defender, a red flag in fantasy, Bonk has considerable fantasy value. At 6-foot-2 he has decent size and can play a physical role and contribute hits and blocks. But he has also contributed significant offensive numbers with 150 career regular season points in 189 games with the London Knights. Bonk was deployed as the net front presence on the power play regularly with London and was tried as the first powerplay quarterback for Canada at the WJC. His pro career will begin with a season in the AHL with Lehigh Valley before he becomes a top four NHL regular.

18 - Tanner Molendyk, LD – Nashville Predators

Nashville has a strong track record of drafting and developing top quality NHL defencemen. Tanner Molendyk is the latest and he nearly made the Predators out of training camp last year before returning for his final year in the WHL. He was a point per game player with Saskatoon and Medicine Hat and at the Memorial Cup. Molendyk will be an AHL rookie this season, but it likely won’t be long before he is patrolling the Predators blueline in a top four capacity.

19 - Hunter Brzustewicz, RD – Calgary Flames

His fantasy value took a big hit when the Flames drafted Zayne Parekh. Brzustewicz is an offensive defenceman that posted a 92-point season in the OHL, and in his AHL rookie campaign last year impressed with five goals and 32 points in 70 games with the Wranglers. Brzustewicz was a key piece in return from the Elias Lindholm trade so the Flames are invested, he has great offensive and fantasy upside, but the Parekh addition will take some of that critical power play ice time up.

20 - Tom Willander, RD – Vancouver Canucks

After two seasons in the shadow of a Hutson with the Boston University Terriers, Willander may be an underrated fantasy defenceman. With all the top offensive deployment at BU going to the Hutson’s, lane and Cole, Willander still managed to produce 49 points in 77 career games with the Terriers. His play with Sweden at the WJC was impressive as well with five points in seven games. Willander is a strong skating, puck moving two-way defender with offensive upside. Willander was signed by the Canucks and will start his professional career in the AHL with defending Calder Cup Champions Abbotsford.

Goalies

1 - Yaroslav Askarov – San Jose Sharks

The Sharks are building something special and Askarov should be a key piece of that puzzle. A top ranked goalie prospect for years, the move from Nashville and out from under Juuse Saros, gives Askarov has the opportunity to seize a starting role in San Jose. With the young core and foundations now in place, it’s just a short matter of time before this team becomes a powerhouse, and Askarov is a fantasy star.

2 - Jesper Wallstedt – Minnesota Wild

There is no sugar coating this, Wallstedt had a terrible season posting brutal numbers in both the AHL, and NHL in his third season in North America. Despite the setback, Wallstedt remains an elite goalie prospect and with the Wild building a defence that consist of Brock Faber, Zeev Buium, and David Jiricek the future still remains very bright.

3 - Jacob Fowler – Montreal Canadiens

It is difficult to understand how Fowler was not the top goalie selected in his draft year. Five other goalies went before he was selected 69th overall in the third round of the 2023 NHL Draft. Since then, he has established himself as an elite prospect playing at Boston College in the NCAA. Fowler has won a WJC Gold Medal with USA, a Hockey East Championship, and was named the Goalie of the Year winning the Mike Richter Award. Fowler is trending to be the next great Montreal Canadiens goalie following the likes of Ken Dryden, Patrick, Roy and Carey Price.

4 - Ilya Nabokov – Colorado Avalanche

A late bloomer, Nabokov was drafted in 2024 by the Avalanche after a breakout season in the KHL as a 21-year-old, where Nabokov won a Gagarian Cup and playoff MVP. Nabokov has signed his ELC with Colorado but has been loaned back to play the 2025-26 season in the KHL to ensure he gets playing time. Expect him to finish the season in the AHL as the KHL season ends in March, allowing him a small sample of North American hockey before being full time in 2026-27.

5 - Sebastian Cossa – Detroit Red Wings

The Wings 2021 15th overall draft pick has now played three full seasons of professional hockey with time in the ECHL, AHL, and he made his NHL debut in December with a 6-foot-5 shootout win over Buffalo. The past two seasons have been consistent and strong for Cossa, playing 40+ games in Grand Rapids and posting 20+ wins. The addition of John Gibson suggests that Detroit thinks he needs a little more development before he becomes their starting goalie.

6 - Drew Commesso – Chicago Blackhawks

On last years list I suggested Commesso was on track to develop into the Hawks starting goalie for the Connor Bedard glory years. Since then, the Hawks acquired Spencer Knight, and he appears to be the incumbent franchise goalie for the foreseeable future. Commesso had another impressive year of development in the AHL and is still quite capable of being an NHL starting goalie. Where and when are less certain now.

7 - Trey Augustine – Detroit Red Wings

The Red Wings added insulation to their goaltending future when they selected Augustine 41st overall in 2023. Since then, he has been developing with Michigan State U. in the NCAA with a career record of 42-16-6, two Big Ten Championships and two WJC Gold Medals with USA.  Augustine will play his junior season with the Spartans and will also need some AHL development time. He is further away than Cossa, but his upside could be higher.

8 - Niklas Kokko – Seattle Kraken

Kokko made his North American debut last season, and it was a strong one posting a 20-10-2 record in the AHL with a 2.26 GAA and .913 SV%. His strong play earned him an NHL recall, and he had a rough start coming in to relieve Joey Daccord in a 7-2 loss to the Blues where he allowed two goals on six shots. With Grubauer and Daccord under contract for the next two seasons, the 21-year-old Finnish netminder can continue to develop in the AHL with Coachella. He is a prospect on the rise.

9 - Mikhail Yegorov – New Jersey Devils

The Devils selected the Russian goalie from the USHL with their second-round pick in 2024 and Yegorov started his D+1 season back in the USHL with Omaha. Committed to Boston University in the NCAA, the Terriers were having goaltending concerns and brought “Big Mike” in just in time for the Bean Pot Tournament where he was outstanding leading the Terriers to victory. Yegorov played in 18 games total with an 11-6-1 record and 2.15 GAA. Still only 19-years-old, the 6-foot-5 netminder is a long way from the NHL, but he is showing tremendous potential.

10 - Hampton Slukynsky – Los Angeles Kings

Perhaps Slukynsky is still a little under the radar and not quite a household name in less deep dynasty leagues, but that is about to change. Selected 118th overall by the Kings, Slukynsky posted a 19-5-1 record as a freshman at Western Michigan and a sparkling 1.90 GAA. His trophy case includes USHL Goalie of the Year, Championships from the USHL, NCAA National and NCHC, and Gold Medals with USA from the U-18, WJC and World Championship. He is still just 20-years-old and needs a lot of development time before the NHL, but his stock is rising fast!

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MONTREAL, QC - APRIL 16:Ivan Demidov (93) of the Montreal Canadiens shoots the puck during the second period of the NHL game between the Carolina Hurricanes and the Montreal Canadiens on Apr 16 2025, at the Bell Centre in Montreal, QC (Photo by Vincent Ethier/Icon Sportswire)

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MCKEEN’S 2024-25 NHL YEARBOOK – MONTREAL CANADIENS – Top 15 Prospect Profiles – Organizational Rank #2 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2024-25-nhl-yearbook-montreal-canadiens-top-15-prospect-profiles-organizational-rank-2/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2024-25-nhl-yearbook-montreal-canadiens-top-15-prospect-profiles-organizational-rank-2/#respond Fri, 27 Sep 2024 13:00:12 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=188259 Read More... from MCKEEN’S 2024-25 NHL YEARBOOK – MONTREAL CANADIENS – Top 15 Prospect Profiles – Organizational Rank #2

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PARADISE, NV - JUNE 28: Ivan Demidov is drafted by the Montreal Canadians in the first round during the Upper Deck NHL Draft on June 28, 2024 at the Sphere in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Jeff Speer/Icon Sportswire)

Prospect System Ranking – 2nd (Previous Rank - 4th)
GM: Kent Hughes Hired: January 2022
COACH: Martin St. Louis Hired: February 2022

The Montreal Canadiens passed on Matvei Michkov in the 2023 NHL Entry Draft to select defenceman David Reinbacher. Sitting 30th in our McKeen’s rankings, Reinbacher split his draft-plus-one campaign between the Swiss league and AHL and will now take on his official rookie year in Laval.

Montreal's foresight paid off, snagging a Russian phenom of their own in Ivan Demidov at the 2024 draft podium. Ranked as our third-best prospect, Demidov is regarded by many as a more complete player than Michkov, combining strong offensive instincts with an all-around versatile game. Simply put, his services change the future trajectory of the Canadiens overnight.

Reinbacher isn’t the only defensive prospect creating a buzz in Quebec. Boston University standout Lane Hutson (40th) has signed his papers and is ready to shift his game to the NHL circuit. The 20-year-old thrived at the collegiate level, posting 97 points over 77 games from the blueline, and picked up several personal accolades along the way. He embodies the modern offensive defenceman. Similarly, Logan Mailloux (59th) has made good strides in his development and, in reality, could push for an NHL roster spot out of training camp.

Joshua Roy, who appeared in 23 games for the Canadiens last season, is also on the verge of an NHL breakthrough. Roy is poised to join the likes of Juraj Slafkovský, Jayden Struble, Kaiden Guhle, and Cole Caufield as recent McKeen’s graduates making their mark on the NHL.

In goal, 2023 third-round pick Jacob Fowler has proven to be a strong bet. Backstopping Boston College to a Hockey East Championship, Fowler posted a 32-6-1 record in his freshman year and was named a First Team All-Star. While he’s still a few years away from NHL action, we could be looking at the Habs' goaltender of the future.

Montreal's competitive roster is beginning to take shape, bolstered by a recent mid-August trade that brought Patrik Laine to the team. They now boast a forward core led by Juraj Slafkovský (20), Nick Suzuki (25), Cole Caufield (23), Alex Newhook (23), Kirby Dach (23), and Patrik Laine (26). They will soon be joined by the young prospects mentioned above. On defence, the Canadiens’ future is promising with the likes of Lane Hutson (20), David Reinbacher (19), Logan Mailloux (20), and Kaiden Guhle (22).

After four consecutive postseason misses, things are finally looking up for the devoted fans of Les Habitants. The pieces are falling into place for a promising future.

Montreal Canadiens Top-15 Prospects

1. Ivan Demidov

The Canadiens already had one of the best prospect pools in the league prior to the 2024 draft, but the one thing it needed was a game-breaking forward. That's why their decision to pick Demidov 5th overall, as opposed to some other very appealing options that were also still available at the time, made all the sense in the world. He's a dynamic talent with a deep bag of tricks, along with the confidence to utilize all of them, and the smarts and awareness to pick the right times to do so. He's the type of player who can make a goal happen out of nothing, which is both valuable and rare within the tight defensive structures seen in the NHL. He also has a big-game mentality and thrives in the spotlight, which will be incredibly useful and much appreciated by fans in a hockey-mad market like Montreal.

2. David Reinbacher

It certainly can't be easy to be Reinbacher these days, with all that noise generated by the fervent Montreal fans and media, especially the noise that’s related to his somewhat controversial draft slot. Knowing that, it says a lot about his character that he was able to quickly move past an injury-dampened and loss-filled season in Switzerland and immediately start looking comfortable with Laval in the AHL. The Habs want him to be a top-pairing, all-situations, minute-munching blueliner, and he's on a good enough trajectory with his development so far that he genuinely could reach that ceiling. He already has all of the necessary tools in his toolbox. However, he's still a long ways away from that goal as of right now, and progress won't happen overnight. If the team and the city can be patient enough they could get rewarded handsomely.

3. Lane Hutson

Never tell Hutson the odds. It’s understandable, to a degree, why teams were nervous about him in his draft year, because it’s exceedingly rare for blueliners of his small stature to become core roster players. That said, it’s always been pretty apparent that this particular pint-sized defender was special, and now there are probably a number of teams that are kicking themselves for not being believers, especially since he has grown a bit since then. When it comes to puck-rushing defencemen he is as dynamic as they come, with explosive all-direction mobility and the desire to play on his toes at all times. He also deserves full marks for his mental traits, as he is utterly fearless and endlessly driven, and he reads and reacts to the play in front of him at lightning speed with near perfect precision. He’s a truly unique kind of talent.

4. Michael Hage

The feel-good story of the 2024 draft was Montreal picking Hage, whose father, Alain, was a diehard Canadiens fan up until his sudden and tragic death in the summer of 2023. Now Michael is committed to using his dad's memory and legacy as fuel for his own growth as a player. And what a player he is, as an athletic center who moves around the ice well and can do a lot of damage as both a shooter and a playmaker. And there aren't many development paths that are better than going from the USHL's Chicago Steel to the NCAA's University of Michigan, as both organizations have produced a plethora of great prospects in recent years. He's still a little unrefined right now, but the sky's the limit for him, and his first game at the Bell Centre will surely be an emotional affair.

5. Joshua Roy

Nearly three years have now passed since the 2021 draft, and yet it’s only gotten more and more perplexing over time why Roy wasn’t picked until the 5th round, 150th overall. Sure, hindsight is always 20/20, and absolutely no one was confident that he would be quite this good by this age, but he was a former 1st-overall pick into the QMJHL who scored at a point-per-game pace that season split between two lackluster teams, and a profile like that seems like it would be worth a roll of the dice at least a round or two sooner. The Canadiens certainly aren’t complaining about how things worked out, though. He’s already putting in work and looking solid as a support scorer, and that will keep him around for a long time, even if he never becomes a primary creator.

6. Logan Mailloux

Much has already been said and written about Mailloux’s past and the highly controversial decision by the Canadiens to select him in the 1st round in the 2021 draft, and that story will be talked about again and relitigated in depth once he eventually becomes an NHL regular. For right now, though, there is another story that has emerged with him, and it’s about how well he’s managed to tune out all that chatter and channel his energy into his on-ice performance, which cannot be an easy focus to maintain. He is intensely attuned to his development and the on-ice results that stem from it, perhaps knowing that his career will always be on uniquely thinner ice than others, and he’s become one of the best defence prospects in all of hockey. If the Habs keep maintaining their long-term investment in him then he’ll win a full-time spot with the big club in short order.

7. Jacob Fowler

A popular hockey saying goes that goalies are voodoo, but thus far into his career Fowler is almost boringly, simplistically excellent. Put on the pads, stop almost all the pucks, win the game, repeat. And that's been the same song and dance for him going as far back as his stats were even recorded. His technique and positioning are impeccably fine-tuned for a goalie his age, and the quality of his mental approach is rare. He just never seems to have a bad game, and on the rare occasion that he lets in a bad goal he’s always able to shake it off and immediately refocus. He came remarkably close to winning back-to-back league championships, after leading Youngstown to a USHL title last season, but Boston College was overpowered in the final of the Frozen Four. If he keeps improving his quickness and athleticism he could become quite a solid NHL starter.

8. Owen Beck

In this past spring Beck suited up for his third OHL team in the span of three years, but he probably didn’t complain too much about it, because he was guaranteed a return trip to the Memorial Cup tournament, now as a member of the host Saginaw Spirit, after getting there the harder way the year before with the Peterborough Petes. Montreal must be pleased that he received all this high-quality experience, because it’s nothing but pure benefit for him. He’s a reliable, competitive, two-way center by nature, and after all of this it’s easy to imagine how prepared he’s going to be for playoff hockey in the NHL once he gets there. It seems like his ceiling will end up being a little lower than what was initially hoped for, but he should still be able to fit in just fine with what the Canadiens are building long-term.

9. Oliver Kapanen

Yet another member of the Kapanen clan, Oliver comes from quite a bloodline of hockey players. To say that he lived and breathed hockey growing up probably wouldn't be much of a stretch or understatement. He was also practically raised by the Kalpa organization in Finland, playing with them for so many years that they watched him grow from a boy into a man, so there must have been a lot of pride being felt when he exploded in the Liiga playoffs this spring, scoring at a point per game pace and helping them advance far into the postseason. The skill and hockey IQ have always been in place for him, and he continues to make necessary progress on his strength and conditioning, improvements that he'll need to be able to play in the NHL one day. Montreal, with all their young forward depth, can afford to be patient with Kapanen.

10. Jakub Dobes

Among all AHL goalies this season Dobes finished tied for the lead for game appearances and was solely in second place for total minutes between the pipes, which is quite a rare thing for a rookie netminder in that league to accomplish. He has a remarkable ability to step into a totally new environment and look uncharacteristically right at home, which he’s done recently with both Ohio State and now Laval as well, winning the starter’s job upon arrival each time and never relinquishing it. His play just keeps getting better and better as he continues growing into his sprawling frame and gaining more natural coordination. Making things even more enticing, he still looks like he’s not even close to reaching the limits of that progression. If a re-do for the 2020 draft were to happen tomorrow Dobes might get picked as many as 100 spots higher.

11. Filip Mesar

A longtime friend and international teammate of Juraj Slafkovský, Mesar is Montreal's other young Slovak forward, but his development hasn't begun to soar nearly as much in comparison. On the bright side, he has a knack for saving his best hockey for the biggest games, from the World Juniors to the OHL playoffs, which is never a bad sign. He’s an offense-first winger who is at his most dangerous off the rush.

12. Bogdan Konyushkov

Sometimes it makes sense to select older, previously undrafted prospects, because more is already known about them. Konyushkov was the oldest player to get drafted in 2023, but he had just played a full season in the KHL, so the Habs had enough material to inform their decision. He has the requisite determination and pacing needed for smaller blueliners, utilizing his feet to be fast and shifty on puck retrievals and breakouts, while keeping tight gaps to defend with pokechecks.

13. Sean Farrell

Farrell was a top offensive contributor in both the USHL and the NCAA, so further point production is expected of him. That might just take longer than expected, because of how much progress he still needs to make with his strength and conditioning. Few can match his ability to see the ice and anticipate the flow of play, and he pairs that with an innate touch for the puck, but he needs to get more explosive and apply pressure with more intensity.

14. Adam Engström

Engström is a bit of a sleeper in Montreal's crowded system, but he just keeps quietly getting better and better playing overseas in the SHL. He was also one of Rögle's regular defensemen in their surprise underdog run to the league finals, which is the type of experience that can really boost a young player's development. His game is all about crisp puck movement that is carried out at a brisk pace.

15. Riley Kidney

Kidney rattled off repeat 100-point seasons during his QMJHL tenure, so Habs fans shouldn't get too concerned that he had a quiet rookie campaign in the AHL. It wasn't a secret that he would need more time to get his strength and conditioning up to par, and he still possesses the same sharp offensive vision and precise playmaking that he had before. The Canadiens have enough prospect depth that they can let Kidney develop at a pace that works for him.

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MCKEEN’S 2024 NHL PROSPECT REPORT – #4 Montreal Canadiens – Organization Overview – Top 15 Prospects https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2024-nhl-prospect-report-4-montreal-canadiens/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2024-nhl-prospect-report-4-montreal-canadiens/#respond Sun, 09 Jun 2024 15:00:05 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=186382 Read More... from MCKEEN’S 2024 NHL PROSPECT REPORT – #4 Montreal Canadiens – Organization Overview – Top 15 Prospects

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MONTREAL, QC - SEPTEMBER 25:Montreal Canadiens defenseman David Reinbacher (64) waits for a face-off during the New Jersey Devils versus the Montreal Canadiens preseason game on September 25, 2023, at Bell Centre in Montreal, QC (Photo by David Kirouac/Icon Sportswire)

Kent Hughes has been one of the more active and creative GM’s in the NHL in a little over two years. Two drafts under his belt, and he has shown he is going to follow his own instincts, as both first overall picks were not the consensus at the time. He has received vindication for taking Juraj Slafkovsky first overall in 2022 as he broke out this season and showed considerable ceiling as an elite power forward. There were some raised eyebrows about picking 6’2” right shot defenseman, David Reinbacher, given there were flashier options on the table at the time. He is followed by the #2 prospect, Lane Hutson, also on defense, and looking like one of the great steals from the 2022 Draft at 62nd. He also gets high marks for drafting goaltender Jacob Fowler in the second round, currently ranked as the sixth best prospect goaltender by McKeens. He will certainly add to the fourth best prospect pool with two first-round picks in 2024 and two firsts in 2025, and a slew of picks in both drafts.

Hughes, an ex-player agent, is a master of using his cap space to land prospects and picks. He took Sean Monahan off of Calgary’s hands (future considerations) for a first-round pick in the summer of 2022. Monahan had a strong 2023-24 season and recouped another first at the 2024 deadline. We do not have enough space here to cover all the wheeling and dealing but it has created a wealth of future potential, but also to add key young pieces to the core in reclamation projects in two former first round 23-year-olds in Kirby Dach and Alex Newhook. They are building around forwards Nick Suzuki (24) and Cole Caufield (23), who have established themselves as stars, and are signed through 2029-30 at very reasonable, identical AAV of $7.875 million. They are a few years out from contending, there is real momentum and excitement in one of the most jaded fan bases.

RNK PLAYER POS AGE HT/WT TM Acquired GP G(W) A(L) PTS(GAA) PIM(SPCT)
1 David Reinbacher D 19 6-2/185 Kloten (Sui-NL) `23(5th) 35 1 10 11 18
          Laval (AHL) `23(5th) 11 2 3 5 4
2 Lane Hutson D 20 5-10/160 Boston University (HE) `22(62nd) 38 15 34 49 24
          Montreal (NHL) `22(62nd) 2 0 2 2 0
3 Joshua Roy RW 20 6-0/190 Laval (AHL) `21(150th) 41 13 19 32 12
          Montreal (NHL) `21(150th) 23 4 5 9 0
4 Logan Mailloux D 21 6-3/215 Laval (AHL) `21(31st) 72 14 33 47 91
5 Jacob Fowler G 19 6-1/215 Boston College (HE) `23(69th) 39 32 6 2.14 0.926
6 Owen Beck C 20 5-11/185 Pbo-Sag (OHL) `22(33rd) 57 34 47 81 18
7 Sean Farrell C 22 5-8/175 Laval (AHL) `20(124th) 47 9 19 28 10
8 Jakub Dobes G 22 6-3/200 Laval (AHL) `20(136th) 51 24 18 2.93 0.906
9 Oliver Kapanen C 20 6-0/170 KalPa (Fin-Liiga) `21(64th) 51 14 20 34 32
10 Bogdan Konyushkov D 21 5-11/175 Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod (KHL) `23(110th) 65 6 22 28 18
11 Filip Mesar C 20 5-9/175 Kitchener (OHL) `22(26th) 45 19 33 52 12
12 Adam Engstrom D 20 6-2/185 Rogle (SHL) `22(92nd) 51 4 18 22 4
13 Riley Kidney C 21 5-11/170 Laval (AHL) `21(63rd) 65 7 13 20 41
14 Emil Heineman LW 22 6-1/185 Laval (AHL) T(Cgy-2/22) 48 15 14 29 25
          Montreal (NHL) T(Cgy-2/22) 4 0 0 0 0
15 William Trudeau D 21 6-0/190 Laval (AHL) `21(113th) 70 8 16 24 69
1. David Reinbacher, D, Kloten (NL)/Laval Rocket (AHL)

It certainly can't be easy to be Reinbacher these days, with all that noise generated by the fervent Montreal fans and media, especially the noise that’s related to his somewhat controversial draft slot. Knowing that, it says a lot about his character that he was able to quickly move past an injury-dampened and loss-filled season in Switzerland and immediately start looking comfortable with Laval in the AHL. The Habs want him to be a top-pairing, all-situations, minute-munching blueliner, and he's on a good enough trajectory with his development so far that he genuinely could reach that ceiling. He already has all of the necessary tools in his toolbox. However, he's still a long ways away from that goal as of right now, and progress won't happen overnight. If the team and the city can be patient enough, they could get rewarded handsomely.

2. Lane Hutson, D, Boston University (NCAA)

Never tell Hutson the odds. It’s understandable, to a degree, why teams were nervous about him in his draft year, because it’s exceedingly rare for blueliners of his small stature to become core roster players. That said, it’s always been pretty apparent that this particular pint-sized defender was special, and now there are probably a number of teams that are kicking themselves for not being believers. When it comes to puck-rushing defensemen he is as dynamic as they come, with explosive all-direction mobility and the desire to play on his toes at all times. He also deserves full marks for his mental traits, as he is utterly fearless and endlessly driven, and he reads and reacts to the play in front of him at lightning speed with near perfect precision. Can Hutson reach a similar level to Quinn Hughes in Vancouver? Habs fans are already dreaming about it.

3. Joshua Roy, RW, Laval Rocket (AHL)

Nearly three years have now passed since the 2021 draft, and yet it’s only gotten more and more perplexing over time why Roy wasn’t picked until the 5th round and 150th overall. Sure, hindsight is always 20/20, and absolutely no one was confident that he would be quite this good by this age, but he was a former 1st-overall pick into the QMJHL who scored at a point-per-game pace that season split between two lackluster teams, and a profile like that seems like it would be worth a roll of the dice at least a round or two sooner. The Canadiens certainly aren’t complaining about how things worked out, though. He’s already putting in work and looking solid as a support scorer, and that will keep him around for a long time, even if he never becomes a primary creator.

4. Logan Mailloux, D, Laval Rocket (AHL)

Much has already been said and written about Mailloux’s past and the highly controversial decision by the Canadiens to select him in the 1st round in the 2021 draft, and that story will be talked about again and relitigated in depth once he eventually becomes an NHL regular. For right now, though, there is another story that has emerged with him, and it’s about how well he’s managed to tune out all that chatter and channel his energy into his on-ice performance, which cannot be an easy focus to maintain. He is intensely attuned to his development and the on-ice results that stem from it, perhaps knowing that his career will always be on uniquely thinner ice than others, and he’s become one of the best defense prospects in all of hockey. If the Habs keep maintaining their long-term investment in him then he’ll win a full-time spot with the big club in short order.

5. Jacob Fowler, G, Boston College (NCAA)

A popular hockey saying goes that goalies are voodoo, but thus far into his career Fowler is almost boringly, simplistically excellent. Put on the pads, stop almost all the pucks, win the game, repeat. And that's been the same song and dance for him going as far back as his stats were even recorded. His technique and positioning are impeccably fine-tuned for a goalie his age, and the quality of his mental approach is rare. He just never seems to have a bad game, and on the rare occasion that he lets in a bad goal he’s always able to shake it off and immediately refocus. He came remarkably close to winning back-to-back league championships, after leading Youngstown to a USHL title last season, but Boston College was overpowered in the final of the Frozen Four. If he keeps improving his quickness and athleticism he could become quite a solid NHL starter.

6. Owen Beck, C, Saginaw Spirit (OHL)

Beck is now playing for his third OHL team in the span of three years, but he’s probably not complaining too much, since he’s guaranteed a return trip to the Memorial Cup tournament, this time as a member of the host Saginaw Spirit after getting there the harder way last year with the Peterborough Petes. Montreal must be pleased that he’s getting all of this high-quality experience, because it’s nothing but pure benefit for him. He’s a reliable, competitive two-way center by nature, and after all of this it’s easy to imagine how prepared he’s going to be for playoff hockey in the NHL once he gets there. It seems like his ceiling will end up being a little lower than what was initially hoped for, but he should still be able to fit in just fine with what the Canadiens are building long-term.

7. Sean Farrell, C, Laval Rocket (AHL)

Farrell proved himself to be a top-tier offensive contributor in both the USHL and the NCAA, so further point production is expected to be a part of his future. That might just take longer than Habs fans expect, though, because of the higher importance of strength and conditioning at the professional levels, and how much progress he still needs to make in these areas. Few can match his ability to see the ice in front of him and anticipate the flow of play, and he pairs that with an innate touch for the puck and a confidence for playmaking. He’s an ace at slowing things down and letting his options unfurl themselves, and that’s always a great trait to possess, but he will also need to round things out by getting more explosive with his skating and applying pressure with more intensity.

8. Jakub Dobes, G, Laval Rocket (AHL)

Among all AHL goalies this season Dobes finished in a tie for game appearances and was solely in second place for total minutes between the pipes, which is quite a rare thing for a rookie netminder in the league to accomplish. He has a remarkable ability to step into a totally new environment and look uncharacteristically right at home, which he’s done recently with both Ohio State and now Laval as well, winning the starter’s job upon arrival each time and never relinquishing it. His play just keeps getting better and better as he continues growing into his sprawling frame and gaining more natural coordination, and making things even more enticing, he still looks like he’s not even close to reaching the limits of that progression. If a re-do for the 2020 draft were to happen tomorrow Dobes might get picked as many as 100 spots higher.

9. Oliver Kapanen, C, KalPa (Liiga)

Yet another member of the Kapanen clap, Oliver comes from quite a bloodline of hockey players. To say that he lived and breathed hockey growing up probably wouldn't be much of a stretch or understatement. He was also practically raised by the Kalpa organization in Finland, playing with them for so many years that they watched him grow from a boy into a man, so there must have been a lot of pride being felt when he exploded in the Liiga playoffs this spring, scoring at a point per game pace and helping them make it far. The skill and hockey IQ have always been in place for him, and he continues to make necessary progress on his strength and conditioning, improvements that he'll need to be able to play in the NHL one day. Montreal, with all their young forward depth, can afford to be patient with Kapanen.

10. Bogdan Konyushkov, D, Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod (KHL)

Sometimes it makes a lot of sense to draft older prospects, even if they've gone unpicked before, because more is already known about them, and less guess work is needed about their development. Konyushkov was the single oldest player to hear his name get called in the 2023 draft, but he had just played a full season in the KHL, so the Habs had a lot of good material to help inform their decision and must have been pretty comfortable in their assessment of him. Additionally, his coach for the past two seasons with Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod was the legendary Igor “The Professor” Larionov, which was surely a nice bonus. He has the requisite determination and pacing needed for smaller blueliners, utilizing his feet to be fast and shifty on puck retrievals and breakouts, while keeping tight gaps to defend with pokechecks.

PROSPECT CRITERIA: Players under 26 years of age as of 9/15/2024 who have appeared in less than 60 games (30 for goalies) and less than 25 in one season (25 for goalies).

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MCKEEN’S 2024 NHL PROSPECTS REPORT: TOP 30 NHL PROSPECTS https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2024-nhl-prospects-report-top-30-nhl-prospects/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2024-nhl-prospects-report-top-30-nhl-prospects/#respond Sat, 01 Jun 2024 12:22:26 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=186591 Read More... from MCKEEN’S 2024 NHL PROSPECTS REPORT: TOP 30 NHL PROSPECTS

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At McKeen’s Hockey we do a ranked affiliated prospect list twice a season. Our first, this ranking, follows the end of the regular season for most prospects but does not include the playoffs. It is a ranking of the top 200, plus the top 15 by team, prior to the NHL Draft. Once the NHL Draft is complete, we begin the process of updating the organizational ranking to a top 20, and then rank the top 300. That is completed in August, once the dust has settled on free agency, and any trades that are made in the meantime. We include that ranking in our McKeen’s NHL Yearbook, published in late August, Early September.

Our team of 16 scouts are based in key markets around the world, in the rinks, supported by video scouting. They utilize some terrific tools from Hudl/InStat, which can isolate so many aspects of a player’s game, along with proprietary statistics. They spend countless hours in rinks and in front of screens and are deeply familiar with these players and their progression. Our management team of Brock Otten (Director of Scouting) and Derek Neumeier (Assistant Director of Scouting/Senior Western Regional Scout), along with Video Scouting Coordinator, Josh Bell, will take the teams input and finalize the list you see below. Brock, Derek and Josh are responsible for the player write-ups in the Prospect Guide.

The organizational rankings are based on an algorithm that takes into account how many prospects are ranked within the top 200.  The teams are broken down by the number of prospects in our top 1 -25, 26 - 50, 51 - 100, and 101 - 200. A weight is attached to each group and then some subjective tweaking is done based on our knowledge of the players. There can be a wider discrepancy in the top 25 group than the latter groupings that needs to be taken into account.

Here is our definition of an NHL prospect: Players under 26 years of age as of 9/15/2024 who have appeared in less than 60 NHL games (30 for goalies) and less than 35 in one season (25 for goalies).

Check back in with us in the fall to see how things change following the draft. We are releasing out top 30 NHL Prospects free to non-subscribers. If you want to learn more, link here. 

Subscribers can link to the full top 200 listing here

Here is an excerpt of Brock Otten's Risers and Fallers article from the magazine to give you more perspective and a little taste of our content.

The best part of scouting is the somewhat unpredictable nature of human development. Some players improve dramatically from one year to the next…others do not. When we compare the rankings from our 2023-24 NHL Yearbook (where we did a Top 300 prospect ranking) to now, these are the players who have risen/fallen the most.

Risers

DALLAS, TX - APRIL 22: Dallas Stars center Logan Stankoven (11) reacts to a goal score during game one of the Western Conference First Round between the Dallas Stars and the Vegas Golden Knights on April 22, 2024 at American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas. (Photo by Matthew Pearce/Icon Sportswire)
Logan Stankoven (27 to 5) - Dallas Stars
  • Stankoven’s jump from one of the best players in the WHL to one of the best players in the AHL has been impressive. So has his quick start in the NHL.
Ryan Leonard (32 to 6) – Washington Capitals
  • Leonard is returning to Boston College after a Championship barely eluded him this year. However, he has proven to be an elite play driver to go with his strong off puck play.
MONTREAL, QC - FEBRUARY 11: Look on Montreal Canadiens right wing Joshua Roy (89) during warm-up before the St. Louis Blues versus the Montreal Canadiens game on February 11, 2024, at Bell Centre in Montreal, QC (Photo by David Kirouac/Icon Sportswire)
Josh Roy (63 to 35) – Montreal Canadiens
  • Roy continues to prove doubters wrong after a terrific AHL season with Laval. His skill set has become so well rounded since being drafted.
Conor Geekie (68 to 18) – Utah
  • Geekie’s power game from the middle of the ice makes him such an interesting prospect for today’s NHL. His skating continues to improve.
Mavrik Bourque (79 to 23) – Dallas Stars
  • Bourque emerged as one of the best players in the AHL this season as a sophomore professional. He’s ready to take that next step with the Stars.
Gabe Perreault (86 to 19) – New York Rangers
  • Once thought to be the third wheel on the talented Will Smith/Ryan Leonard threesome, Perreault’s progression as a play driver at Boston College this season has altered the perception that he can be a front-line NHL player.
Bradly Nadeau (109 to 34) – Carolina Hurricanes
  • Drafting early out of the BCHL has yielded inconsistent results, however Nadeau was exceptional as a freshman at Maine. Did he leave school too early though?
Jagger Firkus (112 to 47) – Seattle Kraken
  • Firkus took his game to another level this year in his final WHL season, leading the league in scoring. He’s ready to be a pro.
Gavin Brindley (122 to 66) – Columbus Blue Jackets
  • One of the most improved players in the NCAA this year, Brindley emerged as a star for the University of Michigan and really altered his projection as a potential top six forward.
Quentin Musty (125 to 51) – San Jose Sharks
  • The dynamic American winger worked hard to fine tune components of his game in Sudbury this year and deserves a bump for improving his consistency.
Jani Nyman (135 to 81) – Seattle Kraken
  • Nyman emerged as one of the top goal scorers in Finland this season as a U20 player. This, combined with his strong WJC performance, has helped push him up our board north.
Logan Mailloux (145 to 45) – Montreal Canadiens
  • Mailloux proved to be way more refined at the AHL level than previously perceived. Simply put, he was one of the best defensive prospects in the AHL this year.
Josh Doan (153 to 55) - Utah
  • What a terrific story to the end of the Coyotes franchise. Doan emerged as a potential star this season and finished the year strong in the NHL, scoring in his debut.
Riley Heidt (157 to 44) – Minnesota Wild
  • We still don’t understand how Heidt fell as far as he did in the 2023 draft, however he is proving NHL scouts wrong thus far after a remarkable year with Prince George.
Ville Koivunen (165 to 71) – Pittsburgh Penguins
  • The main piece of the Jake Guentzel to Carolina deal, Koivunen emerged as one of the top players in Liiga this year.
Ethan Del Mastro (169 to 73) – Chicago Blackhawks
  • There was little doubt that Del Mastro’s strong defensive ability would translate to the AHL level well, but he continues to improve offensively and that has altered his projection.
Theo Lindstein (185 to 91) – St. Louis Blues
  • Lindstein’s strong year for Brynas has helped to elevate his upside as a two-way defender. We may have ranked him too low in our 2023 Draft Rankings.
Carson Rehkopf (201 to 69) – Seattle Kraken
  • Consistency off the puck and a lack of engagement held Rehkopf back last year. This year marked improvement in those areas helped him emerge as a top offensive talent in the OHL.
Easton Cowan (204 to 67) – Toronto Maple Leafs
  • One of the surprises of the 2023 draft, Cowan set a new OHL record with a 42-game point streak. More than just a high energy guy now, he can be a difference maker offensively.
Seamus Casey (214 to 63) – New Jersey Devils
  • Casey continues to improve in the NCAA. He may not have elite size, but he has everything else, and it has the Devils excited about his future.
Jacob Fowler (222 to 52) – Montreal Canadiens
  • Fowler compiled a list of accolades as a freshman this year at Boston College, emerging as one of the top goaltending prospects in the game.
Fraser Minten (226 to 84) – Toronto Maple Leafs
  • After starting the year with the Leafs, Minten returned to the WHL and ended up captaining Canada at the World Juniors.
Jackson Blake (277 to 117) – Carolina Hurricanes
  • A finalist for the Hobey Baker this year, Blake became an NCAA star for North Dakota, and he now turns pro.
Erik Portillo (Unranked to 118) – Los Angeles Kings
  • Acquired by the Kings, Portillo turned pro after three years at Michigan and he was one of the best goaltenders in the AHL as a first-year pro.
Rodwin Dionicio (Unranked to 139) – Anaheim Ducks
  • Dionicio still plays a high risk, high reward game from the back end, but his offensive upside has become too large to ignore.
Fallers
EDM - Xavier Bourgault
Xavier Bourgault (from 48 to 113) – Edmonton Oilers
  • After a mediocre first professional year last season, Bourgault was even more disappointing as a sophomore with Bakersfield. The Oilers just haven’t been developing prospects well in recent years.
Eduard Sale (72 to 140) – Seattle Kraken
  • Sale’s first year in North America did not go according to plan as he struggled to be a consistent impact player in the OHL.
Jack Rathbone (96 to not ranked) – Pittsburgh Penguins
  • Perhaps we ranked Rathbone too aggressively this summer, but not only did he fail to earn a spot on Vancouver, but he’s now an NHL after thought after entering Pittsburgh’s organization via trade.
Jacob Perreault (127 to not ranked) – Montreal Canadiens
  • Perreault’s off puck play and skating just haven’t improved to the point where he can be a consistent pro and it caused the Ducks to move on from him, trading him to Montreal.
Jan Jenik (156 to not ranked) - Utah
  • Once a highly ranked prospect, Jenik continues to fall. He just hasn’t been able to take that next step and even passed through waivers this year unclaimed.
RNK PLAYER NHL POS AGE HT/WT TM GP G(W) A(L) PTS(GAA) PIM(SPCT)
1 Will Smith SJ C 19 6-0/175 Boston College (HE) 41 25 46 71 14
2 Matvei Michkov Phi RW 19 5-10/170 SKA St. Petersburg-HK Sochi (KHL) 48 19 22 41 26
3 Brandt Clarke LA D 21 6-2/185 Los Angeles (NHL) 16 2 4 6 10
4 Cutter Gauthier Ana LW 20 6-2/190 Boston College (HE) 41 38 27 65 18
5 Logan Stankoven Dal C 21 5-8/170 Dallas (NHL) 24 6 8 14 4
6 Ryan Leonard Wsh RW 19 5-11/190 Boston College (HE) 41 31 29 60 38
7 Alexander Nikishin Car D 22 6-3/195 SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) 67 17 39 56 39
8 Yaroslav Askarov Nsh G 21 6-3/175 Milwaukee (AHL) 44 30 13 2.39 0.911
9 Jesper Wallstedt Min G 21 6-3/215 Iowa (AHL) 45 22 19 2.70 0.910
10 Matthew Savoie Buf C 20 5-9/179 Wen-MJ (WHL) 34 30 41 71 10
11 Simon Edvinsson Det D 21 6-6/215 Detroit (NHL) 16 1 1 2 4
12 Jonathan Lekkerimaki Van RW 19 5-11/170 Orebro (SHL) 46 19 12 31 10
13 Dustin Wolf Cgy G 23 6-0/166 Calgary (AHL) 36 20 12 2.45 0.922
14 Devon Levi Buf G 21 6-0/192 Rochester (AHL) 26 16 6 2.42 0.927
15 Olen Zellweger Ana D 20 5-9/180 Anaheim (NHL) 26 2 7 9 4
16 Dmitri Simashev Ari D 19 6-4/198 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) 63 4 6 10 18
17 David Reinbacher Mtl D 19 6-2/185 Kloten (Sui-NL) 35 1 10 11 18
18 Conor Geekie Ari C 19 6-3/193 Wen-SC (WHL) 55 43 56 99 66
19 Gabe Perreault NYR RW 18 5-11/165 Boston College (HE) 36 19 41 60 29
20 Daniil But Ari LW 19 6-5/203 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) 55 10 11 21 10
21 Shane Wright Sea C 20 6-0/200 Coachella Valley (AHL) 59 22 25 47 18
22 Jiri Kulich Buf C 20 6-1/186 Rochester (AHL) 57 27 18 45 26
23 Mavrik Bourque Dal C 22 5-10/190 Texas (AHL) 71 26 51 77 32
24 Nate Danielson Det C 19 6-2/185 Bdn-Por (WHL) 54 24 43 67 42
25 Danila Yurov Min RW 19 6-1/175 Metallurg Magnitogorsk (KHL) 62 21 28 49 35
26 Brennan Othmann NYR LW 21 6-0/175 Hartford (AHL) 67 21 28 49 65
27 Lane Hutson Mtl D 20 5-10/160 Boston University (HE) 38 15 34 49 24
28 Tom Willander Van D 19 6-1/180 Boston University (HE) 38 4 21 25 12
29 Marco Kasper Det C 20 6-1/185 Grand Rapids (AHL) 71 14 21 35 30
30 Dalibor Dvorsky StL C 18 6-1/200 Sudbury (OHL) 52 45 43 88 17
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2024 NHL PROSPECTS REPORT: TOP 200 NHL PROSPECTS https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/2024-nhl-prospects-report-top-200-nhl-prospects/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/2024-nhl-prospects-report-top-200-nhl-prospects/#respond Sat, 25 May 2024 17:02:31 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=186489 Read More... from 2024 NHL PROSPECTS REPORT: TOP 200 NHL PROSPECTS

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At McKeen’s Hockey we do a ranked affiliated prospect list twice a season. Our first is following the end of the regular season for most prospects but does not include the playoffs. It is a ranking of the top 200, plus the top 15 by team, prior to the NHL Draft. Once the NHL Draft is complete, we begin the process of updating the organizational ranking to a top 20, and then rank the top 300. That is completed in August, once the dust has settled on free agency, and any trades that are made in the meantime. We include that ranking in our McKeen’s NHL Yearbook, published in late August, Early September.

Our team of 16 scouts are based in key markets around the world, in the rinks, supported by video scouting. They utilize some terrific tools from Hudl/InStat, which can isolate so many aspects of a player’s game, along with proprietary statistics. They spend countless hours in rinks and in front of screens and are deeply familiar with these players and their progression. Our management team of Brock Otten (Director of Scouting) and Derek Neumeier (Assistant Director of Scouting/Senior Western Regional Scout), along with Video Scouting Coordinator, Josh Bell, will take the teams input and finalize the list you see below. Brock, Derek and Josh are responsible for the player write-ups in the Prospect Guide.

The organizational rankings are based on an algorithm that takes into account how many prospects are ranked within the top 200.  The teams are broken down by the number of prospects in our top 1 -25, 26 - 50, 51 - 100, and 101 - 200. A weight is attached to each group and then some subjective tweaking is done based on our knowledge of the players. There can be a wider discrepancy in the top 25 group than the latter groupings that needs to be taken into account.

Here is our definition of an NHL prospect: Players under 26 years of age as of 9/15/2024 who have appeared in less than 60 NHL games (30 for goalies) and less than 35 in one season (25 for goalies).

Check back in with us in the fall to see how things change following the draft.

Subscribers can link to the listing here

RNK PLAYER NHL POS AGE HT/WT TM GP G(W) A(L) PTS(GAA) PIM(SPCT)
1 Will Smith SJ C 19 6-0/175 Boston College (HE) 41 25 46 71 14
2 Matvei Michkov Phi RW 19 5-10/170 SKA St. Petersburg-HK Sochi (KHL) 48 19 22 41 26
3 Brandt Clarke LA D 21 6-2/185 Los Angeles (NHL) 16 2 4 6 10
4 Cutter Gauthier Ana LW 20 6-2/190 Boston College (HE) 41 38 27 65 18
5 Logan Stankoven Dal C 21 5-8/170 Dallas (NHL) 24 6 8 14 4
6 Ryan Leonard Wsh RW 19 5-11/190 Boston College (HE) 41 31 29 60 38
7 Alexander Nikishin Car D 22 6-3/195 SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) 67 17 39 56 39
8 Yaroslav Askarov Nsh G 21 6-3/175 Milwaukee (AHL) 44 30 13 2.39 0.911
9 Jesper Wallstedt Min G 21 6-3/215 Iowa (AHL) 45 22 19 2.70 0.910
10 Matthew Savoie Buf C 20 5-9/179 Wen-MJ (WHL) 34 30 41 71 10
11 Simon Edvinsson Det D 21 6-6/215 Detroit (NHL) 16 1 1 2 4
12 Jonathan Lekkerimaki Van RW 19 5-11/170 Orebro (SHL) 46 19 12 31 10
13 Dustin Wolf Cgy G 23 6-0/166 Calgary (AHL) 36 20 12 2.45 0.922
14 Devon Levi Buf G 21 6-0/192 Rochester (AHL) 26 16 6 2.42 0.927
15 Olen Zellweger Ana D 20 5-9/180 Anaheim (NHL) 26 2 7 9 4
16 Dmitri Simashev Ari D 19 6-4/198 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) 63 4 6 10 18
17 David Reinbacher Mtl D 19 6-2/185 Kloten (Sui-NL) 35 1 10 11 18
18 Conor Geekie Ari C 19 6-3/193 Wen-SC (WHL) 55 43 56 99 66
19 Gabe Perreault NYR RW 18 5-11/165 Boston College (HE) 36 19 41 60 29
20 Daniil But Ari LW 19 6-5/203 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) 55 10 11 21 10
21 Shane Wright Sea C 20 6-0/200 Coachella Valley (AHL) 59 22 25 47 18
22 Jiri Kulich Buf C 20 6-1/186 Rochester (AHL) 57 27 18 45 26
23 Mavrik Bourque Dal C 22 5-10/190 Texas (AHL) 71 26 51 77 32
24 Nate Danielson Det C 19 6-2/185 Bdn-Por (WHL) 54 24 43 67 42
25 Danila Yurov Min RW 19 6-1/175 Metallurg Magnitogorsk (KHL) 62 21 28 49 35
26 Brennan Othmann NYR LW 21 6-0/175 Hartford (AHL) 67 21 28 49 65
27 Lane Hutson Mtl D 20 5-10/160 Boston University (HE) 38 15 34 49 24
28 Tom Willander Van D 19 6-1/180 Boston University (HE) 38 4 21 25 12
29 Marco Kasper Det C 20 6-1/185 Grand Rapids (AHL) 71 14 21 35 30
30 Dalibor Dvorsky StL C 18 6-1/200 Sudbury (OHL) 52 45 43 88 17
31 Brad Lambert Wpg C 20 6-0/180 Manitoba (AHL) 64 21 34 55 38
32 Ivan Miroshnichenko Wsh LW 20 6-1/185 Washington (NHL) 21 2 4 6 6
33 Axel Sandin Pellikka Det D 19 5-11/180 Skelleftea (SHL) 39 10 8 18 17
34 Bradly Nadeau Car LW 18 5-10/165 Maine (HE) 37 19 27 46 12
35 Joshua Roy Mtl RW 20 6-0/190 Montreal (NHL) 23 4 5 9 0
36 Denton Mateychuk CBJ D 19 5-11/190 Moose Jaw (WHL) 52 17 58 75 31
37 Brayden Yager Pit C 19 5-11/165 Moose Jaw (WHL) 57 35 60 95 20
38 Calum Ritchie Col C 19 6-2/185 Oshawa (OHL) 50 28 52 80 20
39 Joakim Kemell Nsh RW 20 5-10/185 Milwaukee (AHL) 67 16 25 41 23
40 Colby Barlow Wpg LW 19 6-0/195 Owen Sound (OHL) 50 40 18 58 27
41 Jimmy Snuggerud StL RW 19 6-1/185 Minnesota (B1G) 39 21 13 34 42
42 Matthew Coronato Cgy RW 21 5-10/183 Calgary (NHL) 34 3 6 9 4
43 Frank Nazar Chi C 20 5-10/180 Michigan (B1G) 41 17 24 41 18
44 Riley Heidt Min C 19 5-10/180 Prince George (WHL) 66 37 80 117 42
45 Logan Mailloux Mtl D 21 6-3/215 Laval (AHL) 72 14 33 47 91
46 Sebastian Cossa Det G 21 6-6/229 Grand Rapids (AHL) 40 22 9 2.41 0.913
47 Jagger Firkus Sea RW 20 5-10/155 Moose Jaw (WHL) 63 61 65 126 30
48 Mikhail Gulyayev Col D 19 5-11/170 Avangard Omsk (KHL) 64 4 8 12 8
49 Scott Morrow Car D 21 6-2/195 Massachusetts (HE) 37 6 24 30 25
50 Matthew Wood Nsh RW 19 6-3/195 Connecticut (HE) 35 16 12 28 43
51 Quentin Musty SJ LW 18 6-2/200 Sudbury (OHL) 53 43 59 102 72
52 Jacob Fowler Mtl G 19 6-1/215 Boston College (HE) 39 32 6 2.14 0.926
53 Fabian Lysell Bos RW 21 5-11/181 Providence (AHL) 56 15 35 50 37
54 Shakir Mukhamadullin SJ D 22 6-3/180 San Jose (AHL) 55 7 27 34 24
55 Josh Doan Ari RW 22 6-1/183 Arizona (NHL) 11 5 4 9 0
56 Thomas Bordeleau SJ C 22 5-9/180 San Jose (NHL) 27 6 5 11 18
57 Lian Bichsel Dal D 19 6-6/233 Rogle (SHL) 29 2 2 4 28
58 Nikolai Kovalenko Col RW 24 5-10/180 Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod (KHL) 42 11 24 35 30
59 Aatu Raty Van C 21 6-2/185 Abbotsford (AHL) 72 18 34 52 18
60 Oliver Moore Chi C 19 5-11/185 Minnesota (B1G) 39 9 24 33 8
61 Samuel Honzek Cgy LW 19 6-4/186 Vancouver (WHL) 33 10 21 31 18
62 Jakob Pelletier Cgy LW 23 5-9/170 Calgary (NHL) 13 1 2 3 2
63 Seamus Casey NJ D 20 5-9/165 Michigan (B1G) 40 7 38 45 14
64 Tristan Luneau Ana D 20 6-1/195 Anaheim (NHL) 7 1 2 3 4
65 Chaz Lucius Wpg C 20 6-1/185 Manitoba (AHL) 17 2 11 13 6
66 Gavin Brindley CBJ C 19 5-9/165 Michigan (B1G) 40 25 28 53 28
67 Easton Cowan Tor RW 18 5-10/170 London (OHL) 54 34 62 96 64
68 Zachary L'Heureux Nsh LW 20 5-11/195 Milwaukee (AHL) 66 19 29 48 197
69 Carson Rehkopf Sea LW 19 6-1/195 Kitchener (OHL) 60 52 43 95 45
70 Filip Bystedt SJ C 20 6-4/205 Linkopings (SHL) 47 8 9 17 2
71 Ville Koivunen Pit LW 20 6-0/175 Karpat (Fin-Liiga) 59 22 34 56 26
72 Noah Ostlund Buf C 20 5-11/163 Vaxjo Lakers (SHL) 38 12 11 23 4
73 Ethan Del Mastro Chi D 21 6-4/210 Rockford (AHL) 69 7 30 37 54
74 Lukas Cormier VGK D 22 5-10/180 Henderson (AHL) 58 4 16 20 33
75 Liam Ohgren Min LW 20 6-1/200 Farjestads (SHL) 26 12 7 19 12
76 Marat Khusnutdinov Min C 21 5-11/175 Minnesota (NHL) 16 1 3 4 6
77 Mackie Samoskevich Fla RW 21 5-11/190 Charlotte (AHL) 62 22 32 54 24
78 Stanislav Svozil CBJ D 21 6-1/180 Cleveland (AHL) 57 5 18 23 24
79 Zachary Bolduc StL LW 21 6-1/175 St. Louis (NHL) 25 5 4 9 6
80 Rutger McGroarty Wpg LW 20 6-1/200 Michigan (B1G) 36 16 36 52 6
81 Jani Nyman Sea RW 19 6-3/215 Ilves (Fin-Liiga) 48 26 17 43 2
82 Andrew Cristall Wsh LW 19 5-9/165 Kelowna (WHL) 62 40 71 111 46
83 Oliver Bonk Phi D 19 6-2/175 London (OHL) 60 24 43 67 32
84 Fraser Minten Tor C 19 6-1/185 Kam-Sas (WHL) 43 22 26 48 25
85 Tanner Molendyk Nsh D 19 5-11/185 Saskatoon (WHL) 50 10 46 56 18
86 David Goyette Sea C 20 5-10/175 Sudbury (OHL) 68 40 77 117 29
87 David Edstrom SJ C 19 6-3/185 Frolunda (SHL) 44 7 12 19 8
88 Anton Wahlberg Buf C 18 6-3/194 Malmo (SHL) 43 5 5 10 4
89 Emil Andrae Phi D 22 5-9/185 Lehigh Valley (AHL) 61 5 27 32 66
90 Trey Augustine Det G 19 6-1/185 Michigan State (B1G) 35 23 9 2.96 0.915
91 Theo Lindstein StL D 19 6-0/180 Brynas (HockeyAllsvenskan) 49 4 11 15 4
92 Mads Sogaard Ott G 23 6-7/195 Belleville (AHL) 32 18 9 2.45 0.916
93 Isak Rosen Buf RW 21 6-0/175 Rochester (AHL) 67 20 30 50 12
94 Maveric Lamoureux Ari D 20 6-7/214 Drummondville (QMJHL) 39 9 24 33 53
95 Drew Commesso Chi G 21 6-2/180 Rockford (AHL) 38 18 16 2.65 0.906
96 Ville Heinola Wpg D 23 6-0/180 Manitoba (AHL) 41 10 17 27 24
97 Carter Mazur Det LW 22 6-0/170 Grand Rapids (AHL) 60 17 20 37 48
98 Otto Stenberg StL C 18 5-11/180 Frolunda (SHL) 31 3 3 6 8
99 Egor Afanasyev Nsh LW 23 6-3/205 Milwaukee (AHL) 56 27 27 54 60
100 Nikita Chibrikov Wpg RW 21 5-10/170 Manitoba (AHL) 70 17 30 47 53
101 Zach Dean StL C 21 6-0/175 Springfield (AHL) 49 9 5 14 24
102 William Dufour NYI RW 22 6-2/195 Bridgeport (AHL) 55 15 10 25 35
103 Sam Rinzel Chi D 19 6-4/180 Minnesota (B1G) 39 2 26 28 20
104 Joel Blomqvist Pit G 22 6-2/185 Wilkes-Barre (AHL) 45 25 12 2.16 0.921
105 Arseni Gritsyuk NJ RW 23 5-10/170 SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) 50 19 19 38 8
106 Corson Ceulemans CBJ D 20 6-2/200 Cleveland (AHL) 47 3 9 12 12
107 Michael Hrabal Ari G 19 6-6/209 Massachusetts (HE) 30 16 12 2.59 0.912
108 Brendan Brisson VGK C 22 5-11/180 Vegas (NHL) 15 2 6 8 2
109 Owen Pickering Pit D 20 6-4/180 Swift Current (WHL) 59 7 39 46 35
110 Owen Beck Mtl C 20 5-11/185 Pbo-Sag (OHL) 57 34 47 81 18
111 William Wallinder Det D 21 6-4/190 Grand Rapids (AHL) 65 3 12 15 10
112 Xavier Bourgault Edm C 21 6-0/170 Bakersfield (AHL) 55 8 12 20 24
113 Jordan Dumais CBJ RW 20 5-8/165 Halifax (QMJHL) 21 16 31 47 6
114 Aleksi Heimosalmi Car D 20 5-11/170 Assat (Fin-Liiga) 47 2 14 16 12
115 Brandon Bussi Bos G 25 6-4/218 Providence (AHL) 41 23 10 2.67 0.913
116 Jackson Blake Car RW 20 5-10/160 North Dakota (NCHC) 40 22 38 60 26
117 Erik Portillo LA G 23 6-6/210 Ontario (AHL) 39 24 11 2.50 0.918
118 Sean Farrell Mtl C 22 5-8/175 Laval (AHL) 47 9 19 28 10
119 Kasper Halttunen SJ RW 18 6-3/205 London (OHL) 57 32 29 61 61
120 Topi Niemela Tor D 22 5-11/165 Toronto (AHL) 68 8 31 39 43
121 Ethan Gauthier TB RW 19 5-11/175 Drummondville (QMJHL) 64 36 35 71 42
122 Daniil Miromanov Cgy D 26 6-4/200 VGK-Cgy (NHL) 24 3 4 7 8
123 Ruslan Iskhakov NYI C 23 5-8/155 Bridgeport (AHL) 69 18 32 50 30
124 Shai Buium Det D 21 6-3/210 Denver (NCHC) 43 7 29 36 14
125 Jakub Dobes Mtl G 22 6-3/200 Laval (AHL) 51 24 18 2.93 0.906
126 Oliver Kapanen Mtl C 20 6-0/170 KalPa (Fin-Liiga) 51 14 20 34 32
127 Danny Nelson NYI C 18 6-3/200 Notre Dame (B1G) 30 9 14 23 32
128 Lenni Hameenaho NJ RW 19 6-0/175 Assat (Fin-Liiga) 46 14 17 31 10
129 Nick Lardis Chi LW 18 5-11/165 Brantford (OHL) 37 29 21 50 12
130 Ty Nelson Sea D 20 5-10/195 North Bay (OHL) 54 16 36 52 50
131 Isaac Howard TB LW 20 5-10/185 Michigan State (B1G) 36 8 28 36 10
132 Fyodor Svechkov Nsh C 21 6-0/185 Milwaukee (AHL) 57 16 23 39 18
133 Jeremie Poirier Cgy D 21 6-1/196 Calgary (AHL) 23 3 10 13 22
134 Reid Schaefer Nsh LW 20 6-3/215 Milwaukee (AHL) 63 7 14 21 39
135 Zack Ostapchuk Ott C 20 6-3/205 Belleville (AHL) 69 17 11 28 47
136 Nathan Gaucher Ana C 20 6-3/207 San Diego (AHL) 72 10 15 25 68
137 Rodwin Dionicio Ana D 20 6-2/207 Wsr-Sag (OHL) 60 25 48 73 108
138 Eduard Sale Sea LW 19 6-1/170 Bar-Kit (OHL) 49 15 23 38 8
139 Danil Gushchin SJ RW 22 5-8/165 San Jose (AHL) 56 20 34 54 24
140 Sean Behrens Col D 21 5-10/175 Denver (NCHC) 44 4 27 31 53
141 Christian Kyrou Dal D 20 5-10/170 Texas (AHL) 57 8 15 23 22
142 Niklas Kokko Sea G 20 6-3/185 Pelicans (Fin-Liiga) 13 9 0 1.49 0.926
143 Vasily Ponomarev Pit C 22 5-10/180 Tuc-Chi-WBS (AHL) 45 9 21 30 16
144 Ryan Winterton Sea RW 20 6-2/190 Coachella Valley (AHL) 58 22 13 35 23
145 Dmitri Buchelnikov Det LW 20 5-10/165 Admiral Vladivostok (KHL) 55 13 16 29 8
146 Oscar Fisker Molgaard Sea C 19 6-0/165 HV 71 (SHL) 50 9 12 21 6
147 Aku Raty Ari RW 22 6-1/190 Tucson (AHL) 55 15 29 44 22
148 Matyas Sapovaliv VGK C 20 6-3/180 Saginaw (OHL) 54 19 43 62 22
149 Georgii Merkulov Bos C 23 5-11/175 Providence (AHL) 67 30 35 65 20
150 Topias Vilen NJ D 21 6-1/195 Utica (AHL) 54 2 27 29 16
151 Ryan Chesley Wsh D 20 6-0/200 Minnesota (B1G) 39 2 6 8 19
152 Jayden Perron Car RW 19 5-9/165 North Dakota (NCHC) 39 11 7 18 8
153 Tristen Robins SJ C 22 5-10/175 San Jose (AHL) 42 7 11 18 12
154 Calle Odelius NYI D 19 6-0/190 Djurgardens (HockeyAllsvenskan) 10 0 4 4 2
155 Vincent Iorio Wsh D 21 6-2/190 Hershey (AHL) 60 4 10 14 30
156 Raphael Lavoie Edm RW 23 6-4/215 Bakersfield (AHL) 66 28 22 50 64
157 Ronnie Attard Phi D 25 6-3/210 Lehigh Valley (AHL) 48 10 17 27 37
158 Niko Huuhtanen TB RW 20 6-2/205 Jukurit (Fin-Liiga) 52 19 27 46 46
159 Carson Bjarnason Phi G 18 6-3/185 Brandon (WHL) 46 24 17 3.01 0.907
160 Lukas Dragicevic Sea D 19 6-1/190 Tri-City (WHL) 66 14 36 50 52
161 Leevi Merilainen Ott G 21 6-2/160 Belleville (AHL) 24 10 9 2.87 0.906
162 Tyler Kleven Ott D 22 6-4/200 Belleville (AHL) 53 5 16 21 51
163 Hunter Brzustewicz Cgy D 19 5-11/185 Kitchener (OHL) 67 13 79 92 24
164 Ryan Greene Chi C 20 6-1/180 Boston University (HE) 40 12 24 36 6
165 Damian Clara Ana G 19 6-6/214 Brynas (HockeyAllsvenskan) 34 25 8 2.23 0.913
166 Carson Lambos Min D 21 6-1/200 Iowa (AHL) 69 4 10 14 64
167 Denver Barkey Phi C 19 5-8/160 London (OHL) 64 35 67 102 28
168 Gage Goncalves TB C 23 6-1/170 Syracuse (AHL) 69 13 45 58 43
169 Arshdeep Bains Van LW 23 6-0/185 Abbotsford (AHL) 59 16 39 55 28
170 Bogdan Konyushkov Mtl D 21 5-11/175 Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod (KHL) 65 6 22 28 18
171 Alexei Kolosov Phi G 22 6-1/185 Dinamo Minsk (KHL) 47 22 21 2.39 0.907
172 Samuel Fagemo LA RW 24 6-0/195 Ontario (AHL) 50 43 19 62 26
173 Filip Mesar Mtl C 20 5-9/175 Kitchener (OHL) 45 19 33 52 12
174 Matthew Robertson NYR D 23 6-3/200 Hartford (AHL) 68 4 17 21 49
175 Adam Engstrom Mtl D 20 6-2/185 Rogle (SHL) 51 4 18 22 4
176 Michael Buchinger StL D 20 5-11/185 Guelph (OHL) 52 10 37 47 37
177 Semyon Chistyakov Nsh D 22 5-11/180 Avangard Omsk (KHL) 59 4 20 24 16
178 John Farinacci Bos C 23 5-11/197 Providence (AHL) 71 12 26 38 16
179 Angus Crookshank Ott LW 24 5-10/180 Belleville (AHL) 50 24 22 46 60
180 Yegor Sidorov Ana RW 19 6-0/180 Saskatoon (WHL) 66 50 38 88 66
181 Samu Tuomaala Phi RW 21 5-10/175 Lehigh Valley (AHL) 69 15 28 43 12
182 Logan Morrison Sea C 21 6-0/180 Coachella Valley (AHL) 64 16 25 41 4
183 Jean-Luc Foudy Col C 21 5-11/175 Colorado (AHL) 26 4 10 14 18
184 Adam Gajan Chi G 19 6-3/167 Green Bay (USHL) 43 23 12 3.35 0.893
185 Nolan Allan Chi D 21 6-2/195 Rockford (AHL) 60 5 12 17 47
186 Oskar Olausson Col RW 21 6-1/180 Colorado (AHL) 39 11 9 20 24
187 Samuel Poulin Pit C 23 6-1/205 Wilkes-Barre (AHL) 41 16 15 31 35
188 Brett Berard NYR LW 21 5-9/165 Hartford (AHL) 71 25 23 48 62
189 Colton Dach Chi C 21 6-4/205 Rockford (AHL) 48 11 15 26 39
190 Jack Thompson SJ D 22 6-0/180 Syr-SJ (AHL) 62 6 35 41 16
191 Riley Kidney Mtl C 21 5-11/170 Laval (AHL) 65 7 13 20 41
192 Roby Jarventie Ott RW 21 6-3/195 Belleville (AHL) 22 9 11 20 22
193 Carey Terrance Ana C 18 6-1/175 Erie (OHL) 56 29 23 52 25
194 Luca Del Bel Belluz CBJ C 20 6-1/185 Cleveland (AHL) 58 9 22 31 12
195 Luca Pinelli CBJ C 19 5-9/165 Ottawa (OHL) 68 48 34 82 44
196 Francesco Pinelli LA C 21 6-1/185 Ontario (AHL) 67 13 7 20 24
197 Elias Salomonsson Wpg D 19 6-1/185 Skelleftea (SHL) 31 2 9 11 58
198 Sam Colangelo Ana RW 21 6-2/205 Western Michigan (NCHC) 38 24 19 43 23
199 Sasha Pastujov Ana RW 20 6-0/185 San Diego (AHL) 46 10 13 23 14
200 Andrew Gibson Det D 19 6-3/195 Saul St. Marie (OHL) 68 12 32 44 58
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NHL: BELL – Scout’s Notebook – Midseason Stock Watch on 10 Prospects https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/nhl-bell-scouts-notebook-midseason-stock-watch-10-prospects/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/nhl-bell-scouts-notebook-midseason-stock-watch-10-prospects/#respond Wed, 07 Feb 2024 12:28:09 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=185376 Read More... from NHL: BELL – Scout’s Notebook – Midseason Stock Watch on 10 Prospects

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HV71s Oscar Fisker Molgaard 
Photo: Carl Sandin / BILDBYRÅN /

We’re past the midpoint of the 2023-24 hockey season, with eyes already starting to look towards playoffs or in the case of some NHL teams - the NHL Draft.

Reaching this point in the campaign provides an excellent sample size to analyze which players are meeting expectations or which aren’t taking the steps forward that were hoped. There’s enough hockey left to be played that players' trajectories can still shift, but in all likelihood, the path they’re on at this point is how their season will be remembered.

I looked at prospects across the globe and highlighted 10 that have either raised their stock so far this season or have seen their stock fall. By no means is this a comprehensive list, but simply 10 that have stood out to me enough versus pre-season expectations - positively or negatively.

Stock Down: Xavier Bourgault, Bakersfield Condors, AHL (Edmonton Oilers)

Xavier Bourgault entered the AHL last season as a rookie and truly impressed, fitting in extremely well with the Bakersfield Condors. The Edmonton Oilers top prospect put up respectable numbers in his first year and all signs pointed to 2024-25 being another step in the right direction. That hasn’t been the case. Bourgault is on pace to fall below his stat totals in goals and assists this season, despite looking to play 10 extra games.

Drafted 22nd overall in 2021, there was hope from the Oilers that he would become an offensive threat in the NHL. Looking at where his points are coming from right now though, he may fall into a special-teams role in the long term. His ability to produce (especially to score) at even strength has taken a step backward if anything. There’s still potential here but right now, Bourgault is looking like a bottom-six, complementary player.

Stock Up: Oscar Fisker Molgaard, HV71, SHL (Seattle Kraken)

In his sophomore season in the SHL, Oscar Fisker Molgaard seems to be getting more comfortable with every game played. And it’s starting to show. The 52nd selection of the Seattle Kraken in the 2023 NHL Draft, Fisker Molgaard returned to HV71 this season and has seen his time on ice slowly increase throughout. After helping Team Denmark to a World Juniors (D1A) Bronze Medal, he’s back in the SHL and on fire, with points in 10 of his last 14 games.

To make this even more impressive, he’s doing it playing as a centre. Most 18-year-olds in the SHL would be slid to the wing to play with a more veteran pivot. Not Fisker Molgaard, whose intelligence and improving playmaking have been making him look like a potential middle-six centreman in the NHL. What’s more impressive is that he’s likely to continue to get better. He currently weighs in at 168 pounds. How will he play with another 10-15 pounds? Could this be a potential 2C? This is very much a player to continue to keep an eye on as he develops.

Stock Up: Nikita Grebyonkin, Metallurg Magnitogors, KHL (Toronto Maple Leafs)

He may not have heard his name until 135th overall in the 2022 NHL Draft, but Nikita Grebyonkin is not looking like a fifth-round pick right now. After being selected by the Toronto Maple Leafs, the Russian forward returned to play in the KHL, leading all rookies in points (26) and earning the honour of the league’s Best Rookie Award. Now in his sophomore season, he’s looking even stronger, getting regular minutes on the power play and playing a more complete game.

The competitiveness that the young forward brings stands out in both ends of the ice. His shot looks better, in both his power and his accuracy, which has led to him being on pace to double his goal total from a year ago. This is all while playing LESS on average this season with Metallurg Magnitogorsk than he did a year ago with Amur Khabarovsk. Grebyonkin will be an interesting name to keep an eye on in the coming months, as his KHL deal is over at the end of this season. Will the Maple Leafs be able to bring him to North America?

Stock Down: Noel Gunler, Karpat, Liiga (Carolina Hurricanes)

It wasn’t that long ago that public discussions about Noel Gunler were around whether or not he should be ranked in the top 10 of the 2020 NHL Draft. He ended up hearing his name called 41st by the Carolina Hurricanes, sliding out of the first round likely due to some off-ice issues that were discussed. Either way, the thought was maybe they got a steal. Since being drafted though, Gunler hasn’t developed into that player that many hoped. He did even head overseas to play in the AHL for the 2022-23 season but ultimately headed back to Europe this season.

Now playing in the Liiga with Karpat (he was in the SHL before his year with the Chicago Wolves), Gunler hasn’t been able to settle in, collecting just eight points in 24 games, including five goals. Not great for a player who is known for his goal-scoring. Now adding to this, Gunler hasn’t played since January 10th, due to a transfer dispute between the Malmo Redhawks and Karpat. So it seems unlikely that he’ll be able to bounce back at this point. Gunler’s future is in question at this point, and whether he’s still on a path to being an NHLer is up for debate. 

Stock Up: Niko Huuhtanen, Jukurit, Liiga (Tampa Bay Lightning)

When you get into the later rounds of the NHL Draft, you’re really just crossing your fingers that you’re selecting a future NHLer. You bet on a trait or traits that your scouting department has put high value on (skill, physicality, size, etc.), and hope for the best. In the 2021 NHL Draft, with the final selection, the Tampa Bay Lighting were likely doing just that when they called Niko Huuhtanen’s name 224th overall. The next season, he led the WHL in goals for a rookie (37). In 2022-23? He led the Liiga in goals AND points from a rookie, earning Rookie of the Year honours. And now - he’s looking even better.

The Finn has truly taken steps forward in each season, and that has continued this year in the Liiga with Jukurit. He’s on pace to nearly double his output from his rookie year, largely thanks to his tremendous improvement in his playmaking. He’s very much a goal scorer, but his vision and ability to distribute the puck have stood out this season. With his contract up at the end of the season, perhaps a move to the AHL is next for Huuhtanen.

Stock Down: Danila Klimovich, Abbotsford Canucks, AHL (Vancouver Canucks)

The Vancouver Canucks made a fairly bold choice drafting Danila Klimovich 41st overall in the 2021 NHL Draft. After all, it’s not often that a player gets drafted playing in Belarus. But the young prospect had done enough to show the Canucks’ brass that he was their guy. He immediately came overseas for the 2021-22 season and then took a noticeable step forward in 2022-23. All signs were positive.

This season though, has been a different story. He’s been in and out of the lineup, often scratched but there have also been some injuries along the way. His point totals are way down, across the board with just four points in 17 games, a long stretch from the 29 last season or even the 18 the year prior. There are aspects of his game to love, like his pace and creativity, but the rest of his game is falling behind. If he’s going to become an NHL regular, he’ll need to show some positive steps soon.

Stock Up: Robert Orr, Acadie-Bathurst Titan, QMJHL (Carolina Hurricanes)

When the Carolina Hurricanes drafted the next Bobby Orr 136th overall in 2021, they were drafting a never-give-up prospect that plays a hard-nosed game. He was a younger player in the class, with a September 1st birthdate. Well, it looks like his development may be catching up. He’s among the QMJHL leaders in points this season with 63 in just 47 games, already setting a career-high in the league.

Orr was traded to the Acadie-Bathurst Titan last season and seems to have settled in this year. He’s been playing with a tremendous amount of confidence and is already looking like a player destined for the NHL. I was high on him in his draft year, and it’s excellent to see him coming into his own. It’s important to note that he’s now an older player in the league, so this level of play is expected of him, but it’s fantastic to see him taking those steps. Look for him to jump to the AHL next season.

Carson Rehkopfi of the Kitchener Rangers. Photo by Natalie Shaver/OHL Images

Stock Up: Carson Rehkopf, Kitchener Rangers, OHL (Seattle Kraken)

I’ve already covered Carson Rehkopf’s tremendous season in a previous article, but he’s very much worth the mention here as well. The Kitchener Ranger star forward has exploded offensively this season, currently sitting second in the league in goals (37) and eighth in points per game (1.57). His play this season even earned him a spot on Team Canada for the World Juniors, where he stayed hot with four points in five games.

Rehkopf’s ability to score goals might just be enough to carry him all the way to the NHL. That’s always been a staple of his game and while it’s gotten better this year, so has the rest of his game, elevating him to another level in the OHL. He’s showing the potential to be a top-six winger for the Kraken down the line, an excellent projection for the 50th overall pick in 2023.

Stock Down: David Reinbacher, Kloten, NL (Montreal Canadiens)

When the Montreal Canadiens shocked and drafted Austrian defender David Reinbacher fifth overall in the 2023 NHL Draft, they put some lofty expectations on the defender. He was coming off an outstanding year, earning NL honours as Youngster (Rookie) of the Year, standing out at the World Juniors, and even earning a spot in the World Championships for Team Austria. To cap it off by being drafted fifth overall in a tough market, expectations skyrocketed for the young player.

Unfortunately, things haven’t gone as hoped for Reinbacher. Back in Switzerland with EHC Kloten, he’s struggled to match his rookie-year output. Part of this may be due to an injury he had to start the year, and he hasn’t exactly seemed 100% healthy. Looking at his game, it’s obvious that there are still strides needed in his development to become a potential top-four defender in the NHL. He has a lot of tools to like, such as his mobility and confidence defensively, but that two-way ability seems to have stalled. Still, I expect him to move to the AHL next season, where at least one full year would be helpful to his game.

Stock Up: Massimo Rizzo, University of Denver, NCAA (Philadelphia Flyers)

The last highlighted prospect, Massimo Rizzo has been dominating the NCAA this season with the University of Denver. He currently leads the entire nation in points with 44 in just 28 games. Drafted way back in 2019 and way down at 216th overall by the Carolina Hurricanes, this is outstanding progression for the young forward. For his efforts, he’s been nominated for the 2024 Hobey Baker Award as the NCAA’s top player.

As well, Rizzo earned a sport with Team Canada this season, playing in the Spengler Cup in Switzerland, where he looked extremely comfortable playing against men. The Philadelphia Flyers acquired Rizzo in the offseason along with a 2025 fifth-round pick for the rights to David Kase, a deal that’s already looking excellent for the Flyers. Rizzo’s rights expire in August 2025, so you can bet that the Flyers will be looking to lock him up prior to that.

 

 

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2023 NHL DRAFT: A Review https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/2023-nhl-draft-review/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/2023-nhl-draft-review/#respond Mon, 17 Jul 2023 14:10:53 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=181754 Read More... from 2023 NHL DRAFT: A Review

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Another long year of amazing hockey has come and passed as we oficially end the 2023 scouting season and shift from the star-studded offensive draft class to the defensive-heavy 2024 NHL draft. This year's class was super fun and had the potential to bring the big stars and deep depth that we saw in the 2015 draft. This makes it very difficult to rank the winners and losers as every team acquired some very talented athletes in their organization that should make an impact for many years to come. Some teams acquired some elite star players at draft positions they didn't think would be possible at lower picks and later rounds. Those picks make the difference between good and great drafting by finding those diamonds in the rough.

NHL hockey operations departments are made up of the best of the best in the industry and have been through more drafts and different case studies over more years than I have been alive, which creates some hesitation in handing out grades for teams that we felt drafted poorly or passed on talent or upside. It is important to remember that teams take into consideration so many intangibles and factors outside any eye test or analytics can tell us. They have considerable resources and information networks public scouting teams can only dream of.

Most importantly, people need to remember these young athletes are human beings that just had the best week of their lives and treating them disrespectfully and pre-judging a young man that has yet to fully develop mentally and physically is completely unfair. I think every fan base should be showing love and support for the future players that are going to put in blood sweat and tears for the team you cheer for and go to war against the opposition.

With all that in mind, here is how I think all 32 teams performed at the 2023 NHL Draft based on my own rankings as well as the wonderful team at McKeen’s that I have the pleasure working alongside.

HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA - DECEMBER 29: Canada's Connor Bedard #16 backhands the puck while Austria's Tim Geifes #21 defends during Preliminary Round - Group A action at the 2023 IIHF World Junior Championship at Scotiabank Centre on December 29, 2022 in Halifax, Nova Scotia. (Photo by Matt Zambonin/IIHF)
#1 Chicago Blackhawks (A+)

1 Connor Bedard (F)

19 Oliver Moore (F)

35 Adam Gajan (G)

44 Roman Kantserov (F)

55 Martin Misiak (F)

67 Nick Lardis (F)

93 Jiri Felcman (F)

99 Alex Pharand (F)

131 Marcel Marcel (F)

167 Milton Oscarson (F)

195 Janne Peltonen (D)

It feels very fitting that the number one ranked team had the number one pick this year in the generational talent of Connor Bedard, who is expected to make an immediate impact. Kyle Davidson clearly agrees by bringing in some veteran support this summer in Taylor Hall, Nick Foligno and Corey Perry. This pick was obvious. What makes the Blackhawks stand out is what might be my favourite selection of the entire draft in Oliver Moore at 19th overall, where I, alongside Davidson, was in shock this player was still on the board—followed by selecting one of if not one of the best goaltenders in Adam Gajan. We absolutely loved Nick Lardis at McKeens, and we find this to be amazing value in the early third round. Roman Kantserov, Martin Misiak, Alex Pharand and Marcel Marcel are other great pickups to round out the real depth of this draft class for the Blackhawks as they build the next generation in Chicago.

#2 Columbus Blue Jackets (A)

3 Adam Fantilli (F)

34 Gavin Brindley (F)

66 William Whitelaw (F)

98 Andrew Strathmann (D)

114 Luca Pinelli (F)

156 Melvin Strahl (G)

194 Oiva Keskinen (F)

224 Tyler Peddle (F)

The Blue Jackets' dreams came true when Adam Fantilli was still waiting for them at third overall, as the rookie Hobey Baker winner would have been selected first overall in any other draft. Followed up by his Michigan teammate Gavin Brindley who we at McKeens had ranked #26. William Whitelaw ranked at #39 by McKeen’s, and Andrew Strathmann, ranked #39 by me, are amazing values. I really like Luca Pinelli at #114 and thought it was a great move to trade for the last pick in the draft and select Tyler Peddle, who was in attendance and should have been selected much higher. This will be the draft that could really put the Blue Jackets over the top to be a future contender in the Metro.

#3 Philadelphia Flyers (A)

7 Matvei Michkov (F)

22 Oliver Bonk (D)

51 Carson Bjarnason (G)

87 Yegor Zavragin (G)

95 Denver Barkey (F)

103 Cole Knuble (F)

120 Alex Ciernik (F)

135 Carter Sotheran (D)

172 Ryan MacPherson (F)

199 Matteo Mann (D)

The Flyers got a player with arguably the highest upside in the class in 7th overall in Matvei Michkov alone, which is enough to rank them this high. Aside from whether there is any truth to rumours that he somehow orchestrated his way to Philadelphia, he was genuinely excited to be drafted by the organization. The possibility that he will be coming to play in North America perhaps sooner rather than later could completely alter the landscape of the rebuild for GM Daniel Briere. They followed up by selecting Oliver Bonk, who our Ontario scouts adore at McKeens, including myself. Bonk will continue to develop in London. The Carson Bjarnson pick could age very well as a good young goaltender with a long road of development ahead. Denver Barkey and Alex Cienik are great value picks at 95th and 120th.

#4 Seattle Kraken (A-)

20 Eduard Sale (F)

50 Carson Rehkopf (F)

52 Oscar Fisker Mølgaard (F)

57 Lukas Dragicevic (D)

84 Caden Price (D)

116 Andrei Loshko (F)

148 Kaden Hammell (D)

168 Visa Vedenpää (G)

180 Zeb Forsfjäll (F)

212 Zaccharya Wisdom (F)

Seattle has been consistently one of the better drafting teams since they entered the league, and they continued that streak in Nashville. Eduard Sale is very much a gamble with questions about his compete lvel and lack of production against pros. However, he possesses elite finishing ability and was dominant against players his own age. He has a very high ceiling that I believe can be developed properly in the OHL, followed by the development team in Seattle. At the end of the day, with such a great prospect pool, you can take a swing for upside at #20 overall and can add a true top-line finisher for Shane Wright or Matty Beniers. The Kraken continues to favour the CHL and loaded up with more players in Carson Rehkopf, Lukas Dragicevic and Caden Price in the late second round. They had all been viewed as late first/early second round talents. Oscar Fisker Mølgaard has the potential to bring some real energy to the bottom six and PK and become a really good role player for the team. I had him ranked at #30th betting on his high motor and relentless pressure with some finishing ability.

#5 Carolina Hurricanes (A-)

30 Bradly Nadeau (F)

62 Felix Unger Sörum (F)

94 Jayden Perron (F)

100 Alexander Rykov (F)

126 Stanislav Yarovoy (F)

139 Charles-Alexis Legault (D)

158 Ruslan Khazheyev (G)

163 Timur Mukhanov (F)

190 Michael Emerson (F)

222 Yegor Velmakin (G)

Bradley Nadeau was the highest player selected from the BCHL after having a monster year. He was ranked #27 by McKeens, which makes for a good pick late in the first. Where Carolina impressed us was how well they drafted in the later rounds picking up some of the biggest steals of the draft in Jayden Perron who we ranked 34th and Timur Mukhanov ranked 98th. As they typically do, Carolina drafted great to add to the loaded prospect pool.

#6 Buffalo Sabres (A-)

13 Zach Benson (F)

39 Anton Wahlberg (F)

45 Maxim Strbak (D)

86 Gavin McCarthy (D)

109 Ethan Miedema (F)

141 Scott Ratzlaff (G)

173 Sean Keohane (D)

205 Norwin Panocha (D)

Draft after draft Buffalo finds themselves selecting some great players but I think Zach Benson could be the final elite piece they need to take them back to the playoffs and end the long drought. Benson is the smartest player in the draft after Connor Bedard. They followed up with good picks in Anton Wahlberg and Maxim Strbak. I really like the value of Ethan Miedema and Scott Ratzlaff in rounds 4 and 5.

#7 St. Louis Blues (B+)

10 Dalibor Dvorský (F)

25 Otto Stenberg (F)

29 Theo Lindstein (D)

74 Quinton Burns (D)

76 Juraj Pekarcik (F)

106 Jakub Stancl (F)

138 Paul Fischer (D)

170 Matthew Mayich (D)

202 Nikita Susuyev (F)

Dalibor Dvorský and Otto Stenberg could be an amazing one-two punch down the middle in the near future as the Blues shift towards the future and away from the team that won them the 2019 Stanley Cup. I think Dvorsky and Stenberg both have been underrated as they tend to be looked at as “safe picks” - a term that I sometimes hate because it shouldn’t discount the true skill these players have. Because they are viewed as having lower ceilings than some other top names in the class they fell at the draft, and St. Louis took full advantage and selected the best player available. The rest of the Blues draft was very average, not making any poor selections but also not taking any swings on some big names with upside.

#8 Washington Capitals (B+)

8 Ryan Leonard (F)

40 Andrew Cristall (F)

104 Patrick Thomas (F)

136 Cameron Allen (D)

200 Brett Hyland (F)

206 Antoine Keller (G)

The Capitals may not have had the luck they had hoped for in having Michkov fall to them, but they were very quick to the podium to select the NTDP gritty winger in Ryan Leonard. He brings a hard game and that’s no slight on the raw skill this kid has. After this year’s playoffs, NHL teams are looking to mold their roster after the Florida Panthers and Vegas Golden Knights and Leonard fits that profile. Many, including myself, expected Andrew Cristall to fall on draft day but to 40th overall was quite surprising and Washington took full advantage, taking some risk on a junior perimeter player. Going into the draft year we expected Cameron Allen to be the first OHL player off the board, but after a brutal season his stock plummeted. It’s hard to believe this talented young player entirely forgot how to play hockey and I think the Caps were willing to take this bet at 136.

#9 Colorado Avalanche (B)

27 Calum Ritchie (F)

31 Mikhail Gulyayev (D)

155 Nikita Ishimnikov (D)

187 Jeremy Hanzel (D)

219 Maros Jedlicka (F)

The Avalanche wouldn’t have expected to select Calum Ritchie and Mikhail Gulyayev with these very late first rounders who we ranked 19th and 24th. This is great value at these picks. I find it very interesting that they went with a very smart player who has a low ceiling and a high floor in Ritchie but then took a bit of a gamble on Gulyayev who is the polar opposite with a high ceiling and low floor. Not having many picks, and not many high ones, they can consider it a win if Colorado can get a couple NHLers from such minimal selections.

#10 Los Angeles Kings (B)

54 Jakub Dvorak (D)

78 Koehn Ziemmer (F)

118 Hampton Slukynsky (G)

150 Matthew Mania (D)

182 Ryan Conmy (F)

Jakub Dvorak has been such an underrated player all season long because he hasn’t been playing due to injury and is not flashy and doesn’t have much of a highlight reel but he might be the best defensive defenseman to come from this draft class. Big frame players like Dvorak are rare and hard to find and are typically viewed as underrated even in the NHL because they are never noticeable with the puck. Dvorak shut down all the top players in the U.S. NTDP top line, Dvorsky, Michkov and even Connor Bedard at international competitions. He makes life so hard for attackers and will be a nightmare for goal scorers in the NHL and people will wonder how he was selected so late. The Kings followed this up with good picks in Koehn Ziemmer and Matthew Mania.

#11 Florida Panthers (B)

63 Gracyn Sawchyn (F)

127 Albert Wikman (D)

159 Olof Glifford (G)

191 Luke Coughlin (D)

198 Stepan Zvyagin (F)

Florida was another team that capitalized on an underrated player who slid on draft day in Gracyn Sawchyn. He played on a star-studded Seattle Thunderbirds team and didn’t get the opportunity to play top minutes but that didn’t stop him from putting up over a point per game. He will continue to grow under a great development program as he gains more ice time and expect him to put up monster numbers in the WHL for the next two seasons.

#12 Dallas Stars (C+)

61 Tristan Bertucci (D)

79 Brad Gardiner (F)

125 Aram Minnetian (D)

157 Arno Tiefensee (G)

189 Angus MacDonell (F)

221 Sebastian Bradshaw (F)

Dallas had very minimal draft capital and made the absolute most of it to no one's surprise as they usually do. Amazing value in Tristan Bertucci and Aram Minnetian.

#13 Vegas Golden Knights (B-)

32 David Edstrom (F)

77 Mathieu Cataford (F)

96 Arttu Kärki (D)

192 Tuomas Uronen (F)

Vegas selecting David Edstrom almost felt destined to happen as the last pick of the first round as we expected him to be selected in the first round. Great pick for the Stanley Cup winners. Arttu Karki was also my favorite Finnish defense this year and I think 96 is excellent value for a player of his skill.

#14 San Jose Sharks (B-)

4 Will Smith (F)

26 Quentin Musty (F)

36 Kasper Halttunen (F)

71 Brandon Svoboda (F)

123 Luca Cagnoni (D)

130 Axel Landén (D)

132 Eric Pohlkamp (D)

196 David Klee (F)

203 Yegor Rimashevsky (F)

The Sharks drafted the highly skilled forward Will Smith very high, and I know he has gained some real hype over the past few months to get into the top 5 but personally having him just outside the top 10 makes it very hard to justify so much talent and other options at pick 4. This is a take that really could come back to bite me but I just don't love what Smith and Musty bring to the table outside of the high offensive skill that they clearly both have. In terms of value picks I think Halttunen is the Sharks best pick. If he played in London last season, he would have been called on day one of the draft and still has the opportunity to come over next season and be one of the best players in the league right away. The Sharks drafted very well but 13 other teams just did better.

#15 Calgary Flames (B-)

16 Samuel Honzek (F)

48 Étienne Morin (D)

80 Aydar Suniev (F)

112 Jaden Lipinski (F)

176 Yegor Yegorov (G)

208 Axel Hurtig (D)

The Flames had a solid draft and got a player we can expect the be a safe NHLer in Samuel Honzek that was expected in this range. I think Etienne Mornin could be the steal for them. This is a player that is extremely intelligent, and I personally have a lot of faith will continue to have success in his own development each season and could be viewed as a late first rounder in the near future. Aydar Suniev at 80th overall is also great value.

#16 Montréal Canadiens (B-)

5 David Reinbacher (D)

69 Jacob Fowler (G)

101 Florian Xhekaj (F)

110 Bogdan Konyushkov (D)

128 Quentin Miller (G)

133 Sam Harris (F)

144 Yevgeni Volokhin (G)

165 Filip Eriksson (F)

197 Luke Mittelstadt (D)

Montréal might be the most talked about team post draft for all the wrong reasons so being dead in the middle at 16 may come as a surprise to most. The dislike for me comes from picks 101-197 where they took seven guys they could have gotten in rounds 6 or 7, and unfortunately some of those picks were in rounds 4 and 5. Jacob Fowler is a good goalie that could be huge for them, with the organization having such little depth in that department. Now Reinbacher who is the talk of Twitter and unfortunately for terrible reasons. The only argument I can understand against him is that Michkov should have been the pick, but there were many question marks surrounding the Russian and his intentions, leaving the Habs in a situation with lots of uncertainty at pick #5. So, they understandably took a player with a lot of certainty in elite defenseman David Reinbacher.  He has been the only player under 18 shutting down grown professional athletes and ex-NHLers for two years. If that's not impressive enough he didn't just defend, he also produced higher than anyone in their DY-2 and DY-1 ever.

David has a good head on his shoulders and will develop all the necessary skills to round out his game to become a high-end defenseman who will eat lots of minutes and make a huge impact. He may not put up great offensive numbers or make highlight reel plays. That's ok, he plays defense for a reason. Leave that for the loads of talented players you already have and let Reinbacher make the other team's life a living hell and win hockey games, because that's what it's all about.

#17 Arizona Coyotes (B-)

6 Dmitri Simashev (D)

12 Daniil But (F)

38 Michael Hrabal (G)

70 Jonathan Castagna (F)

72 Noel Nordh (F)

81 Tanner Ludtke (F)

88 Vadim Moroz (F)

102 Terrell Goldsmith (D)

134 Melker Thelin (G)

160 Justin Kipkie (D)

162 Samu Bau (F)

166 Carsen Musser (G)

Arizona may have not drafted our best player available in their slots, but they took an interesting strategy to this year's draft that might have been the best option based on the current state of the team. Dmitri Simashev was our number one ranked defenseman in the class while Danill But has displayed shades of Evgeni Malkin at times.  Both played on the same team this past season. This put Arizona in a safer situation to swing on upside and internally develop them together and could very well be a big payoff. Hrabal is the pick that gives some extra value as my personal favorite goaltender in the class. Drafting all players over 6'0" is another interesting strategy that is hard to disagree with. Middle of the pack supports my mixed feelings on the drafting of the Coyotes.

#18 Winnipeg Jets (C)

18 Colby Barlow (F)

82 Zachary Nehring (F)

146 Jacob Julien (F)

151 Thomas Milic (G)

210 Connor Levis (F)

Winnipeg is facing a lot of potential turnover on their roster this season. Colby Barlow makes an excellent pick for the Jets, bringing in a character Canadian guy, on and off the ice, as a key piece to build upon. You can expect Barlow to score lots of goals in the near future. The rest of the picks are very average, so they receive an average grade.

#19 New York Rangers (C)

23 Gabe Perreault (F)

90 Drew Fortescue (D)

152 Rasmus Larsson (D)

178 Dylan Roobroeck (F)

183 Ty Henricks (F)

Gabe Perreault was good value at 23rd as I thought his production this season would lead to him going much higher than he should have and I think this was a good range for him. A smart player who can be a great complement to some high-end skill just like he did with the NTDP. The rest of the picks were not very average.

#20 Detroit Red Wings (C)

9 Nate Danielson (F)

17 Axel Sandin Pellikka (D)

41 Trey Augustine (G)

42 Andrew Gibson (D)

47 Brady Cleveland (D)

73 Noah Dower Nilsson (F)

117 Larry Keenan (D)

137 Jack Phelan (D)

147 Kevin Bicker (F)

169 Rudy Guimond (G)

201 Emmitt Finnie (F)

Detroit's draft was very interesting to me because I find it hard to criticize Steve Yzerman’s picks which have been excellent in the past with some home runs to show for it. Nate Danielson and Axel-Sandin Pellika are great players who will be NHLers and good ones. They just didn't strike me as the types of players Detroit has recently drafted with some hard nose battlers that are going to be warriors. I think it might take a while for either to become impact playoff players relative to some of the skill still left on the board, such as Oliver Moore at pick #9 and still available at #17. They pass with a C as most other picks were good, but just that they were good and not great, where teams ahead of them made some great picks.

#21 Edmonton Oilers (C)

56 Beau Akey (D)

184 Nathaniel Day (G)

216 Matt Copponi (F)

Beau Akey is a good pick that has a good path in front of him to refine his offensive talents and become a threat from the point for the Colts over the next couple of seasons and get a real chance to make the Oilers. Hard to judge a team with such little options at the draft.

Leo Carlsson of Sweden at a practice session during the 2023 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship on May 25, 2023 in Riga.
Photo: Joel Marklund / BILDBYRÅN /
#22 Anaheim Ducks (C-)

2 Leo Carlsson (F)

33 Nico Myatovic (F)

59 Carey Terrance (F)

60 Damian Clara (G)

65 Coulson Pitre (F)

85 Yegor Sidorov (F)

97 Konnor Smith (D)

129 Rodwin Dionicio (D)

161 Vojtech Port (D)

I think passing on Fantilli will be something that will haunt Anaheim for a long time and really hurts their grade even though they are getting a great talent in Leo Carlsson. Unfortunately, I have a hard time seeing Carlsson being the 2nd best player that comes from this class and when they are a top team in the league soon this selection might be the difference between a contender and a champion. Other than that, Myatovic, Terrance and Pitre are solid picks.

#23 Vancouver Canucks (D+)

11 Tom Willander (D)

75 Hunter Brzustewicz (C-)

89 Sawyer Mynio (D)

105 Ty Mueller (F)

107 Vilmer Alriksson (F)

119 Matthew Perkins (F)

171 Aiden Celebrini (D)

Willander was ranked 23rd by us at McKeens and is a great defenseman who happens to be in a star studded offensive heavy draft. I think the Canuks were guilty of drafting for need rather than best player available and that affected the grade. Other than that, there isn’t too much to like in the class other than Hunter Brzustewicz at 75 was a great selection.

#24 Nashville Predators (C-)

15 Matthew Wood (F)

24 Tanner Molendyk (D)

43 Felix Nilsson (F)

46 Kalan Lind (F)

68 Jesse Kiiskinen (F)

83 Dylan MacKinnon (D)

111 Joseph Willis (F)

121 Juha Jatkola (G)

143 Sutter Muzzatti (F)

175 Austin Roest

218 Aiden Fink

Nashville was the host of this year’s draft and advised by new GM Barry Trotz in an interview to take some swings on high upside to add some high-end skill to the prospect pool. Well, they just didn’t do any of that and delivered a mediocre draft outside of top prospect Matthew Wood. What makes their draft so disappointing is that after 10 consecutive picks, the next best value pick was David Poiles last pick in Aiden Fink in the 7th round. Expectations were high and far from reached.

#25 Tampa Bay Lightning (D)

37 Ethan Gauthier (F)

115 Jayson Shaugabay (F)

179 Warren Clark (D)

193 Jack Harvey (F)

211 Ethan Hay (F)

Tampa will find a way to develop these players, especially Ethan Gauthier, because that’s what they do best within their system. I just believe they could have done it with the better options available and left talent on the table with every pick.

#26 New Jersey Devils (D+)

58 Lenni Hämeenaho (F)

122 Cam Squires (F)

154 Chase Cheslock (D)

164 Cole Brown (F)

186 Daniil Karpovich (D)

New Jersey was very inactive and didn’t take many swings this year and they are in a situation where they didn’t need to. Lenni Hameenaho was ranked 84 for us at McKeens and was a bit of a reach.

#27     Ottawa Senators (D)

108 Hoyt Stanley (D)

140 Matthew Andonovski (D)

204 Owen Beckner (F)

207 Vladimir Nikitin (G)

215 Nicholas VanTassell (F)

Ottawa did not have many picks and none very high. Hoyt Stanley is the only pick which has had some hype going into the draft and been noticeable this season. I wouldn’t expect anyone from the class to make the roster.

#28 Pittsburgh Penguins (D-)

14 Brayden Yager (F)

91 Emil Pieniniemi (D)

142 Mikhail Ye. Ilyin (F)

174 Cooper Foster (F)

217 Emil Järventie (F)

223 Kalle Kangas (D)

Another situation where good players were selected but when I look at this class, and Emil Jarventie is the best value pick in the 7th round, that is an issue for me. Yes, Brayden Yager is an excellent player with a deadly shot and a good head on his shoulders. It’s hard to give high grades when top 5-10 talents were still available where he was picked. This strikes me as more of a situation where the Penguins scouting staff were left to make the pick, more so than Dubas, and they went with the guy they targetted going into the draft rather than the best player available.

#29 Toronto Maple Leafs (D-)

28 Easton Cowan (F)

153 Hudson Malinoski (F)

185 Noah Chadwick (D)

The Easton Cowan pick is very difficult to grade because it really could go both ways. I understand the pick because you’re getting, debatably, the hardest working player in the class whose development is skyrocketing at a high pace under the teachings of the Hunters in London. You can expect this growth to continue over the next couple seasons. It woudl appear the Leafs aren’t selecting the 28th best player currently and are banking on Cowan being a first round talent in 3-5 years, an approach I agree with. The issue I have with this pick is I really think you could have selected him later, and possibly much later. The 2nd round Is still a reach but at least you’re not leaving talent on the table in this deep draft and getting the maximum value out of each pick. I just think this was some poor asset management and the Leafs just focused on getting their guy. Time will be the true indicator.

#30 New York Islanders (D)

49 Danny Nelson (F)

113 Jesse Nurmi (F)

145 Justin Gill (F)

177 Zach Schulz (D)

209 Dennis Good Bogg (D)

Islanders drafted some good leadership in a pair of Captains in Danny Nelson and Zach Shulz. When that is the best thing to be said about the selections that is an issue.

#31 Boston Bruins (F+)

92 Christopher Pelosi (F)

124 Beckett Hendrickson (F)

188 Ryan Walsh (F)

214 Casper Nässén (F)

220 Kristian Kostadinski (D)

Beckett Hendrickson is the only reason they aren’t ranked 32nd.

#32 Minnesota Wild (F)

21 Charlie Stramel (F)

53 Rasmus Kumpulainen (F)

64 Riley Heidt (F)

149 Aaron Pionk (D)

181 Kalem Parker (D)

213 Jimmy Clark (F)

The Wild are the only team that gets an F grade. It’s not because I don't like the players in Charlie Stramel and Rasmus Kumpulainen because they are prospects I had on my personal board, but it’s very hard to justify these picks with the options still available on the board at the time of the picks. These are just too far off the board to not trade back and still get the player you want. We at McKeens ranked both these players as 3rd round talents.

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