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1 - Hendrix Lapierre C
Hendrix Lapierre is a pure playmaker drafted 22nd overall by the Washington Capitals at the 2020 NHL Draft. Some executives mentioned back then that they would not have taken Lapierre in the first round due to his concussion problems. However, the Caps did not have the same line of thought. Lapierre, at some point during the beginning of his junior career, would always never shoot the puck: he was always looking for a pass. However, he did round out his game recently as he had 21 goals and 30 assists last season with the Acadie-Bathurst Titans. On top of that, He’s an extremely gifted stickhandler that can weave his way through an entire team. It was his high skill level that caught the attention of the Capitals as they gave him an early season six game audition this past season (that saw Lapierre score his first career NHL goal). Now aged out of the QMJHL, Lapierre will attempt to crack the Capitals full time this season. More than likely, he will need some additional seasoning in the AHL to help him round out his game as a more complete player. However, there is no doubting Lapierre’s upside as a future top six player for Washington. - EB
2 - Ivan Miroshnichenko LW
Miroshnichenko was the 20th selection by the Washington Capitals in the 2022 draft. The Capitals are confident that this is the kind of player who can become the team’s future goal scoring leader following in the footsteps of countryman Alex Ovechkin. There were high expectations for Miroshnichenko in the 2021-22 season, as he was expected to be one of the top players available heading into the draft year. Despite the fact that the previous season was not outstanding for Miroshnichenko, he was able to show the world his warrior character by overcoming all difficulties, particularly his battle with cancer. Although the decision to select Miroshnichenko in the first round may have been a risky decision, the club sees great promise in Miroshnichenko and believes in his talent. Miroshnichenko is a technically skilled sniper. He played last season in the VHL (2nd men’s league in Russia) and finished among his team’s top five scorers. He possesses excellent technical skating as he is a wide and fast skater. Miroschnichenko also has great stick-handling ability, which he pairs with a very good wrist shot and excellent slap shot. He uses his shooting arsenal correctly. A physical player, he's got a mature game and will play through contact to make a play. Consistency is an issue he will look to correct, and his defensive play does need to improve as he has a tendency to chase and lose his man. A potential future top six scorer, Miroshnichenko is expected to be able to play in the NHL as early as the 2023-24 season at the end of his current contract in Russia. - DB
3 - Ryan Chesley D
Ryan Chesley was a divisive prospect during the 2022 draft cycle, with many debates being heard about the true nature of his NHL upside. Chesley’s offensive production at the U.S. National Team Development Program was underwhelming, and many have wondered if that’s an indication that he just doesn’t have the skill level to be more than a defensive specialist at the next level. But while his abilities in one zone are the subject of fierce debate, Chesley’s value in the other two zones generates more consensus. Starting with the defensive zone, Chesley’s value is more readily apparent. He’s a mobile defenseman, able to close on pucks and incoming defenders in a timely fashion. He’s a physical player who willingly engages in board battles and has unleashed some rattling hits. He’s not a massive defenseman but standing at six feet tall he has enough size to play the sort of defensive style he prefers. In the neutral zone, Chesley’s abilities puck skills combined with his skating give him definite transition value, and while some might mistakenly typecast him as a stay-at-home, throwback defender Chesley is absolutely a fit for what the modern NHL expects from its blueliners. The issue with Chesley lies in the way he sees the game. Too often, Chesley’s ability to make the right reads at the right times betrays him, and that has kept him from achieving the sort of heights as a prospect his tools would indicate he can reach. With the proper development, he could become a valuable two-way defenseman in a team’s top-four, but he needs some work to get there. - EH
4 - Aliaksei Protas C
In his first full season with the Capitals organization, Protas managed to suit up for 33 games, performing admirably. The 6’6”, 225-pound mammoth certainly has size, but his maturity and ability to responsibly play a lower line role paid out in spades for the 2019 3rd round draft pick. His strong start with Hershey of the AHL moved him up the list of call-ups very quickly in a year where the Capitals introduced more rookies to the line-up than had in years. This shouldn’t be surprising for Protas after he broke out with the WHL Prince Albert Raiders in 19-20 and then followed that up with considerable step in development in the 20-21 season. He potted 10 goals in the KHL for Dinamo Minsk, which tied him for first among U20 players in Russia’s top league That was followed by a 16-game stint with Hershey in which he accumulated another seven points. As his size and ever-increasing weight would indicate, Protas can be an absolute handful down low, and this was evident even at the NHL level this year. His movement to the net combined with a propensity for cycling in the corners makes him difficult to defend against. He also uses his body very well to protect the puck. Just how far he goes will be determined by his progress in the skating department. He is already at a point where he can swim at the NHL level. A gig with the Capitals is not a guarantee heading into this season. – CL
5 - Alexander Alexeyev D
The road to an NHL spot has been a bumpy one for Washington’s 2018 first rounder. After spending the majority of the 20-21 season on loan to KHL Salavat, putting up 17 points in 64 total games, he concluded that season on a high note with nine points and a +11 in 12 games with AHL Hershey. An extremely solid player who presents a fine balance between his responsibilities on the defensive side and his acumen in supporting the attack, Alexeyev spent nearly the entire 21-22 season in the AHL. Much had been expected last season, but he barely doubled his AHL season over season despite playing over five times as many games. Even though he was considered a defensively oriented defenseman, his accumulation of exactly one goal presented quite the letdown in light of the steps he had taken in prior seasons. Thought to be on the cusp of an NHL spot this time last year, Alexeyev heads into the 22-23 season facing great competition in taking the next step. Internal competitor Martin Fehervary appears to have earned himself a spot in the line-up moving forward and Washington made several veteran depth signings while also adding former first rounder Gabriel Carlsson this summer. With this in mind, Alexeyev heads into camp needing to push Washington’s hand or Hershey will be his destination once again for his third and final season of his ELC. – CL
6 - Bogdan Trineyev
Trineyev is easy to notice with his mobility and big frame, along with effortless puck control and a strong shot from the right-hand side, all making it easy to see why Washington has made a bet on his upside. On the other hand, he is coming off a very uneven season, as after a good start and earning decent minutes in the KHL he suffered a broken thumb, which sidelined him for a lengthy stretch. After recovering from that he found himself back in junior hockey, where he looked good, but he also left the impression that he didn’t want to be there. After the season ended, Trineyev signed an entry-level deal with the Capitals and even managed to play couple of AHL games on a tryout agreement with Hershey. It might still be too early in his development to succeed in North American hockey, as he needs to add maturity and well-roundedness to his game, and he also needs to further fill his frame. It was no big surprise when it was announced that Trineyev would be loaned back to Dynamo Moscow for the 2022-23 season, to better prepare him for his hopefully brighter future. It would be a safe bet to see the big winger come back to North America after the KHL season ends in April, to see how the added time at home better prepared him for life in the AHL. The NHL is still a very realistic future goal. - VF
7 - Jake Karabela C
The 149th selection in the 2022 NHL Draft, Jake Karabela didn’t have many expectations coming into the season, but he quickly made an impression and was able to become a utility knife for the Storm. He adapted to different roles, played with different teammates up and down the lineup, and was able to play both on the wing and centre when needed and was effective consistently wherever he played. Karabela plays a pretty simple game, but he’s very effective at what he does. He makes smart decisions with and without the puck consistently and has great awareness, finding open space to make it easier on teammates. He’s able to play a strong 200ft game and compete hard every shift. Like others, Karabela missed the 2020-2021 season due to the Covid-19 shutdown. In the 2021-2022 season, Karabela finished with 45 points (12G,33A) in 68 games, which was 7th in the league for assists by a rookie and 4th on the team in points. Karabela’s best assets are his puck handling and competitiveness. He’s able to beat opponents one-on-one with deception and quick hands and has the ability to protect the puck and drive through traffic, being able to get many chances in the slot and near the net. Karabela has a motor that never quits on a play, showing great determination to finish a play. He displays great energy along the boards and gives himself a chance to win every puck battle. Going into the 2022-2023 season, Karabela will look to increase his point totals and become a lock in the top six. - DK
8 - Alexander Suzdalev LW
Suzdalev was recently selected 70th overall by the Washington Capitals in the 2022 NHL draft. He is known mainly for his playmaking ability. His hands are silky with the puck, which allows him to make last second plays in tight. He also has a good combination of size (6’2”) and speed. He is able to generate speed through his skating stride, however he has also proven his ability to slow the game down when necessary. This past season, Suzdalev had polar opposite play between his time with HV71 in the J20 league and his international play. In the J20, he showed his polished playmaking ability by finishing with 36 assists and 51 points in 45 games. That was enough for Suzdalev to finish in the top 10 in scoring for the J20. On the other hand, he struggled in international play, especially at the U18 tournament in April, where he looked sloppy and was held pointless. Ultimately for someone his size, he could benefit from attacking the middle of the ice more, rather than always playing along the boards. He also would benefit from adding strength to his current frame. This could improve his puck protection and his ability to generate speed through his first stride. Next season, there is a strong chance he plays in the WHL for the Regina Pats. This could be an extreme plus for Suzdalev as he is known for his playmaking ability and may have the chance to play with the expected 1st overall pick in 2023, the prolific goal scorer Connor Bedard. - ZS
9 - Brent Johnson D
Brent Johnson hasn’t had the easiest transition to college hockey since being drafted 80th overall by the Capitals at the 2021 NHL draft. The five-foot-eleven Johnson had surgery before his freshman year that impacted his readiness and ability to play at 100% for the University of North Dakota last season. As a result, Johnson’s role was limited last season and his effectiveness was limited as well. Johnson’s best tool is his skating, and he can absolutely move around the ice quite well. Johnson’s mobility gives him upside on both ends of the ice, especially as someone who can help his team exit the defensive zone and enter the offensive zone. On the rush, his speed also allows him to maintain proper gap control With that being said, the strength of his skating isn’t backed up by major strengths in other areas of his game. Johnson’s decision-making can be lacking at times, and his overall defensive impact was quite poor last season, despite his skating. It’s not that he’s simply being overwhelmed and is unable to handle the responsibilities of being a defenseman in the NCAA, it’s more that Johnson’s attempts to make sound defensive plays weren’t often successful and his lack of size and strength left him ill-equipped to handle larger forwards. Johnson’s season in the USHL was promising, though, and he’s a project. If he can make tangible steps to improve other areas of his game in college, his mobility can be the tool that makes him a notable pro prospect. But he has work to do. His progress will definitely be something to watch for those who follow Capitals prospects. - EH
10 - Joaquim Lemay D
Joaquim Lemay had only played fifteen games at the Junior A level in his draft season, but that didn’t stop the Washington Capitals from using a fourth-round pick to nab Lemay at the 2021 NHL draft. Their scouts obviously saw something in Lemay that most others didn’t, as he barely registered in media rankings and was ranked 224th among North American Skaters by NHL Central Scouting for the 2021 draft. After Lemay’s debut USHL season, it’s become a lot clearer why the Capitals felt confident enough to select him despite Lemay receiving very little outside attention. Lemay was an instant-impact two-way defenseman for the Lincoln Stars, flashing talent on both ends of the ice. Like fellow Capitals prospect Brent Johnson, Lemay’s best attribute is his skating talent. He’s an incredibly mobile defenseman, and his skating ability is the foundation of his game that he builds the rest of his habits on. Lemay is more than just his feet, too. He is a facilitator when he’s in the offensive zone and should contribute on the power play at the University of Nebraska-Omaha. As one would expect, Lemay’s defensive game is more about zone exits, closing out on pucks quickly, and using his speed to cover ground and get into passing lanes as they develop. The bottom line with Lemay is that his skating is good enough to make him a legitimate NHL prospect, and if he can build off of that tool at the college level and become an offensive difference-maker, he could rise quickly in the Capitals’ prospect rankings. - EH
11 - Vincent Iorio
Iorio’s calling card at the next level might be in the defensive end, but the WHL defender is coming off of a strong offensive season. A strong skating right shot defender with size, Iorio is likely to start playing in the AHL this year, however he could also be sent back to the WHL for an overage year.
12 - Axel Jonsson-Fjallby
The speedy winger stands out most in a high energy role and as a penalty killer. He has a chance to make the Capitals full time this season in that exact role.
13 - Lucas Johansen
Injuries have derailed the former first round pick’s development thus far. But Johansen was finally healthy last season and responded with a strong season for Hershey. He could be a sneaky candidate for a roster spot this season.
14 - David Gucciardi
Gucciardi’s freshman season at Michigan State was a success, making him a draft selection of Washington in 2022. An excellent powerplay QB because of his mobility, Gucciardi still needs to work on his decision making at both ends.
15 - Fabian Wagner
An intriguing athlete, Wagner’s draft season was mired in inconsistency. His upside may be a little clearer after this coming season in the Linkoping program.
16 - Mitchell Gibson
Gibson, the starting netminder at Harvard, will return for another season with the Ivy league program. He has been solid so far and will look to become one of the better goaltenders in the NCAA this season to increase his stock in the system.
17 - Chase Clark
The big netminder ended last season on a high note with Muskegon in the USHL and will now try to secure consistent playing time at Quinnipiac as a freshman this season.
18 - Clay Stevenson
A free agent signing out of Darthmouth after a single NCAA season, the Capitals are intrigued by Stevenson’s combination of size and athleticism in the crease. It will be interesting to see what the team’s goaltending development coaches can do with him.
19 - Garrett Pilon
This is a make-or-break season in the Capitals system for Pilon. The son of former NHL’er Rich Pilon is a competitive power forward, but his lack of pace has held him back thus far.
20 - Ludwig Persson
A 2022 draft pick by Washington, Persson had a disappointing draft year after being thought of as one of Sweden’s top players in the draft class previously. He has speed to burn but his offensive capabilities may be more limited than previously thought.
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#28 Washington - Washington has been trying to add some higher end players of late, but not enough of them. There may not be ten real future NHLers in this system.

It was an excellent development year for McMichael, especially given the circumstances surrounding his first pro season (thrust into the AHL as a 19-year-old because of the OHL’s cancellation). McMichael finished the season as Hershey’s leading scorer and was subsequently named to the AHL’s All-Rookie team. The 2019 first round selection has put himself firmly in competition for NHL playing time as early as this upcoming season.
The former London Knights star has the potential to be an extremely versatile player. He can play any forward position. He has the intelligence level to play in any situation. And he is a more than competent finisher, due to a great wrist shot and scoring instincts. While he may not project as a first line all-star at the NHL level, he does have a chance of becoming a consistent 20-goal scorer and someone who can play a middle six role for Washington in the near and distant future. Look for him to split the year between the AHL and NHL this upcoming season, likely serving as the Capitals’ top injury call-up. In that situation, he should establish himself as an NHL regular by the time the 2022/23 season comes along. - BO
How good it feels to see a healthy Hendrix Lapierre! This past season Lapierre finally managed to distance himself from his previous injuries. Visually, he appeared much better equipped to play a more physically engaged brand of hockey. He was sturdier, stronger and he looked like he had added serious lower body power. It had been a difficult season for everyone last year (COVID-19), but especially so for Lapierre. He earned the nickname "King of Quarantines" after spending 63 days in administrative quarantine during the season, split between the camp for Junior Team Canada, the pro camp in Washington and a return to Chicoutimi with his junior team.
It was an emotional season for the young man from Aylmer, Quebec too. A heartbreaking cut at Team Canada junior selection camp, a surprise invitation to the Capitals camp, a trade after the season (In the QMJHL), etc. His periods of isolation (quarantine) had to be difficult, and it did prevent him from finding consistency early on. But he got better over the year, finally living up to some of his hype. A highly skilled player, Lapierre has the talent to be a top six forward for the Capitals in a few seasons. He will play this year with the AB Titan and should be among the leading scorers in the QMJHL. He just needs another year without injuries. - BB
Despite Alexeyev being a first round pick back in 2019 and leaving a very good impression at every level where he has played so far, somehow, he continues to fly under the radar and is rarely mentioned in the conversation as an elite level prospect. Playing on loan to the KHL to start last season, Alexeyev was quick to adjust to the KHL game again after playing in North America the previous four seasons (WHL and AHL). Alexeyev showed that he doesn't have a lot of weaknesses and was very good at finding the balance between the defensive responsibilities and supporting the attack offensively. When the KHL season ended, Alexeyev returned to the AHL a more confident offensive player, which was converted to improved offensive production.
While the Capitals plans are unclear for their bottom pairing this upcoming season, Alexeyev will have to beat out NHL veteran Trevor Van Riemsdyk or fellow prospect Martin Fehevary for a role. He is likely ready to play on the third pairing right away after a very successful 2020/21 season. His potential probably lies on the Capital’s second pairing in the future, where he can play a variety of roles and be a steady presence on the blueline. - VF
A former second round selection by the Capitals in 2018, Fehervary has progressed very well since. The former captain of the Slovak World Junior Team, Fehervary took an unconventional road by playing out of Sweden for the majority of his junior career. However, since signing and coming to play in North America two seasons ago, Fehervary has established himself as one of Washington’s top prospects. In his first pro year, he actually got into a couple NHL games, including a few in the playoffs for the Capitals. Last season, he played strictly in the AHL, but played very well, improving his offensive production, while remaining one of Hershey’s best defensive players.
The 6’2, 203lbs defender is a rock in the defensive end. His defensive instincts are sound. He brings a physical element. His high-end mobility makes him a suffocating presence and someone who should be able to at least fill a shutdown role at the NHL level. However, Fehervary’s confidence in using his plus skating ability to start the breakout and his confidence in his puck handling abilities have grown considerably in the last calendar year. He appears primed for an NHL role as early as this season, but he will need to beat out veterans like Trevor Van Riemsdyk and Matt Irwin for a spot on the third pairing. Fehervary projects as a second pairing defensive anchor and a long time NHL defender. - BO
A year after a breakout campaign with the Prince Albert Raiders of the WHL, hulking Belarussian forward Aliaksei Protas followed that up with a very strong performance in 2020/21. His 10 goals in the KHL for Dinamo Minsk were tied for the most by any U20 player in the top men’s league with Columbus first round pick Yegor Chinakhov. Following the KHL season, he joined Hershey of the AHL and performed admirably in a smaller sample size. Then to close out the year, he played for Belarus at the World Championships.
The 6’6, 215 lbs center is an absolute load to handle down low for opposing defenses, as he dominates the cycle game and works his way to the net. Not really your typical power forward, Protas relies more on his skill and puck protection ability to create in traffic. The key for him is to continue putting in the work to improve his skating ability. He will likely spend the entire upcoming season in the AHL, adjusting to the pace and strength of the pro game in North America. Protas projects as a middle six forward for Washington but will likely require several years of development before being ready for a full-time role. - BO
Slow and steady wins the race. That saying certainly personifies Pilon’s professional development thus far in Washington’s system. The former WHL standout (and son to former NHL pugilist Rich Pilon) has slowly improved over the course of three seasons with Hershey of the AHL, finally breaking through as a top contributor last season. As a reward, Pilon was even given a small taste of NHL action. Now eligible for waivers this season, the Capitals will have a decision to make this training camp.
The highlight of Pilon’s game has always been the stocky center’s two-way play and awareness on the ice. A high-end playmaker, he has finally gained the confidence to be more creative at the AHL level and has learned how to control the pace from the middle, becoming a difficult player to separate from the puck. The finer points to his game, like his faceoff ability, strong neutral zone play, and positional versatility, make him a great candidate to earn a depth role on the Capitals this season. Given his progression, it seems unlikely that the Caps would risk sending him through waivers unless he really struggles at training camp. His upside may not be significant, but he does have the potential to be a high-end checking line player or depth option moving forward. - BO
A 6’3, right shot defender, Iorio was a rock for a strong Brandon Wheat Kings team this past season. A late born ‘02, Iorio emerged as an all-situations, minute-cruncher for Brandon, anchoring the second pair behind New York Rangers first round pick Braden Schneider. Iorio is the modern day shut down defender, blending size, mobility, and physicality to stymie attackers. Using his strong four-way quickness, Iorio is aggressive in defending transitional attacks, stepping up early to angle attackers off, always minding a tight gap. Iorio is also a highly intelligent defender who makes a good outlet pass and possesses good awareness at both ends of the ice. This is what allows him to excel at the WHL level in all situations.
That said, Iorio’s game does appear to have some limitations. His even strength production was pretty limited, with the majority of his points coming on the powerplay. He is at his best when he keeps things simple because he does not possess the creativity or hands to be a topflight puck mover. The Capitals are likely hoping that Iorio’s offensive skill set can continue to blossom with Brandon and that he can eventually become a really solid #4 defender for them in the future. - McKeen’s Draft Guide 2021
Johnson is a toolsy defender, who even likes to play rough, despite his clear size disadvantage. He throws his body around, gets involved in scrums regularly, and often defends with an ornery edge. That said, Johnson’s best strengths come in the offensive end. His speed allows him to drive the transition, and he looks impressive carrying the puck up the ice. He isn’t the type to engage very deep in the offensive zone, but can control play rather well from the point, with quick and accurate puck movement from high to low, or a solid shot. Even though he comes across as an offensive-minded defender, he is not absent in his own zone, and played a regular shorthanded role for the Stampede of the USHL last year.
There is a valid question of how effective he can remain at higher levels against more uniformly bigger and stronger players, but Johnson has a dynamic element that is worth gambling on, especially if his lack of a high-level resume means he will have more to show in the coming years, which will include time playing collegiately for North Dakota. He will look to bounce back this year as a freshman after shoulder surgery ended his season in 2021. - McKeen’s Draft Guide 2021
When the Capitals took Kody, the son of Toronto Maple Leafs legend Wendell Clark, in the second round in 2018, the hope was that he could develop into an elite power forward not all that dissimilar from their very own Tom Wilson. Unfortunately, the offensive side of things has been fairly slow to develop. Clark never reached the point per game mark in the OHL before graduating to the AHL and his first pro season was fairly underwhelming. However, Clark’s sophomore effort last year did show marked improvement from an offensive perspective, suggesting that there could be hope yet for him to become an NHL player.
An intense physical competitor, Clark is a human missile on the forecheck. He knows his role on the ice is to cause havoc by driving the net and by forcing turnovers on the opponent’s side of the ice. While Clark is not likely to be a Tom Wilson type, he could still be a serviceable checking line player for the Capitals in a couple of seasons. Washington will be looking for Clark to continue to show improvement offensively this season in the AHL before earning a look the following year (when he is waivers eligible in 2022/23). - BO
It’s been quite the meteoric rise for Leason, who was passed over twice in the NHL draft before his skating caught up to the rest of his game and he exploded on the scene in 2018-19 with a monster season that included a point-per-game stint at the world junior under-20 tournament. This resulted in Leason hearing his name called in the second round of the draft by the Washington Capitals. Since then, while the pandemic has perhaps stalled the development of many other prospects around him, Leason has continued to blossom, with two successful seasons in the AHL with the Hershey Bears. Last year was another step forward, with 20 points in 33 games for the big winger.
Leason brings size, scoring punch and the motor of a player half a foot shorter. His skating continues to improve, and his hockey sense allows him to be effective with or without the puck. He uses his massive frame well and distributes the puck well, to go with an NHL-calibre shot. He could stand to be even more physical and continue to improve his first three steps. Already 22-years-old, it would be easy to discount Leason as a potential middle-six winger at best in the NHL, but he continues to make inroads and has beaten the odds thus far. With a fairly thin prospect cupboard in front of him, it’s not a stretch to think Leason could see a cup of coffee in the NHL this upcoming season, if the stars align. - AS
The upside may not be incredibly high, but Jonsson-Fjallby’s talents as a forechecker and penalty killer can be used at the NHL level. After parts of three seasons at the AHL level, the time is now for the Swedish spark plug to earn a fourth line role for the Capitals this season.
A former fourth round pick, Gibson had a solid freshman season for Harvard two seasons ago, establishing himself as the program’s starter. However, due to the pandemic, Harvard did not play last season, leaving Gibson with nowhere to play. He will look to get his development back on track this season as he re-assumes the starter’s role on what should be a strong Crimson team.
Bjorklund had an excellent post draft season with Medicine Hat (WHL) last year, as he emerged as one of the top netminders in Western Canada. Bjorklund has the skill set to be an NHL netminder and worked hard to correct some technical flaws to become a more consistent performer. He should be a contender for the WHL’s goaltender of the year this season.
The plan for Has was to have him play a full season in the OHL last year, after a partial year prior to that. But the pandemic had other plans and as such, Has played sparingly outside of a few international appearances for the Czech Republic (including the World Juniors). The stay-at-home defender can be an asset in the defensive end because of his strong transitional defensive ability, however his play with the puck needs to improve. His playing location this season remains a mystery, especially since he has not yet been signed by the Capitals.
The previous season was not a good one for the competitive and physical, former WHL winger. An achilles tear ended his season before it began and has even put the start of this season in jeopardy. Malenstyn will look to bounce back strong at some point with Hershey. He still possesses the potential to be an impact fourth liner for the Caps.
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Few 2019 draft selections progressed as well as McMichael did this past season with London, where he went from a strong complimentary piece to the lifeblood through which the offense flowed. A strong skater, he showed much more confidence when carrying the puck, allowing him to dominate touches. He can beat you in transition because of his speed and he can beat you down low because of how well he protects the puck and how sound his decision making is. We also saw a huge improvement in his shot, especially his powerful wrist shot, and he uses different shooting angles to deceive goaltenders. McMichael also showed improved strength away from the puck, and paired with his high-end IQ, is now a strong two-way presence. Originally projecting as a winger in the NHL, he has shown enough to alter this belief. He is a very versatile player. Given the improvements he made last year, it is not impossible to see him playing in the NHL next year with the Capitals. He already skates well enough for the NHL. At this point, his projection is that of a two-way, goal scoring forward who can play inside the first two lines. – BO
Lapierre battled consistency and injury issues all season, but of his high-end IQ and skill combination make him a potential steal. Originally thought to a concussion victim, it was later found to be a cervical spine issue. He has a very dynamic skill level and can make the spectacular look easy. He is smooth with the puck in transition and is a precise, pass-first center. He is a strong skater, who gets separation through excellent acceleration. He can work well along the wall and behind the net, with crisp turns, making him elusive in coverage. Lapierre is also a terrific two-way player who excels in all three zones because of his high-end hockey IQ. He uses anticipation and a quick stick to force turnovers on the backcheck, which he excels at transitioning the other way. He needs to take a step forward as a goal scorer. His game can be too predictable at times and to keep the opposition on their toes, he could stand to become a more well-rounded offensive player, shooting more often. Even despite a poor year, his potential remains high as a two-way, all situations center who can make his teammates better players. – BO
Alexeyev brings size (6-4”) and hockey IQ to the Washington organization. Making the jump from the WHL, he managed to make it through his first professional season with no serious injuries despite his shaky health track record. He struggled early in the beginning of the season to adjust to the pace of the AHL, but as the season went along his confidence grew and the skills that got him drafted began to show themselves, particularly in the form of his passing ability and offensive zone positioning. Alexeyev will need to demonstrate better conditioning when the next season gets underway to remain consistent throughout the full 60 minutes and he will need to find another gear to add more speed to his game. Numerous times last season opponents blew past him when driving the net and he will need to improve at keeping them to the outside. As he continues to develop and his game matures, there is little doubt that he has the overall ability to become a top pairing defenseman at the NHL level, it is simply a matter of opportunity and Alexeyev staying healthy, as he cannot sustain another serious injury without suffering major career setbacks. – SC
Tight competition between Fehervary and fellow Hershey Bears roommate and first round pick Alexander Alexeyev has been good for Fehervary’s development, pushing him hard in order to see results. The results of that developmental push have been evident as the lanky Slovakian has managed to impress in his rookie North American professional season, often using his tremendous skating to sail past opponents and earn scoring opportunities. He is the complete package as a future NHL defenseman; he plays a physical and rough game, can skate, carry the puck, and his defensive zone coverage is good. The only downsides come in the form of patience, passing, and decision making with the puck. He is not as well known for his passing abilities as he is for his skating and skill level and at times it was evident this past season with turnovers and missed important passes that oftentimes led to icings or offsides. Fehervary will need to tighten up his passing and work on how he moves the puck as well as when he moves it in order to be able to make the right choices in the NHL. - SC
Protas has a very solid offensive toolkit. His unique size and frame enable him to be an elite puck protector. He can pace the game to his level and allow plays to develop. He is able to shed defenders and maintain control just a half step longer than most which dovetails perfectly with his playmaking and passing. He has excellent vision and can play the half-wall or behind the net equally comfortably. He has a deft touch and can make highlight reel passes due to his soft hands and a great ability to hit teammates in stride. His shot is above average and enables him to always be a dual threat to defend. His willingness to shoot the puck has helped his offensive game blossom. The knock on Protas was always his cumbersome footwork and lack of pace, but he has made some serious strides in that part of his game as well. He still needs to work on his overall defensive commitment and has struggled in the faceoff dot but those have improved with coaching. He is still a long-term project but the potential upside here is much higher than most expected in his draft year. - VG
Standing out in the NHL will always be hard due to Pilon’s style of play. A hard-working grinder who can skate and who keeps his feet moving at all times, there is nothing particular that stands out about the way that he plays. To get too the next level, he will have to broaden his play, bettering his offensive production and puck possession skills next season. A top penalty killer using speed and determination, Pilon works hard every shift but at the next level it is about putting all of those things together and he will have to have a better, more cohesive and consistent game to earn a bottom six spot on the NHL club. He is a passionate player, and he will also need to keep his temper and frustration in check to avoid spending more time in the box than on the ice. He will be a big-league asset soon enough should he continue to put his overall game together and mature. - SC
Pinho is the flashy forward with good puckhandling skills that every team has or needs. For a sixth-round selection, he has taken the long route for his development, finally coming into his own this past season, finishing top in prospect points. For his performance with the Hershey Bears, Pinho earned a spot on the Washington Capitals playoff roster and managed to also make his debut suiting up for two playoff games. Throughout the season, he was a clutch player for Hershey, often earning overtime marker and tying goals. He dominates in the offensive zone and often times earns breakaways on turnovers and long passes. That being said, he needs to work on bringing that competitive level to every game and on further developing his defensive play. With the recent call up to the Capitals, Pinho may have earned his chance at next season’s roster as a member of the bottom six. - SC
After a decent season with the OHL Ottawa 67’s, Clark swung his talents over to the AHL’s Hershey Bears for his rookie professional season. He quickly realized that the next level would not be as smooth sailing as major junior and he was a scratch for majority of the first half of the season. Following in father Wendel’s footsteps, Clark brings the grit and offensive prowess to a mildly physical Hershey roster, but that is where his talents stop until he finds a way to keep up at the AHL pace. He is a strong skater but his puck possession was simply not there last season and he will have to find a way to get to the net if he wants to even be considered as a top priority call up option. Serving more time in the penalty box than often necessary, Clark will have to prove himself as a skilled player first more than anything in terms of next season and working his way towards a call up. He has the potential and skill to play as a bottom six forward in the NHL, but he still has a lot of learning to go before that will happen. - SC
For a player who was passed over two years in a row in the draft, Leason has managed to defeat the odds, becoming a second-round pick for the Capitals. He has the size to play and to stay safe at the next level, proving so during his rookie season with AHL Hershey, however speed and skill is another thing. This is where the Washington offensive prospect structure starts to thin out and with Hershey last season, Leason failed to mark more than five goals, a disappointing drop from the 36 goals he scored in major junior the year before to being a healthy scratch for Hershey towards the season’s end. Leason will have to find another gear and start playing up at a professional level, as right now he is simply not fast enough to cut it and if he cannot find another gear it will be uncertain if he will ever be given a chance with the Washington Capitals as a bottom six. - SC
With an expired contract and only nine games played this past season, it is unsure as to where Johansen will be playing next season. It is assumed the Capitals will re-sign him; however he has not had the best of progressions in the organization as his play has gotten worse over the course of his three seasons with the Hershey Bears. As a first-round pick, Johansen needs to perform better, he has offered little in the way of point production and the quantity of turnovers he gives up is just bad. Having missed the bulk of the season with a leg injury, Johansen will need to show that he spent the time off well to come back better than ever to prove to Capitals management that he is deserving of a call up at least. As the time goes by, the Capitals are drafting more and more high-quality defensemen and Johansen’s name is getting further and further down their organizational depth list. It is now or never to prove that his passing, hockey IQ, and composure with the puck are good enough for a bottom four spot in Washington’s lineup. - SC
For a Washington Capitals organization which may be missing a goaltender next season with the expiring contract of incumbent starter Braden Holtby, it means that the young prospects in the system are getting their much-awaited shot. Although the current future may be Ilya Samsonov, recent backup and first call up Vitek Vanecek has the talent and hockey IQ to read NHL speed plays and the focus to get him to the next level. With a tight goaltender race, Vanecek will have to show his composure every time he gets a chance to be up with the Capitals. His quick reflexes and athleticism in the net are what set him apart from his counterparts as he is very active and aggressive in his crease, he fights for positioning well, and sees plays with good vision. His rebound control could use a little work and his timing when playing the puck can sometimes be a worrisome issue, however the Capitals look to have a promising goaltender tandem for the future as Vanecek could manage the starting role just as well as Samsonov. - SC
Despite starting his North American professional career off a little shaky, including a return trip to Sweden to finish the season, Jonsson-Fjallby has redeemed himself this past season, completing the full season in North America, finishing with 23 points. It is clear to see that the winger has the speed and the offensive hockey ability to make an impact at the next level when it comes to getting to the net and putting forth the necessary individual effort. That being said, he lacks instincts as a two-way player and in the defensive end, and there is little else to be said about his giveaways and ill-advised passes in the neutral zone and on breakouts. Jonsson-Fjallby is a difficult prospect to talk about because he has NHL-level skills, but his hockey sense is poor and hard to overlook. With any luck, he will find himself in a Capitals jersey within the next season as a first choice call up to a bottom six position. - SC
While some in the hockey world have dismissed Switzerland as a nation worth heavily scouting, the Capitals have always been believers. Look at NHLer Jonas Siegenthaler, their second-round pick in 2015, now an established NHLer. Look at Tobias Geisser, their first selection in 2017, albeit in the 4th round. And look at Riat, taking in between the two blueliners, who signed an entry level deal with the Capitals in March after five successful seasons in the NLA. A speedy winger with intriguing puck skills, he has been the top scorer in his age cohort ever since being overshadowed by a young Auston Matthews in 2015-16, until finally being overtaken again last year. For an organization that rarely drafts out of Europe, Riat has a chance to convince the Capitals to change their scouting direction once more if he adapts well to the North American game this year. - RW
A top scorer as a youth, Magnusson took off in his second season in SuperElit, finishing second in the league in scoring among all U18 players, behind only Carolina draft pick Zion Nybeck. Magnusson has a fine collection of offensive tools and can contribute as both a finisher as well as a playmaker. He has good instincts for the game and reads the play well, helping him to maximize his physical tools. On the other hand, he is very physically underdeveloped, and his skating is average at best. He is actually fairly explosive on his feet, but his strides are short, causing him to burn out too much energy too quickly. He earned a four game call up to Malmo’s senior side last year and is expected to have a chance to compete for a regular SHL role this season. Before even thinking of a move to North America, he will have to prove that his offense-first game can succeed against men at home in Sweden. – RW
At 5-9” Nardella is certainly undersized as defenseman go in professional hockey, however, do not be fooled as this crafty and highly offensive defenseman is a threat no matter where he is on the ice. He finished seventh on the Bears in points and tops for defenseman this past season, his rookie professional campaign. Having been trusted for a role on the Bears’ top powerplay unit, Nardella clearly shows his maturity and that he is focused enough to manage high pressure situations and smart enough to make the right plays. He also has the skill as a top-level skater and puckhandler to get to the net for scoring opportunities which can make him an asset in today’s game. The major downside is size and if the Capitals can get past that, rest assured that Nardella has the potential to be a top four pairing defenseman. The delay in cracking the Washington lineup simply comes from defensive depth and prospect hierarchy politics, because as a player Nardella offers nothing but good things to a team. - SC
A late arrival to the OHL made Has a bit of a mystery and a difficult player to evaluate. Some may wonder about why he only played a single game for the North Bay Battalion before being moved to Guelph. The answer is because the OHL has a rule that imports cannot be traded until they play at least one game for the drafting team. In Guelph, Has was eased into a top four role for the Storm, playing as a stay at home defender with partner Daniil Chayka (a top 2021 eligible player). At 6-4”, he certainly has good length and exhibits good gap control when containing the transition game of the opposition. As an offensive player, we saw Has struggle at times with his decision making and the pace of play in the OHL. It remains to be seen just how much potential he has as an NHL prospect moving forward. Next year he will return to Guelph and will likely resume his partnership with Chayka. As he becomes more comfortable, we should get a better idea of the type of player he is and can become. – BO
Playing as art of a platoon with Ottawa draft pick Mads Sogaard, Bjorklund didn’t have the kind of year that scouts hoped of him, as consistency issues plagued him in his intermittent starts. Part of that may have come from not playing consistently as part of a routine. He still has the size (6-2”) and quickness to be an NHL netminder and the potential to turn it around given more regular time between the pipes. To his credit, he tracks the play well and seems to have a solid grasp of the technical nuances of the position. A former first round pick in the WHL Bantam Draft, even in his struggles, he showed flashes of pro caliber ability, but was done in too often by juicy rebounds, and seeming to lose his composure after surrendering a bad goal. Reports of his commitment to the game are promising, and, even though he was outperformed last year on the whole by the Danish second round pick, more often than not, there was little to separate the two performance-wise, and there may be a lot of room for growth in this profile. – BO
If we want to search for rays of hope with Bjorklund (#17), we need look no further than Gibson, who struggled badly in his first post draft season making the adjustment from the NAHL to the USHL. Moving on to Harvard, his performance improved by several grades. Given the chance to play regularly, he took the bulk of a time-share from senior Cameron Gornet and kept the Crimson in pretty much every game, something he could not say for his time with Central Illinois. Gibson is on the smaller side for a modern netminder but moves well and fights for every puck. He did a good job at limiting second chances and has a knack for puck play as well. Where concerns remain are in his ability to track the play through traffic, where his height works against him, as well as his propensity to lose the finer details of his technique in the crease. A second season like the last one with Harvard and he will rise up this list. - RW
Re-read everything written above about Garrett Pilon and just make him a winger instead of a center, and then lower the ceiling a fair bit. Considering how low we stated the ceiling was for Pilon, we are basically stating that Malenstyn projects as a replacement level player. His hands have promise, and he plays a hard and tough style of game, but it is hard to see him as more than an injury replacement callup. The simple fact is that his offensive contributions are meagre. Even in the WHL, he was a secondary scorer. Through two seasons in the AHL, he hasn’t exceeded 16 points, although, to be fair, he could have cracked 20 if last season wasn’t ended early due to the pandemic. He could have been a regular in the 1980s, but it is hard for players of his ilk to establish themselves in the NHL anymore, and we don’t see why Malenstyn will break that mold. - RW
One of the few of the next generation of the Sutter family to still retain NHL hopes, Riley Sutter’s projection was stunted over the previous two injury-plagued seasons. He has always carried the grit and smarts of his father’s generation, but the knock on him, from the time of his draft year, has been his heavy feet. Now, with only 63 combined games played in the last two years, split between the WHL and AHL, his chances have taken a hit with the missed development time. We can give him a mulligan for his poor numbers in his abbreviated rookie pro season, as he has solid puck skills and reads the opposition well, but he can scarcely afford a repeat of the last two seasons. A return to health and improved performance will help Sutter re-ascend this list. Continued injuries can end his NHL hopes. He has the size and strength to play a bottom six role in the future, but he has a ways to go to achieve that goal. - RW
]]>The 20-80 scouting system is meant to allow players from different leagues in different parts of the world to be compared to one another, such that grades on a player in the OHL can be directly compared to grades from an AHL player, and to grades of someone playing in the MHL.
PROSPECT CRITERIA
Players under 26 years of age as of the September 15th prior (Sep. 15, 1994) to the season in question who have appeared in less than 60 NHL games (30 for goalies) and less than 35 in any one season – or 25 last year (20 for goalies, 15 last season) are considered prospects
| RANK | PLAYER | NHL | POS | AGE | HT/WT | ACQUIRED |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Alexis Lafreniere | NYR | LW | 19 | 6-1/195 | `20(1st) |
| 2 | Tim Stutzle | Ott | C | 18 | 6-1/185 | `20(3rd) |
| 3 | Quinton Byfield | LA | C | 18 | 6-4/215 | `20(2nd) |
| 4 | Trevor Zegras | Ana | C | 19 | 6-0/170 | `19(9th) |
| 5 | Kirill Kaprizov | Min | LW | 23 | 5-10/200 | `15(135th) |
| 6 | Lucas Raymond | Det | LW | 18 | 5-11/170 | `20(4th) |
| 7 | Dylan Cozens | Buf | C | 19 | 6-3/185 | `19(7th) |
| 8 | Bowen Byram | Col | D | 19 | 6-0/195 | `19(4th) |
| 9 | Peyton Krebs | VGK | C | 19 | 5-11/180 | `19(17th) |
| 10 | Jake Sanderson | Ott | D | 18 | 6-1/185 | `20(5th) |
| 11 | Moritz Seider | Det | D | 19 | 6-3/185 | `19(6th) |
| 12 | Jamie Drysdale | Ana | D | 18 | 5-11/175 | `20(6th) |
| 13 | Igor Shesterkin | NYR | G | 25 | 6-1/190 | `14(118th) |
| 14 | Alexander Holtz | NJ | RW | 18 | 6-0/190 | `20(7th) |
| 15 | Cole Perfetti | Wpg | LW | 19 | 5-10/180 | `20(10th) |
| 16 | Marco Rossi | Min | C | 19 | 5-9/185 | `20(9th) |
| 17 | Vasili Podkolzin | Van | RW | 19 | 6-1/190 | `19(10th) |
| 18 | Victor Soderstrom | Ari | D | 19 | 5-11/180 | `19(11th) |
| 19 | Nick Robertson | Tor | LW | 19 | 5-9/160 | `19(53rd) |
| 20 | Cole Caufield | Mtl | RW | 19 | 5-7/165 | `19(15th) |
| 21 | Yaroslav Askarov | Nsh | G | 18 | 6-3/175 | `20(11th) |
| 22 | Spencer Knight | Fla | G | 19 | 6-3/195 | `19(13th) |
| 23 | Philip Broberg | Edm | D | 19 | 6-3/200 | `19(8th) |
| 24 | Jack Quinn | Buf | RW | 19 | 6-0/180 | `20(8th) |
| 25 | Matthew Boldy | Min | LW | 19 | 6-1/190 | `19(12th) |
| 26 | Nils Lundkvist | NYR | D | 20 | 5-11/180 | `18(28th) |
| 27 | Seth Jarvis | Car | RW | 18 | 5-10/175 | `20(13th) |
| 28 | Ty Smith | NJ | D | 20 | 5-10/180 | `18(17th) |
| 29 | Grigori Denisenko | Fla | LW | 20 | 5-11/185 | `18(15th) |
| 30 | Barrett Hayton | Ari | C | 20 | 6-1/190 | `18(5th) |
| 31 | Alex Newhook | Col | C | 19 | 5-10/195 | `19(16th) |
| 32 | Thomas Harley | Dal | D | 19 | 6-3/190 | `19(18th) |
| 33 | Alex Turcotte | LA | C | 19 | 5-11/185 | `19(5th) |
| 34 | Vitali Kravtsov | NYR | RW | 21 | 6-3/185 | `18(9th) |
| 35 | Philip Tomasino | Nsh | C | 19 | 5-11/180 | `19(24th) |
| 36 | Connor McMichael | Wsh | C | 19 | 5-11/175 | `19(25th) |
| 37 | Dawson Mercer | NJ | C | 19 | 6-0/180 | `20(18th) |
| 38 | Ilya Sorokin | NYI | G | 25 | 6-2/180 | `14(78th) |
| 39 | Gabriel Vilardi | LA | RW | 21 | 6-3/200 | `17(11th) |
| 40 | Ryan Merkley | SJ | D | 20 | 5-11/170 | `18(21st) |
| 41 | Alexander Romanov | Mtl | D | 20 | 5-11/185 | `18(38th) |
| 42 | Kaiden Guhle | Mtl | D | 18 | 6-2/190 | `20(16th) |
| 43 | Samuel Poulin | Pit | LW | 19 | 6-1/205 | `19(21st) |
| 44 | K'Andre Miller | NYR | D | 20 | 6-3/205 | `18(22nd) |
| 45 | Scott Perunovich | StL | D | 22 | 5-10/175 | `18(45th) |
| 46 | Evan Bouchard | Edm | D | 21 | 6-2/195 | `18(10th) |
| 47 | Braden Schneider | NYR | D | 19 | 6-2/200 | `20(19th) |
| 48 | Juuso Valimaki | Cgy | D | 22 | 6-2/205 | `17(16th) |
| 49 | Cam York | Phi | D | 19 | 5-11/175 | `19(14th) |
| 50 | Anton Lundell | Fla | C | 19 | 6-1/185 | `20(12th) |
| 51 | Morgan Frost | Phi | C | 21 | 5-11/180 | `17(27th) |
| 52 | Owen Tippett | Fla | RW | 21 | 6-1/200 | `17(10th) |
| 53 | Albert Johansson | Det | D | 19 | 5-11/165 | `19(60th) |
| 54 | Liam Foudy | CBJ | C | 20 | 6-0/175 | `18(18th) |
| 55 | Kieffer Bellows | NYI | LW | 22 | 6-0/200 | `16(19th) |
| 56 | Arthur Kaliyev | LA | RW | 19 | 6-2/190 | `19(33rd) |
| 57 | Oliver Wahlstrom | NYI | RW | 20 | 6-1/205 | `18(11th) |
| 58 | Nils Hoglander | Van | RW | 20 | 5-9/185 | `19(40th) |
| 59 | Matias Maccelli | Ari | LW | 20 | 5-11/170 | `19(98th) |
| 60 | Tobias Bjornfot | LA | D | 19 | 6-0/200 | `19(22nd) |
| 61 | Jacob Bernard-Docker | Ott | D | 20 | 6-0/180 | `18(26th) |
| 62 | Connor Zary | Cgy | C | 19 | 6-0/180 | `20(24th) |
| 63 | Dominik Bokk | Car | RW | 20 | 6-1/180 | T(StL-9/19) |
| 64 | Ryan Suzuki | Car | C | 19 | 6-0/180 | `19(28th) |
| 65 | Dylan Samberg | Wpg | D | 21 | 6-3/190 | `17(43rd) |
| 66 | Jake Bean | Car | D | 22 | 6-1/175 | `16(13th) |
| 67 | Josh Norris | Ott | C | 21 | 6-1/195 | T(SJ-9/18) |
| 68 | Rasmus Kupari | LA | C | 20 | 6-1/185 | `18(20th) |
| 69 | Jakob Pelletier | Cgy | LW | 19 | 5-9/165 | `19(26th) |
| 70 | Drake Batherson | Ott | RW | 22 | 6-1/190 | `17(121st) |
| 71 | Jan Jenik | Ari | RW | 20 | 6-1/180 | `18(65th) |
| 72 | John-Jason Peterka | Buf | LW | 18 | 5-11/190 | `20(34th) |
| 73 | Kirill Marchenko | CBJ | LW | 20 | 6-3/190 | `18(49th) |
| 74 | Bode Wilde | NYI | D | 20 | 6-2/195 | `18(41st) |
| 75 | John Beecher | Bos | C | 19 | 6-3/210 | `19(30th) |
| 76 | Tyler Madden | LA | C | 21 | 5-10/155 | T(Van-2/20) |
| 77 | Jack Studnicka | Bos | C | 21 | 6-1/170 | `17(53rd) |
| 78 | Jake Oettinger | Dal | G | 22 | 6-4/210 | `17(26th) |
| 79 | Alex Formenton | Ott | LW | 21 | 6-2/165 | `17(47th) |
| 80 | Matthew Robertson | NYR | D | 19 | 6-3/200 | `19(49th) |
| 81 | Calen Addison | Min | D | 20 | 5-10/180 | T(Pit-2/20) |
| 82 | Ty Dellandrea | Dal | C | 20 | 6-0/185 | `18(13th) |
| 83 | Akil Thomas | LA | C | 20 | 5-11/170 | `18(51st) |
| 84 | Mavrik Bourque | Dal | C | 18 | 5-10/180 | `20(30th) |
| 85 | Ian Mitchell | Chi | D | 21 | 5-11/175 | `17(57th) |
| 86 | Jason Robertson | Dal | LW | 21 | 6-2/195 | `17(39th) |
| 87 | Hendrix Lapierre | Wsh | C | 18 | 5-11/180 | `20(22nd) |
| 88 | Brendan Brisson | VGK | C | 19 | 5-11/180 | `20(29th) |
| 89 | Theodor Niederbach | Det | C | 18 | 5-11/175 | `20(51st) |
| 90 | Zac Jones | NYR | D | 20 | 5-10/175 | `19(68th) |
| 91 | Robert Mastrosimone | Det | LW | 19 | 5-10/160 | `19(54th) |
| 92 | Joe Veleno | Det | C | 20 | 6-1/195 | `18(30th) |
| 93 | Rodion Amirov | Tor | LW | 19 | 6-0/170 | `20(15th) |
| 94 | Jake Neighbours | StL | LW | 18 | 5-11/195 | `20(26th) |
| 95 | Julien Gauthier | NYR | RW | 23 | 6-4/225 | T(Car-2/20) |
| 96 | Justus Annunen | Col | G | 20 | 6-4/215 | `18(64th) |
| 97 | Egor Zamula | Phi | D | 20 | 6-4/175 | FA(9/18) |
| 98 | Shane Pinto | Ott | C | 20 | 6-2/190 | `19(32nd) |
| 99 | Noel Gunler | Car | RW | 19 | 6-2/175 | `20(41st) |
| 100 | Ridly Greig | Ott | C | 18 | 5-11/165 | `20(28th) |
| 101 | Jesse Ylonen | Mtl | RW | 21 | 6-1/185 | `18(35th) |
| 102 | Samuel Fagemo | LA | RW | 20 | 6-0/195 | `19(50th) |
| 103 | Mattias Norlinder | Mtl | D | 20 | 5-11/180 | `19(64th) |
| 104 | Olli Juolevi | Van | D | 22 | 6-3/200 | `16(5th) |
| 105 | Kristian Vesalainen | Wpg | LW | 21 | 6-3/205 | `17(24th) |
| 106 | Raphael Lavoie | Edm | RW | 20 | 6-4/195 | `19(38th) |
| 107 | Jan Mysak | Mtl | C | 18 | 5-11/180 | `20(49th) |
| 108 | Cayden Primeau | Mtl | G | 21 | 6-3/180 | `17(199th) |
| 109 | Pavel Dorofeyev | VGK | LW | 20 | 6-1/170 | `19(79th) |
| 110 | Morgan Barron | NYR | C | 22 | 6-2/200 | `17(174th) |
| 111 | Ville Heinola | Wpg | D | 19 | 5-11/180 | `19(20th) |
| 112 | Dylan Holloway | Edm | C | 19 | 6-0/205 | `20(14th) |
| 113 | Jack Dugan | VGK | RW | 22 | 6-2/185 | `17(142nd) |
| 114 | Alexander Khovanov | Min | C | 20 | 5-11/195 | `18(86th) |
| 115 | Jacob Perreault | Ana | RW | 18 | 5-11/195 | `20(27th) |
| 116 | Jake Evans | Mtl | C | 24 | 6-0/185 | `14(207th) |
| 117 | Adam Beckman | Min | LW | 19 | 6-1/170 | `19(75th) |
| 118 | Jett Woo | Van | D | 20 | 6-0/205 | `18(37th) |
| 119 | Nolan Foote | NJ | LW | 20 | 6-3/190 | T(TB-2/20) |
| 120 | Logan Brown | Ott | C | 22 | 6-6/220 | `16(11th) |
| 121 | Martin Kaut | Col | RW | 21 | 6-1/175 | `18(16th) |
| 122 | Jack Rathbone | Van | D | 21 | 5-10/175 | `17(95th) |
| 123 | Ozzy Wiesblatt | SJ | RW | 18 | 5-10/185 | `20(31st) |
| 124 | Ryan O'Rourke | Min | D | 18 | 6-0/180 | `20(39th) |
| 125 | Lukas Reichel | Chi | LW | 18 | 6-0/170 | `20(17th) |
| 126 | Jordan Harris | Mtl | D | 20 | 5-11/180 | `18(71st) |
| 127 | Lukas Dostal | Ana | G | 20 | 6-1/170 | `18(85th) |
| 128 | Egor Afanasyev | Nsh | RW | 19 | 6-3/205 | `19(45th) |
| 129 | Conor Timmins | Col | D | 22 | 6-1/185 | `17(32nd) |
| 130 | Lassi Thomson | Ott | D | 20 | 6-0/190 | `19(19th) |
| 131 | Eeli Tolvanen | Nsh | RW | 21 | 5-10/175 | `17(30th) |
| 132 | Kasper Simontaival | LA | RW | 18 | 5-9/180 | `20(66th) |
| 133 | Roni Hirvonen | Tor | C | 18 | 5-9/165 | `20(59th) |
| 134 | Thomas Bordeleau | SJ | C | 18 | 5-9/180 | `20(38th) |
| 135 | Benoit-Olivier Groulx | Ana | C | 20 | 6-1/195 | `18(54th) |
| 136 | Tyler Kleven | Ott | D | 18 | 6-4/200 | `20(44th) |
| 137 | Tyson Foerster | Phi | C | 18 | 6-1/195 | `20(23rd) |
| 138 | Helge Grans | LA | D | 18 | 6-2/205 | `20(35th) |
| 139 | Jonathan Dahlen | SJ | LW | 23 | 5-11/185 | T(Van-2/19) |
| 140 | Marat Khusnutdinov | Min | C | 18 | 5-11/175 | `20(37th) |
| 141 | Alexander Alexeyev | Wsh | D | 21 | 6-3/200 | `18(31st) |
| 142 | Pierre-Olivier Joseph | Pit | D | 21 | 6-2/170 | `17(23rd) |
| 143 | Topi Niemela | Tor | D | 18 | 5-10/160 | `20(64th) |
| 144 | Oskari Laaksonen | Buf | D | 21 | 6-2/165 | `17(89th) |
| 145 | Filip Hallander | Tor | LW | 20 | 6-1/185 | T(Pit-8/20) |
| 146 | Serron Noel | Fla | RW | 20 | 6-5/205 | `18(34th) |
| 147 | Martin Chromiak | LA | LW | 18 | 6-0/185 | `20(128th) |
| 148 | Shakir Mukhamadullin | NJ | D | 18 | 6-3/180 | `20(20th) |
| 149 | Mattias Samuelsson | Buf | D | 20 | 6-3/215 | `18(32nd) |
| 150 | Janne Kuokkanen | NJ | LW | 22 | 6-1/190 | T(Car-2/20) |
| 151 | Ryan Johnson | Buf | D | 19 | 6-0/175 | `19(31st) |
| 152 | Sean Farrell | Mtl | C | 19 | 5-8/175 | `20(124th) |
| 153 | Martin Fehervary | Wsh | D | 21 | 6-1/190 | `18(46th) |
| 154 | Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen | Buf | G | 21 | 6-4/195 | `17(54th) |
| 155 | Will Lockwood | Van | RW | 22 | 5-11/175 | `16(64th) |
| 156 | Isac Lundestrom | Ana | C | 21 | 6-0/185 | `18(23rd) |
| 157 | Michael DiPietro | Van | G | 21 | 6-0/195 | `17(64th) |
| 158 | Jonatan Berggren | Det | RW | 20 | 5-10/185 | `18(33rd) |
| 159 | Kevin Bahl | NJ | D | 20 | 6-6/230 | T(Ari-12/19) |
| 160 | Aliaksei Protas | Wsh | C | 19 | 6-5/205 | `19(91st) |
| 161 | Reilly Walsh | NJ | D | 21 | 5-11/180 | `17(81st) |
| 162 | Nick Abruzzese | Tor | C | 21 | 5-9/160 | `19(124th) |
| 163 | Tyler Tucker | StL | D | 20 | 6-1/205 | `18(200th) |
| 164 | Arseni Gritsyuk | NJ | RW | 19 | 5-10/170 | `19(129th) |
| 165 | Klim Kostin | StL | C | 21 | 6-3/195 | `17(31st) |
| 166 | Brayden Tracey | Ana | LW | 19 | 6-0/175 | `19(29th) |
| 167 | Joel Hofer | StL | G | 20 | 6-3/160 | `18(107th) |
| 168 | Joey Anderson | Tor | RW | 22 | 6-0/195 | T(NJ-10/20) |
| 169 | Yegor Spiridonov | SJ | C | 19 | 6-2/195 | `19(108th) |
| 170 | Sam Colangelo | Ana | RW | 19 | 6-1/205 | `20(36th) |
| 171 | Joey Keane | Car | D | 21 | 6-0/185 | T(NYR-2/20) |
| 172 | Jared McIsaac | Det | D | 20 | 6-1/195 | `18(36th) |
| 173 | Jamieson Rees | Car | C | 19 | 5-10/175 | `19(44th) |
| 174 | Ivan Morozov | VGK | C | 20 | 6-1/180 | `18(61st) |
| 175 | Rem Pitlick | Nsh | C | 23 | 5-11/200 | `16(76th) |
| 176 | Tyce Thompson | NJ | RW | 21 | 6-0/170 | `19(96th) |
| 177 | Michael McLeod | NJ | C | 22 | 6-2/195 | `16(12th) |
| 178 | Jaret Anderson-Dolan | LA | C | 21 | 5-11/190 | `17(41st) |
| 179 | Dustin Wolf | Cgy | G | 19 | 6-0/165 | `19(214th) |
| 180 | Antti Tuomisto | Det | D | 19 | 6-4/190 | `19(35th) |
| 181 | Brett Berard | NYR | LW | 18 | 5-9/155 | `20(134th) |
| 182 | Luke Evangelista | Nsh | RW | 18 | 5-11/170 | `20(42nd) |
| 183 | Joel Blomqvist | Pit | G | 18 | 6-1/180 | `20(52nd) |
| 184 | Joni Ikonen | Mtl | C | 21 | 5-10/170 | `17(58th) |
| 185 | Olivier Rodrigue | Edm | G | 20 | 6-1/165 | `18(62nd) |
| 186 | Lucas Elvenes | VGK | RW | 21 | 6-0/175 | `17(127th) |
| 187 | Anthony Angello | Pit | RW | 24 | 6-5/205 | `14(145th) |
| 188 | Tuukka Tieksola | Car | RW | 19 | 5-10/160 | `19(121st) |
| 189 | Declan Chisholm | Wpg | D | 20 | 6-1/190 | `18(150th) |
| 190 | Cole Koepke | TB | LW | 22 | 6-1/195 | `18(183rd) |
| 191 | Valtteri Puustinen | Pit | RW | 21 | 5-9/185 | `19(203rd) |
| 192 | Ty Smilanic | Fla | C | 18 | 6-1/175 | `20(74th) |
| 193 | Patrik Puistola | Car | LW | 19 | 6-0/175 | `19(73rd) |
| 194 | Justin Barron | Col | D | 19 | 6-2/190 | `20(25th) |
| 195 | Andrew Peeke | CBJ | D | 22 | 6-3/210 | `16(34th) |
| 196 | Michael Vukojevic | NJ | D | 19 | 6-3/210 | `19(82nd) |
| 197 | Alec Regula | Chi | D | 20 | 6-3/200 | T(Det-10/19) |
| 198 | Connor Corcoran | VGK | D | 20 | 6-1/185 | `18(154th) |
| 199 | Jeremy Swayman | Bos | G | 22 | 6-1/190 | `17(111th) |
| 200 | Pyotr Kochetkov | Car | G | 21 | 6-1/175 | `19(36th) |
| 201 | Mikey Anderson | LA | D | 21 | 6-0/195 | `17(103rd) |
| 202 | Carter Savoie | Edm | LW | 18 | 5-9/190 | `20(100th) |
| 203 | Samuel Walker | TB | C | 21 | 5-11/160 | `17(200th) |
| 204 | William Wallinder | Det | D | 18 | 6-4/190 | `20(32nd) |
| 205 | Jack Drury | Car | C | 20 | 5-11/180 | `18(42nd) |
| 206 | Emil Andrae | Phi | D | 18 | 5-9/185 | `20(54th) |
| 207 | Cal Petersen | LA | G | 26 | 6-3/190 | FA(7/17) |
| 208 | Jeremie Poirier | Cgy | D | 18 | 6-0/200 | `20(72nd) |
| 209 | Tarmo Reunanen | NYR | D | 22 | 6-0/180 | `16(98th) |
| 210 | Simon Holmstrom | NYI | RW | 19 | 6-1/185 | `19(23rd) |
| 211 | Aleksi Saarela | Fla | RW | 23 | 5-11/200 | T(Chi-10/19) |
| 212 | Anton Johannesson | Wpg | D | 18 | 5-9/155 | `20(133rd) |
| 213 | Lauri Pajuniemi | NYR | RW | 21 | 6-0/185 | `18(132nd) |
| 214 | Morgan Geekie | Car | C | 22 | 6-2/180 | `17(67th) |
| 215 | Shane Bowers | Col | C | 21 | 6-2/190 | T(Ott-11/17) |
| 216 | Sasha Chmelevski | SJ | C | 21 | 5-11/190 | `17(185th) |
| 217 | Ruslan Iskhakov | NYI | C | 20 | 5-8/155 | `18(43rd) |
| 218 | Cole Schwindt | Fla | RW | 19 | 6-2/185 | `19(81st) |
| 219 | Hugo Alnefelt | TB | G | 19 | 6-3/195 | `19(71st) |
| 220 | Nikita Okhotyuk | NJ | D | 20 | 6-1/195 | `19(61st) |
| 221 | Sampo Ranta | Col | LW | 20 | 6-2/205 | `18(78th) |
| 222 | Alexander Volkov | TB | LW | 23 | 6-1/190 | `17(48th) |
| 223 | Alexander True | SJ | C | 23 | 6-5/205 | FA(7/18) |
| 224 | John Leonard | SJ | C | 22 | 5-11/190 | `18(182nd) |
| 225 | Carl Grundstrom | LA | LW | 23 | 6-0/195 | T(Tor-1/19) |
| 226 | Dmitri Semykin | TB | D | 20 | 6-3/200 | `18(90th) |
| 227 | Cal Foote | TB | D | 22 | 6-4/215 | `17(14th) |
| 228 | Jean-Luc Foudy | Col | C | 18 | 5-11/175 | `20(75th) |
| 229 | Alex Barre-Boulet | TB | C | 23 | 5-10/165 | FA(3/18) |
| 230 | Tristen Robins | SJ | RW | 19 | 5-10/175 | `20(56th) |
| 231 | Max Gildon | Fla | D | 21 | 6-3/190 | `17(66th) |
| 232 | Nikita Alexandrov | StL | C | 20 | 6-0/180 | `19(62nd) |
| 233 | Michael Benning | Fla | D | 18 | 5-9/180 | `20(95th) |
| 234 | Justin Sourdif | Fla | RW | 18 | 5-11/175 | `20(87th) |
| 235 | Tanner Laczynski | Phi | C | 23 | 6-1/200 | `16(169th) |
| 236 | Eamon Powell | TB | D | 18 | 5-11/165 | `20(116th) |
| 237 | Kaedan Korczak | VGK | D | 19 | 6-3/190 | `19(41st) |
| 238 | Drew Commesso | Chi | G | 18 | 6-1/180 | `20(47th) |
| 239 | Nikolai Kovalenko | Col | RW | 21 | 5-10/175 | `18(171st) |
| 240 | Pius Suter | Chi | C | 24 | 5-11/170 | FA(7/20) |
| 241 | Wade Allison | Phi | RW | 23 | 6-2/205 | `16(52nd) |
| 242 | Bobby Brink | Phi | RW | 19 | 5-10/165 | `19(34th) |
| 243 | Lukas Cormier | VGK | D | 18 | 5-10/180 | `20(68th) |
| 244 | David Farrance | Nsh | D | 21 | 5-11/190 | `17(92nd) |
| 245 | Roby Jarventie | Ott | RW | 18 | 6-2/185 | `20(33rd) |
| 246 | Dmitri Voronkov | CBJ | LW | 20 | 6-4/190 | `19(114th) |
| 247 | German Rubtsov | Phi | C | 22 | 6-2/190 | `16(22nd) |
| 248 | Vitaly Abramov | Ott | RW | 22 | 5-9/175 | T(CBJ-2/19) |
| 249 | Alex Laferriere | LA | RW | 19 | 6-0/175 | `20(83rd) |
| 250 | Trey Fix-Wolansky | CBJ | RW | 21 | 5-8/185 | `18(204th) |
| 251 | Isaac Ratcliffe | Phi | LW | 21 | 6-5/200 | `17(35th) |
| 252 | Kale Clague | LA | D | 22 | 6-0/180 | `16(51st) |
| 253 | Landon Slaggert | Chi | LW | 18 | 5-11/180 | `20(79th) |
| 254 | Wyatt Kalynuk | Chi | D | 23 | 6-1/180 | FA(7/20) |
| 255 | Mikko Kokkonen | Tor | D | 19 | 5-11/200 | `19(84th) |
| 256 | Kevin Mandolese | Ott | G | 20 | 6-4/180 | `18(157th) |
| 257 | Daniil Tarasov | CBJ | G | 21 | 6-5/185 | `17(86th) |
| 258 | Evan Barratt | Chi | C | 21 | 6-0/190 | `17(90th) |
| 259 | Tyler Benson | Edm | LW | 22 | 6-0/200 | `16(32nd) |
| 260 | Yegor Korshkov | Tor | RW | 24 | 6-4/215 | `16(31st) |
| 261 | Hunter Skinner | NYR | D | 19 | 6-2/175 | `19(112th) |
| 262 | Riley Damiani | Dal | C | 20 | 5-9/165 | `18(137th) |
| 263 | Ryan McLeod | Edm | C | 21 | 6-2/205 | `18(40th) |
| 264 | Ilya Konovalov | Edm | G | 22 | 6-0/195 | `19(85th) |
| 265 | Will Cuylle | NYR | LW | 18 | 6-3/205 | `20(60th) |
| 266 | Evan Vierling | NYR | C | 18 | 6-0/165 | `20(127th) |
| 267 | Emil Heineman | Fla | LW | 19 | 6-0/180 | `20(43rd) |
| 268 | Zayde Wisdom | Phi | RW | 18 | 5-10/195 | `20(94th) |
| 269 | Hunter Jones | Min | G | 20 | 6-4/195 | `19(59th) |
| 270 | Ty Tullio | Edm | RW | 18 | 5-10/165 | `20(126th) |
| 271 | Jordan Spence | LA | D | 19 | 5-10/165 | `19(95th) |
| 272 | Dmitri Zavgorodny | Cgy | LW | 20 | 5-9/175 | `18(198th) |
| 273 | Alex Beaucage | Col | RW | 19 | 6-1/195 | `19(78th) |
| 274 | Matiss Kivlenieks | CBJ | G | 24 | 6-2/190 | FA(5/17) |
| 275 | Artyom Zub | Ott | D | 25 | 6-2/200 | FA(5/20) |
| 276 | Urho Vaakanainen | Bos | D | 22 | 6-0/185 | `17(18th) |
| 277 | Dmitri Samorukov | Edm | D | 21 | 6-2/180 | `17(84th) |
| 278 | Michal Teply | Chi | LW | 19 | 6-3/185 | `19(105th) |
| 279 | Colby Ambrosio | Col | C | 18 | 5-8/170 | `20(118th) |
| 280 | Mads Sogaard | Ott | G | 20 | 6-7/195 | `19(37th) |
| 281 | Jeremy Lauzon | Bos | D | 23 | 6-3/205 | `15(52nd) |
| 282 | Dennis Gilbert | Col | D | 24 | 6-2/200 | T(Chi-10/20) |
| 283 | Trent Frederic | Bos | C | 22 | 6-4/215 | `16(29th) |
| 284 | Lucas Carlsson | Chi | D | 23 | 6-0/190 | `16(110th) |
| 285 | Zack Macewen | Van | RW | 24 | 6-3/205 | FA(3/17) |
| 286 | Brandon Hagel | Chi | LW | 22 | 6-1/175 | FA(10/18) |
| 287 | Vasily Ponomarev | Car | C | 18 | 5-10/180 | `20(53rd) |
| 288 | Jakub Zboril | Bos | D | 23 | 6-1/200 | `15(13th) |
| 289 | Garrett Pilon | Wsh | RW | 22 | 5-11/190 | `16(87th) |
| 290 | Jeremy Bracco | Car | RW | 23 | 5-9/180 | FA(10/20) |
| 291 | Dylan Sikura | VGK | RW | 25 | 6-0/170 | T(Chi-9/20) |
| 292 | Kyle Capobianco | Ari | D | 23 | 6-1/180 | `15(63rd) |
| 293 | Sami Niku | Wpg | D | 24 | 6-0/175 | `15(198th) |
| 294 | John Farinacci | Ari | C | 19 | 5-11/185 | `19(76th) |
| 295 | Jackson Lacombe | Ana | D | 19 | 6-1/170 | `19(39th) |
| 296 | David Cotton | Car | LW | 23 | 6-3/205 | `15(169th) |
| 297 | Erik Portillo | Buf | G | 20 | 6-6/210 | `19(67th) |
| 298 | Jacob Truscott | Van | D | 18 | 6-1/170 | `20(144th) |
| 299 | Mikhail Berdin | Wpg | G | 22 | 6-2/165 | `16(157th) |
| 300 | Cam Hillis | Mtl | C | 20 | 5-10/170 | `18(66th) |
I write these words less than 24 hours after the Dallas Stars took game one of the Stanley Cup Finals against the heavily favored Tampa Bay Lightning. Unlike most seasons wherein the end of the Stanley Cup marks the beginning of off-season player movement, this year teams have taken an early start to the transactional Ferris wheel as many expect the upcoming offseason (from the awarding of the Cup, through to the draft in the first week of October to the start of the 2020-21 season perhaps as soon as early December, pending COVID trends in North America) to be especially turbulent.
We have seen a few trades of NHL pieces, one deal which impacted this guidebook, as Toronto sent Kasperi Kapanen to Pittsburgh and Swedish winger Filip Hallander was among those coming back to Toronto. Hallander was our selection for the second-best prospect in the Penguins system and now holds that title for the Maple Leafs. That trade knocked the Penguins down a few slots on our organizational rankings and allowed Toronto to go the other way accordingly.
Of course, with the draft roughly 17 days away, and with it a complete re-shuffling of the organizational rankings, this is just a snapshot in time of how every team’s system shakes up. We will re-run this list, incorporating the drafted players, in our pre-season fantasy guide, where we will expand the lists up to 20.
What you are about to dive into is a comprehensive list of all prospect eligible players on all 31 teams. To hold prospect eligibility, a player needs to 25 or younger, as of September 15, 2020. All skaters need to have played less than 60 career games, with no more than 35 of those games coming in a single season (or 25 for this past shortened season). For goalies, the age criteria remain the same, but the games played benchmark drops to 30 career games and 20 in a given season (or 15 last year). Any cutoff that does not hew exactly to the Calder Trophy award criteria is, by nature, arbitrary, but we aim to be inclusive for all players who have not yet cemented NHL jobs and/or have not had a prolonged chance to prove himself capable – or incapable.
We rank 15 per team, as depth is as important as the high end. Our goal is to identify players who could – if they have an advocate for them within the team’s braintrust – play a role in the NHL. These players were identified through our thorough vetting of each prospect across the globe, assigning scores, or grades, to five areas for skaters (skating, shot, puck skills, smarts, physicality) and six for netminders (athleticism/speed/quickness, compete/temperament, vision/play reading, positioning/technique, rebound control, and puck handling). Depending on the position, the grades are run through an algorithm to come up with an overall future projection (OFP).
The OFP, if the scout is being honest, measures the future role we anticipate the prospect being able to hold. A 50 score is the lower threshold to be a regular 4th line forward, or bottom pairing defender. Grades over 56 are potential top line/pairing skaters. The grades in between, obviously project to the middle of the lineup.
As we are reminded every year, development is not linear. Some players take unexpected sudden leaps forward (see Marino, John), and others stagnate (see Ho-Sang, Josh), and many do exactly what we expect of them when they are given the chance. As much as I trust the analysts in our team, I can also tell you that this exercise is always humbling. There will be at least one player who we rate highly who bombs. There will be at least one player who did not feature on his team’s top 15 who becomes an NHL regular next year. We accept those errors in judgment and promise you, our faithful subscriber, that we will learn from them and refine our work for next year, as we learn just as NHL teams learn.
Until then, please enjoy this snapshot view of the future of the beautiful, frozen game. Putting this together has provided at least some sense of normalcy during this crazy summer.
| NHL | RNK | PLAYER | POS | AGE | HT/WT | TM | Acquired |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ana | 1 | Trevor Zegras | C | 19 | 6-0/170 | Boston University (HE) | `19(9th) |
| Min | 2 | Kirill Kaprizov | LW | 23 | 5-10/200 | CSKA (KHL) | `15(135th) |
| Col | 3 | Bowen Byram | D | 19 | 6-0/195 | Vancouver (WHL) | `19(4th) |
| Buf | 4 | Dylan Cozens | C | 19 | 6-3/185 | Lethbridge (WHL) | `19(7th) |
| Fla | 5 | Spencer Knight | G | 19 | 6-3/195 | Boston College (HE) | `19(13th) |
| VGK | 6 | Peyton Krebs | C | 19 | 5-11/180 | Winnipeg (WHL) | `19(17th) |
| Ari | 7 | Victor Soderstrom | D | 19 | 5-11/180 | Brynas (Swe) | `19(11th) |
| Mtl | 8 | Cole Caufield | RW | 19 | 5-7/165 | Wisconsin (B1G) | `19(15th) |
| Van | 9 | Vasili Podkolzin | RW | 19 | 6-1/190 | SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) | `19(10th) |
| Edm | 10 | Philip Broberg | D | 19 | 6-3/200 | Skelleftea AIK (Swe) | `19(8th) |
| Tor | 11 | Nick Robertson | LW | 19 | 5-9/160 | Peterborough (OHL) | `19(53rd) |
| Col | 12 | Alex Newhook | C | 19 | 5-10/195 | Boston College (HE) | `19(16th) |
| Det | 13 | Moritz Seider | D | 19 | 6-3/185 | Grand Rapids (AHL) | `19(6th) |
| Fla | 14 | Grigori Denisenko | LW | 20 | 5-11/185 | Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) | `18(15th) |
| Min | 15 | Matthew Boldy | LW | 19 | 6-1/190 | Boston College (HE) | `19(12th) |
| NJ | 16 | Ty Smith | D | 20 | 5-10/180 | Spokane (WHL) | `18(17th) |
| LA | 17 | Alex Turcotte | C | 19 | 5-11/185 | Wisconsin (B1G) | `19(5th) |
| Nsh | 18 | Philip Tomasino | C | 19 | 5-11/180 | Nia-Osh (OHL) | `19(24th) |
| Pit | 19 | Samuel Poulin | LW | 19 | 6-1/205 | Sherbrooke (QMJHL) | `19(21st) |
| Wsh | 20 | Connor McMichael | C | 19 | 5-11/175 | London (OHL) | `19(25th) |
| LA | 21 | Gabriel Vilardi | RW | 21 | 6-3/200 | Ontario (AHL) | `17(11th) |
| NYR | 22 | Igor Shesterkin | G | 24 | 6-1/190 | Hartford (AHL) | `14(118th) |
| Dal | 23 | Thomas Harley | D | 19 | 6-3/190 | Mississauga (OHL) | `19(18th) |
| Ari | 24 | Barrett Hayton | C | 20 | 6-1/190 | Arizona (NHL) | `18(5th) |
| NYR | 25 | Nils Lundkvist | D | 20 | 5-11/180 | Lulea (Swe) | `18(28th) |
| LA | 26 | Arthur Kaliyev | RW | 19 | 6-2/190 | Hamilton (OHL) | `19(33rd) |
| Cgy | 27 | Juuso Valimaki | D | 21 | 6-2/205 | DNP - Injured | `17(16th) |
| Det | 28 | Jared McIsaac | D | 20 | 6-1/195 | Hal-Mon (QMJHL) | `18(36th) |
| NYR | 29 | Vitali Kravtsov | RW | 20 | 6-3/185 | Hartford (AHL) | `18(9th) |
| Edm | 30 | Evan Bouchard | D | 20 | 6-2/195 | Bakersfield (AHL) | `18(10th) |
| NYR | 31 | K'Andre Miller | D | 20 | 6-3/205 | Wisconsin (B1G) | `18(22nd) |
| Edm | 32 | Raphael Lavoie | RW | 19 | 6-4/195 | Hal-Chi (QMJHL) | `19(38th) |
| NYI | 33 | Ilya Sorokin | G | 25 | 6-2/180 | CSKA (KHL) | `14(78th) |
| Det | 34 | Albert Johansson | D | 19 | 5-11/165 | Farjestads (Swe) | `19(60th) |
| Ari | 35 | Matias Maccelli | LW | 19 | 5-11/170 | Ilves Tampere (Fin) | `19(98th) |
| Van | 36 | Nils Hoglander | RW | 19 | 5-9/185 | Rogle (Swe) | `19(40th) |
| Ari | 37 | Jan Jenik | RW | 20 | 6-1/180 | Hamilton (OHL) | `18(65th) |
| Phi | 38 | Cam York | D | 19 | 5-11/175 | Michigan (B1G) | `19(14th) |
| Phi | 39 | Morgan Frost | C | 21 | 5-11/180 | Lehigh Valley (AHL) | `17(27th) |
| Ana | 40 | Lukas Dostal | G | 20 | 6-1/170 | Ilves Tampere (Fin) | `18(85th) |
| LA | 41 | Tobias Bjornfot | D | 19 | 6-0/200 | Ontario (AHL) | `19(22nd) |
| SJ | 42 | Ryan Merkley | D | 20 | 5-11/170 | London (OHL) | `18(21st) |
| NYI | 43 | Kieffer Bellows | LW | 22 | 6-0/200 | Bridgeport (AHL) | `16(19th) |
| NYI | 44 | Oliver Wahlstrom | RW | 20 | 6-1/205 | Bridgeport (AHL) | `18(11th) |
| LA | 45 | Rasmus Kupari | C | 20 | 6-1/185 | Ontario (AHL) | `18(20th) |
| CBJ | 46 | Liam Foudy | C | 20 | 6-0/175 | London (OHL) | `18(18th) |
| LA | 47 | Tyler Madden | C | 20 | 5-10/155 | Northeastern (HE) | T(Van-2/20) |
| Mtl | 48 | Alexander Romanov | D | 20 | 5-11/185 | CSKA (KHL) | `18(38th) |
| NYI | 49 | Bode Wilde | D | 20 | 6-2/195 | Bridgeport (AHL) | `18(41st) |
| Ott | 50 | Jacob Bernard-Docker | D | 20 | 6-0/180 | North Dakota (NCHC) | `18(26th) |
| Cgy | 51 | Jakob Pelletier | LW | 19 | 5-9/165 | Moncton (QMJHL) | `19(26th) |
| LA | 52 | Akil Thomas | C | 20 | 5-11/170 | Nia-Pbo (OHL) | `18(51st) |
| Wpg | 53 | Dylan Samberg | D | 21 | 6-3/190 | Minn-Duluth (NCHC) | `17(43rd) |
| Chi | 54 | Ian Mitchell | D | 21 | 5-11/175 | Denver (NCHC) | `17(57th) |
| Ott | 55 | Josh Norris | C | 21 | 6-1/195 | Belleville (AHL) | T(SJ-9/18) |
| NYR | 56 | Matthew Robertson | D | 19 | 6-3/200 | Edmonton (WHL) | `19(49th) |
| VGK | 57 | Pavel Dorofeyev | LW | 19 | 6-1/170 | Magnitogorsk (KHL) | `19(79th) |
| Dal | 58 | Jake Oettinger | G | 21 | 6-4/210 | Texas (AHL) | `17(26th) |
| Ott | 59 | Drake Batherson | RW | 22 | 6-1/190 | Belleville (AHL) | `17(121st) |
| LA | 60 | Samuel Fagemo | RW | 20 | 6-0/195 | Frolunda (Swe) | `19(50th) |
| Col | 61 | Justus Annunen | G | 20 | 6-4/215 | Karpat Oulu (Fin) | `18(64th) |
| Bos | 62 | John Beecher | C | 19 | 6-3/210 | Michigan (B1G) | `19(30th) |
| Phi | 63 | Egor Zamula | D | 20 | 6-4/175 | Calgary (WHL) | FA(9/18) |
| NYR | 64 | Zac Jones | D | 19 | 5-10/175 | Massachusetts (HE) | `19(68th) |
| CBJ | 65 | Kirill Marchenko | LW | 20 | 6-3/190 | SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) | `18(49th) |
| VGK | 66 | Jack Dugan | RW | 22 | 6-2/185 | Providence (HE) | `17(142nd) |
| StL | 67 | Scott Perunovich | D | 22 | 5-10/175 | Minn-Duluth (NCHC) | `18(45th) |
| Bos | 68 | Jack Studnicka | C | 21 | 6-1/170 | Providence (AHL) | `17(53rd) |
| Dal | 69 | Ty Dellandrea | C | 20 | 6-0/185 | Flint (OHL) | `18(13th) |
| Min | 70 | Calen Addison | D | 20 | 5-10/180 | Lethbridge (WHL) | T(Pit-2/20) |
| NYR | 71 | Julien Gauthier | RW | 22 | 6-4/225 | Charlotte (AHL) | T(Car-2/20) |
| Van | 72 | Olli Juolevi | D | 22 | 6-3/200 | Utica (AHL) | `16(5th) |
| NJ | 73 | Nolan Foote | LW | 19 | 6-3/190 | Kelowna (WHL) | T(TB-2/20) |
| NJ | 74 | Janne Kuokkanen | LW | 22 | 6-1/190 | Cha-Bng (AHL) | T(Car-2/20) |
| Ott | 75 | Alex Formenton | LW | 21 | 6-2/165 | Belleville (AHL) | `17(47th) |
| Det | 76 | Robert Mastrosimone | LW | 19 | 5-10/160 | Boston University (HE) | `19(54th) |
| NYR | 77 | Morgan Barron | C | 21 | 6-2/200 | Cornell (ECAC) | `17(174th) |
| Mtl | 78 | Jesse Ylonen | RW | 20 | 6-1/185 | Pelicans (Fin) | `18(35th) |
| Car | 79 | Dominik Bokk | RW | 20 | 6-1/180 | Rogle (Swe) | T(StL-9/19) |
| Nsh | 80 | Egor Afanasyev | RW | 19 | 6-3/205 | Windsor (OHL) | `19(45th) |
| Ana | 81 | Benoit-Olivier Groulx | C | 20 | 6-1/195 | Hal-Mon (QMJHL) | `18(54th) |
| Min | 82 | Alexander Khovanov | C | 20 | 5-11/195 | Moncton (QMJHL) | `18(86th) |
| Det | 83 | Joe Veleno | C | 20 | 6-1/195 | Grand Rapids (AHL) | `18(30th) |
| NJ | 84 | Kevin Bahl | D | 20 | 6-6/230 | Ottawa (OHL) | T(Ari-12/19) |
| Car | 85 | Ryan Suzuki | C | 19 | 6-0/180 | Bar-Sag (OHL) | `19(28th) |
| Van | 86 | Jett Woo | D | 20 | 6-0/205 | Calgary (WHL) | `18(37th) |
| Mtl | 87 | Mattias Norlinder | D | 20 | 5-11/180 | MODO (Swe 2) | `19(64th) |
| Min | 88 | Adam Beckman | LW | 19 | 6-1/170 | Spokane (WHL) | `19(75th) |
| Bos | 89 | Jeremy Swayman | G | 21 | 6-1/190 | Maine (HE) | `17(111th) |
| Wpg | 90 | Kristian Vesalainen | LW | 21 | 6-3/205 | Manitoba (AHL) | `17(24th) |
| Tor | 91 | Filip Hallander | LW | 20 | 6-1/185 | Lulea (Swe) | T(Pit-8/20) |
| Fla | 92 | Owen Tippett | RW | 21 | 6-1/200 | Springfield (AHL) | `17(10th) |
| Car | 93 | Jake Bean | D | 22 | 6-1/175 | Charlotte (AHL) | `16(13th) |
| Ott | 94 | Shane Pinto | C | 19 | 6-2/190 | North Dakota (NCHC) | `19(32nd) |
| Col | 95 | Martin Kaut | RW | 20 | 6-1/175 | Colorado (AHL) | `18(16th) |
| Van | 96 | Jack Rathbone | D | 21 | 5-10/175 | Harvard (ECAC) | `17(95th) |
| Tor | 97 | Nick Abruzzese | C | 21 | 5-9/160 | Harvard (ECAC) | `19(124th) |
| Bos | 98 | Urho Vaakanainen | D | 21 | 6-0/185 | Providence (AHL) | `17(18th) |
| Wsh | 99 | Alexander Alexeyev | D | 20 | 6-3/200 | Hershey (AHL) | `18(31st) |
| NYI | 100 | Simon Holmstrom | RW | 19 | 6-1/185 | Bridgeport (AHL) | `19(23rd) |
| LA | 101 | Jaret Anderson-Dolan | C | 21 | 5-11/190 | Ontario (AHL) | `17(41st) |
| Car | 102 | Joey Keane | D | 21 | 6-0/185 | Hfd-Cha (AHL) | T(NYR-2/20) |
| Wsh | 103 | Martin Fehervary | D | 20 | 6-1/190 | Hershey (AHL) | `18(46th) |
| StL | 104 | Tyler Tucker | D | 20 | 6-1/205 | Bar-Fnt (OHL) | `18(200th) |
| SJ | 105 | Yegor Spiridonov | C | 19 | 6-2/195 | Stalnye Lisy Magnitogorsk (MHL) | `19(108th) |
| NJ | 106 | Joey Anderson | RW | 22 | 6-0/195 | Binghamton (AHL) | `16(73rd) |
| Col | 107 | Conor Timmins | D | 21 | 6-1/185 | Colorado (AHL) | `17(32nd) |
| StL | 108 | Klim Kostin | C | 21 | 6-3/195 | San Antonio (AHL) | `17(31st) |
| Mtl | 109 | Cayden Primeau | G | 21 | 6-3/180 | Laval (AHL) | `17(199th) |
| SJ | 110 | Jonathan Dahlen | LW | 22 | 5-11/185 | Timra IK (Swe 2) | T(Van-2/19) |
| NJ | 111 | Reilly Walsh | D | 21 | 5-11/180 | Harvard (ECAC) | `17(81st) |
| Buf | 112 | Oskari Laaksonen | D | 21 | 6-2/165 | Ilves Tampere (Fin) | `17(89th) |
| NJ | 113 | Arseni Gritsyuk | RW | 19 | 5-10/170 | Omskie Yastreby (MHL) | `19(129th) |
| Wsh | 114 | Aliaksei Protas | C | 19 | 6-5/205 | Prince Albert (WHL) | `19(91st) |
| Cgy | 115 | Dustin Wolf | G | 19 | 6-0/165 | Everett (WHL) | `19(214th) |
| StL | 116 | Joel Hofer | G | 20 | 6-3/160 | Portland (WHL) | `18(107th) |
| VGK | 117 | Ivan Morozov | C | 20 | 6-1/180 | SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) | `18(61st) |
| Mtl | 118 | Jake Evans | C | 24 | 6-0/185 | Laval (AHL) | `14(207th) |
| Nsh | 119 | Eeli Tolvanen | RW | 21 | 5-10/175 | Milwaukee (AHL) | `17(30th) |
| Wpg | 120 | Ville Heinola | D | 19 | 5-11/180 | Lukko Rauma (Fin) | `19(20th) |
| VGK | 121 | Lucas Elvenes | RW | 21 | 6-0/175 | Chicago (AHL) | `17(127th) |
| TB | 122 | Cole Koepke | LW | 22 | 6-1/195 | Minn-Duluth (NCHC) | `18(183rd) |
| Ana | 123 | Isac Lundestrom | C | 20 | 6-0/185 | San Diego (AHL) | `18(23rd) |
| NYR | 124 | Tarmo Reunanen | D | 22 | 6-0/180 | Lukko Rauma (Fin) | `16(98th) |
| Mtl | 125 | Jordan Harris | D | 20 | 5-11/180 | Northeastern (HE) | `18(71st) |
| Ana | 126 | Brayden Tracey | LW | 19 | 6-0/175 | MJ-Vic (WHL) | `19(29th) |
| Phi | 127 | Tanner Laczynski | C | 23 | 6-1/200 | Ohio State (B1G) | `16(169th) |
| Chi | 128 | Alec Regula | D | 20 | 6-3/200 | London (OHL) | T(Det-10/19) |
| Buf | 129 | Mattias Samuelsson | D | 20 | 6-3/215 | Western Michigan (NCHC) | `18(32nd) |
| Car | 130 | Jamieson Rees | C | 19 | 5-10/175 | Sarnia (OHL) | `19(44th) |
| Edm | 131 | Olivier Rodrigue | G | 20 | 6-1/165 | Moncton (QMJHL) | `18(62nd) |
| Fla | 132 | Serron Noel | RW | 20 | 6-5/205 | Osh-Kit (OHL) | `18(34th) |
| Det | 133 | Antti Tuomisto | D | 19 | 6-4/190 | Assat Pori (Fin Jr) | `19(35th) |
| Dal | 134 | Jason Robertson | LW | 21 | 6-2/195 | Texas (AHL) | `17(39th) |
| Mtl | 135 | Joni Ikonen | C | 21 | 5-10/170 | DNP - Injured | `17(58th) |
| Nsh | 136 | Rem Pitlick | C | 23 | 5-11/200 | Milwaukee (AHL) | `16(76th) |
| Ott | 137 | Logan Brown | C | 22 | 6-6/220 | Belleville (AHL) | `16(11th) |
| TB | 138 | Samuel Walker | C | 21 | 5-11/160 | Minnesota (B1G) | `17(200th) |
| Phi | 139 | Wade Allison | RW | 22 | 6-2/205 | Western Michigan (NCHC) | `16(52nd) |
| Wpg | 140 | Declan Chisholm | D | 20 | 6-1/190 | Peterborough (OHL) | `18(150th) |
| NJ | 141 | Tyce Thompson | RW | 21 | 6-1/180 | Providence (HE) | `19(96th) |
| VGK | 142 | Connor Corcoran | D | 20 | 6-1/185 | Windsor (OHL) | `18(154th) |
| Ana | 143 | Jackson Lacombe | D | 19 | 6-1/170 | Minnesota (B1G) | `19(39th) |
| NYR | 144 | Lauri Pajuniemi | RW | 21 | 6-0/185 | TPS Turku (Fin) | `18(132nd) |
| Car | 145 | Tuukka Tieksola | RW | 19 | 5-10/160 | Karpat Oulu (Fin Jr) | `19(121st) |
| CBJ | 146 | Andrew Peeke | D | 22 | 6-3/210 | Cleveland (AHL) | `16(34th) |
| Ana | 147 | Axel Andersson | D | 20 | 6-0/180 | Moncton (QMJHL) | T(Bos-2/20) |
| Car | 148 | Patrik Puistola | LW | 19 | 6-0/175 | Tap-Juk-Koo (Fin) | `19(73rd) |
| NJ | 149 | Michael McLeod | C | 22 | 6-2/195 | Binghamton (AHL) | `16(12th) |
| Car | 150 | Pyotr Kochetkov | G | 21 | 6-1/175 | SKA-VIT (KHL) | `19(36th) |
| NJ | 151 | Michael Vukojevic | D | 19 | 6-3/210 | Kitchener (OHL) | `19(82nd) |
| NYI | 152 | Ruslan Iskhakov | C | 20 | 5-8/155 | UConn (HE) | `18(43rd) |
| Wpg | 153 | Sami Niku | D | 23 | 6-0/175 | Manitoba (AHL) | `15(198th) |
| TB | 154 | Hugo Alnefelt | G | 19 | 6-3/195 | HV 71 (Swe) | `19(71st) |
| NJ | 155 | Nikita Okhotyuk | D | 19 | 6-1/195 | Ottawa (OHL) | `19(61st) |
| NYR | 156 | Hunter Skinner | D | 19 | 6-2/175 | London (OHL) | `19(112th) |
| LA | 157 | Mikey Anderson | D | 21 | 6-0/195 | Ontario (AHL) | `17(103rd) |
| Col | 158 | Shane Bowers | C | 21 | 6-2/190 | Colorado (AHL) | T(Ott-11/17) |
| NYI | 159 | Joshua Ho-Sang | RW | 24 | 6-0/175 | Bri-SA (AHL) | `14(28th) |
| LA | 160 | Cal Petersen | G | 25 | 6-3/190 | Ontario (AHL) | FA(7/17) |
| Col | 161 | Sampo Ranta | LW | 20 | 6-2/205 | Minnesota (B1G) | `18(78th) |
| Wpg | 162 | Mikhail Berdin | G | 22 | 6-2/165 | Manitoba (AHL) | `16(157th) |
| Bos | 163 | Jeremy Lauzon | D | 23 | 6-3/205 | Providence (AHL) | `15(52nd) |
| Nsh | 164 | David Farrance | D | 21 | 5-11/190 | Boston University (HE) | `17(92nd) |
| Van | 165 | Will Lockwood | RW | 22 | 5-11/175 | Michigan (B1G) | `16(64th) |
| NYI | 166 | Sebastian Aho | D | 24 | 5-10/175 | Bridgeport (AHL) | `17(139th) |
| Wpg | 167 | Logan Stanley | D | 22 | 6-7/225 | Manitoba (AHL) | `16(18th) |
| Buf | 168 | Ryan Johnson | D | 19 | 6-0/175 | Minnesota (B1G) | `19(31st) |
| Van | 169 | Michael DiPietro | G | 21 | 6-0/195 | Utica (AHL) | `17(64th) |
| VGK | 170 | Kaedan Korczak | D | 19 | 6-3/190 | Kelowna (WHL) | `19(41st) |
| Car | 171 | Jack Drury | C | 20 | 5-11/180 | Harvard (ECAC) | `18(42nd) |
| StL | 172 | Nikita Alexandrov | C | 19 | 6-0/180 | Charlottetown (QMJHL) | `19(62nd) |
| Col | 173 | Nikolai Kovalenko | RW | 20 | 5-10/175 | Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) | `18(171st) |
| Nsh | 174 | Juuso Parssinen | C | 19 | 6-2/205 | TPS Turku (Fin) | `19(210th) |
| Chi | 175 | Pius Suter | C | 24 | 5-11/170 | ZSC Lions (NLA) | FA(7/20) |
| Fla | 176 | Aleksi Saarela | RW | 23 | 5-11/200 | Rfd-Spr (AHL) | T(Chi-10/19) |
| Bos | 177 | Trent Frederic | C | 22 | 6-4/215 | Providence (AHL) | `16(29th) |
| CBJ | 178 | Dmitri Voronkov | LW | 20 | 6-4/190 | Ak Bars Kazan (KHL) | `19(114th) |
| Ott | 179 | Lassi Thomson | D | 19 | 6-0/190 | Ilves Tampere (Fin) | `19(19th) |
| Car | 180 | Morgan Geekie | C | 22 | 6-2/180 | Charlotte (AHL) | `17(67th) |
| CBJ | 181 | Trey Fix-Wolansky | RW | 21 | 5-8/185 | Cleveland (AHL) | `18(204th) |
| Ott | 182 | Vitaly Abramov | RW | 22 | 5-9/175 | Belleville (AHL) | T(CBJ-2/19) |
| TB | 183 | Alexander Volkov | LW | 23 | 6-1/190 | Syracuse (AHL) | `17(48th) |
| Tor | 184 | Mikko Kokkonen | D | 19 | 5-11/200 | Jukurit (Fin) | `19(84th) |
| Ott | 185 | Kevin Mandolese | G | 20 | 6-4/180 | Cape Breton (QMJHL) | `18(157th) |
| CBJ | 186 | Daniil Tarasov | G | 21 | 6-5/185 | Assat Pori (Fin) | `17(86th) |
| LA | 187 | Carl Grundstrom | LW | 22 | 6-0/195 | Ontario (AHL) | T(Tor-1/19) |
| LA | 188 | Kale Clague | D | 22 | 6-0/180 | Ontario (AHL) | `16(51st) |
| Ott | 189 | Artyom Zub | D | 24 | 6-2/200 | SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) | FA(5/20) |
| Edm | 190 | Tyler Benson | LW | 22 | 6-0/200 | Bakersfield (AHL) | `16(32nd) |
| Det | 191 | Jonatan Berggren | RW | 20 | 5-10/185 | Skelleftea AIK (Swe) | `18(33rd) |
| Tor | 192 | Yegor Korshkov | RW | 24 | 6-4/215 | Toronto (AHL) | `16(31st) |
| Dal | 193 | Riley Damiani | C | 20 | 5-9/165 | Kitchener (OHL) | `18(137th) |
| VGK | 194 | Zach Whitecloud | D | 23 | 6-2/210 | Chicago (AHL) | FA(3/18) |
| Buf | 195 | Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen | G | 21 | 6-4/195 | Cincinnati (ECHL) | `17(54th) |
| Car | 196 | David Cotton | LW | 23 | 6-3/205 | Boston College (HE) | `15(169th) |
| Chi | 197 | Wyatt Kalynuk | D | 23 | 6-1/180 | Wisconsin (B1G) | FA(7/20) |
| Min | 198 | Hunter Jones | G | 19 | 6-4/195 | Peterborough (OHL) | `19(59th) |
| LA | 199 | Jordan Spence | D | 19 | 5-10/165 | Moncton (QMJHL) | `19(95th) |
| Cgy | 200 | Dmitri Zavgorodny | LW | 20 | 5-9/175 | Rimouski (QMJHL) | `18(198th) |
| Col | 201 | Alex Beaucage | RW | 19 | 6-1/195 | Rouyn-Noranda (QMJHL) | `19(78th) |
| TB | 202 | Dmitri Semykin | D | 20 | 6-3/200 | SKA-1946 St. Petersburg (MHL) | `18(90th) |
| CBJ | 203 | Matiss Kivlenieks | G | 24 | 6-2/190 | Cleveland (AHL) | FA(5/17) |
| StL | 204 | Ville Husso | G | 25 | 6-3/205 | San Antonio (AHL) | `14(94th) |
| Phi | 205 | Bobby Brink | RW | 19 | 5-10/165 | Denver (NCHC) | `19(34th) |
| NYI | 206 | Otto Koivula | C | 22 | 6-4/220 | Bridgeport (AHL) | `16(120th) |
| Car | 207 | Eetu Makiniemi | G | 21 | 6-2/180 | KOOVEE (Fin 2) | `17(104th) |
| NYI | 208 | Anatoli Golyshev | RW | 25 | 5-8/180 | Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg (KHL) | `16(95th) |
| Chi | 209 | Evan Barratt | C | 21 | 6-0/190 | Penn State (B1G) | `17(90th) |
| Buf | 210 | Erik Portillo | G | 20 | 6-6/210 | Dubuque (USHL) | `19(67th) |
| Fla | 211 | Cole Schwindt | RW | 19 | 6-2/185 | Mississauga (OHL) | `19(81st) |
| Chi | 212 | Michal Teply | LW | 19 | 6-3/185 | Winnipeg (WHL) | `19(105th) |
| Ott | 213 | Mads Sogaard | G | 19 | 6-7/195 | Medicine Hat (WHL) | `19(37th) |
| Buf | 214 | Jonas Johansson | G | 24 | 6-4/205 | Rochester (AHL) | `14(61st) |
| TB | 215 | Cal Foote | D | 21 | 6-4/215 | Syracuse (AHL) | `17(14th) |
| StL | 216 | Niko Mikkola | D | 24 | 6-5/200 | San Antonio (AHL) | `15(127th) |
| NYI | 217 | Robin Salo | D | 21 | 6-1/190 | SaiPa (Fin) | `17(46th) |
| Bos | 218 | Jakub Zboril | D | 23 | 6-1/200 | Providence (AHL) | `15(13th) |
| Buf | 219 | Will Borgen | D | 23 | 6-2/200 | Rochester (AHL) | `15(92nd) |
| Pit | 220 | Pierre-Olivier Joseph | D | 21 | 6-2/170 | Wilkes-Barre (AHL) | `17(23rd) |
| SJ | 221 | Sasha Chmelevski | C | 21 | 5-11/190 | San Jose (AHL) | `17(185th) |
| Ari | 222 | Kyle Capobianco | D | 23 | 6-1/180 | Tucson (AHL) | `15(63rd) |
| Det | 223 | Keith Petruzzelli | G | 21 | 6-5/180 | Quinnipiac (ECAC) | `17(88th) |
| Wsh | 224 | Garrett Pilon | RW | 22 | 5-11/190 | Hershey (AHL) | `16(87th) |
| NJ | 225 | Nikola Pasic | RW | 19 | 5-10/185 | Karlskoga (Swe 2) | `19(189th) |
| TB | 226 | Alex Barre-Boulet | C | 23 | 5-10/165 | Syracuse (AHL) | FA(3/18) |
| Edm | 227 | Ryan McLeod | C | 20 | 6-2/205 | Bakersfield (AHL) | `18(40th) |
| NYI | 228 | Samuel Bolduc | D | 19 | 6-3/210 | BLB-She (QMJHL) | `19(57th) |
| Ott | 229 | Joey Daccord | G | 24 | 6-2/195 | Belleville (AHL) | `15(199th) |
| StL | 230 | Hugh McGing | C | 22 | 5-9/180 | Western Michigan (NCHC) | `18(138th) |
| Edm | 231 | Cooper Marody | C | 23 | 6-0/180 | Bakersfield (AHL) | T(Phi-3/18) |
| Tor | 232 | Jeremy Bracco | RW | 23 | 5-9/180 | Toronto (AHL) | `15(61st) |
| Phi | 233 | German Rubtsov | C | 22 | 6-2/190 | Lehigh Valley (AHL) | `16(22nd) |
| Wsh | 234 | Brian Pinho | C | 25 | 6-1/195 | Hershey (AHL) | `13(174th) |
| Col | 235 | Logan O'Connor | RW | 24 | 6-0/170 | Colorado (AHL) | FA(7/18) |
| Buf | 236 | Casey Fitzgerald | D | 23 | 5-11/190 | Rochester (AHL) | `16(86th) |
| NJ | 237 | Daniil Misyul | D | 19 | 6-3/180 | Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) | `19(70th) |
| Ari | 238 | John Farinacci | C | 19 | 5-11/185 | Harvard (ECAC) | `19(76th) |
| Edm | 239 | Aapeli Rasanen | C | 22 | 6-0/195 | Boston College (HE) | `16(153rd) |
| Pit | 240 | Anthony Angello | RW | 24 | 6-5/205 | Wilkes-Barre (AHL) | `14(145th) |
| Mtl | 241 | Cam Hillis | C | 20 | 5-10/170 | Guelph (OHL) | `18(66th) |
| Cgy | 242 | Mathias Emilio Pettersen | RW | 20 | 5-9/170 | Denver (NCHC) | `18(167th) |
| SJ | 243 | Alexander True | C | 23 | 6-5/205 | San Jose (AHL) | FA(7/18) |
| NYI | 244 | Reece Newkirk | C | 19 | 5-11/175 | Portland (WHL) | `19(147th) |
| Dal | 245 | Dawson Barteaux | D | 20 | 6-0/180 | RD-Wpg (WHL) | `18(168th) |
| Bos | 246 | Jack Ahcan | D | 23 | 5-8/185 | St. Cloud State (NCHC) | FA(3/20) |
| Det | 247 | Seth Barton | D | 21 | 6-2/175 | Mass-Lowell (HE) | `18(81st) |
| Fla | 248 | Max Gildon | D | 21 | 6-3/190 | New Hampshire (HE) | `17(66th) |
| Ari | 249 | Aku Raty | RW | 19 | 6-0/175 | Karpat Oulu (Fin) | `19(151st) |
| Wpg | 250 | David Gustafsson | C | 20 | 6-1/195 | Winnipeg (NHL) | `18(60th) |
Washington Capitals
While most competing teams make a habit out of trading draft picks (we see you, Pittsburgh Penguins!), the Washington Capitals, winners of the Metropolitan Division for five years running (which includes this season, truncated as it was, wherein the Capitals went into the pandemic-pause with a one point lead over Philadelphia in equal games played), have not.
True, they do not always have their full complement of seven draft picks, as they left draft weekend with only four players selected in three of the last five draft classes. But with the exception of the class of 2017, the Capitals have always had their own first rounder. In fact, 2016 and 2017 were also the only years in the previous five drafts that saw the Capitals without a second-round pick.
Spelling out the consequences of this approach, unlike the Penguins (one first rounder in five years), the San Jose Sharks (three first rounders in five years, one of which was traded away before playing a professional game)*, the recent vintage of the New York Rangers, who did not have a first rounder between 2013-16, and others, the Capitals are achieving long-term success without selling the future.
*The Penguins and the Sharks are also both without a first rounder going into the 2020 draft, but that is a topic for another year.
This is not to say that the Capitals haven’t traded some future assets for pieces in the here and now, but those assets are much more likely to take the form of a middle or late-round draft pick. Perhaps we can say that the organization is under the after-effects of the “once bitten, twice shy” mentality. After trading future star Filip Forsberg within ten months of selecting him 11th overall, the Capitals prefer these days to use a more minor asset, picks from the back half of the draft, or youngish depth players, to make the upgrades they need to remain competitive at the highest level. If absolutely necessary, they will deal away a second-round pick, such as the one they shipped to San Jose for Brendan Dillon at this year’s trade deadline.
If anything, the Capitals feel more secure in trading away a later pick as they also try to add them when dealing away excess talent. Since winning the Stanley Cup in 2018, the Capitals have acquired five draft picks in various trades while shipping out six (two of which were conditional).
All else being equal, you would want your team to have more draft picks to play with than less, but if you have to move some picks for a roster upgrade, it is far better to send away something farther from the top. There have been numerous studies performed over the years, by people far more numerically savvy than myself, noting how the value of a pick at the top of the draft starts very high (on aggregate) and drops off rapidly, flatlining sooner than one might expect. In short, once we get past the first round, the expected value from a third rounder or a seventh rounder is not all that large. We might even say that that value can be replaced through the astute signings of undrafted talent from the collegiate or European ranks, such as Bobby Nardella further down this list, or Joe Snively, who was our first cut.
As of this writing, the Capitals own five picks for the 2020 draft and will sit out the second and seventh rounds.

Few 2019 draft selections progressed as well as McMichael did this past season with the London Knights, where he went from a strong complementary piece to the lifeblood through which the Knights’ offense flowed. This has many scouts re-evaluating his potential as an NHL player.
A strong skater, McMichael showed much more confidence when carrying the puck and this allowed him to dominate touches when on the ice. He can beat you in transition because of his speed and he can beat you down low because of how well he protects the puck and how sound his decision making is. He is just a solid all-around offensive player. We also saw a huge improvement in his shot that saw him nearly hit the 50-goal mark. His wrist shot is powerful, and he is great at using different shooting angles to deceive goaltenders.
McMichael also showed improved strength away from the puck, which when paired with his high-end IQ, makes him a strong two-way presence. Originally thought of by many to be an eventual winger at the NHL level, he has shown enough to alter this belief. This is a very versatile player. Given the improvements he made this year, it is not impossible to see McMichael playing in the NHL next year with the Capitals. He already skates well enough to be an NHL player.
His versatility will make him very valuable and he could fill a variety of different roles for Washington if he shows himself worthy at training camp. At this point, McMichael’s projection is that of a two-way, goal scoring forward who can play inside the first two lines. – BO
When people think of the Washington Capitals they think of their offensive prowess as a system and the big names on the attack which is why for the past few years the Capitals management has not had to bother drafting forwards with their first round picks. From goaltenders to defensemen, the Capitals have decided to build up their back end and defensive structure instead.
Alexeyev, their 2018 first rounder, is no exception to the defensive pattern and he adds size (6-4”) and hockey IQ to the game. Making the jump from the Western Hockey league’s Red Deer Rebels, he managed to make it through his first professional season with no serious injuries despite his shaky health track record. He struggled in the beginning of the season to adjust to the pace, but as the season went along his confidence grew enough for the skills that got him drafted to make themselves present, particularly in the form of his passing ability and offensive zone positioning.
Alexeyev will need to come back to the Bears better conditioned in order to remain consistent throughout all three periods and he will need to find another gear when it comes to skating and speed. Numerous times last season opponents blew past him when driving the net and he will need to get stronger in keeping them to the outside.
Overall as he continues to develop and his game matures, there is little doubt that he has the overall ability to become a top pairing defenseman for Washington, it is simply a matter of the Capitals finding the right time and Alexeyev staying healthy, as he cannot sustain another serious injury without suffering major career setbacks. - SC

Having earned a spot on the Capitals 2020 playoff roster, as well as having suited up for his first playoff game in the NHL, Fehervary is off to a good start to the somewhat long and drawn out COVID-19 season. Tight competition between Fehervary and fellow Hershey Bears roommate and first round pick Alexander Alexeyev has been good for Fehervary’s development in the Washington organization, pushing him hard in order to see results. The results of that developmental push have been evident as the lanky Slovakian has managed to impress Capitals management is his rookie North American professional season, often using his tremendous skating ability to sail past opponents and earn scoring opportunities.
He is the complete package as a future NHL defenseman; he plays a physical and rough game, can skate, carry the puck, and his defensive zone coverage is good. The only downsides come in the form of patience, passing, and knowing when to hold onto the puck or to pass it. He is not as well known for his passing abilities as he is for his skating and skill level and at times it was evident this past season with turnovers and missed important passes that oftentimes led to icings or offsides. Fehervary will simply need to tighten up his passing and work on how he moves the puck as well as when he moves it in order to be able to make the right choices in the NHL when his time comes to suit up as a top four defenseman. - SC
Protas has a very solid offensive toolkit. His unique size and frame enable him to be an elite puck protector. He can pace the game to his level and allow plays to develop. He is able to shed defenders and maintain control just a half step longer than most which dovetails perfectly with his playmaking and passing. He has excellent vision and can play the half-wall or behind the net equally comfortably. He has a deft touch and can make highlight reel passes due to his soft hands and a great ability to hit teammates in stride.
His shot is above average and enables him to always be a dual threat to defend. You have to respect his shot as he has been averaging 3.6 shots/game this season, over double his previous years. His willingness to shoot the puck has helped his overall offensive game blossom into one of the best in the WHL this past season.
The knock on Protas in his draft year was always his cumbersome footwork and lack of pace, but he has made some serious strides in that part of his game as well. He will never be mistaken for a speedster, but his speed has improved enough that it does not hinder his game anymore. He still needs to work on his overall defensive commitment and has struggled in the faceoff dot but those are both things have improved with coaching. He is still a long-term project but the potential upside here is much higher than most expected in his draft year. - VG
For a player like Pilon, making the NHL and standing out will always be hard due to his style of play. Every team is in need of a hard working grinder who can skate and who keeps his feet moving at all times, however there is nothing particular that stands out about the way that Pilon plays and that is the main issue. The Capitals roster currently has its fast skaters and its fourth line grinders in the likes of Carl Hagelin and company, therefore Pilon will have to impress by broadening his play and bettering his offensive production and overall puck possession next season.
He finished fifth in team scoring with the Hershey Bears this past season and managed to establish himself as one of the AHL club’s top penalty killers with his speed and determination, both with and without the puck. It is clear that Pilon takes his hockey seriously and works hard every shift but at the next level it is about putting all of those things together and he will have to have a better, more cohesive and consistent game heading into next season in order to pull away from the pack and lead his way into a bottom six spot on the NHL club.
He is a passionate player and he will also need to keep his temper and frustration in check to avoid spending more time in the box than on the ice. As stated before, if the Capitals cannot find a spot for him, all teams are in need of a hard working grinder to do the dirty work and Pilon will be a big-league asset should he continue to put his overall game together and mature. - SC
Pinho is the flashy forward with good puckhandling skills that every team has or needs. For a sixth-round selection, he has taken the long route for his development, finally coming into his own this past season, finishing top in prospect points. For his performance with the Hershey Bears, Pinho earned a spot on the Washington Capitals playoff roster and managed to also make his debut suiting up for two playoff games.
Throughout the season, he was a clutch player for Hershey, often earning overtime markers and tying goals. He dominates in the offensive zone and often times earns breakaways on turnovers and long passes. That being said, he needs to work on bringing that competitive level to every game and on further developing his defensive play. With the recent call up to the Capitals, Pinho may have earned his chance at next season’s roster as a member of the bottom six. - SC
After a decent season with the OHL Ottawa 67’s, Clark swung his talents over to the AHL’s Hershey Bears for his rookie professional season. He quickly realized that the next level would not be as smooth sailing as major junior and he was a scratch for majority of the first half of the season. Following in father Wendel’s footsteps, Clark brings the grit and offensive prowess to a mildly physical Hershey roster, but that is where his talents stop until he finds a way to keep up at the AHL pace.
He is a strong skater but his puck possession was simply not there this season and he will have to find a way to get to the net if he wants to even be considered as a top priority call up option. Serving more time in the penalty box than often necessary, Clark will have to prove himself as a skilled player first more than anything in terms of next season and working his way towards a call up. He has the potential and skill to play as a bottom six forward in the NHL, but he still has a lot of learning to go before that will happen. - SC
For a player who was passed over two years in a row in the draft, Leason has managed to defeat the odds, becoming a second-round pick for the Capitals. He has the size to play and to stay safe at the next level, proving so during his rookie season with AHL Hershey, however speed and skill is another thing. This is where the Washington offensive prospect structure starts to thin out and with Hershey this season, Leason failed to mark more than five goals, a disappointing drop from the 36 goals he scored in major junior the year before to being a healthy scratch for Hershey towards the season’s end. Leason will have to find another gear and start playing up at a professional level, as right now he is simply not fast enough to cut it and if he cannot find another gear it will be uncertain if he will ever be given a chance with the Washington Capitals as a bottom six. - SC
With an expired contract and only nine games played this past season, it is unsure as to where Johansen will be playing next season. It is assumed the Capitals will re-sign him; however he has not had the best of progressions in the organization as his play has gotten worse over the course of his three seasons with the Hershey Bears.
As a first round pick, Johansen needs to perform better, he has offered little in the way of point production and the quantity of turnovers he gives up is just bad. Having missed the bulk of the season with a leg injury, Johansen will need to show that he spent the time off well to come back better than ever to prove to Capitals management that he is deserving of a call up at least.
As the time goes by, the Capitals are drafting more and more high-quality defensemen and Johansen’s name is getting further and further down their organizational depth list. It is now or never to prove that his passing, hockey IQ, and composure with the puck are good enough for a bottom four spot in Washington’s lineup. - SC
For a Washington Capitals organization which may be missing a goaltender next season with the expiring contract of incumbent starter Braden Holtby, it means that the young prospects in the system are getting their much-awaited shot. Although the current future may be Ilya Samsonov, recent backup and first call up Vitek Vanecek has the talent and hockey IQ to read NHL speed plays and the focus to get him to the next level.
With a tight goaltender race, Vanecek will have to show his composure every time he gets a chance to be up with the Capitals. His quick reflexes and athleticism in the net are what set him apart from his counterparts as he is very active and aggressive in his crease, he fights for positioning well, and sees plays with good vision. His rebound control could use a little work and his timing when playing the puck can sometimes be a worrisome issue, however the Capitals look to have a promising goaltender tandem for the future as Vanecek could manage the starting role just as well as Samsonov. - SC
Despite starting his North American professional career off a little shaky, including a return trip to Sweden to finish the season, Jonsson-Fjallby has redeemed himself this past season, completing the full season in North America, finishing with 23 points. It is clear to see that the winger has the speed and the offensive hockey ability to make an impact at the next level when it comes to getting to the net and putting forth the necessary individual effort.
That being said, he lacks instincts as a two-way player and in the defensive end, and there is little else to be said about his giveaways and ill-advised passes in the neutral zone and on breakouts. Jonsson-Fjallby is a difficult prospect to talk about because he has NHL-level skills, but his hockey sense is poor and hard to overlook. With any luck, he will find himself in a Capitals jersey within the next season as a first choice call up to a bottom six position. - SC
While some in the hockey world have dismissed Switzerland as a nation worth heavily scouting, the Capitals have always been believers. Look at NHLer Jonas Siegenthaler, their second-round pick in 2015, now an established NHLer. Look at Tobias Geisser, their first selection in 2017, albeit in the 4th round. And look at Riat, taking in between the two blueliners, who signed an entry level deal with the Capitals in March after five successful seasons in the NLA.
A speedy winger with intriguing puck skills, he has been the top scorer in his age cohort ever since being overshadowed by a young Auston Matthews in 2015-16, until finally being overtaken again this year. For an organization that rarely drafts out of Europe, Riat has a chance to convince the Capitals to change their scouting direction once more if he adapts well to the North American game this year. - RW
With his contract expired and the end of his prospect eligibility coming up, Lewington has hopefully proved himself to be enough of an asset on the backend in the Washington organization to be offered a new contract.
He is a big body and has been a physical, mature presence on the ice for the AHL Hershey Bears. He plays a solid defensive game and often times lends his shooting ability in offensive situations which allows him to stand out with his overall in-game effectiveness as a two-way player.
He is a good defenseman with a promising future ahead and the potential to be a bottom four contributor either with the Capitals or another team should they choose not to resign him. There are slight discipline issues but nothing of concern with Lewington’s actual play and for a seventh round pick his development has surpassed anything expected when he was first drafted. - SC
At 5-9” Nardella is certainly undersized as defenseman go in professional hockey, however, do not be fooled as this crafty and highly offensive defenseman is a threat no matter where he is on the ice. He finished seventh on the Bears in points and tops for defenseman this past season, his rookie professional campaign.
Having been trusted for a role on the Bears’ top powerplay unit, Nardella clearly shows his maturity and that he is focused enough to manage high pressure situations and smart enough to make the right plays. He also has the skill as a top-level skater and puckhandler to get to the net for scoring opportunities which can make him an asset in today’s game.
The major downside is size and if the Capitals can get past that, rest assured that Nardella has the potential to be a top four pairing defenseman. The delay in cracking the Washington lineup simply comes from defensive depth and prospect hierarchy politics, because as a player Nardella offers nothing but good things to a team. - SC
A late arrival to the OHL made Has a bit of a mystery and a difficult player to evaluate. Some may wonder about why he only played a single game for the North Bay Battalion before being moved to Guelph. The answer is because the OHL has a rule that imports cannot be traded until they play at least one game for the drafting team. In Guelph, Has was eased into a top four role for the Storm, playing as a stay at home defender with partner Daniil Chayka (a top 2021 eligible player).
At 6-4”, he certainly has good length and exhibits good gap control when containing the transition game of the opposition. As an offensive player, we saw Has struggle at times with his decision making and the pace of play in the OHL. It remains to be seen just how much potential he has as an NHL prospect moving forward. Next year he will return to Guelph and will likely resume his partnership with Chayka. As he becomes more comfortable, we should get a better idea of the type of player he is and can become. - BO
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In many cases, teams supplement their prospect income with free agent signees, and Washington has been no exception, although to a lesser extent than many other teams, with only seven qualified having been brought into the organization – having been brought into professional hockey – as undrafted free agents. That said, the player’s inked by the Capitals off the free prospect market do not have the organizational impact that you see from free agents in other systems. While the two free agent collegians signed by Washington this year (Joe Snively from Yale and Bobby Nardella from Notre Dame) were considered for the top 20 list, none of the free agent signees ultimately featured in the list below.
Also incidentally not appearing anywhere in the top 20 below is a single product from the Capitals’ small draft class of 2017, when they did not select a single player prior to the fourth round.
The above factors would typically lead to a system that is among the bottom end of systems in the game, and while we have not yet scored out all systems as of this writing, and even without Chase Priskie, who would have likely been in the top six here were it not for his stated intentions to explore free agency after Washington’s right on him expire in mid-August as a college graduate, the Capitals have a decent system, buttressed by a top four who all profile to be top half of the NHL roster players.
The system, from the 30,000 foot view lacks for inspiration, but between minute munching, two-way defender Alexander Alexeyev, long-touted netminder Ilya Samsonov, who began to demonstrate the potential that had Capitals’ brass salivating for years in the second half of his season in North America, and their top two picks from the 2019 class, forward Connor McMichael and Brett Leason, there are four players here who could grow into future core pieces for a franchise that should reasonably expect to continue to contend for postseason glory.
What the system lacks, on the other hand, is the breadth and depth of the system that is also needed to ensure that a team can withstand the inevitable injuries that teams accrue over the course of a season. The AHL talent – at least those guys who will not be AHL rookies this year – has very few forwards who could be expected to play NHL roles yet, with the only young potential 2019-20 contributing players coming on the blueline. In fact, two of the following three players listed below after the aforementioned top three, and three of those in the 5-10 range are defensemen with at least one full season of AHL experience under their belts.
The moral here, if there is one, is that the Capitals have a better system than might be expected, but that the system may not be structured to help the NHL team as needed, depending on how those needs shake out. Expect their depth to be tested this year.
-Ryan Wagman

1 Alexander Alexeyev, D (31st overall, 2018. Last Year: 3) Alexeyev is a great story wrapped in a very good player who has all the tools to be a top four defender in the NHL. He has good size, skates very well, and has more snarl in his game then most give him credit for. Couple all that with a defender who is an excellent passer both in his own zone as well as when quarterbacking a powerplay, and he shows real promise. He has had some injury trouble the past couple of seasons and had a tragic loss as his mother passed away mid-season in his draft year. Despite so many ups and downs he has been one of the top defenders in the WHL since his arrival from Russia. He projects as playing both sides of special teams although maybe on second units and he could be an very solid second pairing defender. - VG
2 Ilya Samsonov, G (22nd overall, 2015. Last Year: 1) Having had good numbers in the KHL, Samsonov was destined to be a top goaltender in North America, however despite his cool demeanor, depending on the outcome of a play he can get easily frustrated and distracted. His playoff performance with AHL Hershey was less than desirable and he seemed to lack the maturity to keep his focus into the postseason. Samsonov is a very intense, high pressure goaltender and he has all the traits to be a starter in the NHL. It will be a matter of time and perhaps a chance at a better playoff run to build his confidence up before we see him make the leap to starting more than a game or two with Washington. There is no doubt that with his tracking abilities and poise Samsonov will see another call up to the NHL again this season and hopefully for a longer time frame in order to further his NHL experience. - SC
3 Connor McMichael, C (25th overall, 2019. Last Year: IE) McMichael was one of the most consistent performers for the London Knights this past season, despite being in his NHL draft year. His hockey IQ is his best asset as he is such an intelligent player in the offensive zone. He is also a great skater, which he uses in combination with his vision and anticipation to find those soft spots in the opposing defense. As a shoot first center, McMichael’s ability to create for his linemates will need to improve should he want to stick down the middle moving forward. A lot of that comes from a need to play with more intensity, especially with the puck on his stick. He needs to attack the middle of the ice with more ferocity. While scouts are unsure as to whether McMichael is a center or wing in the future, he profiles as a strong two-way middle six forward who can provide versatility and goal scoring to the Capitals in the future. - BO
4 Brett Leason, RW (56th overall, 2019. Last Year: IE) Leason’s skating has improved by leaps and bounds since his first time through the draft. He is now an average skater but it is now enough to enable his many other skills to shine through now that he can keep up with play. He is an underrated passer with good instincts in the offensive zone. He is a monster on the cycle game and below the dots where he can tire out opponents forcing them to chase the game. His shot is lethal and he is an excellent net front presence as he battles and keeps his skill free to tip pucks or reach loose pucks. If the scoring doesn’t translate he can still be an effective energy guy that can tilt the ice and generate offensive zone time. At his best he could be a power forward with 20-25 goal potential. -VG
5 Martin Fehervary, D (46th overall, 2018. Last Year: 6) An aggressive import from Slovakia, Fehervary played full time in the SHL last season, in his last year qualifying for junior hockey. He finished the season ranked sixth on HV71 in ice time. All told, he had a good, but not great, season. He played in his customary aggressive style, with quick skating, physicality, and good reach. His game was well suited to the SHL level and he had mostly good underlying numbers. The one area where his stats were not as strong was in his on-ice save percentage. While that rate is usually luck-related, with only a single season of data, it is hard to tell for sure. He still has NHL potential, with the look of a third pairing blueliner. His skating, reach and aggressiveness will becoming a strong defensive defender. He should be playing n North America next season, most likely in the AHL, which will go a long way in pushing his development along. - JH
6 Jonas Siegenthaler, D (57th overall, 2015. Last Year: 12) Siegenthaler really stepped up at the end of last season and managed a good enough performance as a call up to the Capitals to earn a spot as one of their starters for this coming season. He is a strong and smooth skating defenseman who has a very high hockey IQ which makes him an asset to any team. As a bottom pairing defender with the Capitals to start this season, it will be up to Siegenthaler to work his way up the ladder a little more. An added bonus is his playoff experience from last season, having already proved himself in the most high pressure of situations. It should be a relatively easy transition from training camp into NHL mode this season with fewer nerves to worry about. It is safe to say that Siegenthaler’s time in the AHL is done if he can clock his first full season with the Capitals in 2019-20. - SC
7 Lucas Johansen, D (28th overall, 2016, Last Year: 2) It is debatable whether Johansen is a good skater. His crossovers and edgework are fine but he lacks consistency with his speed in-game. If he can continuously maintain an urgency to his game and avoid being caught standing still then he will be on the right track to earning his first call up to the Capitals next season. For now, he will remain at the AHL level with the Bears until he finds the maturity in his game to take him to the next level. As a first rounder in 2016, Johansen has the skill to play the NHL and the potential to be a second pairing defenseman but he is still only scratching the surface with his development. Johansen will most likely be relegated to another two seasons in the AHL before being in position to gain a full time roster spot with the Capitals. - SC
8 Aliaksei Protas, C (91stoverall, 2017. Last Year: IE) Protas is a monster on the ice. His presence is as noticeable as his shadow. He needs to work on his feet as he is slow and cumbersome as he moves around the rink. That said, he has pretty good puck skills and is a very deft passer. He is able to create from the halfwall or from behind the net where he can hold on to the puck for longer than most. He uses his size very effectively although his overall game is not especially physical. He gained more scouting notoriety as he upped his offensive game drastically in the WHL playoffs, playing a key role in pushing the Raiders to a WHL championship. If he can improve his skating stride there is some potential there. - VG
9 Riley Sutter, RW (93rd overall, 2018. Last Year: 9) Riley is the latest chapter in the Sutter family dynasty with the Capitals selecting him in the third round of the 2018 draft. He was on a good pace last year, with 41 points through 38 games, before suffering a severe lower body injury that cost him the remainder of the regular season (although he managed to return for the end of Everett’s postseason run, as well as a cameo with AHL Hershey in their playoffs). Sutter is a solid two way forward with good size and smarts. He is versatile and can play either center or on the wing, has a nose for the net, and an above average shot. He projects to be a bottom six forward at the highest level and will most likely be used in checking roles as he moves up. As he turns 20 in October, he could still return to Everett for another season, but the ods suggest he will spend next season in the AHL. - KO
10 Connor Hobbs, D (143rd overall, 2015. Last Year: 4) Hobbs is a great team player and a solid passer compiling 15 assists over the course of the season. He is not the smoothest of defensemen and may seem somewhat scrambly but he gets the job done. Although he plays a more gritty and passionate game than other defensemen on this list, his maturity on the ice is what will carry him to the next level. His positioning is good and he is dynamic and capable of playing an offensive role which only adds to his value. Hobbs plays with vibrant energy and his progression with the Capitals organization has been good and will only get better should he stay focused. That being said, expect him to play another full year in the AHL before earning a call up. The unorthodox, late blooming defenseman has the potential to be a Tory Krug type of defender, but will need another full year in the AHL to come into his own. - SC
11 Kody Clark, RW (47th overall, 2018. Last Year: 13) One would expect the son of former NHL’er Wendell Clark to be quite the physical aggressor and that expectation happens to be a correct one. Kody Clark is an intense competitor who is very active on the forecheck and in puck pursuit. He also has great lower body strength which makes him difficult to separate from the puck as he works the wall and prolongs possession for his more skilled linemates. There are some limitations to Clark’s offensive game and subsequently his offensive ceiling. His puck skill, creativity, goal scoring instincts, hands, and vision would all have to be classified as average. Likely the key to Clark’s development moving forward will be the development of his defensive game. This will determine whether he becomes more than just a fourth line agitator and energy player. -BO
12 Colby Williams, D (173rd overall, 2015. Last Year: Not ranked) Among defensemen in the Washington system, Williams is on the smaller end but that does not stop him from making smart plays. He plays a physical game, is strong on the boards and does well at keeping the puck on his stick. His shot production and offensive play needs to improve a little more before he can be considered for a call up to the NHL. He is a mature enough player to earn the call and he plays with enough determination and control that he would be a solid addition to the Capitals’ roster. It is hard to estimate at this point whether or not Williams will play another full year with the Hershey Bears or be sent up for a few games. If he checks off every area of development, he could emerge on a third pairing in time. - SC
13 Shane Gersich, C (134th overall, 2014. Last Year: 5) Gersich is a high energy and entertaining forward to watch and having already won the Stanley Cup with the Capitals in 2018 he has high pressure experience with the big club under his belt already. Unfortunately however, Gersich fell short this season with Hershey as he did not quite live up to expectations. Gersich is a very fast and skilled player with a great set of hands but these skills were lost as he adjusted to the pace of his first professional season while making the jump from NCAA. Gersich had a great development camp and it is without question that he will be better adjusted and prepared this coming season when he starts with Hershey. It is well known that the Capitals have a strong forward lineup but a spot on the Capitals’ roster is not too far away for Gersich as he is certainly dynamic, aggressive and skilled enough to be a bottom six forward once he gets the call. - SC
14 Vitek Vanecek, G (39th overall, 2014. Last Year: 14) Vanecek is a tricky case with the Washington Capitals in terms of goaltenders in their system as they have a lot of goaltending talent and it is quite a competitive system in terms of skill. On the smaller end of the standard goaltender size spectrum, Vanecek moves well, has good vision and keeps rebounds low which are all things that make him a contender for a spot on the Capitals. Last season, Vanecek and Ilya Samsonov nearly split the starts evenly. Vanecek finished in the top 20 in the AHL for his goals against average which is a testament to his athleticism. His temperament may be stable enough for an NHL club however consistency is an issue and he needs to work on being more stable in net if he wants to earn a spot as a backup goaltender in the future. - SC
15 Eric Florchuk, C (217th overall, 2018. Last Year: Not ranked) Florchuk has been a mixed bag this past season but he has some offensive skills and good hockey IQ. He is a pass first player who makes smart plays in all three zones. He needs to add some strength to continue to develop into his pro-sized frame. He is a responsible two-way player who back checks hard and gets in on his forecheck well. He projects as a bottom six forward that helps on the penalty kill and contributes to an overall team game. While not the most exciting or high skilled forward in the system, he looks like great value for literally the final pick of the 2018 draft.- VG
16 Axel Jonsson-Fjallby, LW (147th overall, 2016. Last Year: 7) When he is at his best, Jonsson-Fjallby is a highly energetic and quick player to play with and tough to keep up when paired against. His speed makes him a force to be reckoned with and his hockey IQ has improved drastically in the last year. He has become a smart and reliable two way player, whereas once his defensive game was insubstantial. His backwards skating is weak and his consistency and ability to read the play needs to drastically improve. Jonsson-Fjallby still has the potential to be a bottom six forward but first he needs to complete a full season in North America - last season did not go as planned and he returned back home to play with Djurgardens in the Swedish Hockey League - and prove that he has made a proper adjustment to the ice size and style of North American professional hockey. - SC
17 Garrett Pilon, C (87th overall, 2016. Last Year: 17) Pilon is a hard working forward capable of winning battles, allowing for good puck possession. He is dynamic and has a good head on his shoulders where playmaking is concerned. He creates offensive opportunities and passing is certainly a strength of his with his goal/assist ratio only proving that fact. He is a clean, but physical player who gets well into the tough spots and adds notable pressure to create turnovers. However, good two way players are a valuable commodity and Pilon needs to find an extra gear and find a way to keep up the tempo in all zones and not just the offensive end to move to the next level. His level of comfort moving from the Everett Silvertips of the WHL to the AHL has been shifted somewhat and it will be up to him to manage his transition better in order to be noticed as a potential bottom six center with Washington. - SC
18 Damien Riat, LW (117th overall, 2016. Last Year: 11) Last season, Riat left his childhood team of Geneve-Servette for NLA competitor Biel-Bienne, and there was some hope that the fresh start would allow him to take that next step in his development as a prospect. And while he had a decent season with his new team, Riat did not take any such steps. His point production barely budged (from 24 to 25 points in an equal number of games) and according to first-hand accounts, the skilled winger didn’t look any better in producing the way either. He is still an agitating winger whose feet are as quick as his hands, but with his NLA contract expiring this summer, this will be a critical year for him to show that his greasy game would be worth an ELC from the Capitals. - RW
19 Beck Malenstyn, LW (145th overall, 2016. Last Year: Not ranked) Last season was rough for Malenstyn and presumably not how he expected to start off his professional career. With only a meager 16 points throughout 74 games, the regular season was disappointing. He started to pick up steam as he hit the playoffs only for Hershey to be eliminated, killing his momentum. It is optimistic to say that he will need a confidence boost next season in order for him to be able to showcase his skills better. When on his game, Malenstyn is a natural goal scorer and great at gaining puck possession, but he will have to have a much better showing in order to prove to Washington that he still has NHL upside. With his shot and natural scoring ability, he will have to find the back of the net more than just 7 times next season to reach even ensure that he can remain in the AHL long term. - SC
20 Martin Hugo Has, D (153rd overall, 2019. Last Year: IE) The Capitals selected the towering Czech defenseman in the fifth round of the 2019 draft. Has spent the past two seasons with Tappara U20 and unless he makes the Liiga team this year, it is reasonable to think that he will stay at the U20 level. His shooting ability stands out, with a wrist shot that is hard and accurate, while his slap shot features a lot of power and a good wind up. He also has a knack for getting shots through on the net. His other attributes project to be more around average and the jury is still out on whether he has enough upside to play a significant role in the NHL at his maturation. His acceleration and overall mobility need work and although he shows promise in his defensive and physical games, there is room for improvement in those areas as well. – MB
]]>That take on a bland system was the natural result of an organization that had been trading draft picks like hockey cards for years. The Capital made only four selections in both the 2015 and the 2017 drafts. In the latter year, their earliest pick came at the tail end of the fourth round.
Some teams can get away with not drafting often as they supplement their systems with undrafted free agents. After all, the difference in quality between players drafted in the sixth or seventh rounds and the top 30-50 undrafted free agents can be pretty minimal. In fact, the latter group, as they are generally older, are closer to realizing their potential than 17-18 year-olds who are still in the early stages of their respective journeys.
Unfortunately, Washington has not had a strong track record of luring undrafted talent into their ranks. Most of the undrafted players playing with their AHL affiliate in Hershey were of the older variety. To wit, their average age on the farm last year was 25.51 years old, second oldest in the league to only the San Diego Gulls.
As it happened, any successes experienced by Hershey last year were largely the product AHL veterans, instead of NHL prospects. Their 1A goalie turned 26 during last season, and four of their top ten scorers will be at least 28 years old before the 2018-19 season begins.
In fairness, there were some pretty important contributions from Washington’s top prospects on the team’s run to their first Stanley Cup championship. Number two prospect Jakub Vrana, a former first rounder, had 27 points in his rookie NHL season and added eight postseason points. Chandler Stephenson, who had ranked eighth on this list last year, was a fixture on the fourth line. He contributed 18 points in the regular season and another seven in the postseason. Madison Bowey, who we had ranked fifth, was the ostensible seventh defenseman during the regular season, although he did not play in the playoffs at all. Finally, thirteenth ranked Christian Djoos, who had cycled in and out of the lineup with Bowey in the regular season, cemented his place in the lineup in the playoffs, playing in 22 of the Capitals’ 24 games. A few other guys snuck into games here and there, but he have covered the bulk of the prospect contributions to the championship.
We can appreciate the fact that the Capitals’ championship was a largely veteran affair, but we cannot overlook the value of the draft in creating the Cup raising team. Instead of making a series of veteran-adding trades at the deadline, this team was run by players who had spent years in the organization. From former first rounders such as Ovechkin, Backstrom, Kuznetsov, Carlson, Wilson, Burakovsky, and the aforementioned Vrana, to later round picks like Dmitri Orlov, and Braden Holtby, the importance of the draft cannot be overlooked. By it is also a reminder that the payoff is generally not immediate.
1 Ilya Samsonov, G (22nd overall, 2015. Last Year: 1st) The wait on one of the best goalies on the planet not yet in the NHL has seemingly come to an end with Samsonov’s dominant three year run with Magnitogorsk of the KHL coming to an end with a combined .929 save percentage and a 2.20 GAA. His game between the pipes is very well rounded. He is a high-end athlete who adjusts his body quickly and acrobatically to get to puck that other goalies would have no chance on. He is competitive, reads the game well and technically sound, covering his angles well and playing with an understanding of depth. He even does well at controlling the first shot, thereby minimizing second and third chances. He could still to improve his puck handling skills. While Washington’s net is in capable hands with Braden Holtby, in Samsonov, they have a succession plan in place, and he will spend most, if not all, of the coming season in the NHL.
2 Lucas Johansen, D (28th overall, 2016. Last Year: 3rd) An exceptional puck mover, Johansen has developed at a stately but reasonable pace since the Capitals made him a late first round pick in 2016. Coming out of the blueline factory in Kelowna, he is another highly mobile, modern-era defenseman who has more upside than any other skater in the system. Thanks to his late birthdate, he was able to play in the AHL before his 20th birthday and he ended the season fifth in points among U21 blueliners in the league. Almost as impressive as his offensive capabilities, he also shows a responsible game in his own end. His point shot is strong enough to pick up time on the power play once he reaches the NHL. Speaking of the NHL, he still needs to add muscle to his lanky frame while the chance to dominate at a lower level will allow him to explore the extent of his game before being under the spotlight.
3 Alexander Alexeyev, D (31st overall, 2018. Last Year: IE) The final pick of the 2018 first round, Alexeyev had to overcome quite a lot to get to that point. Not only did he leave home before his 17th birthday to play hockey in Red Deer, but he also dealt with a few injuries in his time on the WHL, notably a knee injury that robbed him of a large chunk of his draft year. Even more than that though, he dealt with the unexpected passing of his mother near mid-season. Alexeyev showed a lot of maturity and drive to come back to Canada within a few weeks of that tragedy and continue to play a high end two way game. He brings size and processing power to his own end, and a big point shot and even more impressive passing ability to the offensive game. His above average skating comes with him wherever he goes. May have more untapped potential than any skater in the system.
4 Connor Hobbs, D (143rd overall, 2015. Last Year: 4th) The Capitals took a risk drafting Hobbs after a draft year partially lost due to a dispute with his original WHL club. The subsequent growth in his game in his final two WHL years make him the best value pick in the organization still working his way up the ladder. He plays a punishing physical game with a big, strong frame. His offensive output from the WHL has not yet followed him to the AHL, but he has been able to demonstrate a promising ability to move the puck, both as a carrier and as a passer. There will be an expectation placed on his shoulders to stand out more in his second-go-round with Hershey, such as being more selectively assertive with his powerful point shot, but his first step showed enough to keep him high in Washington’s future plans.
5 Shane Gersich, C/LW (134th overall, 2014. Last Year: 9th) The Capitals were very patient with Gersich. After using a fifth round pick on him four years ago, they waited as he spent one more season in the USHL and three seasons in NCAA with North Dakota. He played a depth role as UND won a national title in his freshman year but was more prominent in their failed attempts to return to the summit in the last two years. He is a fantastic skater, with both speed and slipperiness. Gersich is also a creative stickhandler, able to find ways out of tricky situations. After his junior year, he signed a late-season ELC with Washington, getting into three regular season games and two in the postseason, to add an NHL title to his NCAA glory. More likely to break into the league as a winger than a center, he should spend most of the next season apprenticing in the AHL first.

6 Martin Fehervary, D (46th overall, 2018. Last Year: IE) A smooth skater with a rich resume in international hockey, Fehervary had already represented his country in two WU18s, two WJCs, and one World Championship before being selected in the second round by the Capitals this past June. He does not jump out on the stats pages, and unfortunately, that is indicative of the type of game he brings to the ice. In addition to his prime acceleration and overall mobility, he has a large frame that he knows how to use and has an advanced feel for the game. With the puck, he is less of a sure thing, sometimes looking downright jittery. He does not have great upside, but has a mature game that can find a fit on the back half of an NHL defensive corps.
7 Axel Jonsson Fjallby, LW (147th overall, 2016. Last Year: not ranked) With his rock star flow and sprinter’s speed, Jonsson Fjallby had a coming out party in last year’s WJC, dazzling as he helped Sweden to a Silver Medal. He grew into a depth scoring role in his first full season in the SHL, but showed more finishing touch with six goals through the first two rounds of the SHL playoffs for Djurgardens. He can be unpredictable to cover, not just with the elusiveness that is a natural by-product of his near-elite speed, but some creativity with the puck as well. He knows how to utilize his speed to be a PK asset as well. Signed to an ELC in May, he should send this coming season in the AHL.
8 Riley Barber, RW (167th overall, 2012. Last Year: 15th) After a year beset by injury, Barber stayed healthy and played a practically full schedule last season, but had his worst output yet as a pro in a down year for AHL Hershey. Further, without a single callup to Washington, he was not able to add to his bulging championship collection. The Capitals will want to see more ability to control the offensive game, and he has the tools to do so. His skating, shot, and puck skills all grade out as above average and last year was his first year where he was not near his team’s scoring lead. He should have a good chance to make the team as an extra forward this year.
9 Riley Sutter, RW (93rd overall, 2018. Last Year: IE) A prototypical member of the Sutter dynasty, son of Ron is a meat-and-potatoes winger who brings a pluggers’ mentality along with a pretty hard wrist shot that has won him a number of admirers in the WHL. The type of player who can play on both special teams units, Riley Sutter can screen the opposing goalie at one end while shutting down the play from the point at the other. He has ideal size for a bottom six winger at the NHL level, and would probably have been a first round pick in clutch and grab days of the early to mid-1990s. These days however, skating prowess rules the day, and while his top speed is alright, Sutter is a bit sluggish afoot. A more explosive takeoff can make him a high-end NHL prospect.
10 Brian Pinho, C (174th overall, 2013. Last Year: 18th) Like Shane Gersich above, Pinho is a product of patience on Washington’s part. He spent an additional year in the USHL after being drafted and then four full years at Providence before finally signing an ELC. Also like Gersich, Pinho won an NCAA title in his freshman year as he gradually grew into a leadership role for his school. The captain as a senior, he has a full set of solid tools to play with, although nothing that would qualify him as a dynamic talent. He projects as more of a defensive sound center who can chip in offensively, but cannot drive play on his own.
11 Damien Riat, LW (117th overall, 2016. Last Year: 10th) After two times each at the WU18 and the WJC, Riat has aged out of junior competition and spent part of his offseason this year helping Switzerland get to the World Championship final, albeit in a depth role. A strong skater, he also grades out well for his puck skills, hockey IQ and physical game. The point requires note that his lack of size will ensure that he is never a punishing player, but he plays with a pest’s mentality, forechecking hard and generally getting into the face of an opponent as he works to separate him from the puck. The Capitals seem to be n no real rush to bring him state-side and his new contract with Biel-Bienne in the Swiss NLA should keep him in Europe for another two seasons.

12 Jonas Siegenthaler, D (57th overall, 2015. Last Year: 7th) A physical specimen at 6-2” and over 220 pounds, Siegenthaler is much more than a coke machine on ice. For starters, he is fairly mobile. Not dynamic by any stretch (which is something that can be said about most parts of his game), but he gets around well and has shown that he can keep up at the pro level. He showed a bit more offense in his first year in the AHL than some had anticipated, which is to say that he could be more than a pure stay-at-home defender. The fact that he was playing professionally in his native Switzerland from age 17 shows up in his reads and positioning. His one true selling point, however, as expected by his frame, is a high end physical game. He is not mean, but when he leans on a guy, there isn’t much the opponent can do.
13 Kody Clark, RW (47th overall, 2018. Last Year: IE) Despite his status as a second round pick of the defending Stanley Cup champions, Kody Clark has a long way to go before he ceases being primarily the son of Wendel Clark. Whereas his father was a star for his toughness and world class wrist shot – not always in that order – Kody is a very raw player. He has flashed a facsimile of what made his father great, as well as some reports of fine wheels, but he has never really put it all together on the ice and his production has been closer to that of a late round pick than someone with a number in the mid double digits. He needs to play with more consistency and start to anticipate instead of react.
14 Vitek Vanecek, G (39th overall, 2014. Last Year: 14th) To be absolutely clear, the Capitals highest hopes for Vanecek are as a future backup. This would be the case almost no matter how well he performs. With a former Vezina winner still in his prime in the NHL and one of the top netminding prospects in the sport ready to move into the NHL this year, the athletic Czech goaltender is more a curiosity at this point. His third pro season did not match his second, although Hershey as a whole had a down year. He does a pretty good job of limiting second chances, but the rest of his game is fairly average. Also worth noting is that at 6-1”, he is on the small side for the modern goalie.
15 Travis Boyd, C (177th overall, 2011. Last Year: 11th) While Hershey had a rare down year, Boyd continued to produce offense and earned his first NHL stint, including one playoff game to start his career off with a ring. The former Golden Gopher has the offensive tools necessarily to be a respectable secondary scoring presence in the NHL, although his size and lack of attention to detail in his own zone mean he will likely need to be sheltered, whether with a more responsible linemate, or with favorable shifts. Expected to compete for the fourth line center job in 2018-19, he will also need to prove that he can play effectively in the greasy areas in order to secure that spot and create new career highlights.

16 Nathan Walker, LW (Waivers: Dec. 20, 2017 [Edmonton]. Last Year: not ranked) All’s well that ends well, I suppose. The first Australian drafted by an NHL team, the Caps placed Walker on waivers in late November and he was promptly claimed by Edmonton. He was with the Oilers for eight games, six of which were spent in the press box, before he was waived again and the Capitals re-claimed him. Small, quick and feisty, he spent much of the rest of the season in the AHL, but got up to Washington for stretches, and played in one playoff game against Pittsburgh, where he even picked up an assist. He will once again be viewed as organizational depth on the wing, but he got his name on the Cup.
17 Garrett Pilon, C (87th overall, 2016. Last Year: 17th) Son of longtime New York Islander, the offensively declined Rich Pilon, Garrett developed as a two way forward instead. There were hopes that he could develop more offensively as he completed his junior career, but his tools have trended more towards average. As with most sons-of, his hockey IQ is the selling point of his prospects for an NHL future. At present Washington’s system is not very deep, so he will get a decent chance. But as the team replenishes its minor league ranks, he will have to show more ability to drive the play than he has to this point.
18 Chase Priskie, D (177th overall, 2016. Last Year: 20th) Very much a late bloomer, Priskie has shown much greater ability to drive the play with Quinnipiac than he ever had in the BCHL. Now the captain of the Bobcats, he is a fantastic skater, fast and with plus edge work, making his forays up the ice a treat to observe. Despite the impressive goal totals for the defenceman, his shot is not nearly as impressive as his ability to control the flow from the point as a distributing quarterback. He has also filled out some physically in his time on campus, but his game is lacking a physical component. Expect the Capitals to make a big push to get him under contract after his senior season ends.
19 Juuso Ikonen, RW (UDFA: May 2, 2018. Last Year: IE) One year after younger brother Joni was drafted in the second round by Montreal, Juuso signed as a free agent with Washington. Juuso is a little bit smaller and a fair amount less talented than his brother, but is still a decent player in his own right as is demonstrated by his having played high level hockey in Finland and Sweden since his age 16 season. He skates well and is tricky with the puck on his stick. His hockey has been well honed by his accumulated experience, although do not be mistaken into thinking he is a defensive specialist, as he is here to help drive the offense. He will have to prove that his size is not a detriment in the AHL before getting a full NHL opportunity.
20 Steven Spinner, RW (159th overall, 2014. Last Year: not ranked) Yet another example of the Capitals’ willingness to let their collegians maximize their time on campus, Spinner has slowly grown into a reliable play-maker’s game with Nebraska-Omaha. He is a skilled puck handler who has good reach and strong puck protection ability. The Mavericks have not hesitated to use Spinner on the penalty kill and in other defensively challenging situations. Despite having average size, he adds a dash oh physicality to his skilled game, finishing his checks before re-assuming a defensive posture. His upside is not the greatest, but there should be room for him in Hershey after next year, if he want sot sign with Washington.
]]>With Regina hosting the 100th Memorial Cup in a few months, all eyes have been on the Prairie Province to see how competitive they would be this season while hosting junior hockey’s premier event. Entering into the first round of the playoffs Saskatchewan will be sending four teams into the fray, which is great news, however based on seeding they have all ended up head to head. Regina looks to be in tough to get to the Memorial Cup in the honest way as a first round trip down Highway 1 to Swift Current looms. This year’s host team could have a month without competitive hockey before the start of the Memorial Cup.
*Note Team stats (GP-W-L-OTL-SOL-PTS), Player Stats (GP-G-A-PTS-PIM)
Eastern Conference:
1E Vs WC 2 Moose Jaw (72-52-15-2-3-109) vs Prince Albert (72-32-27-9-4)
Prediction: Moose Jaw in five
Moose Jaw has been a dominant team wire to wire this year. They have been ranked in the top 10 for 23 weeks of the season and are the only team in the WHL to eclipse 50 wins. They are an offensive juggernaut averaging an impressive 4.5 goal per game, they have the league’s top scoring forward in the aforementioned Halbgewachs (SJS) (72-70-57-125-12) surpassing expectations with the first 70 goal season in the league since 1998-99 (Pavel Brendl). The team boasts several offensively dangerous forwards in Brayden Burke (ARZ) (61-31-82-113-45), Justin Almeida (72-43-55-98-10), and Brett Howden (NYR) (49-24-51-75-42) who can balance the attack and keep the pressure on all the way down the lineup. Defensively they added the most productive blueliner in Kale Clague (LAK) (54-11-60-71-43) to help anchor them for a long playoff run. Moose Jaw has been the class of the league for most of the season but down the stretch have lost games to Regina, Red Deer and Prince Albert making them more vulnerable for upset than at any point in the season.
Prince Albert will be riding high into the playoffs after a 9-0-1 stretch enabled them to nip a playoff spot from Saskatoon. During that stretch they took three points of a possible four from Moose Jaw as well as solid divisional wins over Swift Current and Brandon. Prince Albert has been playing playoff-like hockey for over a month just to get to in, so the pressure will be off with nothing to lose against a powerhouse team like Moose Jaw.

Cole Fonstad (72-21-52-73-6) has had a great second half of the season and will end the season as one of the most productive draft eligible forwards in the WHL this year. Jordy Stallard (WPG) (72-44-47-91-26) has been an exceptional player this year, and Winnipeg may have found another late round gem. A couple of mid-season additions in Regan Nagy (57-25-20-45-53) and Kody McDonald (68-34-32-66-139) have chipped in some nice secondary scoring but they will have to be at their best to give the Raiders a chance of getting through this tough first round match up.
2E Vs 3E Swift Current (72-48-17-5-2-103) vs Regina (72-40-25-6-1-87)
Prediction: Swift Current in five Games

Swift Current poses matchup problems for any team they play against. Like Moose Jaw they have elite scoring with the likes of Glen Gawdin (CGY), (67-56-69-125-101), Aleksi Heponiemi (Fla), (57-28-90-118-28)), and WJC game winning goal scorer Tyler Steenbergen (ARZ) (56-47-55-102-44) leading the way. There is a great supporting cast and what may be a difference maker in net in the form of Stuart Skinner (EDM). In 23 games since joining Swift Current has put has put up a stellar .917 Sv% and a 2.60 GAA. The team’s defensive corps is led by Colby Sissons (NJD) (72-13-58-71-69) and Artyom Minulin (64-13-30-43-26) who both play a physical and abrasive style of game that can get under the skin of opponents. This team is built to compete against any style of team in the league and has the best shot of taking down Moose Jaw in the East.
Regina has been on fire down the stretch which is great for momentum but tough for the match up. Holding down the top wild card would have seen them ship out of such a tough division and play Medicine Hat who has struggled down the stretch and looks ripe for an upset. It was not to be however and Regina’s strong play down the stretch has earned them a tough match up with Swift Current. Regina has a highly competitive team and in other seasons would have had a chance to get to the Memorial Cup the hard way but with the strength against them they will be in tough to escape the first round. What would it look like for Regina to upset Swift Current?

Sam Steel (ANA) (54-33-50-83-18) would have to play lights out controlling the tempo and dictating the play like his line did at the World Juniors. Perhaps even more important would be the play of Josh Mahura (ANA) (60-22-47-69-42) and Cale Fleury (MTL) (68-12-39-51-58) who, when together on the blueline, give the Pats one of the top pairings in the league. Even when split up 5 on 5 to help defend against a deep team like they face in the first round they will need to maintain their balanced play for the team to have any success. Rookie Max Paddock will also need to get on a roll in between the pipes as his strong play down the stretch has made him the probable starter in this first round series. Finally 20 year old Cameron Hebig (EDM) (66-41-49-90-44) will have to deliver a complete game every night.
1C Vs WC2 Medicine Hat (72-36-28-8-0-80) vs Brandon (72-40-27-3-2-85)
Prediction: Brandon In six
Medicine Hat has had the benefit of playing in one of the weakest divisions across the CHL this season. Despite leading their division they trail both Wild Card teams in terms of point production. Even with having home ice advantage the Tigers are in tough against Brandon but they do have enough weapons to make this series a coin flip. Mark Rassell (70-50-30-80-23) is having a great overage season scoring 50 goals for the first time in his career. That coupled with the impressive offensive production of undersized defender David Quenneville (NYI) (70-26-54-80-58) who leads all WHL defenseman in goals and points will have to take their games to another level to push Medicine Hat through this first round match up. Draft eligible Ryan Chyzowski (72-21-31-52-28) has also had a strong season while playing on the second line.

Despite trading Kyle Clague (LAK) to Moose Jaw at the deadline there is still plenty of production in this line up to be dangerous. Undrafted Ty Lewis (COL as a UFA) (70-44-56-100-60) and Stelio Mattheos (CAR) (68-43-47-90-81) have had great seasons and can do some real damage in the postseason. With two draft eligible forwards adding some secondary scoring in Luka Burzan (72-15-25-40-20) and Cole Reinhardt (68-19-15-34-40) they should be deep enough to compete with Medicine Hat. Defensively there was a big hole with Clague out but a couple of rookies have stepped in and had a positive impact. Chase Hartje (58-3-22-25-18) has seen an increased role since coming over from Moose Jaw while 2001 born Braden Schneider (66-1-21-22-16) has been quietly impressive helping Brandon to a 7-3 record over their last 10 games as they head into the playoffs.
2C Vs 3C Lethbridge (72-33-33-6-0-72) Vs Red Deer (72-27-32-10-3-67)
Prediction: Red Deer in six

Lethbridge boasts some highly talented youngsters who continue to develop nicely while gaining valuable experience. Calen Addison (68-11-54-65-53) is dynamic young skater who is on the cusp of being a first round pick this year. Dylan Cozens (57-22-31-53-20) has been a solid player at both ends of the ice especially considering the fact that as a 2001 born rookie he is lining up against guys two and three years his senior. But the real straw that stirs the drink for Lethbridge is Jordy Bellerive (PIT) (71-46-46-92-82). He plays a physical, hard-working style of game that creates plenty of offensive zone time where he is a clinical finisher. To have success this time of year they need one or two depth players contribute at a higher level, perhaps Jake Elmer (70-18-19-37-46) could be that guy for Lethbridge this year.

Red Deer has united the three best forwards they have giving them a formidable top line that can compete with most teams. Centered by Kristian Reichel (63-34-23-57-32), with wingers Mason McCarty (69-38-36-74-82) and Brandon Hagel (BUF) (56-18-41-59-45), the top line has been stellar since Christmas. Defensively two players stand out and both are eligible for this year’s draft. Alexander Alexeyev (45-7-30-37-29) is a big, strong defender who skates well and has nice vision and puck handling skills that makes him a first round candidate. Dawson Barteaux (64-3-29-32-22) is a good skater who passes the puck well and looks to go in the back half of the draft. Early into the New Year Red Deer trailed Edmonton, Calgary, and Kootenay, and was well out of any playoff conversation but winning 10 of 15 down the stretch, including a four game sweep through BC, has ensured that they will be there and in good form upon arrival.
Predictions Second round and beyond:
If things unfold as expected Moose Jaw and Swift Current will play one another in the second round which could very well be the best series in all the CHL playoffs let alone the WHL. I expect Swift Current to beat Moose Jaw based on their incredible depth, overall defensive game and higher end goaltending. In the Central division it seems likely that Brandon makes short work of both of their Central opponents, but they will be overmatched in the conference final, a Swift Current victory.
Western Conference:
1US Vs WC 2 Everett (72-47-20-2-3-99) Vs Seattle (71-34-27-8-2-78)
Prediction: Everett in five

Everett boasts the largest X-factor player in the entire league, in netminder Carter Hart (PHI). He leads the league in most statistical categories including save percentage (.947), Goals against average (1.60), and shutouts (7). Even on the rare occasion that his team does not play well in front of him he can still steal a game. Hart is not the only reason for team success though as Patrick Bajkov (FLA) (72-33-67-100-56) recently signed an entry level contract after an impressive season. Also contributing offensively is Riley Sutter (68-25-28-53-70) who is draft eligible this year, Garrett Pilon (WSH) (69-34-46-80-48), and Matt Fonteyne (72-35-53-88-22) who could well find himself with a pro deal by the end of the summer. With a team that plays a sound defensive game and has so many steady offensive contributors expect them to go far.
Seattle has played Everett tough this year despite only getting two wins in seven attempts. In only one game did they lose by more than a goal, and only once did Everett get four goals in seven games head to head. That sort of effort will be required to hang tight game to game. In a series of one goal games a little puck luck could help beat the top team in the Western Conference. Veteran players like Nolan Volcan (70-32-44-76), Neuls Donovan (71-22-54-76-48), and Zack Andrusiak (71-35-38-73-20) will have to find a way to score while Austin Strand (LAK) (68-25-38-63-75) will be relied on heavily on the back end as his 25 goals was second in the league by defenseman. Seattle’s magic number is three. If they can get three goals past Hart they are 2-0 this season.
1BC Vs WC1 Kelowna (72-43-22-5-2-93) Vs Tri-City (71-37-25-8-1-83)
Prediction: Kelowna is six

Kelowna has an impressive roster from top to bottom with some of their talent that is not even draft eligible until 2019. Kole Lind (VAN) (58-39-56-95-65), Dillon Dube (CGY) (53-38-46-84-52), and Cal Foote (TBL) (60-19-51-70-46) start off an impressive cast of players each more than capable of creating offense while keeping pucks out at the same time. Kyle Topping (66-22-43-65-56), draft eligible in 2018, is another forward who stands out with his near 1.0 point per game production. Cal’s younger brother Nolan Foote (50-13-27-40-31) is yet another offensive weapon and he will not be eligible until the 2019 draft but he has shown some high end offensive tools.

Tri-City has had some struggles with injuries to top players this year. Michael Rasmussen (DET) (47-31-28-59-40) missed nearly 1/3 of the season while Juuso Valimaki (CGY) (42-14-29-43-32) has managed to get into just 42 games. Regardless, both look healthy as they enter the playoffs. Tri-City has a dynamic blueline with three of their top eight scorers coming from their back end. Jake Bean (CAR) (56-11-35-46-22), who was added at the deadline, Dylan Coghlan (VGK) (69-17-46-63-65), and the aforementioned Valimaki are all big time contributors to the Americans success. If the likes of Morgan Geekie (CAR) (67-30-53-83-32), and overage player Jordan Topping (71-38-41-79-56) are able to keep up their scoring rates from regular season they will have more than a puncher’s chance against Kelowna.
2BC Vs 3BC Victoria (72-39-27-4-2-84) Vs Vancouver (72-36-27-6-3-81)
Prediction: Victoria in six

A short ferry ride is all that separates these two team geographically and even less separates them on the ice. Both have diminutive but dynamic goal scorers. Victoria boasts Matthew Phillips (CGY) (71-48-64-112-36) while Vancouver sports Ty Ronning (NYR) (70-61-23-84-47). Both teams have solid offensive depth although the Victoria looks to run a little bit deeper there. Between the pipes each team has a veteran goalie with a save percentage above 0.910 and a goal’s against right around 3.00. Tyler Benson (EDM) (58-27-42-69-39) has been excellent when healthy for Vancouver but the deciding factor in the match up could be the play of 20 year olds. If Tyler Soy (ANA) (66-36-56-92-42) and Chaz Reddekopp (LAK) (46-7-24-31-42) are able to out produce Ronning and Brennan Riddle (67-1-11-12-48) then Victoria looks to make it out of this closely contested first round match up.
2US Vs 3US Portland (71-44-22-1-4-93) Vs Spokane (71-40-25-3-3-86)
Prediction: Portland in seven

Portland’s offence is not quite as deep as the top teams from the East but having six players averaging right around a point per game or better is a tough match up for anyone. Cody Glass (VGK) (63-37-64-101-24) has paced the offense all year bringing his consistent effort and excellent playmaking skills to a team with plenty of finishers. Skyler McKenzie (WPG) (71-46-40-86-54), Kieffer Bellows (NYI) (55-40-33-73-63) and Joachim Blichfeld (SJS) (55-24-32-56-51) have all produced at a high level this season on his wings at different times of the year. Their back end boasts two elite level puck movers in Henri Jokiharju (CHI) (62-12-59-71-14) and Dennis Cholowski (DET) (68-14-52-66-32). These two help them transition the puck quickly and make their offense even more explosive.

Spokane looks like the banana peel that everyone treads lightly around in the first round. Elite skating and dynamic playmaking defender Ty Smith (69-14-59-73-30) has led this team offensively all season and is a lock to be the top player taken from the WHL in this year’s draft. Since the WJC Kailer Yamamoto (EDM) (40-21-43-64-18) has elevated his game and the entire team has benefited. Both Jaret Anderson-Dolan (LAK) (69-40-51-91-25) and Hudson Elynuik (CAR) (71-31-55-86-78) have been the most rewarded as they sit one and two in team goals. In addition to that, they have four other players with 20 or more goals across the team giving them balance and depth for a long series. If there was a team in the US division that could score with Portland over a seven game series it would be Spokane. While they lost the first five regular season match ups against Portland they have won the last two, both in convincing fashion, 6-3 and a 9-3 performances.
Predictions Second round and beyond:
The Western Conference is more wide open than the East where Swift Current and Moose Jaw stand out well above the rest. Everett’s total team commitment to defense has them as my favorite to come out of the West as their stingy goaltending has the potential to shut down any high scoring offense they may face. I see Kelowna handling either of Victoria or Vancouver but as long as Carter Hart is healthy they would be hard pressed to beat Everett in the Western Final.
A WHL final with Everett and Swift Current has a number of interesting storylines as both clubs have not been traditional WHL powerhouses but have recruited and drafted well over the past few years. Two of the top goalies in the WHL going head to head, a chance to test the old adage that defense wins championships, and the story book ending as Tyler Steenbergen scores the winning goal in another big Championship game would really round out what has been an excellent 2017-2018 WHL season.
]]>Moose Jaw and Swift Current have taken the league by storm this year as they battle for home ice advantage throughout the playoffs. Their division also boasts a Brandon Wheat Kings team that has been in and out of the CHL top 10 standing all year as well as the 100th Memorial Cup hosts Regina Pats so game in and game out there has been highly competitive hockey, for critical points in the standings. Out in the West things are as competitive as ever with Everett, Portland, Kelowna and Victoria all within 4 points of each other at the top of the Western Conference. Everett continues to impress league-wide, with a sound defensive game and high end goaltending and solid team game. The other top teams of the East are sporting high end offensive talents like Cody Glass (Por), Skyler McKenzie (Por), Matthew Phillips (Vic), Kole Lind (Kel), and Dillion Dube (Kel) who are all having excellent seasons having been previously drafted into the NHL.

Moose Jaw has been an offensive dynamo all season and at the trade deadline were able to add pieces that will help stabilize the back end and the defensive game. The scoring is being led by two 20 year olds in Brayden Burke (Unsigned) and Jayden Halbgewach (signed SJS) who are sitting one and two in the WHL in scoring. These two might not even be the most offensive players on the team as Brett Howden missed 24 games and has only lately seemed to be hitting his stride. At the deadline Moose Jaw addressed their biggest needs by grabbing a big stay out home defenseman in Brandon Schuldhaus from Red Deer as well as top scoring defenseman and recent World Juniors Gold Medalist Kale Clague (LAK 2016) from Brandon. His dynamic puck moving skills should only enhance this team’s offensive prowess. The largest contribution from a draft eligible player has to have come from Jett Woo. He has been a consistent defender in all situations showing a strong competitive fire in his own zone. He isn’t a dynamic player but more of a jack of all trades defender who can chip in offensively while playing steady responsible minutes. This team has set themselves up to come out of the East as they have the top offensive numbers averaging nearly 0.75 of a goal per game more than anyone else in the league. That coupled with the roughly 3.00 overall goals against average is a strong indicator of future success for this win-now franchise.

Swift Current possess the most dynamic duo in the league this year and it really hasn’t even been that close. Tyler Steenbergen (Ari) is averaging over one goal per game with 36 in 34 games while averaging an assist per game at 35 assists in 34 games. Even more impressive is Aleksi Heponiemi (Fla) who has 89 points in just 37 games (2.41ppg). Throw in an amazing overage year for Glenn Gawdin (Cgy) and they were a one line team who were impressing night after night. Over the course of the season a number of key additions have been made to balance out the scoring and ensure the team kept rolling with a few key members at the WJC. Matteo Gennaro, Beck Malenstyn, and Giorgio Estephan now lead a more than capable supporting cast of forwards who will help the offense. On the defensive side Colby Sissons (NJ) has taken a big step offensively while maintaining his strong defensive play. Finally the addition of Stuart Skinner (Edm) as a true #1 has been a great add as they push for a seemingly inevitable clash with Moose Jaw in the Eastern Final. Riley Stotts (2018) had been their best draft eligible prospect but was moved out to add Gennaro and Malenstyn so they look pretty thin for 2000’s on the roster.

You can assess what Brandon thought of their chances of coming out of the East this year by what they did at the deadline. After being in and out of the CHL top 10 most of the season Brandon traded away their MVP and perhaps the top defenseman in the league this year to a divisional rival in Moose Jaw. Brandon had been paced by Ty Lewis and Stelio Mattheos up front both on pace for 40 goals seasons but that didn’t look to be enough to get past one let alone both of Moose Jaw and Swift Current. Brandon has a lot of young talent to build around going forward with Chase Hartje (2018) and Luka Burzan (2018) coming over in the deal for Clague, as well as the home grown Cole Reinhardt (2018). The nicest future piece could be the speedy play in Jonny Hooker (2020) who has not looked out of place in a his 31 games.
As the Host of this year’s Memorial Cup Regina has a spot already booked in the tournament but has been adding veteran players throughout the season to ensure a strong showing. The team has been built around an impressive top pairing for Josh Mahura and Cale Fleury. Both log big minutes in all situations creating offense while shutting the door on some of the top forwards in the WHL. Mahura has taken another step this year and his offensive production has been amongst the league leaders from the back end. Cameron Hebig has adjusted quickly to add some 20 year old offense after a slow offensive starts to the season for Nick Henry (Col) and Jake Leschyshyn (VGK). Sam Steel (Ana) is really the straw that stirs the drink for this team offensively as he averages over 1.3 ppg heading into the last 20 games of the season. This team is poised to be the top wild card which is a pretty favorable outcome heading out of the division and avoiding the top three teams in the conference. Despite trading away a lot of youth to keep the team strong for a host season the club have managed to keep Emil Oksanen (2018) on the roster through the deadline. He is a fast, offensive minded right shot winger who is averaging just under a point per game while looking to be drafted in his second year of eligibility.
Saskatoon will likely make the playoffs as the Central Division is really struggling to produce anything that resembles a challenge for the Wild card. Saskatoon has to be pleased with the development of Eric Florchuk (2018) and Chase Wouters (2018) who have both been solid contributors. While neither looks to be a high end offensive talent at the pro level both have shown themselves to be effective secondary producers in junior. Throw in the development of Kirby Dach (2019) and Saskatoon looks ready to take over the division as some of these teams start to age out of their current rosters.
As the division basement dwellers standing suggests they are weaker than all the previously mentioned teams. That said they likely would make the playoffs as a 2 or 3 seed in the Central division. The team plays a structured game and while there aren’t big name drafted players Vojtech Budik (Buf) has acquitted himself well on the back end. The real jewel of Prince Albert’s roster is Cole Fonstand (2018) who leads all WHL draft eligible players in primary points with 34 in 47 games. Overall he averages .98 points per game and is able to drive offense despite being undersized on a team that doesn’t have a ton of high end support for him.
The Tigers lead the Central division by a pretty wide margin in what could be the worst division in the CHL this season. The team is led in all respects by David Quenneville (NYI) who drives play with his excellent transition game and is leading the WHL in defensive scoring this year with 53 points. Medicine Hat has a pretty young team that is gaining confidence with each victory this year. That youth is led by 2018 draft eligible Ryan Chyzowski, who has good size and can play in all three zones. He has earned power play time in the second half of the season which should help improve his production (15G, 17A) as we close out the season.
Lethbridge has been a team in flux. Earlier in the season they seemed to be making a push acquiring Lane Zablocki (Det) from Red Deer but then at the deadline shipped him to Victoria to help them make a push. Once the decision to move out some veterans had been made they moved major assets in Stuart Skinner (Edm) and Giorgio Estephan to bring back some youth and draft picks. In a division where a win one lose one record pulls you ahead for a playoff spot the team is not a serious contender to oust any of the power house teams in the Eastern division. Through all this transition one thing has been a constant; undersized defender Calen Addison (2018) has been driving offensive chances and using his great vision and playmaking to produce points at a very high level (G-7-A-33-PTS-40).
Kooteney has been in the basement of this division since the departure of Sam Reinhart (Buf) to the NHL. This current incarnation’s place in the standings is more the rest of the division getting worse than it is of team gaining legitimacy as a force in the Central. The most impressive piece on this roster is 16 year old Peyton Krebs (2019) who looks every bit the part of a first overall pick from the 2016 Bantam Draft. He is near a point per game playing in all situations and is second on the team scoring in his Draft -1 year, very impressive.
The Calgary Hitman had a fire sale this season and while most of the assets collected came back in draft picks a good number of draft eligible players remain part of the roster. With Jake Bean (Car) moved out Vladislav Yeryomenko (2018) has become the number one defender for this team. He is aggressive and skates very well with and without the puck and is starting to show better playmaking skills. In addition a rookie in Jackson Van De Leest (2019) has shown he is capable of helping shoulder more minutes on the back end. Those kids coupled with the a nice collection of 17 year olds in Riley Stotts (2018), Carson Focht (2018), Tristen Nielsen (2018), and Egor Zamula (2018) are all getting valuable minutes for the remainder of the season.
The Rebels have under achieved throughout the early part of the season forcing management’s hand to start rebuilding. Two key pieces in the rebuild look to be Kristian Reichel (2018) and Alex Alexeyev (2018). While playing in the Czech league Reichel was overlooked but this year in Red Deer coupled with a strong showing at the WJC have him moving up draft boards. His skating is very strong which has helped him establish himself as a 200 foot player capable of producing and defending. Alexeyev has been impressive this year and he has dynamic skating and excellent vision and passing skills. He needs to work on his game in his own zone and can have mental lapses in his own zone but he has a ton of potential. They have also been running a 2019 eligible goalie as a starter for most of this season. Ethan Anders‘ (2019) numbers have been respectable despite a number of breakdowns defensively in front of him.
Edmonton’s Memorial Cup victory seems a long time ago as the organization has had another tough season after building back to back Memorial Cup teams just a few years ago. The offense comes from the stick of Trey Fix-Wolansky (Unsigned) who is a very dangerous undersized player. Brett Kemp (2018) may be a late round pick this year despite the team’s struggles overall. The real developmental progression for the Oil Kings is in the 2001’s where Matthew Robertson and Liam Keeler both have shown some real promise.
Everett seems to be built for playoff hockey. Carter Hart (Phi), after being afflicted with mono to start the season, has rebounded to put up some ridiculous numbers. His sparkling 1.51 GAA in 24 games is leaps and bounds better than anyone else in the league. By comparison only three other goalies have a GAA under 3.00 (at least 20 games played) and the best of them is at a 2.77. His save % of .953 is 40 points higher than the next goalie who has played at least 20 games. The scoring is well distributed on this team but the real punch comes from two overage players that have produced while still buying into the defense first system of head coach Dennis Williams. Both Matt Fonteyne and Patrick Bajkov have really shown something this year as they both average well over 1.00 ppg. 2018 draft eligible Riley Sutter has shown that he too can generate offense while playing a sound defensive game. He has good size and speed that sets him apart from other draft eligible forwards in this year’s draft.
Portland boasts some of the most offensively gifted players in the league. Undersized Skyler McKenzie (Wpg) has a shot at eclipsing 100pts this year and is still targeting a 50 goal season. He likely is the third best forward on his line as he skates with Cody Glass (VGK) and Kieffer Bellows (NYI) on a nightly basis. On the back end they are led by Henri Jokiharju (Chi) and the recently added Dennis Cholowski (Det). Both of these defenders can carry the puck and distribute it at a high level. John Ludvig is the most likely 2018 prospect for this team. He is a pretty effective defensive defenseman capable of making a good first pass while playing a strong physical game.
After losing Matt Barzal (NYI), Ryan Gropp (NYR), and Ethan Bear (Edm) a by-committee approach has led to solid season in the US Division for Seattle. The team sports five players in Nolan Volcan (Unsigned), Donovan Neuls (Unsigned), Zack Andrusiak (Unsigned), Austin Strand (LAK) and Sami Moilanen (Unsigned) who all average right around 1.00 ppg. Seattle has been looking for a stabilizing force in net as three goalies have played over ten games each already this season. The duo of Dorrin Luding (Unsigned) and Liam Hughes (Unsigned) will be asked to deliver solid performances down the stretch if they have any hopes of catching either Portland or Everett.

A highly competitive team that relies on the strength of their back end and strong overage goaltending to compete in a challenging division. The deadline acquisition of Jake Bean (Car) from the Calgary Hitmen really sets the expectations for the group heading into the last 20 games. Dylan Coghlan (Vgk) , Bean and Juuso Valimaki (Cgy) all put up excellent offensive numbers. Up front Morgan Geekie (Car) has been very consistent this year averaging the 1.25 ppg he did in his draft season. Isaac Johnson leads the charge for 2018 potential draft picks as he has a big frame and some decent offensive skills for an overage player. Highly touted Michael Rasmussen (Det) has continued to show his goal scoring prowess this season dispute struggling to stay in the lineup.

The optics of being last in the division do not reflect the strength of this team and their potential to win a round as a wild card in the playoffs. Jaret Anderson-Dolan (LAK) has been a consistent and steady force for this team as it started without one of the most dynamic players in the league in Kailer Yamomoto (Edm). Now 20 games in Yamamoto has rounded back into form and is averaging 1.48 PPG. Add in the early season trade the brought in Zach Fischer (Cgy) the team has a nice balanced group of forwards. On the back end they boast Ty Smith (2018) who has a real shot at going in the top 10 of this year’s NHL entry draft. Despite his stature he projects to be a dynamic playmaker that can carry the puck with speed, while displaying excellent vision and playmaking ability.

Kelowna’s roster is loaded to bear and despite a lot of injury trouble with key players have been able to battle to the top of the B.C. Division. Kelowna was able to provide the captain for team Canada in Dillon Dube (Cgy), while also providing minute munching defender Cal Foote (TBL). Foote brings the gritty toughness you love in a top pairing defenseman while still being a good playmaker and shooter. Kole Lind (Van) has been pacing the offense this year along with Carsen Twarynski (Phi) as both are on pace to hit 40 goals this season. While being loaded with current draft picks the team still has a number of pieces NHL teams will covet over the next few drafts, Kyle Topping (2018), Libor Zabransky (2018), and Nolan Foote (2019) have all been large contributors to the team’s success this year which bodes well over the next few seasons.
Matthew Phillips (Cgy) has been one of the top goal scorers in the entire WHL over the past three seasons and with him signing his ELC in December will very likely be gone after this year. With a goal scoring talent like that leaving town Victoria has a gone all in this year adding Tanner Kaspick (StL), Noah Gregor (SJS), Lane Zablocki (Det), Andrei Grishakov, and Jeff De Wit, showing a real commitment to making their way out of the Western Conference. Tyler Soy (Ana) who early in the season was recognized as the CHL player of the week has had points in 13 of his last 15 games while the new players have since established some chemistry with their new team. In net Griffen Outhouse leads the league in shots faced and saves giving him a very respectable .912 Sv% this season which puts him 3rd in the league for goalies who have played in over 20 games. If he can stay hot into the playoffs Victoria has a real chance at making the Western Final.
Ty Ronning (NYR) paces Vancouver’s offense with his impressive 42 goals in just 49 games this season. This is even more impressive given that Tyler Benson (Edm) has continued to be plagued by injury problems, missing 13 games already this year after having missed 39 in 2017 and 42 in 2016. Milos Roman (2018) has taken advantage of this and has been providing a playmaking presence on the team with his 21 assists with many projecting him to be a top 60 pick this year.
Kamloops shipped out a number of their top guys at the deadline with key personnel Garrett Pilon and Ondrej Vala both leaving for Everett. The strength of the U.S. division means that a team stuck in neutral in the B.C. division is a long shot to make the playoffs and Kamloops would have to play lights out down the stretch to even catch a Wild Card spot.
With Dennis Cholowski (Det) joining the Cougars this summer rather than continue along the college route there was a heightened expectation that was never reached this year. He was impressive scoring 13 goals and 26 assists prior to the trade deadline but could not carry the team. A major hole in the team this season has been scoring with just one player (Josh Maser) with over 20 goals. Nikita Popugaev (NJD), a promising Russian import was expected to lead the line offensively however his commitment to a total team game was lacking, as was his commitment to play in North America as he jumped ship back to Russian after only 13 games. There are a couple of promising youngsters that could hear their names called at the 2018 NHL Entry draft this year including Ilijah Colina, and Jackson Leppard. Leppard is a power forward with a big body and frame that can really shoot the puck, while Colina is a small speedy winger who was in the bottom six in Portland until heading north of the border. Since joining Prince George he has scored 6pts in 9 games in an expanded role with his new team.
***
This season the WHL has two highly competitive divisions and five elite teams in Moose Jaw, Swift Current, Everett, Portland and Kelowna all with a real shot at making the Championship series. The wildcard format is very practical this year, as without it a quality team would be left out of the playoff picture in each Conference. While it is a much debated structure in hockey this season in particular shows the practicality of having potential divisional cross over teams as it ensures that the best 16 teams in the WHL get a shot to go for the Ed Chynoweth Cup, which would not have been the case in a pure divisional playoff structure.
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