[04-May-2026 15:31:54 UTC] PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Class 'WP_Widget' not found in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/widgets/mckeens_news_feed_widget.php:3 Stack trace: #0 {main} thrown in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/widgets/mckeens_news_feed_widget.php on line 3 [04-May-2026 15:31:55 UTC] PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Class 'WP_Widget' not found in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/widgets/mckeens_sidebar_menu_widget.php:3 Stack trace: #0 {main} thrown in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/widgets/mckeens_sidebar_menu_widget.php on line 3 [04-May-2026 15:31:45 UTC] PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Call to undefined function add_action() in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/shortcodes/mckeens_display_editorials.php:22 Stack trace: #0 {main} thrown in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/shortcodes/mckeens_display_editorials.php on line 22 [04-May-2026 15:31:46 UTC] PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Call to undefined function add_action() in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/shortcodes/mckeens_display_tabs.php:50 Stack trace: #0 {main} thrown in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/shortcodes/mckeens_display_tabs.php on line 50 [04-May-2026 15:31:47 UTC] PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Call to undefined function add_action() in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/shortcodes/mckeens_heading.php:15 Stack trace: #0 {main} thrown in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/shortcodes/mckeens_heading.php on line 15 German Rubtsov – McKeen's Hockey https://www.mckeenshockey.com The Essential Hockey Annual Fri, 04 Dec 2020 17:14:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 McKeen’s 2020-21 Hockey Yearbook: Top 300 Prospect Rankings https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-21-hockey-yearbook-top-300-prospect-rankings/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-21-hockey-yearbook-top-300-prospect-rankings/#respond Fri, 04 Dec 2020 17:09:56 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=167749 Read More... from McKeen’s 2020-21 Hockey Yearbook: Top 300 Prospect Rankings

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These are our final prospect ranking prior to the start of the season. As a subscriber you can download the list in an excel chart and can link to the player pages in the chart found here. As always, the rankings you see below are based on our 20-80 scouting system looking at five categories for skaters (Skating, Shot, Puck Skills, Hockey Smarts, Physicality) and six for netminders (Athleticism/Quickness/Speed, Compete/Temperament, Vision/Play Reading, Technique/Style, Rebound Control, Puck Handling). Our prospect team spent large portions of their last few months pre-COVID in the rinks, watching the players below and many others, and further work on video (Instat Hockey has been a terrific resource in recent days) before passing judgement on their future projections.

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)
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MCKEENS 2020 NHL PROSPECTS REPORT – TOP 250 PROSPECTS https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-nhl-prospects-report-top-250-prospects/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-nhl-prospects-report-top-250-prospects/#respond Tue, 22 Sep 2020 11:50:55 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=167345 Read More... from MCKEENS 2020 NHL PROSPECTS REPORT – TOP 250 PROSPECTS

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MCKNS 2020 Prospect ReportI 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)
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MCKEEN’S 2020 NHL PROSPECT REPORT – PHILADELPHIA FLYERS – ORGANIZATIONAL RANK: 15 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-nhl-prospect-report-philadelphia-flyers-organizational-rank-16/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-nhl-prospect-report-philadelphia-flyers-organizational-rank-16/#respond Fri, 18 Sep 2020 14:30:50 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=167283 Read More... from MCKEEN’S 2020 NHL PROSPECT REPORT – PHILADELPHIA FLYERS – ORGANIZATIONAL RANK: 15

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philflyersPhiladelphia Flyers

Chuck Fletcher was hired as the new GM of the Philadelphia Flyers on December 3, 2018 after spending nearly nine years as GM of the Minnesota Wild. The Flyers had a low-key great season in the abbreviated 2019-20, and much of that is due to the roster built by Fletcher’s predecessor, Ron Hextall, but I think it is reasonable to look at the players – particularly younger players – who have entered the system in the Fletcher era to get an idea of the impact he and his staff have made. Not that signing cornerstones like Ivan Provorov and Travis Konecny to extensions wasn’t important, but as you all know, we are here to talk about prospects.

First off, considering that Hextall left him with one of the deepest organizations in the league, Fletcher did not have to go treasure hunting in the free agent market. To this point, the Fletcher-Flyers have not signed a single undrafted free agent out of the NCAA or CHL ranks. In fact, the only young, free talent the franchise has folded in was Linus Sandin, older brother to Toronto blueline wunderkind Rasmus Sandin. Sandin did not make this list, but if we had gone to 20 (we will after the draft), he would have made it. There isn’t much we can learn about how Fletcher will finish building the Flyers based on the Sandin signing. This was a player who had just finished his third year of SHL hockey. He has solid offensive tools and has solid bottom six potential, but there isn’t anything there that raises the eyebrows.

Other than Sandin, the only other “prospect” to enter the system outside of the draft has been Nathan Noel, who was acquired from Chicago in exchange for AHL veteran TJ Brennan. Brennan is an AHL All Star, but didn’t have a role in Philadelphia, whereas he might have in an injury-riddled Chicago blueline. Noel was a former fourth round pick who has not yet shown that he belongs in the AHL after three professional seasons. This was clearly the type of trade made to appease a veteran to give him a chance. Noel was merely a contract that had to be acquired in the exchange to keep Chicago roster compliant. Noel finished the year in the ECHL and, with his ELC now expired, is not expected to be re-signed by the Flyers.

So, we are left with the draft. With only one draft class so far, that isn’t a lot to go by. And Fletcher has not been opposed to trading away picks for current help, although to his credit, even with the Flyers surging, hasn’t surrendered anything weightier than a third rounder…so far.

What we can say about the Flyers 2019 draft class is that so far, there haven’t been too many players who have pushed their way to the front of the depth chart. First rounder Cam York is the top prospect in the system, which is to be expected of a top half of the first-round guy, and three others find placement in the top 15 here. The other three were OK at best. If there are any notable trends from the seven players selected by the Flyers, it is that Fletcher has followed Hextall (so far, at least) down the collegiate path, as four of their seven selections were taking that developmental route, including their top three picks.

It may also be worth pointing out the case of Wyatt Kalynuk, drafted by the Flyers in the seventh round in 2017. After three outstanding seasons at Wisconsin, he decided to turn pro. Rumor has it that the Flyers tried to sign him, but he demurred, and signed as a free agent with Chicago instead. There is likely more to the story, but there is surely some downside in turning over the faces of the franchise when trying to recruit talent. The men who scouted him and had relationships with him may have no longer been his conduits to the organization, making it easy for him to lose any sense of loyalty he once may have felt. I don’t know if that was the case, but it is certainly worth thinking about.

EAST MEADOW, NY - SEPTEMBER 12: Philadelphia Flyers forward Morgan Frost (68) plays the puck in a pre-season rookie matchup vs the New York Islanders on September 12, 2018, at the Northwell Health Ice Center. (Photo by John McCreary/Icon Sportswire)
EAST MEADOW, NY - SEPTEMBER 12: Philadelphia Flyers forward Morgan Frost (68) plays the puck in a pre-season rookie matchup vs the New York Islanders on September 12, 2018, at the Northwell Health Ice Center. (Photo by John McCreary/Icon Sportswire)
  1. Cam York, D (14th overall, 2019. Pre-season: 2)

York’s first season of NCAA hockey had its ups and downs. On the one hand, he was the top scoring freshman defender in the Big 10 and tied for the team lead from the blueline as well, while making the American WJC squad as an 18-year-old. Both very impressive markers.

On the other hand, as an offensive defenseman, his numbers were moderate at best, barely cresting the point every-other-game mark, and his role on Team USA was as the seventh defenseman, getting only a handful of minutes per game and the occasional power play shift. Compared to fellow USNTDP grad Henry Thrun, York provided less offense as a freshman, even though he had more of a role on the power play.

Back to the positive, York was able to show more competence away from the puck than may have been expected originally. Even if he needed to keep both hands on the stick with greater consistency, he defended well against opposing rushes, and showed an understanding of how to position himself when facing down an odd-man rush. He played a regular PK shift as well, illustrating the faith placed in him by the Michigan coaching staff.

Of course, the Flyers did not draft York looking for as a two-way defender, but as a dynamic bringing of offense. Those flashes were still apparent. He was an upper echelon skater at the collegiate level and still showed the ability to carry the puck up the ice with pace, wiggling through multiple layers of the defense to enter the offensive zone. He also doesn’t play a static role once the zone is gained, regularly jumping up from the blueline to give the defense something else to think about in deep. York started off solid, but there is more in him to give and we expect we will see more next season. - RW

  1. Morgan Frost, C/LW (27th overall, 2017. Pre-season: 3)

Frost is constantly developing and undoubtedly fits into every team he is part of but due to the competition level between the forwards in the Flyers organization, he has struggled to earn a more permanent role with the NHL club.

With Joel Farabee making quicker adjustments to the professional game, he was the first choice to lead the Flyers as the rookie forward this season with Frost right behind him. Frost, despite being a smaller, more compact forward, plays an aggressive forechecking game and has a good defensive game enabling him to deliver as a good two-way player. With his development continuing, it will be good to see him start the season with Lehigh Valley in the AHL especially after the long break in order for him to get his confidence up and his footing back with the faster game since his rookie season was cut short.

He has great potential in the Philadelphia system playing a power forward style, capable of getting to the net on his own and supplying strong passes to enable breakouts and scoring opportunities. Frost is a pretty consistent player that offers a good effort every time he is on the ice, however he sometimes struggles to find open ice and gets closed out too easily from getting to the net so he will have to battle harder to get to the net next season.

After finishing second in points with the Lehigh Valley Phantoms, Frost has time on his side and a good track record with Philadelphia so far leading to a bright future ahead. - SC

  1. VOORHEES, NJ - JUNE 24:  Yegor Zamula of the Philadelphia Flyers poses for his official headshot for the 2019-2020 season on June 24, 2019 at the Virtua Flyers Skate Zone in Voorhees, New Jersey.  (Photo by Len Redkoles/NHLI via Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Yegor Zamula
    VOORHEES, NJ - JUNE 24: Yegor Zamula of the Philadelphia Flyers  (Photo by Len Redkoles/NHLI via Getty Images) 
    Egor Zamula, D (Undrafted Free Agent, signed Sep. 20, 2018. Pre-season: UR)

Zamula has grown leaps and bounds since coming to North America in his draft year. While it didn’t help him get drafted, he was able to sign an ELC with the Flyers after attending development camp. Since returning from that camp the most noticeable improvements in his game have been his puck handling and confidence with the puck. He is showing a willingness to carry the puck in from the blueline where he is a threat both to pass or shoot. He has fakes and can shift his weight but also with his wingspan he is able to protect the puck and change the passing angle to get by defenders.

He has always had good speed and had the size and a strong foundation but once he started to put some of his pucks skills to effective use he showed a dynamic quality, such as in the 2020 WJC, where he played top pairing minutes and had five points in seven games. He is a solid defender, using his size to keep defenders wide, block lanes and jump on loose puck, and he can finish his checks with the opponent pinned or off balance. He has good range and can close his gap at the blueline or jump a play as they cross the blueline to force an offside.

Zamula can physically punish his opponents by stepping up in the neutral zone or making hard physical plays along the wall. He makes his defensive partner better by setting up plays with crisp tape to tape passes. His first pass consistently starts the rush, but he is comfortable carrying the puck through the neutral zone should that be the best read. He has a cannon of a shot from the point and uses it appropriately to the situation. -  VG

  1. Tanner Laczynski, C (169th overall, 2016. 2019 Rank: 10)

A lasting gift from the Hextall regime, Laczynski finished his four-year career at THE Ohio State having finished 5th, 1st, 2nd, and 1st in team scoring. All told, he finished 23rd all-time in OSU scoring, behind only currently Islanders’ farm hand Mason Jobst among 21st century players. He was already 19 when the Flyers used a sixth round pick on him, and he made such a splash in his first season with the Buckeyes that he was a member of the Gold Medal winning Team USA at the 2017 WJC.

he has not matched his incredible 47 point campaign as a sophomore, Laczynski’s college play was defined by his excellent playmaking abilities and his knack for always being in the right place at the right place for maximum impact, on both sides of the puck. In fact, as his college career progressed, his defensive game only grew, and he was a regular on the OSU PK as a senior.

In addition to his playmaking, Laczynski is also an ace stickhandler, which helps him overcome his lack of high-end skating ability. Not that he is a bad skater, in fact his skating has improved quite a bit since landing on campus, but it is still not a strength of his game and he isn’t a player you want to see racing to beat out an icing call. In addition to improving his stride in college, he also completed his physical maturity, packing on close to 30 pounds over the four seasons in Columbus, making himself harder to play against.

Between his brains and his puck skills, Laczynski could find himself playing in a middle six NHL role in the near future. - RW

  1. Wade Allison, RW (52nd overall, 2016. 2019 Rank: 12)

Like Laczynski, Allison was a four-year collegian. Whereas Laczynski is an intellectual player, succeeding through his mind more than his physical gifts, Allison is just the opposite. When he has been physically right at Western Michigan, he was devastating, as was saw most clearly in his 30 points in 22 games sophomore campaign. A torn ACL ended that season too early and he struggled to find his rhythm when he returned as a junior.

His senior season was again hampered by an injury, this time a balky shoulder, which kept him off the ice for much of December. By the end of the season, peak Allison was back, as he finished his season – and his collegiate career – with six points in his last five games, after a 13 points in a  6-game stretch in late January/early-February. Allison has lost maybe a third of a step since his pre-draft days, but he still skates well, with a great start up getting him quickly to his top speed. His motor is always at full throttle and when he gets the jump, he can still blow past defenders.

His style of game is mostly that of a power forward, but he has touch as well, with soft hands helping him create from in tight. His lower body strength also makes him hard to dislodge from the net front, especially on the power play. His missed time has certainly set him back, without which he could have turned pro at least one year ago but continued return to full strength could make him a valuable weapon up and down the lineup in the coming seasons. - RW

  1. Bobby Brink, RW (34th overall, 2019. 2019 Rank: 5)

Stylistically, there is a lot to compare Brink with Tanner Laczynski above. Both forwards rack up points like nobody’s business yet lack the foot speed we often look for in the so-called “modern game.” Brink, too, seems to have gained a step since moving from the USHL to college, but is still only around average or so. The two main differences between the players are that Brink is quite small, while Laczynski has an average frame, and that the OSU grad is a playmaker while the Denver freshman is a triggerman.

Brink makes up for his middling skating speed through solid agility and a preternatural knack for showing up in the right place at exactly the right time to catch the defense flat-footed. He won’t be the one to generate the zone entry, but he is the one you look for to finish off the play. More than half of his freshman offense was compiled on the power play and Brink still needs to prove he can produce at a high level at even strength to strengthen his claim on a top six spot in the future. - RW

  1. German Rubtsov, C (22nd overall, 2016. 2019 Rank: 7)

After a shaky second season in the American Hockey League, Rubtsov remains a skilled skater and a prospect with a lot to offer for Lehigh Valley. It will be a test of time to see if he has what it takes to offer the Philadelphia Flyers anything at the next level.

Rubtsov plays a well-positioned defensive game and continues to be a good passer and playmaker both at even strength and power play situations. He will have to continue to work on the physical aspects of his game some more and work on moving the puck a little quicker at times but overall, there is nothing of grave concern heading into next season skills-wise.

Being a first rounder there is extra pressure to perform now for Rubtsov who will need to find an extra gear heading into next season in order to maintain his Flyer system status and earn another call up as a bottom six for now. - SC

  1. Isaac Ratcliffe, LW (35th overall, 2017. 2019 Rank: 4)

For a big body, Ratcliffe skates well although he does not have the most finesse and isn’t the prettiest to watch but he gets the job done and protects the puck well. He was a very strong major junior captain with the Guelph Storm of the OHL but the move to the pros in the AHL has not been nearly as kind to him. He will need to clean up his play in the neutral zone and lessen the number of turnovers he gives up in order to even be considered for a call up to the Flyers.

Ratcliffe uses his size well, however this past season has been more a testament of frustration and overcompensation which has led to many unnecessary penalties and too many minutes spent in the box. He will need to be more disciplined next season in order to show more of the skill that got him drafted, and not just the size that got him noticed if he wants to crack a bottom six role in the Philadelphia lineup. - SC

  1. Ronnie Attard, D (72nd overall, 2019. 2019 Rank: 9)

A classic late-bloomer, Attard exploded offensively in his third year of draft eligibility, winning the USHL Player of the Year award on the back of a 30-goal season, one of the best marks ever for a defenseman in the league. While his first collegiate campaign was good enough to be named to the NCHC All-Rookie team, there were also signs that his incredible age 19 season with Tri-City was a fluke.

On the positive side, he has great size and his feet work quite well. Attard likes to jump off the blueline and pinch deep. He has a very hard shot (you saw those goal totals, right?) and can beat good NCAA goalies from the point – even with a backhand. He can pass the puck around nicely, as well. Where he struggled most last year was in his own end. The game seemed to come at him too fast at times, catching him flatfooted and/or out-of-position.

The tools are all strong and make him worth gambling on and tracking. But without improving his reads and instincts, bust potential is still there. - RW

  1. Mark Friedman, D (86th overall, 2014. 2019 Rank: 11)

At the end of his prospect eligibility age-wise, Friedman has finished with a better season under his belt despite having to cut his time with Lehigh short at the break. He continues to play a thought-provoking methodical game, allowing for strong passes and well put-together plays when it comes to breakouts and regroups.

However, Friedman still needs to find ways to be a more present offensive defenseman and contribute with shot opportunities from the point. He needs to carry the puck and rush it in order to not only start the plays behind his own net but also to learn to quarterback from the hash marks and higher when exiting the zone.

Friedman needs to give next season all he has in order to get what seems likely to be his last chance at a call up with the Philadelphia Flyers and a bottom four role and a chance at cracking the power play rotation. - SC

  1. Jay O’Brien, C (19th overall, 2018. 2019 Rank: 16)

O’Brien’s game is defined by his skating. He is very smooth with a great top speed and incredible edge work. He is not just quick skater, but he plays the game with an up-tempo style, engaging in 50/50 battles for the puck all over the ice.

He is a shoot first player although his style of play has expanded with a bit more of a playmaking side this year in Victoria. His puck handling is very good as he can weave in and out of traffic with the puck and looks very comfortable playing with the puck on his forehand and backhand. He has a full array of shot types (back hand, in tight, distance wrist shot, and one timer) that are effective, each with good accuracy with decent velocity.

His offense is not lacking although other than his skating there isn’t any skill that really stands out in a dynamic sense. O’Brien is going to a school in Boston University where he will be able to challenge for a top six spot right away but will need a few years of college to round out his overall game after his aborted year in Providence. - VG

  1. Jack St. Ivany, D (112th overall, 2018. 2019 Rank: 17)

At 6-3”, St. Ivany is a towering defenseman. Drafted in the fourth round by the Flyers, he has shown improvement over the past few years. He played near his hometown in Los Angeles before a two year stint in the USHL. As a freshman, the defender was a quick contributor for Yale while taking time out to help the US win a silver medal at the World Junior Championship.

There is not a lot of weight on his frame as he has room to fill out. He is an offensive defenseman who can move quite well and is balanced for his size. He was Yale’s highest-scoring defender this season. His laser-focused passes make him an asset on breakouts. He is capable of joining the rush, but at times this puts him out of defensive position, and he can then struggle on the backcheck. He played on both the penalty kill and power play as well. St. Ivany has an active defensive stick and causes turnovers.

As a sophomore there was still room to improve, and his speed will be a primary factor in what level St. Ivany ends up next. - JS

  1. Ivan Fedotov, G (188th overall, 2015. 2019 Rank: UR)

Under the leadership of Ron Hextall, the Philadelphia Flyers drafted six netminders in five years. We are all familiar with budding superstar Carter Hart, but the other five have mostly failed to live up to expectations (thus far). Of that latter group though, Fedotov is the one closest to looking like he might still have impact potential at the highest level.

He may be a late bloomer, but at 6-8”, at least a couple of inches taller than he was when he was drafted, he has certainly bloomed. Last year Fedotov finally earned a full time KHL role, after spending the bulk of the previous three seasons in the VHL (Russia’s second highest league), and he put up top ten numbers leaguewide.

He moves pretty well for his size, and competes for every puck, an area when his size works to his obvious advantage. His ability to get down on a shot is remarkable at his size and he didn’t show any particular weak spot as a KHL rookie. He recently signed a two-year extension with Traktor Chelyabinsk, so Flyers fans will have to continue waiting to see if Fedotov can one day back up Hart in Philadelphia. - RW

  1. Mason Millman, D (103rd overall, 2019. 2019 Rank: UR)

One player who really improved over the course of this past OHL season was Millman. It seemed like with each passing month, his game and confidence reached a new level. By season’s end, he had established himself as one of the better offensive defenders in the OHL.

He impacts the game from an offensive standpoint because of how well he skates and how well he distributes. A breakout machine, he has that explosiveness to really turn around possession. Heading into next season, the expectations on him will be even higher as he looks to become a more well-rounded defender, and one of the best overall blueliners in the Ontario Hockey League.

At this point, a projection is difficult because Millman’s game is still growing and improving. At worst, he looks like a potential mobile third pairing defender who can see time on the powerplay. And at best, he could be an all situations second pairing defender. This is a prospect trending upwards. - BO

  1. Noah Cates, LW (137th overall, 2017. 2019 Rank: 18)

After an NCAA championship and WJC Silver Medal as a freshman, and a near point-per-game performance as a sophomore, Cates will enter his junior season with Minnesota-Duluth as the team captain. A skinny player when drafted, he has filled out very nicely over two seasons on campus and is now very tough to play against physically, a trait that pairs well with his high hockey IQ.

Cates is reliable in all three zones, and has an impactful presence, even if his offensive skills are closer to average than to elite. With world class point man Scott Perunovich having turned pro with St. Louis, there is some question as to how much Cates will be able to produce going forward, especially on the power play, but his NHL future is more tied to his two-way play anyway.

If he can maintain some semblance of his offensive rates on a team that is expected to be weaker next year, Cates will be a lot closer to confirming his future as a fourth line energy winger to can chip in 8-12 goals per year as well. - RW

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AHL 2019-20 Preview: Eastern Division https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/ahl-2019-20-preview-eastern-division/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/ahl-2019-20-preview-eastern-division/#respond Wed, 13 Nov 2019 19:24:06 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=163403 Read More... from AHL 2019-20 Preview: Eastern Division

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LAVAL, QC - MARCH 06: Toronto Marlies right wing Jeremy Bracco (27) tries to maintain control of the puck while under pressure from Laval Rocket center Hayden Verbeek (17) during the Toronto Marlies versus the Laval Rocket game on March 06, 2019, at Place Bell in Laval, QC  (Photo by David Kirouac/Icon Sportswire)
LAVAL, QC - MARCH 06: Toronto Marlies right wing Jeremy Bracco (27) tries to maintain control of the puck while under pressure from Laval Rocket center Hayden Verbeek (17) during the Toronto Marlies versus the Laval Rocket game on March 06, 2019, at Place Bell in Laval, QC (Photo by David Kirouac/Icon Sportswire)

The 2019-20 AHL season marks the start of the professional careers for many of the top prospects representing each of the 31 NHL teams.

Although some of the AHL teams are located in smaller cities or far from their parent clubs (for example Utica and Vancouver) the start of the AHL season marks the start of a game of chess and musical chairs for NHL and AHL clubs and their internal player dealings as they work with their prospects and shift lines around to allow for injuries and call ups throughout the season.

Below is a brief segment on every team in the East as well as a glimpse at their three top prospects. Team run down is presented alphabetically by division and not as a prediction for the upcoming 2019-2020 AHL season.

Note: All quotes have been taken from the 2019-20 McKeen’s Hockey Yearbook.

Atlantic Division

The AHL’s Atlantic Division plays host to teams all over the eastern US coastline from Rhode Island to North Carolina. The Atlantic encompasses eight teams, some states play host to multiple teams such as Pennsylvania and Connecticut. Last season the Charlotte Checkers were able to bring the Calder Cup back to the Atlantic and this season the same will presumably be expected.

Bridgeport Sound Tigers (New York Islanders)

Even though Bridgeport was able to clinch a playoff spot last season, they were no match for the defending Calder Cup champion Charlotte Checkers. Bridgeport finished second in the Atlantic division and second also in penalty minutes. Despite having a mass of talent on Bridgeport, they did not play as a group and therefore could not achieve the desired playoff goal.

The Islanders organization are not as progressive with getting their prospects in the NHL lineup as say the Montreal Canadiens or New York Rangers. Losing Michael Dal Colle and Oliver Wahlstrom to the Islanders this season may have lessened Bridgeport’s offence somewhat but with Sebastian Aho back down and coming off a career year last season their defence is stronger than ever and may be just what Bridgeport needs to “bridge” their offensive gap.

Players to Watch

Sebastian Aho

“The Swedish born Aho is a smooth skating and smart playing defenseman. Although not known for his shooting ability, he is accurate and his shots from the point are of quality. He is a strong passer and a creative playmaker which was notable in his second AHL season.”

Otto Koivula

“Koivula is a massive forward and a very handy player to have in front of the net as his positioning is generally very good in all areas of the ice. He sees the play very well and has a good eye for making difficult passes in tight spots and from behind the net. Overall, he is a very clean and skilled player.”

Kieffer Bellows

“Bellows is a strong, dominant force on the ice with physical prowess and a highly competitive attitude. He plays to win and with an impressive amount of passion to compliment his natural scoring ability and skill set. He will need to have better control of his game next season and step up his play a bit to earn a spot at the next level.”

Charlotte Checkers (Carolina Hurricanes) 

Charlotte is the Southern-most team in the Atlantic division and boasts some of the hottest weather for an Atlantic division team. The defending 2019 Calder Cup Champion Checkers who posted a record of 51-17-7-1 last season and had an impressive playoff run to say the least, but have not had the best start to the 2019-20 season. Upon losing their two top forwards with Aleksi Saarela being traded (to Chicago, since moved to Florida) and Martin Necas graduating to the Hurricanes, Charlotte has had to rebuild their offensive core one draft pick at a time and with many of their high end prospects still playing major junior or overseas, the Checkers will have to devise a plan to do so.

Just over ten games into the season Charlotte is sitting second from the bottom and with not a lot of goals scored. Many of their shots last year came from guys like Saarela and Necas but now without them, they’ll be turning to the players who flew under the radar last season such as Morgan Geekie and Eetu Luostarinen to create offensive opportunities in hopes of repeating Charlotte’s Calder Cup success.

Players to Watch

Morgan Geekie

“He has plus size, moves well for a big man and has quietly effective offensive instincts which help him to outproduce his tools. He has the strength to protect the puck, and the quickness of hands to capitalize on a broken play and make something happen.”

Eetu Luostarinen

“His skating was fairly good in his draft year but he has since added explosiveness, quickness, and improved his endurance. Moreover, he has added power to his game, not only strength-wise but his shot is also more powerful than it used to be. Luostarinen is dependable without the puck and can play in a more defensive role if needed.”

Jake Bean

“He has a very high panic threshold, allowing him to remain calm with the puck in the face of opposing pressure. He can walk the blueline nicely, but his best work comes in his ability to exit his own zone with total control. Whether he skates the puck out or finds a passing option, he can be relied on to kickstart the transition to offense.”

Hartford Wolf Pack (New York Rangers)Now to move on to from one of the bottom placed teams with the Charlotte Checkers  to the top team in the Atlantic; the Hartford Wolfpack feeder team to the original six New York Rangers have gotten off to an electric start this season. So far Hartford has spun things around 180 degrees on the poor outcome the Wolf Pack had last season with only 29 wins and no real chance at qualifying for the playoffs. Their disappointing 2018-19 was a bi-product of their ever-changing rosters as the Rangers frequently called players up and as a result Hartford’s lines were constantly changing and their play was inconsistent and messy. They also boasted the highest goals against number and the lowest goals for on the season.

With the positive start, the Wolf Pack sit atop the Atlantic Division rolling into the start of November and over the hump of new teams and settling into new line combinations. With key acquisitions and veteran experience added during the offseason, Hartford will be a hard opponent to knock off the top. Although heading into his last season of prospect status, Vinni Lettieri can offer just the right amount of knowledge and offensive talent to make up for the recent temporary loss of top Rangers prospect Vitali Kravtsov, who departed the Wolf Pack for a year long loan deal back to his KHL club Traktor Chelyabinsk.

Players to Watch

Vinni Lettieri

“Often overlooked due to his stature, Lettieri’s speed and tenacity make up for any doubts his size may have caused. If given the chance, he could carry a role on the top penalty kill unit with his speed and overall forechecking knowledge.”

Igor Shestyorkin

“The 23-year old goalie has accumulated enough experience in the KHL and on the international stage and is more ready than your average rookie netminder. Shestyorkin is an agile goaltender, a bit on the small side for today’s trends, but won’t going to suffer from it.”

Joey Keane

“An elite skater, Keane is built for the modern NHL age. With his mobility, he is incredibly difficult to pin deep in his own zone, because he takes such good routes to dump ins and is able to transition to offense in a flash. As he moves to the pro level, he will need to keep the game simple, using his mobility to aid in his learning curve.”

Hershey Bears (Washington Capitals)

Despite Hershey Pennsylvania being the home of the Hershey Chocolate World, the Bears could certainly argue that the end of their 2018-19 season could have been a little sweeter. Not only did the Bears manage to end the season third from the bottom in goal production but they were also swept by Charlotte in the second round of playoffs.

With Hershey being the feeder team for the offensive powerhouse Washington Capitals it would seem the club has big shoes to fill. This season is looking somewhat different and the team is off to a better start offensively, already doubling the number of goals they had at the tail end of last season. Their back end is loaded with new talent, many of whom are responsible for quarterbacking their offensive play. With Jonas Siegenthaler now a permanent Capitals fixture the Bears look to have their rookie defensemen, namely; 2018 first rounder Alex Alexeyev and speedy 2nd rounder Martin Fehervary, taking over in the back. Look for the Bears to be playoff hopefuls once again.

Prospects to Watch

Axel Jonsson-Fjallby

“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.”

Martin Fehervary

“An aggressive import from Slovakia, Fehervary played full time in the SHL last season, in his last year qualifying for junior hockey. He played in his customary aggressive style, with quick skating, physicality, and good reach. He still has NHL potential, with the look of a third pairing blueliner. His skating, reach and aggressiveness will becoming a strong defensive defender.”

Alex Alexeyev

“Alexeyev is 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 been one of the top defenders in the WHL since his arrival from Russia.”

Lehigh Valley Phantoms (Philadelphia Flyers)

Last season the Phantoms missed playoffs by two points, finishing fifth in the Atlantic Division. For an AHL team that seems to fly under the radar and whose parent team of Philadelphia seems to be known more for their mascot antics than their play, so far their success in the opening part of the season has not gone unnoticed. With rookie Morgan Frost leading the way and riding a seven game point streak as of this writing and carrying the team with nine points through the opening ten games, Lehigh’s young blood has been off to a strong start.

However, one point streak is not enough to create a winning team and with the departures of defenceman Phillippe Meyers and goaltender Carter Hart to the Flyers, their offence will surely have to be a strong point. This year Lehigh Valley welcomes many new faces to their roster which could be a turning point in the Flyers system due to their struggles with team cohesiveness in the past. The Phantoms look to have a promising amount of offensive rookie talent, many of whom bring energy to a slow to start returning AHL group.

Players to Watch

Morgan Frost

“Frost is ready for the next challenge in his young career. The talented playmaking center has improved his skating and strength on the puck over his OHL career and those should allow for an easy transition to pro hockey. He generates well off the rush, using a variety of dif- ferent attacks which speaks volumes to his creativity with the puck.”

Isaac Ratcliffe

“Ratcliffe is a hulking power winger with massive goal scoring potential at the next level. He has an extremely powerful shot that sees him use his size well to shield defenders before releasing the puck quickly. His skating continues to improve, especially his ability to cut and maintain possession through to the net.”

German Rubtsov

“He is a fast skating, quick shooting, high tempo player who plays with a lot of intensity and drive. He is a promising forward with much offensive potential and enough speed that he can get back on the backcheck as well. Rubtsov has the hands, the shot and the speed to be a standout forward with Philadelphia in the future if he can stay healthy.”

Providence Bruins (Boston Bruins)

One of the most controversial and most talked about clubs in the NHL is the Boston Bruins who seem to be Stanley Cup contenders every year, but can the same be said for the Bruins’ American Hockey league team? Last season the Providence Bruins managed to clinch the last playoff spot in the Atlantic division but were eliminated in the first round by the Bridgeport Sound Tigers. With the third lowest goals against average in the league and many other stats ranking somewhere in the middle of the pack, for Providence they were the quintessential “average” team. They played a safe, controlled and structured breakout, regroup and forecheck game but there seemed to be a missing spark in their 2018-19 season.

The team has had a firecracker of a start and from the very first game it was evident that Providence would be a much faster and more skilled team than they were last year. With speedy rookies like Jack Studnicka and Oskar Steen added to the lineup, Providence’s offensive zone time has been rising. Should Providence stay healthy, they will be playoff contenders for sure.

Players to Watch

Urho Vaakanainen

“Vaakanainen is a smooth skating, dynamic defenseman who had
a good transition from SaiPa in the Liiga to the Providence Bruins. He is not known for any particular offensive abilities but his neutral zone play and puck movement are still amongst the top on this list. He makes precise passes and knows when to skate the puck and when to dump it.”

Trent Frederic

“He is a fine skater with enough puck skill and offensive instinct to earn middle six minutes at maturity. His grinder, to the net style also bodes well for that role. Boston will be looking for more consistent production before giving an NHL look.”

Jack Studnicka

“It could probably be argued that Studnicka is one of the more well-rounded forward prospects in hockey. There is no role that he cannot play on the ice for his team. Given how pro ready his game is, he could be much closer to making an impact in Boston than some think.”

Springfield Thunderbirds (Florida Panthers)

Although the Florida Panthers continue to struggle with their attendance, their feeder team in Springfield, MA seems to do fine and will continue to do so this season with a start as hot as the one they’re having now. The Thunderbirds have soared to second place in the Atlantic division after just over ten games played and currently lead in goals for.

With the recent additions of rookies Owen Tippett and Aleksi Heponiemi to the regular roster it is no wonder they are on the fast track to success. Tippett is a scoring machine and can shoot from anywhere on the ice while Heponiemi had unbeatable major junior years in the WHL as a playmaker and only continues to shine in the AHL. With young players like these only continuing to gain momentum, look for Springfield to maintain their top four Atlantic division status throughout the season.

Players to Watch

Owen Tippett

“While his ability to put the puck in the net will be his ticket to an NHL career, he has improved his play away from the puck and his patience with it to become a player who can make an impact even when he is not scoring. With good size and skating ability, Tippett is at his best when he is attacking North/South, hunting for opportunities to unleash his terrific wrist shot.”

Aleksi Heponiemi

“A nifty stickhandler with excellent vision and offensive awareness, he is a natural playmaker who can finish, too. His shot has improved quite a bit, he has the ability to pick his spots and be a dual threat in the final third. While not fast, Heponiemi is highly agile on his skates and can make shifty moves to evade defenders.”

Jonathan Ang

“A brilliant skater, Ang’s hands are almost as quick as his legs. The question he has always been asked about is his offensive ceiling. For as much as his speed allows hi to be one step ahead of the play and very difficult to contain, his numbers have never really stood out. He flashes the tools that got him drafted, but not consistently and he struggles to finish what he starts.”

Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (Pittsburgh Penguins)

It is no secret that the Pittsburgh Penguins are in trouble when it comes to their prospect system, however after just one draft that can be turned around and with a trade a team can be bolstered dramatically. Not to say that the Penguins prospect system needs a revamp but if they continue to draft the way they have, their feeder team in Wilkes-Barre will remain average, at best. For the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins momentum is hard to find, not only is the arena an older venue but there is just is not enough talent on the back end to drive offensive plays. To boot, the average age of Wilkes-Barre is 25 which means very few prospects are seeing ice time at the AHL level and the team lacks in youthful energy.

For the Pittsburgh Penguins the next few years will be a tipping point for their prospects and current players. That said, there is hope with defenceman Pierre-Olivier Joseph paving the way for a hardworking, play making defencemen, W-B/S may be able to generate enough offence to up their scoring chances. As the season progresses, look for forward Kasper Bjorkqvist to earn top mention and top minutes with the Baby Penguins on the front end.

Players to Watch

Pierre-Olivier Joseph

“Joseph’s best two assets are his work eth- ic and his hockey sense. He rarely makes a bad decision and, most importantly, knows his limitations. He is slight for the pro game at 168 pounds, but he is as adept at defending positionally as he is physically, and has figured out how to read many schemes with the puck to best attack from the back end.”

Jordy Bellerive

“Bellerive is a player who can play the game in any style. He is happy to drive the net and work hard to create his offense but he has a shot that can beat goalies cleanly from distance. He works his tail off in both zones and often generates additional chances from chasing down the play. He makes good passes both in transition and below the dots.”

Kasper Bjorkqvist

“He uses his solid size to play near the opposing crease and has a plan for the puck when he gets it, resulting in quick touches and quickly released shots. At his best, he has a nice shot an can play or pass the puck well, but he can go for prolonged stretches at less than his best, effectively becoming a non-factor in the play.”

North Division

The North Division is home to three out of the four Canadian teams in the AHL and some of the coldest climates, ranging from Binghamton, NY up to Laval, QC. Two seasons ago the Calder Cup was hoisted by the Toronto Marlies in dramatic fashion against the Texas Stars, and we should look to the North to be hungry for the Cup once again.

Belleville Senators (Ottawa Senators)

As one of the newest teams in the AHL with one of the smaller arenas, the Belleville Senators had a reasonable season last year but failed to qualify for the last playoff spot in the North Division. Belleville is still capable of packing an offensive punch and holding their own. Making up for the absence of Rudolfs Balcers who has earned a spot on Ottawa, will be rookie Josh Norris and Drake Batherson, the latter of whom earned the AHL All-Star MVP last season.

Although Belleville looks to be offensively equipped it will be interesting to see how they fare defensively this season after losing Erik Brannstrom and Christian Wolanin to Ottawa. Both were responsible for much of Belleville’s offensive play last season, particularly after Brannstrom joined the club in the Mark Stone trade from Vegas.

Prospects to Watch

Drake Batherson

“He is an elusive player that slips under the radar and is quiet on the ice until the puck is found in the net as a result of his strong playmaking ability. He is a highly adaptable and entertaining player to watch in both even strength and special team situations, his adjustment to the AHL level has been tremendous.”

Josh Norris

“A high IQ center with a standout two-way game, the former USNTDP standout is a strong play driver, with a fantastic shot and strong playmaking abilities. He was the hockey wherewith- al to play a bottom six role right away, but he projects as a clear top six center at his best.

Alex Formenton

“The foundation of Formenton’s game is his elite skating ability. He has an effortless, yet powerful stride that allows him to be such an effective high-energy winger. Additionally, Formen- ton is a physical player who is aggressive on the forecheck, making him a terrific penalty killer. As an offensive player, his best asset is a quick release.”

Binghamton Devils (New Jersey Devils)

Although the Binghamton Devils finished last in the North Division last season, their big sister club New Jersey made some key trades as well as draft acquisitions during the off season in hopes of deepening their system. Despite their place in the standings, that did not stop the Devils from having a successful development year for many of their prospects who received the chance to play up with New Jersey.

With a plethora of prospects to choose from Binghamton will be expected to move further up the ranks in the 2019-20 season standings. With additions like 2019 first overall pick Jack Hughes and Swedish prospect Jesper Boqvist to New Jersey’s forward lineup, look to Michael McLeod, Joey Anderson, Nathan Bastian, Mikhail Maltsev and Marian Studenic to pad up Binghamton’s offence. There is an abundance of top level prospects in New Jersey’s system and after the 2019 draft, look to the Devils to potentially have one of the best systems on paper.

Prospects to Watch

Michael McLeod

“Although not the smoothest of skaters to watch, he is strong and good both with and without the puck. McLeod’s defensive game has grown a lot this season making him a better two way player. He is a talented and smart playmaker and with a good start in the AHL and given more confidence he will definitely be in the right shape again to be shipped back up to the Devils.”

Marian Studenic

“Studenic had a solid start to his professional career this year with Binghamton and his natural skill and skating ability helped him to stand out amongst fellow rookie forwards. He is a deadly player when he gets to the net and is quick to capitalize on turnovers.”

Mikhail Maltsev

“He is a two-way forward with excellent size and good physical abilities, smooth hands and a solid positional game. Maltsev is a great choice for the third or fourth line considering his mass, defensive skills, and great reading of the ice in any situation at both ends of the rink.”

Cleveland Monsters (Columbus Bluejackets)

With an average height of 6-2” the name “Monsters” fits the tallest team in the AHL perfectly. Ironically enough Cleveland’s parent club, the Columbus Bluejackets, is home to one of the shortest and most skilled forwards in the NHL in 5-8” Cam Atkinson. Last season, Cleveland got off to a good start but faded quickly after the January All-Star break, barely making the playoffs. This coming year Cleveland once again seems to be hugging the fourth place spot in the North Division but perhaps they are still acclimatizing and pacing themselves, especially after seeing Sonny Milano and Kole Sherwood move up to the parent club.

With offence hanging in the brink for Cleveland, look to their firecracker of a forward Trey Fix-Wolansky to fire things up offensively and to Kevin Stenlund to add a physical punch to the Monsters’ offence. With 2018 first round pick Liam Foudy not quite ready to make the jump to the AHL yet, the Monsters will also have to rely on good goaltending from Finnish product Veini Vehvilainen to keep them in the game. Expect a decent back half of the season playoff run from the Monsters once they get settled.

Players to Watch

Veini Vehvilainen  

“He is a very quick goalie. His lateral quickness and post-to-post movement are both high end and he can recover loose pucks quickly. He is also highly athletic and flexible. He rarely allows a soft goal and if he does, he is able to bounce back quickly.”

Trey Fix-Wolansky

“Fix-Wolansky is a player that has really grown over the past couple of seasons. That has improved substantially in this regard as has his foot speed. His playmaking and shooting skills have always been there but now he has the pace and the drive to impact every play. He has a real shot at being a success story as his offensive tools are very good.”

Kevin Stenlund

“Stenlund plays a gritty and hard on the puck type of game, he wins battles and uses his size to his advantage. Stenlund may have used his size as an advantage but his size is also what made him stand out despite being one of the slower players on the ice. He is strong on the puck but it sometimes appears to be an effort for Stenlund to maneuver easily in tight spots.”

Laval Rocket (Montreal Canadiens)

There is only one team in the league who conducts most of their business in a language other than English and that would be the Montreal Canadiens who have been a staple original six team as well as a symbol of French Canadian culture for decades. Now fast forward to the Laval Rocket who play in one of the nicest arenas in the AHL, La Place Bell, which housed one of the poorest performing teams in the North Division last season. Laval had a less than desirable year finishing second last in the standings having managed to score only 195 times through the whole season while every other team in their division surpassing the 200 goal mark.

Montreal has had some major prospect developments and a few small turnarounds from where they were sitting last season with Nick Suzuki, Victor Mete and Ryan Poehling all pulling their weight in the big leagues. That being said, it’s an exciting time for the Canadiens who have prospect momentum heading into the next year year with NCAA product Jake Evans in his sophomore season with Laval and Noah Juulsen, an unexpected cut from Montreal, returning to the lineup. Laval will be a dark horse this season and only time will tell where they will finish in the standings.

Players to Watch

Jake Evans

“Evans is an elite level passer who can make crisp on-the-tape passes in the most difficult of situations. He is a really solid player and has good jump to his stride and energy to his game. Evans has the full package, and he just needs to muster up more grit and stay consistent with his play and he will be set to dawn a Canadiens jersey soon.”

Noah Juulsen

“For a smooth skating defenseman who can shoot from just about anywhere on the ice, Juulsen has not had the same amount of success in the pro ranks as he had during his major junior days with Everett in the WHL. He is not the most mobile defender and his actions seem even more stiff and mechanical when he begins to think too much.”

Otto Leskinen

“A mobile defenseman, he skates well both backwards and laterally. He is light on his skates and there is little wasted motion in his stride. Leskinen has the abilities to be an impactful player offensively. He can make a crisp first pass or carry the puck up into the zone. He has a hard slap shot and a wrister with a very quick release.”

Rochester Americans (Buffalo Sabres)

For the past few seasons the Buffalo Sabres have been the team that starts out strong and finishes in last place but the opposite can be said about their feeder team, the Rochester Americans. Last season, Rochester duked it out with the Syracuse Crunch all season long for top spot in the North Division with only a three point margin separating the two teams. Rochester was led by veteran defenceman Zach Redmond and rookie forward Victor Olofsson, the latter of whom has since moved up to clinch a well-deserved spot with the Sabres.

Although Olofsson is no longer on the farm, his Swedish line mate Rasmus Asplund continues to gain momentum and acclimatize to North American play. Asplund is off to a much better start this season and his linemate C.J. Smith also looks to add to Rochester’s offensive depth. Netminder Ukka-Pekka Luukkonen remains a dark horse, soon set to return from rehab for surgery he had during the offseason. With Luukkonen, who is arguably one of the top goaltending prospects - and a future starting netminder in the NHL- joining Rochester it will be safe to say that should Rochester make playoffs their back end composure will be more than okay.

Players to Watch

Rasmus Asplund

“He is a smaller forward but a great forechecker working well to fill a spot as a grinder. Always keeping his feet moving, many of his 41 points this year came from rebounds and net scrambles. At times he is a little bit sloppy with his positioning which may be the reason why he has yet to earn a call up to the Sabres.”

Ukka-Pekka Luukkonen

“He is the complete package as a goaltender with his size and athleticism. Luukkonen moves so well in his crease, but with his size is able to square up to shooters still and take away all angles. He also reads and reacts to the play around him as he is rarely caught out of position. His composure in the crease this year was one of his more impressive features.”

C.J. Smith

“Smith is a great example of this as he is an entertaining player to watch and brings energy and drive to each game. His natural skill and scoring ability made him a stand out forward for the Americans last year, and are what will hopefully push him to work hard to gain a top six spot.

Syracuse Crunch (Tampa Bay Lightning)

Recapping the post season for the Tampa Bay Lightning franchise in the 2018-2019 season is simply depressing, as not only did Tampa fail to impress in their playoffs despite running away with the regular season, but Syracuse followed the exact same pattern. The Crunch led the North Division all season long but were swept in the first round of playoffs by the fourth place Cleveland Monsters. Truly disappointing but nonetheless a wakeup call to a franchise that may have gotten a little overconfident.

After the humbling events of last season, Syracuse has started off in a very modest middle of the pack spot with the departure of Alexander Volkov and Erik Cernak from the Crunch to the Lightning. It has been up to many of the guys heading into their sophomore seasons like Boris Katchouk, Taylor Raddysh and Cal Foote to make up for the absences on the blueline as well as on the offensive attack. Syracuse will have to work much harder with their young squad if they want to achieve the same results as they achieved in 2018-19.

Players to Watch

Cal Foote

“Foote’s ranking as Tampa Bay’s number one prospect is well deserved as he is the perfect mix of a skilled offensive blueliner with a highly physical and dependable defensive defenseman. He has exceptional awareness and his hockey IQ is what makes him a great player. He has size and plays a calm, aware positional game that makes him stand out as being the most mature and dynamic prospect on this list.”

Taylor Raddysh

“Raddysh is a natural goal scorer with a knack for getting to the net in even the most difficult of situations. He is a good skater and a strong shooter capable of getting shots off in tight situations. He is especially good with one timers and adapting to bad passes. Raddysh will have to work on being more creative and being stronger on the puck in open ice situations, his level of want for the puck will have to improve.”

Mitchell Stephens

“He is a very competitive player who likes to win and who brings such passion to the game. He wins draws, gets to the net, blocks shots and plays a strong physical game. The only thing missing is an extra gear, as he needs that extra speed to be able to make a solid impact at the next level.”

Toronto Marlies (Toronto Maple Leafs)

The Toronto Maple Leafs are one of the most iconic teams in the league, boasting some of the most loyal fans around. That being said, they are also one of the younger player systems in the NHL with a core group of high end young players, and theirs is not a system like Boston or Washington which are reliant on veteran talent. That also means that for the Toronto Marlies, the Leafs’ AHL affiliate, it may be harder to make the opening night lineup than ever with very few retiring and new talent being drafted every year- the only thing mixing things up being the cap hit. However, despite monetary constrictions and trades all around, the Marlies have managed to not only win a Calder Cup in 2018 but also qualify for playoffs again the following year.

This season seems a little different and so far with so many changes, the core group consisting of Jeremy Bracco, Rasmus Sandin, Timothy Liljegren, Pierre Engvall and Adam Brooks have all adjusted well and have continued to put up a North Division leading 7-0-3 record through their first ten games of the season. Look to see the Marlies either on top of the divisional race or just below in second by the time the 2019-20 season draws to a close.

Players to Watch

Jeremy Bracco

“Bracco is a creative playmaker to say the least and every play holds different possibilities thanks to his level of hockey sense. He is a powerful and agile skater that can easily maneuver around opponents with his edgework, often opting to use his inside edges for turns rather than traditional crossovers.”

Rasmus Sandin

“Sandin is a versatile defenseman capable of leading rushes and quar- terbacking them as well. He is a skilled player with a good shot and great hockey sense. He sees the plays before they happen and stays one step ahead and remains focused while doing so.”

Yegor Korshkov

“He has a lot of good traits in his game that could translate well to the NHL, like the way he can cover the puck in the corners and create scoring chances from there. He has strong balance which will get stronger with more overall strength.”

Utica Comets (Vancouver Canucks)

Having played host to the 2019 World Juniors in Vancouver as well as the 2019 NHL Draft, Vancouver has been quite the hockey destination within the past months. However, for many fans who do not reside on the west coast, it may be easier to catch a Utica Comets game instead. Utica has had quite the roster turn around from last season offering a better start to the season as well.

With the addition of former Team Canada goaltender and top prospect Michael DiPietro, Utica now can rest assured that the net is covered as DiPietro moves like no other goaltender and possesses ultimate composure and focus while in the net. Another key addition is 2016 fifth overall pick Olli Juolevi who has come back from injury and is padding up the defensive end for the Comets. Utica is battling with Toronto back and forth for first spot in the North, which should be the race all season long should Utica not move any players. Note that former Canucks regular Nikolay Goldobin is still down with Utica and only adds to their offensive talent.

Players to Watch

Michael DiPietro

“He relies on his reads and his athleticism to make saves and he can be a real game changer because of it. At the pro level, there are often growing pains for these types of goaltenders because the game moves faster, the top part of the net becomes an easier target, and confidence can wane. But DiPietro remains a very solid pro prospect and should eventually develop into an asset.”

Olli Juolevi

He is a smart defenseman capable of reading the play and being one step ahead. He is a spot on passer and he can shoot from anywhere on the ice with speed and precision. His goal should be to keep his feet moving equally in all zones of the ice and to get back to playing a physical game.

Lukas Jasek

“An underdog type of player, Jasek has the ability to sneak past opponents and get into open ice without notice, giving him a leg up on his counterparts. He is a lightweight and a rather small looking player but his deceptiveness is scary when it comes to how aggressive he is on the puck. He plays with energy and passion and never gives up on a play.”

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Philadelphia Flyers 2019-20 Prospect Review: Top 20 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/philadelphia-flyers-2019-20-prospect-review-top-20/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/philadelphia-flyers-2019-20-prospect-review-top-20/#respond Sat, 14 Sep 2019 12:59:25 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=162620 Read More... from Philadelphia Flyers 2019-20 Prospect Review: Top 20

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When Chuck Fletcher took over from Ron Hextall as General Manager of the Flyers last December, he was taking over a franchise that had amassed an impressive array of talent at all positions. Former GM Ron Hextall had a keen scouting eye. Further, he had been in the habit of stockpiling draft picks. In his five drafts at the helm of the Flyers, the team only once had fewer than eight picks, and that was in his first draft.

The Flyers had picked players from almost every part of the hockey playing world, too (oddly, Hextall never selected a player from the Finnish ranks). Even when the team strayed from a consensus-type pick, more often than not, the player exceeded public expectations and turned himself into a valuable asset for Philadelphia. On the other hand, as with every team, there were some drafting misses. Beyond the sixth and seventh rounders who rarely pan out for anyone, you could look at someone like Slovakian netminder Matej Tomek, drafted late in the third round in 2015 out of the NAHL. Tomek was actually the second goalie taken by the Flyers in that round. Tomek dealt with injuries and got in only two games in two seasons at North Dakota and then five games as a junior at Nebraska-Omaha after transferring. While Philadelphia still has his rights, Tomek has returned home for this season to play with HK Dukla Trencin.

2016 second rounder Pascal Laberge has also been injury riddled since he was drafted, and only managed to play in 15 games with Lehigh Valley last year, his first “full” season as a pro. But when Tomek is leavened with Carter Hart, and Laberge with Oskar Lindblom, not to mention the deep system in place now, Flyers’ fans can sleep soundly, knowing their previous GM had the big picture in mind.

There is one glaring exception though, a player we saw as a potential mid-second rounder who Hextall called out in the middle third of the first round. A player who showed skill in a vacuum but had never really performed against top level competition for his age group. That exception goes by the name of Jay O’Brien.

These days, even youngsters from the State of Hockey try to spend the first month or two of their draft years in the USHL before going back home to play for their high school. They get the best of both worlds, challenging themselves against high end college-bound competition for a stretch, and then going home to spend a few more months with their friends, like “normal” teenagers.

O’Brien paid lip service to that idea He played in five games for the Youngstown Phantoms in the two years leading up to his draft, as well as seven games with the UNSTDP program. IN those 12 games, O’Brien garnered three points. He destroyed the New England prep school competition with Thayer Academy. Despite is lack of high-level success, Hextall bet on the tools.

So far, no good. O’Brien struggled mightily as a freshman with Providence, failing to earn top six minutes. His skill set earned him a ticket to the WJC, but he failed to record a single point in seven games. He dealt with injuries in the second half of his season and left school in a huff. O'Brien dealt with failure by running from it. We are gambling on his tools by having him in our top 20, but to stay there for another year, he will have to earn it.

-Ryan Wagman

EAST MEADOW, NY - SEPTEMBER 12: Philadelphia Flyers forward Morgan Frost (68) plays the puck in a pre-season rookie matchup vs the New York Islanders on September 12, 2018, at the Northwell Health Ice Center. (Photo by John McCreary/Icon Sportswire)
Philadelphia Flyers forward Morgan Frost (68) (Photo by John McCreary/Icon Sportswire)

1 Joel Farabee, LW (14th overall, 2018. Last Year: 1) I might as well start with the negative. I would not have advised Farabee to turn pro after only one season at Boston University, as he is still slight and would have a harder time gaining muscle mass under the pro schedule than he would as a weekend warrior on campus. The upside is he could probably play in the top six for the Flyers right away and has the two-way game to mature into a rare Selke candidate from the wing within a few short years. Despite his lack of mass, he is strong. His offensive tools are high end. He was close to a point per game player as a freshman on a mediocre team and performed well as an 18-year-old in the WJC. A cerebral player, Farabee is a possession monster who can control the pace of the game better than many centers. He is an impact player even when he doesn’t score, but there is no reason why he shouldn’t score at a top six level in the NHL. - RW

2 Cam York, D (14th overall, 2019. Last Year: IE) One of the top puck handling defensemen of the 2019 draft class, York was earmarked relatively early as a hot commodity when he jumped to play with the USNTDP U18 team in his U17 year and was a key player immediately. He is a very good skater, although his agility and edgework surpass his pure speed as differentiators. He sees the ice like a pro, allowing him to always make the right decisions about when to hold the line, or when to circle back. He is preternaturally calm and will take a hit to make a play. Despite lacking much size, he has the strength to hold the blueline with brute force, if needed. His shot is good enough to play the point on the power play, although he is stronger as a creator of chances for others. York profiles as a first pairing defender in the NHL. - RW

3 Morgan Frost, C/LW (27th overall, 2017. Last Year: 3) With another 100-point season under his belt, one that saw him lead the OHL in assists, Frost is ready for the next challenge in his young career. The talented playmaking center has improved his skating and strength on the puck over his OHL career and those should allow for an easy transition to pro hockey. He generates well off the rush, using a variety of different attacks which speaks volumes to his creativity with the puck. His improved strength has also allowed him to be more effective along the wall, where he can prolong possession and keep plays alive to ensure more passing lanes open up for him. As one of the top prospects in the OHL last year, Frost is a potential first or second line center for Philadelphia and should be ready to take a regular shift by 2020-21. - BO

4 Isaac Ratcliffe, LW (35th overall, 2017. Last Year: 6) Ratcliffe is a hulking power winger with massive goal scoring potential at the next level. He has an extremely powerful shot that sees him use his size well to shield defenders before releasing the puck quickly. His skating continues to improve, especially his ability to cut and maintain possession through to the net. His defensive game and commitment level in all three zones have really improved too, as he is able to use that long reach to break up passes and disrupt flow. As he turns pro this year, the Flyers will be looking for Ratcliffe to use his size even more efficiently to dominate down low, in addition to improving his decision making with the puck; making quicker decisions with his passes and adjusting to the speed of the pro game. He could easily develop into a 30-goal scorer in the NHL within a few seasons. - BO

5 Bobby Brink, RW (34th overall, 2019. Last Year: IE) He is very small and his skating can charitably be described as OK, but all Bobby Orr Brink does is score. Despite missing some time to a broken bone in his ankle sustained at the WJAC, he finished fourth in league scoring, with a point per game average higher than all but top five picks Jack Hughes and Alex Turcotte. He has a special ability to find seams and soft spots in coverage and fill those gaps as he creates scoring chances almost at will. He has a very powerful wrist shot and has great possession ability. He can be prone to conserving his energy in his own zone, but for the most part, is conscientious off the puck as well. Despite his lack of size, he does not shy away from playing the greasy areas if his internal GPS points there for chances, but he will need to add some zip in his legs to reach his ceiling as a top line scoring winger. - RW

6 Philippe Myers, D (Undrafted Free Agent, signed Sep. 21, 2015. Last Year: 9) Myers is a beast of a defenseman, with a big body, powerful skating, a strong shot, and great hockey sense. He is an all-around defensive package, especially after proving himself this past year Lehigh Valley. He had 33 points in 53 games, proving that he is capable of not just playing a solid defensive game, but also of contributing offensively. His passing is good, but his shot is his primary offensive weapon, and he can shoot from just about anywhere, but his slapshots from long range are his main draws as they are especially powerful. He is surprisingly fast for a player of his size, with a long stride, and his transitional skating is very good, leaving us with no doubts about his ability to keep up with the NHL pace. Next time Myers hits the ice with the Flyers he will be more than ready to prove himself as a potential top two pairing defenseman. - SC

7 German Rubtsov, C (22nd overall, 2016. Last Year: 5) Rubtsov unfortunately suffered a severe injury in his first professional season with Lehigh Valley but is set to start back with them this season. He is a fast skating, quick shooting, high tempo player who plays with a lot of intensity and drive. He is a promising forward with much offensive potential and enough speed that he can get back on the backcheck as well. He will need to play out at least another half season in the AHL before he will be considered as a call up to the Flyers. Rubtsov has the hands, the shot and the speed to be a standout forward with Philadelphia in the future and, if he can stay healthy, his ceiling can only go up to a top six role based on his skillset alone. His ability to be a star playmaker rests in his progression this season. - SC

8 Samuel Ersson, G (143rd overall, 2018. Last Year: Not ranked) Goalie Ersson had an amazing season in Sweden last year. He excelled advancing from a strong junior season to be the best goalie among men in Allsvenskan. He played for a low ranked team and was the unofficial MVP for that team, finishing third among league voters as well. He also had a strong showing at the WJC in the middle. His .933 save percentage in 36 regular season games was followed by .938 in 5 playoff games. Ersson is a calm goalie with strong hockey sense and good puck control. He is not big for a goalie but has okay size (6-2”). The way he reads the game makes him look calm and secure. Next season, he will play in the SHL and will have a good chance to take his game to next level there. - JH

9 Ronnie Attard, D (72nd overall, 2019. Last Year: IE) One of the top late bloomers of the 2019 draft class, Attard jumped from five points in his first year of draft eligibility, to 15 in his second, and finally hit 64 points in his third and final year of eligibility last season. More than just a bigger player beating up on smaller and younger talents, he has a full set of tools to help him succeed at the next level and beyond. He has great size at a beefy 6-3” and is a fine skater, not just for his size, but for any size. He owns a big slapshot and is a fine, if unexceptional distributor from the point. As exciting as his offensive game might be, Attard may be even better in his own end. His reads are refined, and he has a knack for filling in passing and shooting lanes, with his big body and extra long reach. He should have a chance to play in an offensive role at Western Michigan and has top four NHL upside. - RW

10 Tanner Laczynski, C (169th overall, 2016. Last Year: 11) One of several examples on this list of Philadelphia mining the USHL for unheralded talent, Laczynski has been a key driver of Ohio State’s success of late, making the NCAA tournament three years running, after not making the dance since 2009. Only Islanders’ prospect Mason Jobst has outscored Laczynski since the latter made it to campus. He has remarkably quick hands and is a thrilling playmaker, even when facing heavy defensive pressure. His skating has also come on nicely as a collegian, to the point where he can keep up as a pro, once he moves on to the next level. He needs to show that he can handle tougher defensive assignments to ensure that he is not a top six or bust player after he completes his eligibility next spring. - RW

11 Mark Friedman, D (86th overall, 2014. Last Year: 19) For an undersized defenseman, Friedman moves well and protects the puck from opponents. He is a good skater and a strong passer capable of making good stretch passes and backdoor passes. His hockey sense is good and the way he gets into position makes him an offensive asset. He will have to work on being more consistently engaged in defensive play and harder on the puck in his own end as it is important that his defensive play and the nature of his position come first. Friedman has the potential to be a bottom four defenseman in the NHL, but he will have to keep up with the pace and have a better showing next time round with the Flyers. His goal for this coming season with Lehigh Valley will be to simply be stronger in his own end and to work on his awareness and gap control when he doesn’t have the puck. - SC

12 Wade Allison, RW (52nd overall, 2016. Last Year: 4) Through the mid-way point of his sophomore campaign at Western Michigan, Allison seemed on the straight and narrow path to the NHL. Then he tore his ACL. He returned to play a partial season as a junior, but his conditioning never got back to speed, and his effectiveness dropped precipitously. He is apparently back to full health now and if he gets back to where he was in the first half of 2017-18 – even to 90% of that – the Flyers will have a very intriguing power forward on their hands. At his best, he played with plus speed and the hands to keep up with his legs. He was a solid player even at his worst, so there is some leeway in his recovery before we write him off as a prospect, but clearly the healthier Allison is the more enticing player. Of course, as he is entering his senior season, he will also have the opportunity to test the free agent market after graduation, if he chooses.  -RW

13 Wyatt Kalynuk, D (196th overall, 2017. Last Year: Not ranked) Drafted in his third year of eligibility, Kalynuk has been a late round revelation in the two years since the Flyers called out his name. Even as Wisconsin’s team game has ebbed and waned in his underclassman years, Kalynuk has been a steady offense generating presence from the blueline, staving off a number of more highly touted defenders on the depth chart. He is a fantastic skater and specializes in starting the transition by carrying the puck out of his own zone. He reads the play well and has been known to find teammates far up ice with long bomb passes. Once the offensive zone has been gained, he is composed and stealthy from the blueline, walking the line and showing off a nice slap shot to keep goalies honest. Once a Flyer flyer, Kalynuk has evolved into a prime prospect, with second pairing – and second power play unit – upside. - RW

14 Samuel Morin, D (11th overall, 2013. Last Year: 17) Morin is a massive defenseman who moves very well despite his size. He is more of a stay at home blueliner who contributes best to the offence by forcing high turnovers or ensuring a solid pass to start the breakout. He is a potential contender for a top two defensive pairing with the Flyers. He will be starting up in the NHL this season as a defensive defenseman responsible for stopping plays before they develop and keeping players to the outside. It would be nice if he can up his offensive numbers in the future but not nearly as important as staying healthy, considering injuries have limited him to a combined 24 games over the previous two seasons. It will be key for Morin to assert his aggressiveness and presence early this season and to not second guess his decisions allowing him to start gaining momentum early. - SC

15 Nicolas Aube-Kubel, RW (48th overall, 2019. Last Year: 18) For a player who is now heading into his fourth professional season in the AHL, Aube-Kubel still only sits at about an average ranking. He is a good, simple player, with a decent skillset, capable of getting to the net and understanding the pace and play of the AHL. He plays a gritty game and at times certainly loses focus a little too much, which can lead to spending a little too much time in the penalty box. He will need to have a career year next season in order to be considered back in the race and prove himself worthy of getting a chance as a bottom six forward with the Flyers. Aube-Kubel will need to play a more structured game and bring more energy to every shift to convince the right people that he can be trusted to move up to the next level. - SC

16 Jay O’Brien, C (19th overall, 2018. Last Year: 8) The tools that convinced the Flyers to use a first-round pick on O’Brien are still there. He is a slick skater, capable of high-end puck play, including crisp passes and a nice wrist shot that he keeps low, generating rebounds. He also works well in the corners, belying his as yet immature frame. Once in a while, he can execute an instinctive bit of brilliance that can leave onlookers nodding their heads, as if to say, “I get it.” But those moments were few and far between as a freshman with Providence, as well as in his role as the extra forward for the American WJC team. Injuries played a role, but so, too, did his inability to think the game at the pace required. Most of his past successes have come against lesser competition. Unfortunately, O’Brien responded to the poor year by leaving school. He will spend a pivotal season with Penticton of the BCHL before returning to school, this time at Boston University. - RW

17 Jack St. Ivany, D (112th overall, 2018. Last Year: 16) Passed over in his first year of draft eligibility, St. Ivany found a new level in a return engagement with Sioux Falls and earned the call in his second go-round. He then began his collegiate career at Yale earlier than originally expected, where his strong skater and his drive for self-improvement helped him play a regular role on a rebuilding system, leading team blueliners in scoring along the way. His performance also earned him a surprise engagement with the American WJC squad, playing as the extra defender. His offensive game sticks out more than his defensive duties as in addition to the wheels, he has a nice snapshot and moves the puck well from the point, generally not forcing plays. If he continues to trend upward, St. Ivany has the look of a future third pairing defender at the highest level. - RW

18 Noah Cates, LW (137th overall, 2017. Last Year: Not ranked) An exceptionally raw high school point producer when the Flyers used a fifth-round pick on him two years ago, Cates’ game has evolved and grown substantially in the time passed. First came a year with Omaha of the USHL in which he was fine but lacked pop. When he moved on last year to Minnesota-Duluth, his game added new dimensions. His offensive game now relies mostly on effort and grit. He gets to the net, can flash nice acceleration and a good shot release. He is effective when he plays a simple game, with strength on his stick and perseverance. He has also taken his physical game to a new level, in line with his mature frame. He tries to make life difficult for opponents, and at the collegiate level at least, he succeeds. Cates projects as a bottom six winger, with enough offense in his game to also be a fan favorite. - RW

19 Adam Ginning, D (50th overall, 2018. Last Year: 7) Ginning is an aggressive defensive defenseman with good skating and okay puck handling. He plays with poise and shows leadership abilities, competing well. He played a full season in the SHL last season in his first post-draft campaign. He is big (6-4”) and uses his size as a weapon along the boards and in front of the net. To have his game translate at the NHL level, he will need to be more consistent with his decision-making and not force the play, which has sometimes been the case for him. He was the sixth defenseman in Linkoping in terms of usage and saw a lot of PK-time as an SHL rookie. He didn’t have strong underlying numbers and was not yet strong enough in his game to push the play up the ice for his team, even if he defended well. For next season he will stay with the same team but with a bigger role. - JH

20 Linus Hogberg, D (139th overall, 2016. Last Year: Not ranked) Hogberg is a modern type of defensive defenseman. He has decent size (6-1”) and mobility. He can use his reach and skating to shut down plays. He makes a good breakout pass and has good control with the puck on his stick. His offensive abilities aren’t strong enough to be an offensive contributor, but he has a smart third pairing potential and, in that role, he has a legit NHL ceiling. His underlying numbers in the SHL have been strong and he helps his team shut down plays and move the puck up the ice. 21-year-old Hogberg still hasn’t gotten a bigger role in SHL and was only fifth among blueliners in ice-time with Vaxjo and will play there for another year. He should at least be a top three defenseman and see more PK time as well before he can go over to North America as a legit option for the Flyers’ bottom pair. - JH

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Philadelphia Flyers Prospect System Overview https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/philadelphia-flyers-prospect-system-overview/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/philadelphia-flyers-prospect-system-overview/#respond Sat, 15 Sep 2018 17:44:44 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=150320 Read More... from Philadelphia Flyers Prospect System Overview

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The name of the game in Philadelphia is depth. Even after graduating Nolan Patrick, Travis Sanheim and Robert Hagg to the NHL last year, the Flyers’ system is still bursting at the seams with prospects of all shapes and sizes, high ceilings and high floors and every position. Were it not for severe injuries, Anthony Stolarz and Samuel Morin might also have graduated from this list last year.

The amazing thing with this system is that it may be even deeper by this time next year. Despite having many players who might be ready to contribute in the NHL, barring injuries, there is seemingly only one spot up for grabs to start the year, with one of Oskar Lindblom or Danick Martel primed to grab a bottom six job on the left wing. Sanheim and Patrick should consolidate their spots as full time NHLers and the rest will likely continue to marinate in nearby Lehigh Valley.

Unlike some teams, the Flyers do not prioritize one geographical region over another when it comes to scouting. They are truly equal opportunity for their scouting staff. Looking at where their prospect played last year, we see two in the QMJHL, five from the OHL, three in the WHL, five in the USHL, one American high schooler, six playing college hockey, eight Swedes, and three Russians. I suppose one could point out that Philadelphia lacks any players from Finnish extract. The Flyers’ Finnish scout, Juuso Riksman, must be frustrated.

Beyond sheer depth, one area where Philadelphia has focused on more than any other team over the length of the Ron Hextall regime (starting in 2013-14) is in drafting netminders. The irony of that focus is clear in that Hextall himself was the last consistently above average goalie employed by the Flyers and he hasn’t strapped on the pads since before the turn of the century. There are three netminders listed among Philly’s top 20, but each of the eight whose rights they currently control would be in contention for the top 20 with a less top-heavy organization.

Of course, a good number of the players in the Philadelphia system will not see the light of day in the NHL. Some are not high priority prospects and others could see their primes passed by as they fall victim to the numbers game. For example, the Flyers draft heavily from Europe, and are not at all averse to leaving prospects overseas to develop there, only bringing them over when it is clear the player is ready, or especially well-suited to the North American game. Lindblom fits the latter description as does Mikhail Vorobyov, who did not make the cut here (but would elsewhere). The one other European prospect who is playing in the AHL, Radel Fazleev, was actually drafted out of the WHL, so doesn’t really count there. Others, namely the 12 present and future collegians, will be given as much time as they need and/or want on campus before Philadelphia will offer them an ELC.

Whether it is star players or role players, the Flyers have it all. If the system is not as highly vaunted next year, it can only be because Hextall cashed in a few chips from his reservoirs in trade for NHL talent during the season.

Joel Farabee
Joel Farabee

1 Joel Farabee, LW (14th overall, 2018. Last Year: IE) More than any other player in this system, Farabee, the first of two first round picks made by the Flyers this year, has the tools and temperament to be a force at both ends of the ice. He gets very high grades for his skating ability, puckhandling skills, and the hockey IQ needed to make it all work. Were Farabee two inches taller and/or 20 pounds heavier, he would not have been available at 14, but considering the size of his two older brothers, he may yet get up there. A stronger playmaker than a goal scorer, he has nevertheless showed a promising finishing touch at every level and every setting at which he has played. Heading to BU next year, Farabee may be one and done and should not need more than two years on campus before turning pro.

2 Carter Hart, G (48th overall, 2016. Last Year: 9th) Goalies are notoriously difficult to project. But there are not many goalies who put up GAAs below two for two consecutive seasons in the WHL. He also topped that benchmark leading Canada to WJC Gold last year. Carter Hart was named league MVP in his final season with Everett, which he can add to his three consecutive (a record) Del Wilson Trophies, as the top WHL netminder. Although he is on the small side for modern goalies, Hart is a phenomenal athlete, read the game like a pro, and has a daunting competitive instinct. He has a very strong technical game as well. In short, he is the type of goalie teams make room for once they are ready.

3 Morgan Frost, C/LW (27th overall, 2017. Last Year: 8th) His selection in the first round of the 2017 draft was fairly surprising, but 12 months later, the Flyers are laughing. Frost leapt from 62 points in 67 games in his draft year to an eye opening 112 points in the same number of games the following year. Although he is a strong skater with an NHL shot, Frost truly excels in his puck handling abilities and through a very high hockey IQ. Really, the only place where he is not at least above average is in his physical game. Even there, while he will always be on the small side, he has begun to play with more jam and there is no reason why he should not be able to hold his own. He might get an NHL opportunity to kick off the season, but another year in the OHL would suit him best.

4 Wade Allison, RW (52nd overall, 2016. Last Year: 7th) Despite missing over one third of last season with a lower body injury, he still nearly led Western Michigan in scoring and finished sixth in the nation in points per game with 1.36. As successful as he has been through most of two seasons in NCAA and considering his mature build, he might be ready to contribute at the NHL level this year, but is expected to return to WMU, where he will wear the ‘A’ on his chest. He plays a hard-charging style, with plus speed, a good shot and a keen understanding of the game and how to be effective. He projects as a shift disturbing secondary scorer and fan favorite. Presuming a fully healthy junior season, he will likely turn pro upon its conclusion.

German Rubtsov
German Rubtsov

5 German Rubtsov, C (22nd overall, 2016. Last Year: 4th) Although Rubtsov’s point totals in the QMHL were underwhelming, a relatively healthy season and a solid showing for Team Russia at the WJC means that we cannot be truly disappointed by the former first rounder’s development. He is also still young enough that we should put more stick in his tools than his production in his first full season in North America. Rubtsov has game breaking speed and is a pinpoint passer. While he does not generally play a very aggressive game, he knows how to use his average sized frame to good effect. The upside may not be more than middle six center, but he is still trending in that direction.

6 Isaac Ratcliffe, LW (35th overall, 2017. Last Year: 5th) A physical specimen at 6-6” and over 200 pounds, Ratcliffe took a promising step forward in his first post-draft season, breaching 40 goals in the process for an improving Guelph squad. A decent skater for his size, he makes his impressions in the OHL through the inability for defenders to handle him in the dangerous areas of the ice. He skates well enough for his size, but his ability to get the puck on the net – and often enough, in the net – will be his ticket to the NHL. Somewhat unfortunately, for as big as Ratcliffe is, he does not play a heavy game. He has enough finesse to make it, but learning to better use his bulk will help him.

7 Adam Ginning, D (50th overall, 2018. Last Year: IE) A very big young man, Ginning skates quite well for his size, and uses his big frame exceptionally in his own end. His positioning is advanced, and he can control a gap with the best of them. Not just big, he is strong and once he gets in on the hands of an opposing forward, he does well in shutting down the rush. On the other hand, Ginning offers little to his team’s offensive game. He will rush with the puck and his hands lack subtlety. The Flyers have been down this path before with Samuel Morin, although Ginning has flashed hints of offensive instincts. The floor is high here, but it isn’t far from the ceiling.

8 Jay O’Brien, C (19th overall, 2018. Last Year: IE) Last year, the Flyers shocked insiders with the selection of Morgan Frost in the first round. History repeated itself this year when they popped Jay O’Brien with their second first rounder. There was no doubt that O’Brien was the most talented prep player in the 2018 draft class, but few other organizations, if any, saw him as a first-round talent. He certainly has a full kit of high end offensive tools, from a lethal shooting repertoire, to some fancy puck handling moves and above average offensive instincts to go with them. He gets to a nice top speed, although his first few steps lack in bite. The challenge with scouting a player like O’Brien is that he was so much better than his competition, and rarely played at higher levels, that it is very hard to know how much it will translate. We’ll find out next season at Providence.

9 Philippe Myers, D (UDFA: Sep. 21, 2015. Last Year: 3rd) Philippe Myers’ drop from 3rd in the Flyers’ system to 8th is less a sign that he has regressed than it is a matter of the Flyers drafting well and other players simply improving more. To a lesser extent, Myers did not hit the ground running in his AHL debut, although in the big picture he was fine between a few questionable decisions. The undrafted signee is a big player who skates like a much smaller one. He is generally competent with the puck and more than that off of it. He offers an imposing physical presence, even if he is not a snarling beast on the blueline. It is still amazing that he made the type of step he did immediately after going undrafted in his age 17/18 season.

Pascal Laberge
Pascal Laberge

10 Pascal Laberge, C (36th overall, 2016. Last Year: 12th) Despite production that could best be described as disappointing, Laberge still flashes the tools that had the Flyers excited to use a second-round pick on him two years ago. Both the shot and his puck skills grade out very highly and he skates well to boot. He should be able to find a role that fits at the pro level, as he is known to receive regular shifts on the PK and plays a solid all-around 200-foot game. Assuming his concussion troubles can be a thing of the past, Laberge probably ends up as a top nine player, able to contribute to the offensive attack, but lacking the killer instinct to take advantage of all opportunities that come his way.

11 Tanner Laczynski, C (169th overall, 2016. Last Year: 16th) Somewhat of a late bloomer when the Flyers used a sixth-round pick on Laczynski in his second year of draft eligibility, the budding playmaker’s game has turned up a few notches in the two seasons since going to Ohio State. After finishing fifth in team scoring as a freshman, he led the Buckeyes as a sophomore, with a four-point edge on the runner-up. Through hard work, he has also turned a former weakness – his skating – into at least an average tool, without any degradation to his other tools. His puck skills are still his selling feature, but he has also taken strides as a finisher and shows an advanced understanding of the game. This is what a sleeper looks like.

12 Alex Lyon, G (UDFA: Apr. 5, 2016. Last Year: Unranked) In many other systems, Alex Lyon, who signed with the Flyers as an undrafted free agent after a dominant three year run at Yale, would be considered a likely goalie of the future candidate. With Philadelphia, he is aiming for future backup rights, as Carter Hart is one of the best goalie prospects in the sport. Lyon is an aggressive goalie, quick with a poke check and enjoys playing the puck. He is an above average athlete for the position and does a good job at preventing juicy rebounds. As part of his second pro season, he earned a callup to the 11 and held his own in an 11-game trial. With two veterans in the system with one year remaining in their contracts, his chance for a full time NHL job will arrive soon enough.

13 Oskar Lindblom, LW (138th overall, 2014. Last Year: 6th) To his eternal credit, Oskar Lindblom produced at a fair clip in his first full season in North America and spent 23 games in the NHL as a reward for his efforts. While we maintained faith in players like Pascal Laberge and German Rubtsov for their tools, excusing so-so production, Lindblom is almost an inverse. Outside of high end puck skills, none of his tools grade out as much above average. He is a strong player despite roughly average size and he is very comfortable playing the net front. He forechecks heavily and his overall intensity might be the key in overcoming his physical abilities. As mentioned above, there may be an NHL job in Philadelphia with his name on it this season.

14 Carsen Twarynski, LW (82nd overall, 2016. Last Year: Unranked) Like Lindblom above, Carsen Twarynski is an intense, net-front winger who uses his brawn and willingness to take punishment as a means to rack up the goals. With 45 of those last year for Kelowna, it seems to be working. Twarynski is a solid skater, who has decent hands and clearly knows how to finish, although the offensive package does not seem like enough to profile as a top six winger in the pro ranks. He did score a goal for Lehigh Valley in a five-game run at season’s end, but needs a full season of the same to prove that last year’s number were not a stone fluke.

David Kase
David Kase

15 David Kase, C (128th overall, 2015. Last Year: Unranked) In his third year after being drafted, former fifth round pick David Kase finally left his native Czech Republic for improved competition in Sweden and impressed enough with Mora that the Flyers extended an ELC offer to the speedy center. This is not a dynamic offensive weapon, but Kase has enough puck skills to go along with his high-end skating ability to suggest a middle six role in his future. He also demonstrates enough hockey sense to overcome his slight frame. He will, of course, need to prove that he can handle the AHL first, but he is trending in the right direction.

16 Jack St. Ivany, D (112th overall, 2018. Last Year: IE) Like Tanner Laczynski above, St Ivany, a product of the growing Southern California youth hockey scene, was not really ready in his first season of draft eligibility. He would flash intriguing tools on the blueline, but the whole was less than the sum of the parts. In his second go-round, he added a more dynamic element to his game, improving his offensive output from 10 to 36 points in close to the same playing time. He has a big, strong frame, and moves well for his size. He can contribute at both ends of the ice and his offensive tools grade out as roughly average for a blueliner. He also uses his size well without getting into penalty trouble. Not expected to join Yale until 2019-20, St. Ivany is a longer-term project.

17 Samuel Morin, D (11th overall, 2013. Last Year: 14th) Morin, already rated as a disappointment for a former fairly high first round pick, suffered through a very frustrating, very painful season in 2017-18, as a series of injuries limited him to 20 games between the regular season and the postseason, including two regular season contents for the Flyers. Next season figures to be more of the same, as a torn ACL suffered in the AHL postseason is expected to keep him out of action until February. Morin will always have awe-inspiring size but serves as a reminder that a “safe” prospect is not really safe is his upside is so low that a failure to develop even a little bit will make him not good enough for a regular NHL role. Injuries don’t help either.

18 Nicolas Aube-Kubel, RW (48th overall, 2014. Last Year: 19th) Small, but feisty, Aube-Kubel may be a tweener. He has enough skill to play top six minutes at a solid level for the AHL but lacks the tools to do so in the NHL. To his credit, the former second rounder has upped the tenacity from a game that already was known for energy in juniors, without diminishing his productiveness at all. He skates well and seems to have a good head for the game in all situations, but lacks the creativity to be a driver of the offense at the highest level. The floor is good enough for an NHL job, but is most likely that of a fourth liner who could help on the penalty kill.

19 Mark Friedman, D (86th overall, 2014. Last Year: 20th) It is easy for a player like Friedman, lacking in size or in any standout tools, to be overlooked. There is always someone else with higher expectations, more highlight reel plays to his name. But Friedman has met every challenge thrown his way this far in his career, whether in the USHL, the NCAA, and now, the AHL. He is a fluid skater, who gets an edge from his first few steps, and he moves the puck at a smart clip. His reads are fairly mature and he has a good sense of when to ump in deep into the offensive zone attack. A right-handed shot, he has established himself as one to watch and a potential injury replacement in the NHL as soon as this year.

20 Anthony Stolarz, G (45th overall, 2012. Last Year: 13th) We have already looked at Wade Allison, Samuel Morin and Philippe Myers, critical components of the Flyers’ prospect depth, who missed large chunk of last year with injury. So, it is only right that we spare a moment’s thought for Stolarz, the former second round pick whose strong 2016-17 season had him on the verge of an NHL backup job, but was limited to only four games total, between the AHL and ECHL, last season. He still has the ideal size you look for in a modern day netminder, standing a towering 6-6”, 209 lbs., but already 24 years old, this may be his final chance to claim an NHL future, if not in Philadelphia, then elsewhere.

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State of the CHL: Quebec Major Junior Hockey League https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/state-chl-quebec-major-junior-hockey-league/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/state-chl-quebec-major-junior-hockey-league/#respond Mon, 29 Jan 2018 16:11:08 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=141917 Read More... from State of the CHL: Quebec Major Junior Hockey League

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Wide open Q marches towards the playoffs

As the season began in September, the QMJHL looked as wide-open as ever. Each team coming into the campaign had a weakness or an issue that needed to be addressed.

The trading period has come and gone, and two teams have addressed their weaknesses the best and are the most poised for a deep run in the QMJHL President’s Cup playoffs – The Blainville-Boisbriand Armada and the Acadie-Bathurst Titan.

Drake Batherson of the Blainville-Boisbriand Armada. Photo courtesy of the QMJHL.
Drake Batherson of the Blainville-Boisbriand Armada. Photo courtesy of the QMJHL.

The Armada added the best player available on the market in Drake Batherson (Ottawa), and the Titan acquired the best defenceman on the market in Olivier Galipeau, one of the top goal scorers in Mitch Balmas, great center depth in Samuel Asselin, and a goalie with a ton of potential in Evan Fitzpatrick.

Blainville-Boisbriand made the final last season where they were quickly dispatched by a strong Saint John Sea Dog squad after upsetting a great Charlottetown Islanders unit, but they addressed some lack of offence by acquiring Batherson, who led the Q in scoring earlier in the year before being overtaken by surging-hot now-teammate Alex Barré-Boulet and his 25-game point-streak.

Barré-Boulet’s 57 points over that two-months-plus stretch sees him towering over the competition in the scoring race. He still has a more-than-20-point cushion over his competition, and is currently the only player in the league past the 40-goal mark.

Alex Barré-Boulet of Blainville-Boisbriand Armada. Photo courtesy of the QMJHL.
Alex Barré-Boulet of Blainville-Boisbriand Armada. Photo courtesy of the QMJHL.

Batherson, Barré-Boulet and Alexandre Alain form one of the most dangerous potential trios in the league in Joel Bouchard’s arsenal, and adding Batherson can make the Armada one line deeper, as he makes every player around him better.

Acadie-Bathurst was one team on the outset of the season that had to make a run for it this year with the veterans on their team, and they made the right decision to make a strong push to become a true contender in the league.

Antoine Morand of the Acadie-Bathurst Titan. Daniel Doucet/DD Sports Photo
Antoine Morand of the Acadie-Bathurst Titan. Daniel Doucet/DD Sports Photo

Adding the sharpshooter in Balmas from the Gatineau Olympiques, despite his early scoring struggles since joining the team, gives them a powerful counter-point on the opposite wing to Anaheim prospect center Antoine Morand on the powerplay, and a great flank for Morand or Philadelphia Flyer first rounder German Rubtsov at even strength. Samuel Asselin is a do-it-all player much in the mold of Titan captain Jeff Truchon-Viel – an aggressive forechecker, relentless in pursuit and great hands, and he gives Bathurst an excellent one-two punch of killer faceoff men with Samuel L’Italien.

Noah Dobson of the Acadie-Bathurst Titan.  Photo courtesy of the QMJHL.
Noah Dobson of the Acadie-Bathurst Titan. Photo courtesy of the QMJHL.

The Titan are very deep up front, and maybe even deeper on the back end, with defensive leading scorer Galipeau added to strong pivot Adam Holwell and top prospect Noah Dobson (2018), who both feature on the top end of defenceman scoring. No other team has more than one defender in the top-20 of blueliner scoring.

Incumbent Reilly Pickard was swapped for Evan Fitzpatrick in goal, and this is a make-or-break stretch for the St. Louis second rounder. He must show his potential and his abilities for the Titan to make a great run, and he is well insulated with this defending corps.

A dark horse among the contenders may be the Victoriaville Tigres. They made a surprising trade, shipping out Philadelphia second rounder Pascal Laberge to Quebec, but also picked up goaltender Etienne Montpetit and Columbus Blue Jacket prospect Vitalii Abramov. The Tigres expected to be among the top teams in the league and they struggled out of the gate, but they have the lineup to do some damage and cause an upset or two. Abramov, with his great speed and hands, has been a great addition up front.

Speaking of upsets, there are a few teams with younger cores that could make deep runs, namely the Halifax Mooseheads, the Rimouski Oceanic and the Drummondville Voltigeurs.

Jared McIsaac of the Halifax Mooseheads. Photo courtesy of the QMJHL.
Jared McIsaac of the Halifax Mooseheads. Photo courtesy of the QMJHL.

The Mooseheads boast a handful of potential top picks in this June’s entry draft in Dallas – forwards Filip Zadina and Benoît-Olivier Groulx, defender Jared McIsaac and goaltender Alexis Gravel. They have a very potent offence with captain and Columbus Blue Jacket Maxime Fortier and resurgent Finn and Tampa Bay Lightning pick Otto Somppi to add to the young players, and New Jersey Devils blueliner Jocktan Chainey on the back end.

Benoit-Olivier Groulx.
Benoit-Olivier Groulx.

All but Fortier of the core group can return next season, though it is very possible that Zadina could stick around professionally wherever he is taken this summer.

The Oceanic have been led by two excellent young players in their rookie seasons in the Q. Alexis Lafrenière has been every bit as advertised and then some. This past June’s first overall pick is scoring at over a point-a-game this season, leading his Rimouski mates in scoring as a 16-year-old, and a late-2001 birth date at that. He is only eligible for the 2020 NHL draft, and is already making waves.

Alexis Lafrenière,  Rimouski Oceanic. Photo courtesy of the QMJHL.
Alexis Lafrenière, Rimouski Oceanic. Photo courtesy of the QMJHL.

The other, more unexpected contributor is 17-year-old goaltender Colten Ellis. The Telus Cup-winning goaltender from last season has taken the starter’s job and ran with it since the start of the season after being acquired in a draft day trade with the Cape Breton Screaming Eagles.

His performance this season allowed Rimouski to be more active on the trade market and pursue some immediate help for the upcoming playoff run, rather than conservatively stay the course for later seasons. The Oceanic have only three 19-year-olds in their lineup, but they are the top defensive team in the league.

The Voltigeurs made a huge splash as the trading period opened in December by acquiring star forward Joe Veleno from the Sea Dogs. They paid a massive price in doing so, giving up five picks in the top two rounds over the next three seasons, but the former Sea Dogs captain has provided a further spark to the league’s best offense.

Joe Veleno (#90), player of Drummondville Voltigeurs, season 2017-18 of the QMJHL. Drummondville, Que., Dec. 30, 2017. THE CANADIAN PRESS IMAGES/Ghyslain Bergeron
Joe Veleno (#90), player of Drummondville Voltigeurs, season 2017-18 of the QMJHL. Drummondville, Que., Dec. 30, 2017. THE CANADIAN PRESS IMAGES/Ghyslain Bergeron

At 17 years old, Veleno fits right in with the strong young core for the Volts, with Nicolas Guay, Dawson Mercer, Cédric Desruisseaux, Pavel Koltygin (Nashville) and Xavier Simoneau up front, and Nicolas Beaudin and Xavier Bernard on the back end. Olivier Rodrigue is the back-stop in goal and all those players are 18 or younger and will return next season.

Drummondville could score their way to a long playoff run, and have the defenders and goaltender to hang tight when the going gets tough. Two of their top scorers – veterans Bobby Lynch and Morgan Adams-Moisan – played in checking roles last season and can certainly provide protection as well as scoring.

Two teams are in the hangover years of their team-building cycle, but could still do some damage in the playoffs: the Rouyn-Noranda Huskies and the Charlottetown Islanders.

The Huskies stormed out of the gate with an excellent performance from netminder Samuel Harvey in the early-going, and boast a very deep blueline, much like the President’s Cup-winning team in 2016.

The scoring on paper isn’t very strong, but Peter Abbandonato, Félix Bibeau, Mathieu Boucher, and Rafael Harvey-Pinard have proven the doubters wrong with strong performances up front. William Cyr has been a revelation offensively, running the point on the blueline, with a veteran corps led by strong defensive defender in Jacob Neveu.

Pierre-Olivier Joseph of the Charlottetown Islanders. Photo courtesy of the QMJHL.
Pierre-Olivier Joseph of the Charlottetown Islanders. Photo courtesy of the QMJHL.

The Islanders really struggled to open the campaign but caught fire with the play of goaltender Matt Welsh and top pair Pierre-Olivier Joseph (Arizona) and Saku Vesterinen. Coach and GM Jim Hulton smartly added over Christmas, acquiring scorers Cam Askew, Dan Hardie and Derek Gentile without giving up much in futures, as well as getting top prospect Brett Budgell to report to the team. The result is a good contender with the pieces left from the strong team last season.

The parity of the league has been impressive to watch this season. The top teams in the league are all separated by just a handful of points. The difference between top seed and losing home-ice is 14 points, and earlier in January it was just eight.

Contrast that to last season, when the Saint John Sea Dogs and the Charlottetown Islanders were the two top contenders, this season’s top foes are very much undetermined at this point. It is the first year in a long time where there are not a couple of teams above the rest. There will be upsets in the opening round this season, and many of the teams at the top of the table are winning despite a lack of true veterans.

The 19-year-old crop in the QMJHL is just not very good. Acadie-Bathurst and Blainville-Boisbriand are the only two teams that built the core of their team around the 1998-born players in the league. Most other teams at the top of the standings have much of their key contributors as either 20-year-old overagers or younger players. The 18-year-olds and 17-year-olds are already leading contending teams, like Halifax, Rimouski and Drummondville.

Looking ahead, the league could have as many as six first-round picks this upcoming draft, and Halifax has been appointment viewing in that regard, with as many as four of those six potential first rounders.

Filip Zadina and his shifty offence leads the pack and should have his name called early in the first round, likely in the top five. His offensive game is extremely well developed at this stage in his career, with a deceptive wrist shot from either circle to use the screen and a great ability to perform at top speed with the puck, weaving in and out of traffic easily. He doesn’t slouch on the back check either, showing his skating ability is not just for the attack.

On the back end, Jared McIsaac is a solid option for a top-pairing defender. He has excellent skating ability as well as great hockey sense, and he can man the point on a power play. The Mooseheads top powerplay unit features Zadina, McIsaac, Fortier, Groulx, and Arnaud Durandeau (NY Islanders) – a lot of talent on the ice at once.

Groulx has a great handle on the two-way game from the center position. His ability to do many of the little things well, like faceoffs, positioning in all three zones, and an active stick on the back check, will keep him in the lineup, and his offensive game could develop into a top-line threat.

Alexis Gravel is one of the top goaltenders available, with his big frame and his quick movement. If a team takes a flyer on a goaltender in the opening round, Gravel is as good as any netminder in this draft class.

Acadie-Bathurst’s Noah Dobson will also go high in June. He does so many things well, along with ideal size at 6-3” – skating, positioning, manning the point, gap control, puck control, breakouts – that he could be a cornerstone blueliner for a team for years to come. His play continues to rise and he continues to find another gear to bring up his game as the draft comes closer. His poise and ability to play in tough and long minutes endears him to many scouts.

Drummondville’s Joe Veleno will be a first-rounder in the upcoming draft, though he may be looked at as a bit of a disappointment to some. He has not put up the huge offensive numbers expected from an exceptional status draft pick in the Q to date, though his offensive game is refined and he has many tools with the puck on his stick. His 200-foot game rounds out the package and is his calling card. He is a dynamo on the back check, and is a great positional defender in the defensive zone. His points have jumped up since joining the high-scoring Voltigeurs, and being coached by Dominique Ducharme will help his development. Veleno is a sure-fire NHLer, although it is unclear what his role will be in the pros. He could fill many of them going forward.

All those players could benefit from deep playoff runs, and Halifax, Drummondville and Acadie-Bathurst may all play deep into May depending on where the chips fall. The President’s Cup is truly up for grabs this season, and it will take a hot team with all facets of the game clicking to take it home.

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WJC 2018 – Team Preview – Russia https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/wjc-2018-team-preview-russia/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/wjc-2018-team-preview-russia/#respond Wed, 27 Dec 2017 19:38:34 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=139928 Read More... from WJC 2018 – Team Preview – Russia

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Despite rarely rating as a favorite before the tournament begins, Russia has medaled in each of the past seven WJCs, picking up one gold (2011), three silvers (2012, 2015, 2016) and three bronzes (2013, 2014, 2017). It should come as no surprise if 2018 sees the cycle repeated once more.

Russia, under head coach Valeri Bragin, has picked up a reputation of generally icing older squads. That reputation is somewhat earned and this year’s squad (albeit before final cuts have been made) has an average of 18.75 years of age, younger only than team Canada by around five weeks. On the other hand, the youngest squad, the Swiss, are only around five younger on average. Likely to be of more significance in Buffalo this year is that the Russians will likely be icing one of the tournament’s smaller lineups, ranking ninth in height and eighth in weight (again, before final cuts are made).

Even more pressing from Team Russia this year is that, for the first time since that Gold Medal winning 2011 squad, they are not led by a stud in net, after having enjoyed the services of Andrei Vasilevskiy, Ilya Sorokin, Igor Shestyorkin, and Ilya Samsonov in recent years.

For Russia to return to the podium for an eighth straight year, their chances seemingly hinge on outgunning the opposition. Their roster features a number of players justly feted for their offensive potential, including high profile NHL prospects such as Vitali Abramov (Clm), Andrei Altybarmakyan (Chi), Klim Kostin (StL), Dmitry Sokolov (Min), Mikhail Maltsev (NJ), and German Rubtsov (Phi), who may be joined by a very prominent player under consideration for the 2018 draft in goalscorer extraordinaire Andrei Svechnikov. Of the top five teams, they are both the most likely to finish in third, as well as the most likely to be bumped from the top five by an upstart.

Ten to Watch

Alexei Melnichuk, G

Coming up through the St. Petersburg organization as a youth, Melnichuk had never received any consideration for national play prior to this year. Now, in his last year of eligibility for the junior program, rumors in mid-December make Melnichuk the odds-on favorite to receive the lions-share of the starts in net for Team Russia at the 2018 WJCs. His recent rise to prominence is based on stellar league play over the last season and a half with SKA-Neva St. Petersburg in the VHL, Russia’s version of the AHL. His SV% last year was tops in the league for all under-20 netminders, and is currently second in that subset to Vladislav Sukhachyov, who is on the roster bubble. Melnichuk also held his own in two starts this year with the parent KHL club. Where he really raised his profile though was in the recent CIBC Canada-Russia series. He appeared in five game, putting up a 1.96 GAA and a .926 save percentage, exuding calmness. He lacks prototype size between the pipes, but positions himself well to make the save if he does not need go post-to-post. If the Russian starter is not Melnichuk, look for Sioux Falls (USHL) netminder Mikhail Berdin, a Winnipeg draftee to take over. He is currently third in the USHL in save percentage.

Yegor Zaitsev, D

One of the last picks in last year’s NHL draft, the Devils selected Russian blueliner Zaitsev 205th overall in his second year of draft eligibility after he split his age 18 season mostly between Dynamo Moscow of the KHL and junior side Dynamo Balashikha. A steady, all-situations type, Zaitsev is thought by some as a leading candidate to wear the ‘C’ for Team Russia in Buffalo. He lacks typical NHL size, but plays a rugged game. He is better in his own zone than in the offensive end or carrying the puck. Although lacking in quickness, he moves around relatively well. Despite his lack of offensive production, he has spent time on the power play in domestic play in addition to penalty kill duties. His passing ability and hard shot suggest that there might be more offense in the tank here, but he has never demonstrated that element to his game at any level of play, at least as far back as the U17 level in his homeland. Expect more of a steady minute-muncher on this year’s Russia squad, who, if he ends up on a highlight reel, it will be for executing a big hit.

Dmitri Samorukov, D

Although he often struggled to leave much of an impression with a very young Guelph Storm in his draft eligible season, the tall and lanky Samorukov had a very strong finish to his season with Team Russia at the World U18 championship and represented good value for Edmonton when the Oilers popped him as a third round draft choice. With the Storm better from top to bottom this year, Samorukov, whose father was a high level soccer netminder in Russia in his day, is displaying much more of an offensive game in the OHL. His expected role with Team Russia should be the virtual opposite of how the team will use Zaitsev. Samorukov is very strong with the puck, and is a strong skater. Although not a big hitter, he has the frame to eventually be that player. For now, there are weaknesses to his game away from the puck, but if he can play in Buffalo like he did last year at the WU18s, the Valeri Bragin will take it. The former second overall CHL Import draft pick has a chance to cement his reputation as a big game player in this tournament.

Vitali Abramov, RW/LW

A player who should have been drafted well ahead of 65th overall, where the Columbus Blue Jackets nabbed him after he lit up the QMJHL as a rookie in 2015-16, the undersized Abramov was overlooked again last year, as he was overlooked by Team Russia for the 2017 WJC, despite being well on his way to a league-leading offensive output of 104 points for a mediocre team in Gatineau. He was not far removed from making the Blue Jackets out of camp this year, before being sent back to the Q. He started the season strong again, but with Gatineau rebuilding, Abramov was recently shipped off to Victoriaville. He is a great skater who can beat many high-end defenders wide and is clear silk with the puck, able to pull rabbits out of his stick thanks to his dexterous hands and seldom-matched creativity. He will always be on the small side, but that has never yet held him back and he has plenty of experience killing penalties. There is little to suggest that he will be a liability in his own zone. He is the early favorite to be Russia’s primary option for creating offense. If he succeeds in Buffalo, Russia will be fine.

CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I - NOVEMBER 14: CIBC Canada Russia Series game #5  between Team Russia and Team QMJHL on November 14, 2017, at the Eastlink Centre in Charlottetown, P.E.I.(Photo by Vincent Ethier/QMJHL Media)
CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I - NOVEMBER 14: CIBC Canada Russia Series game #5 between Team Russia and Team QMJHL on November 14, 2017, at the Eastlink Centre in Charlottetown, P.E.I.(Photo by Vincent Ethier/QMJHL Media)

Andrei Altybarmakyan, RW

When the Blackhawks selected Altybarmakyan in the third round last summer, more than a few eyebrows were raised. A fantastic offensive producer in the Russian junior leagues, the undersized winger gained some international prominence during a very strong performance at this year’s Canada-Russia series. For one thing, he put to bed most concerns about his size, as he played a game much bigger than his 5-11”, 183 pound listing. He plays a power forward game with a wide stance that helps hi get into position to unleash a very quick wrist shot. He does not play a fancy game, but his hands are quick enough in tight areas. Back in Russia, he has struggled to impose his game at the KHL level (no points in 13 games for SKA St. Petersburg), but has shown the ability to play with adults, having already scored seven times in 20 games with SKA’s VHL farm team. Known as Barmen (his name is a mouthful even for native Russians), his aggressive style of game should serve him well on all sides of the puck. Expected to play a 200 foot game as part of a versatile middle six.

Klim Kostin
Klim Kostin

Klim Kostin, C/LW

A big player with a mature power game, Kostin has flown a little bit under the radar in the AHL as an 18 year old with San Antonio. On the other hand, as one of only three skaters under the age of 19 playing in the AHL, the fact that he is more than holding his own with the Rampage, with 11 points in his first 26 games, speaks volumes. The numbers look even better after realizing that only six of his teammates are currently outscoring him. He is a smooth skater who has a good shot, but prefers to set up his teammates. Kostin has fantastic vision and is capable of a string of pretty passes. He reads the opposition very well and his reactions show plus hockey IQ within. He seems fully recovered from the injuries that kept him off the ice for much of his draft year. As one of the younger players projected to make the Russian WJC roster, he may be given a bottom six role to start, even though he has one of the highest career upsides among his projected teammates. The tournament represents a great opportunity for the St. Louis to re-establish his place in the hockey prospect world.

Mikhail Maltsev, LW

Drafted by New Jersey in the fourth round in 2016, Maltsev has spent the last season and a half getting acclimated to the professional game, spending most of his time in the VHL with SKA-Neva St. Petersburg, growing more and more comfortable asserting himself on the offensive side of the rink. Always an aggressive player away from the puck, he uses his plus frame to good effect. Coupled with an active stick and good vision, he should be a primary call for coach Bragin for key defensive zone faceoffs. He is a strong skater for his size and demonstrates intriguing playmaking traits once he gets the puck moving in the right direction. Listed as a winger, he nonetheless has earned a reputation as a faceoff wizard and may play more often as a pivot for Russia. Although unlikely to threaten for the team lead in scoring, his ability and willingness to play in all situations bodes well for his chances to lead the team’s forwards in ice time, if nothing else. His North American style game should also work well in the smaller rinks in Buffalo, and once the tournament reaches the elimination matches, where Russia will likely get the chance to play one of Canada of the USA.

German Rubtsov, C

At least until Svechnikov is drafted next June, Rubtsov holds the distinction as the highest drafted player on the Russian squad at this year’s WJC, having been selected 22nd overall by Philadelphia in 2016. He got into five games at last year’s tournament, but failed to register a single point before suffering a scary looking facial fracture that limited him to 16 games over the rest of the season. In fact, Rubtsov used the tournament last year to springboard his career from the Russian leagues over to North America, staying in Quebec to play for Chicoutimi. Early this season, the Sagueneens dealt the rangy center to Acadie-Bathurst and he has been a point-per-game player for both squads. A dynamic skater and puck handler, he seems to be lacking only some consistency (perhaps a side effect of being moved from team to team with some frequency) to see his game truly take off. The type of player who always seems to have the puck on his stick, he is more of a playmaker than a goal scorer. While he has a good pro-looking frame, he does not play a physical game. Likely to play a top six, offense-first role for Team Russia in Buffalo.

Dmitry Sokolov, RW/C

One of the best pure goalscorers in the OHL since his debut with the Sudbury Wolves in the 2016-17 season, Sokolov’s being named to the 2018 Russian WJC squad offers some late redemption for a player whose commitment to defense has long been derided. In fact, Sokolov was kept out of the national picture since contributing one point per game for Russia in the WU18 in 2015 as an underager. 78 goals in two OHL seasons was not enough to overcome the persistent questions about his fitness level and his commitment to the game away from the puck. In general the only questions about his defensive game in the past have been whether he was merely disinterested in his own zone, or acutely incapable. As for his fitness level, any player measuring below six feet but tipping the scales at upwards of 220 pounds will always face sceptics. Finally, though, with continued production at the OHL level, including a nine points in six games production for the Wolves in last season’s playoffs, as well as two points in the two games of the OHL portion of the Canada-Russia series, and Sokolov will get to audition for an ELC on the biggest amateur stage there is.

 

SPISSKA NOVA VES, SLOVAKIA - APRIL 13: Russia's Andrei Svechnikov #14 celebrates at the bench with teammates after a third period goal against Sweden during preliminary round action at the 2017 IIHF Ice Hockey U18 World Championship. (Photo by Steve Kingsman/HHOF-IIHF Images)
SPISSKA NOVA VES, SLOVAKIA - APRIL 13: Russia's Andrei Svechnikov #14 celebrates at the bench with teammates after a third period goal against Sweden during preliminary round action at the 2017 IIHF Ice Hockey U18 World Championship. (Photo by Steve Kingsman/HHOF-IIHF Images)

Andrei Svechnikov, RW

Although Team Russia does not often play draft eligible players at the WJC, Svechnikov would not be the first, as Ivan Provorov also played a pivotal role in a Silver Medal winning side in 2015. Svechnikov, whose older brother Yevgeni was a first round pick of Detroit in 2015, is both a better prospect than his sibling, and likely Provorov as well – we project him to go second in the 2018 draft. He is a pure goal scorer. Although he has missed a big chunk of the first half to a hand injury, a recent hat trick in league play should not allow us to presume that there is any rust in his game. Averaging a Colts’-high four shots on net per game, scoring at nearly a goal per game pace, he has mostly been lined up with Team Russia hopeful Alexei Lipanov. Valeri Bragin would do well to keep the prolific duo together for this tournament. Last year, as one of the youngest players in the USHL, with Muskegon, Svechnikov finished sixth in league scoring, with 29 goals and 58 points in 48 games – the second best U17 scorer in the league finished with 27 points. This here is a superstar in the making.

Sleeper

Mikhail Berdin, G

Currently sitting in third place in save percentage among USHL netminders, Berdin was just as good last year and more than held his own whenever he has been called upon to represent Russia on the international stage. One of the few North American based goalies outside of the American or Canadian rosters at this WJC, there is speculation among Russian reporters whether he will be named the starter ahead of the above-profiled Melnichuk. Tall and lanky and with very impressive athleticism, the Winnipeg Jets prospect has great recovery ability and got to show off earlier this season in a very different manner when he scored an empty net goal. He has not yet committed to any level of play beyond this season, so he may be playing for a professional contract at this tournament.

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QMJHL: German Rubtsov (Acadie-Bathurst – Philadelphia) https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/qmjhl-german-rubtsov-chicoutimi-philadelphia/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/qmjhl-german-rubtsov-chicoutimi-philadelphia/#respond Tue, 07 Nov 2017 16:09:59 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=134893 Read More... from QMJHL: German Rubtsov (Acadie-Bathurst – Philadelphia)

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Philadelphia Flyers 2016 first round pick, German Rubtsov was traded from Chicoutimi to Acadie-Bathurst on November 2nd. Rubtsov made his North American debut with Chicoutimi last season firing 22 points in 16 games in an injury plagued campaign, missing the playoff run. Mike Sanderson provides a detailed breakdown as Rubtsov heads into a critical season with high expectations.

A note on the 20-80 scale used below. We look at five attributes (skating, shooting, puck skills, hockey IQ and physicality) for skaters and six for goalies (athleticism/quickness, compete/temperament, vision/play reading, technique/style, rebound control and puck handling). Each individual attribute is graded along the 20-80 scales, which includes half-grades. The idea is that a projection of 50 in a given attribute meant that our observer believed that the player could get to roughly NHL average at that attribute at maturity.

German Rubtsov 2016 Draft (22nd - Philadelphia Flyers)
Position: C, Shoots L H/W: 6-2", 190 lbs
Stats to date (GP-G-A-PTS-PIMS) Chicoutimi/Acadie-Bathurst, QMJHL, (13-4-10-14-0)
German Rubstov. Phot courtesy of the QMJHL
German Rubstov. Photo courtesy of the QMJHL

Skating: Rubtsov is a very powerful skater with excellent edgework. He can harness complete control of his body to direct it where he wants to go in a flash. He can turn on a dime and shift direction to provide separation and give himself some extra space with the puck. Because of the power his stride generates, he gets up to max speed in a hurry. His top speed is quite fast and will do the job, but it is not elite-level, which could prevent him from being a center at the NHL level. His efficient stride and agility are what separates him from the pack. Grade: 60

Shot: Rubtsov can pick a corner with ease with his wrist shot. His shot creates enough of a threat that the defenders cannot give him too tight a gap, as he will make them pay with his heavy wrister. His backhander provides quite the balance on his off-hand, as he can lift it up in a hurry, especially in tight after a deke. His snapshot and slapshot generally stay in the tool-box, as he tends to stick with the wrister on the forehand, and the backhand shot. He is usually the one dishing for one-timers, not taking them. Grade: 55

Skills: Rubtsov’s skating opens up his game to many uses, as he can save his energy from his efficient stride for other skills during a game. He is a natural with the puck on his stick, and loves to have control of the biscuit. While he does possess a good shot, he is a natural playmaker, and is looking for teammates in optimal positions. He is absolutely not selfish, but he also does not force a play if it is not there. His passes are crisp and to the tape with the appropriate speed to maximize a potential scoring chance. His edgework skating can give himself more separation than most with the puck, and he uses that to his advantage, forcing a wider gap to let go of a shot, or moving against the grain to open up a passing seam or an area of the ice to penetrate. His vision then shines while hitting the open man at precisely the right instant. His faceoffs need work, which could force a temporary or even permanent shift to the wing in the pros. Grade: 60

Smarts: It is not very often that Rubtsov does not have the puck while he is on the ice, so his play without the puck is rare. He is a puck possession machine in the QMJHL, aggressive in his pursuit of the puck and strong on his protection of the puck once he has it. The offense of his line runs through him and that is how he is most effective. He provides a very good option and outlet in the offensive zone, and plays a good decoy to set off offensive plays if needed. As well, he is defensively-responsible. He backchecks and does well in pursuit. His agility helps keep him on pace and pick up ground as needed on the defensive side. His gaps are good coming back, and he identifies and picks up his man on the rush well. Grade: 55

Physicality: Rubtsov has great size for a finesse player; but he will not be a checker at the next level. To his benefit, he also rarely takes penalties, making him more effective since he can play more minutes. Having said that, he does not shy away from the physical game. He takes his lumps and can be a bit of a pest, which keeps him engaged in the game and keeps opponents off of theirs. He is no Brad Marchand, but a little edge to his game looks good on the whole and will fit in very well in the City of Brotherly Love. Grade: 50

Summary: German Rubtsov received a lot of flack for being the most recognizable player on the Russian team that was banned for meldonium use prior to the 2016 U18 Worlds. With that behind him, he had a well-traveled and injury-plagued year last season between Russia and Chicoutimi. Visa issues and a broken wrist that eventually needed surgery ended his campaign last year before the playoffs, where he could have been a breakout star on a Saguenéens team that went to the final four. He played as long as he could with the wrist issue, until he could not hold his stick anymore, which is when he finally sought out treatment. This season is big for Rubtsov’s development, and he was just traded to the Acadie-Bathurst Titan, a team poised to make a President’s Cup run of their own. He will make up half of a very effective one-two finesse punch down the middle along with Anaheim Ducks prospect Antoine Morand and will fit in very well with a dynamic and deep forward group on the north shore of New Brunswick. Rubtsov could be a favourite to make his rookie season debut with the Flyers next season. His game seems more suited to be played off his strong-side wing on the left side, rather than down the middle.

Overall Future Projection (OFP): 56.75

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Philadelphia – System Overview https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/philadelphia-system-overview/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/philadelphia-system-overview/#respond Thu, 14 Sep 2017 07:32:34 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=131566 Read More... from Philadelphia – System Overview

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To paraphrase an old axiom from the days of legitimate voter fraud, the Philadelphia Flyers draft early and draft often. With 28 selections over the last three draft classes, including two top ten selections, the Flyers have rebuilt a system that had been lackluster at best and now ranks as one of the deepest and most impressive in the game.

Even with two of the better players of those three drafts already bonafide NHLers, this system has players for every position and every role. There are seven forwards who can all lay some claim to having top six upside. That is not to say that they will force out the dynamic NHL duo of Claude Giroux and Jakub Voracek, but they will add significant breadth to the Flyers’ attack once they are ready to produce. The backhalf of the top ten – and looking deeper than them as well – has many more forwards who have games well suited for bottom six roles.

Looking at the blueline, and considering that the Flyers already have an awesome pair of young ones who have already graduated in Shayne Gostisbehere and Ivan Provorov, there is much more on the way. Near the top of this list there are two – Philippe Myers and Travis Sanheim – who both have second pairing upside and look relatively near to being ready. Further down the list, we rank two other defenders who have NHL upside, but players like Robert Hagg or David Bernhardt, who would likely have fit into many other organizational top 20s, also could play in the NHL in some role.

Even with the above, it almost feels silly to suggest that the blueline might be the weakest positional area in the system. The players are good, some very good, but it is true that the Flyers are not deep in blueliners who have not yet graduated to NHL roles.

Finally, that leaves us with the goaltending. The Flyers, always known for being a goalie graveyard, have stockpiled goalie after goalie, trusting the eye of their GM, himself a longtime NHL netminder, to pick ones with high-end potential. Even though the team does not have an incumbent of great standing for the top level, it is rather difficult to say with any certainty which of their prospects is the heir-apparent, or even which is most ready to break through. We ranked Carter Hart ahead of Felix Sandstrom in the rankings, but there was very little space between the two.

Anthony Stolarz has looked sharp in limited NHL action, but if push came to shove, we would not bet too much cash that if the Flyers had a long term need at the position this year, they would not call up Alex Lyon instead. Beyond that, it would not be totally surprising if any of their other three netminders – Matej Tomek, Kirill Ustimenko, or Ivan Fedotov – eventually emerges as the best NHL player, although it is reasonable to note for now that they are all further away.

Patrick Nolan of the Brandon Wheat Kings, photo by
Patrick Nolan of the Brandon Wheat Kings, photo by

1 Nolan Patrick – Favored to be the 2017 first overall pick since before the 2016 draft, Patrick lost nearly half of his draft season to groin and shoulder injuries and still had many expecting him to go first overall. The Flyers did not mind one bit when he dropped to second. A strong, big-game player, he had the highest hockey IQ of anyone in the draft. Skating, shooting, and puck skills are also all high end. Assuming health, he should be able to step right into a middle six role with the Flyers, and has first line upside.

2 Travis Sanheim – The former first round pick had a solid, if unspectacular first full season with Lehigh Valley of the AHL. A good two-way defenseman who is just as comfortable quarterbacking a power play as he is guarding the slot on the penalty kill, he has fantastic puck skills for a blueliner. Could stand to be more aggressive in his own zone, but has enough of a well-rounded skill set coupled with above average hockey IQ that his path to the NHL should not be long.

3 Philippe Myers – One of the best underdog stories of recent prospect lore. Myers was undrafted in his first year of eligibility, despite great size, due to poor production (8 points in 60 games). He impressed in rookie camp and earned an ELC from Philadelphia, going back to the Q to reward the Flyers for their faith, he finished his junior career as a point-per-game defender. Between his size, hockey sense, awareness, and poise on the puck, he looks like a future second pairing option.

4 German Rubtsov – After suffering a facial injury playing for Russia at the WJC, Rubtsov elected to stay in North America and spent the rest of his first post-draft season with Chicoutimi in the QMJHL. He acclimated very quickly to the CHL game, especially considering the injury situation. He has great offensive instincts and is very creative. Plays with some sandpaper that allows him to play bigger than his size. Has magic in his hands.

5 Isaac Ratcliffe – A raw, physical specimen, Ratcliffe combines ideal power forward size with burgeoning puck skills with the willingness and ability to be effective in front of the net. While his draft year numbers do not leap off the page, it is important to remember that he was playing on a horrible Guelph team. He is a solid skater, but can be inconsistent in his pace. Shows strong anticipation and soft hands. His ceiling is very high.

6 Oskar Lindblom – The former fifth round pick continued to take big strides in his development in his third full season in the SHL, leading Brynas in scoring. He is excellent with the puck along the boards and around the crease and does a great job of finding soft spots in coverage for himself or his teammates. Paired with a skilled center, he has enough complementary skills to be a strong option on a second line in the NHL. May get that chance this year.

7 Wade Allison – After emerging as if out of nowhere in his draft year at Tri City of the USHL, Allison continued to play his game without a hitch as a freshman at Western Michigan. Playing a power forward game, he stays heavily involved in all three zones. He has enough speed in his hands and feet to draw penalties and can contribute to the offense as a shooter or creating for others on the cycle. Could stand to cut down on the penalties caused by his aggressive style.

8 Morgan Frost – Somewhat of a surprise as a first round pick this year, Frost has three main selling points in his skating speed, his puck skills, and his hockey intelligence. A heads-up player who earns his keep on both sides of the puck, he is already a reliable penalty killer. When he is on the ice, the puck is generally glued to his stick until he is ready to move it along. He will need to increase in strength and round out his game more, but he has the building blocks for a good middle six forward.

9 Carter Hart – If you like Hart, he is one of the better goaltending prospects in the game. If you have doubts, you point to the extreme defensive system employed by Everett as an aid to his stellar WHL numbers. Only moderately sized for a modern netminder, he makes up for it with great athleticism, reassuring calmness in net and excellent ability to read the play and track the puck. He has one more year of WHL eligibility before he will turn pro.

10 Felix Sandstrom – If not for Hart, Sandstrom would get a lot more attention in the Flyers’ system, especially after improving his numbers across the board in the second season with Brynas of the SHL as well as a strong showing in his second WJC. Above average across the board, he is not a goalie who can carry a team on his back, but he will also not let his mates down if they play solidly in front of him. He will continue his development next year in Sweden.

11 Jordan Weal – Undersized and quicker than he is fast, Weal was finally given a chance to take his game to the NHL last year after proving that he could score at a point-per-game pace in the AHL. 8 goals in 23 NHL games suggest that he is more than a dreaded 4A player and he is in line for a full season with the Flyers, likely on the second line. He has very impressive puck skills and a keen understanding of the flow of the game.

12 Pascal Laberge – Laberge maintains a spot in the solid middle of the Flyers deep prospect list as he still flashed high end offensive potential in a season fraught by concussions and off-ice issues outside his control. He has very soft hands, and is a shifty skater who can change directions in a flash to deke out defenders and netminders. He sees the ice very well in the offensive zone and is as strong shooting as he is setting up others. Look for a big bounce-back campaign.

13 Anthony Stolarz – As difficult as it would seem to trap a 6-6” netminder, Stolarz is trapped. From below, the Flyers have drafted, among others, Carter Hart and Felix Sandstrom since using a second round pick on Stolarz in 2012. That duo is earmarked for the future. From above, Brian Elliott and Michal Neuvirth are both signed to multi-year NHL deals. Stolarz, who has an impressive combination of compete and play reading ability is effectively trapped.

14 Samuel Morin – The first thing that stands out when watching Samuel Morin is..well, Samuel Morin. He is huge. 6-6”, and broad as well. The former first round pick is strong on his feet, which is especially impressive at his size, but has been slow to develop. His offensive game is very limited and he does not play as aggressive a game as you want to see from a player of his stature. At his best, he is safe and intelligent. At his worst, he is 6-6”.

15 Mike Vecchione – One of the prize NCAA free agents of the year, Vecchione was both a key contributor to Union’s surprise NCAA championship team in his freshman season and the team captain for the past two years. A fast skater who was dynamic offensively was a faceoff ace as well. Although not tall, he is stocky and incredibly strong. He may not have the impact of former teammate Shayne Gostisbehere, but he will be an asset in Philadelphia.

16 Tanner Laczynski – A somewhat surprising inclusion in Team USA’s gold medal winning WJC squad, Taczynski had a very strong freshman season with Ohio State. Showing more willingness to shoot the puck, he is still stronger and more effective when stickhandling and looking to set-up a teammate. Not the best skater, he has nevertheless improved since his time in the USHL. Only one year on, he is already looking like a sixth round steal for the Flyers.

17 Taylor Leier – A relative anomaly in a system chock-full of players with as-yet-untapped potential, Leier is what he is. A strong secondary scorer with Lehigh Valley, he succeeds through his unrelenting aggression in all three zones. He has done well enough in callups to the NHL on both of the last two seasons and should see more NHL time this year. Strong enough defensively to play on the PK.

18 Mikhail Vorobyov – One of the biggest surprises for Team Russia at the last WJC, Vorobyov was everywhere, seemingly picking up an assist on every second goal his nation scored. A strong puck mover, his most notable traits are his hockey IQ/vision and his physical game. He has above-average size and uses it effectively to ensure he can play wherever he wants to. The Flyers signed him to an ELC after his first full KHL season ended and he will spend this season with Lehigh Valley.

19 Nicolas Aube-Kubel – After a stellar junior career with Val-d’Or, Aube-Kubel struggled mightily in his first full AHL campaign. He is still a very good skater and was very consistently reliable away from the puck, demonstrating good hockey sense, but the best that could be said of his ability to impact the game offensively was that there were flashes. We will be looking to see more out of him in his follow-up season.

20 Mark Friedman – An offensively inclined blueliner, Friedman is a strong skater who looks strong when beginning to rush the puck out of his zone thanks to his plus acceleration. He plays a physical game despite being undersized and has improved that aspect of his game by dint of taking fewer minor infractions. Does not have the shot to profile as a serious power play QB, but moves the puck around well enough to play there for the second unit.

Despite avoiding blueliners in the draft for the past two years, the Philadelphia Flyers still have strength at all positions in their system. Further adding to their case for the top tier of systems in the league is that their talent will arrive in multiple waves, with some ready now, some needing another year of development in the AHL and some who are further down the road, but no less bright for the distance.

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