[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
At this stage, it looks like the fight for the final playoff seed in the East will come down to Detroit and Washington, but the Islanders (29-25-15), New Jersey (34-32-5), Buffalo (33-33-5) and even Pittsburgh (30-29-9) all have an outside chance of squeaking into the playoffs. Would it be shocking if, say, the Penguins earned a postseason berth? Absolutely, but it’s at least a mathematic possibility at the time of writing.
The final wild-card slot in the Western Conference is slightly more secure. Vegas (37-25-7) has a four-point edge over St. Louis (37-30-3) and a five-point lead over Minnesota (34-28-8) despite playing in one game less than either team. The Golden Knights likely still need to be solid down the stretch to secure their playoff berth, but at least they have a bit of breathing room.
The Blues and Wild are Vegas’ only real competition, but there is still an outside chance of a Cinderella story involving Calgary (33-30-5) or Seattle (28-28-12).
The Golden Knights still also have a path to earn the third seed in the Pacific Division over Los Angeles (36-22-11), though I’d almost say it doesn’t matter. Getting the third seed would put the Golden Knights on track to face Edmonton in the first round instead of Winnipeg, Colorado, Dallas or Vancouver. All five of those potential adversaries are great, so Vegas will have a tough first round either as a wild-card team or as the third seed in the Pacific Division.
Either way, the battle for the last playoff spots should be fun.

Anaheim is set to play on the road all of next week. They have back-to-back contests against Seattle on Tuesday and Thursday, followed by games in Edmonton on Saturday and Vancouver on Sunday. It’s certainly not an easy schedule, especially on the back half, but the Ducks are one of the few teams scheduled to play four games, so they’re still worthy of mention.
Trevor Zegras hasn’t been in the lineup since Jan. 9 because of an ankle injury, but he has been able to resume practicing without restriction, which suggests that he’s close to returning. After exceeding the 60-point milestone in each of his previous two campaigns, he has just four goals and seven points in 20 outings this year. There’s a good chance he’ll at least be able to finish the year on a positive note, but regardless of what happens, it’s important you remember him for next season’s fantasy drafts. The 23-year-old forward should enjoy a comeback campaign, provided he gets better luck on the injury front.
The 2024-25 campaign should also be one of progress for Leo Carlsson, who has recorded nine goals and 24 points in 43 games as a rookie this season. In the meantime, though, he suffered a lower-body injury Thursday, so his status for next week’s contests is undetermined. If he can’t play then Isac Lundestrom might serve in a top-six capacity, but honestly rather than that be an opportunity for Lundestrom, it would just highlight the sorry state of the Ducks. The 24-year-old has just six points (four goals) in 34 contests this year and likely won’t do much offensively even if he moves up to the second line.
At least they have goaltender Lukas Dostal, who has done alright lately, posting a 2.69 GAA and a .916 save percentage over his past eight games. That’s worlds better than John Gibson’s 5.80 GAA (yes, really) and .833 save percentage in his past four outings. Given the disparity in their play, Dostal should get the majority of the remaining starts.
The Sabres are likely to miss the playoffs for the 13th consecutive campaign, extending their record for the longest postseason drought in NHL history. However, they still have an outside shot of squeaking into the playoffs. In order to keep that hope alive, they’ll likely need to win all three of their contests against Ottawa on Wednesday, New Jersey on Friday and Toronto on Saturday. It’s a tall order, but at least the Sabres will have the home-ice advantage in all those games.
With Buffalo’s postseason hopes all but dashed, Jeff Skinner will likely have to wait even longer to make his first playoff appearance. The 31-year-old is approaching 1,000 career regular-season contests. This hasn’t been his best campaign, but Skinner has been alright with 24 goals and 45 points in 63 outings. He also earned his seventh career hat trick Monday when he led Buffalo in its 6-2 victory over Seattle.
Tage Thompson is surely hoping he won’t have to wait nearly as long as Skinner to get into the playoffs. However, if Thompson had played like he did in 2022-23 (47 goals, 94 points), perhaps the Sabres’ fortunes would have been different this campaign. Instead, he’s been alright, but not great with 21 goals and 43 points through 60 outings. The 27-year-old might end the season on a positive note, though. He’s on a four-game scoring streak in which Thompson has provided a goal and six points.
Meanwhile, Bowen Byram is just 22, but his name is already on the Cup thanks to his time with the Avalanche. Now a member of the Sabres, Byram is playing a prominent role and has taken advantage of that opportunity. He’s recorded three goals, six points, 17 blocks and 17 hits in eight contests while averaging 23:53 of ice time. Byram has even averaged a healthy 2:39 with the man advantage as a member of the Sabres, though the presence of Rasmus Dahlin and Owen Power means the fight for power-play ice time will always be fierce among Buffalo defensemen.
This will mark the Blue Jackets’ fourth straight season without a playoff berth. Nothing they do now will alter the fact that it’s been a rough campaign, but they can at least end things on a positive note. It helps that they’ll be facing other non-playoff teams next week – they’ll play in Arizona on Tuesday, in Pittsburgh on Thursday and then host the Penguins on Saturday.
Johnny Gaudreau isn’t the reason Columbus will be missing the playoffs, though it is true he hasn’t lived up to expectations. His 55 points (11 goals) through 69 outings, would mark the lowest point-per-game pace of his career if the season ended now. However, Gaudreau has contributed a goal and six points in his past four contests, so the stage is set for him to finish the campaign on a positive note.
The same might be true of Alexander Nylander, who has eight goals and 11 points in 13 contests since being acquired by Columbus from Pittsburgh. The 26-year-old forward was held off the scoresheet in his previous two games, and it’s reasonable for fantasy managers to wonder if this is the right time to jump ship, especially because he doesn’t have a track record of success beyond his recent stretch. Personally, I recommend waiting a little longer though to see if his production picks up again. Keep in mind, Nylander is being utilized on the Blue Jackets’ top line and first power-play unit, which are roles that he hasn’t enjoyed for any noteworthy stretch until now, so there might be more to his production than a mere hot streak. I’m not saying that his new role has transformed him into a superstar, but he might still do well enough to be fantasy relevant the rest of the way.
Daniil Tarasov might have value going forward too. The 24-year-old has been subpar in 2023-24 with a 7-9-3 record, 3.20 GAA and .903 save percentage across 20 appearances, but he’s been far better dating back to Feb. 21, posting a 2.30 GAA and .934 save percentage over nine games. His strong play has led to the Blue Jackets increasingly using him over Elvis Merzlikins.
Ottawa will begin next week with a breather before playing in Buffalo on Wednesday. The Senators will then host Chicago on Thursday and play in Winnipeg on Saturday. Like Ottawa, the Sabres and Blackhawks are having campaigns and aren’t expected to make the playoffs (Chicago has been mathematically eliminated while Buffalo has just a fringe chance of a wild-card spot), so those are two winnable games.
Ottawa is in a four-way tie for 28th defensively with 3.59 goals per game despite having an xGA/60 of 2.94, which ties the Senators for 11th overall. Those two stats in combination suggest is Ottawa’s defense is underrated and has been made to look bad this year due to poor goaltending. A case could be made that Joonas Korpisalo has been this year’s worst starter, ranking last in Goals Saved Above Expected at minus-19.4. In terms of his base stats line, he has a 15-21-4 record, 3.37 GAA and .887 save percentage in 44 contests. While it would be an oversimplification to say that Ottawa isn’t making the playoffs because of Korpisalo, it is fair to say that his terrible play has been a key factor.
Unfortunately, it seems the Senators overvalued his strong 2022-23 campaign when they inked Korpisalo to a five-year contract. While he had a Goals Saved Above Expected of 12.7 last season, he finished in the negatives in each campaign from 2017-18 through 2021-22, so performing below average relative to the team in front of him appears to be the norm for Korpisalo rather than the exception. This is all to say that if you’re looking for the 29-year-old goaltender to rebound in 2024-25, you’re making a risky bet that likely won’t pay off.
Not that Anton Forsberg, who has a 12-12-0 record, 3.42 GAA and .885 save percentage in 25 outings in 2023-24, is good either. Forsberg is signed through 2024-25 at a cap hit of $2.75 million, so Ottawa might have this unfortunate duo again next year. If that’s the case, it’s hard to see them making the playoffs in 2024-25 either.
That’s unfortunate for Claude Giroux, who is 36 years old and consequently running out of chances to make another run at the Cup. If the direction of the Senators has been weighing on him, though, he hasn’t let that bleed into his game. He’s still provided a goal and five points over his past six contests, giving him 19 goals and 58 points through 68 outings overall. It wouldn’t be surprising to see the veteran finish the season on a high note. That should also be true of Brady Tkachuk, who has provided four goals and five points over his past four contests.
The goaltending clearly needs work, but with players like Giroux and Tkachuk leading the forward corps, at least that aspect of the Senators is strong.
The Flyers are set to play on the road against the Rangers on Tuesday and the Canadiens on Thursday before hosting the Blackhawks on Saturday. While the Rangers are a tough adversary, Philadelphia has a golden chance to collect four points against Montreal and Chicago as it looks to secure its playoff spot.
The biggest story in Philadelphia is coach John Tortorella scratching Sean Couturier for the Flyers’ 4-3 win over Toronto on Tuesday and 3-2 overtime loss to Carolina on Thursday. This comes after a stretch in which Couturier registered just three assists and had a minus-13 rating over 14 games from Feb. 15-March 19. He also has only six points (one goal) in his last 23 contests, undoing his solid start to the campaign -- 30 points (10 markers) through his first 41 appearances.
Maybe this time off will allow him to reset and come back stronger. He’ll certainly be a player to watch closely next week because when Couturier’s at his best, he’s a strong top-line option.
In the meantime, Owen Tippett has been leading the Flyers’ attack. He has three goals and eight points over his past five games, bringing him up to 25 goals and 46 points through 66 outings this year. The 25-year-old is just two goals and three points shy of his career highs.
Morgan Frost is also on a five-game scoring streak, totaling three goals and seven points in that span. He hasn’t had an amazing campaign overall (12 goals and 38 points in 59 games), but the 24-year-old has been centering the top line and serving on the first power-play unit during Couturier’s absence. Given how well he’s done in that role, Frost might continue to feature prominently even after Couturier slides back into the lineup.
The Penguins have faded out of the playoff picture at this point and things aren’t going to get any easier when they host the Hurricanes on Tuesday. The silver lining is Pittsburgh does have a home-and-away series against the lowly Blue Jackets, which will take place Thursday and Saturday, respectively.
Michael Bunting, who Pittsburgh acquired from Carolina in the Jake Guentzel trade, seems to be settling in with his new team. He’s on a three-game scoring streak and has recorded a point in four of his last five contests, totaling two goals and two assists in that span. He’s seeing time on the top power-play unit and alongside Evgeni Malkin at even strength, so Bunting seems set to have a solid finish to the campaign.
Bryan Rust is looking to finish on a high note too. He’s been limited to 48 games this season due to injury, but he has been effective when healthy with 21 goals and 41 points. The 31-year-old has done particularly well recently, providing three goals and five points across his last four contests.
Lastly, while it doesn’t have fantasy relevance, you might want to pay attention to Jeff Carter. The 39-year-old is dealing with an upper-body issue, but when he returns, he’ll likely be playing out the last games of his career. While it’s possible he’ll pursue a new contract once his present one expires this summer, he likely won’t find any takers. He’s been held to nine goals and 12 points in 61 outings this campaign. Still, Carter has had a storied career, scoring 440 goals in 1,310 career games and playing a significant role in Los Angeles’ Stanley Cup victories in 2012 and 2014.
Seattle will start the week with a pair of favorable home matchups against the lowly Ducks on Tuesday and Thursday. After that two-game series, the Kraken will host the Stars on Saturday.
Vince Dunn hasn’t played since March 4 due to an upper-body injury, and he doesn’t appear to be close to returning. He’s been a key offensive defenseman for the Kraken this campaign, providing 11 goals and 45 points in 57 games. Due to Dunn’s absence, Brian Dumoulin has seen an uptick in even-strength minutes, while Ryker Evans was summoned from AHL Coachella Valley and has received a power-play role.
Evans has done decently during Dunn’s absence, recording three assists -- all with the man advantage -- in the last seven games. He’s also played with a physical edge, accumulating eight PIM and 16 hits in the same span. Once Dunn returns, Evans might lose his spot in the lineup, but it wouldn’t be surprising to see him continue to make those kinds of contributions until Dunn’s back.
Seattle’s forward corps hasn’t done great this campaign and Seattle’s attack has been particularly lackluster recently, totaling just five goals in four games from March 14-21. Still, Oliver Bjorkstrand has been a rare bright spot with a goal and three points during that stretch. He also has five goals and eight points over his last 11 contests to put his cold spell from Jan. 30-Feb. 24 (one assist in eight outings) well behind him.
As poor as the Kraken’s offense has been, Anaheim has done even worse, ranking 30th offensively with just 2.49 goals per game. It wouldn’t be surprising to see goaltenders Philipp Grubauer and Joey Daccord split the two-game set against the Ducks, and both netminders would be a good play versus Anaheim.
The Golden Knights are one of the few teams set to play four games next week, though they’ll be on the road for that stretch. They’ll play in St. Louis on Monday, Nashville on Tuesday, Winnipeg on Thursday and Minnesota on Saturday. It’s not the easiest schedule, but the Golden Knights’ hold on the second wild-card spot is loose, so they’ll need to find a way to win a good chunk of those contests.
Their pursuit of a playoff berth has been complicated by Adin Hill, who has struggled mightily with a 3.90 GAA and an .872 save percentage over his last seven games. By contrast, Logan Thompson has saved 41 of 43 shots (.953 save percentage) over his last two contests, so it wouldn’t be surprising to see Vegas pivot to Thompson, at least in the short term. Earlier in the campaign, the Golden Knights might have been more open to riding out Hill’s cold spell in the hopes that he’d rebound, but they don’t really have that luxury at this stage.
In terms of offense, it’s been defenseman Shea Theodore who has led the charge. The 28-year-old has collected 15 assists in 14 outings since returning from an upper-body injury. That’s propelled him to four goals and 33 points across 34 outings in 2023-24. Theodore has missed significant portions of the last two campaigns due to injury, but he would likely breach the 50-point milestone for the second time in his career if he manages to stay healthy next season.
Meanwhile, blueliner Noah Hanifin seems to be settling in fine with Vegas. He has four assists, a plus-3 rating, 10 blocks and 10 hits in seven contests since being acquired from the Flames. Hanifin’s also averaging 22:09 of ice time with Vegas, though he’s only on the second power-play unit, which limits his offensive potential a bit.
]]>Trevor Zegras
One of the most exciting players in the league, the 21-year-old center exudes creativity when he is on the ice, regularly attempting – and succeeding – lacrosse-style goals, making between the legs shots and passes and that makes him highly marketable. It also earned him an invite to All-Star Weekend, just so he could put on a show, but for all of his audacity with the puck, Zegras can still develop a more complete game as he moves towards his peak years. One notable area for improvement is in the faceoff circle, as he won just 39.9% of his draws last season. Zegras was the runner-up in Rookie of the Year voting after scoring 61 points in 75 games, finishing the season with 17 points in his last 18 games, and he is going to be expected to carry a big portion of the offensive load for Anaheim, at least when it comes to playmaking. While it would be tempting to envision Zegras as a premier scorer as soon as this season, he is not there yet, so 70 points would still be a strong output in his second full NHL season.

Troy Terry
The skilled winger erupted for a career-high 37 goals and 67 points in 2021-2022, having never scored more than 20 points in any previous season. He is not likely to continue scoring on more than 19% of his shots, as he did last season, but Terry did increase his shot volume and that offers a more sustainable path to increased production. Terry has remarkably few hits – 18 in 204 career games – and yet has established his credentials as both a finisher and a quality two-way winger. The biggest challenge might be finding the same kind of chemistry that he had with the now-retired center Ryan Getzlaf. Terry is a fascinating case when it comes to projections because last season’s scoring was so far beyond anything that he had done before in the NHL, yet he was scoring at an impressive clip in college and the American Hockey League, before reaching the NHL It’s reasonable to suspect that he will not score 37 goals and 67 points, but how far will he regress? 55-60 points seems a reasonable range.
Adam Henrique
Even though he has won at least 55.0% of his faceoffs in each of the past three seasons, Henrique has been playing more on the wing at this point in his career. The 32-year-old is a five-time 20-goal scorer who tallied 19 goals in 58 games last season. His 2.43 shots on goal per game last season was a career high. The veteran forward has improved his ability to drive play in recent seasons and he is an above average finisher, scoring on better than 15% of his shots on goal over the course of his career and never recording a full season with a shooting percentage under 12%. Henrique’s name lands in trade rumors quite a bit but the Ducks have plenty of reason to keep a proven veteran scorer to help ease the pressure on their younger talent. Even if Henrique could contribute 20 goals and 40 points that would have some value.
Ryan Strome
Signed as a free agent to anchor the Ducks’ second line, Strome is coming off the third season of his career during which he recorded at least 50 points, and he had a career-high 21 goals. He struggles in the faceoff circle, winning 45.3% of draws for his career. Strome has enjoyed his greatest success when skating on a line with star winger Artemi Panarin, and it might be difficult to find that kind of talent on the Ducks roster. Strome, 29, is not especially fast or strong, so he stands out with a heady approach to the game and solid playmaking. Strome might find it difficult to score as much in Anaheim, without having a star like Artemi Panarin on his wing, but a 45-point season should still be within his reach.
Frank Vatrano
Although he fell out of the Florida Panthers’ lineup last season, Vatrano thrived upon being traded to the New York Rangers, scoring eight goals and 13 points with 56 shots on goal in 22 games. The 28-year-old winger has been a strong shot generator for much of his career and while the sturdy winger is not the fastest skater, he is also not afraid to bang bodies on the forecheck and go to the high traffic areas necessary to get scoring chances. Vatrano should find a spot in Anaheim’s top six, which will provide an opportunity that is practically unprecedented in his career for him to play significant minutes and continue putting pucks on net. While Vatrano was with the Rangers last season, he played 71:30 with Ryan Strome during 5-on-5 play and the results were disastrous, including 34.2% Corsi and 36.2% of expected goals. Vatrano has never scored 40 points in an NHL season and that may not change this season, but he should be counted on to contribute 15-20 goals.
Isac Lundestrom
Although the 22-year-old has taken some time to establish his credentials as a full-time NHL player, he did have something of a breakthrough season in 2021-2022, scoring a career high 16 goals and 29 points. Some of that production was inflated by Lundestrom scoring on a career high 19.3% of his shots on goal, but it was a sign of progress and Lundestrom has room to improve offensively. Defensively, he is mature beyond his years and is already a reliable checking center, though like other Ducks centers, Lundestrom struggles in the faceoff dot, winning 45.0% of his faceoffs throughout his career. As the Ducks embark on a rebuilding process, Lundestrom’s development as a third-line center ought to be a priority. Maybe Lundestrom’s shooting percentage will fall, and his track record indicates that there is a definite ceiling on how much he will score, but he could still challenge for 30 points with some positive regression related to his on-ice shooting percentage.
Maxime Comtois
A power forward who has some skill and is eager to play a physical role, Comtois is coming off a down season in which his ice time, goal and point production all collapsed. It was a surprising development after he had 33 points in 55 games the year before. The 23-year-old was substantially better in 2020-2021, going hard to the net and finding soft spots in the defense so that he would be in scoring position. He opened the 2021-2022 season with zero points in his first 11 games and the season never really got on track after that because Comtois’ ice time was cut, and he was left scrambling as he tried to catch up. He has shown that he can be a contributor at this level, but he is now in the position of trying to recapture that early career success, so there is some element of pressure on him going into the 2022-2023 season. If Comtois can stay in the lineup, he could contribute 15 goals and 30-plus points and he has the tools to provide even more if he finds the right fit in the Ducks lineup.
Jakob Silfverberg
A blood clot limited the 31-year-old winger to 53 games last season, and he managed just five goals, scoring on a career-low 4.2% of his shots on goal. Throughout his career, Silfverberg has been a reliable shot generator who has four 20-goal seasons to his credit. Combined with a quality defensive game, he has been a solid middle six winger for close to a decade, playing at least 16:57 per game for seven straight seasons, but his offensive production has started to wane, and health has become more of an issue in recent seasons. On a young Ducks squad, however, there should be a role for a healthy Silfverberg, but considering how his past two seasons have gone, don’t expect more than 30 points.
Max Jones
A torn pectoral muscle meant that Jones saw action in just two games last season, which was not ideal for his development, but the 24-year-old has shown that he can be an effective depth winger, albeit one that has managed 28 points in 137 career games. From the Ducks’ perspective, they would like to get Jones healthy and then maybe find out if he has enough skill to hold a role in the top nine. He has played 13:56 per game in his career but the lack of production in those minutes suggests that Jones still has something to prove if he is going to receive that much ice time. So far, his top end is a dozen points in a season so if he could produce 20 points and stay healthy, that would have to be considered progress. Jones can be a physical presence – he has 184 hits in 107 games over the past three seasons – and he will fight, too, but if his career is going to have any staying power, he needs to stay healthy and contribute something offensively.
John Klingberg
Following a disappointing offseason in which he could not find a suitable long-term contract as a free agent, the 30-year-old right-handed power play quarterback signed a one-year, $7 million contract with the Ducks, which feels a lot like a make-good deal for a blueliner who still generates offense at an elite level, but whose defensive play has declined in recent seasons. Klingberg has played more than 22 minutes per game for seven consecutive seasons and has 97 power play points since 2017-2018, which ranks seventh among NHL defensemen. He should give the Ducks power play a boost this season, at least until he gets shopped to a contender before the trade deadline, and if he produces 45 points that would set Klingberg up to cash in as a free agent next summer.
Cam Fowler
A reliable veteran defenseman who is not outstanding at any one thing but does a lot of things well and that makes him a legit top pair defenseman. Fowler scored a career high 42 points last season, thanks in part to 18 points on the power play, his most with the man advantage since scoring 23 power play points as a rookie in 2010-2011. He has matured into a quality player and the 30-year-old defenseman is the one player that the Ducks were willing to invest in long term. For a young team that is almost assuredly going to make its share of mistakes, Fowler’s steady hand is essential. Klingberg’s arrival is likely to reduce Fowler’s impact on the power play, but he should still be able to provide 35 points in addition to his defensive value.
Kevin Shattenkirk
The 33-year-old right-shot defenseman can still move the puck and last season’s 35 points was his most since 2016-2017. However, his defensive performance also declined last season and the overall results with Shattenkirk on the ice were not as strong as they have been in the past. He has never been a bruiser on the back end, but Shattenkirk did record a career-high 135 blocked shots last season, a slightly different contribution from a player whose reputation has been built on strong play driving results and effective work on the power play. His offensive contributions may be sliding at this point, but Shattenkirk could still find his way to 30 points, a threshold he has reached eight times in his career.
Jamie Drysdale
A brilliant skater and dynamic puck moving defenseman, the 20-year-old still has room to grow and will need a more well-rounded game if he is going to maximize his impact. Nevertheless, even with some defensive shortcomings, Drysdale showed some positive signs in his second NHL season and given his age his career ascent should continue. With the Ducks bringing in Klingberg, they can be patient with the sixth pick in the 2020 Draft. Drysdale’s development does not need to be rushed in the short term, so maybe he scores 35-plus points, a little improvement on his rookie season, but not necessarily the explosion that could come in another year or two. Ideally, for the Ducks, his play without the puck will get steadier, too.
John Gibson
The underlying numbers for a few years now have been warning the Anaheim Ducks that goaltender John Gibson, once capable of carrying the team’s success on his back, had finally reached a point where he needed a break. It took until this past season for the raw data to catch up – but sure enough, the Ducks will enter the 2022-23 season unsure of just what their goaltending can do to save them, a position they haven’t really found themselves in for just shy of a decade.
The biggest concern with Gibson is that it’s hard to tell whether he’s suffering from physical wear and tear or if he’s starting to simply mentally fatigue after so many years of facing high-volume shot loads behind the Anaheim defense. He’s always embodied an unhurried structure combined with a quick mental read of the game, economizing his movements and staying low and deep to goad shooters into thinking they’ve got an easy shot on net. It seemed like that worked for him, right up until it didn’t; over the last year, he looked less unhurried and more delayed in his cross-crease movements, and he lacked that extra level of explosive movement upon arrival in position to snag errant shots and take up space that shooters didn’t think he could. If that’s simply due to too much time spent playing a physically demanding position behind a team that wasn’t giving him much help, it seems reasonable to hope that he can bounce back with the team’s continued rebuild; if he’s struggling to stay sharp in reading his opponents because he’s hit his capacity after the last few years, it’s much harder to predict whether or not he can bounce back. His biggest struggles seemed to come with tracking quick cross-ice puck movement fast enough to get his body across the net upon a shot release, and in using his hands to stop shots without opening up holes around his torso; while he certainly wasn’t being given enough support to pin the year entirely on him, it was a noticeable enough slump that it’s worth wondering whether or not we’ve started to witness his decline. If that’s the case, that’s bad news for Anaheim – they’re hoping to take tangible steps forward in their rebuild efforts, and Gibson is still under contract for another four years after this one. That’s not a problem if he plateaus at merely good instead of elite – the team could always use him to guide a newcomer like Calle Clang or Lukas Dostal in the final years of his career – but if he continues to trend down, they’ll need to make a tough decision about what he still has in the tank and whether or not he’s still a good fit for the franchise.
Projected starts: 50-55
Anthony Stolarz
It’s a satisfying feeling to watch former Philadelphia Flyers prospect Anthony Stolarz really find his stride in the NHL for Anaheim, even as it feels tough to watch his tandem partner John Gibson struggle. Stolarz, a roller hockey-raised New Jersey native who wowed scouts when he burst onto the scene as a late bloomer with the London Knights a decade ago, proved in his first full season as an NHL backup that he was worth the wait; his .917 raw save percentage and .672 quality start percentage through a 28-game campaign for Anaheim were good enough to consider him one of the most underrated backups in the league. Now, he’ll be back to prove that he wasn’t just a flash in the pan; he’s signed through the season on an incredibly agreeable $950,000 contract to tandem with Gibson and hopefully help the Ducks look a little more promising in the tumultuous Pacific Division.
Stolarz is such a fascinating goaltender to watch because his late start is still so apparent in his style, which makes his natural talent all the more obvious to observers. He looms over opponents at a whopping 6-foot-6 and 243 pounds but doesn’t play deep in his net like most larger netminders; instead, he showcases a lot of natural agility challenging opponents and pushing across the crease with plenty of speed to make sprawling saves and flashy highlight-reel second stops. His lack of consistent, formal technique make it hard to feel confident that he’s got true starter potential, especially as NHL shooters start to figure him out; he remains a little too easy to goad into challenging the wrong man on the ice, leaving him forced to make desperation saves in moments where he probably could have gotten the job done in a much simpler way. But for the moment, he keeps his opponents guessing enough that he’s able to suss out what they want to do during their moments of hesitation. He doesn’t mind getting aggressive, either, which can force shooters in close to release shots too quickly in an attempt to keep the puck away from him; it’s a high-stress style to watch, but it may just be the energy and morale boost that the Ducks need while they let GIbson work his way back from a year that disappointingly looked just ‘okay’.
Projected starts: 25-30
]]>Later this year, the Seattle Kraken will officially become the 32nd NHL franchise when they select their team through their expansion draft. July 17 is the date set for NHL teams to submit their protected lists (with Vegas being exempt) and July 21 is the date set for the expansion draft itself. Of course, these dates could change depending on how the NHL season finishes up in the midst of a global pandemic. However, as of right now, that is when we will find out who will be wearing that Kraken jersey to start the 2021-22 season.
Naturally, Seattle general manager Ron Francis, assistant general manager Jason Botterill, and director of player personnel Norm Maciver will be aiming to replicate the success that Vegas had (and has continued to have). They have to reach the salary floor with their selections, so they will be choosing some veterans (or trading for/signing some) to lead this group. However, much like Vegas, they will be looking to swing for the fences with some selections, by opting for a few young, unestablished players. This article aims to highlight some of the prospects who could be (and are likely to be) left unprotected by their NHL teams come July. The focus is on players who have yet to truly establish themselves as NHL players. The list will be organized by position and published in two parts. This is the second feature on the forwards. Part one can be found by linking here.
FORWARDS
A strong two-way center, Asplund has had a hard time breaking through with the Sabres to become a full time NHL player. Even this year, he has seen time on the Sabres roster, on the taxi squad, and in the AHL with Rochester. He could certainly be a potential bottom six center target for the Kraken.
A big forward, Geekie has broken through as a full time NHL player to start the 2021 season after a successful cup of coffee last year. Playing on the fourth line and the powerplay, Geekie has yet to hit the score sheet this year. However, given Carolina’s forward depth, it seems unlikely that they will be able to protect him.
If there is one forward on this list that I see possibly being protected, it is Stenlund. He has proven himself to be a quality NHL forward after a half a season last year and a hot start this year. The question is, if Stenlund is protected, it means someone like Max Domi, Boone Jenner, or the injured Gustav Nyquist will not be. Columbus could also try to work out a deal with Seattle to make sure that they leave Stenlund be.
At this point, Borgstrom is probably a candidate for a change of scenery. The former University of Denver star got off to a good start in his pro career, but he has been unable to take that next step, with last year being a clear step backwards. As such, the Panthers loaned him to HIFK for the year. A talented playmaker, Borgstrom could be a great candidate for Seattle to select in hopes of unlocking his offensive potential.
A heavy winger, Bastian has improved every year as a pro thus far, finally making the Devils this season. He has played extremely well in a third line role and as a penalty killer. However, the Devils have a heck of a decision ahead of them for the expansion draft. Do they sacrifice Pavel Zacha in order to protect someone like Bastian or the others on this list?
Sharangovich got off to a hot start to the NHL season playing alongside Jack Hughes. While the offensive production hasn’t been consistent, he has certainly impressed in his first NHL season after starting the year in the KHL. An explosive goal scorer, the Devils may be reluctant to let him go given the energy and pace he plays with.
Like Bastian, Kuokkanen has emerged as a legitimate NHL player in his fourth pro season, excelling in the bottom six. The former London Knights standout and the key acquisition in the Sami Vatanen deal to Carolina, Kuokkanen is certainly someone who could draw the interest of Seattle.
Merkley, an intelligent and hard working playmaker, seems to be behind Bastian, Sharangovich, Kuokkanen, and Mikey McLeod (who I assumed the Devils would be protecting) in the pecking order. However, that does not mean that he lacks talent or NHL potential. Look for the Devils to try to rotate the above players in and out of the lineup in order to truly evaluate who they could be willing to lose.
Keiffer, the son of former NHL’er Brian Bellows, is a former high NHL draft pick whose high end goal scoring ability has yet to truly translate to terrific results at the pro level. Playing on the fourth line this year for the Isles, Bellows has yet to score this season. Given the forward depth that the Islanders have, it seems unlikely that Bellows will be able to be protected. If New York truly believes in his potential, they may try to look at a way to convince Seattle not to select him.
In the rare one for one prospect trade, the Rangers shipped Joey Keane to Carolina for Gauthier last season. The big, quick, physical winger has been a fixture on the Rangers’ fourth line to start this season, however it seems unlikely that he gets protected given the others New York must protect. One of Brendan Lemieux, Brett Howden, or Gauthier will likely get the nod with the other two being unprotected. How they finish the year will dictate who that is.
A dynamic offensive player, Abramov had a breakout season in Belleville last year that really gave management hope that his skill set could translate to the NHL level. However, it seems unlikely that Ottawa will be able to protect him and how he plays in the AHL this season will dictate whether Seattle has interest in him.
Chlapik split last season between Ottawa and Belleville, performing only adequately in a depth role. This season, he has bounced between the main roster, the taxi squad, and the AHL. A good sized playmaking center, Chlapik may not get his chance in Ottawa, but he could be a target of Seattle.
It is certainly possible that the Senators protect Brown. The former 11th overall pick has performed admirably in the AHL, but his play at the NHL level has been uninspiring thus far. A hulking center at 6’6, Brown needs to play more between the dots and use his size; a criticism dating back to his draft year.
A competitive and feisty forward, Aube-Kubel is a versatile player for the Flyers with the ability to play in any situation and any forward position. He has been in the Flyers system forever and is finally getting a chance to be a full time NHL player this season. However, it is unlikely that the Flyers will be able to protect him. He could be the perfect bottom six player for Seattle.
The first two seasons of Barre-Boulet’s pro career probably couldn’t have gone better considering he was an undrafted free agent acquisition by Tampa. He was the AHL rookie of the year two years ago and an AHL all star last year. But due to Tampa’s depth he remains buried in the minors again this year (where he has continued his torrid pace). The dilemma for Tampa Bay will be, do they protect a player who...as of now, has not shown an ability to translate his offensive skill set to the NHL?
Ahead of Barre-Boulet on the Tampa depth chart currently and the recipient of a roster spot thanks to the Kucherov injury, Volkov is a skilled winger that the Lightning have high hopes for. However, like many young players in their system, it is unlikely that they will be able to protect him.
A former high selection by the Lightning, Stephens was set to play full time this year as the Lightning’s fourth line center. However, he suffered a lower body injury early on and is sidelined for a few months. No longer waiver eligible, he likely will continue to have a spot when he returns but will it be enough for him to earn one of those valuable protection spots?
A high energy winger, Joseph was a standout as a rookie for the Lightning in 2018/19, however the acquisitions of players like Goodrow and Coleman pushed him to the minors for a large chunk of last season. Fast forward to this year and he has his place back in the Tampa lineup and is playing fantastic hockey. Does Tampa protect a younger player like Joseph (or others on this list) and risk a higher salaried player like Yanni Gourde, Alex Killorn, or Blake Coleman being selected?
A star in the OHL, Katchouk’s game has not translated to the AHL level as well as Tampa would have hoped thus far. Now in his third pro season, Katchouk will have to show that he can take that next step in his development as an offensive player before the Lightning consider him for a checking line role. He is definitely a potential candidate to be lost in the expansion draft and is also waivers eligible next year.
Another former OHL star, Raddysh has had similar difficulties translating his game to the AHL level. He has not been terrible, but the average offensive production hasn’t yet warranted a callup for the former Erie Otter. Ultimately, his lack of dynamic skating ability may hold him back from becoming a quality NHL player. However, if he plays well in his third AHL season this year, he could certainly attract attention from Seattle.
Acquired from the New Jersey Devils last year in exchange for Andreas Johnsson, Anderson has bounced back and forth between the NHL and the AHL the last three seasons. The former U.S. captain at the World Juniors, Anderson is a high energy, two-way forward who could definitely be an attractive, cheap target for Seattle as it is unlikely that Toronto protects him.
Already in his third pro season in North America despite being only 21 years old, the former first round selection has finally cracked the Anaheim Ducks roster full time this season. The two-way forward excels in defensive situations and on the penalty kill and could be a quality checking line option for the Kraken, with a chance to still improve offensively. William Karlsson part deux anyone?
His lack of size (5’7) is certainly a deterrent (even if the game has changed to accommodate smaller players), but Phillips is most definitely a talented offensive player. He was an AHL all star last season in his second AHL campaign. This year, he returns to the AHL with Stockton and should be among the league’s scoring leaders.
A terrific goal scorer and former OHL standout, Mascherin is entering his third AHL season, undoubtedly a huge one for his development. Thus far, the results have been great as he is among the league’s scoring leaders. At some point this year, it is likely that Dallas gives him a look if he continues to play well, as not only do they have to decide on who to protect for the expansion draft, but Mascherin is waiver eligible next year too.
The former first overall selection in the WHL bantam draft by the Vancouver Giants, Benson has come a long way since then. With two strong AHL seasons under his belt, Benson enters his third year with the hope that he can play well enough to earn a longer look at the NHL level in the event of an Oilers’ injury. It does seem unlikely that the Oilers will protect him from Seattle though.
A competitive, goal scoring center and the son of former NHL’er Lance Pitlick, Rem is expansion draft eligible even though he is only in his second professional season. This is due to the Predators burning a year of his ELC in 2019 when he signed out of Minnesota. He has started out the AHL season well and could earn a look from the Predators at some point this year to see if they will want to protect him.
Dahlen is a very interesting case. Acquired from Vancouver, Dahlen spent one year in the AHL before returning to Sweden where he has torched the Allsvenskan the last two seasons. The opinions vary about his standing as an NHL prospect, given he plays in the Swedish second league and not the SHL. Where he stands in the Sharks organization remains a mystery, but they will have to protect him from Seattle.
A free agent signing by the Sharks out of the WHL, True has played well in the AHL over the last three years. The Danish forward has seen some limited action in the NHL with mixed results, however his start to this AHL season has been terrific. It seems unlikely that San Jose protects him, but would Seattle consider him as a high upside pick?
Widely considered as one of San Jose’s top forward prospects, Letunov is a huge center (6’4) and a former second round selection. He played very well in the AHL last season and has been on the San Jose taxi squad so far this season. At some point this year, San Jose is going to have to give him more than the three games they gave him last year, especially given their struggles as a team.
One of the players traded to Ottawa in the Erik Karlsson trade, Balcers was reacquired by the Sharks earlier this season off waivers. He has proven to be a capable offensive player in the AHL during his career but has not yet taken that step forward to become an NHL player. San Jose is going to give him a serious look this year, along with some other young forwards. It seems likely that Seattle could have more interest in the other Sharks on this list, but who knows how Balcers finishes the season.
A former high selection of the Canucks, Lind has steadily improved in each of his AHL seasons thus far. The big, physical winger currently is among the AHL’s leading goal scorers this year and will likely earn a look from Vancouver at some point this season if he continues to play well. Do the Canucks protect him over disappointing talents like Jake Virtanen or Adam Gaudette?
*Special thanks to the capfriendly expansion draft tool which helped to identify those players who are eligible to be selected.
]]>
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) |
This article is our final top 20 ranking of the Anaheim Duck Prospects and will be included in our McKeen's 2020-21 NHL Yearbook releasing on December 4th. For an overview of the Ducks prospect system prior to the NHL Draft please refer to Ryan Wagman's article here You can also read the review of their Draft performance versus the McKeen's final rankings here
Trevor Zegras makes everything look effortless. The forward spent two seasons with the USNTDP, winning a gold medal with the U.S. in the U17 WHC and a bronze in the U18 as souvenirs. This season he also played in the WJC, leading the tournament in assists with nine and was named as one of the U.S.’ top three players in the event. He also earned a spot on the Hockey East All-Rookie Team. Zegras entered Boston University as a true freshman and led the Terriers’ rookies in scoring. He is almost impossible to contain in the offensive zone and makes everything he does look easy with his excellent vision. One of his best assets is as a playmaker - he is an excellent passer and makes the puck float. He has quick hands and is always in the right place at the right time. On top of his preternatural passing ability, he is also an excellent scorer with a quick release on his shot that can fool goaltenders easily. The Ducks were suitably impressed and coaxed him off campus at the end of this first season. The NHL beckons. – JS
It was definitely a good year for the 5-11” defender from Toronto. Internationally, he captained Canada to a silver medal at the Hlinka/Gretzky Cup in the summer, and he played a regular role on route to gold at the WJC. With Erie in the OHL, Drysdale wore an ‘A’ and finished just under the point-per-game mark at 0.98, far and away the best mark by a U18 defender in the league. His skating ability is something to marvel at. Drysdale takes great routes to dump-ins and is able to transition from backward to forward stride so smoothly, rarely getting pinned in his own end. After retrieving, he takes only a few strides to hit full speed, dictating the pace. His mobility is also a huge asset working just inside the blueline, making forwards defending high look silly, allowing him to break down defensive coverage as others scramble to cover him. Drysdale also possesses terrific vision with the puck. In his own end, he always has his head up, looking up ice and can stretch the play with a breakout pass just as well as he can with his feet. – BO
Perreault has hit the 30 goal mark the last two seasons, including scoring 39 this year in only 57 games. A natural center, he has played primarily on the wing during his junior career and is a gifted goal scorer. He projects as a top six goal scorer at the NHL level because of the quality of his shot; easily one of the best in the recent draft class. He loves to work down low, especially with the man advantage. When given an inch, he will take a mile and is aggressive in bringing the puck closer to the slot to create a better shot angle. He routinely beats goaltenders clean up high because of his quick and deceptive release. Perreault also looks to set up on the wing for one-time opportunities, where he can unleash a quick, powerful, and accurate slap shot. His hands and puck skills are very good overall, and he can create his own scoring chances in transition by attacking the middle, beating defenders one on one. He has yet to fully develop an ability to utilize his speed to be a consistent weapon, often slowing down to make cuts or to re-evaluate his options. - BO
Dostal’s first full season with Ilves was a huge success story. He started the season somewhat slowly, but eventually performed at a very high level. The Czech netminder was given the Urpo Ylonen award as the league’s best goalie. He gave Ilves a chance to win every night. He is athletic with quick reactions and the ability to make the occasional desperation save. He moves quickly and effectively post to post and can make extension pad saves. He uses his stick and blocker well to deflect rebounds into the corner. He also traps pucks well into his body. He gets set quickly for initial shot attempts and reads shooters well. On high danger shots, he is often able to even anticipate shooters’ intentions and make the saves as needed. When the puck is dumped in, Dostal will go behind the net to stop the puck. He moves the puck to his teammates with firm and simple passes. Dostal is known as a hard worker who takes time off the ice to study opposing players. In the past season, he solidified his position as one of the top European goalie prospects. - MB
The best compliment to Groulx’s game is his attention to detail. He does all the little things necessary to win. A mid-season trade highlighted his value, as he took a top line role in every situation right away for the contending Moncton Wildcats. Groulx was recognized as the best defensive forward in the league, while also putting up over one point-a-game. He is an excellent face-off man, great positionally in the offensive and defensive zones, a great passer and playmaker who involves his linemates expertly. The downside for Team Canada’s last cut for the WJC roster is his skating, which is just okay, and could hold him back at the highest level, especially as a center. Even so, his smarts could carry him to a very good professional career. No matter where Groulx tops out, he will be an impactful player. He will figure in the Ducks plans going forward regardless, as he has already inked his entry-level contract. The AHL is his next challenge, a test for his pro-ready game. What is certain is that he will work hard for the opportunity. If his skating improves, he should be a strong two-way center at the NHL level. - MS
While he does not possess the scoring prowess of Rickard Rakell or the polished stability of Hampus Lindholm, both previous Anaheim first rounders from Sweden, Lundestrom is the prototypical auxiliary player, providing immense value as a compliment to a more offensive forward. Responsible and smart, he is becoming just what the Ducks envisioned when they took the centerman out of the SHL. With quiet self-confidence, Lundestrom excels in a two-way role. His skating is serviceable with plus acceleration, which plays up his swift and deceptive hands and passing game. Though he could be more of a high-octane offensive forward, he has shown a great wrist shot and a desire to have the puck in transition. The high-IQ 20-year-old shines brightest on defense, where he is willing to take - and initiate - contact to keep the puck out of danger, and leads backchecks with ferocity. He was trusted with some significant time against the opposition’s primary scoring lines with AHL San Diego, earning a 15-game trial run playing the same role. He can absolutely become a second-line two-way force alongside a more offensively-oriented player in the near future. - TD
Tracey had an excellent camp in Anaheim last season, where he was one of the last players cut, which typically leads to a drop off in play when returning to Junior. Despite that, he jumped out of the gate, potting an impressive eight goals and eight assists in his first eight games back, including back-to-back hat tricks. Where Tracey showed the most growth was in driving play. Where he was often a passenger in his draft year, he was carrying his line last season, especially impressive from the wing. His ability to carry the puck and to back defenders off opened up time and space for his linemates to attack, enabled his young center to find his legs. His skating allowed for zone exits, zone entries and a high pace of play through the neutral zone. When his line was on the ice he was able to handle the extra defensive attention. His playmaking skills are underrated as he has great touch on his passes and above average vision. Tracey is still a shooter at his core and has an excellent release that enables him to score from distance, off the rush, or from a deadly one-timer. – VG
Colangelo has NHL size and strength and is a solid skater who demonstrates the ability to make sharp cuts and looks downright deadly curling off the wall to attack the slot. He has soft hands that work well in tight spots. He was integral to the Chicago Steel’s team-wide offensive dominance, but he was not necessarily the driver. He had points in 35 of his 44 games and only once was he held off the scoresheet twice in a row, but was on a team was so deep, the opposition often focused their shutdown defenders against the a different scoring line. Furthermore, even when Colangelo would get on the scoresheet, it was not always due to his own strong work as he could go for games at a time without doing much of notice. When he is noticed, it is because he is dominating. His North-South game is still in demand in the modern speed-skill NHL, and his game meshes well with speed-skill players. He might only need two seasons at Northeastern to prove his readiness for the pros. - RW
Among the biggest risers one year out from the 2019 draft class, Lacombe made a very intriguing jump from playing for Shattuck-St. Mary’s to the University of Minnesota, finishing the year on the Big 10 All Rookie team. The thing that sticks out most for Lacombe is his composure, on or off the puck. He is a very smooth skater and has a plan when exiting his own zone. By the end of his freshman season, he had surpassed the standing of 2019 first rounder Ryan Johnson on the roster and was also receiving special teams work. I expect him to take another big step forward as a sophomore while his timeline to making an impact at the professional level has seemingly moved up from 2024 to 2023 or even 2022. Between his skating, play reading, and diverse offensive tools, Lacombe is projecting as a potential second pairing defender sooner than later. - RW
The slick-skating defender did not see his offensive potential translate into a ton of points in his first season in North America, but it did not stop the Ducks from acquiring him from the Boston Bruins at the trade deadline this season. The Bruins dealt Andersson as they are loaded on the blueline in the pipeline, and the Ducks could use another defender in the coffers. The strong Swede is a confident puck-mover and plays with an aura of control in his game. He does a great job at keeping attackers in front of him and steering them away from his goal. He hung on as an extra defenseman in the American league to start the season, which proves how his game will translate to the pros. Andersson projects as a solid positional blueliner who can chip in offensively, but more as a no-nonsense, middle-pairing, all-situations defenseman rather than a flashy star. He will be a jack-of-all-trades defender at the top level, with no true outstanding skills, but no glaring weaknesses, either. - MS
Although McLaughlin has yet to fully live up to the potential he showed in his draft year, his first two collegiate campaigns at Minnesota have been strong, if not dominant, and his sophomore season was a small step in the right direction. The play driving winger still needs to bulk up before he can be ready for the professional game, and additional consistency will also only be to his benefit. On the other hand, his play off the puck has grown more reliable, and his agility and puck handling ability have worked to make him a legit weapon offensively. He reads the play well, draws defenders to himself, and can keep opponents on their toes, dancing around them, or drawing a penalty in the attempt. There is another level that I think McLaughlin can get to as a playmaking winger, and if and when he does, he could fight for a top nine role at the highest level. Until then, we have to admit that he could be a boom-or-bust prospect. - RW
Thrun, an alumnus of the U.S. NTDP, joined the program after playing prep hockey. He is an offensive defenseman who held his own in his freshman year of collegiate hockey and was named to the ECAC All-Rookie Team. He also earned a gold medal at the U17 WHC and bronze at the U18 WJC. Harvard’s trust in Thrun’s abilities were evident by his appearance on the team’s first penalty kill unit - a big vote of confidence for a rookie. He also runs point on the power play, another big responsibility for a rookie. He has a big frame and is physical, but he needs to pump his legs to move, but he can still join in on the rush. His speed and his laser passes help him set up his teammates and are part of what makes an offensive defenseman. Thrun is a also good stickhandler but he needs to work on staying on his feet in his own zone as he continues in his development. - JS
Right off the bat, we know that Moore will require a great deal of patience as he develops and refines his game. Four years (one in the USHL, three in college) is the likely minimum before he turns pro, much less proves ready to play in the NHL. He is a tall defender who skates very well, both in terms of speed and agility. He likes to push the pace to get the puck into the offensive end, and he shoots from the right side as well. Also of note is that his big offensive numbers notwithstanding, his game may actually be more refined off the puck. Moore positions himself well in his own end and uses a tight gap and a good stick to wedge opposing forwards towards the boards. As much as he likes to play an offensive game, he can be prone to forcing plays and playing impatiently. The bad habits from play against lesser prep school competition will have to be ironed out of his game sooner than later. This diamond is still very much in the rough. - RW
One of the most lethal offensive defensemen during his WHL heyday, Mahura has started to find a groove with that style in the AHL. A plus skater and a high-end puck mover, he was heating up as a top-pair defender with San Diego (seven points in the last eight games) before the AHL cancelled the remainder of the 2019-20 season. Mahura has shown some promise in transition for Anaheim in his 28 career NHL appearances over two seasons, displaying some fearlessness with the puck. What is most important in his development is just that faith and confidence, because the skill is there. In addition to his puck-moving and skating prowess, the 22-year-old plays tight gaps with more strength in man-to-man battles than his lighter frame suggests, and he has become better at shutting down passing lanes in the defensive zone. Anaheim is likely holding him back until he can play with consistency in all three zones, and if that day comes, the 2016 third rounder would make a solid bottom-four defender with offensive upside. - TD
Growing up less than 20 miles from Anaheim’s Honda Center, De Leo cheered for the Ducks as a kid. He has suited up for his childhood team twice and led their AHL team over the past two seasons. Surely, he has some satisfaction with where he has gone in his career, but at 24, his story is not quite over. One of the most complete offensive players in the system, De Leo has very quick feet and a rapid shot that is particularly effective from in tight. The lefty is not limited in strength in spite of his 5-10” frame and can effectively run a cycle or drive the net without issue. However, De Leo is not much of an option on defense and seems to play with more energy and puck-play on the wing compared to center. He has essentially been the same player for three years and, while not impossible, is unlikely to stick in the NHL long-term as much more than an injury replacement. He can be an elite quad-A player for the next ten years, but not much else. - TD
After captaining the Halifax Mooseheads to a Memorial Cup appearance in his final QMJHL season, Morand struggled in his first pro campaign. His lack of size was a glaring issue and he shied away from competing physically for that reason, which is fairly concerning. But otherwise, the 21-year-old showed some offensive skill and decent potential as a middle-six center with AHL San Diego. Fast and smart, his agility and passing skill stand out most. Capable of carrying the puck and eluding defenders with it at top speed, he displays soft hands and excellent foot quickness to get a step on his opposition. He has been trusted with late faceoffs and protecting a lead in the final minutes of a game, which speaks to his quiet, mature demeanor. Admittedly, Morand is a very tough player to project; in certain games he will exhibit top-six scoring ability but then look invisible on the next five shifts. Finding some consistency in his raw, talented package could allow him to sneak into a top-nine role in the future with Anaheim, but his performance must first improve. - TD
A former third round pick, Badini recently signed with the Ducks after three years at Harvard. The Connecticut native also spent two and a half years in the USHL, where he won a championship with the Chicago Steel. A center, Badini’s scoring statistics might not look so impressive, but that shouldn’t stop anyone from seeing his value. A former member of the ECAC All-Rookie team, he has seen playing time on both Harvard’s power play and penalty kill. His skating requires power strides, but he is a really quick skater. When he is on his game, his passes are powerful and crisp and he can thread them in difficult situations. His speed, plus his quick, direct passes make him a shorthanded scoring threat. He also moves around well in the defensive zone. At the next level, Badini projects as a defensive, power forward. - JS
Janicke would not have made the top 15 with many other organizations, but the Ducks thin out quickly, leaving us room to talk about one of the smaller players in the system. He has a period early in the season where he looked like a potential steal, with seven points over a four game stretch, including three games against Big 10 opponents, but could not maintain that momentum as the season dragged on and he had streaks of nine and six games without points later in the year. I fact, in the 18 games he played for the Fighting Irish after 2020 kicked in, Janicke was limited to three points. Some of the cold spell was luck-related, and he still flashed the skills that saw him drafted in the first place. He is a triggerman who can also dish and has soft hands. With half of Notre Dame’s top six turning pro, he will have a bigger chance to make an impact as a sophomore. – RW
The fourth time was the charm for Galimov, who was neglected over three consecutive drafts before the Ducks finally selected him in the fifth round this year. A hard-working, two-way winger who landed on the Russian national team radar last year, making the WJC roster, lost none of his admittedly meager scoring touch moving from the junior league (MHL) to the KHL and was named KHL rookie of the month in October. His follow up KHL campaign, now underway, is showing more of the same two-way, complimentary offense style game. Galimov is a fine skater with an impressive East-West game and good edges. His mature game, particularly his reliability on the other side of the puck and on the PK could translate well to a depth role in North America as soon as his contract expires at the end of next season. His ceiling and floor are both in bottom six roles. - RW
Kindopp has a lot to like about his game. In Everett the total buy-in to team defense is the best in the WHL and Kindopp has been a big part of that. He is effective along the wall, both breaking up the opponent’s cycle and generating his own. He has a good release on his shot but is an effective scorer mainly because of how he positions himself and drives to the net. He is willing to pay the price to get to the net and has the size to stay there as the play progresses. He has a knack for sliding off pressure to give himself space to elevate and finish from in close. On the rush he can score but he isn’t a speedster. His skating has improved enough to get a look, but it is part of why he wasn’t drafted. The most impressive thing with Kindopp has been his steady progression, with minutes, goals per game, shots per game, and points per game having improved year over year. - VG
]]>
I write these words less than 24 hours after the Dallas Stars took game one of the Stanley Cup Finals against the heavily favored Tampa Bay Lightning. Unlike most seasons wherein the end of the Stanley Cup marks the beginning of off-season player movement, this year teams have taken an early start to the transactional Ferris wheel as many expect the upcoming offseason (from the awarding of the Cup, through to the draft in the first week of October to the start of the 2020-21 season perhaps as soon as early December, pending COVID trends in North America) to be especially turbulent.
We have seen a few trades of NHL pieces, one deal which impacted this guidebook, as Toronto sent Kasperi Kapanen to Pittsburgh and Swedish winger Filip Hallander was among those coming back to Toronto. Hallander was our selection for the second-best prospect in the Penguins system and now holds that title for the Maple Leafs. That trade knocked the Penguins down a few slots on our organizational rankings and allowed Toronto to go the other way accordingly.
Of course, with the draft roughly 17 days away, and with it a complete re-shuffling of the organizational rankings, this is just a snapshot in time of how every team’s system shakes up. We will re-run this list, incorporating the drafted players, in our pre-season fantasy guide, where we will expand the lists up to 20.
What you are about to dive into is a comprehensive list of all prospect eligible players on all 31 teams. To hold prospect eligibility, a player needs to 25 or younger, as of September 15, 2020. All skaters need to have played less than 60 career games, with no more than 35 of those games coming in a single season (or 25 for this past shortened season). For goalies, the age criteria remain the same, but the games played benchmark drops to 30 career games and 20 in a given season (or 15 last year). Any cutoff that does not hew exactly to the Calder Trophy award criteria is, by nature, arbitrary, but we aim to be inclusive for all players who have not yet cemented NHL jobs and/or have not had a prolonged chance to prove himself capable – or incapable.
We rank 15 per team, as depth is as important as the high end. Our goal is to identify players who could – if they have an advocate for them within the team’s braintrust – play a role in the NHL. These players were identified through our thorough vetting of each prospect across the globe, assigning scores, or grades, to five areas for skaters (skating, shot, puck skills, smarts, physicality) and six for netminders (athleticism/speed/quickness, compete/temperament, vision/play reading, positioning/technique, rebound control, and puck handling). Depending on the position, the grades are run through an algorithm to come up with an overall future projection (OFP).
The OFP, if the scout is being honest, measures the future role we anticipate the prospect being able to hold. A 50 score is the lower threshold to be a regular 4th line forward, or bottom pairing defender. Grades over 56 are potential top line/pairing skaters. The grades in between, obviously project to the middle of the lineup.
As we are reminded every year, development is not linear. Some players take unexpected sudden leaps forward (see Marino, John), and others stagnate (see Ho-Sang, Josh), and many do exactly what we expect of them when they are given the chance. As much as I trust the analysts in our team, I can also tell you that this exercise is always humbling. There will be at least one player who we rate highly who bombs. There will be at least one player who did not feature on his team’s top 15 who becomes an NHL regular next year. We accept those errors in judgment and promise you, our faithful subscriber, that we will learn from them and refine our work for next year, as we learn just as NHL teams learn.
Until then, please enjoy this snapshot view of the future of the beautiful, frozen game. Putting this together has provided at least some sense of normalcy during this crazy summer.
| NHL | RNK | PLAYER | POS | AGE | HT/WT | TM | Acquired |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ana | 1 | Trevor Zegras | C | 19 | 6-0/170 | Boston University (HE) | `19(9th) |
| Min | 2 | Kirill Kaprizov | LW | 23 | 5-10/200 | CSKA (KHL) | `15(135th) |
| Col | 3 | Bowen Byram | D | 19 | 6-0/195 | Vancouver (WHL) | `19(4th) |
| Buf | 4 | Dylan Cozens | C | 19 | 6-3/185 | Lethbridge (WHL) | `19(7th) |
| Fla | 5 | Spencer Knight | G | 19 | 6-3/195 | Boston College (HE) | `19(13th) |
| VGK | 6 | Peyton Krebs | C | 19 | 5-11/180 | Winnipeg (WHL) | `19(17th) |
| Ari | 7 | Victor Soderstrom | D | 19 | 5-11/180 | Brynas (Swe) | `19(11th) |
| Mtl | 8 | Cole Caufield | RW | 19 | 5-7/165 | Wisconsin (B1G) | `19(15th) |
| Van | 9 | Vasili Podkolzin | RW | 19 | 6-1/190 | SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) | `19(10th) |
| Edm | 10 | Philip Broberg | D | 19 | 6-3/200 | Skelleftea AIK (Swe) | `19(8th) |
| Tor | 11 | Nick Robertson | LW | 19 | 5-9/160 | Peterborough (OHL) | `19(53rd) |
| Col | 12 | Alex Newhook | C | 19 | 5-10/195 | Boston College (HE) | `19(16th) |
| Det | 13 | Moritz Seider | D | 19 | 6-3/185 | Grand Rapids (AHL) | `19(6th) |
| Fla | 14 | Grigori Denisenko | LW | 20 | 5-11/185 | Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) | `18(15th) |
| Min | 15 | Matthew Boldy | LW | 19 | 6-1/190 | Boston College (HE) | `19(12th) |
| NJ | 16 | Ty Smith | D | 20 | 5-10/180 | Spokane (WHL) | `18(17th) |
| LA | 17 | Alex Turcotte | C | 19 | 5-11/185 | Wisconsin (B1G) | `19(5th) |
| Nsh | 18 | Philip Tomasino | C | 19 | 5-11/180 | Nia-Osh (OHL) | `19(24th) |
| Pit | 19 | Samuel Poulin | LW | 19 | 6-1/205 | Sherbrooke (QMJHL) | `19(21st) |
| Wsh | 20 | Connor McMichael | C | 19 | 5-11/175 | London (OHL) | `19(25th) |
| LA | 21 | Gabriel Vilardi | RW | 21 | 6-3/200 | Ontario (AHL) | `17(11th) |
| NYR | 22 | Igor Shesterkin | G | 24 | 6-1/190 | Hartford (AHL) | `14(118th) |
| Dal | 23 | Thomas Harley | D | 19 | 6-3/190 | Mississauga (OHL) | `19(18th) |
| Ari | 24 | Barrett Hayton | C | 20 | 6-1/190 | Arizona (NHL) | `18(5th) |
| NYR | 25 | Nils Lundkvist | D | 20 | 5-11/180 | Lulea (Swe) | `18(28th) |
| LA | 26 | Arthur Kaliyev | RW | 19 | 6-2/190 | Hamilton (OHL) | `19(33rd) |
| Cgy | 27 | Juuso Valimaki | D | 21 | 6-2/205 | DNP - Injured | `17(16th) |
| Det | 28 | Jared McIsaac | D | 20 | 6-1/195 | Hal-Mon (QMJHL) | `18(36th) |
| NYR | 29 | Vitali Kravtsov | RW | 20 | 6-3/185 | Hartford (AHL) | `18(9th) |
| Edm | 30 | Evan Bouchard | D | 20 | 6-2/195 | Bakersfield (AHL) | `18(10th) |
| NYR | 31 | K'Andre Miller | D | 20 | 6-3/205 | Wisconsin (B1G) | `18(22nd) |
| Edm | 32 | Raphael Lavoie | RW | 19 | 6-4/195 | Hal-Chi (QMJHL) | `19(38th) |
| NYI | 33 | Ilya Sorokin | G | 25 | 6-2/180 | CSKA (KHL) | `14(78th) |
| Det | 34 | Albert Johansson | D | 19 | 5-11/165 | Farjestads (Swe) | `19(60th) |
| Ari | 35 | Matias Maccelli | LW | 19 | 5-11/170 | Ilves Tampere (Fin) | `19(98th) |
| Van | 36 | Nils Hoglander | RW | 19 | 5-9/185 | Rogle (Swe) | `19(40th) |
| Ari | 37 | Jan Jenik | RW | 20 | 6-1/180 | Hamilton (OHL) | `18(65th) |
| Phi | 38 | Cam York | D | 19 | 5-11/175 | Michigan (B1G) | `19(14th) |
| Phi | 39 | Morgan Frost | C | 21 | 5-11/180 | Lehigh Valley (AHL) | `17(27th) |
| Ana | 40 | Lukas Dostal | G | 20 | 6-1/170 | Ilves Tampere (Fin) | `18(85th) |
| LA | 41 | Tobias Bjornfot | D | 19 | 6-0/200 | Ontario (AHL) | `19(22nd) |
| SJ | 42 | Ryan Merkley | D | 20 | 5-11/170 | London (OHL) | `18(21st) |
| NYI | 43 | Kieffer Bellows | LW | 22 | 6-0/200 | Bridgeport (AHL) | `16(19th) |
| NYI | 44 | Oliver Wahlstrom | RW | 20 | 6-1/205 | Bridgeport (AHL) | `18(11th) |
| LA | 45 | Rasmus Kupari | C | 20 | 6-1/185 | Ontario (AHL) | `18(20th) |
| CBJ | 46 | Liam Foudy | C | 20 | 6-0/175 | London (OHL) | `18(18th) |
| LA | 47 | Tyler Madden | C | 20 | 5-10/155 | Northeastern (HE) | T(Van-2/20) |
| Mtl | 48 | Alexander Romanov | D | 20 | 5-11/185 | CSKA (KHL) | `18(38th) |
| NYI | 49 | Bode Wilde | D | 20 | 6-2/195 | Bridgeport (AHL) | `18(41st) |
| Ott | 50 | Jacob Bernard-Docker | D | 20 | 6-0/180 | North Dakota (NCHC) | `18(26th) |
| Cgy | 51 | Jakob Pelletier | LW | 19 | 5-9/165 | Moncton (QMJHL) | `19(26th) |
| LA | 52 | Akil Thomas | C | 20 | 5-11/170 | Nia-Pbo (OHL) | `18(51st) |
| Wpg | 53 | Dylan Samberg | D | 21 | 6-3/190 | Minn-Duluth (NCHC) | `17(43rd) |
| Chi | 54 | Ian Mitchell | D | 21 | 5-11/175 | Denver (NCHC) | `17(57th) |
| Ott | 55 | Josh Norris | C | 21 | 6-1/195 | Belleville (AHL) | T(SJ-9/18) |
| NYR | 56 | Matthew Robertson | D | 19 | 6-3/200 | Edmonton (WHL) | `19(49th) |
| VGK | 57 | Pavel Dorofeyev | LW | 19 | 6-1/170 | Magnitogorsk (KHL) | `19(79th) |
| Dal | 58 | Jake Oettinger | G | 21 | 6-4/210 | Texas (AHL) | `17(26th) |
| Ott | 59 | Drake Batherson | RW | 22 | 6-1/190 | Belleville (AHL) | `17(121st) |
| LA | 60 | Samuel Fagemo | RW | 20 | 6-0/195 | Frolunda (Swe) | `19(50th) |
| Col | 61 | Justus Annunen | G | 20 | 6-4/215 | Karpat Oulu (Fin) | `18(64th) |
| Bos | 62 | John Beecher | C | 19 | 6-3/210 | Michigan (B1G) | `19(30th) |
| Phi | 63 | Egor Zamula | D | 20 | 6-4/175 | Calgary (WHL) | FA(9/18) |
| NYR | 64 | Zac Jones | D | 19 | 5-10/175 | Massachusetts (HE) | `19(68th) |
| CBJ | 65 | Kirill Marchenko | LW | 20 | 6-3/190 | SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) | `18(49th) |
| VGK | 66 | Jack Dugan | RW | 22 | 6-2/185 | Providence (HE) | `17(142nd) |
| StL | 67 | Scott Perunovich | D | 22 | 5-10/175 | Minn-Duluth (NCHC) | `18(45th) |
| Bos | 68 | Jack Studnicka | C | 21 | 6-1/170 | Providence (AHL) | `17(53rd) |
| Dal | 69 | Ty Dellandrea | C | 20 | 6-0/185 | Flint (OHL) | `18(13th) |
| Min | 70 | Calen Addison | D | 20 | 5-10/180 | Lethbridge (WHL) | T(Pit-2/20) |
| NYR | 71 | Julien Gauthier | RW | 22 | 6-4/225 | Charlotte (AHL) | T(Car-2/20) |
| Van | 72 | Olli Juolevi | D | 22 | 6-3/200 | Utica (AHL) | `16(5th) |
| NJ | 73 | Nolan Foote | LW | 19 | 6-3/190 | Kelowna (WHL) | T(TB-2/20) |
| NJ | 74 | Janne Kuokkanen | LW | 22 | 6-1/190 | Cha-Bng (AHL) | T(Car-2/20) |
| Ott | 75 | Alex Formenton | LW | 21 | 6-2/165 | Belleville (AHL) | `17(47th) |
| Det | 76 | Robert Mastrosimone | LW | 19 | 5-10/160 | Boston University (HE) | `19(54th) |
| NYR | 77 | Morgan Barron | C | 21 | 6-2/200 | Cornell (ECAC) | `17(174th) |
| Mtl | 78 | Jesse Ylonen | RW | 20 | 6-1/185 | Pelicans (Fin) | `18(35th) |
| Car | 79 | Dominik Bokk | RW | 20 | 6-1/180 | Rogle (Swe) | T(StL-9/19) |
| Nsh | 80 | Egor Afanasyev | RW | 19 | 6-3/205 | Windsor (OHL) | `19(45th) |
| Ana | 81 | Benoit-Olivier Groulx | C | 20 | 6-1/195 | Hal-Mon (QMJHL) | `18(54th) |
| Min | 82 | Alexander Khovanov | C | 20 | 5-11/195 | Moncton (QMJHL) | `18(86th) |
| Det | 83 | Joe Veleno | C | 20 | 6-1/195 | Grand Rapids (AHL) | `18(30th) |
| NJ | 84 | Kevin Bahl | D | 20 | 6-6/230 | Ottawa (OHL) | T(Ari-12/19) |
| Car | 85 | Ryan Suzuki | C | 19 | 6-0/180 | Bar-Sag (OHL) | `19(28th) |
| Van | 86 | Jett Woo | D | 20 | 6-0/205 | Calgary (WHL) | `18(37th) |
| Mtl | 87 | Mattias Norlinder | D | 20 | 5-11/180 | MODO (Swe 2) | `19(64th) |
| Min | 88 | Adam Beckman | LW | 19 | 6-1/170 | Spokane (WHL) | `19(75th) |
| Bos | 89 | Jeremy Swayman | G | 21 | 6-1/190 | Maine (HE) | `17(111th) |
| Wpg | 90 | Kristian Vesalainen | LW | 21 | 6-3/205 | Manitoba (AHL) | `17(24th) |
| Tor | 91 | Filip Hallander | LW | 20 | 6-1/185 | Lulea (Swe) | T(Pit-8/20) |
| Fla | 92 | Owen Tippett | RW | 21 | 6-1/200 | Springfield (AHL) | `17(10th) |
| Car | 93 | Jake Bean | D | 22 | 6-1/175 | Charlotte (AHL) | `16(13th) |
| Ott | 94 | Shane Pinto | C | 19 | 6-2/190 | North Dakota (NCHC) | `19(32nd) |
| Col | 95 | Martin Kaut | RW | 20 | 6-1/175 | Colorado (AHL) | `18(16th) |
| Van | 96 | Jack Rathbone | D | 21 | 5-10/175 | Harvard (ECAC) | `17(95th) |
| Tor | 97 | Nick Abruzzese | C | 21 | 5-9/160 | Harvard (ECAC) | `19(124th) |
| Bos | 98 | Urho Vaakanainen | D | 21 | 6-0/185 | Providence (AHL) | `17(18th) |
| Wsh | 99 | Alexander Alexeyev | D | 20 | 6-3/200 | Hershey (AHL) | `18(31st) |
| NYI | 100 | Simon Holmstrom | RW | 19 | 6-1/185 | Bridgeport (AHL) | `19(23rd) |
| LA | 101 | Jaret Anderson-Dolan | C | 21 | 5-11/190 | Ontario (AHL) | `17(41st) |
| Car | 102 | Joey Keane | D | 21 | 6-0/185 | Hfd-Cha (AHL) | T(NYR-2/20) |
| Wsh | 103 | Martin Fehervary | D | 20 | 6-1/190 | Hershey (AHL) | `18(46th) |
| StL | 104 | Tyler Tucker | D | 20 | 6-1/205 | Bar-Fnt (OHL) | `18(200th) |
| SJ | 105 | Yegor Spiridonov | C | 19 | 6-2/195 | Stalnye Lisy Magnitogorsk (MHL) | `19(108th) |
| NJ | 106 | Joey Anderson | RW | 22 | 6-0/195 | Binghamton (AHL) | `16(73rd) |
| Col | 107 | Conor Timmins | D | 21 | 6-1/185 | Colorado (AHL) | `17(32nd) |
| StL | 108 | Klim Kostin | C | 21 | 6-3/195 | San Antonio (AHL) | `17(31st) |
| Mtl | 109 | Cayden Primeau | G | 21 | 6-3/180 | Laval (AHL) | `17(199th) |
| SJ | 110 | Jonathan Dahlen | LW | 22 | 5-11/185 | Timra IK (Swe 2) | T(Van-2/19) |
| NJ | 111 | Reilly Walsh | D | 21 | 5-11/180 | Harvard (ECAC) | `17(81st) |
| Buf | 112 | Oskari Laaksonen | D | 21 | 6-2/165 | Ilves Tampere (Fin) | `17(89th) |
| NJ | 113 | Arseni Gritsyuk | RW | 19 | 5-10/170 | Omskie Yastreby (MHL) | `19(129th) |
| Wsh | 114 | Aliaksei Protas | C | 19 | 6-5/205 | Prince Albert (WHL) | `19(91st) |
| Cgy | 115 | Dustin Wolf | G | 19 | 6-0/165 | Everett (WHL) | `19(214th) |
| StL | 116 | Joel Hofer | G | 20 | 6-3/160 | Portland (WHL) | `18(107th) |
| VGK | 117 | Ivan Morozov | C | 20 | 6-1/180 | SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) | `18(61st) |
| Mtl | 118 | Jake Evans | C | 24 | 6-0/185 | Laval (AHL) | `14(207th) |
| Nsh | 119 | Eeli Tolvanen | RW | 21 | 5-10/175 | Milwaukee (AHL) | `17(30th) |
| Wpg | 120 | Ville Heinola | D | 19 | 5-11/180 | Lukko Rauma (Fin) | `19(20th) |
| VGK | 121 | Lucas Elvenes | RW | 21 | 6-0/175 | Chicago (AHL) | `17(127th) |
| TB | 122 | Cole Koepke | LW | 22 | 6-1/195 | Minn-Duluth (NCHC) | `18(183rd) |
| Ana | 123 | Isac Lundestrom | C | 20 | 6-0/185 | San Diego (AHL) | `18(23rd) |
| NYR | 124 | Tarmo Reunanen | D | 22 | 6-0/180 | Lukko Rauma (Fin) | `16(98th) |
| Mtl | 125 | Jordan Harris | D | 20 | 5-11/180 | Northeastern (HE) | `18(71st) |
| Ana | 126 | Brayden Tracey | LW | 19 | 6-0/175 | MJ-Vic (WHL) | `19(29th) |
| Phi | 127 | Tanner Laczynski | C | 23 | 6-1/200 | Ohio State (B1G) | `16(169th) |
| Chi | 128 | Alec Regula | D | 20 | 6-3/200 | London (OHL) | T(Det-10/19) |
| Buf | 129 | Mattias Samuelsson | D | 20 | 6-3/215 | Western Michigan (NCHC) | `18(32nd) |
| Car | 130 | Jamieson Rees | C | 19 | 5-10/175 | Sarnia (OHL) | `19(44th) |
| Edm | 131 | Olivier Rodrigue | G | 20 | 6-1/165 | Moncton (QMJHL) | `18(62nd) |
| Fla | 132 | Serron Noel | RW | 20 | 6-5/205 | Osh-Kit (OHL) | `18(34th) |
| Det | 133 | Antti Tuomisto | D | 19 | 6-4/190 | Assat Pori (Fin Jr) | `19(35th) |
| Dal | 134 | Jason Robertson | LW | 21 | 6-2/195 | Texas (AHL) | `17(39th) |
| Mtl | 135 | Joni Ikonen | C | 21 | 5-10/170 | DNP - Injured | `17(58th) |
| Nsh | 136 | Rem Pitlick | C | 23 | 5-11/200 | Milwaukee (AHL) | `16(76th) |
| Ott | 137 | Logan Brown | C | 22 | 6-6/220 | Belleville (AHL) | `16(11th) |
| TB | 138 | Samuel Walker | C | 21 | 5-11/160 | Minnesota (B1G) | `17(200th) |
| Phi | 139 | Wade Allison | RW | 22 | 6-2/205 | Western Michigan (NCHC) | `16(52nd) |
| Wpg | 140 | Declan Chisholm | D | 20 | 6-1/190 | Peterborough (OHL) | `18(150th) |
| NJ | 141 | Tyce Thompson | RW | 21 | 6-1/180 | Providence (HE) | `19(96th) |
| VGK | 142 | Connor Corcoran | D | 20 | 6-1/185 | Windsor (OHL) | `18(154th) |
| Ana | 143 | Jackson Lacombe | D | 19 | 6-1/170 | Minnesota (B1G) | `19(39th) |
| NYR | 144 | Lauri Pajuniemi | RW | 21 | 6-0/185 | TPS Turku (Fin) | `18(132nd) |
| Car | 145 | Tuukka Tieksola | RW | 19 | 5-10/160 | Karpat Oulu (Fin Jr) | `19(121st) |
| CBJ | 146 | Andrew Peeke | D | 22 | 6-3/210 | Cleveland (AHL) | `16(34th) |
| Ana | 147 | Axel Andersson | D | 20 | 6-0/180 | Moncton (QMJHL) | T(Bos-2/20) |
| Car | 148 | Patrik Puistola | LW | 19 | 6-0/175 | Tap-Juk-Koo (Fin) | `19(73rd) |
| NJ | 149 | Michael McLeod | C | 22 | 6-2/195 | Binghamton (AHL) | `16(12th) |
| Car | 150 | Pyotr Kochetkov | G | 21 | 6-1/175 | SKA-VIT (KHL) | `19(36th) |
| NJ | 151 | Michael Vukojevic | D | 19 | 6-3/210 | Kitchener (OHL) | `19(82nd) |
| NYI | 152 | Ruslan Iskhakov | C | 20 | 5-8/155 | UConn (HE) | `18(43rd) |
| Wpg | 153 | Sami Niku | D | 23 | 6-0/175 | Manitoba (AHL) | `15(198th) |
| TB | 154 | Hugo Alnefelt | G | 19 | 6-3/195 | HV 71 (Swe) | `19(71st) |
| NJ | 155 | Nikita Okhotyuk | D | 19 | 6-1/195 | Ottawa (OHL) | `19(61st) |
| NYR | 156 | Hunter Skinner | D | 19 | 6-2/175 | London (OHL) | `19(112th) |
| LA | 157 | Mikey Anderson | D | 21 | 6-0/195 | Ontario (AHL) | `17(103rd) |
| Col | 158 | Shane Bowers | C | 21 | 6-2/190 | Colorado (AHL) | T(Ott-11/17) |
| NYI | 159 | Joshua Ho-Sang | RW | 24 | 6-0/175 | Bri-SA (AHL) | `14(28th) |
| LA | 160 | Cal Petersen | G | 25 | 6-3/190 | Ontario (AHL) | FA(7/17) |
| Col | 161 | Sampo Ranta | LW | 20 | 6-2/205 | Minnesota (B1G) | `18(78th) |
| Wpg | 162 | Mikhail Berdin | G | 22 | 6-2/165 | Manitoba (AHL) | `16(157th) |
| Bos | 163 | Jeremy Lauzon | D | 23 | 6-3/205 | Providence (AHL) | `15(52nd) |
| Nsh | 164 | David Farrance | D | 21 | 5-11/190 | Boston University (HE) | `17(92nd) |
| Van | 165 | Will Lockwood | RW | 22 | 5-11/175 | Michigan (B1G) | `16(64th) |
| NYI | 166 | Sebastian Aho | D | 24 | 5-10/175 | Bridgeport (AHL) | `17(139th) |
| Wpg | 167 | Logan Stanley | D | 22 | 6-7/225 | Manitoba (AHL) | `16(18th) |
| Buf | 168 | Ryan Johnson | D | 19 | 6-0/175 | Minnesota (B1G) | `19(31st) |
| Van | 169 | Michael DiPietro | G | 21 | 6-0/195 | Utica (AHL) | `17(64th) |
| VGK | 170 | Kaedan Korczak | D | 19 | 6-3/190 | Kelowna (WHL) | `19(41st) |
| Car | 171 | Jack Drury | C | 20 | 5-11/180 | Harvard (ECAC) | `18(42nd) |
| StL | 172 | Nikita Alexandrov | C | 19 | 6-0/180 | Charlottetown (QMJHL) | `19(62nd) |
| Col | 173 | Nikolai Kovalenko | RW | 20 | 5-10/175 | Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) | `18(171st) |
| Nsh | 174 | Juuso Parssinen | C | 19 | 6-2/205 | TPS Turku (Fin) | `19(210th) |
| Chi | 175 | Pius Suter | C | 24 | 5-11/170 | ZSC Lions (NLA) | FA(7/20) |
| Fla | 176 | Aleksi Saarela | RW | 23 | 5-11/200 | Rfd-Spr (AHL) | T(Chi-10/19) |
| Bos | 177 | Trent Frederic | C | 22 | 6-4/215 | Providence (AHL) | `16(29th) |
| CBJ | 178 | Dmitri Voronkov | LW | 20 | 6-4/190 | Ak Bars Kazan (KHL) | `19(114th) |
| Ott | 179 | Lassi Thomson | D | 19 | 6-0/190 | Ilves Tampere (Fin) | `19(19th) |
| Car | 180 | Morgan Geekie | C | 22 | 6-2/180 | Charlotte (AHL) | `17(67th) |
| CBJ | 181 | Trey Fix-Wolansky | RW | 21 | 5-8/185 | Cleveland (AHL) | `18(204th) |
| Ott | 182 | Vitaly Abramov | RW | 22 | 5-9/175 | Belleville (AHL) | T(CBJ-2/19) |
| TB | 183 | Alexander Volkov | LW | 23 | 6-1/190 | Syracuse (AHL) | `17(48th) |
| Tor | 184 | Mikko Kokkonen | D | 19 | 5-11/200 | Jukurit (Fin) | `19(84th) |
| Ott | 185 | Kevin Mandolese | G | 20 | 6-4/180 | Cape Breton (QMJHL) | `18(157th) |
| CBJ | 186 | Daniil Tarasov | G | 21 | 6-5/185 | Assat Pori (Fin) | `17(86th) |
| LA | 187 | Carl Grundstrom | LW | 22 | 6-0/195 | Ontario (AHL) | T(Tor-1/19) |
| LA | 188 | Kale Clague | D | 22 | 6-0/180 | Ontario (AHL) | `16(51st) |
| Ott | 189 | Artyom Zub | D | 24 | 6-2/200 | SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) | FA(5/20) |
| Edm | 190 | Tyler Benson | LW | 22 | 6-0/200 | Bakersfield (AHL) | `16(32nd) |
| Det | 191 | Jonatan Berggren | RW | 20 | 5-10/185 | Skelleftea AIK (Swe) | `18(33rd) |
| Tor | 192 | Yegor Korshkov | RW | 24 | 6-4/215 | Toronto (AHL) | `16(31st) |
| Dal | 193 | Riley Damiani | C | 20 | 5-9/165 | Kitchener (OHL) | `18(137th) |
| VGK | 194 | Zach Whitecloud | D | 23 | 6-2/210 | Chicago (AHL) | FA(3/18) |
| Buf | 195 | Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen | G | 21 | 6-4/195 | Cincinnati (ECHL) | `17(54th) |
| Car | 196 | David Cotton | LW | 23 | 6-3/205 | Boston College (HE) | `15(169th) |
| Chi | 197 | Wyatt Kalynuk | D | 23 | 6-1/180 | Wisconsin (B1G) | FA(7/20) |
| Min | 198 | Hunter Jones | G | 19 | 6-4/195 | Peterborough (OHL) | `19(59th) |
| LA | 199 | Jordan Spence | D | 19 | 5-10/165 | Moncton (QMJHL) | `19(95th) |
| Cgy | 200 | Dmitri Zavgorodny | LW | 20 | 5-9/175 | Rimouski (QMJHL) | `18(198th) |
| Col | 201 | Alex Beaucage | RW | 19 | 6-1/195 | Rouyn-Noranda (QMJHL) | `19(78th) |
| TB | 202 | Dmitri Semykin | D | 20 | 6-3/200 | SKA-1946 St. Petersburg (MHL) | `18(90th) |
| CBJ | 203 | Matiss Kivlenieks | G | 24 | 6-2/190 | Cleveland (AHL) | FA(5/17) |
| StL | 204 | Ville Husso | G | 25 | 6-3/205 | San Antonio (AHL) | `14(94th) |
| Phi | 205 | Bobby Brink | RW | 19 | 5-10/165 | Denver (NCHC) | `19(34th) |
| NYI | 206 | Otto Koivula | C | 22 | 6-4/220 | Bridgeport (AHL) | `16(120th) |
| Car | 207 | Eetu Makiniemi | G | 21 | 6-2/180 | KOOVEE (Fin 2) | `17(104th) |
| NYI | 208 | Anatoli Golyshev | RW | 25 | 5-8/180 | Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg (KHL) | `16(95th) |
| Chi | 209 | Evan Barratt | C | 21 | 6-0/190 | Penn State (B1G) | `17(90th) |
| Buf | 210 | Erik Portillo | G | 20 | 6-6/210 | Dubuque (USHL) | `19(67th) |
| Fla | 211 | Cole Schwindt | RW | 19 | 6-2/185 | Mississauga (OHL) | `19(81st) |
| Chi | 212 | Michal Teply | LW | 19 | 6-3/185 | Winnipeg (WHL) | `19(105th) |
| Ott | 213 | Mads Sogaard | G | 19 | 6-7/195 | Medicine Hat (WHL) | `19(37th) |
| Buf | 214 | Jonas Johansson | G | 24 | 6-4/205 | Rochester (AHL) | `14(61st) |
| TB | 215 | Cal Foote | D | 21 | 6-4/215 | Syracuse (AHL) | `17(14th) |
| StL | 216 | Niko Mikkola | D | 24 | 6-5/200 | San Antonio (AHL) | `15(127th) |
| NYI | 217 | Robin Salo | D | 21 | 6-1/190 | SaiPa (Fin) | `17(46th) |
| Bos | 218 | Jakub Zboril | D | 23 | 6-1/200 | Providence (AHL) | `15(13th) |
| Buf | 219 | Will Borgen | D | 23 | 6-2/200 | Rochester (AHL) | `15(92nd) |
| Pit | 220 | Pierre-Olivier Joseph | D | 21 | 6-2/170 | Wilkes-Barre (AHL) | `17(23rd) |
| SJ | 221 | Sasha Chmelevski | C | 21 | 5-11/190 | San Jose (AHL) | `17(185th) |
| Ari | 222 | Kyle Capobianco | D | 23 | 6-1/180 | Tucson (AHL) | `15(63rd) |
| Det | 223 | Keith Petruzzelli | G | 21 | 6-5/180 | Quinnipiac (ECAC) | `17(88th) |
| Wsh | 224 | Garrett Pilon | RW | 22 | 5-11/190 | Hershey (AHL) | `16(87th) |
| NJ | 225 | Nikola Pasic | RW | 19 | 5-10/185 | Karlskoga (Swe 2) | `19(189th) |
| TB | 226 | Alex Barre-Boulet | C | 23 | 5-10/165 | Syracuse (AHL) | FA(3/18) |
| Edm | 227 | Ryan McLeod | C | 20 | 6-2/205 | Bakersfield (AHL) | `18(40th) |
| NYI | 228 | Samuel Bolduc | D | 19 | 6-3/210 | BLB-She (QMJHL) | `19(57th) |
| Ott | 229 | Joey Daccord | G | 24 | 6-2/195 | Belleville (AHL) | `15(199th) |
| StL | 230 | Hugh McGing | C | 22 | 5-9/180 | Western Michigan (NCHC) | `18(138th) |
| Edm | 231 | Cooper Marody | C | 23 | 6-0/180 | Bakersfield (AHL) | T(Phi-3/18) |
| Tor | 232 | Jeremy Bracco | RW | 23 | 5-9/180 | Toronto (AHL) | `15(61st) |
| Phi | 233 | German Rubtsov | C | 22 | 6-2/190 | Lehigh Valley (AHL) | `16(22nd) |
| Wsh | 234 | Brian Pinho | C | 25 | 6-1/195 | Hershey (AHL) | `13(174th) |
| Col | 235 | Logan O'Connor | RW | 24 | 6-0/170 | Colorado (AHL) | FA(7/18) |
| Buf | 236 | Casey Fitzgerald | D | 23 | 5-11/190 | Rochester (AHL) | `16(86th) |
| NJ | 237 | Daniil Misyul | D | 19 | 6-3/180 | Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) | `19(70th) |
| Ari | 238 | John Farinacci | C | 19 | 5-11/185 | Harvard (ECAC) | `19(76th) |
| Edm | 239 | Aapeli Rasanen | C | 22 | 6-0/195 | Boston College (HE) | `16(153rd) |
| Pit | 240 | Anthony Angello | RW | 24 | 6-5/205 | Wilkes-Barre (AHL) | `14(145th) |
| Mtl | 241 | Cam Hillis | C | 20 | 5-10/170 | Guelph (OHL) | `18(66th) |
| Cgy | 242 | Mathias Emilio Pettersen | RW | 20 | 5-9/170 | Denver (NCHC) | `18(167th) |
| SJ | 243 | Alexander True | C | 23 | 6-5/205 | San Jose (AHL) | FA(7/18) |
| NYI | 244 | Reece Newkirk | C | 19 | 5-11/175 | Portland (WHL) | `19(147th) |
| Dal | 245 | Dawson Barteaux | D | 20 | 6-0/180 | RD-Wpg (WHL) | `18(168th) |
| Bos | 246 | Jack Ahcan | D | 23 | 5-8/185 | St. Cloud State (NCHC) | FA(3/20) |
| Det | 247 | Seth Barton | D | 21 | 6-2/175 | Mass-Lowell (HE) | `18(81st) |
| Fla | 248 | Max Gildon | D | 21 | 6-3/190 | New Hampshire (HE) | `17(66th) |
| Ari | 249 | Aku Raty | RW | 19 | 6-0/175 | Karpat Oulu (Fin) | `19(151st) |
| Wpg | 250 | David Gustafsson | C | 20 | 6-1/195 | Winnipeg (NHL) | `18(60th) |
Anaheim Ducks
The Ducks’ current NHL roster is not in a great way. Like the other California-based teams, the Ducks were pretty bad this year, finishing out of even the Play-in round, a fate reserved for only the bottom seven teams in the NHL.
For their efforts, they will pick sixth in the upcoming NHL draft, as well as whichever pick Boston ends up earning, a residual from the trade deadline maneuver that saw the Ducks acquire David Backes, prospect Axel Andersson (7th on this list) and a 2020 first rounder in exchange for Ondrej Kase.
Fellow bottom dwellers like Los Angeles, New Jersey, Ottawa, and Buffalo had all already been knee deep in their own rebuilds, and iced rosters among the youngest in the NHL. Detroit was unique among the seven in that their own teardown was still in the early stages, with too many bad contracts playing out the string and very few players considered among the next group of competing Red Wings not yet on the active roster. Anaheim could thus be lumped in with San Jose. Neither the Ducks nor the Sharks anticipated a losing season, both hoping, if not expecting, to compete for the postseason on the backs of their respective aging cores.
In addition to rostering one of the ten most experienced rosters in the league, the Ducks were also top ten size-wise, something which one might expect to go hand-in-hand with age.
There is a light at the end of the tunnel, though. Lining up alongside the greybeards like Getzlaf, the aforementioned Backes, Ryan Miler, and four other 30-somethings, there is a new young core emerging in Orange County. Former first round pick Jacob Larsson has seemingly stuck on the blueline, and the team graduated three of our preseason top five prospects – and four from the top ten, among the forwards, in Sam Steel, Maxime Comtois, Troy Terry, and Max Jones. Perhaps trade pickups Sonny Milano and Brendan Guhle, once top prospects with Columbus and Buffalo respectively, and could regain some of his old sheen and stick with the Ducks as well.
All of the above paragraph is well and good, and a testament to the scouting and development of the organization in recent years. On the other hand, with the prominent exception of the team’s top prospect, Trevor Zegras, the system is presently quite thin. In fact, Zegras alone may be the difference between where the team is currently ranked organizationally, and a spot ten or more slots further down the list.
Another notable aspect of Anaheim’s player acquisition strategy has already been hinted at above, in noting the team’s rankings in height and weight. Of the five recent graduates listed above, three are plus sized. Of the 28 prospect-eligible players currently in the system, only four are listed as under 6-0” in height. The presence of Steel (5-11”) and Zegras (a skinny 6-0”) indicate that the team is not strictly targeting height at the draft, especially not with their early picks, but with a game trending more towards speed than ever, it may also be correct to state that the Ducks may have fallen behind.
There are some pieces here who could be instrumental to the Ducks returning to contention, but without re-focusing on drafting players who can play fast – skating and puck movement – they will likely continue to flounder.
I could also go on a mini-rant about the state of the blueline organizationally – old in the NHL and little coming up the ladder with only four of the top 15 being defensemen, but that is another topic for another essay.

Trevor Zegras is one of the best — if not the best — prospects to come out of the East region in recent years. A No. 9 overall draft pick, Zegras is living up to his draft status and then some. He makes everything look effortless.
The forward spent two seasons with the U.S. National Team Development program, playing with the U-17 and U-18 teams. He won a gold medal with the U.S. in the U17 WHC and a bronze in the U18 World Junior Championship as souvenirs. This season he also played in the World Junior Championship, leading the tournament in assists with nine in five games and was named as one of the U.S.’ top three players in the event. He also earned a spot on the Hockey East All-Rookie Team.
Zegras entered Boston University as a true freshman and led the Terriers in scoring amongst rookies. He is almost impossible to contain in the offensive zone and makes everything he does look easy with his excellent vision. One of Zegras’ best assets is as a playmaker - he is an excellent passer and makes his passes float. He has quick hands and is always in the right place at the right time.
On top of his preternatural passing ability, he is also an excellent scorer himself with a quick release on his shot and can fool goaltenders easily. It is no surprise that Zegras was on BU’s first power play unit. The Ducks were suitably impressed and coaxed him off campus at the end of this first season. The NHL beckons. - JS
Dostal’s first full season with Ilves was a huge success story. He started the season somewhat slowly, but eventually performed at a very high level. The Czech netminder was given the Urpo Ylonen award as the league’s best goalie. He saves his team many wins and points and really gave Ilves a chance to win every night.
He is athletic with quick reactions and the ability to make the occasional desperation save. He is a very good skater with strong edge work. He moves quickly and effectively post to post and can make extension pad saves. His rebound control is another asset. He uses his stick and blocker well to deflect pucks into the corner. He also traps pucks well into his body. He gets set quickly for initial shot attempts and reads shooters well. On high danger shots, he is often able to even anticipate shooters’ intentions and make the saves as needed. When the puck is dumped in, Dostal will go behind the net to stop the puck. He moves the puck to his teammates with firm and simple passes; nothing flashy though.
Dostal is known as a hard worker who takes time off the ice to study opposing players in order to know them inside and out. In the past season, he solidified his position as one of the top European goalie prospects. As of this writing, it is possible that Dostal will remain with Ilves for 2020-21, even though he is more than ready to bring his talents to North America. - MB

The best compliment to Groulx’s game is his attention to detail. He does all the little things necessary to win. A mid-season trade to Moncton highlighted his value in the QMJHL as he took a top line role in every situation right away for the contending Wildcats, after taking up the captaincy for the Mooseheads in the first half of the year. Groulx won the Guy Carbonneau trophy as the best defensive forward in the league, while also putting up over a point-a-game, and it was well deserved.
Groulx is an excellent face-off man, great positionally in the offensive and defensive zones, a great passer and playmaker who involves his linemates expertly. He was perhaps the smartest player in all of junior hockey last season. The downside for Team Canada’s last cut at the World Juniors is his skating, which is just okay. His skating could hold him back, especially as a center at the highest level. Even so, his smarts, much like Carbonneau’s game, could carry him to a very good professional career.
No matter where Groulx tops out, he will be an impactful player. He will figure in the Ducks plans going forward regardless, as he has already inked his entry-level contract. The AHL is his next challenge, where he will have instant success with his pro-ready game. What is certain is that Groulx, the son of Syracuse coach Benoît, will work hard for the opportunity. If his skating improves, he will be a strong two-way center at the NHL level. - MS
In 2018, the Ducks continued their trend of selecting Swedish players with their top pick in the NHL Draft. Following Rickard Rakell (2011), Hampus Lindholm (2012), Marcus Pettersson (2014), and Jacob Larsson (2015), Isac Lundestrom joined the fray. While he does not possess the scoring prowess of Rakell or the polished stability of Lindholm, Lundestrom is the prototypical auxiliary player; never will he be the most talented or most dangerous player on a team, but he will provide immense value as a complement to a more offensive forward.
Responsible and smart, he is becoming just what the Ducks envisioned when they took the centerman out of the SHL. With quiet self-confidence, Lundestrom excels in a two-way role. His skating is serviceable with plus acceleration, which plays up his swift and deceptive hands and passing game. Though he could be more of a high-octane offensive forward, he has shown a great wrist shot and a desire to have the puck in transition.
The high-IQ 20-year-old shines brightest on defense, where he is willing to take - and initiate - contact to keep the puck out of danger and leads backchecks with ferocity. He was trusted with some significant time against the opposition’s primary scoring lines with AHL San Diego and began a transition to the NHL in a 15-game trial run playing the same role. While his offensive ceiling is not of a top-line center, he can absolutely become a second-line two-way force alongside a more offensively oriented player in the Ducks system in the near future. - TD

If you look at Tracey’s numbers, we could understand concern. His +33 from the year before dropped to a combined -16 this season between Moose Jaw and Victoria. Both his goals per game and his points per game have regressed from his draft season as well. While this is all factual it does not provide anywhere close to the full picture of Tracey as a prospect.
In his draft year with Moose Jaw he was part of an elite group of five that all produced at an impressive rate, one of the most impressive in recent memory. Secondly, Tracey had an excellent camp in Anaheim where he was one of the last players cut which typically leads to a drop off in play when returning to Junior. Despite all of those things, he jumped out of the gate scoring an impressive eight goals with eight assists in his first eight games back, including back to back hat tricks.
Where Tracey showed the most growth was in driving play. Where he was oft a passenger in his draft year, he was carrying his line this season, especially impressive from the wing. His ability to carry the puck and to back defenders off opened up time and space for his linemates to attack and enabled his young center to find his legs. His skating allowed for zone exits, zone entries and a high pace of play through the neutral zone. When his line was on the ice, he was able to handle the extra defensive attention.
His playmaking skills are underrated as he has great touch on his passes and above average vision. Tracey is still a shooter at the core and has an excellent release that enables him to score from distance, off the rush, or from a deadly one-timer. - VG
Among the biggest risers one year out from the 2019 draft class, Lacombe made a very intriguing jump from playing for Shattuck-St. Mary’s to the University of Minnesota, finishing the year on the Big 10 All-Rookie team.
The thing that sticks out most for Lacombe is his composure, on or off the puck. He is a very smooth skater and has a plan when exiting his own zone. By the end of his freshman season, he had surpassed the standing of 2019 first rounder Ryan Johnson on the roster and was also receiving special teams work.
I expect him to take another big step forward as a sophomore while his timeline to making an impact at the professional level has seemingly moved up from 2024 to 2023 or even 2022. Between his skating, play reading, and diverse offensive tools, Lacombe is projecting as a potential second pairing defender sooner than later. - RW
The slick-skating defender did not see his offensive potential translate into a ton of points in his first season in North America, but it did not stop the Ducks from acquiring him from the Boston Bruins at the trade deadline this season. The Bruins dealt Andersson as they are loaded on the blueline in the pipeline, and the Ducks could use another defender in the coffers.
The strong Swede is a confident puck-mover and plays with an aura of control in his game. He does a great job at keeping attackers in front of him and steering them away from his goal. He hung on as an extra defenseman in the American league to start the season, which proves how his game will translate to the pros. Andersson projects as a solid positional blueliner who can chip in offensively, but more as a no-nonsense, middle-pairing, all-situations defenseman rather than a flashy star. He will be a jack-of-all-trades defender at the top level, with no true outstanding skills, but no glaring weaknesses, either. - MS
Although McLaughlin has yet to fully live up to the potential he showed in his draft year, his first two collegiate campaigns at Minnesota have been strong, if not dominant, and his sophomore season was a small step in the right direction. The play driving winger still needs to bulk up before he can be ready for the professional game, and additional consistency will also only be to his benefit.
On the other hand, his play off the puck has grown more reliable, and his agility and puck handling ability have worked to make him a legit weapon offensively. He reads the play well, draws defenders to himself, and can keep opponents on their toes, dancing around them, or drawing a penalty in the attempt.
There is another level that we think McLaughlin can get to as a playmaking winger, and if and when he does, he could fight for a top nine role at the highest level. Until then, we have to admit that he could be a boom-or-bust prospect. - RW
Thrun, an alumnus of the U.S. NTDP, joined the program after playing prep hockey. He is an offensive defenseman who held his own in his freshman year of collegiate hockey and was named to the ECAC All-Rookie Team. He also earned a gold medal at the U17 WHC and bronze at the U18 WJC.
Harvard’s trust in Thrun’s abilities were evident by his appearance on the team’s first penalty kill unit - a big vote of confidence for a rookie. He also runs point on the power play, another big responsibility for a rookie.
He has a big frame and is physical, but he needs to pump his legs to move, but he can still join in on the rush. His speed and his laser passes help him set up his teammates and are part of what makes an offensive defenseman. Thrun is also a good stickhandler but he needs to work on staying on his feet in his own zone as he continues in his development. - JS
One of the most lethal offensive defensemen during his WHL heyday, Mahura has started to find a groove with that style in the AHL. A plus skater and a high-end puck mover, he was heating up as a top-pair defender with San Diego (seven points in the last eight games) before the AHL cancelled the remainder of the 2019-20 season.
Mahura has shown some promise in transition for Anaheim in his 28 career NHL appearances over two seasons, displaying some fearlessness with the puck. What is most important in his development is just that faith and confidence, because the skill is there. In addition to his puck-moving and skating prowess, the 22-year-old plays tight gaps with more strength in man-to-man battles than his lighter frame suggests, and he has become better at shutting down passing lanes in the defensive zone.
Anaheim is likely holding him back until he can play with consistency in all three zones, and if that day comes, the 2016 third rounder would make a solid bottom-four defender with offensive upside. - TD
Growing up less than 20 miles from Anaheim’s Honda Center, De Leo cheered for the Ducks as a kid. He has suited up for his childhood team twice and led their AHL team over the past two seasons. Surely, he has some satisfaction with where he has gone in his career, but at 24, his story is not quite over.
One of the most complete offensive players in the system, De Leo has very quick feet and a rapid shot that is particularly effective from in tight. The lefty is not limited in strength in spite of his 5-10” frame and can effectively run a cycle or drive the net without issue. However, De Leo is not much of an option on defense and seems to play with more energy and puck-play on the wing compared to center.
He has essentially been the same player for three years and, while not impossible, is unlikely to stick in the NHL long-term as much more than an injury replacement. He can be an elite quad-A player for the next ten years, but not much else. - TD
After captaining the Halifax Mooseheads to a Memorial Cup appearance in his final QMJHL season, Morand struggled in his first pro campaign. His lack of size was a glaring issue and he shied away from competing physically for that reason, which is fairly concerning. But otherwise, the 21-year-old showed some offensive skill and decent potential as a middle-six center with AHL San Diego.
Fast and smart, his agility and passing skill stand out most. Capable of carrying the puck and eluding defenders with it at top speed, he displays soft hands and excellent foot quickness to get a step on his opposition. He has been trusted with late faceoffs and protecting a lead in the final minutes of a game, which speaks to his quiet, mature demeanor.
Admittedly, Morand is a very tough player to project; in certain games he will exhibit top-six scoring ability but then look invisible on the next five shifts. Finding some consistency in his raw, talented package could allow him to sneak into a top-nine role in the future with Anaheim, but his performance must first improve. - TD
A former third round pick, Badini recently signed with the Ducks after three years at Harvard. The Connecticut native also spent two and a half years in the USHL, where he won a championship with the Chicago Steel.
A center, Badini’s scoring statistics might not look so impressive, but that shouldn’t stop anyone from seeing his value. A former member of the ECAC All-Rookie team, he has seen playing time on both Harvard’s power play and penalty kill. His skating requires power strides, but he is a really quick skater.
When he is on his game, his passes are powerful and crisp, and he can thread them in difficult situations. His speed, plus his quick, direct passes make him a shorthanded scoring threat. He also moves around well in the defensive zone. At the next level, Badini projects as a defensive, power forward. - JS
Janicke would not have made the top 15 with many other organizations, but the Ducks thin out quickly, leaving us room to talk about one of the smaller players in the system. He had a period early in the season where he looked like a potential steal, with seven points over a four game stretch, including three games against Big 10 opponents, but could not maintain that momentum as the season dragged on and he had streaks of nine and six games without points later in the year.
In fact, in the 18 games he played for the Fighting Irish after 2020 kicked in, Janicke was limited to three points. Some of the cold spell was luck-related, and he still flashed the skills that saw him drafted in the first place. He is a triggerman who can also dish and has soft hands. With half of Notre Dame’s top six turning pro, he will have a bigger chance to make an impact as a sophomore. - RW
Kindopp has a lot to like about his game. In Everett the total buy-in to team defense is the best in the WHL and Kindopp has been a big part of that.
He is effective along the wall, both breaking up the opponent’s cycle and generating his own. He has a good release on his shot but is an effective scorer mainly because of how he positions himself and drives to the net. He is willing to pay the price to get to the net and has the size to stay there as the play progresses. He has a knack for sliding off pressure to give himself space to elevate and finish from in close.
On the rush he can score but he isn’t a speedster. His skating has improved enough to get a look, but it is part of why he wasn’t drafted. The most impressive thing with Kindopp has been his steady progression, with minutes, goals per game, shots per game, and points per game having improved year over year. - VG
]]>October is a month of formation for minor league hockey teams. In the first month of a long regular season, you start to see the players -- most often a mix of wily veterans and first- or second-year pros -- align and adapt to one another’s unique playing styles.
For some clubs, players, and coaches, that transition can be seamless, but for some it’s a disastrous early-season experiment. Such is the beauty of the American Hockey League, wherein young prospects are given chances to succeed not only in spite of, but because of, their early-season mistakes.
As mentioned above, development is a work in progress. Some young players can adjust with relative ease, while the unlucky struggle to acclimatize themselves to the speed, skill, and physicality of the hockey world’s second-best professional sanctioning body.
Today, we’ll be taking a look at the teams and notable prospects in the AHL’s Pacific Division. The teams on the West Coast, desert, and Rocky Mountains have all made strides and adjustments in the early portion of the campaign, and this article will take you through some of the news and notes from each of the Pacific Division’s seven member teams.
Record: 7-1-1-1, 16 points, .800 points percentage
The Heat are absolutely on fire (pun intended) to start the 2019-20 AHL campaign. Exploding offensively, the youthful club has scored the most goals in the Western Conference (39) thus far and had four players averaging a point per game.
The job Cail MacLean has done with a team missing the two-way contributions of top-ranked prospect Jusso Valimaki cannot be overstated. Since moving from Glen Falls, New York to Stockton as part of the AHL’s California expansion four years ago, the Heat have never won a playoff series.
Their chances to do so look better than ever before in this season’s early parts. Unfortunately for the fans in San Joaquin county, looming concerns over an arena lease have clouded the much-deserved celebration of the club’s early success.

Dillon Dube, 3rd in McKeen’s Yearbook preseason rankings of Flames farm system (7GP-1G-6A-7P): Though it was a disappointment for the 21-year-old to not crack the Flames’ opening night roster after a decent NHL showing last season, he was arguably the Heat’s best player in October. A playmaker and forechecker extraordinaire heading into the season, he is starting to display heightened awareness and patience on offense as well as an increased defensive presence and responsibility. With exceptional penalty kill work, the former Team Canada World Junior captain is one of the first guys going up to Calgary if needed and can easily find a way to contribute to the big-league team.
Eetu Tuulola, 14th (8-4-1-5): Skating was the biggest concern surrounding the first-year winger from Finland, and while his acceleration and balance can still lag at times, his straight-line speed looks solid. Adding some quickness to his massive 6-3”, 220lbs frame makes the 21-year-old Tuulola a scary player, as his body control, shooting ability, and versatile usefulness on the power play have already impressed scouts around the game.
Glenn Gawdin, 18th (8-2-6-8): Gawdin, a second-year pro, has long had an incredible offensive game, but like Tuulola, his skating had held him back from becoming a go-to option for offense in the pro ranks. His acceleration looks a little better, and he has displayed more energy out on the ice than in his 2018-19 rookie season. His point-per-game pace to this point is a direct reflection of that assertiveness, but I still see Gawdin as more of a two-way bottom-six center with some offensive potential. His smarts and discipline have always been his biggest draw to me, and his skating is too big of a concern for him to pan out as a top-six offensive option.
Record:8-3-0-0, 16 points, .727% points percentage
After injuries decimated their young club late into the 2018-19 season, the Roadrunners appear to be reaching the potential they missed out on due to ailments last campaign. Head coach Jay Varady’s club was briefly in first place in the Pacific Division in October.
While the club has been top heavy in terms of point-scoring, they have been carried mightily by a pair of young netminders, Adin Hill and Ivan Provsetov, who have combined to allow just 25 goals, the fewest in the AHL’s Western Conference.
After missing the playoffs last year, we expected the team to come back with a vengeance and contend for the top spot in the seven-team division, which they won in 2017-18. Their first 11 games, a solid 16 percent of their season schedule, confirms those beliefs.
Lane Pederson, Unranked in McKeen’s Yearbook preseason rankings of Coyotes farm system (11-9-5-14): Although the former WHLer is not the most intriguing prospect in the game, or the most well-known, Pederson has inarguably been the best skater on the Roadrunners roster this season. Third in the league in both goals and points, his offensive contributions are no coincidence if you remember his efforts in Coyotes training camp, through which he almost broke the NHL roster. His skating has improved from his WHL days, and while his passing game/vision are still to be developed, his shot is a force. He is reliable defensively and kills penalties for Tucson. He went undrafted, but if there was a second or third-round pick attached to his name, hype would be building fast for the potential middle-six center.
Ivan Prosvetov, 6th (3-1-0-0, 1.98 GAA, .944 Sv% in four starts): We knew that Prosvetov was a beast in the goal and would eventually turn into a high-end pro, but it’s somewhat surprising to see how quickly he has transformed into a mature, disciplined netminder. He was a hot head in the OHL, once receiving a five-game suspension for batting a puck into spectators during a stoppage of play. It looks like he has harnessed that competitive fire, boosting his package of 6-5” length and athletic ability with an energized demeanor on the ice. At 20 years old, younger than the large majority of AHL netminders, he is a step ahead of the competition.
Kyle Capobianco, 4th (3-0-2-2): Capobianco looks like, and is to a degree, an NHL player. He made the Coyotes’ opening night roster and has appeared in nine big-league contests so far, after his 2018-19 campaign came to a disastrous end due to a season-ending leg injury in February. So this prospect blurb acts like more of a check-up on a prospect than an actual scouting piece, in this case: he’s fine. He does not look a step slow due to his injury, his playmaking and skating are still capable of contributing in all three zones, and his potential as a power-play quarterback is still there. He will be a full-time NHLer in short order.
Record: 6-2-2-0, 14 points, .700% points percentage
Last season, Ontario finished seventh out of seven Pacific Division teams, had a .441 points percentage, and recorded a -61 goal differential. Their struggles were a direct reflection of a Kings farm system that had become depleted due to their NHL parent club’s sustained success and desire for more.
The Kings of that era valued size and defensive strength over anything else, and now, as the game of hockey has progressed, so has the L.A. system. The revamped Reign roster is beginning to see the effects of the newly-implemented Rob Blake system, and have used that speed and skill to ascend back to the top of the division table.
Of course, a healthy chunk of the credit for the Reign’s turnaround has to go to head coach Mike Stothers, as well as many of their young players. If October is any indicator, the Reign could be playing postseason hockey again this season.

Cal Petersen, 11th in McKeen’s Yearbook preseason rankings of Kings farm system (6-2-2-0, 2.55 GAA, .929 Sv% in ten starts): Since his pro debut in 2017-18, Petersen has been one of the AHL’s top goaltenders. Last season was grim, as his GAA floated over four due mostly to a horrid club in front of him, but he looks to have bounced back big time. The 25-year-old plays a wild, entertaining style of highly-athletic goaltending, and rarely cracks mentally. His hulking physical size and ability to read plays as they develop helps him compensate for a lack of decisive tool-selection and overall refinement. His contract goes from a two-way deal this year to one-way the next year and beyond, meaning he is essentially auditioning for an NHL job this season.
Carl Grundstrom, 8th (4-5-2-7): Along with a 2019 first round pick (used on Tobias Bjornfot), Grundstrom was the return from Toronto in the Jake Muzzin trade, and the young forward has added some instant value to the Kings system. In dominating the AHL in the early parts of the season, he has earned some appearances with L.A. and can only get better from here. He is a hard-working player who competes in all three zones, never slows down out there, and can flash a surprising goal-scoring touch. A hard forechecker to escape, that effort translates to the other end of the ice, where he has become an impactful penalty killer. He can be prone to mistakes, but Grundstrom’s relentless motor and two-way reliability give him a solid ceiling of a middle-six winger with some offensive upside that has not even been tapped into.
Matt Luff, 20th (9-3-4-7): The undrafted 22-year-old was one of Ontario’s best players (and a bright spot in his short Kings stint) last season, and he looks to have carried that promise and excellence into 2019-20. One thing that helps accumulate NHL-worthy stats is just how much the winger loves to shoot, leading the club with 34 shots through nine AHL games so far, in addition to being third on the team in shots (153) despite just 33 games with the AHL team has year. Luff has good reason to be a volume shooter, with a heavy, spinning wrist shot that has menacing velocity and tremendous accuracy, but his toughness and puck skills are also elements to watch out of the depth forward.
Record: 5-5-1-0, 11 points, .500% points percentage
While Edmonton’s two superstar talents, Connor McDavid and Leon Draisiatl, have ripped the NHL to shreds in the early going of the 2019-20 season, some of the club’s top prospects are continuing the trend in the AHL.
Oilers’ CEO Bob Nicholson’s laid-out plan of allowing prospects to “over-ripen” seems to be the organization’s modus operandi, and the Condors are reaping the benefits of having more experienced, longer-tenured players on the roster this season.
For head coach Jay Woodcroft, it’s mostly the same players that dominated during their historic 2018-19 run that have been at the forefront of their 2019-20 operations. You can’t bank on Bakersfield having the same 17-game winning streak as the division champs did last season, but they will compete to bring playoff hockey to Kern County, California for the second time after relocating from Oklahoma City in 2015.
Tyler Benson, 4th in McKeen’s yearbook preseason rankings of Oilers farm system (11-2-7-9): His maturity, hockey IQ, and vision make it easy to forget, but Benson is only 21 years old and has just one full pro season under his belt. After pacing the Condors in points last season, his heads-up rushing action and high-end playmaking skills have put him out front early this year. A speedy skater with beautiful acceleration and swift pivots, his ability to draw space to himself and pass the puck off is reminiscent of the NHL’s preeminent puck-movers. His only flaw is his shot, which lacks speed and accuracy. His early-career development was plagued by injuries, but with full health, he looks downright scary good and could soon be a top-six facilitator for the Oilers.
Kailer Yamamoto, 6th (11-4-3-7): Sent down to Bakersfield as part of a rehab schedule for his wrist injury from last season, Yamamato has had a pretty decent start to his AHL season. The former first-round pick has been so-so on offense, and you would like to see him use his slippery skating, speedy hands, and creativity to drive offense more. But his penalty kill and overall defensive game have been exceptional, and it is impressive to see the way he has rounded out his game. I wouldn’t be surprised to see the 21-year-old get a recall to Edmonton soon, especially as the Oilers’ bottom six is starved for skill.
Evan Bouchard, 2nd (11-3-4-7): The reigning Max Kaminsky trophy winner as the Ontario Hockey League’s best blueliner, Bouchard has been playing up to that billing since joining the AHL ranks at the start of the season. With his creativity, vision, and booming shot, the 10th overall pick in 2018 has excelled with Bakersfield thus far. Two of the defenseman’s three goals have come on the man-advantage, which speaks to his effectiveness on the power play. His skating is not as big of an issue as it was in his draft season, but can still improve.
Record:4-4-0-1, 9 points, .500% points percentage
San Jose has so few certified “veteran” players on the roster that it is genuinely impressive that they have posted a .500 record so far this season. Kudos to Roy Sommer, the club’s head coach, but also, the team’s European scouting group for plucking legitimate talent from some obscure areas.
Swedish winger Joel Kellman, German forward Lean Bergmann, and Danish forwards Alexander True and Joachim Blichfeld are the club’s top-four scorers through nine games. All four of the Barracuda stars were either undrafted signees or seventh-round draft selections.
Their top goaltender, Josef Korenar, was also an undrafted signee who has emerged as one of the AHL’s top goalies at just 21. Hopefully the team can be carried by these otherwise-unheard of players to the club’s fifth consecutive postseason appearance since relocating from Worcester, Massachusetts.
Sasha Chmelevski, 2nd in McKeen’s yearbook preseason rankings of Sharks farm system (6-0-1-1): Both things can be true: Chmelevski has had a hard time adjusting to the pro ranks, and he has been battling injuries since the beginning of the season, having missed the last few Barracuda games with a lower-body ailment. So, you have to take his early-season results with a grain of salt. He has flashed some of that quick, precise passing and smart decision making early on in his pro career, especially on the San Jose power play, where he is playing first-unit minutes. His injuries have hampered his skating some, and you would like to see him use his heavy, accurate wrist shot more. He almost made the Sharks roster out of training camp, which means there is something special about the 21-year-old, but we just have to wait and see a fully healthy version of him.
Joachim Blichfeld, 7th (8-3-3-6): Whereas Chmelevski has had a troublesome professional hockey adjustment process, Blichfeld has been excellent since puck drop on opening night. While his offensive numbers don’t equal that of his godly WHL totals a year ago (68-53-61-114), he has been exceptional at what he does best; drive play with speed and creativity, fire the puck at will, and get into dirty areas without the puck. He has been a pest in front of the goal and seeks out crease-front rebounds at every chance. A power-play staple, the right-hander has played a variety of roles on the man-advantage. However, the Danish winger can be prone to frequent turnovers, and needs to amp up his three-zone awareness to prevent getting the puck stick-checked away.
Josef Korenar, 10th (3-2-1-2, 1.82, .932): An AHL All-Star last season, the 21-year-old Czech has only stepped his game up from there. Most importantly, the former undrafted signee has provided the Sharks with one thing they arguably didn’t have: a denoted goaltender of the future. His tool selection can still be a little spotty, and he plays an inconsistent positional game (when to come out and challenge, when to guard posts, etc), but his raw package is that of a future NHL stud. Korenar displays otherworldly smarts, vision, and anticipation while playing a calm and composed style in the crease. He is highly athletic and can scramble to make saves, and his rebound control has improved since last season.
Record: 4-5-0-0, 8 points, .444% points percentage
Whereas some teams have benefited from an influx of their organization’s brightest young stars, the Eagles have stagnated with a bunch of veteran guys with low ceilings. I don’t believe their slow start to the season is a coincidence; they just don’t really have that pure, youthful skill to mesh with the aged, seasoned pros on the club.
It is not like Colorado has no high-end prospects on the roster, as the club sports names like Shane Bowers, Conor Timmins, or Martin Kaut, but moreso that these young players are having trouble finding a rhythm or just coming into their own as prospects.
Luckily, they are through just nine games of the Pacific Division’s 68-game schedule. Head coach Greg Cronin and the club have time on their side and a group of experienced players who know what it takes to make it through the tough and tiresome winter months. With that, the goal is to bring playoff hockey to Loveland, CO, in just their second year in the AHL.
Conor Timmins, 6th in McKeen’s yearbook preseason rankings of Avalanche farm system (7-1-2-3): We all knew Timmins could play, but how quickly he has jumped back into action and found a way to contribute after missing the entirety of the 2018-19 season is nothing short of amazing. The right-shot defenseman who made the Avs roster out of camp has not missed a beat, and has emerged as the versatile, three-zone defender he was picked as in the second-round of the 2017 draft. His physical strength makes him capable of outmuscling anyone in a puck battle, and his vision to get the puck out of the zone — via his solid outlet pass or his skating — makes him a threat joining the rush. He has the potential to be a top-four minute-munching defender at the highest level of the game.
Nick Henry, 11th (9-1-2-3): An assist machine in his final year with WHL Lethbridge, Henry’s main asset — playmaking and transitional play — has translated well in his first full professional season. Although he is not racking up points at an insane pace, the 20-year-old has been instrumental in driving play for the Eagles’ fourth line. His skating is not great, but good enough to get through the neutral zone, where his vision and high hockey IQ can take over a rush. He is solid defensively, with decent strength for an undersized winger, and his energy and tenacity on the forecheck has been noticeable. His main issue is his hesitance to shoot, mainly defaulting to passing; he will need to improve upon his shot assertiveness to succeed long-term in the pros.
Logan O’Connor, 12th (9-1-2-3): The former University of Denver captain continued his emergence as a top-notch prospect in the Avs system in October. Boosted onto the top line for the Eagles (mostly playing with veterans T.J. Tynan and Erik Condra), O’Connor’s well-rounded, mature game has provided plus value for Colorado thus far. He has the acceleration and top speed of an NHL top-six winger, along with the hockey IQ and smarts to make an impact in all three zones. He can play any role, at any forward position, against any competition, and that kind of versatility is what makes him a surefire future NHLer.
Record: 2-6-0-0, 4 points, .250% points percentage
The diagnosis for their slow start is a simple one: the Gulls have suffered from a transitioning, transformative roster in Anaheim depleting the AHL club, which made the Western Conference Finals last season.
Head coach Kevin Dineen has his work cut out for him with a roster that has lost his stars from last campaign, such as former first-round picks Sam Steel and Max Jones as well as Team U.S.A. World Junior hero Troy Terry, all of whom are on the Ducks’ active roster.
There still shine some bright lights amid a dark and frightening tunnel however, as a Ducks farm system with a decent amount of talent steps on the ice in San Diego.
Isac Lundestrom, 4th in the McKeen’s yearbook preseason rankings of Ducks farm system (6-2-1-3): After starting the season eating healthy scratches with the Ducks, the 2018 first-rounder returned to the AHL and has fared well centering the Gulls’ third line, scoring his first career AHL goal just a few games ago. His ability as a puck carrier has received a well-deserved spotlight on the power play, and his versatility and maturity (it’s easy to forget that he is just 19-years-old) has received abundant penalty kill time thus far. The youthful Swede is such a multi-faceted player and thinks the game at such a high level that he will not need much more improving to do before being a solid, consistent NHL player. He just needs to improve upon his offensive assertiveness, most importantly how underused his wrist shot is.
Joshua Mahura, 9th (6-0-0-0): Mahura was recently recalled to the NHL roster (where he promptly recorded three assists in his season debut), and it was a well-deserved promotion. The scoresheet won’t prove it to you, but he had quietly been one of the Gulls’ better players in the young season. Playing on both special teams, the defender exhibited his high-end two-way versatility and desire to play up at most times. He is a highly dangerous option to start or join a rush at any opportunity, and that same mentality is paying off in the NHL, with his 3.9 CF% Rel. It’s early, and both the Ducks and Gulls are undergoing a lot of changes, but perhaps he has already played his last regular season AHL game.
]]>It would be easy to attribute their recent fall from grace to their insistence on playing checkers while the rest of the league plays chess, but that isn’t wholly accurate either. You see, if they were so far behind the times, the Ducks would not have been consistent contenders for so long. Not only did last year’s playoff miss signify the first early vacation for the Ducks since 2011-12, but it was just their third playoff miss since winning the Stanley Cup in 2007.
It would be pretty easy to look at last year as not only a result of anti-analytics, but doubling down on the anti-analytics style, what with Randy Carlyle spending the bulk of the season behind the bench before GM Bo Murray finally pulled the plug and installed himself as the interim bench boss over the last few months of the season.
While the above was a contributing factor, the Ducks fell from their regular postseason perch due to a combination of an aging core (with the associated injuries that also come in tandem) with a young next wave that was not quite ready.
One of the things that has most fascinated me about the Ducks player development system (including their scouting/drafting) is how they see to consistently find skilled forwards at the draft, which they had supplemented with just enough of a blueline corps to maintain their edge. Trades and the expansion draft (Sami Vaatanen and Marcus Pettersen for the former and Shea Theodore for the latter) made that blueline weaker than they had hoped and they team simply lacked the horses to replace them.
We can see that below, as the Ducks current top 20 has only four defensemen, two of whom were just brought into the system at this year’s draft. None of those four defenders are ranked higher than ninth in the system. That top defender, Josh Mahura, was given a change last year, in his first professional season, and held his own in a 17 game NHL trial, but did not do enough at either the AHL or NHL levels to indicate that he was ready for a full time NHL role.
The same is not true for the team’s forwards. With the Anaheim forward unit aging, and in some case, excised from the roster, there will be a few chances for one or more of the team’s top prospects to step up. The Ducks are expected to offer extended opportunities to Sam Steel, Troy Terry, and Max Jones to make the NHL roster on a full-time basis, especially now that former AHL San Diego coach Dallas Eakins has been named the Anaheim head coach. All will be given a chance to become part of the new Anaheim core.
-Ryan Wagman

1 Trevor Zegras, C (9th overall, 2019. Last Year: IE) With all of the hoopla surrounding teammate and occasional linemate Jack Hughes, it was relatively easy to miss the fact that Trevor Zegras was also among the handful of the most dynamic forwards available in the 2019 draft class. Part of his ability to fly under the radar was due to not being a natural goalscorer, preferring, like current Anaheim legend Ryan Getzlaf, to create opportunities for others. The other part of it is the fact that near elite hockey IQ is one of the driving factors in his game, as opposed to say skating ability (although he is a tremendous skater) or puck skills (he has fantastic hands). With Hughes clearly the number one center for the USNTDP last year, Zegras alternated between playing as the second line center, or on either of the two wings. He can do it all and may not need to do it all at Boston University for more than a single season before he is ready for the pro game. - RW
2 Sam Steel, C (30th overall, 2016. Last Year: 1) Steel’s first pro season was a solid one, as his dependable smarts and diverse offensive skill set were all on display in a season split between Anaheim and AHL San Diego. A playmaker at heart, he possesses incredible patience and natural hockey sense, but can beat you with a wicked wrist shot from the slot as well. He took on some tough defensive matchups in his rookie season in the pro ranks, showing exemplary maturity and discipline at a young age. Though his playmaking traits revolve around slowing the game down, he could stand to play with more pace. The door is wide open for the former first-rounder to secure a full-time spot on the center depth chart in the NHL. Expect him to play a top-six role with the Ducks in the future. - TD
3 Maxime Comtois, C/LW (50th overall, 2017. Last Year: 4) Comtois secured a taste of the NHL level this season with seven points in 10 games, and later spent another four games at the AHL level. This experience is a sign pointing to how close he is to making the show. Comtois added the captaincy along with six points in five games for Team Canada at the World Juniors while playing through a separated shoulder. He also had an impressive second half of 48 points in 25 games with Drummondville showing great resiliency in returning strong after receiving unwarranted criticism from some fans after his Team Canada performance. Comtois is NHL ready; he has the size, the skills, the smarts and the drive. His skating is not special but it should be enough, and his game evolved from pure offensive power forward to a two-way force at the junior level. His 2018-19 was a big step towards reaching his potential as a responsible and dependable physical top-six winger with offensive upside. -MS
4 Isac Lundestrom, C/LW (23rd overall, 2018. Last Year: 2) Lundestrom has already seen NHL action as a teenager and will be an NHLer in the long run as well. He has a chance to emerge as a good center for Anaheim as soon as this upcoming season. His potential is not top line elite but as a middle six center he could thrive. He has strong foundations when it comes to his skating, skills, smarts and physicality. He could show more of an attack mentality in the offensive end though. His wrist shot is good, but he doesn’t use it enough. He is a strong puck carrier and excels at zone entries. He can be used in various roles, offensively as well as defensively, and do well at both ends, but isn’t all-in-all good enough to become the best player for your team. Lundestrom plays a balanced game and takes responsibility in all three zones. He can also support the offensive game and has puck skills to become a 40/50-point player in the NHL at his peak. - JH
5 Troy Terry, C (148th overall, 2015. Last Year: 3) Terry is not the best or most complete prospect in the Anaheim system, but he might be the one with the most raw, unadulterated skill. The center is yet another pro rookie who dazzled in 2018-19, as the former World Junior Championship hero put up a point per game with AHL San Diego and 13 points in 32 games with Anaheim last year. His quick hands, whippy, dangerous wrist shot, offensive vision, and deceptive skating give him a neat package to build on, as long as he can remain confident and start to help out on defense more than he currently does. Has a solid chance to break the Ducks’ Opening Night roster, if his health (broken leg late last season) coincides with his gameplay. - TD
6 Benoit-Olivier Groulx, C (54th overall, 2018. Last Year: 5) Coaches love smart players, and Groulx is certainly that. He showed a lot of growth on a deep Halifax team this season, with a 25-point improvement from the previous year. He was injured and missed some time in the playoffs, and was not himself until the Memorial Cup, where he contributed at a point-per-game pace. Groulx’s skating is only so-so, and could make him a better winger than center in the pros, but he has the hockey sense and the intelligence to overcome average skating speed and succeed. He can play all situations and has been one of the smartest players in the Q. Pair that with a greatly improved shot, and Groulx has a solid opportunity to move along in the pro ranks. He is shaping up to be a solid middle-six option who can play all situations, and can hang around with his hockey sense above all of his other well-rounded skills. - MS
7 Brayden Tracey, LW (29th overall, 2019) What will get Tracey to the NHL is his ability to shoot the puck. He has a great wrist shot as well as a lethal one-timer that he can get off in limited space. He has the ability to find soft spaces in the defensive zone coverage that enable him good shooting opportunities. He was fortunate this year to be the fifth player in one of the top 5 man units in the WHL and I remain a bit skeptical about his ability to drive offense without such a dominant supporting cast around him. His skating is above average and he moves around the ice well with and without the puck, including some nice feigns and dekes that allow him to beat guys one on one. He projects as a middle six winger who is a viable offensive option on a second power play unit. - VG
8 Max Jones, LW (24th overall, 2016. Last Year: 8) Another former first-rounder who made his pro debut last season, Jones boasts a menacing power-forward repertoire and the intense, mature game to grow into it. He struggled to establish himself in limited NHL minutes last season (30-2-3-5), but looked dominant at times with AHL San Diego, using his elite skating, combining balance and stride power to finesse by defenders and make something happen. His skating speed is at a high level for someone of his size and playing style, and his sturdiness with the puck on his stick makes him a difficult player to wrap up. His feisty, angry demeanor on the ice can backfire (penalty minute accumulation, lack of focus on defense), but will be a factor if he can harness it for good. Even if he does not live up to his draft billing, he should establish himself on a bottom six slot in short order. - TD
9 Josh Mahura, D (85th overall, 2016. Last Year: 6) As part of a long line of high-end defensemen drafted in later rounds and developed by the Ducks, Mahura shows top-four upside and the potential to be a lethal power-play quarterback in the future. A crisp, accurate, and heads-up passer, the 2016 third-rounder is a beast in transitional play, and is never afraid to start -- or join -- an offensive rush. Solid vision of up-ice development is aided by his tight gaps, which can force turnovers at the blue line and spark a chance the other way. An average skater, Mahura needs to work on his technical footwork (pivots, start/stops, acceleration) to command a lot of minutes in his NHL future. He could also be a shooter, but his game is more tailored to his skill at facilitating chances for others. - TD
10 Blake McLaughlin, LW (79th overall, 2018. Last Year: 7) After a strong performance in his draft year with USHL Chicago, McLaughlin was one of several high end newcomers at the University of Minnesota. In a disappointing season for the Golden Gophers, the former third rounder was part of the general malaise around the program during the first half of the season, but he made the necessary adjustments from the Junior A level and performed at an admirable NCAA level in the second half of his freshman year. By year’s end, he was showcasing a promising two-way game, using his skilled hands to force turnovers in his own end and then to create chances for his linemates in the offensive end. His solid first few steps also help him be a disruptive force throughout the rink. If his trajectory continues, he still has a good chance of fulfilling his middle six NHL upside. - RW
11 Trevor Janicke, C (132nd overall, 2019. Last Year: IE) Like Trevor Zegras above, this Trevor is also experienced at being overshadowed by Jack Hughes. A USNTDP member during the 2016-17 and 2017-18 seasons, he was never draft eligible as a late birthday, but even so, Hughes helped keep him in the bottom six during his second year with the program. Spending his draft year with lowly, and now defunct Central Illinois of the USHL, Janicke was easy to forget, but he has often the only real offensive driver for the Flying Aces. Heading to Notre Dame next year, Janicke has refined hockey sense and is a strong skater (two endemic traits among USNTDP alums) but his shot is a separator. The wrist shot, in particular, can beat good goalies (at the USHL level) from a distance. While he may not score as often from the blueline, he will still be deadly from the circles on in. With continued development with the Fighting Irish, he has middle six upside, although more likely as a winger than up the middle. -RW
12 Henry Thrun, D (101st overall, 2019. Last Year: IE) Lacking the flair of fellow USNTDP blueliners Cam York and Domenick Fensore, or the size and brawn of teammates like Alex Vlasic or Case McCarthy, Thrun did a little bit of everything for the program. He plays a quiet, hyper-efficient game at both ends. He was a regular on the penalty kill and shows the type of on-ice IQ that you could expect from someone heading to Harvard. He is not a blazer, but has enough mobility to move the puck out of his own zone. His work in the offensive end lacks panache, but he is an excellent passer, particularly with his backhand. He has good size, but he wins battles defensively through positioning instead of brute force. His upside is not likely to be better than a solid number four, but in this system, that makes him one of the best defenders.
13 Antoine Morand, C (60th overall, 2017. Last Year: 9) A teammate of Groulx’s and a close friend of Comtois, Antoine Morand is well connected with his fellow Anaheim-drafted Q prospect teammates. Much like them, Morand knows where to be on the ice. He is a creator who distributes very well and can run an offence. For the third year in a row, he broke the 70-point barrier, this time with the Halifax Mooseheads, where he was named captain. In his second Memorial Cup appearance, he doubled his point output at the tournament from two to four. He is a solid skater with great agility and strong edgework, but his size is a question mark going forward. Morand will have to bulk up to have extended success at the NHL level, as he is a top-6 offensive player or bust prospect as an undersized forward. - MS
14 Lukas Dostal, G (85th overall, 2018. Last Year: 12) Although small by modern goaltending standards, Czech netminder Lukas Dostal is blessed with high end athleticism. Along with his glove hand and his ability to track the puck, he can keep his team in games, as he demonstrated time and again at the junior level, and against men at various European stops. In addition to a star turn with the Czech U20 team at the WJC (he was named one of the three best players on the team and led all netminders at the tournament with a stellar .957 save percentage), he also more than held his own at the Czech second division and in Finland’s top level with Ilves. He likes to challenge shooters and shows a plus ability to prevent second chances. His limbs move quickly, and he can cover more of the net than his bulk would suggest. Heading back to Ilves for another year, he profiles as a future backup at the highest level. - RW
15 Brendan Guhle, D (51st overall, 2015 [Buffalo]. Last Year: 3 [Buffalo]) Packaged in the February trade that sent Brandon Montour to Buffalo, Guhle wasted no time getting acclimated to the Ducks system and showing his NHL potential in the process. The former second-rounder has the size and fundamental defensive smarts to be reliable in his own zone, as well as the speed and playmaking abilities to carry the puck out and make some noise. At the tail end of the 2018-19 campaign, the former second-round pick was quarterbacking the Ducks’ second power-play unit, as his fantastic technical skating ability and shot made for a nifty man-advantage package at the top of the zone. Mature and physical, there are no real, debilitating flaws to his game, and he could be on the Ducks’ blueline come to the start of the 2019-20 season although his true upside is more number four or five than defensive linchpin. - TD
16 Chase De Leo, C (99th overall, 2014 [Winnipeg]. Last Year: Unranked) An undersized forward, De Leo has absolutely dominated in the AHL over the past few seasons, including a career-best 66-20-35-55 stat line with San Diego last year, adding five playoff goals in the process. His combination of energy, skill, playmaking, and shooting prowess make him one of the most intriguing presences in a prospect system -- one De Leo joined following a trade from Winnipeg in June 2018 -- deep in scoring centers. So why hasn’t he seen an extended shot in the NHL? His 5-9” stature doesn’t help, and his inability to help much on defense -- even in his draft +4 year -- is not a step in the right direction. Jumping into a re-tooling organization like the Ducks could help his case for an NHL spot, however, although he would need to prove he can take on a bottom six role. - TD
17 Jackson Lacombe, D (39th overall, 2019. Last Year: IE) As Lacombe spent the overwhelming majority of his draft year playing with the Shattuck St. Mary’s Midget Prep program, kicking butt and taking names, it was fairly clear that he was too good for the level he was at. His outrageous point totals (89 points in 54 games as a defenseman) need to be taken with a few shakers of salt. That said, when he did play in the USHL for a few scattered games with the Chicago Steel, he showed a different side of his game, one seemingly more indicative of what he could develop into. Tall and lanky, with room to gain mass, he is a plus skater and shows the ability to move the ability at a solid level, similar to what he demonstrated in the pre-season at the Hlinka Gretzky Cup. Most notable to these eyes, he was able to read the play at a higher level than was necessary in the prep ranks. He has higher upside than some ranked above him on this list, but is further from reaching that level. -RW
18 Jack Badini, C/LW (91st overall, 2017. Last Year: 13) Along with Blake McLaughlin and Jackson Lacombe, Jack Badini is one of three former Chicago Steel players in the Anaheim system. Drafted in his second year of eligibility after leading the Steel to a USHL crown in 2017, his first two years at Harvard have been solid, but not spectacular. He is still fleet of foot and a dangerous penalty killer. Since being drafted, Badini has grown more into his frame over two years at Harvard and can be a tougher player to get past in his own end. He has not been given an extended opportunity playing special teams, but has still managed to contribute at a nice secondary pace. Badini still has the makings of a solid bottom six forward, possibly at center, but it would be good to see him gain additional responsibilities with the Crimson before turning pro. - RW
19 Anthony Stolarz, G (45th overall, 2012 [Philadelphia]. Last Year: 13 [Philadelphia]) As an injury-prone netminder who has been through multiple NHL systems, you might be asking what Stolarz is even doing on a prospects rundown. Keep in mind that the massive, surprisingly athletic American still has quite a bit of upside and has even showed it in his brief NHL stints to this point. A deep-playing netminder, Stolarz is calm, shuts down the posts well, moves from side to side efficiently, and has a very composed game that limits scrambling. With John Gibson atop the goaltending totem pole, what the Ducks will do with the 25-year-old is an open question, but he projects to be a high-end backup goalie at the NHL level if given the role over an extended trial. - TD
20 Andrew Poturalski, C (UFA: Mar. 8, 2016 [Carolina]. Last Year: 14 [Carolina]) Everywhere he has gone in his career, Poturalski has scored at incredible rates. A star at the USHL and NCAA levels, the undrafted forward has torn up the AHL as well, most recently with a 72-23-47-70 regular season, Calder Cup title, and the Butterfield Trophy (AHL postseason MVP) with Charlotte in 2018-19. A decisive, speedy playmaker with quick hands and high-end vision, the 25-year-old possesses a ceiling of a depth scoring forward with potential to have a ton of success on the power play. The lack of a quick first step has limited his ability to attack on the fly, while his undersized frame makes him nearly non-existent around the boards and might be the primary reason why he only received a two game NHL cameo across his three full season in the Carolina organization. With a rebuilding Anaheim team, he may finally get his chance. - TD
]]>In addition, the division features perhaps the largest disparity between the talent level of the clubs. You have a team like Bakersfield that will casually reel off a 17-game winning streak, and teams like Ontario, who have already effectively been eliminated from postseason contention with more than a dozen games left on the calendar. 26 points separate the Condors and the Reign in the standings.
However, the prospects involved still have the same job to do, and in a sense, their efforts are amplified because of the frequency of common opponents and the aspect of there being fewer games from which to impress your organization. With that, let's take a look at the Pacific Division's brightest young guns from February.
Bakersfield Condors (Edmonton Oilers)

The Condors are a killing machine, a club that has won 19 out of their last 21 games and are being led by a couple of top Edmonton Oilers prospects. Tyler Benson (4th in Oilers' preseason prospect rankings) and Cooper Marody (5th) are the team's two leading scorers and have been absolute dynamite over a historically hot streak.
Benson's (9-37-46) first pro season has been an exhibition on what he can do when his health cooperates, as the play-making left wing's creativity, hockey IQ, and discipline have all been on full display. The 20-year-old drives play and carries his own line with his intellect and vision and looks like a surefire middle-six NHL assist machine, even if he severely lacks a finishing touch to his team-leading shot totals (141, 6.3%).
Marody (13-30-43), since coming over from the Philadelphia Flyers last year, has had an equally impressive rookie pro season. The stocky, muscular centerman has displayed his wicked wrist shot -- while improving his hands down low in the zone and his specialty moves in one-on-one situations -- in the process of earning a short, albeit scoreless, recall to Edmonton.
The two have similar ceilings, as versatile middle-sixers. However, if I were an Oilers fan, I would be a little worried about the front office's supposed plan to let their top prospects become "overripe" in the AHL, which might stunt the development of these two forwards. They look like NHL-ready players already, especially in Marody's case, because he is already 22 years old.
San Jose Barracuda (San Jose Sharks)
As a first-year pro who needed to prove himself capable of scoring in the pros -- something he did at will in the WHL -- Jayden Halbgewachs has to be pretty satisfied with himself this season. Despite a pretty concrete third-line role with less power play time than he probably should be getting, Halbgewachs (12th) has shown flashes of offensive brilliance at times in 2018-19.
With 26 points (10-16-26), the former Moose Jaw Warriors star has proved to be a worthy free agent signing for the Sharks organization, who inked the undrafted Halbgewachs to a contract in December of 2017. He exhibits quick hands whether passing or stickhandling, and is a very fast decision-maker, which translates well to the NHL. Though he is undersized and is not the fastest skater, his agility and technical skating skill plays up his otherwise average skating.
San Jose got a very intriguing prospect at the trade deadline in 21-year-old Swede Jonathan Dahlen, who entered his third farm system in as many years in the deal that sent him from Vancouver to the Sharks organization. Dahlen (5th in Canucks' preseason prospect rankings) has been a solid addition to the Barracuda top-six, totaling four assists in four games since the trade.
Dahlen possesses silky-smooth hands and a top-tier hockey IQ, while his improved skating speed has made him a dangerous offensive player. He could stand to shoot more, especially on the rush, but coaches love pass-first wingers who can carry their own line like this. Also, of interest, Dahlen told hockeynews.se that his offensive game was being stifled while playing for the Utica Comets, the Canucks' AHL affiliate. A change of scenery will likely suit the left-hander well going forward.
San Diego Gulls (Anaheim Ducks)
The Gulls received some help via trade for the last fourth of the AHL schedule, in the form of former Iowa Wild forward Justin Kloos, an undrafted 25-year-old with some quiet NHL potential. What the future holds for Kloos remains to be seen, but for short-term assistance in the AHL, the Ducks got a steal.
Kloos (16th in Minnesota's preseason prospect rankings) is a hard-working middle-six checking forward with the touch and offensive senses of a depth scorer. His shot is a legitimate weapon in the attacking zone, and something he is very willing to let loose, but he also possesses solid vision and stick skills. His presence has already made a difference for the San Diego offense (1-7-8 in 11 games).
In a tight postseason race, the addition of Kloos comes at the right time, due to the absences of Sam Steel (1st), Isac Lundestrom (2nd), Troy Terry (3rd) and Max Jones (8th), all of whom made a massive mark on the Gulls' offense earlier this season. Steel, Terry, and Jones are kicking it with the lowly Ducks in the NHL, while Lundestrom plays out his assignment in Sweden.
Gulls faithful will hope Kalle Kossila (15th) can step up, as the 25-year-old center has been a near point-per-game player in the AHL this season and has what it takes to carry a line and a team, at least at the AHL level. Though his stints in the NHL to this point have been less than promising, Kossila (13-17-30) is a mature, skilled playmaker who consistently gets everyone involved in plays.
Colorado Eagles (Colorado Avalanche)
The Eagles remain a very intriguing team with their depth in scoring, and a sizable amount of that depth scoring is coming from an interesting bunch of prospects in the Avalanche system. The impressively resurgent A.J. Greer (18th) and solid rookie, 2018 first-rounder Martin Kaut (4th) are a start, but it extends beyond those two.
Defenseman Nicolas Meloche (15th), a former high second-rounder whose development path to this point has been very rocky, is back on the right track. The 6-3", 205 lb rearguard is leveraging his great size more, using his bulk to pester opposing forwards down low in his zone, and pinching more against the boards in the offensive zone.
What Meloche (6-14-20) needs to work on more is his willingness to shoot, rather than over pass (which is his fallback move). His shot can be a weapon at even strength and on the power play, and to use it more consistently and more frequently should be a point of emphasis for the 21-year-old right-hander. He isn't the most fleet-of-foot skater, though he is pretty quick for a big man, and will need to find a way to contribute offensively somehow.
Tucson Roadrunners (Arizona Coyotes)
Tucson's lineup got a facelift with the addition of former Milwaukee Admirals forward Emil Pettersson, who was acquired via trade with the Nashville Predators organization. Pettersson (13th in Nashville rankings) might be past his realistic NHL chances, but can provide a boost to a stagnant offense.
Pettersson (0-5-5 since the trade) is a smart and reliable two-way center whose hustle and competitiveness can be infectious, and a decently skilled offensive threat who appears on the power play. With the Coyotes in the thick of the playoff race in the NHL's Western Conference, it won't be now that they give the Swede a try, but his play this season could earn him a recall and an NHL debut eventually.
An under-the-radar guy with NHL specs is Michael Bunting, who is seemingly getting better by the game. Though the AHL All-Star, not ranked in our preseason Coyotes prospect rankings, lacks any skill that ranks above the average tier, he is a consistent producer and plays with a physical edge on the Roadrunners' top two lines. Bunting (11-17-28), a fourth-round selection in 2014, made his NHL debut this season, and has since played with the competitive drive and leadership qualities of a future major-league star.
Tucson's other league All-Star, Kyle Capobianco (7th), will be out for the remainder of the season with a leg injury suffered shortly after a well-deserved promotion to the NHL. The Roadrunners will miss his smooth skating, passing skills, and three-zone awareness, things that they really can't replace. Capobianco (7-25-32) had been the team's leading scorer for a good portion of the season.
Stockton Heat (Calgary Flames)
This season, the Heat have been a team of redemption for a lot of players. Once high-profile prospects who flamed out under their initial draft teams, like Alan Quine (ineligible), Kerby Rychel (17th), and Curtis Lazar (ineligible) have taken refuge in the Stockton locker room, providing a veteran boost to an otherwise pretty young team.
The Flames system doesn't quite benefit from the presence of this type of player, though. For example, Lazar was summoned by the parent club in mid-February but has yet to appear in a game. Calgary and Stockton alike must see contributions from their top prospects before anyone else.
Guys such as Dillon Dube, for instance. Dube (2nd) has been dynamite for the Heat since being assigned by the Flames after being held to just five points in 23 NHL games. The two-time World Junior Championship competitor for Canada has improving rink sense that are helping him round out an otherwise electric offensive game that features above average ranks in shot tools, energy/hustle, puck skills, and acceleration/footwork.
Matthew Phillips (6th) has proven, despite his 5-7" size and how he fell to the sixth round of the 2016 draft, that he can be a pro-caliber player with the right opportunity. Having torn up the WHL with Victoria for four seasons, his last a 112-point campaign, his offensive skills are obvious.
He is a quick, head-down skater with lightning-like top speed and sick hands, especially in tight. His shot is as fast as that of someone six inches taller and has been used on the power play as a legitimate weapon in the slot. Phillips (11-18-29) is an absolute pest on and off the puck in all three zones, as well. He will probably need another year to develop, but his size and skillset, from a style standpoint, make him kind of like a Diet Johnny Gaudreau.
Ontario Reign (Los Angeles Kings)
A quick stick tap for defenseman Matt Roy. The first time I took his game in, I didn't think anything of him, but he kept improving and become a leader -- on and off the ice -- of a thin Ontario team, and earned a recall to Los Angeles, where he has spent the last ten games. Roy (not ranked), a right-handed Michigan Tech alum, is a true shutdown defenseman whose stick positioning, physicality down low, and shot-blocking, make him a penalty kill staple anywhere he goes.
The 24-year-old started the season behind guys like Alex Lintuniemi (16th) and Sean Walker (20th) on the depth chart, as well as on the pecking order for potential NHL promotion/staying power. Roy (8-21-29) has arguably surpassed both of them.
Another person who has impressed greatly in spite of the circumstances is rookie winger Carl Grundstrom, who was acquired by the Kings in a late-January trade with the Toronto Maple Leafs that sent Jake Muzzin to The Six. Grundstrom (4th in Toronto's preseason prospect rankings) is a rugged but speedy forward with excellent hands and purposeful passing, earning a recent recall to the NHL with that versatile skillset and overall creativity.
Grundstrom (3-7-10) is only 21 and will assist the rebuilding Kings in getting back to the top of the mountain. L.A.'s farm system was ranked 16th out of 31 in our preseason farm system rankings, and the middling prospect core became significantly better with the presence of Grundstrom.
]]>