[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 Jonathan Dahlen – McKeen's Hockey https://www.mckeenshockey.com The Essential Hockey Annual Wed, 08 Feb 2023 16:35:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 NHL PROSPECTS: 22-23 European Prospect Musings #2 – Prospects coming into focus in the stretch run https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/nhl-prospects-european-prospect-musings-2-22-23-season-prospects-coming-focus-stretch-run/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/nhl-prospects-european-prospect-musings-2-22-23-season-prospects-coming-focus-stretch-run/#respond Wed, 08 Feb 2023 16:28:41 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=180250 Read More... from NHL PROSPECTS: 22-23 European Prospect Musings #2 – Prospects coming into focus in the stretch run

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While the NHL All-Star Game has just wrapped up and NHL teams are gearing up for whatever trade deadline transactions they may intend to conduct at the end of the month, most European leagues are in the stretch run for playoff spots, with a few leagues just a half dozen games away from “the best time of the year”. Looking across Europe and even into Russia, there are plenty of interesting prospect notes, but not a whole of stories that have NHL teams licking their chops about a young man who is guiding the fortunes of his respective league, much less his team.

We’d like to take a look at some of the more notable stories that have been developing to this point in the season.

230103 Rögles William Wallinder, 3 januari 2023 i Växjö.
Foto: Jonas Ljungdahl / BILDBYRÅN

Sweden

Coming into the season as a favorite, Rogle has certainly not had the season it was expecting and is currently mired in 11th, yet only four points away from 8th place. The team has nonetheless seen several young draftees grow into bigger, if not chief roles. It was expected that Detroit’s Marco Kasper would grow on last season, and he has, putting up eight goals and 20 points to date. A number of his assists have come on the power play, and he’s had a top nine role pretty much all season. As a third-year pro, Adam Edstrom (NYR) is in the midst of a career season, even if his 12 points to date are only minimally more than what he’s produced the past two years. His role has grown and he’s looking a lot more at home in his 6’8”, 225-pound body.

Another Rangers pick, Oliver Tarnstrom, has taken on a much smaller role, but also suited up for 32 games now while Ottawa’s 2022 3rd rounder Oskar Pettersson has found himself in a Rogle jersey for 21 games, which might have been more had he not spent several weeks playing for the WJC squad. Each has two points in the SHL this year. Buffalo’s SHL recent 7th rounder Linus Sjodin has suited up for 41 games (six points) himself, although this is his second full season in the SHL.

But the real story on the prospect front have been the defensemen William Wallinder (DET) and Adam Engstrom (MON). A recent second rounder, Wallinder was already a contributing regular last season, but his role has grown into that of the team’s go-to player on the blueline. He not only leads all defensemen with 23 points in 41 games but is third on the entire team in scoring. At the same time, Engstrom has wiggled his way into what is basically a top 4 role, contributing 10 points in 32 games along the way. That actually has him 5th overall in the SHL in junior rookie scoring. The world got to see how far he’s come when he put up three points and a +6 at the WJC for Team Sweden. His star is rising considerably on the prospect front.

As should come as no surprise, the top scorers in the league continue to be veterans, with recent Maple Leaf Antti Suomela having led the way most of the season. His 24 goals and 48 points in just 38 games were good for tops and have him producing at a clip that few players have played at in the SHL over the past decade. He is however now trailing UFA and linemate Patrik Karlkvist, who has collected 50 points in 41 contests. Recent San Jose Shark Jonathan Dahlen, who headed back to his heart and hometown team Timra to play his first ever season of SHL play, is sitting 9th in league scoring with 17 goals and 32 points. The 25-year-old had 12 goals for the Sharks just last season.

But all eyes are still on Örebro HK forward Leo Carlsson, who’s coming off a 6-point WJC performance. He’s not blowing anything out of the water with his five goals and 18 points in 34 games, but as usually happens in a top pro league, vets tend to be relied upon more down the stretch run. His name still tops the list of draft eligibles, but we think NHL teams have got to have Axel Sandin-Pelikka ranked among their top 20 prospects for next summer’s event. And we’d advise any and everyone who is stat watching to disregard his mere five points in 22 games and the quiet assist at the WJC. His coaches already trust him. He’s getting PP time and he’s getting time at the end of the game when something is on the line. His understanding of the game, ice usage, and situations is simply something you don’t see much in a player this age.

A teammate of his in Skelleftea and on the U20 club is Zeb Forsfjall. The young man with a slight build has 10 games of SHL play and is looking like a lock for the U18 Worlds this spring. He is the younger brother of 20-year-old Mans Forsfjall who is undrafted but looking like quite the overage option in this summer’s draft, often found on the first line and having put up two goals, 13 points, and a +14 thus far this season. Would be fascinating if the brothers are both selected next summer.

There’s a whole bunch more going on across the nation in the SHL, Allsvenskan, and U20 circuit with a number of draft-eligible players getting shifts in pro hockey, but we continue to be very impressed with the J20 Nationell Noah Dower Nilsson, whose 48 points in 28 games means he’s clipping at a 1.78 PPG pace, which is a league-high. It’s only been good enough to get him into one game of SHL action, but the mother club Frolunda is chock full of options and, well, Detroit prospect Liam Dower Nilsson (22 games) looks to be blocking his path to the bigs at the moment.

Boston Bruins fans will be happy to hear that Latvian pick Dans Locmelis isn’t far behind Nilsson in U20 production with 47 points in 35 games, good for 6th in the league. Lulea would have loved to test him at the SHL level by now, but that won’t be happening as Locmelis is scheduled to begin playing for the University of Massachusetts next fall. Expect this well-schooled and very experienced young man to have an instant impact on college hockey next season.

As the draft approaches, we’ll be spending time at the site with the likes of defenseman Theo Lindstein (22 games for Brynas), Frolunda two-way forward Otto Stenberg, and Danish surprise Oscar Molgaard (31 games and six points for HV71), but we’ll wrap up our look at Sweden with overage defenseman Oskar Asplund. In the midst of his second full season of HockeyAllsvenskan play, the heady two-way 5’11” defenseman already has five goals and 27 points in 39 games. It has earned him two games of SHL play with Skelleftea and overall, he reminds us a bit of former overager Adam Wilsby, who was selected in the 4th round by Nashville in the 2020 draft. Wilsby is currently suiting up for Milwaukee of the AHL. Asplund is even in the same organization.

Joakim Kemell of Finland celebrates after scoring 2-2 during the 2022 IIHF World Junior Championship final between Canada and Finland on August 20, 2022 in Edmonton.
Photo: Joel Marklund / BILDBYRÅN /

Finland

The Finnish Liiga is well on its way to the finish line and one of the more astounding trends is that there are few players currently scoring at a PPG pace. Even the league leader Michael Joly has just 49 points in 48 games. Perhaps not surprising in light of that, but astounding nonetheless, is that Joona Ikonen (an undrafted 24-year-old) leads the league in goal-scoring behind Joly’s 21 goals with just 20 markers. Yes, in some cases, individual team scoring is simply spread across more shoulders, but the lack of individual scoring prowess is more akin to what we usually see in the SHL.

What this means is that a few current and former prospects are putting up numbers that are eyebrow-raising to say the least. Former Winnipeg Jets draft pick Sami Niku couldn’t edge out a solid NHL job despite at times outstanding AHL numbers. He was suiting up for the Montreal Canadiens just last season. At age 25, he decided he needed more job security and perhaps one very impressive season in Europe to get his name back into the minds of NHL GMs. Well, his nine goals and 37 points in 46 games for JYP is likely doing the trick while simultaneously making him the league’s top scorer among defensemen. An appearance at the men’s World Championship is all but a lock and then the question will be if Niku gets an offer that has a spot in an NHL line-up somewhat set in stone.

This past week, the Islanders moved arguably their top prospect in Aatu Raty to the Vancouver Canucks as part of the Bo Horvat trade, but his brother Aku Raty (ARI) is having himself a fine season for Ilves with 29 points and a +16 in 41 games. It’s a career best for the 21-year-old and is coming at a time where Arizona is going to want to decide on whether to sign him to an ELC. Really arriving on the scene has been Tampa Bay’s 2021 7th rounder, the 6’2”, 210-pound Niko Huuhtanen. Certainly, his 77 points in 64 games for the Everett Silvertips meant that he was already on the map for most prospect watchers, but he’s reinforced the belief that there’s a pro here with a sense for offensive generation, as his 15 goals and 27 points in 36 games go to show this season. That puts him within the top 40 in league-wide scoring, ahead of i.e., solid Maple Leafs prospect Roni Hirvonen, who himself is doing just fine with 24 points in 46 games for HIFK.

One name you’re not seeing is that of U18 and WJC star Joakim Kemell (NAS), whose 11 points and -14 rating in 32 games have him flying far below expectations. Quite the opposite is the case for Patrik Puistola (CAR), who leads all U23 players with 13 goals and 34 points in 48 games. That not only has him 12th in league scoring but means he’s the clear-cut go-to player for his Jukurit team, something that has to have the Hurricanes brass mighty excited about.

When it comes to Finland’s top junior league, there are not many NHL-drafted players currently plugging away at it, but Buffalo’s Viljami Marjala is second in league scoring with 48 points and a +29 in 31 games. He’s also put up two points in four games for Liiga club TPS and it’s felt he’ll conclude the season with the big club one way or another. You may remember that Marjala spent the past two seasons with the Quebec Remparts of the QMJHL. It was felt Nashville went a very safe route in picking all-round defenseman Kasper Kulonummi in the 3rd round last summer. His 39 points in 33 games has him second to teammate Leevi Sorvali (42 in 39 contests) league-wide in defenseman scoring. He’s seen 5 games of Liiga action for Tappara this season, which - in case you hadn’t heard - is Finland’s most hockey-crazy town.

True prospect fans will surely be wondering what 2024 top prospect Aron Kiviharju has been up to in recent weeks. Many had hoped to see him on this winter’s WJC squad, but the season has seen a more conservative approach. Having just turned 17, Kiviharju has gotten into 14 games of Liiga action (two assists and a +1 rating) while only being able to suit up for 20 U20 league games this year, in which he’s impacted play fairly considerably with a 1-16-17 and +11 statline. All fine, but not screaming superstar just now. Still, the U18 Worlds is where he’s expected to show the international scouting community just how far he’s come.

Germany

The DEL has been of special interest this year, but not so much due to any particular up-n-coming young players making noise.

No, it’s been all about a certain prospect making a major comebokk on the prospect scene. Oh yes, that play on words just couldn’t be skipped out on as former St. Louis Blues 1st rounder and current Carolina Hurricanes asset Dominik Bokk has spent all season letting the hockey world know he is not to be forgotten after, well, pretty much having gone forgotten in the Hurricanes organization. As we mentioned in the fall, he’s been playing for league newbie Frankfurt Lions after having won the championship with Berlin last season, with whom his cameo had little to do with Berlin’s fate when all was said and done. Now he’s spent most of the season leading the entire DEL in scoring, currently coming in at 24 goals and 49 points in 43 games. He’s doing it for a team that entered the year with but an outside shot at the playoffs and it has to be clear to anyone watching that he’s technically and physically a number too good for this league, one filled with former NHL and AHLers. His scoring has often been timely, and he’s constantly been able to create and make his teammates better.

If he hasn’t renewed Carolina’s interest, there must be a few teams out there wondering if this is your classic case of a late bloomer. Once the DEL year is over, he’s basically a lock for the men’s WC tournament, which will surely make him one of the more interesting viewings from an NHL standpoint. Or could he be part of a trade deadline package before that?

Unfortunately, Bokk was caught in an awkward check this weekend and will miss the remainder of the regular season with a shoulder injury.

What’s also been noteworthy this year is the goaltending position. Primarily young, German-born goaltenders have found themselves getting plenty of ice time and holding their own in the process. Yes, 26-year-old Maxi Franzreb is making the most of the season, getting more starts than any U27 goaltender and shining brightly with a 2.28 GAA and .925 save percentage. Mirko Pantkowski (24) has become a full-fledged starter himself, going 21-15 thus far for Cologne. But the kids really opening eyes are Arno Tiefensee (20), Florian Bugl (20), Tobias Ancicka (21), and - in a cameo appearance - Daniel Allavena (23), who went 4-1 over an emergency 5-game stretch for Munich. For the other three, Ancicka has 30 starts for Berlin as the go-to number 1 in goal, Bugl has gone 15-7 for Straubing since having initially filled in for the injured starter, and Tiefensee is way up there in the league with a 2.17 GAA, .919 SV%, and 10-5 record for Mannheim.

This century simply hasn’t witnessed this many German goalies successfully carrying this much responsibility in goal in Germany’s top league. And as everyone knows, NHL history is full of goaltenders signed out of Europe as free agents in their mid- to late 20s. Some of whom have ended up having successful careers, so these are names you’re going to want to have in the back of your mind moving forward. Also, if you’re wondering who the next minor league UFA signings á la Julian Napravnik and Kai Wissmann may be, two Ingolstadt Panthers have arrived on the scene this year in a big way, both quite unexpectedly. Defenseman Leon Huttl is just 22 and of average size, but his 19 points in 45 games have been accompanied by a +21 rating and he’s been effective in all three zones for a team that has experienced major injury hits to every position. Up front, Polish-born Wojciech Stakowiak has been the team’s fully unexpected all-everything contributor. Now 23, he was coming off of five- and six-point seasons, but now has 15 goals, 31 points, and a +16 in 46 games, finding himself on the ice in all key situations.

We already chronicled how a number of U21 players had started getting a shot to kick off the season and we must say, it hasn’t stopped. The number of players 21 and under who have gotten a shot in the DEL this season has been astounding, with 16-year-old defenseman Max Merkl (Nuremberg), 17-year-old defenseman Paul Mayer (Mannheim), and 18-year-olds Edmund Junemann (Düsseldorf) and Lukas Ullmann (Ingolstadt) having basically come out of nowhere to get into a handful of games. With injuries on the blueline, Ingolstadt even reacquired 18-year-old defenseman Niklas Hubner out of Finnish juniors, and he’s suited up for each of the last seven games. We commented some years ago about how particularly the SHL was able to regularly churn out players aged 16-21 who were taking fairly regular shifts. The DEL knew it had to follow suit in order for the quality of players to increase and provide the nation with more quality depth. Just that seems to be happening as we write.

Russia

The Matvei Michkov watch has been gaining momentum since he was loaned out to HK Sochi. After just three scoreless games with St. Petersburg and then an eye-popping 10 goals and 14 points in 12 games with SKA’s VHL outfit, Michkov found himself in the show on a scoring line with a Sochi team that had an offensive role to offer. The result has been five goals and nine points in 17games, with three of those points coming in the two most recent games. All things Russia continue to be taboo, but in a time where Connor Bedard is running away with the first overall pick status, the hockey world has got to be back to asking whether Michkov isn’t still the second-best option at this summer’s draft?

Like with the Finnish Liiga, players clipping at a PPG pace are hard to come by in the KHL this year. Former NHLer Dmitri Jaskin is back to his scoring ways though, leading the league with 33 goals (3rd with 50 points) in 59 games, closely followed by German national Brooks Macek, who has 31 in 52 games. At the same time, impending 26-year-old free agent Marat Khairullin is having a career year for SKA with 25 goals and 50 points, blowing his previous high of 32 points out of the water. Will he be sought after like Andrey Kuzmenko was last offseason?

Pleasantly though, several NHL prospects are making some real noise with career years. It simply must be pointed out that Carolina’s 21-year-old defensive prospect Alexander Nikishin, who measures in at an imposing 6’4” and 216 pounds, leads ALL defensemen in scoring with 10 goals and 49 points in 57 games. It’s basically a season for the ages in a league still dominated by older veterans. The question is when and if he’s coming over and just how his game will translate. But he’s clearly the NHL asset with the most traction in Europe this season. Almost just as impressive is the work being put in by Colorado’s Nikolai Kovalenko , who checks in at 6th overall in league scoring with 19 goals and 48 points in 50 games. A chip off the old block, it’ll be interesting to see if Colorado feels Kovalenko’s work is in line with an ELC this offseason.

Two other highly touted prospects keeping things extremely fascinating are New Jersey’s Arseni Gritsyuk (21) and Minnesota’s Marat Khusnutdinov (20). Whereas Gritsyuk pretty much arrived on the scene last season with 22-16-38 in 52 contests, he’s now heading towards the playoffs with Omsk sporting 13-21-34 numbers as more of a set-up man for Reid Boucher (25 goals) and Vladimir Tkachev (20 goals). It’s Khusnitdinov who is truly arriving this season as his 11-26-37 and +12 statline for SKA marks a true step in development, far outweighing anything done the past three seasons, where he already showed some glimpses of what was to come. Hard to imagine that GM Bill Guerin won’t be looking to get him over to North America for next season.

Out of the nation’s second tier league, VHL, there are three players who have caught our eyes as being noteworthy. Up front, Detroit’s 2022 2nd rounder Dmitri Buchelnikov, who can be quite the wizard with the puck on his blade, has 14 goals, 27 points, and a +9 in just 32 games. He’s also chipped in 12 points in four MHL contests as well as two points in 10 KHL games for St. Petersburg. In short, he’s having a wildly successful DY+1 season. On the defensive side, we let you know that we’d be closely watching LA Kings’ draft pick Kirill Kirsanov and he hasn’t disappointed in a developmental capacity. After starting off on fire, his overall game has leveled out to a sound 13 points and +13 rating in 28 games, but he’s been a PPG player in five MHL games and has gotten his feet wet in nine KHL contests (one assist, -5 rating). The 6’1”, 198-pound defender is right on track in his development. The league is also playing host to a 23-draft prospect who has been gaining traction. Alexander Rykov is a mid-sized forward who has 11 points in 20 games for Chelyabinsk and has even gotten into six KHL games (no stats) for Traktor. He’s exactly the type of player we’d have loved to see at the U18 Worlds this spring.

Another young man we’d like to make mention of is 19-year-old forward Nikita Grebyonkin. After a very impressive draft year in the junior circuit MHL, collecting 77 points and a +42 in 67 total games, Grebyonkin has spent the majority of this season loaned out to Amur Khabarovsk with whom he’s put up nine goals, 23 points, and a +3 in 40 games. Already a fan favorite for the club’s faithful, Grebyonkin is generally a player who just hasn’t played in a spotlight location. What we’re seeing is an astute 5th pick of the Toronto Maple Leafs whose slick style and 6’2”, 180-pound frame is looking very promising moving forward. That said, his skating is that of a later round draft pick.

The notes are currently minimal on both the NHL and prospect fronts in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Switzerland, but there are a few player situations developing there that we’ll look to highlight in the next edition. The upcoming playoffs will surely give us much to muse about as the spring rolls around.

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CULLEN: 20 FANTASY HOCKEY POINTS: Sleepers, Rookies, and Potential Breakthrough Players – Middle to Late Rounds https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/cullen-20-fantasy-hockey-points-sleepers-rookies-potential-breakthrough-players-middle-late-rounds/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/cullen-20-fantasy-hockey-points-sleepers-rookies-potential-breakthrough-players-middle-late-rounds/#respond Fri, 01 Oct 2021 14:02:42 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=172544 Read More... from CULLEN: 20 FANTASY HOCKEY POINTS: Sleepers, Rookies, and Potential Breakthrough Players – Middle to Late Rounds

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Each week, I will dive into the numbers and offer some insights that should help when it comes time to make fantasy hockey decisions.

In this week’s edition of 20 Fantasy Points, a look at players to consider in the middle and later rounds of drafts this season. Some sleeper candidates, rookies, potential breakthrough players, but all in the name of finding value on draft day. Evgeni Dadonov, Michael Bunting, Jonathan Dahlen, Viktor Arvidsson, and Chandler Stephenson are some value plays with potential.

#1 Before managing 13 goals in 55 games for Ottawa last season, Vegas Golden Knights winger Evgeni Dadonov had three straight seasons with at least 25 goals. His shot rate dropped from 8.2 shots/60 to 6.0 shots/60 during 5-on-5 play but a drop in power-play production sunk his season. In 2019-2020, Dadonov had 17 power play points, including 11 goals, for Florida. Last season, in more than 159 power play minutes, Dadonov had zero goals and one assist. Vegas might offer him better opportunities, and they need his offense with Alex Tuch out of the lineup while he recovers from shoulder surgery.

#2 Washington Capitals center Lars Eller has yet to score 40 points in an NHL season, topping out at 39 points in 2019-2020, but that was in 69 games of a shortened season. Last season, Eller had 23 points in 44 games, his second straight season with better than 0.50 points per game, and the reason this has some importance is that the Washington Capitals could be missing Nicklas Backstrom for a while at the start of the season and if that is the case, Eller could find a more significant role, at least early in the season.

#3 There were 10 players to score at least half a goal per game last season. All 10 might not have survived a full 82-game schedule but it was the lowest number of players with at least half a goal per game (minimum 20 games) since 2016-2017, when there were only three. It would appear, then, that finding goals at the higher end of the scale has generally been easier over the past four seasons.

OTTAWA, ON - SEPTEMBER 29: Toronto Maple Leafs left wing Michael Bunting (58) closes on the play during first period National Hockey League preseason action between the Toronto Maple Leafs and Ottawa Senators on September 29, 2021, at Canadian Tire Centre in Ottawa, ON, Canada. (Photo by Richard A. Whittaker/Icon Sportswire)

#4 A player who just missed scoring 0.50 goals per game last season was new Toronto Maple Leafs winger Michael Bunting, who had 10 goals in 21 games for Arizona. It would be unreasonable to expect Bunting to score on 26.3% of his shots again, especially over a full season, but his brief success with Arizona was very much predicated on going to the dirty areas to score on tips and rebounds and that could conceivably secure him a valuable spot in Toronto’s top six.

#5 After two promising seasons to start his career, St. Louis Blues center and right winger Robert Thomas saw his production drop dramatically last season. Some of it was due to injury as he only played in 33 games but, in the games that he did play, Thomas saw his numbers decrease across the board. Most troubling was that his 5-on-5 rate of shots per 60 minutes dropped from 5.3 in 2019-2020 to 2.8 last season. Thomas is a decent pick for a bounce-back season but part of that will require him to generate more shots.

#6 It appears that the San Jose Sharks are going to give winger Jonathan Dahlen a prime opportunity to get his NHL career going. The 23-year-old was drafted by Ottawa and traded to Vancouver. After scoring 35 points in 59 AHL games, he returned to Sweden to play for Timra in the Allsvenskan league and Dahlen put up 61 goals and 148 points in 96 games over the past two seasons. It is a big jump from the Allsvenskan to the NHL but it also looks like the Sharks are prepared to give Dahlen a shot in a scoring role right away so he could be in a position to have some success.

#7 With the Pittsburgh Penguins missing both Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin at the start of the season, there could be an opening for 6-foot-6 forward Radim Zohorna to have in a significant role with the Penguins. Zohorna had four points (2 G, 2 A) in eight games for Pittsburgh last season, but he also had 11 points (3 G, 8 A) in 12 AHL games and 22 points (12 G, 10 A) in 21 Czech league games. As a late-round flier, might be worth a look.

#8 The 2020 first overall pick by the New York Rangers, Alexis Lafreniere had an underwhelming rookie season with 21 points (12 G, 9 A) in 56 games, but he got off to a terrible start with seven points in his first 27 games, improving to 14 points in the next 29 games. A small sign of progress? Maybe, but he will need to generate more shots. Last season, Lafreniere had 2.53 shots/60, which ranked 213th out of 277 forwards to play at least 500 5-on-5 minutes, falling between Oskar Lindblom and Josh Archibald.

#9 The Nashville Predators are hoping to inject some life into former Vegas prospect Cody Glass, the sixth pick in the 2017 Draft. Glass has 22 points in 66 NHL games early in his career, but five of his nine goals have come on the power play. His even-strength production has been abysmal. Across the past two seasons, there are 415 forwards that have played at least 500 5-on-5 minutes, Glass ranks 406th in points/60 (0.80) and 362nd in shots/60 (5.19). There may be some potential lurking, but the early returns have been rough.

#10 The Minnesota Wild continue to move pieces around as they try to overcome a lack of production down the middle of the ice. One big hope would be for Marco Rossi, the 9th pick in the 2020 Draft, to step into a prominent role but that could be asking a lot since Rossi missed all of last season suffering after-effects of Covid-19. But really, they need someone to bump out Victor Rask who had 0.26 individual expected goals per 60 last season. That ranked 276th out of 277 forwards to play at least 500 5-on-5 minutes.

RALEIGH, NC - MARCH 20: Columbus Blue Jackets right wing Patrik Laine (29) with the puck during the 1st period of the Carolina Hurricanes vs Columbus Blue Jackets on March 20th, 2021 at PNC Arena in Raleigh, NC (Photo by Jaylynn Nash/Icon Sportswire)

#11 Who ranked 277th? None other than Columbus’ Patrik Laine, just in case you weren’t sure if last season was enough of a disaster for a player who was an elite goal-scorer not so long ago but it is hard to become an elite goal scorer without generating legitimate scoring chances.

#12 In the past five seasons, the best goal per game rates for an individual season naturally have a lot of familiar names. Tops on the list is Auston Matthews, who scored 41 goals in 52 games last season (0.79 gpg), followed by the Rangers Mika Zibanejad in 2019-2020 (41 goals in 57 games) and then it became a gathering of premier scorers: Alex Ovechkin, Alex DeBrincat, David Pastrnak, Leon Draisaitl, Connor McDavid, 13 Sidney Crosby and then, with the 13th-best goals per game rate for a season in the past five years, it is Viktor Arvidsson. In 2018-2019, Arvidsson scored 34 goals in 58 games for Nashville. That might seem like a long way away after he scored 10 goals in 50 games last season but that high-end scoring potential is part of the reason that Los Angeles acquired him.

#13 Florida’s Sam Reinhart tied a career high with 25 goals in 54 games for Buffalo last season while scoring on a career-high 19.2% of his shots. While that percentage may regress, an opportunity to play alongside Aleksander Barkov with the Panthers may help him get even more opportunities. With Barkov on the ice last season, the Panthers had 65.2 shot attempts per 60 minutes. In Buffalo, the Sabres had 50.6 shot attempts per 60 during 5-on-5 play with Reinhart on the ice.

#14 In the past five seasons, Florida right winger Patric Hornqvist has scored 42 power play goals, tied for 21st in the league with Toronto’s John Tavares. Hornqvist also had more than 100 hits for five straight seasons before finishing with 80 hits in 44 games last season. Power play production and consistent hit totals make Hornqvist a value play in the later rounds.

#15 On the quest for defensive depth, consider Florida blueliner Gustav Forsling, who has 6.99 shots per 60 minutes across the past two seasons, ranking fifth among all defensemen that played at least 500 5-on-5 minutes. His 1.04 points/60 in that time ranks 43rd among 237 defensemen to meet that ice time qualification.

#16 Among defensemen to play at least 100 5-on-4 minutes last season, Shayne Gostisbehere ranked first in shot attempts per 60 minutes (31.67) and shots on goal per 60 minutes (16.12). Now in Arizona, can he be a factor on the Coyotes power play? It would presumably have to be on the second unit since Jakob Chychrun is set on PP1.

#17 Since scoring 40 goals for the Sabres in 2018-2019, and landing a monster contract as a result, Jeff Skinner has scored a total of 21 goals in 112 games. Only one of those goals has been on the power play, so maybe that is area to address in order to get him back on track. During 5-on-5 play, Skinner still creates chances. In the past two years, he has 10.1 shots per 60 minutes which ranks 15th among forwards that have skated in at least 1000 5-on-5 minutes. His three most common linemate in the past two seasons has been Curtis Lazar so it is possible that the Sabres could try to give Skinner a better chance to succeed by actually trying to achieve that objective.

#18 Coming off a season in which he scored on a career-low 7.6% of his shots, on the way to 16 points (6 G, 10 A) in 51 games, Boston’s Charlie Coyle does have an opportunity to see a big offensive increase this season if he can win the Bruins’ second-line center job in the wake of David Krejci’s departure. Coyle is facing competition from Jack Studnicka and possibly Erik Haula but skating between Taylor Hall and Craig Smith could be a plum spot for whomever wins the job. When Hall and Smith were on the ice together last season, the Bruins earned 66.9% of the shot attempts and outscored opponents 13-1 during 5-on 5-on-5 play.

#19 Hockey life has changed rather dramatically for Vegas Golden Knights center Chandler Stephenson, who was a checker early in his career with Washington before he joined Vegas and landed on the top line, skating with Max Pacioretty and Mark Stone. When Stephenson is on the ice with Stone, during the past two seasons, Vegas has outscored opponents 65-29 (69.2 GF%) and in the past two years, Stephenson has scored 1.84 points per 60 minutes of 5-on-5 play, the same rate as Claude Giroux and more than Nicklas Backstrom. The upshot here is that the Golden Knights are probably not in a major rush to find someone else for that role because it is already working really well with Stephenson there.

#20 A name to keep in mind among defensemen, and one who does not get a power play boost, is Tampa Bay’s Erik Cernak. In the past two seasons, there have been 174 defensemen to have played at least 1000 5-on-5 minutes and Cernak ranks 10th with 6.57 shots per 60 minutes. Mix that in with more than 2.7 hits per game during his career and Cernak does offer some deep league value.

*Advanced stats via Natural Stat Trick

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2021-22 TOP 15 PROSPECTS: SAN JOSE SHARKS – RANK: #16 – TIER III https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/top-15-prospects-san-jose-sharks-rank-16-tier-iii/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/top-15-prospects-san-jose-sharks-rank-16-tier-iii/#respond Sat, 11 Sep 2021 11:42:58 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=172334 Read More... from 2021-22 TOP 15 PROSPECTS: SAN JOSE SHARKS – RANK: #16 – TIER III

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San Jose Sharks

#16 San Jose - The Sharks have been prevented from undergoing a full rebuild due to multiple bad contracts at the NHL level, but they have drafted heavily for upside lately, especially at forward, and now a path back to NHL relevence is in sight.

Sweden's William Eklund during the ice hockey match in the training match between Sweden and Denmark on April 28, 2021 in Malmö.
Photo: Mathilda Ahlberg / BILDBYRÅN
  1. William Eklund

While it was a very successful draft season for the 5’10 forward out of the storied Djurgårdens program, it was far from an easy one. Yes, he led the SHL in U20 scoring by a forward (ahead of the likes of Lucas Raymond and Alexander Holtz) and was the league’s rookie of the year. However, bad luck seemed to follow him like a cloud hanging over him. First, he contracted Covid in December, eliminating him from contention for the Swedish World Junior team. Then he had to have his appendix removed in January after falling ill. Finally, he got injured at the Swedish training camp for the World Championships in May and was not able to participate at that event either.

Eklund’s skating might just be his strongest asset. His mother was a figure skater, and it shows in Eklund’s skating that he has taken advantage of that growing up. His edges are exceptional, and it gives him the opportunity to turn fast (faster than his opponent) and those turns give him the little extra space that he needs to create chances for himself or his teammates. William Eklund is also elusive because of how quick his hands are. As a slightly smaller forward, the Sharks may need to be patient with him as he spends a year or two more in Sweden to further gain strength. Even as one of the older players in the draft, he is still somewhat physically immature. He can get pushed off the puck a little too easily and he needs to become stronger to really make an impact in the NHL. As he gets stronger and builds confidence in his physical abilities, Eklund does have the chance to be a physically intense competitor who is difficult to separate from the puck. He may be the highest future point producer of anyone that was available in 2021. - McKeen’s Draft Guide 2021

  1. Thomas Bordeleau

Even surrounded by talents like 2021 top five picks Owen Power, Matthew Beniers, and Kent Johnson, as well as 2020 first rounder Brendan Brisson, Bordeleau stood out as an offensive producer without parallel. His 22 assists were seventh in all of the NCAA ranks, and he wasn’t just teeing them up for a solitary big shot sniper either, as no one among his teammates scored more than 10 times.

A smaller forward, Bordeleau plays a gutsy game, working to get into the hard areas of the ice to create a play, and succeeded more than most. Although he lacks elite speed, he has quick feet, and even quicker hands. He reads opponents very well, and rapidly picks up on their errors, forcing turnovers. His quick hands also work to make him an asset on the faceoff dot. The next step in his progression is to reintroduce his wicked wrist shot as a primary weapon again, as that was his primary selling feature during his time with the USNTDP. Considering how well he managed to perform without the sniper’s approach, the frequency of his setups for linemates, and even his proving that he didn’t need to be protected and could even be a regular penalty killer, the avenues to Bordeleau’s success at the NHL level are multiple. He could turn pro after this coming season, and possibly reach the NHL by 2023-24, with a likely top six outcome. - RW

  1. Ozzy Wiesblatt

After being drafted with the final first-round pick in 2020 by the Sharks, Wiesblatt got a chance to play six AHL games with the Barracuda with the pandemic curtailing major junior hockey in Canada. After the new year, he was returned to the WHL’s Raiders, where he posted 28 points in 21 games to cap a successful campaign.

A feisty, aggressive skater with an explosive first step, Wiesblatt fights through traffic and keeps his feet moving at a frenetic pace, utilizing his low center of gravity. He excels in tight spaces and is a tenacious forechecker without the puck, creating turnovers and opportunities on the penalty kill. He possesses quick hands but perhaps lacks the offensive upside that top-line players usually have. Although he’s a fairly disciplined player, Wiesblatt may need to play more of an agitator role in order to have success at the NHL level. His release is good but lacks velocity, and he will need to continue to add strength to compensate for his lack of size. With another two seasons of junior eligibility remaining, Wiesblatt will almost certainly return to the WHL for 2021-22, where he will likely be one of the top players in the league, and perhaps an invite to the World Junior Championships in December is in the cards as well. - AS

  1. Ryan Merkley

A dynamic offensive defenseman, Merkley started his pro journey last season after four years in the Ontario Hockey League. Given his high-risk style of play, the San Jose Sharks will have to be patient with Merkley as he learns to mitigate risk at the pro level, just as he had to do at the junior level. That was extremely evident with the Barracuda of the AHL in his rookie year. His skating ability and high skill level allows him to keep pace at the pro level...with ease. However, his decision making at both ends still leaves something to be desired.

An electric skater, especially due to his confidence on his edges and his ability to navigate traffic, Merkley can be a real asset in transition. Additionally, his ability to open up lanes on the powerplay with his footwork can give his offensive unit a major advantage. Over the course of his OHL career, his defensive commitment and ability improved, however, to be an NHL player, it will need to improve further. The offensive production this past year for the Barracuda may not be at the level some expected, but it is important to note that Merkley did not get first unit powerplay time, the situation where he would have likely been most effective. Look for him to improve his offensive numbers this year in the AHL with greater responsibility. He still projects as a potential offensively oriented top four defender and powerplay QB, however, he may yet be a few years away from making an impact. - BO

  1. Jonathan Dahlen

Dahlén has absolutely ripped apart the HockeyAllsvenskan over the last two years; he scored an unbelievable total of 148 points in just 96 games. He led the league in points last year with a nine-point lead over the second most productive player (Jens Lööke), who, on the other hand, played seven more games. Dahlén had no reason to stay in the Swedish second tier league; he should be ready for an NHL challenge. Even though he helped his team to promote to the top Swedish league, he´ll fight for a regular spot in the National Hockey League with San Jose.

A Sharks prospect, who was drafted by the Senators in the second round in 2016, signed a one-way contract with the team. He is a dynamic, offensively skilled winger, who would be best in the top-six. The jump from the Swedish second tier to the best league in the world is not easy, but Dahlén´s ridiculous numbers have proven he is capable of playing in a much better league than he did in the last two years. He is speedy and agile and has all the offensive tools in his skillset – he´s a great puck handler, passer and shooter, but he rather relies on his playmaking skills. On the other hand, he lacks grit and there were some consistency issues during his previous North American seasons, but he should be more NHL ready this time. If everything goes right for Dahlén, he is able to be a 0.5 point per game player even next season. - MD

  1. Ben Gaudreau

With a strong performance at the World Under 18 Hockey Championships in Texas, Gaudreau put himself in the conversation with the likes of Jesper Wallstedt and Sebastian Cossa as one of the top goaltenders available. The starter for the gold medal winning Canadians at the event, he was named the tournament’s top goaltender, an award won by the likes of Yaroslav Askarov, Ilya Samsonov, Juuse Saros, and John Gibson in the last decade. An incredibly meticulous and detailed oriented netminder, Gaudreau combines good size (6-2”) with an elite ability to process the action around him.

Ultimately, Gaudreau’s ability to read the play is a major strength. He just seems to be one step ahead of the play unfolding around him, allowing him to consistently be in the correct position. His play tracking ability is among the best of any goaltender to come through the OHL in recent years. Additionally, his movement is so refined. Rarely do you see him over-extend on his pushes, taking him out of the play or putting him out of position. Where Gaudreau sometimes gets himself in trouble is that holes can open up while moving and he can be susceptible to some “softer” goals to the five-hole area and close to the body as he pushes laterally. Like any young goaltender, he will also need to continue to improve his control of his lower body and pads, directing shots away from the slot with more consistency. All that said, Gaudreau definitely has the makeup, athleticism, and temperament to be a top flight NHL goaltender in time. He will return to the OHL this season with Sarnia and look to establish himself as one of the league’s best. - McKeen’s Draft Guide 2021

  1. Danil Gushchin

The third member of the relatively new Russian pipeline of talent that flows through Muskegon, Gushchin followed previous transplants Andrei Svechnikov (Car) and Yegor Afanasyev (Nsh) to the shores of Lake Michigan and made it into a home. After three seasons with the Lumberjacks, he departs as the club’s all-time leader in points, and with an NHL contract in hand. Lacking the size of the aforementioned trail setters, Gushchin more than made up for it with superb energy, and continuously growing skill with the puck. Highlight reel plays were par for the course all year long, as he grew more and more confident with the puck, and more and more able to make defenders look silly.

His straight-ahead speed is solid, but he shines playing an East-West game, forcing opponents to move laterally, and creating holes in otherwise airtight defenses. He packs a very heavy shot into his small frame, and plays relatively fearless, even though his lack of size makes him an inviting target and he isn’t shy about putting himself in harm’s way. There is risk in a player like this, particularly in that he might flounder if put in a bottom six role, teamed up with linemates lacking in the ability to play with high-end skills. And while he was a dangerous penalty killer with Muskegon, that risk will remain until he proves otherwise. Thankfully, his abilities wouldn’t look out of place in a top six role in the NHL. Where he plays this season remains to be seen, as he could go to the OHL with Niagara, as previously planned, or play in the AHL as a 19-year-old. - RW

  1. Tristen Robins

Tristen Robins has a motor that is working all the time. What makes him a promising hockey player is that his mind and body work at the same high speed. He is a 200-f00t player that makes quick decisive plays at both ends of the rink. He is capable of driving a line because of strong transition skills and passing ability. When in the offensive zone, he is comfortable with the puck on his stick and capable of picking corners with his shot or picking apart defenses with his passing. He plays the puck into space incredibly well and leads his guys into scoring opportunities. He makes quick passes and is always moving which makes him so difficult to defend. He is not scared of traffic and will carry the puck to the net, where his trigger reflexes enable him to push the puck wide to help break down the defensive zone coverage.

The biggest concern over his game is his size, but he is tenacious and hardworking so it shouldn’t be an issue like it is with other smaller players. Robins is a player that will need a season or two in the AHL where he can adjust to the pace and the size of the players. He will truly begin his pro journey this season with the Barracuda (after a two-game cup of coffee last year) and it will be interesting to see how he adapts. - VG

  1. Joachim Blichfeld

Blichfeld split 2020-21 between the Sharks and the AHL’s Barracuda, dressing in five NHL games and scoring his first-ever goal against the Wild’s Kaapo Kahkonen. He also earned a two-game suspension for a hit on Nathan MacKinnon. In the minors, Blichfeld posted 12 goals and 25 points in 22 games. A seventh-round pick five years ago, Blichfeld has quietly raised his stock and is knocking at the door of full-time NHL duties.

He possesses good wheels but doesn’t always move his feet enough, something that can be fixed with pro seasoning. His bread and butter is as a volume shooter, utilizing his terrific release, but finding the space to do so at the pro level isn’t that easy. Blichfeld is only average with the puck and as a passer, which may destine him as a bottom-six role player in the NHL if he cracks full-time. He needs to add strength in order to withstand the physical rigours of the game, and up his motor to pursue the puck rather than wait in the weeds to unleash his shot. With the Sharks stagnating a bit, undergoing off-ice drama with Evander Kane, and possessing a thin prospect pool, there could be an opportunity to grab a roster spot this fall in camp for the Dane, who has beaten the odds thus far. - AS

  1. Sasha Chmelevski

2020/21 has to be considered a breakout season for Chmelevski at the pro level. The former OHL star was among the leading scorers for the Barracuda, got his first NHL points (in five games), and even performed very well for the U.S. at the World Championships to close out the year. This has set him up nicely for the upcoming season, where he will compete for a full-time roster spot on the Sharks and could even be a front runner for a bottom six role.

Chemelski is a high energy player who can provide a lot of versatility because of his well-rounded skill set and tenacious work ethic. His skating has improved considerably since being drafted by the Sharks, as has his play away from the puck. A talented playmaker, he excels in transition when he is able to back down opposing defenses by driving the middle with speed. Ultimately, he projects as a middle six forward for San Jose who can play in any situation, although he may have to start on the lower lines and as a penalty killer before working his way up. - BO

  1. Brandon Coe

With the OHL on hiatus, Coe played last season in the AHL with the Barracuda, filling a checking line role. The 6’4 winger skates exceptionally well for his size, but he still needs to gain confidence in his ability to carry the puck and be a go-to offensive player. That is why it appears that San Jose is sending him back to the OHL this year for his overage season.

  1. Artemi Knyazev

After three solid seasons in the QMJHL with Chicoutimi, this mobile, two-way blueliner has emerged as a legitimate defensive prospect for the Sharks. He turns pro this season and will look to become an immediate impact player for the Barracuda.

  1. Dillon Hamaliuk

A big power winger, Hamaliuk’s offensive development has not gone according to plan since being drafted in the second round of the 2019 draft. Even as an overager in the WHL this past season, he failed to crack the point per game mark. But the Sharks did sign him and must see him as a potential checking line player. It will be interesting to see how he performs in the AHL this year.

  1. Yegor Spiridonov

A strong defensive center and penalty killer, the Sharks are still waiting for Spirodonov’s offensive game to take that next step forward. He will try to become a KHL regular this season with SKA St. Petersburg before possibly crossing the pond. The upside is not high, but Spiridonov could still become a valuable role player for San Jose in the future.

  1. Liam Gilmartin

Gilmartin was a valuable role player for the U.S. U18 team this past year. He provides a lot of versatility to his coaches because of his all-around skill set and nonstop motor. Gilmartin will play for Dale Hunter and the London Knights this coming season, a coach notoriously good at developing players like Gilmartin.

 

 

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SEATTLE KRAKEN EXPANSION DRAFT: Prospects to Target – Part Two – Forwards https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/seattle-kraken-expansion-draft-prospects-target-part-forwards/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/seattle-kraken-expansion-draft-prospects-target-part-forwards/#respond Thu, 25 Feb 2021 20:49:20 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=168530 Read More... from SEATTLE KRAKEN EXPANSION DRAFT: Prospects to Target – Part Two – Forwards

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It has been four years since the Vegas Golden Knights joined the National Hockey League through expansion. Through the expansion draft process, the Golden Knights balanced their initial lineup by selecting both veterans and youth, with a focus on team speed and competitiveness. Masterfully constructed, Vegas ended up winning the Pacific division and reaching the Stanley Cup finals in their inaugural season (2017-18).

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

Rasmus Asplund - Buffalo Sabres

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.

Morgan Geekie - Carolina Hurricanes

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.

Kevin Stenlund - Columbus Blue Jackets

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.

Henrik Borgstrom - Florida Panthers

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.

Nathan Bastian - New Jersey Devils

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?

Yegor Sharangovich - New Jersey Devils

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.

Janne Kuokkanen - New Jersey Devils

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.

Nick Merkley - New Jersey Devils

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.

Kieffer Bellows - New York Islanders

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.

Julien Gauthier - New York Rangers

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.

Vitaly Abramov - Ottawa Senators

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.

Filip Chlapik - Ottawa Senators

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.

Logan Brown - Ottawa Senators

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.

Nicolas Aube-Kubel - Philadelphia Flyers

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.

Alex Barre Boulet - Tampa Bay Lightning

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?

Alex Volkov - Tampa Bay Lightning

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.

Mitchell Stephens - Tampa Bay Lightning

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?

Mathieu Joseph - Tampa Bay Lightning

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?

Boris Katchouk - Tampa Bay Lightning

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.

Taylor Raddysh - Tampa Bay Lightning

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.

Joey Anderson - Toronto Maple Leafs

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.

Isac Lundestrom - Anaheim Ducks

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?

Matthew Phillips - Calgary Flames

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.

Adam Mascherin - Dallas Stars

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.

Tyler Benson - Edmonton Oilers

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.

Rem Pitlick - Nashville Predators

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.

Jonathan Dahlen - San Jose Sharks

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.

Alexander True - San Jose Sharks

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?

Maxim Letunov - San Jose Sharks

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.

Rudolfs Balcers - San Jose Sharks

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.

Kole Lind - Vancouver Canucks

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.

 

 

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McKeen’s 2020-21 Hockey Yearbook: San Jose Sharks Top 20 Prospects https://www.mckeenshockey.com/uncategorized/mckeens-2020-21-hockey-yearbook-san-jose-sharks-top-20-prospects/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/uncategorized/mckeens-2020-21-hockey-yearbook-san-jose-sharks-top-20-prospects/#respond Mon, 21 Dec 2020 21:27:01 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=167861 Read More... from McKeen’s 2020-21 Hockey Yearbook: San Jose Sharks Top 20 Prospects

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McKeen's Top 20 New York Rangers prospects for the 2020-21 season. You can read an organizational assessment prior to the draft in Ryan Wagman's article found here. Following the draft we provided a review on each teams performance based on our rankings found here.

  1. Ryan Merkley, D (21st overall, 2018. Previous ranking: 1)

A move to the London Knights to play under Dale Hunter last offseason may have saved Merkley’s status as a top end defensive prospect, as he improved considerably in terms of maturity and engagement level. Merkley’s best assets are his four-way mobility and his creative playmaking. His edgework is high end, as his lateral movement is so fluid and explosive. He plays a higher risk style of game, pushing the pace, which leads to the odd turnover, but he did cut down on those turnovers last year by playing less selfishly and by selecting pinches more carefully. Even without a great shot, he moves well enough to keep defenders guessing. Previously prone to tantrums when things were not going his way, he appears to have figured out how to control his emotions more effectively. Additionally, we saw him more consistently engaged physically in his own zone. The Sharks would be wise not to rush him, ensuring that he can build up confidence at the professional level without becoming frustrated and reverting back to his previous tendencies. He still projects as a quality top four puck moving defender who can anchor a powerplay unit. – BO

  1. Ozzy Weisblatt, RW (31st overall, 2020. Previous ranking: NA)

The competitive Weisblatt is an abrasive energy player. His speed and relentless pursuit of the puck makes him valuable in a variety of situations. He was a difference maker last year, finishing the shortened season second in team scoring, and among the leaders for all U18 players in the WHL. While not large, he is extremely quick, with the acceleration, powerful stride, and breakaway top speed to be a threat, with and without the puck. He will look to attack quickly in transition and is aggressive trying to beat defenders wide to the net. He is also one of the first back to the defensive end, applying back pressure and trying to force turnovers. Wiesblatt also has strong edgework that allows him to change direction quickly at full speed. He is an intelligent playmaker who demonstrates poise with the puck in all situations. At times, he can be too predictable in his attacks, leading to costly turnovers. He does not have a ton of confidence in his shooting, often passing up shot opportunities to pass instead. Even if Wiesblatt’s offensive abilities fail to translate, he could be an effective middle six piece who fits on both special teams’ units. – BO

  1. Thomas Bordeleau, C (38th overall, 2020. Previous ranking: NA)

Bordeleau greatest asset is a wicked wrist shot which he loves firing right over the goalie’s shoulder. He can fire it off successfully whether he is static or in motion, and his lightning release gives the netminder no time to set up. Before he prepares the shot, Bordeleau can also impress with his stick skills. His hands are quick and soft, and he regularly pulls off creative maneuvers. He is a dynamic zone entry machine, and his unpredictable approach leaves defenders guessing, and generally coming up short. He used to limit his effectiveness by staying to the offensive perimeter, but by last season’s second half, he was pushing play up the middle as well, and pulling it off more often than not. Bordeleau will have to show that he can more consistently play with the type of effort needed to succeed in the tough parts of the ice. Even with his greater willingness to play on the inside, that effort is not yet consistent. At higher levels, the outside path will prove much harder for generating scoring chances. He needs to keep his feet moving and get his nose dirty to reach his top six scoring forward potential. – RW

  1. Jonathan Dahlen, LW/C (42nd overall, 2016 [Ottawa]. Previous ranking: 3)

Dahlen is kind of an odd bird in the way that he chose to play in Allsvenskan in three of the last four seasons, although almost all teams in the SHL would have wanted to sign him. He is creative with strong offensive instincts. He has developed his playmaking and is a more dynamic offensive driver than earlier in his career. He is strong both on the power play and at even strength, generally serving as his line’s play driver. His top speed is average by NHL standards, but he has impressive agility and is very elusive with the puck in the offensive zone. Dahlen’s defensive play is okay but still not great and it can cause him to disappear during parts of games as he rarely plays the PK, wins battles in his own end, or turns the play around all on his own. He will need to improve on that side of the game to reach the highest level. He is a top six forward talent. The 22-year-old will probably play in Sweden for at least one more year, maybe even two. He is still a good prospect, and if he can keep developing, could reach his ceiling. - JH

  1. Yegor Spiridonov, C/LW (108th overall, 2019. Previous ranking: 2)

Spiridonov is a limited skater technically but has good balance has at least average speed. He is strong and smart and makes good decisions. He is strong along the boards and in tight areas, works hard and is smart without the puck. He finds open spaces offensively; he has good instincts getting ready to shoot and he plays responsibly defensively. He has the assets to be a useful player on both a power play and a penalty kill. He is good at getting open to shoot but his accuracy and timing on the puck could be better, and he hasn’t yet proven himself as a goal scorer, although he is fine as a playmaker. On the penalty kill, Spiridonov is particularly good at reading passing lanes and disturbing the play. He can detect where the play is going and act appropriately, rather than react after the fact. He has very limited men’s level experience, with much of his success coming in the Russian junior leagues. The lack of elite puck skills and limited skating give Spiridonov a third line ceiling, but his work ethic, strength, PK capabilities, and team play would fit that role, where he could provide offensive depth. - JH

  1. Sasha Chmelevski, C (185th overall, 2017. Previous ranking: 4)

The concern around Chmelevski has long been his skating, and in his first full AHL season, that lack of speed and agility was obvious. Though his puck skills and menacing wrist shot release have made him a lethal offensive option, he had trouble getting past the more mobile defenders of the pro ranks and was hesitant to carry the puck through the neutral zone. Even if he never improves on his feet, he still projects as a long-term NHL piece, as he excels in every other facet of the game. He processes the game at a high speed and makes great decisions with the puck, both offensively and defensively, and has shown himself capable as a penalty-killer. He dealt with injuries for stretches of the 2019-20 season but still posted a solid scoring line and exhibited an ability to score goals in different ways, including as a net-front guy and rebound goblin. Chmelevski's shot and hockey sense give him top-six potential in the future, but with his lack of speed and the uncertain ability to take on heavy responsibility on defense, the Sharks could ultimately deploy him as a middle-six two-way center once his time comes. - TD

  1. Alexander True, C (Undrafted free agent, signed Jul. 18, 2018. Previous ranking: 5)

Not long ago, it was difficult to decide whether True was even a legitimate prospect worthy of being on the radar of an NHL organization. An undrafted center without particularly impressive numbers as a WHL overager has since progressed into one of the most heralded prospects in the San Jose system. He is a dangerous power forward with a plethora of offensive tools, the most notable of which is his overpowering size and balance, which makes him capable of driving the net and playing the cycle against nearly anyone. Possessing a hard shot and great passing skill, his offensive game is more than just grinding; he can set himself or anyone else up for a quality scoring chance from just about anywhere in the zone, though sometimes his decision making and skating speed lags behind his puck skills. Importantly, True is mean, and while that comes with some discipline issues, it also includes a likable assertiveness and aggression. He showed exactly what he can be during a brief NHL recall last season, a bottom six play-driving, cycling center who is hard to defend against. - TD

  1. John Leonard, LW (182nd overall, 2018. Previous ranking: 6)

A sixth-round draft pick, Leonard is a good example of a solid investment and solid development not ending on draft day. Leonard signed with San Jose following his junior season at UMass, and the late bloomer has not disappointed. He spent two seasons in the USHL where his offensive output increased from five goals and nine points to 19 goals and 34 points. Still, neither total was enough for an NHL team to draft him in his first two years of eligibility. His game picked up in a big way in college, and after finally hearing his name called at the draft following his freshman season, he netted a career-high 40 points as a sophomore and was on pace to eclipse that total as a junior, as he led the country in goals and led UMass in scoring before COVID-19 put an early end to the season. The junior was also named New England’s best forward as well as a Hobey Baker finalist. He has soft hands and is able to easily grab loose pucks. He is not afraid to shoot - as evidenced by his goal total — and has a quick release. The former afterthought now has some projecting top six potential. – JS

  1. Tristen Robins, C (56th overall, 2020. Previous ranking: NA)

Robins used a terrific second half last season to lead the Saskatoon Blades in scoring. There is a lot to like about him as a very well-rounded offensive player. He plays with pace both with and without the puck and has an elusiveness that makes him a constant threat. The transition to center showcased his ability to create with the puck on his stick and unlocked a new level of confidence. An aggressive shooter, he possesses a quality release which he utilizes for quick strikes coming through the middle. He works the give and go well with his linemates and is always looking to attack. He keeps his feet moving in the offensive zone and can be a menace to defend as he slips behind defenders. Robins is also a competent two-way player whose play without the puck really improved after that aforementioned move to the middle. He uses his speed well to apply back pressure and to angle off forwards in the neutral zone, forcing turnovers. Adding strength will be key for Robins’ effectiveness in traffic and in the cycle. – BO

  1. Brandon Coe, RW (98th overall, 2020. Previous ranking: NA)

While North Bay struggled to find the win column consistently last season, Coe was able to elevate his game to become an offensive leader. The major allure of his game comes from his size and speed combination. He is very explosive and powerful for a 6-3” forward, consistently blowing past defenders in transition. However, he is more than just a North-South player, as his lateral quickness and edgework are strong, too, allowing him to cut in and out of traffic at top speed. Coe has also learned to use his size more effectively to protect the puck down low and has gained confidence in his heavy shot being a weapon. There is a question of whether he thinks the game well enough to be more than just a change of pace energy player at the NHL level. Additionally, he needs to improve his play away from the puck to become a more consistent three zone player. His physical tools are intriguing but developing them into a cohesive player will be a project. – BO

  1. Danil Gushchin, LW (76th overall, 2020. Previous ranking: NA)

Gushchin needs to play with an edge to be successful. It is clear that when he does so, his skill set can absolutely shine. His hands and feet are both very quick and deceptive. He is capable of pulling off fantastic zone entries. Despite lacking in size, he is incredibly dogged on the puck and skilled at sheltering it from backcheckers, earning himself more than a few penalties. In short, his puck skills are above and beyond is age group. But he does not always play with that edge, which can be spotted by a more lackadaisical approach to puck handling and an excess of turnovers. Gushchin doesn’t have blazing speed, but his feet play up thanks to edgework and agility that can dazzle. His ability to make extra sharp cuts plays into his usage on zone entries as he can carve up multiple layers of the defense. When he loses that edge, his feet stop moving, he stops taking risks, and he functionally disappears. Gushchin tends to be more “on” when his team has the puck, and flat when they don’t. He can go from an expert reading of the play to a disinterested bystander in a single shift. – RW

  1. Artemi Knyazev, D (48th overall, 2019. Previous ranking: 7)

Knyazev saw modest growth in his second season in North America for a much-improved Sagueneens team last year. His 43 points were tops among blueliners on the club, and among the top ten in scoring among defensemen in the QMJHL. He also fine-tuned his defensive game as he improved his play-reading on the smaller ice. His skating is the focal point of his play, and the gatekeeper to his success; it allows him to cover a lot of ice in a short time and in all directions. Not only fast, Knyazev is agile and reaches top speed quickly. He is an offense-first defender and thinks the game with offense in mind. He continued his play as a defensive sharpshooter with a second-consecutive year with double digits in goals. His 11 goals were the most on the team on the back end. His abilities slotted in well next to massive blueliner Louis Crevier, as the pint-sized Knyazev had more permission to freewheel with the big Crevier minding his post. Knyazev is still a project for the pro game, and undersized, but he has the foundation to be a solid powerplay contributor and speedy defender at the NHL level. - MS

  1. Dillon Hamaliuk, LW (55th overall, 20191. Previous ranking: 8)

Hamaliuk moved to Kelowna to help them compete for a Memorial Cup but like most of his teammates never really took stride last year. When his game is on, he is an imposing albeit somewhat lumbering figure on the ice. He is excellent in the cycle game where his size and reach help him dictate play along the walls. He has decent hands that work with his game, he can carry off the wall, and is a solid net front guy. He scores a lot of goals from the goal mouth where he can use his strength to finish off plays in traffic. His skating is a bit of a concern as he looks a step behind the play through the neutral zone and is reliant on others to get the puck in the zone. Defensively he is physical and willing to engage to make a play. It was somewhat of a disappointing season to only collect 31 points in 56 games after being brought in to bolster the offense, after nearly being a point-per-game player last season. - VG

  1. Joachim Blichfeld, RW (210th overall, 2016. Previous ranking: 9)

Blichfeld is yet another steal from untapped regions of Europe taken with a seventh-round pick by an organization deserving of tons of credit in the way they get max value out of every draft selection. After dominating the WHL in his final season with Portland with a league-best 114 points, his transition to the pros was a highly-anticipated one, and the Danish winger delivered with 16 goals and 16 assists in just 44 games of action as an AHL rookie. A big reason for his success with the Barracuda is his heavy, rapid shot, which is a weapon at even strength and on the power play (five of his 16 goals came on the man-advantage). Grading out as an average skater, Blichfeld is not really one to carry the puck, but does a superb job at finding open areas of the ice away from the puck to receive shooting chances. With steady hands and decent awareness of the ice, he is a fairly versatile player who could kill penalties and be a depth scorer in the NHL. - TD

  1. Alexei Melnichuk, G (Undrafted Free Agent, signed May 4, 2020. Previous ranking: 10)

A late free agent signing, Melnichuk alone was responsible for moving the Sharks up two slots in our organizational prospect rankings. On the smaller side for a modern netminder, he gained some notoriety two years ago when a hot start with SKA-Neva St. Petersburg in Russia’s second men’s league, led to an invitation to wear the national colors during the Junior Super Series. Melnichuk excelled in the tune up series and earned a spot on the Russian WJC team as the backup. He bombed in his only game. That might have prevented him from being drafted, but two years later, with a stellar (mostly) full season debut in the KHL to his name, Melnichuk was back in the crosshairs of NHL scouts. He moves well in his crease and likes to challenge shooters when he can. He works hard for his saves and reads the games well, although the numbers at InStatScout make clear that he can really struggle with shots to the top corners, the bane of many smaller netminders. If Melnichuk adapts well to the AHL, he may be in the NHL before long. - RW

  1. Jacob McGrew, RW (159th overall, 2017. Previous ranking: 11)

Jake McGrew is a California native who has done enough to earn himself a look from as a late round flier.  Unfortunately, his career has been derailed by a couple of season-ending knee surgeries. Last season started with high expectations after his first 30 goal season in 2018-19. He jumped out of the gate with five goals in his first six games and looked to be breaking out, but another season ending knee surgery put a halt to a promising overage campaign. At this point he seems to be a long shot to make the NHL and may even struggle to play in the AHL next season. When he is healthy, he plays an up-tempo game and has a great release that enables him to score goals. If he gets healthy, he has a shot at be a middle six forward if he can get his development back on track and avoid any more long-term injuries. - VG

  1. Brinson Pasichnuk, D (Undrafted Free Agent, signed Mar. 31, 2020. Previous ranking: 12)

If you don’t have picks, you have to attack the free talent pool with gusto. Two members of the Sharks’ top 15 were free talent pickups, and the depth of the system includes a clean dozen others who received some consideration. Pasichnuk is the only one of the bunch that was added in 2020. A physical defender – although one who plays relatively clean – with a big shot from the point, the Arizona State graduate was one of the top NCAA free agents last offseason. Lauded for his maturity, on and off the ice, Pasichnuk may have a chance to break right into the San Jose NHL lineup whenever the 2020-21 season begins. In truth, he very well may deserve to rank higher on this list than the Spinal Tap number, as he has almost a sure-fire NHL player. The challenge is that that he is also older than most of the players above him and his ceiling may not be far above his floor. - RW

  1. Santeri Hatakka, D (184th overall, 2019. Previous ranking: 13)

Hatakka split the 2019-20 season between the Liiga and Mestis, Finland’s second-highest league. He also has a solid, yet unspectacular World Juniors tournament. He role was limited in the Liiga as he averaged fewer than 11 minutes of ice-time per game. A strong skater with very good acceleration, he moves well in all directions and can carry the puck from his own end. Stickhandling needs work, though, as he has occasional problems controlling the puck efficiently and keeping up his pace. His willing ness to battle has always stood out. Furthermore, he defends well in tight areas and is very assertive in the defensive zone. He did not have the strongest season possible, but he showed glimpses of potential in the Liiga and could break out as soon as the upcoming season if he can move up the depth chart. Overall, Hatakka is a mobile defenseman with strong physical tool and some untapped offensive potential. - MB

  1. Scott Reedy, C/RW (102nd overall, 2017. Previous ranking: 14)

A smart and versatile forward who finally put his sense to use offensively, scoring a career high 15 goals in his junior season with the Golden Gophers, Reedy has a few tools that suggest he could make a career for himself on the fourth line, playing in the corners and eating up some minutes on the PK. Before he gets there though, he has to show that he can regain some of the speed he showed in his first year with the USNTDP program. To his credit, his feet move well, but his legs are heavy. That means he can maneuver around small spaces nimbly enough but falls behind when the game opens up. He will have to stress his power credentials more and rely very heavily on his hockey IQ to overcome the skating deficit. Of course, he also has to sign, which he still has not as of this writing. He could become a free agent if he plays out his senior year without putting pen to paper with the Sharks. - RW

  1. Lean Bergmann, LW/RW (Undrafted Free Agent, signed May 28, 2019. Previous ranking: 15)

In his current state, Bergmann is the definition of a raw prospect. He can score, he has very quick hands for someone his size, and he can effectively utilize his size and strength to create offensive chances for himself. The German loves to drive the net, with and without the puck, and has the physicality to make it happen. As a net-front power-play guy, he can get bumped off the puck in front of the goal pretty easily, which makes me fear for how ineffective his body strength would actually be at the NHL level. He is a good shooter and has solid skating speed, especially at 200+ pounds, but has little passing game. He played on the penalty kill with the AHL Barracuda and competes hard. He focuses his energy on shoveling pucks on goal and wearing down his opponents, which is precisely what an NHL team would want out of a depth player like Bergmann can be in the near future. - TD

 

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McKeen’s 2020-21 Hockey Yearbook: Top 300 Prospect Rankings https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-21-hockey-yearbook-top-300-prospect-rankings/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-21-hockey-yearbook-top-300-prospect-rankings/#respond Fri, 04 Dec 2020 17:09:56 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=167749 Read More... from McKeen’s 2020-21 Hockey Yearbook: Top 300 Prospect Rankings

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

The 20-80 scouting system is meant to allow players from different leagues in different parts of the world to be compared to one another, such that grades on a player in the OHL can be directly compared to grades from an AHL player, and to grades of someone playing in the MHL.

PROSPECT CRITERIA

Players under 26 years of age as of the September 15th prior (Sep. 15, 1994) to the season in question who have appeared in less than 60 NHL games (30 for goalies) and less than 35 in any one season – or 25 last year (20 for goalies, 15 last season) are considered prospects

RANK PLAYER NHL POS AGE HT/WT ACQUIRED
1 Alexis Lafreniere NYR LW 19 6-1/195 `20(1st)
2 Tim Stutzle Ott C 18 6-1/185 `20(3rd)
3 Quinton Byfield LA C 18 6-4/215 `20(2nd)
4 Trevor Zegras Ana C 19 6-0/170 `19(9th)
5 Kirill Kaprizov Min LW 23 5-10/200 `15(135th)
6 Lucas Raymond Det LW 18 5-11/170 `20(4th)
7 Dylan Cozens Buf C 19 6-3/185 `19(7th)
8 Bowen Byram Col D 19 6-0/195 `19(4th)
9 Peyton Krebs VGK C 19 5-11/180 `19(17th)
10 Jake Sanderson Ott D 18 6-1/185 `20(5th)
11 Moritz Seider Det D 19 6-3/185 `19(6th)
12 Jamie Drysdale Ana D 18 5-11/175 `20(6th)
13 Igor Shesterkin NYR G 25 6-1/190 `14(118th)
14 Alexander Holtz NJ RW 18 6-0/190 `20(7th)
15 Cole Perfetti Wpg LW 19 5-10/180 `20(10th)
16 Marco Rossi Min C 19 5-9/185 `20(9th)
17 Vasili Podkolzin Van RW 19 6-1/190 `19(10th)
18 Victor Soderstrom Ari D 19 5-11/180 `19(11th)
19 Nick Robertson Tor LW 19 5-9/160 `19(53rd)
20 Cole Caufield Mtl RW 19 5-7/165 `19(15th)
21 Yaroslav Askarov Nsh G 18 6-3/175 `20(11th)
22 Spencer Knight Fla G 19 6-3/195 `19(13th)
23 Philip Broberg Edm D 19 6-3/200 `19(8th)
24 Jack Quinn Buf RW 19 6-0/180 `20(8th)
25 Matthew Boldy Min LW 19 6-1/190 `19(12th)
26 Nils Lundkvist NYR D 20 5-11/180 `18(28th)
27 Seth Jarvis Car RW 18 5-10/175 `20(13th)
28 Ty Smith NJ D 20 5-10/180 `18(17th)
29 Grigori Denisenko Fla LW 20 5-11/185 `18(15th)
30 Barrett Hayton Ari C 20 6-1/190 `18(5th)
31 Alex Newhook Col C 19 5-10/195 `19(16th)
32 Thomas Harley Dal D 19 6-3/190 `19(18th)
33 Alex Turcotte LA C 19 5-11/185 `19(5th)
34 Vitali Kravtsov NYR RW 21 6-3/185 `18(9th)
35 Philip Tomasino Nsh C 19 5-11/180 `19(24th)
36 Connor McMichael Wsh C 19 5-11/175 `19(25th)
37 Dawson Mercer NJ C 19 6-0/180 `20(18th)
38 Ilya Sorokin NYI G 25 6-2/180 `14(78th)
39 Gabriel Vilardi LA RW 21 6-3/200 `17(11th)
40 Ryan Merkley SJ D 20 5-11/170 `18(21st)
41 Alexander Romanov Mtl D 20 5-11/185 `18(38th)
42 Kaiden Guhle Mtl D 18 6-2/190 `20(16th)
43 Samuel Poulin Pit LW 19 6-1/205 `19(21st)
44 K'Andre Miller NYR D 20 6-3/205 `18(22nd)
45 Scott Perunovich StL D 22 5-10/175 `18(45th)
46 Evan Bouchard Edm D 21 6-2/195 `18(10th)
47 Braden Schneider NYR D 19 6-2/200 `20(19th)
48 Juuso Valimaki Cgy D 22 6-2/205 `17(16th)
49 Cam York Phi D 19 5-11/175 `19(14th)
50 Anton Lundell Fla C 19 6-1/185 `20(12th)
51 Morgan Frost Phi C 21 5-11/180 `17(27th)
52 Owen Tippett Fla RW 21 6-1/200 `17(10th)
53 Albert Johansson Det D 19 5-11/165 `19(60th)
54 Liam Foudy CBJ C 20 6-0/175 `18(18th)
55 Kieffer Bellows NYI LW 22 6-0/200 `16(19th)
56 Arthur Kaliyev LA RW 19 6-2/190 `19(33rd)
57 Oliver Wahlstrom NYI RW 20 6-1/205 `18(11th)
58 Nils Hoglander Van RW 20 5-9/185 `19(40th)
59 Matias Maccelli Ari LW 20 5-11/170 `19(98th)
60 Tobias Bjornfot LA D 19 6-0/200 `19(22nd)
61 Jacob Bernard-Docker Ott D 20 6-0/180 `18(26th)
62 Connor Zary Cgy C 19 6-0/180 `20(24th)
63 Dominik Bokk Car RW 20 6-1/180 T(StL-9/19)
64 Ryan Suzuki Car C 19 6-0/180 `19(28th)
65 Dylan Samberg Wpg D 21 6-3/190 `17(43rd)
66 Jake Bean Car D 22 6-1/175 `16(13th)
67 Josh Norris Ott C 21 6-1/195 T(SJ-9/18)
68 Rasmus Kupari LA C 20 6-1/185 `18(20th)
69 Jakob Pelletier Cgy LW 19 5-9/165 `19(26th)
70 Drake Batherson Ott RW 22 6-1/190 `17(121st)
71 Jan Jenik Ari RW 20 6-1/180 `18(65th)
72 John-Jason Peterka Buf LW 18 5-11/190 `20(34th)
73 Kirill Marchenko CBJ LW 20 6-3/190 `18(49th)
74 Bode Wilde NYI D 20 6-2/195 `18(41st)
75 John Beecher Bos C 19 6-3/210 `19(30th)
76 Tyler Madden LA C 21 5-10/155 T(Van-2/20)
77 Jack Studnicka Bos C 21 6-1/170 `17(53rd)
78 Jake Oettinger Dal G 22 6-4/210 `17(26th)
79 Alex Formenton Ott LW 21 6-2/165 `17(47th)
80 Matthew Robertson NYR D 19 6-3/200 `19(49th)
81 Calen Addison Min D 20 5-10/180 T(Pit-2/20)
82 Ty Dellandrea Dal C 20 6-0/185 `18(13th)
83 Akil Thomas LA C 20 5-11/170 `18(51st)
84 Mavrik Bourque Dal C 18 5-10/180 `20(30th)
85 Ian Mitchell Chi D 21 5-11/175 `17(57th)
86 Jason Robertson Dal LW 21 6-2/195 `17(39th)
87 Hendrix Lapierre Wsh C 18 5-11/180 `20(22nd)
88 Brendan Brisson VGK C 19 5-11/180 `20(29th)
89 Theodor Niederbach Det C 18 5-11/175 `20(51st)
90 Zac Jones NYR D 20 5-10/175 `19(68th)
91 Robert Mastrosimone Det LW 19 5-10/160 `19(54th)
92 Joe Veleno Det C 20 6-1/195 `18(30th)
93 Rodion Amirov Tor LW 19 6-0/170 `20(15th)
94 Jake Neighbours StL LW 18 5-11/195 `20(26th)
95 Julien Gauthier NYR RW 23 6-4/225 T(Car-2/20)
96 Justus Annunen Col G 20 6-4/215 `18(64th)
97 Egor Zamula Phi D 20 6-4/175 FA(9/18)
98 Shane Pinto Ott C 20 6-2/190 `19(32nd)
99 Noel Gunler Car RW 19 6-2/175 `20(41st)
100 Ridly Greig Ott C 18 5-11/165 `20(28th)
101 Jesse Ylonen Mtl RW 21 6-1/185 `18(35th)
102 Samuel Fagemo LA RW 20 6-0/195 `19(50th)
103 Mattias Norlinder Mtl D 20 5-11/180 `19(64th)
104 Olli Juolevi Van D 22 6-3/200 `16(5th)
105 Kristian Vesalainen Wpg LW 21 6-3/205 `17(24th)
106 Raphael Lavoie Edm RW 20 6-4/195 `19(38th)
107 Jan Mysak Mtl C 18 5-11/180 `20(49th)
108 Cayden Primeau Mtl G 21 6-3/180 `17(199th)
109 Pavel Dorofeyev VGK LW 20 6-1/170 `19(79th)
110 Morgan Barron NYR C 22 6-2/200 `17(174th)
111 Ville Heinola Wpg D 19 5-11/180 `19(20th)
112 Dylan Holloway Edm C 19 6-0/205 `20(14th)
113 Jack Dugan VGK RW 22 6-2/185 `17(142nd)
114 Alexander Khovanov Min C 20 5-11/195 `18(86th)
115 Jacob Perreault Ana RW 18 5-11/195 `20(27th)
116 Jake Evans Mtl C 24 6-0/185 `14(207th)
117 Adam Beckman Min LW 19 6-1/170 `19(75th)
118 Jett Woo Van D 20 6-0/205 `18(37th)
119 Nolan Foote NJ LW 20 6-3/190 T(TB-2/20)
120 Logan Brown Ott C 22 6-6/220 `16(11th)
121 Martin Kaut Col RW 21 6-1/175 `18(16th)
122 Jack Rathbone Van D 21 5-10/175 `17(95th)
123 Ozzy Wiesblatt SJ RW 18 5-10/185 `20(31st)
124 Ryan O'Rourke Min D 18 6-0/180 `20(39th)
125 Lukas Reichel Chi LW 18 6-0/170 `20(17th)
126 Jordan Harris Mtl D 20 5-11/180 `18(71st)
127 Lukas Dostal Ana G 20 6-1/170 `18(85th)
128 Egor Afanasyev Nsh RW 19 6-3/205 `19(45th)
129 Conor Timmins Col D 22 6-1/185 `17(32nd)
130 Lassi Thomson Ott D 20 6-0/190 `19(19th)
131 Eeli Tolvanen Nsh RW 21 5-10/175 `17(30th)
132 Kasper Simontaival LA RW 18 5-9/180 `20(66th)
133 Roni Hirvonen Tor C 18 5-9/165 `20(59th)
134 Thomas Bordeleau SJ C 18 5-9/180 `20(38th)
135 Benoit-Olivier Groulx Ana C 20 6-1/195 `18(54th)
136 Tyler Kleven Ott D 18 6-4/200 `20(44th)
137 Tyson Foerster Phi C 18 6-1/195 `20(23rd)
138 Helge Grans LA D 18 6-2/205 `20(35th)
139 Jonathan Dahlen SJ LW 23 5-11/185 T(Van-2/19)
140 Marat Khusnutdinov Min C 18 5-11/175 `20(37th)
141 Alexander Alexeyev Wsh D 21 6-3/200 `18(31st)
142 Pierre-Olivier Joseph Pit D 21 6-2/170 `17(23rd)
143 Topi Niemela Tor D 18 5-10/160 `20(64th)
144 Oskari Laaksonen Buf D 21 6-2/165 `17(89th)
145 Filip Hallander Tor LW 20 6-1/185 T(Pit-8/20)
146 Serron Noel Fla RW 20 6-5/205 `18(34th)
147 Martin Chromiak LA LW 18 6-0/185 `20(128th)
148 Shakir Mukhamadullin NJ D 18 6-3/180 `20(20th)
149 Mattias Samuelsson Buf D 20 6-3/215 `18(32nd)
150 Janne Kuokkanen NJ LW 22 6-1/190 T(Car-2/20)
151 Ryan Johnson Buf D 19 6-0/175 `19(31st)
152 Sean Farrell Mtl C 19 5-8/175 `20(124th)
153 Martin Fehervary Wsh D 21 6-1/190 `18(46th)
154 Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen Buf G 21 6-4/195 `17(54th)
155 Will Lockwood Van RW 22 5-11/175 `16(64th)
156 Isac Lundestrom Ana C 21 6-0/185 `18(23rd)
157 Michael DiPietro Van G 21 6-0/195 `17(64th)
158 Jonatan Berggren Det RW 20 5-10/185 `18(33rd)
159 Kevin Bahl NJ D 20 6-6/230 T(Ari-12/19)
160 Aliaksei Protas Wsh C 19 6-5/205 `19(91st)
161 Reilly Walsh NJ D 21 5-11/180 `17(81st)
162 Nick Abruzzese Tor C 21 5-9/160 `19(124th)
163 Tyler Tucker StL D 20 6-1/205 `18(200th)
164 Arseni Gritsyuk NJ RW 19 5-10/170 `19(129th)
165 Klim Kostin StL C 21 6-3/195 `17(31st)
166 Brayden Tracey Ana LW 19 6-0/175 `19(29th)
167 Joel Hofer StL G 20 6-3/160 `18(107th)
168 Joey Anderson Tor RW 22 6-0/195 T(NJ-10/20)
169 Yegor Spiridonov SJ C 19 6-2/195 `19(108th)
170 Sam Colangelo Ana RW 19 6-1/205 `20(36th)
171 Joey Keane Car D 21 6-0/185 T(NYR-2/20)
172 Jared McIsaac Det D 20 6-1/195 `18(36th)
173 Jamieson Rees Car C 19 5-10/175 `19(44th)
174 Ivan Morozov VGK C 20 6-1/180 `18(61st)
175 Rem Pitlick Nsh C 23 5-11/200 `16(76th)
176 Tyce Thompson NJ RW 21 6-0/170 `19(96th)
177 Michael McLeod NJ C 22 6-2/195 `16(12th)
178 Jaret Anderson-Dolan LA C 21 5-11/190 `17(41st)
179 Dustin Wolf Cgy G 19 6-0/165 `19(214th)
180 Antti Tuomisto Det D 19 6-4/190 `19(35th)
181 Brett Berard NYR LW 18 5-9/155 `20(134th)
182 Luke Evangelista Nsh RW 18 5-11/170 `20(42nd)
183 Joel Blomqvist Pit G 18 6-1/180 `20(52nd)
184 Joni Ikonen Mtl C 21 5-10/170 `17(58th)
185 Olivier Rodrigue Edm G 20 6-1/165 `18(62nd)
186 Lucas Elvenes VGK RW 21 6-0/175 `17(127th)
187 Anthony Angello Pit RW 24 6-5/205 `14(145th)
188 Tuukka Tieksola Car RW 19 5-10/160 `19(121st)
189 Declan Chisholm Wpg D 20 6-1/190 `18(150th)
190 Cole Koepke TB LW 22 6-1/195 `18(183rd)
191 Valtteri Puustinen Pit RW 21 5-9/185 `19(203rd)
192 Ty Smilanic Fla C 18 6-1/175 `20(74th)
193 Patrik Puistola Car LW 19 6-0/175 `19(73rd)
194 Justin Barron Col D 19 6-2/190 `20(25th)
195 Andrew Peeke CBJ D 22 6-3/210 `16(34th)
196 Michael Vukojevic NJ D 19 6-3/210 `19(82nd)
197 Alec Regula Chi D 20 6-3/200 T(Det-10/19)
198 Connor Corcoran VGK D 20 6-1/185 `18(154th)
199 Jeremy Swayman Bos G 22 6-1/190 `17(111th)
200 Pyotr Kochetkov Car G 21 6-1/175 `19(36th)
201 Mikey Anderson LA D 21 6-0/195 `17(103rd)
202 Carter Savoie Edm LW 18 5-9/190 `20(100th)
203 Samuel Walker TB C 21 5-11/160 `17(200th)
204 William Wallinder Det D 18 6-4/190 `20(32nd)
205 Jack Drury Car C 20 5-11/180 `18(42nd)
206 Emil Andrae Phi D 18 5-9/185 `20(54th)
207 Cal Petersen LA G 26 6-3/190 FA(7/17)
208 Jeremie Poirier Cgy D 18 6-0/200 `20(72nd)
209 Tarmo Reunanen NYR D 22 6-0/180 `16(98th)
210 Simon Holmstrom NYI RW 19 6-1/185 `19(23rd)
211 Aleksi Saarela Fla RW 23 5-11/200 T(Chi-10/19)
212 Anton Johannesson Wpg D 18 5-9/155 `20(133rd)
213 Lauri Pajuniemi NYR RW 21 6-0/185 `18(132nd)
214 Morgan Geekie Car C 22 6-2/180 `17(67th)
215 Shane Bowers Col C 21 6-2/190 T(Ott-11/17)
216 Sasha Chmelevski SJ C 21 5-11/190 `17(185th)
217 Ruslan Iskhakov NYI C 20 5-8/155 `18(43rd)
218 Cole Schwindt Fla RW 19 6-2/185 `19(81st)
219 Hugo Alnefelt TB G 19 6-3/195 `19(71st)
220 Nikita Okhotyuk NJ D 20 6-1/195 `19(61st)
221 Sampo Ranta Col LW 20 6-2/205 `18(78th)
222 Alexander Volkov TB LW 23 6-1/190 `17(48th)
223 Alexander True SJ C 23 6-5/205 FA(7/18)
224 John Leonard SJ C 22 5-11/190 `18(182nd)
225 Carl Grundstrom LA LW 23 6-0/195 T(Tor-1/19)
226 Dmitri Semykin TB D 20 6-3/200 `18(90th)
227 Cal Foote TB D 22 6-4/215 `17(14th)
228 Jean-Luc Foudy Col C 18 5-11/175 `20(75th)
229 Alex Barre-Boulet TB C 23 5-10/165 FA(3/18)
230 Tristen Robins SJ RW 19 5-10/175 `20(56th)
231 Max Gildon Fla D 21 6-3/190 `17(66th)
232 Nikita Alexandrov StL C 20 6-0/180 `19(62nd)
233 Michael Benning Fla D 18 5-9/180 `20(95th)
234 Justin Sourdif Fla RW 18 5-11/175 `20(87th)
235 Tanner Laczynski Phi C 23 6-1/200 `16(169th)
236 Eamon Powell TB D 18 5-11/165 `20(116th)
237 Kaedan Korczak VGK D 19 6-3/190 `19(41st)
238 Drew Commesso Chi G 18 6-1/180 `20(47th)
239 Nikolai Kovalenko Col RW 21 5-10/175 `18(171st)
240 Pius Suter Chi C 24 5-11/170 FA(7/20)
241 Wade Allison Phi RW 23 6-2/205 `16(52nd)
242 Bobby Brink Phi RW 19 5-10/165 `19(34th)
243 Lukas Cormier VGK D 18 5-10/180 `20(68th)
244 David Farrance Nsh D 21 5-11/190 `17(92nd)
245 Roby Jarventie Ott RW 18 6-2/185 `20(33rd)
246 Dmitri Voronkov CBJ LW 20 6-4/190 `19(114th)
247 German Rubtsov Phi C 22 6-2/190 `16(22nd)
248 Vitaly Abramov Ott RW 22 5-9/175 T(CBJ-2/19)
249 Alex Laferriere LA RW 19 6-0/175 `20(83rd)
250 Trey Fix-Wolansky CBJ RW 21 5-8/185 `18(204th)
251 Isaac Ratcliffe Phi LW 21 6-5/200 `17(35th)
252 Kale Clague LA D 22 6-0/180 `16(51st)
253 Landon Slaggert Chi LW 18 5-11/180 `20(79th)
254 Wyatt Kalynuk Chi D 23 6-1/180 FA(7/20)
255 Mikko Kokkonen Tor D 19 5-11/200 `19(84th)
256 Kevin Mandolese Ott G 20 6-4/180 `18(157th)
257 Daniil Tarasov CBJ G 21 6-5/185 `17(86th)
258 Evan Barratt Chi C 21 6-0/190 `17(90th)
259 Tyler Benson Edm LW 22 6-0/200 `16(32nd)
260 Yegor Korshkov Tor RW 24 6-4/215 `16(31st)
261 Hunter Skinner NYR D 19 6-2/175 `19(112th)
262 Riley Damiani Dal C 20 5-9/165 `18(137th)
263 Ryan McLeod Edm C 21 6-2/205 `18(40th)
264 Ilya Konovalov Edm G 22 6-0/195 `19(85th)
265 Will Cuylle NYR LW 18 6-3/205 `20(60th)
266 Evan Vierling NYR C 18 6-0/165 `20(127th)
267 Emil Heineman Fla LW 19 6-0/180 `20(43rd)
268 Zayde Wisdom Phi RW 18 5-10/195 `20(94th)
269 Hunter Jones Min G 20 6-4/195 `19(59th)
270 Ty Tullio Edm RW 18 5-10/165 `20(126th)
271 Jordan Spence LA D 19 5-10/165 `19(95th)
272 Dmitri Zavgorodny Cgy LW 20 5-9/175 `18(198th)
273 Alex Beaucage Col RW 19 6-1/195 `19(78th)
274 Matiss Kivlenieks CBJ G 24 6-2/190 FA(5/17)
275 Artyom Zub Ott D 25 6-2/200 FA(5/20)
276 Urho Vaakanainen Bos D 22 6-0/185 `17(18th)
277 Dmitri Samorukov Edm D 21 6-2/180 `17(84th)
278 Michal Teply Chi LW 19 6-3/185 `19(105th)
279 Colby Ambrosio Col C 18 5-8/170 `20(118th)
280 Mads Sogaard Ott G 20 6-7/195 `19(37th)
281 Jeremy Lauzon Bos D 23 6-3/205 `15(52nd)
282 Dennis Gilbert Col D 24 6-2/200 T(Chi-10/20)
283 Trent Frederic Bos C 22 6-4/215 `16(29th)
284 Lucas Carlsson Chi D 23 6-0/190 `16(110th)
285 Zack Macewen Van RW 24 6-3/205 FA(3/17)
286 Brandon Hagel Chi LW 22 6-1/175 FA(10/18)
287 Vasily Ponomarev Car C 18 5-10/180 `20(53rd)
288 Jakub Zboril Bos D 23 6-1/200 `15(13th)
289 Garrett Pilon Wsh RW 22 5-11/190 `16(87th)
290 Jeremy Bracco Car RW 23 5-9/180 FA(10/20)
291 Dylan Sikura VGK RW 25 6-0/170 T(Chi-9/20)
292 Kyle Capobianco Ari D 23 6-1/180 `15(63rd)
293 Sami Niku Wpg D 24 6-0/175 `15(198th)
294 John Farinacci Ari C 19 5-11/185 `19(76th)
295 Jackson Lacombe Ana D 19 6-1/170 `19(39th)
296 David Cotton Car LW 23 6-3/205 `15(169th)
297 Erik Portillo Buf G 20 6-6/210 `19(67th)
298 Jacob Truscott Van D 18 6-1/170 `20(144th)
299 Mikhail Berdin Wpg G 22 6-2/165 `16(157th)
300 Cam Hillis Mtl C 20 5-10/170 `18(66th)
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MCKEENS 2020 NHL PROSPECT REPORT: SWEDEN – Top Prospects Dominated by Defensemen https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-nhl-prospect-report-sweden-top-prospects-dominated-defensemen/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-nhl-prospect-report-sweden-top-prospects-dominated-defensemen/#respond Sat, 03 Oct 2020 14:57:09 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=167446 Read More... from MCKEENS 2020 NHL PROSPECT REPORT: SWEDEN – Top Prospects Dominated by Defensemen

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Brynäs Victor Söderström during the hockey match in SHL between Brynäs and Djurgården Photo: Kenta Jönsson / BILDBYRÅN / Cop 210
Brynäs Victor Söderström during the hockey match in SHL between Brynäs and Djurgården
Photo: Kenta Jönsson / BILDBYRÅN
Sweden’s top prospects are dominated by defenseman. Victor Soderstrom leads a group of defenders soon to be NHL-bound in significant roles while there is no sure thing among the top forwards.

Outside of North America, Sweden is the country where NHL clubs most often goes to find prospects, and in the last three years, defensemen have been drafted high, specifically. As a Swedish based prospect writer, almost every article I write in recent years seem to be about defenseman. That does look to change over the 2020 and 2021 drafts with forwards featured at the top of most listings.

Some of the already highly drafted defenseman are already making impact in North America with Rasmus Dahlin (BUF) emerging as a star, but also guys like Adam Boqvist (CHI), Rasmus Sandin (TOR) and Erik Brannstrom (OTT) ready to make an impact. The development curve for defensemen is often longer and this season we have seen a guy like Rasmus Andersson (drafted 2015) take big steps on the Calgary blueline. Meaning,  the most NHL ready today might not the be the best defenseman in the long run.

Back in Sweden a majority of the top prospects are defenseman. As a matter of fact, the top four on my best Swedish prospects are all defenseman. I have Victor Soderstrom (ARI) leading the group slight ahead of Philip Broberg (EDM) and the two big risers from the 19/20 season in Nils Lundkvist (NYR) and Albert Johansson (DET).

Victor Soderstrom close to making the Coyotes blue line in terms of development. He is by far the most NHL ready defenseman of all the top prospects from Sweden. His hockey sense and skill level are already good enough for the NHL and with more consistency and strength he will be a top four defenseman for many years in this league. I even see potential as a top pairing. Soderstrom played over 20 minutes per game at the SHL level and produced well offensively. The fact that he is a right-handed defenseman with Coyotes being strong on the left side (Ekman-Larsson, Chychrun and Hjalmarsson) will  open a spot for him sooner if he can take advantage of the opportunity.

Philip Broberg played an exhibition game with the Oilers prior to the bubble playoffs. He had impressed at the training camp but at that exhibition game it became clear he still is one or two years away from the NHL. The long-term projection is still high even though I have put Soderstrom ahead of him (had it the other way around before their draft). Broberg ‘s excellent reach, puck skills and skating are what impressed the Oilers management at the camp and made him get a chance over 2018 draftee Evan Bouchard, for example. In the game he played Broberg got in some trouble early and looked very raw. Soderstrom’ game is more ready in that he plays smarter and has shown that he can use his tools effectively. Broberg became better during that game and his toolbox is stronger long term than Soderstroms but there is no guarantee he will learn to use all of it. Broberg will need to show more consistency in a bigger role in the SHL this upcoming season before he gets another look at the NHL. With Broberg and afore-mentioned Bouchard, Ethan Bear (2017 draft) and Caleb Jones (2017 draft) the Oilers have an interesting blueline in the pipeline after suffering over a decade on that position.

Nils Lundkvist had a breakout season in the SHL and has little to prove there. He earned a spot on the national men’s team and was ready to compete for a spot. The Covid-19 pandemic change the scenario and he will therefore play another year in Sweden. I do not see that as a bad thing as one extra year in the SHL had not hurt any prospect yet. He will get a chance to grow and play with higher expectations on his shoulders. The right-handed defenseman is a terrific passer with strong decision-making. With a strong right side (Fox, DeAngelo and Trouba) the Rangers will have no need to hurry Lundkvist. If we lived under normal circumstance and Lundkvist joined a September camp, he probably would have started in the AHL. To compare with Soderstrom and Broberg, Lundkvist is more simplistic and less powerful in his game. He cannot match Brobergs skating combined with size/reach nor Soderstroms puck skills combined with smooth skating.

Albert Johansson was a player I thought fell too low in the draft as he had shown first round upside. This season he came up in the SHL and played too well for them to send him down. He got a bigger and bigger role and his puck skills combined with a strong hockey sense and puck skills makes Detroit’s famous Swedish scout Hakan Andersson look brilliant again with the 60th pick in 2019. Johansson is a smart defenseman that has an NHL future written all over him and he plays a team first game. Maybe not as a top pair defenseman but as a second or third pair. Detroit signed him but there is no need for them to rush him and he will play his last junior season as a strong SHL defenseman on one of the top teams in the league. Johansson may yet surprise us and become the best of the group, but he is not as smooth as Soderstrom as fast or big as Broberg or as smart as Lundkvist which makes his ceiling lower. He still makes inconsistent decisions and lacks strength in the defensive side of the game.

After those top four on my list, I only have one more affiliated defenseman as a strong make-NHL candidate. I rank him seventh in total and the player I am talking about is Mattias Norlinder. He was snubbed his first draft eligible year but got picked 64th his second year of eligibility. What makes him so interesting is his elite skating ability. Norlinder is not top-pair skilled but a solid puck mover with above average hands. He can help his team in any role. He reads the game well and will become an efficient two-way defenseman in a second or third pairing. He was signed by a top club in the SHL after being a top defenseman in Allsvenskan last season. Beside his skating and puck-moving the upside is not high enough for him to compete with the other defensemen on this list. Size is also an important component for this type of defenseman that relies so much on his skating. If there is good reach combined with strong skating and hockey sense, he becomes much more effective. Norlinder is average sized while a guy like Broberg is 6´4. It is not the only difference between those two but Broberg’s floor will always be higher, as well as his ceiling.

When it comes to forwards, the top guys usually step over the ocean and are ready earlier. Elias Pettersson (VAN) is of course a big star and Emil Bemstrom (CBJ) is a regular with Columbus. Other recent teenagers like David Gustafsson (WPG), Isac Lundestrom (ANA) and Lias Andersson (NYR) have all played 20 plus games in the big league.

Putting those to the side there are a group of forwards still in Sweden that are offensively skilled who I am not sure if they have what it takes to earn a top six forward spot and they are all not good enough in other areas to play in a another role. That group include Nils Hoglander (VAN), Samuel Fagemo (LAK), Jonathan Dahlén (SJS) and Dominik Bokk (CAR). There is no denying their offensive skills though. Sweden also has one really interesting prospect who can play in various roles who I also see as a good bet to become an NHL player and that is the smart power forward, Filip Hallander (PIT).

The two most interesting now are Hoglander and Fagemo though. They were both among the top players at the World juniors and they produced big numbers. Hoglander is a smallish but strong balanced board winger with elusive skills and elite puck skills. I am not sure if his hockey sense is good enough and he has yet to put up points at senior level. He showed at the World juniors that he was a decent playmaker and had various ways to attack, which is what I have not seen him do at senior level. Size will be a factor, even if it is not the biggest concern as he is strong and physically competitive beyond his size. Hoglander plays individually and needs to get better at using his teammates and help drive the play. There will always be a lower ceiling if a player cannot play various roles, the power play for example; Hoglander has yet to show that he can set up a power play or to be a finisher.

Fagemo is simpler to understand. He is a one-way forward with strong instincts and a good shot. He really has a knack for scoring goals which always is useful. His numbers, as well as the underlying ones, will suggest that he will keep scoring goals. But what happens he when he does not score? Fagemo’s defensive game is not strong as his skating is not elite. He will need good support to be successful as a top six forward in the NHL. And that could be the problem. If he gets a slotted chance with the Kings, he may succeed and be able to stick in the NHL but if he does not? He will have hard time earning his coaches trust playing the way he is now. To be become a top six winger in the NHL is extremely hard and there are many who compete for those spots. And if you are not a star (and he is not), you will need other circumstances to run in your favor. So, for both him and Hoglander, I do not deny their skills as a top six forward, it is more that their style of play is not dynamic enough for me to see them as a sure thing.

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

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MCKNS 2020 Prospect ReportI write these words less than 24 hours after the Dallas Stars took game one of the Stanley Cup Finals against the heavily favored Tampa Bay Lightning. Unlike most seasons wherein the end of the Stanley Cup marks the beginning of off-season player movement, this year teams have taken an early start to the transactional Ferris wheel as many expect the upcoming offseason (from the awarding of the Cup, through to the draft in the first week of October to the start of the 2020-21 season perhaps as soon as early December, pending COVID trends in North America) to be especially turbulent.

We have seen a few trades of NHL pieces, one deal which impacted this guidebook, as Toronto sent Kasperi Kapanen to Pittsburgh and Swedish winger Filip Hallander was among those coming back to Toronto. Hallander was our selection for the second-best prospect in the Penguins system and now holds that title for the Maple Leafs. That trade knocked the Penguins down a few slots on our organizational rankings and allowed Toronto to go the other way accordingly.

Of course, with the draft roughly 17 days away, and with it a complete re-shuffling of the organizational rankings, this is just a snapshot in time of how every team’s system shakes up. We will re-run this list, incorporating the drafted players, in our pre-season fantasy guide, where we will expand the lists up to 20.

What you are about to dive into is a comprehensive list of all prospect eligible players on all 31 teams. To hold prospect eligibility, a player needs to 25 or younger, as of September 15, 2020. All skaters need to have played less than 60 career games, with no more than 35 of those games coming in a single season (or 25 for this past shortened season). For goalies, the age criteria remain the same, but the games played benchmark drops to 30 career games and 20 in a given season (or 15 last year). Any cutoff that does not hew exactly to the Calder Trophy award criteria is, by nature, arbitrary, but we aim to be inclusive for all players who have not yet cemented NHL jobs and/or have not had a prolonged chance to prove himself capable – or incapable.

We rank 15 per team, as depth is as important as the high end. Our goal is to identify players who could – if they have an advocate for them within the team’s braintrust – play a role in the NHL. These players were identified through our thorough vetting of each prospect across the globe, assigning scores, or grades, to five areas for skaters (skating, shot, puck skills, smarts, physicality) and six for netminders (athleticism/speed/quickness, compete/temperament, vision/play reading, positioning/technique, rebound control, and puck handling). Depending on the position, the grades are run through an algorithm to come up with an overall future projection (OFP).

The OFP, if the scout is being honest, measures the future role we anticipate the prospect being able to hold. A 50 score is the lower threshold to be a regular 4th line forward, or bottom pairing defender. Grades over 56 are potential top line/pairing skaters. The grades in between, obviously project to the middle of the lineup.

As we are reminded every year, development is not linear. Some players take unexpected sudden leaps forward (see Marino, John), and others stagnate (see Ho-Sang, Josh), and many do exactly what we expect of them when they are given the chance. As much as I trust the analysts in our team, I can also tell you that this exercise is always humbling. There will be at least one player who we rate highly who bombs. There will be at least one player who did not feature on his team’s top 15 who becomes an NHL regular next year. We accept those errors in judgment and promise you, our faithful subscriber, that we will learn from them and refine our work for next year, as we learn just as NHL teams learn.

Until then, please enjoy this snapshot view of the future of the beautiful, frozen game. Putting this together has provided at least some sense of normalcy during this crazy summer.

NHL RNK PLAYER POS AGE HT/WT TM Acquired
Ana 1 Trevor Zegras C 19 6-0/170 Boston University (HE) `19(9th)
Min 2 Kirill Kaprizov LW 23 5-10/200 CSKA (KHL) `15(135th)
Col 3 Bowen Byram D 19 6-0/195 Vancouver (WHL) `19(4th)
Buf 4 Dylan Cozens C 19 6-3/185 Lethbridge (WHL) `19(7th)
Fla 5 Spencer Knight G 19 6-3/195 Boston College (HE) `19(13th)
VGK 6 Peyton Krebs C 19 5-11/180 Winnipeg (WHL) `19(17th)
Ari 7 Victor Soderstrom D 19 5-11/180 Brynas (Swe) `19(11th)
Mtl 8 Cole Caufield RW 19 5-7/165 Wisconsin (B1G) `19(15th)
Van 9 Vasili Podkolzin RW 19 6-1/190 SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) `19(10th)
Edm 10 Philip Broberg D 19 6-3/200 Skelleftea AIK (Swe) `19(8th)
Tor 11 Nick Robertson LW 19 5-9/160 Peterborough (OHL) `19(53rd)
Col 12 Alex Newhook C 19 5-10/195 Boston College (HE) `19(16th)
Det 13 Moritz Seider D 19 6-3/185 Grand Rapids (AHL) `19(6th)
Fla 14 Grigori Denisenko LW 20 5-11/185 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) `18(15th)
Min 15 Matthew Boldy LW 19 6-1/190 Boston College (HE) `19(12th)
NJ 16 Ty Smith D 20 5-10/180 Spokane (WHL) `18(17th)
LA 17 Alex Turcotte C 19 5-11/185 Wisconsin (B1G) `19(5th)
Nsh 18 Philip Tomasino C 19 5-11/180 Nia-Osh (OHL) `19(24th)
Pit 19 Samuel Poulin LW 19 6-1/205 Sherbrooke (QMJHL) `19(21st)
Wsh 20 Connor McMichael C 19 5-11/175 London (OHL) `19(25th)
LA 21 Gabriel Vilardi RW 21 6-3/200 Ontario (AHL) `17(11th)
NYR 22 Igor Shesterkin G 24 6-1/190 Hartford (AHL) `14(118th)
Dal 23 Thomas Harley D 19 6-3/190 Mississauga (OHL) `19(18th)
Ari 24 Barrett Hayton C 20 6-1/190 Arizona (NHL) `18(5th)
NYR 25 Nils Lundkvist D 20 5-11/180 Lulea (Swe) `18(28th)
LA 26 Arthur Kaliyev RW 19 6-2/190 Hamilton (OHL) `19(33rd)
Cgy 27 Juuso Valimaki D 21 6-2/205 DNP - Injured `17(16th)
Det 28 Jared McIsaac D 20 6-1/195 Hal-Mon (QMJHL) `18(36th)
NYR 29 Vitali Kravtsov RW 20 6-3/185 Hartford (AHL) `18(9th)
Edm 30 Evan Bouchard D 20 6-2/195 Bakersfield (AHL) `18(10th)
NYR 31 K'Andre Miller D 20 6-3/205 Wisconsin (B1G) `18(22nd)
Edm 32 Raphael Lavoie RW 19 6-4/195 Hal-Chi (QMJHL) `19(38th)
NYI 33 Ilya Sorokin G 25 6-2/180 CSKA (KHL) `14(78th)
Det 34 Albert Johansson D 19 5-11/165 Farjestads (Swe) `19(60th)
Ari 35 Matias Maccelli LW 19 5-11/170 Ilves Tampere (Fin) `19(98th)
Van 36 Nils Hoglander RW 19 5-9/185 Rogle (Swe) `19(40th)
Ari 37 Jan Jenik RW 20 6-1/180 Hamilton (OHL) `18(65th)
Phi 38 Cam York D 19 5-11/175 Michigan (B1G) `19(14th)
Phi 39 Morgan Frost C 21 5-11/180 Lehigh Valley (AHL) `17(27th)
Ana 40 Lukas Dostal G 20 6-1/170 Ilves Tampere (Fin) `18(85th)
LA 41 Tobias Bjornfot D 19 6-0/200 Ontario (AHL) `19(22nd)
SJ 42 Ryan Merkley D 20 5-11/170 London (OHL) `18(21st)
NYI 43 Kieffer Bellows LW 22 6-0/200 Bridgeport (AHL) `16(19th)
NYI 44 Oliver Wahlstrom RW 20 6-1/205 Bridgeport (AHL) `18(11th)
LA 45 Rasmus Kupari C 20 6-1/185 Ontario (AHL) `18(20th)
CBJ 46 Liam Foudy C 20 6-0/175 London (OHL) `18(18th)
LA 47 Tyler Madden C 20 5-10/155 Northeastern (HE) T(Van-2/20)
Mtl 48 Alexander Romanov D 20 5-11/185 CSKA (KHL) `18(38th)
NYI 49 Bode Wilde D 20 6-2/195 Bridgeport (AHL) `18(41st)
Ott 50 Jacob Bernard-Docker D 20 6-0/180 North Dakota (NCHC) `18(26th)
Cgy 51 Jakob Pelletier LW 19 5-9/165 Moncton (QMJHL) `19(26th)
LA 52 Akil Thomas C 20 5-11/170 Nia-Pbo (OHL) `18(51st)
Wpg 53 Dylan Samberg D 21 6-3/190 Minn-Duluth (NCHC) `17(43rd)
Chi 54 Ian Mitchell D 21 5-11/175 Denver (NCHC) `17(57th)
Ott 55 Josh Norris C 21 6-1/195 Belleville (AHL) T(SJ-9/18)
NYR 56 Matthew Robertson D 19 6-3/200 Edmonton (WHL) `19(49th)
VGK 57 Pavel Dorofeyev LW 19 6-1/170 Magnitogorsk (KHL) `19(79th)
Dal 58 Jake Oettinger G 21 6-4/210 Texas (AHL) `17(26th)
Ott 59 Drake Batherson RW 22 6-1/190 Belleville (AHL) `17(121st)
LA 60 Samuel Fagemo RW 20 6-0/195 Frolunda (Swe) `19(50th)
Col 61 Justus Annunen G 20 6-4/215 Karpat Oulu (Fin) `18(64th)
Bos 62 John Beecher C 19 6-3/210 Michigan (B1G) `19(30th)
Phi 63 Egor Zamula D 20 6-4/175 Calgary (WHL) FA(9/18)
NYR 64 Zac Jones D 19 5-10/175 Massachusetts (HE) `19(68th)
CBJ 65 Kirill Marchenko LW 20 6-3/190 SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) `18(49th)
VGK 66 Jack Dugan RW 22 6-2/185 Providence (HE) `17(142nd)
StL 67 Scott Perunovich D 22 5-10/175 Minn-Duluth (NCHC) `18(45th)
Bos 68 Jack Studnicka C 21 6-1/170 Providence (AHL) `17(53rd)
Dal 69 Ty Dellandrea C 20 6-0/185 Flint (OHL) `18(13th)
Min 70 Calen Addison D 20 5-10/180 Lethbridge (WHL) T(Pit-2/20)
NYR 71 Julien Gauthier RW 22 6-4/225 Charlotte (AHL) T(Car-2/20)
Van 72 Olli Juolevi D 22 6-3/200 Utica (AHL) `16(5th)
NJ 73 Nolan Foote LW 19 6-3/190 Kelowna (WHL) T(TB-2/20)
NJ 74 Janne Kuokkanen LW 22 6-1/190 Cha-Bng (AHL) T(Car-2/20)
Ott 75 Alex Formenton LW 21 6-2/165 Belleville (AHL) `17(47th)
Det 76 Robert Mastrosimone LW 19 5-10/160 Boston University (HE) `19(54th)
NYR 77 Morgan Barron C 21 6-2/200 Cornell (ECAC) `17(174th)
Mtl 78 Jesse Ylonen RW 20 6-1/185 Pelicans (Fin) `18(35th)
Car 79 Dominik Bokk RW 20 6-1/180 Rogle (Swe) T(StL-9/19)
Nsh 80 Egor Afanasyev RW 19 6-3/205 Windsor (OHL) `19(45th)
Ana 81 Benoit-Olivier Groulx C 20 6-1/195 Hal-Mon (QMJHL) `18(54th)
Min 82 Alexander Khovanov C 20 5-11/195 Moncton (QMJHL) `18(86th)
Det 83 Joe Veleno C 20 6-1/195 Grand Rapids (AHL) `18(30th)
NJ 84 Kevin Bahl D 20 6-6/230 Ottawa (OHL) T(Ari-12/19)
Car 85 Ryan Suzuki C 19 6-0/180 Bar-Sag (OHL) `19(28th)
Van 86 Jett Woo D 20 6-0/205 Calgary (WHL) `18(37th)
Mtl 87 Mattias Norlinder D 20 5-11/180 MODO (Swe 2) `19(64th)
Min 88 Adam Beckman LW 19 6-1/170 Spokane (WHL) `19(75th)
Bos 89 Jeremy Swayman G 21 6-1/190 Maine (HE) `17(111th)
Wpg 90 Kristian Vesalainen LW 21 6-3/205 Manitoba (AHL) `17(24th)
Tor 91 Filip Hallander LW 20 6-1/185 Lulea (Swe) T(Pit-8/20)
Fla 92 Owen Tippett RW 21 6-1/200 Springfield (AHL) `17(10th)
Car 93 Jake Bean D 22 6-1/175 Charlotte (AHL) `16(13th)
Ott 94 Shane Pinto C 19 6-2/190 North Dakota (NCHC) `19(32nd)
Col 95 Martin Kaut RW 20 6-1/175 Colorado (AHL) `18(16th)
Van 96 Jack Rathbone D 21 5-10/175 Harvard (ECAC) `17(95th)
Tor 97 Nick Abruzzese C 21 5-9/160 Harvard (ECAC) `19(124th)
Bos 98 Urho Vaakanainen D 21 6-0/185 Providence (AHL) `17(18th)
Wsh 99 Alexander Alexeyev D 20 6-3/200 Hershey (AHL) `18(31st)
NYI 100 Simon Holmstrom RW 19 6-1/185 Bridgeport (AHL) `19(23rd)
LA 101 Jaret Anderson-Dolan C 21 5-11/190 Ontario (AHL) `17(41st)
Car 102 Joey Keane D 21 6-0/185 Hfd-Cha (AHL) T(NYR-2/20)
Wsh 103 Martin Fehervary D 20 6-1/190 Hershey (AHL) `18(46th)
StL 104 Tyler Tucker D 20 6-1/205 Bar-Fnt (OHL) `18(200th)
SJ 105 Yegor Spiridonov C 19 6-2/195 Stalnye Lisy Magnitogorsk (MHL) `19(108th)
NJ 106 Joey Anderson RW 22 6-0/195 Binghamton (AHL) `16(73rd)
Col 107 Conor Timmins D 21 6-1/185 Colorado (AHL) `17(32nd)
StL 108 Klim Kostin C 21 6-3/195 San Antonio (AHL) `17(31st)
Mtl 109 Cayden Primeau G 21 6-3/180 Laval (AHL) `17(199th)
SJ 110 Jonathan Dahlen LW 22 5-11/185 Timra IK (Swe 2) T(Van-2/19)
NJ 111 Reilly Walsh D 21 5-11/180 Harvard (ECAC) `17(81st)
Buf 112 Oskari Laaksonen D 21 6-2/165 Ilves Tampere (Fin) `17(89th)
NJ 113 Arseni Gritsyuk RW 19 5-10/170 Omskie Yastreby (MHL) `19(129th)
Wsh 114 Aliaksei Protas C 19 6-5/205 Prince Albert (WHL) `19(91st)
Cgy 115 Dustin Wolf G 19 6-0/165 Everett (WHL) `19(214th)
StL 116 Joel Hofer G 20 6-3/160 Portland (WHL) `18(107th)
VGK 117 Ivan Morozov C 20 6-1/180 SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) `18(61st)
Mtl 118 Jake Evans C 24 6-0/185 Laval (AHL) `14(207th)
Nsh 119 Eeli Tolvanen RW 21 5-10/175 Milwaukee (AHL) `17(30th)
Wpg 120 Ville Heinola D 19 5-11/180 Lukko Rauma (Fin) `19(20th)
VGK 121 Lucas Elvenes RW 21 6-0/175 Chicago (AHL) `17(127th)
TB 122 Cole Koepke LW 22 6-1/195 Minn-Duluth (NCHC) `18(183rd)
Ana 123 Isac Lundestrom C 20 6-0/185 San Diego (AHL) `18(23rd)
NYR 124 Tarmo Reunanen D 22 6-0/180 Lukko Rauma (Fin) `16(98th)
Mtl 125 Jordan Harris D 20 5-11/180 Northeastern (HE) `18(71st)
Ana 126 Brayden Tracey LW 19 6-0/175 MJ-Vic (WHL) `19(29th)
Phi 127 Tanner Laczynski C 23 6-1/200 Ohio State (B1G) `16(169th)
Chi 128 Alec Regula D 20 6-3/200 London (OHL) T(Det-10/19)
Buf 129 Mattias Samuelsson D 20 6-3/215 Western Michigan (NCHC) `18(32nd)
Car 130 Jamieson Rees C 19 5-10/175 Sarnia (OHL) `19(44th)
Edm 131 Olivier Rodrigue G 20 6-1/165 Moncton (QMJHL) `18(62nd)
Fla 132 Serron Noel RW 20 6-5/205 Osh-Kit (OHL) `18(34th)
Det 133 Antti Tuomisto D 19 6-4/190 Assat Pori (Fin Jr) `19(35th)
Dal 134 Jason Robertson LW 21 6-2/195 Texas (AHL) `17(39th)
Mtl 135 Joni Ikonen C 21 5-10/170 DNP - Injured `17(58th)
Nsh 136 Rem Pitlick C 23 5-11/200 Milwaukee (AHL) `16(76th)
Ott 137 Logan Brown C 22 6-6/220 Belleville (AHL) `16(11th)
TB 138 Samuel Walker C 21 5-11/160 Minnesota (B1G) `17(200th)
Phi 139 Wade Allison RW 22 6-2/205 Western Michigan (NCHC) `16(52nd)
Wpg 140 Declan Chisholm D 20 6-1/190 Peterborough (OHL) `18(150th)
NJ 141 Tyce Thompson RW 21 6-1/180 Providence (HE) `19(96th)
VGK 142 Connor Corcoran D 20 6-1/185 Windsor (OHL) `18(154th)
Ana 143 Jackson Lacombe D 19 6-1/170 Minnesota (B1G) `19(39th)
NYR 144 Lauri Pajuniemi RW 21 6-0/185 TPS Turku (Fin) `18(132nd)
Car 145 Tuukka Tieksola RW 19 5-10/160 Karpat Oulu (Fin Jr) `19(121st)
CBJ 146 Andrew Peeke D 22 6-3/210 Cleveland (AHL) `16(34th)
Ana 147 Axel Andersson D 20 6-0/180 Moncton (QMJHL) T(Bos-2/20)
Car 148 Patrik Puistola LW 19 6-0/175 Tap-Juk-Koo (Fin) `19(73rd)
NJ 149 Michael McLeod C 22 6-2/195 Binghamton (AHL) `16(12th)
Car 150 Pyotr Kochetkov G 21 6-1/175 SKA-VIT (KHL) `19(36th)
NJ 151 Michael Vukojevic D 19 6-3/210 Kitchener (OHL) `19(82nd)
NYI 152 Ruslan Iskhakov C 20 5-8/155 UConn (HE) `18(43rd)
Wpg 153 Sami Niku D 23 6-0/175 Manitoba (AHL) `15(198th)
TB 154 Hugo Alnefelt G 19 6-3/195 HV 71 (Swe) `19(71st)
NJ 155 Nikita Okhotyuk D 19 6-1/195 Ottawa (OHL) `19(61st)
NYR 156 Hunter Skinner D 19 6-2/175 London (OHL) `19(112th)
LA 157 Mikey Anderson D 21 6-0/195 Ontario (AHL) `17(103rd)
Col 158 Shane Bowers C 21 6-2/190 Colorado (AHL) T(Ott-11/17)
NYI 159 Joshua Ho-Sang RW 24 6-0/175 Bri-SA (AHL) `14(28th)
LA 160 Cal Petersen G 25 6-3/190 Ontario (AHL) FA(7/17)
Col 161 Sampo Ranta LW 20 6-2/205 Minnesota (B1G) `18(78th)
Wpg 162 Mikhail Berdin G 22 6-2/165 Manitoba (AHL) `16(157th)
Bos 163 Jeremy Lauzon D 23 6-3/205 Providence (AHL) `15(52nd)
Nsh 164 David Farrance D 21 5-11/190 Boston University (HE) `17(92nd)
Van 165 Will Lockwood RW 22 5-11/175 Michigan (B1G) `16(64th)
NYI 166 Sebastian Aho D 24 5-10/175 Bridgeport (AHL) `17(139th)
Wpg 167 Logan Stanley D 22 6-7/225 Manitoba (AHL) `16(18th)
Buf 168 Ryan Johnson D 19 6-0/175 Minnesota (B1G) `19(31st)
Van 169 Michael DiPietro G 21 6-0/195 Utica (AHL) `17(64th)
VGK 170 Kaedan Korczak D 19 6-3/190 Kelowna (WHL) `19(41st)
Car 171 Jack Drury C 20 5-11/180 Harvard (ECAC) `18(42nd)
StL 172 Nikita Alexandrov C 19 6-0/180 Charlottetown (QMJHL) `19(62nd)
Col 173 Nikolai Kovalenko RW 20 5-10/175 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) `18(171st)
Nsh 174 Juuso Parssinen C 19 6-2/205 TPS Turku (Fin) `19(210th)
Chi 175 Pius Suter C 24 5-11/170 ZSC Lions (NLA) FA(7/20)
Fla 176 Aleksi Saarela RW 23 5-11/200 Rfd-Spr (AHL) T(Chi-10/19)
Bos 177 Trent Frederic C 22 6-4/215 Providence (AHL) `16(29th)
CBJ 178 Dmitri Voronkov LW 20 6-4/190 Ak Bars Kazan (KHL) `19(114th)
Ott 179 Lassi Thomson D 19 6-0/190 Ilves Tampere (Fin) `19(19th)
Car 180 Morgan Geekie C 22 6-2/180 Charlotte (AHL) `17(67th)
CBJ 181 Trey Fix-Wolansky RW 21 5-8/185 Cleveland (AHL) `18(204th)
Ott 182 Vitaly Abramov RW 22 5-9/175 Belleville (AHL) T(CBJ-2/19)
TB 183 Alexander Volkov LW 23 6-1/190 Syracuse (AHL) `17(48th)
Tor 184 Mikko Kokkonen D 19 5-11/200 Jukurit (Fin) `19(84th)
Ott 185 Kevin Mandolese G 20 6-4/180 Cape Breton (QMJHL) `18(157th)
CBJ 186 Daniil Tarasov G 21 6-5/185 Assat Pori (Fin) `17(86th)
LA 187 Carl Grundstrom LW 22 6-0/195 Ontario (AHL) T(Tor-1/19)
LA 188 Kale Clague D 22 6-0/180 Ontario (AHL) `16(51st)
Ott 189 Artyom Zub D 24 6-2/200 SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) FA(5/20)
Edm 190 Tyler Benson LW 22 6-0/200 Bakersfield (AHL) `16(32nd)
Det 191 Jonatan Berggren RW 20 5-10/185 Skelleftea AIK (Swe) `18(33rd)
Tor 192 Yegor Korshkov RW 24 6-4/215 Toronto (AHL) `16(31st)
Dal 193 Riley Damiani C 20 5-9/165 Kitchener (OHL) `18(137th)
VGK 194 Zach Whitecloud D 23 6-2/210 Chicago (AHL) FA(3/18)
Buf 195 Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen G 21 6-4/195 Cincinnati (ECHL) `17(54th)
Car 196 David Cotton LW 23 6-3/205 Boston College (HE) `15(169th)
Chi 197 Wyatt Kalynuk D 23 6-1/180 Wisconsin (B1G) FA(7/20)
Min 198 Hunter Jones G 19 6-4/195 Peterborough (OHL) `19(59th)
LA 199 Jordan Spence D 19 5-10/165 Moncton (QMJHL) `19(95th)
Cgy 200 Dmitri Zavgorodny LW 20 5-9/175 Rimouski (QMJHL) `18(198th)
Col 201 Alex Beaucage RW 19 6-1/195 Rouyn-Noranda (QMJHL) `19(78th)
TB 202 Dmitri Semykin D 20 6-3/200 SKA-1946 St. Petersburg (MHL) `18(90th)
CBJ 203 Matiss Kivlenieks G 24 6-2/190 Cleveland (AHL) FA(5/17)
StL 204 Ville Husso G 25 6-3/205 San Antonio (AHL) `14(94th)
Phi 205 Bobby Brink RW 19 5-10/165 Denver (NCHC) `19(34th)
NYI 206 Otto Koivula C 22 6-4/220 Bridgeport (AHL) `16(120th)
Car 207 Eetu Makiniemi G 21 6-2/180 KOOVEE (Fin 2) `17(104th)
NYI 208 Anatoli Golyshev RW 25 5-8/180 Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg (KHL) `16(95th)
Chi 209 Evan Barratt C 21 6-0/190 Penn State (B1G) `17(90th)
Buf 210 Erik Portillo G 20 6-6/210 Dubuque (USHL) `19(67th)
Fla 211 Cole Schwindt RW 19 6-2/185 Mississauga (OHL) `19(81st)
Chi 212 Michal Teply LW 19 6-3/185 Winnipeg (WHL) `19(105th)
Ott 213 Mads Sogaard G 19 6-7/195 Medicine Hat (WHL) `19(37th)
Buf 214 Jonas Johansson G 24 6-4/205 Rochester (AHL) `14(61st)
TB 215 Cal Foote D 21 6-4/215 Syracuse (AHL) `17(14th)
StL 216 Niko Mikkola D 24 6-5/200 San Antonio (AHL) `15(127th)
NYI 217 Robin Salo D 21 6-1/190 SaiPa (Fin) `17(46th)
Bos 218 Jakub Zboril D 23 6-1/200 Providence (AHL) `15(13th)
Buf 219 Will Borgen D 23 6-2/200 Rochester (AHL) `15(92nd)
Pit 220 Pierre-Olivier Joseph D 21 6-2/170 Wilkes-Barre (AHL) `17(23rd)
SJ 221 Sasha Chmelevski C 21 5-11/190 San Jose (AHL) `17(185th)
Ari 222 Kyle Capobianco D 23 6-1/180 Tucson (AHL) `15(63rd)
Det 223 Keith Petruzzelli G 21 6-5/180 Quinnipiac (ECAC) `17(88th)
Wsh 224 Garrett Pilon RW 22 5-11/190 Hershey (AHL) `16(87th)
NJ 225 Nikola Pasic RW 19 5-10/185 Karlskoga (Swe 2) `19(189th)
TB 226 Alex Barre-Boulet C 23 5-10/165 Syracuse (AHL) FA(3/18)
Edm 227 Ryan McLeod C 20 6-2/205 Bakersfield (AHL) `18(40th)
NYI 228 Samuel Bolduc D 19 6-3/210 BLB-She (QMJHL) `19(57th)
Ott 229 Joey Daccord G 24 6-2/195 Belleville (AHL) `15(199th)
StL 230 Hugh McGing C 22 5-9/180 Western Michigan (NCHC) `18(138th)
Edm 231 Cooper Marody C 23 6-0/180 Bakersfield (AHL) T(Phi-3/18)
Tor 232 Jeremy Bracco RW 23 5-9/180 Toronto (AHL) `15(61st)
Phi 233 German Rubtsov C 22 6-2/190 Lehigh Valley (AHL) `16(22nd)
Wsh 234 Brian Pinho C 25 6-1/195 Hershey (AHL) `13(174th)
Col 235 Logan O'Connor RW 24 6-0/170 Colorado (AHL) FA(7/18)
Buf 236 Casey Fitzgerald D 23 5-11/190 Rochester (AHL) `16(86th)
NJ 237 Daniil Misyul D 19 6-3/180 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) `19(70th)
Ari 238 John Farinacci C 19 5-11/185 Harvard (ECAC) `19(76th)
Edm 239 Aapeli Rasanen C 22 6-0/195 Boston College (HE) `16(153rd)
Pit 240 Anthony Angello RW 24 6-5/205 Wilkes-Barre (AHL) `14(145th)
Mtl 241 Cam Hillis C 20 5-10/170 Guelph (OHL) `18(66th)
Cgy 242 Mathias Emilio Pettersen RW 20 5-9/170 Denver (NCHC) `18(167th)
SJ 243 Alexander True C 23 6-5/205 San Jose (AHL) FA(7/18)
NYI 244 Reece Newkirk C 19 5-11/175 Portland (WHL) `19(147th)
Dal 245 Dawson Barteaux D 20 6-0/180 RD-Wpg (WHL) `18(168th)
Bos 246 Jack Ahcan D 23 5-8/185 St. Cloud State (NCHC) FA(3/20)
Det 247 Seth Barton D 21 6-2/175 Mass-Lowell (HE) `18(81st)
Fla 248 Max Gildon D 21 6-3/190 New Hampshire (HE) `17(66th)
Ari 249 Aku Raty RW 19 6-0/175 Karpat Oulu (Fin) `19(151st)
Wpg 250 David Gustafsson C 20 6-1/195 Winnipeg (NHL) `18(60th)
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MCKEEN’S 2020 NHL PROSPECT REPORT – SAN JOSE SHARKS – ORGANIZATIONAL RANK: 25 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-nhl-prospect-report-san-jose-sharks-organizational-rank-25/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-nhl-prospect-report-san-jose-sharks-organizational-rank-25/#respond Thu, 10 Sep 2020 11:45:50 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=167205 Read More... from MCKEEN’S 2020 NHL PROSPECT REPORT – SAN JOSE SHARKS – ORGANIZATIONAL RANK: 25

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San Jose Sharks LogoSan Jose Sharks

On the bright side, the San Jose system is not the worst in hockey. At least not now. For every team (there aren’t many) that is currently leaner, we have to remind ourselves that the Sharks will not have a first round pick whenever the 2020 draft actually happens. That pick, a lock for a lottery (if there is one), was transferred to Ottawa as part of the big Erik Karlsson trade.

I am sure that they will add some nice prospects with their pair of second rounders and the late first round pick they got in trade from Tampa Bay, but not having a high end first rounder while other teams will be injecting heavy doses of talent into their systems will likely knock the Sharks into the league basement when we re-do this exercise as part of the 2020-21 annual guidebook.

How do things get so bad? In a large part, this is related to the natural success cycle that many teams go through. Their top players are all veterans and are all very good, and the organization did whatever it could to maximize their chances at postseason success. While it’s true that the core of Joe Thornton, Brent Burns, Patrick Marleau, Joe Pavelski, Marc-Edouard Vlasic, and Logan Couture never won a Stanley Cup, they were always in the hunt. This will be only the second season since the lockout in which the Sharks did not qualify for the postseason, and in those 15 seasons, they got past the first round nine times, including four appearances in the Western Conference finals and one trip to the Stanley Cup.

One may lament the lack of rings, but San Jose should be proud of the success they experienced.

But that’s over now. Marleau left the team twice. Pavelski is with Dallas. Thornton is 40. Vlasic is 33 and struggling. Burns is 35 and still going strong, but 35 is not the new 25. Karlsson and Tomas Hertl will be healthy again, Couture still has time left before exiting his prime. Timo Meier and Evander Kane may be ready to become the new core up front. Yet there is no guarantee that the new core will have anywhere like the success of the old core. There are serious questions about the team’s goaltending as incumbent starter Martin Jones with two straight seasons with save percentages below .900.

In short, this is an organization that should be preparing to bring in fresh faces to a lot of spots in the lineup. There is not a single area, in the NHL or anywhere in the system, that can be fairly considered deep. We see three players who could, with some luck and the right opportunity, emerge as top half of the lineup players, although one has shown an unwillingness to stick with the slings and arrows of player development outside of his native Sweden. Another is among the more mercurial prospects in the sport. And even going deeper into the system, Martin Jones’ replacement is not yet here, with not a single goalie featuring in their top 15.

Finally, we remember that having a deep system is a numbers game, as the attrition rate is frightfully large. In the past four drafts, the Sharks have drafted five players thrice, and six once. San Jose has eight picks for 2020 at present. They need to make them count to supplement the new core. - RW

ANAHEIM, CA - SEPTEMBER 20: San Jose Sharks defensemen Ryan Merkley (6) in action during a NHL preseason game between the Anaheim Ducks and the San Jose Sharks played on September 20, 2018 at the Honda Center in Anaheim, CA. (Photo by Brian Rothmuller/Icon Sportswire)
ANAHEIM, CA - SEPTEMBER 20: San Jose Sharks defensemen Ryan Merkley (6) in action during a NHL preseason game between the Anaheim Ducks and the San Jose Sharks played on September 20, 2018 at the Honda Center in Anaheim, CA. (Photo by Brian Rothmuller/Icon Sportswire)
  1. Ryan Merkley, D (21st overall, 2018. 2019 Rank: 1)

It has not always been easy for the highly touted Merkley in the Ontario Hockey League. Through his four years in the league, he has endured trades (from organizations who became too distraught with him), benchings (from coaches who grew distraught with him), and snubs from Hockey Canada. However, a move to the London Knights to play under Dale Hunter this offseason may have saved Merkley’s status as a top end defensive prospect. No bones about it, Merkley had a terrific year playing under Hunter and improved considerably in terms of maturity and engagement level.

Merkley’s best assets are his four-way mobility and his creativity as a playmaker. His edgework is among the best in the OHL, as his lateral movement is so fluid and explosive. This makes him very difficult to contain when he is manning the point. While he will likely always play a higher risk style of game by pushing the pace, and you will have to live with the odd turnover from him trying to beat a defender one on one, he did cut down on those turnovers this year by playing less selfishly and by selecting his times to pinch more carefully. His shot has never developed to become a huge weapon, but he moves well enough to keep defenders guessing.

Where we saw the biggest improvements this year from Merkley were in his defensive engagement and in his attitude on ice. Previously prone to tantrums when things were not going his way, we saw little of that in London. He appears to have figured out how to control his emotions more effectively, committing fewer undisciplined penalties and behaving maturely when things do not go his way. Additionally, we saw him more consistently engaged as a physical player in his own zone.

While it is extremely encouraging to see Merkley taking some steps forward, it is also important to temper expectations as he approaches his first pro season. The Sharks would be wise not to rush him, to ensure that he can build up confidence at the professional level without becoming frustrated and reverting back to his previous tendencies. In the future, he projects as a quality top four puck moving defender who can anchor a powerplay unit. - BO

  1. Yegor Spiridonov, C/LW (108th overall, 2019. 2019 Rank: 3)

A two-way center who is good in many areas but without having elite skills. Spiridonov is a limited skater technically but has good balance and is not slow, with at least average speed. He is strong and smart and makes good decisions all over the ice. He is strong along the boards and in tight areas of the game but lacks a flashy offensive game. He works hard and is smart without the puck. He finds open spaces offensively; he has good instincts getting ready to shoot and he plays responsibly defensively.

He has the assets to be a useful player on both a power play and a penalty kill. On the power play I would like to see him improve his shot. He is good at getting open to shoot but his accuracy and timing on the puck could be better. He has yet to prove himself as a goal scorer. He is an okay playmaker. On the penalty kill he is particularly good at reading passing lanes and disturbing the play. He can detect where the play is going and act rather than react to a play when it is already happening.

Spridonov has yet to play in the KHL and if he does, it will probably be in a limited role. In VHL, Russia’s second pro league, is where he probably will play most of his next season trying to develop his game. His contract with St Petersburg is for one more year. The lack of elite puck skills and limited skating makes me project him as a third line center at best. His work ethic, strength, PK capabilities, and team play are what you look for a player in that role. He has good instincts to put up some points offensively as well in that role. - JH

  1. Jonathan Dahlen, LW/C (42nd overall, 2016 [Ottawa]. 2019 Rank: 8)

Originally a 2nd round pick of the Senators in 2016, Dahlen has been traded twice, played one season in the AHL and returned to Sweden for the 2019-20 season. He is kind of an odd bird in the way that he chose to play in Allsvenskan although almost all teams in the SHL would have wanted to sign him. He was named the top forward and league MVP in Allsvenskan scoring 77 points in 51 games and had five points in the first playoff game before the pandemic ended the season.

He is creative with strong offensive instincts. He has developed his playmaking and is a more dynamic offensive driver than earlier in his career. He is strong both on the power play and at even strength. He likes to be the driver as well and is not that comfortable when playing a smaller role on a line. His top speed is average by NHL standards, but he has impressive agility and is very elusive with the puck in the offensive zone.

His defensive play is okay but still not great and it can make him invisible during parts of games as he rarely plays the PK, wins battles in his own end, or turns the play all on his own. He will need to improve on that side of the game if he wants to reach the highest level. He is a top six forward talent and that is a tough position to reach in the NHL. I believe he will take his time before he steps over to North America again. The 22-year-old will probably play in Sweden for at least one more year, maybe even two. Still a good prospect and if he can keep developing, he could reach his ceiling. - JH

  1. SAN JOSE, CA - SEPTEMBER 12:  Sasha Chmelevski of the San Jose Sharks poses for his official headshot for the 2019-2020 season at Solar4America on September 12, 2019 in San Jose, California (Photo by Kavin Mistry/NHLI via Getty Images)
    SAN JOSE, CA - SEPTEMBER 12: Sasha Chmelevski of the San Jose Sharks  (Photo by Kavin Mistry/NHLI via Getty Images)
    Sasha Chmelevski, C (185th overall, 2017. 2019 Rank: 2)

Chmelevski is a future NHLer and a certified steal three years removed from being selected by the Sharks in the sixth round. However, the concern around the Huntington Beach native has long been his skating, and in his first full AHL season, that lack of speed and agility was obvious. Though his puck skills and menacing wrist shot release made him a lethal offensive option, he had trouble getting past the more mobile defenders of the pro ranks and was hesitant to carry the puck through the neutral zone in fear of being unable to weave past defensemen as he did in the OHL.

Even if he never improves on his feet, I would bet a large sum on the former American WJC star becoming a long-term NHL piece, as he excels in every other facet of the game. He processes the game at a high speed and makes great decisions with the puck, both offensively and defensively, where he has shown himself capable as a penalty-killer. He dealt with injuries for certain stretches of the 2019-20 AHL season but still posted a solid 42-11-16-27 line and exhibited an ability to score goals in different ways, sometimes as a net-front guy and rebound goblin.

Chmelevski's shot and hockey sense give him top-six potential in the future, but with a lack of blistering speed and the uncertain ability to take on heavy responsibility on defense, the Sharks could deploy him as a middle-six two-way center as soon as his NHL career kicks off, which will be in the near future. - TD

  1. Alexander True, C (Undrafted free agent, signed Jul. 18, 2018. 2019 Rank: 20)

The emergence of True over the past couple of seasons is one of the most fascinating development stories in hockey, and another example of San Jose’s terrific job of scouting otherwise unheralded European players. Not long ago, it was difficult to decide whether the Danish forward was even a legitimate prospect worthy of being on the radar of an NHL organization. An undrafted center without particularly impressive numbers as a WHL overager progressed into one of the most heralded prospects in the San Jose system.

True is a dangerous power forward with a plethora of offensive tools, the most notable of which is his freakish size and balance, which makes him capable of driving the net and playing the cycle against nearly anyone. Possessing a hard shot and great passing skill, his offensive game is more than just 90s-style grind; he can set himself or anyone else up for a quality scoring chance from just about anywhere in the zone, though sometimes his decision making and lack of skating speed lags behind his puck skills.

Most importantly for someone who plays this style, True is mean, and while that comes with some discipline issues, it also includes a likable assertiveness and mental aggression. True earned a brief NHL recall to the struggling Sharks and showed exactly what he can be long-term, a play-driving, cycling center who can be hard to defend against in the bottom-six of a good Sharks forward lineup. - TD

  1. John Leonard, LW (182nd overall, 2018. 2019 Rank: UR)

A sixth-round draft pick, Leonard is a good example of a solid investment and solid development not ending on draft day. Leonard signed with San Jose following his junior season at UMass, and the late bloomer has not disappointed. He spent two seasons in the USHL where his offensive output increased from five goals and nine points to 19 goals and 34 points. Still, neither total was enough for an NHL team to draft him in his first two years of eligibility.

His game picked up in a big way in college, and after finally hearing his name called at the draft following his freshman season, he netted a career-high 40 points as a sophomore and was on pace to eclipse that total as a junior, as he led the country in goals and led UMass in scoring before COVID-19 put an early end to the season. The junior was also named New England’s best forward as well as a Hobey Baker finalist. He has soft hands and is able to easily grab loose pucks. He is not afraid to shoot - as evidenced by his goal total — and has a quick release. The former afterthought now has some projecting top six potential. - JS

  1. Artemi Knyazev, D (48th overall, 2019. 2019 Rank: 12)

Knyazev saw modest growth in his second season in North America for a much-improved Sagueneens team this year. His 43 points were tops among blueliners on the club, and among the top ten in scoring among defensemen in the QMJHL. He also fine-tuned his defensive game as he improved his play-reading on the smaller ice.

His skating is the focal point of his play, and the gatekeeper to his success; it allows him to cover a lot of ice in a short time and in all directions. Not only fast, Knyazev is agile and reaches top speed quickly. He is an offence-first defender and thinks the game with offence in mind. He continued his play as a defensive sharpshooter with a second-consecutive year with double digits in goals. His 11 goals were the most on the team on the back end.

His abilities slotted in well next to massive blueliner Louis Crevier, as the pint-sized Knyazev had more permission to freewheel with the big Crevier minding his post. Knyazev is still a project for the pro game, and undersized, but he has the foundation to be a solid powerplay contributor and speedy defender at the NHL level. - MS

  1. Dillon Hamaliuk, LW (55th overall, 20191. 2019 Rank: 13)

Hamaliuk moved to Kelowna to help them compete for a Memorial Cup but like most of his teammates never really took stride this year. When his game is on, he is an imposing albeit somewhat lumbering figure on the ice. He is excellent in the cycle game where his size and reach help him dictate play along the walls. He has decent hands that work with his game, he can carry off the wall, and is a solid net front guy. He scores a lot of goals from the goal mouth where he can use his strength to finish off plays in traffic.

His skating is a bit of a concern as he looks a step behind the play through the neutral zone and is reliant on others to get the puck in the zone. Defensively he is physical and willing to engage to make a play. It was somewhat of a disappointing season to only collect 31 points in 56 games after being brought in to bolster the offense, after nearly being a point-per-game player last season. - VG

  1. Joachim Blichfeld, RW (210th overall, 2016. 2019 Rank: 7)

Blichfeld is yet another steal from untapped regions of Europe taken with a seventh-round pick by an organization deserving of tons of credit in the way they get max value out of every draft selection. After dominating the WHL in his final season with Portland with a league-best 114 points, his transition to the pros was a highly-anticipated one, and the Danish winger delivered with 16 goals and 16 assists in just 44 games of action as an AHL rookie.

A big reason for his success with the Barracuda is his heavy, rapid shot, which is a weapon at even strength and on the power play (five of his 16 goals came on the man-advantage). Grading out as an average skater, Blichfeld is not really one to carry the puck, but does a superb job at finding open areas of the ice away from the puck to receive shooting chances. With steady hands and decent awareness of the ice, he is a fairly versatile player who could kill penalties and be a depth scorer in the NHL. - TD

  1. Alexei Melnichuk, G (Undrafted Free Agent, signed May 4, 2020. 2019 Rank: IE)

A late free agent signing, Melnichuk alone was responsible for moving the Sharks up two slots in our organizational prospect rankings. On the smaller side for a modern netminder, he gained some notoriety two years ago when a hot start with SKA-Neva St. Petersburg in Russia’s second men’s league, led to an invitation to wear the national colors during the Junior Super Series. Melnichuk excelled in the tune up series and earned a spot on the Russian WJC team as the backup. He bombed in his only game.

That might have prevented him from being drafted, but two years later, with a stellar (mostly) full season debut in the KHL to his name, Melnichuk was back in the crosshairs of NHL scouts. He moves well in his crease and likes to challenge shooters when he can. He works hard for his saves and reads the games well, although the numbers at InStathockey make clear that he can really struggle with shots to the top corners, the bane of many smaller netminders. If Melnichuk adapts well to the AHL, he may be in the NHL before long. - RW

  1. Jacob McGrew, RW (159th overall, 2017. 2019 Rank: UR)

Jake McGrew is a California native who has done enough to earn himself a look from as a late round flier.  Unfortunately, his career has been derailed by a couple of season-ending knee surgeries. This season started with high expectations after his first 30 goal season in 2018-19. He jumped out of the gate with five goals in his first six games and looked to be breaking out, but another season ending knee surgery put a halt to a promising overage campaign.

At this point he seems to be a long shot to make the NHL and may even struggle to play in the AHL next season. When he is healthy, he plays an up-tempo game and has a great release that enables him to score goals. If he gets healthy, he has a shot at be a middle six forward if he can get his development back on track and avoid any more long-term injuries. - VG

  1. Brinson Pasichnuk, D (Undrafted Free Agent, signed Mar. 31, 2020. 2019 Rank: IE)

If you don’t have picks, you have to attack the free talent pool with gusto. Two members of the Sharks’ top 15 were free talent pickups, and the depth of the system includes a clean dozen others who received some consideration. Pasichnuk is the only one of the bunch that was added this year.

A physical defender – although one who plays relatively clean – with a big shot from the point, the Arizona State graduate was one of the top NCAA free agents this year. Lauded for his maturity, on and off the ice, Pasichnuk may have a chance to break right into the San Jose NHL lineup whenever the 2020-21 season begins. In truth, he very well may deserve to rank higher on this list as he is almost a sure-fire NHL player. The challenge is that that he is also older than most of the players above him and his ceiling may not be far above his floor. - RW

  1. Santeri Hatakka, D (184th overall, 2019. 2019 Rank: UR)

Hatakka split the 2019-20 season between the Liiga and Mestis, Finland’s second-highest league. He also has a solid, yet unspectacular World Juniors tournament. He role was limited in the Liiga as he averaged fewer than 11 minutes of ice-time per game.

A strong skater with very good acceleration, he moves well in all directions and can carry the puck from his own end. Stickhandling needs work, though, as he has occasional problems controlling the puck efficiently and keeping up his pace. His willingness to battle has always stood out. Furthermore, he defends well in tight areas and is very assertive in the defensive zone.

He did not have the strongest season possible, but he showed glimpses of potential in the Liiga and could break out as soon as the upcoming season if he can move up the depth chart. Overall, Hatakka is a mobile defenseman with strong physical tool and some untapped offensive potential. - MB

  1. Scott Reedy, C/RW (102nd overall, 2017. 2019 Rank: 13)

A smart and versatile forward who finally put his sense to use offensively, scoring a career high 15 goals in his junior season with the Golden Gophers, Reedy has a few tools that suggest he could make a career for himself on the fourth line, playing in the corners and eating up some minutes on the PK. Before he gets there though, he has to show that he can regain some of the speed he showed in his first year with the USNTDP program.

To his credit, his feet move well, but his legs are heavy. That means he can maneuver around small spaces nimbly enough but falls behind when the game opens up. He will have to stress his power credentials more and rely very heavily on his hockey IQ to overcome the skating deficit. Of course, he also has to sign, which he still has not as of this writing. He could become a free agent if he plays out his senior year without putting pen to paper with the Sharks. - RW

  1. Lean Bergmann, LW/RW (Undrafted Free Agent, signed May 28, 2019. 2019 Rank: UR)

In his current state, Bergmann is the definition of a raw prospect. He can score, he has very quick hands for someone his size, and he can effectively utilize his size and strength to create offensive chances for himself. The German loves to drive the net, with and without the puck, and has the physicality to make it happen. As a net-front power-play guy, he can get bumped off the puck in front of the goal pretty easily, which makes me fear for how ineffective his body strength would actually be at the NHL level.

He is a good shooter and has solid skating speed, especially at 200+ pounds, but has little passing game. He played on the penalty kill with the AHL Barracuda and competes hard. He focuses his energy on shoveling pucks on goal and wearing down his opponents, which is precisely what an NHL team would want out of a depth player like Bergmann can be in the near future. - TD

 

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Sweden: 2019-20 Season Preview https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/sweden-2019-10-season-preview/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/sweden-2019-10-season-preview/#respond Wed, 16 Oct 2019 14:13:49 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=162947 Read More... from Sweden: 2019-20 Season Preview

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The 2019-20 season in Sweden started around one month ago, and in this piece, we will give you a look on what to expect and what to look out for as the season progresses. Who are the contenders at the SHL, Allsvenskan, and SuperElit levels? Who are the top prospects playing in Sweden? Are there any 2020 draft candidates getting significant time on ice in the SHL already?
ORNSKOLDSVKIK, SWEDEN - APRIL 28: Sweden's Lucas Raymond #26 celebrates with Karl Henriksson #20 and Alexander Holtz #27 after scoring a third period goal on Team Russia during the gold medal game of the 2019 IIHF Ice Hockey U18 World Championship at Fjallraven Center on April 28, 2019 in Ornskoldsvkik, Sweden. (Photo by Chris Tanouye/HHOF-IIHF Images)
ORNSKOLDSVKIK, SWEDEN - APRIL 28: Sweden's Lucas Raymond #26 celebrates with Karl Henriksson #20 and Alexander Holtz #27 after scoring a third period goal on Team Russia during the gold medal game of the 2019 IIHF Ice Hockey U18 World Championship at Fjallraven Center on April 28, 2019 in Ornskoldsvkik, Sweden. (Photo by Chris Tanouye/HHOF-IIHF Images)

SHL

Championship contenders

Frolunda - The reigning champions are a strong team this season as well. 32-year-old former NCAA-star, Ryan Lasch will be the offensive superstar on the team and in the league this season as well. The 5-7” former Hobey Baker nominee has made a strong European career and is a lethal weapon on the power play. There, he has good chemistry with veteran center and former NHLer Joel Lundqvist (twin brother to Henrik). Another big weapon on Frolunda’s team is winger Samuel Fagemo, who the LA Kings drafted this past summer. He scored 14 goals last season and is looking like a player who will go over 20 goals this season. The team is stacked with former or current NHL prospects like Johan Sundstrom, Max Friberg, Brandon Gormley, Rhett Rakshani, Julius Bergman, Jacob Moverare, and others, making them a strong SHL team. The most exciting to player to look out for though, is 17-year-old Lucas Raymond who plays regularly on a middle six-role for the club. His progression during this season will be very interesting to follow.

Djurgarden - Djurgarden established themselves as a contender last season and with the addition of former NHL center Patrik Berglund, they are definitely a contender this season. Berglund is coming back from a time out from hockey after he left Buffalo last year and terminated his NHL contract. Djurgarden also have other veteran players who have played in the NHL including Niklas Svedberg, Jason Garrison, Jacob Josefson, Tom Wandell and Niclas Bergfors. Prospect wise, Djurgarden is also very interesting. It looks like they might lose 18-year-old defenseman Tobias Bjornfot though, as he has started the year playing in the NHL with the LA Kings. We will know more after 9 NHL games if he comes back or not. Detroit drafted teenager, Albin Grewe is playing full time with the team as well as 2020 draft eligible star, Alexander Holtz. Other prospects to watch are Olle Alsing (OTT), Simon Johansson (MIN), Robin Norell (EDM) and Erik Walli Watherholm (ARI).

Farjestad - Farjestad has a strong team, without any big stars. Victor Ejdsell who was with the Chicago Blackhawks organization last year and is back for this season is one of the team’s key pieces. Michael Lindqvist, who had a short period with the NY Rangers organization last season, keeps on producing well at the SHL level. In goal they have veteran Markus Svensson who has been one of the best goalies in this league for many years now. Backing him up, Winnipeg Jets prospect Arvid Holm is getting his first chance at the SHL level. The biggest prospect on the roster is Detroit Red Wings 2019 pick, Albert Johansson. He isn’t a regular yet but has impressed in the games he has played and may earn a full-time spot soon.

Lulea - There is a “good news/bad news”-situation going on in Lulea so far. The good news is that NY Rangers defenseman prospect Nils Lundkvist has started the season exceptionally well. He is, in fact, the team’s leading scorer as of this writing. The bad news is that Pittsburgh prospect Filip Hallander, who also started well, has been sidelined with a long-term injury due to a broken foot. The team is quite strong and they are among the favorites to win if they can put it all together. Among the stars they have former NHLer Erik Gustafsson, former Hobey Baker winner in Jack Connolly and former AHLers Robin Kovacs and Petter Emanuelsson. Jesper Sellgren (CAR) is another interesting prospect to watch. 2020 draft eligible forward Noel Gunler is playing fourth line minutes, with hopefully the chance of earning more ice time along the way.

Skelleftea - Another prospect strong team. In their SHL roster Philip Broberg (EDM), Jonatan Berggren (DET), Albin Eriksson (DAL), Linus Lindstrom (CGY) and Filip Berglund (EDM) are all playing regularly with the team. The team as a whole still relies heavily on their veteran scorers in Joakim Lindstrom and Oscar Moller (both with NHL experience) to carry the offense. For the prospects, Berggren and Broberg have both started impressively and will be very interesting to follow throughout the season. They both have the potential to be difference makers already this season.

Allsvenskan

Championship contenders

Modo - A big club and historically a big talent producer (Peter Forsberg, Markus Naslund, The Sedins, Victor Hedman, etc.) is playing in Allsvenskan for the fourth consecutive season since being demoted. The team has two interesting players to follow. One is NHL veteran Tobias Enstrom, who is home for the second season for the purpose of helping to get the club back to the SHL. The other one is Montreal prospect Mattias Norlinder, who plays a big role for this team and is looking more and more like a future NHL-defenseman.

Timra - Another big talent producer (Henrik Zetterberg, Mats Naslund, Fredrik Modin, Elias Pettersson, etc.) is back in Allsvenskan after getting demoted last season. They have received a big boost in their bid to return to the top flight, as San Jose prospect Jonathan Dahlen is back with his former team. He wasn’t happy with his situation in North America and felt that the Sharks roster was tough to break into, so he is back home to continue working on his development. Early on, he has been dominating the league with over two points per game.

SuperElit

Championship contenders

Frolunda J20 - Frolunda is probably the most successful organization over the last decade when it comes to developing under 20 talents. They have a strong hockey academy with great facilities. This season their biggest stars are forwards Karl Henriksson (NYR) and Elmer Soderblom (DET). Their best draft eligible players to watch are center Theodor Niederbach and defenseman Theo Nordlund. They also have a strong 2021-group coming on with Fabian Lysell, Simon Edvinsson and Liam Dower Nilsson who all could have first round-potential.

HV71 J20 - Top ranked 2020-players in Zion Nybeck and Emil Andrae are the main players to watch on this talented team in addition to the already drafted Hugo Alnefelt (TBL) who will be splitting games between this team and the SHL team. They have lost last year’s best player in Simon Holmstrom to Bridgeport in AHL.

Leksand J20 - Leksand is destroying the northern division of SuperElit so far. They have won every game and are +54 over 12 games. They have a good team and play a great brand of hockey. Most fun to watch is 2021-prospect Isak Rosén who has the skills and hockey sense to be a top pick in next year’s draft. For 2020, forward Emil Heineman will be interesting to follow as he has started the season with 15 goals over the first 12 games. Columbus prospect Marcus Karlberg is also back with the team after a period on loan to Allsvenskan.

Linkoping J20 - A talented team with Vancouver-prospect Arvid Costmar as a big star and with strong 2019-snubbs in Albert Lyckasen and Marcus Pedersen, who both will have a shot of being drafted 2020 instead. There are also a lot of interesting 2020-eligible players like Elliot Ekmark, Daniel Ljungman and Mateusz Szurowski.

Top NHL drafted prospects to watch
  1. Philip Broberg (Edmonton) - A flashy defenseman who has already wowed the SHL crowd more than once. He plays a regular role on the Skelleftea defense and looks to be only one season from an NHL debut. His physical attributes with tremendous skating and good puck skills makes him very watchable.
  1. Victor Soderstrom (Arizona) - Back with Brynas after spending training camp with Arizona. The smart defenseman will hopefully one of the best defenseman on his team and provide stability and better puck-moving as the team is struggling right now.
  1. Nils Lundqvist (NY Rangers) - The skilled puckmover has been really impressive at the start of this season. He was very good at the summer showcase for Sweden’s U20 team and has been a force for Lulea in SHL action so far.
  1. Mattias Norlinder (Montreal) - Another Swedish super skating defenseman. Norlinder has arguably been Modo’s best player over the beginning of the season and shows a lot of offense to his tremendous skating ability. This looks to be a very strong pick by the Canadiens.
  1. Samuel Fagemo (Los Angeles) - Goal scorer Fagemo hasn’t disappointed after coming back from the LA Kings training camp. He is doing what he does best, and that is scoring goals and creating chances on his own. He is fun to watch that way. I still have questions on him becoming a top six forward in the NHL but at the SHL level he is really good as a 19-year-old.
  1. Jonathan Dahlén (San Jose) - Dahlén has dominated in Allsvenskan at the start of the season. His offensive looks to be more dynamic as he has been as much (or maybe even more) of a playmaker than a goal scorer so far. He creates chances and shows his strong skills in a league he is too good to play in.
  1. Dominik Bokk (Carolina) - Bokk was traded to Carolina earlier this fall and he is playing a regular role with Rogle which currently sits as the top team in the league. They are a surprise team at the top but they look solid so far. Bokk is getting power play time but has struggled with his production early on. He has the skills but I am starting to question his overall hockey sense. He is very interesting to watch.
  1. Albert Johansson (Detroit) - He has put up two points in his four games with Farjestad and I hope he can earn a full-time spot. Johansson is very smart, and we ranked him very high in or draft preview last season due to that intelligence. I can see a rocket-like development trajectory this or next season for him.
  1. Jonatan Berggren (Detroit) - After an injury-filled last season, Berggren seems to be up for good this season with five points in his first 10 games. Berggren is a smart 19 year-old and puck skilled winger with a lot of speed to his game.
  1. Nils Hoglander (Vancouver) - The speedy and creative winger Hoglander plays on the same line as Dominik Bokk for the surprising Rogle. He has three points and a suspension for an ugly elbow so far this season. He is always fun to watch with his strong board play and creative solutions. Still a question mark if he is dynamic enough to become a top six winger in the NHL, though.

HM: Olle Lycksell (PHI), Samuel Ersson (PHI), Filip Hallander (PIT), Hugo Alnefelt (TBL).

Top 2020 NHL draft prospects to watch
  1. Lucas Raymond, Frolunda - A scoring machine who has been quite quiet in the SHL at the start of the season. He plays a middle six role on a stacked team and has three points. He hasn’t dominated in games like we are used to in junior and international hockey. I expect him to explode soon.
  1. Alexander Holtz, Djurgarden - Holtz has been adapting to the SHL level quickly and has played an offensive role for his team. He has been creating chances and has four points (3 goals) through 8 games. He went down and played one game in SuperElit this weekend and scored a hattrick in a 4-3 win.
  1. Noel Gunler, Lulea - A tough player to scout right now. He hasn’t been picked for international games and plays 6-7 minutes a game in the SHL with almost no playing time with the junior team (1 game – 3 points). You can see flashes of smart plays in the SHL though as he is strong in attacking the net and finding spaces for creating scoring chances.
  1. Emil Andrae, HV71 J20 - A skilled and smart defenseman with first round potential. Was Sweden’s best defenseman at the Hlinka Gretzky in august. He plays regularly with the junior team but may get a chance in the SHL as well. In junior he has started off with 14 points in 12 games.
  1. Zion Nybeck, HV71 J20 - A gifted scorer with a smallish frame. Nybeck plays full-time with the junior team so far but I can see him getting chances at senior level as well. He is technically very skilled and entertaining to watch.
  1. Theodor Niederbach, Frolunda J20
  2. Daniel Ljungman, Linkoping J20
  3. Elliott Ekmark, Linkoping J20
  4. Helge Grans, Malmo J20
  5. Emil Heineman, Leksands J20
  6. Leo Loof, Farjestad J20
  7. Mateusz Szurowski, Linkoping J20
  8. Isak Garfve, Mora
  9. Theo Nordlund, Frolunda J20
  10. William Wallinder, Modo J20
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