[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 Jordan Dumais – McKeen's Hockey https://www.mckeenshockey.com The Essential Hockey Annual Mon, 04 May 2026 14:29:10 +0000 en-US hourly 1 MCKEEN’S 2026 NHL PROSPECT REPORT – #19 Columbus Blue Jackets – Organization Overview – Top 15 Prospects https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2026-nhl-prospect-report-19-columbus-blue-jackets-organization-overview-top-15-prospects/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2026-nhl-prospect-report-19-columbus-blue-jackets-organization-overview-top-15-prospects/#respond Wed, 29 Apr 2026 22:00:00 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=199292 Read More... from MCKEEN’S 2026 NHL PROSPECT REPORT – #19 Columbus Blue Jackets – Organization Overview – Top 15 Prospects

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MINNEAPOLIS, MN - NOVEMBER 22: Penn State Nittany Lions defensemen Jackson Smith (7) motions to the Minnesota student section after scoring the go-ahead goal on the power play during the third period of a college hockey game between the Minnesota Golden Gophers and Penn State Nittany Lions on November 22, 2025, at 3M Arena at Mariucci in Minneapolis, MN. (Photo by Nick Wosika/Icon Sportswire)

Prospect System Ranking – 19th (Last Year - 19th)
GM: Don Waddell Hired: May 2024
COACH: Rick Bowness Hired: January 2025

Despite missing the playoffs, the Columbus Blue Jackets are beginning to show signs of progress. A growing group of young NHL contributors has started to hit its stride, with players such as Adam Fantilli and Kirill Marchenko emerging as key offensive drivers. Meanwhile, Kent Johnson, Denton Mateychuk, Cole Sillinger, Luca Pinneli (188th) and Luca Del Bel Belluz (94th) continue to develop into important complementary pieces of the roster. Slowly but surely, Columbus is assembling a more competitive and well-rounded lineup. The organization also signalled its intent to accelerate that progress during the 2025–26 season, acquiring veteran forwards Mason Marchment and Conor Garland. Those additions suggest the Blue Jackets are ready to move beyond the rebuilding phase and begin pushing toward meaningful contention.

Behind the NHL roster, the prospect system continues to develop across multiple leagues. A significant portion of the organization’s high-end talent is currently playing in the NCAA, with several top prospects gaining valuable collegiate experience. Defenseman Jackson Smith, ranked 30th in McKeen’s prospect rankings, has enjoyed an impressive freshman season at Penn State and currently sits among the top-producing defenders in the NCAA. Forward Cayden Lindstrom (52nd), meanwhile, is healthy and progressing through his freshman campaign after injury concerns. William Whitelaw has emerged as a breakout performer at Western Michigan, producing at nearly a point-per-game pace. In Russia, the Blue Jackets also have promising depth in goal. Sergei Ivanov, 21, has spent most of his time at the KHL level, posting an impressive .928 save percentage with three shutouts. Meanwhile, 2025 first-round selection Pyotr Andreyanov (75th) has split his season between the VHL and MHL, with most of his success coming at the junior level.

Another encouraging sign for Columbus is its intact draft capital. The organization has managed to maintain selections in every round of the 2026 NHL Draft, providing additional opportunities to strengthen the system. Regardless of how the current season ultimately unfolds, the Blue Jackets appear to be trending in a positive direction both at the NHL level and throughout their prospect pipeline.

NHL RNK PLAYER POS AGE HT/WT 2024-25 TM GP G(W) A(L) PTS(GAA) PIM(SPCT)
CBJ 1 Jackson Smith D 19 6-4/200 Penn State (NCAA) 35 11 15 26 40
CBJ 2 Cayden Lindstrom C 20 6-3/215 Michigan State (NCAA) 31 3 7 10 94
CBJ 3 Pyotr Andreyanov G 19 6-0/205 Krasnaya Armiya Moskva (MHL) 26 13 8 2.59 0.919
CBJ 4 Luca Del Bel Belluz C 22 6-1/185 Cleveland (AHL) 55 22 36 58 2
CBJ 4 Luca Del Bel Belluz C 22 6-1/185 Columbus (NHL) 14 0 1 1 4
CBJ 5 Luca Marrelli D 20 6-2/185 Cleveland (AHL) 32 4 12 16 10
CBJ 6 Luca Pinelli C 21 5-9/165 Cleveland (AHL) 68 14 32 46 66
CBJ 6 Luca Pinelli C 21 5-9/165 Columbus (NHL) 3 0 0 0 0
CBJ 7 Jordan Dumais RW 22 5-8/165 Cleveland (AHL) 46 7 11 18 8
CBJ 8 William Whitelaw RW 21 5-9/173 Western Michigan (NCAA) 39 19 15 34 51
CBJ 9 Sergei Ivanov G 22 5-11/165 SKA St. Petersburg (Rus) 29 13 11 2.50 0.928
CBJ 10 Evan Gardner G 20 6-0/175 Saskatoon (WHL) 52 25 16 2.96 0.902
CBJ 11 Charlie Elick D 20 6-4/200 Tri-City (WHL) 63 6 14 20 46
CBJ 11 Charlie Elick D 20 6-4/200 Cleveland (AHL) 2 0 1 1 0
CBJ 12 Guillaume Richard D 23 6-2/180 Cleveland (AHL) 70 7 11 18 20
CBJ 13 Oiva Keskinen C 22 6-0/180 Tappara (Fin-Liiga) 49 20 17 37 14
CBJ 14 Jack Williams RW 24 5-11/185 Cleveland (AHL) 72 15 23 38 14
CBJ 14 Jack Williams RW 24 5-11/185 Notre Dame (NCAA) 2 0 0 0 0
CBJ 15 Corson Ceulemans D 23 6-2/200 Cleveland (AHL) 64 8 16 24 43
  1. Jackson Smith, D, Penn State University (NCAA)

    The standout Penn State defenseman joined the team this year after being selected fourteenth overall by the Blue Jackets in the summer of 2025. Smith brings not only a decent size to the blue line, standing at 6’4”, but also some high end skating combined with great stickhandling skills and creativity. It showed in his point production, where he finished the NCAA season with 26 points in 35 games, tops among defenseman on the team. The freshman did not look out of place playing collegiate hockey and transitioned easily into his role as an offensive threat for the Nittany Lions. The one aspect of Smith’s game that stands out right away is his elite skating for his size. From his separation speed, to his four-way mobility and easy transitions, it is no wonder he was highly sought after during the NHL draft. You combine that with his puck control skills and high end shot, Smith will always be a high-end offensive threat every time he steps on the ice. And the defensive part of his game has also been evolving, making him a dual threat from the backend. The Blue Jackets will be very happy once Smith joins the club full time down the road.

  2. Cayden Lindstrom, C, Michigan State University (NCAA)

    After missing a good amount of time during the past two seasons owing to injury, Lindstrom finally made his hockey debut for the Spartans this year and took a little time to get the cobwebs loose and adjust to the speed of college hockey. He responded with a decent freshman outing, putting up 10 points in 31 games. Now the numbers don’t tell the full story, as Lindstrom plays a power forward style game and he is best suited for those battles along the boards and in front of the net. He seemed to embrace his role for Michigan State and helped them become one of the best, if not the best, team in the NCAA. Lindstrom provides some added toughness and grit to the Blue Jackets pipeline and will most likely wreak havoc to opposing teams once he makes the jump to the big club. There may still be some time spent in the NCAA for him to develop and return to top form, but the reward will be worth the wait. The big power forward will also need to get his offensive mojo back if he wants to make an impact at the NHL level. His struggles on the scoresheet this season are hopefully just a one-off and expect him to increase on those totals next year. Columbus is surely hoping Lindstrom can develop into a reliable NHL power forward for their team at some point.

  3. Pyotr Andreyanov, G, Zvezda Moscow (VHL)

    Andreyanov has taken a slight step back this season after his outstanding campaign last year. He started the year in the VHL, but his subpar play got him demoted back to the MHL, where his GAA has taken a significant hit. He is still the uber athletic, explosive and dexterous goalie that Columbus picked at 20 last draft, making difficult plays look easy and producing highlight reel saves when necessary. His ability to anticipate play and track pucks through traffic is excellent as well, adding to his impressive toolkit. The weaknesses in his game come from poor angles when he is forced to move laterally across his crease. He leaves the short side open and has had issues with stopping low glove shots in those situations. He is also slightly on the heavier side. If he can shed some weight while adding muscle, the athleticism could be otherworldly as he is already very gifted. Some slight tweaks to his positioning and techniques could turn him into a star, and he has plenty of time in an excellent goalie developmental system with Krasnaya to get him there.

  4. Luca Del Bel Belluz, C, Cleveland Monsters (AHL)

    For Del Bel Belluz, it’s all about finding a way to breakthrough offensively at the NHL level. He has proven that he can be an impact offensive player at the AHL level with Cleveland. However, that same consistency has not yet carried over to the NHL level. He had a strong cup of coffee last year with the Jackets, but this year’s run was significantly less effective. As he inches closer to the end of his waiver exemption, he will need to prove to Columbus that he can be a top nine player for them. The skill and touch are there. Del Bel Belluz is a skilled play creator who protects the puck well and operates with a quick strike mentality. However, he needs to find a way to discover more success playing through the middle and in higher traffic areas at the NHL level to take that next step. The Jackets have three key top nine forwards entering this offseason as UFA’s and that could create room for LDBB to finally breakthrough next year. He still has terrific upside to be an offensive contributor, even if some tweener concerns are creeping in.

  5. Luca Marrelli, D, Cleveland Monsters (AHL)

    Offseason shoulder surgery delayed Marelli’s pro debut until only recently, but the former Oshawa General standout has been quick to make an impact with the Cleveland Monsters.
    Marrelli’s best asset is unquestionably his brain; he’s an extremely intelligent defender. Marrelli rarely turns the puck over and is calm under pressure, making him a high-end facilitator and powerplay quarterback. He’s not a physical player, but he is effective in the defensive end too, because of his good four-way mobility and defensive instincts. While the Jackets will likely take his development slow the rest of the season given his injury recovery, he has the potential to move quickly through the organization and into a main club role. It’s not inconceivable to see him up with the Jackets full time next year in a third pairing role. He projects as a serviceable two-way second pairing type who can operate as a Swiss Army knife, plying his trade on both special team’s units.

  6. Luca Pinelli, C, Cleveland Monsters (AHL)

    Given his lack of size and elite physical tools, there was some concern over the translatability of Pinelli’s skill set to the pro game. He had improved over four years with the Ottawa 67’s, but concerns lingered. However, his first pro season has been solid so far, with Pinelli even earning a cup of coffee with the Jackets as an injury fill in. He’s such a competitive player; he never stops moving his feet and he’s always in attack mode. That gives him an advantage and allows him to overcome a lack of size/speed. Pinelli is also a skilled playmaker who protects the puck well through traffic despite his smaller stature. Not likely to become a premier offensive player at the NHL level, Pinelli should be able to carve out a long career playing through the middle of a lineup. Given the aforementioned Jackets’ forwards who are UFA’s, Pinelli might have the opportunity to secure a bottom six spot next season with a good offseason and training camp. Danton Heinen’s replacement perhaps?

  7. Jordan Dumais, RW, Cleveland Monsters (AHL)

    Injuries have not been kind to Dumais the last few seasons. The former QMJHL scoring star had struggled to stay on the ice for the last few years, missing time due to hernia surgery, upper body injuries, and hip issues. However, he’s been healthy this year and that’s the main positive as he tries to find his footing at the pro level. The Blue Jackets are going to have to be patient with his development given all the time missed. So, while his production this year with the Monsters has been somewhat disappointing, it’s important to remember the context. An extremely skilled and intelligent offensive player, Dumais’ ceiling is extremely high. However, his lack of size and dynamic skating ability has always brought forward questions regarding the probability of his NHL success. It’s still too early to come to any concrete conclusions; Dumais remains a high upside player. Next season will be the big one for him as he will need to prove that he can be an offensive leader at the AHL level first.

  8. William Whitelaw, RW, Western Michigan University (NCAA)

    The 33rd overall selection of the Blue Jackets in the 2023 NHL draft, joined Western Michigan after two seasons in the NCAA on different teams, and his involvement with the reigning collegiate champs has been nothing but remarkable. Whitelaw popped off offensively this year, posting an impressive 34 points in 39 games, good enough for third on the team in scoring. His ability to help out on the scoresheet is a testament to his development and WMU’s trust in his overall game. The third-year player has elite speed and can easily navigate through the toughest tight areas, owing to his high level four-way mobility and balance. Whitelaw also possesses some great scoring skills and racked up 19 goals for the Broncos, which was second best on the team. He is a gritty player for his size, listed at 5-foot-9 and not afraid to battle down low or along the wall. The question is, will all of these attributes translate into an NHL career? Only time will tell, but Whitelaw’s development curve so far has been positive, and he could one day push for a Blue Jackets roster spot.

  9. Sergei Ivanov, G, St. Petersburg (KHL)

    Ivanov has had an up and down career in the Russian pro leagues. After loans to Sochi and Vladivostok, he has returned to St.Petersburg and is playing well. He is on pace to have his best record and the GAA and SV% has come back to par. He makes up for his smaller size with high-end athleticism and quick lateral mobility. Strong going post to post and covers the bottom of his net well by utilizing the butterfly and his ability to adjust in tight. He is still struggling to fight through screens and has a tendency to lose pucks in scrums, scrambling to follow the play. His ability to read the game is inconsistent but his aggressive nature and strong pushoffs help make up for his poor positioning. There is a tendency to overcommit though, skating himself out of his crease and leaving backdoor passes or rebounds wide open. There is a strong base here and a move to North America to work on his technical play and tightening up his positioning could see him making the NHL one day.

  10. Evan Gardner, G, Saskatoon Blades (WHL)

    By this point it's fair to say that things haven't quite gone as expected for Gardner or the Blue Jackets since the goaltender was selected by Columbus 60th overall in 2024. The Blades were a stalwart defensive club that season and that might have painted a misleading picture of their then-rookie netminder, particularly through his sky-high save percentage, which has been free-falling ever since. His performances in the playoffs have also lagged behind his regular season results, which is another bad sign. There aren't any specific or serious concerns about his game, necessarily. He's about as balanced and well-rounded as goalies his age come. But rather, the problem is that nothing about him truly stands out. His technique, reflexes, puck tracking, rebound control and mental acuity are all more good than they are great, and that's not an ideal makeup for a goalie who doesn't have an abundance of natural size to fall back on. Gardner has already signed his entry-level contract, so Columbus will try to develop him as much as possible in the coming years.

  11. Charlie Elick, D, Tri-City Americans (WHL)

    At this point, you have to operate under the assumption that the offensive game will never really be a strength. However, his size, mobility, and physicality do make him a potentially elite shutdown defender, which is why he was an early second round selection.

  12. Guillaume Richard, D, Cleveland Monsters (AHL)

    Richard is a lot like Elick, but perhaps with a little less upside because his physical tools are not as elite. He’s already proven to be a strong defensive presence in the AHL as a rookie and he is tracking towards being a quality third pairing type for the Jackets.

  13. Oiva Keskinen, C, Tappara (Liiga)

    Keskinen is looking like a solid pick by the Jackets when they took him as an overager late in 2023. He’s improved every year in Liiga and has emerged as one of the top young forwards in Finland.

  14. Jack Williams, RW, Cleveland Monsters (AHL)

    The former Northeastern star was signed as a free agent by the Jackets last year and his first year in the AHL has been largely solid. He’s been one of the Monsters’ top offensive performers and has been solid away from the puck too.

  15. Corson Ceulemans, D, Cleveland Monsters (AHL)

    Columbus has been very patient with their 2021 first round pick out of the AJHL. Since leaving Wisconsin Ceulemans has struggled to be a fairly impactful defender at the pro level, but he’s having his best season to date at both ends, providing some hope that he can at least be a solid depth defender in the near future.

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MCKEEN’S 2025-26 NHL YEARBOOK – COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS – Top 15 Prospect Profiles – Organizational Rank #19 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2025-26-nhl-yearbook-columbus-blue-jackets-top-15-prospect-profiles-organizational-rank-19/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2025-26-nhl-yearbook-columbus-blue-jackets-top-15-prospect-profiles-organizational-rank-19/#respond Fri, 26 Sep 2025 19:01:34 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=195041 Read More... from MCKEEN’S 2025-26 NHL YEARBOOK – COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS – Top 15 Prospect Profiles – Organizational Rank #19

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Prospect System Ranking – 19th (May 2025 - 13th)
GM: Don Waddell Hired: May 2024
COACH: Dean Evason Hired: July 2024

Another year, another missed postseason for the Columbus Blue Jackets. Although, 2024-25 carried a spark of optimism. The team battled until the final day despite falling just short of a playoff spot, buoyed by breakout seasons from a few young stars.

Kirill Marchenko nearly doubled his career high with 74 points, Kent Johnson (22) closed in on 60, and 2023 third-overall pick Adam Fantilli hit the 50-point plateau in his sophomore campaign. Together, they form the core of a group aiming to shift the fortunes of a franchise that has reached the playoffs just six times in 24 years.

On the back end, Denton Mateychuk split time between the NHL and AHL, averaging 18 minutes per game in Columbus and cementing his reputation as a poised two-way defender and power-play distributor. In the AHL, forwards Luca Del Bel Belluz, Jordan Dumais, and Owen Sillinger each flashed offensive upside, while defensemen Stanislav Svozil and Corson Ceulemans continued to develop in Cleveland, positioning themselves as future contributors on the Blue Jackets’ blue line.

Top prospect Cayden Lindstrom missed the entire 2024-25 season due to injury but will return next year at Michigan State and will be looking to reassert himself as one of the most promising young power forwards in the game.

Columbus moved on from Gavin Brindley but bolstered its future at the draft. With two picks in the first round, they selected defenseman Jackson Smith 14th overall and later addressed their long-term goaltending depth with Pyotr Andreyanov—though the Russian netminder is signed overseas for the foreseeable future.

After years of frustration, Columbus now boasts a loaded depth chart at both the NHL and AHL levels. If their emerging core continues to progress and the next wave arrives as expected, the Blue Jackets could soon move from hopeful to dangerous in the Eastern Conference.

Columbus Blue Jackets Top-15 Prospects

1 - Cayden Lindstrom

Lindstrom’s entire 2024-25 season was limited to just seven games, and those appearances never would have happened at all if his Medicine Hat Tigers team wouldn’t have gotten all the way to the WHL finals, won the league championship, then played for the Memorial Cup. This is due to him receiving back surgery in November that was meant to address a nagging issue that had been lingering since the prior season. And yet, if you were to candidly ask the Blue Jackets if they would choose to go a different direction with the fourth overall pick in the 2024 draft if given the opportunity, they would likely still decline. That's because Lindstrom truly is that exciting of a hockey player and still maintains such an enticing long-term ceiling that he is well worth the wait and the slower development path. He's a huge center with menacing physicality, explosive skating ability, sublime puck skill and infectious determination, which is a blend of traits that is highly rare and highly valuable. If everything goes right for him then the sky's the limit.

2 - Jackson Smith

The young and rebuilding Blue Jackets went into the 2025 draft with a clear need for another blue-chip defender in their system, especially after their relationship with former sixth overall pick David Jiricek went south, and he was dealt to Minnesota. Knowing that, they must have been pretty thrilled when Smith was still available for them at 1fourth, because he has a realistic chance of becoming one of the true superstars to come out of this year's class. What makes him such a special prospect is his tremendous upside on both the offensive and defensive sides of the puck, thanks to his explosive skating ability, finely tuned athleticism, energetic demeanor, and his proficiency handling the puck at breakneck speeds. It still remains to be seen, though, just how much of that raw potential Smith will be able to convert into actual results, which has been the knock on him for a while now and surely would have been the reason why Columbus got him where they did.

3 - Luca Del Bel Belluz

Luca Del Bel Belluz has been a huge success story this past year and looks like he’ll compete for a lengthy stint in the NHL this year. In 2024-25, he tore up the AHL, building on his success from the previous season, and carried that production into his call-up with Columbus. After that trial run, Del Bel Belluz returned to the AHL, where his scoring pace dipped in February due to a team-wide slump. Del Bel Belluz generates dangerous chances thanks to his smart timing and off-puck positioning. He always seems to find open ice, readjusting in the zone and using his slick release to beat goalies. While he’s not going to be a play driver and still lacks high-end pace, he projects as a complementary scorer who can bring skill and finishing in a depth role. Del Bel Belluz looks well on his way to becoming a useful piece in Columbus’s bottom six should he continue on his current trajectory.

4 - Pyotr Andreyanov

Andreyanov is one of the most athletic, quickest, and best-skating goalies drafted in the past 5 years, akin to Shesterkin. He plays at a very high intensity, never giving up on a play, and is willing to do whatever it takes to make a save. His stance can be very compact, and his hands are weaker, which can be harmful for an NHL projection. However, his cognition sets him apart. Andreyanov reads the play well, showing a high level of anticipation and predicting play at high speeds and chaos. Combine that with his level of athleticism and skating, and there is a serious potential starting goalie in the making. The area he will have to work on, like most hyper athletic undersized goalies, is his poise. Shesterkin didn’t win a Vezina on raw talent alone. His control, precision, and calmness are what got him there. Andreyanov is a chaotic goalie; he will require refinement to reach his potential, but with Shesterkin as a comparison, it makes sense why he was the 20th overall pick.

5 - Luca Marrelli

Intelligence is the name of the game here. Marrelli is one of the OHL’s smartest defenders. He’s rarely out of position defensively. He rarely turns the puck over. He consistently makes smart plays and stabilizes the offensive attack when he’s on the ice. Best of all for Columbus, he does this from the right side. As a power play quarterback, he walks the line well and gets pucks on net, although a significant amount of his offensive production this year has come at even strength. Marrelli’s upside may not be significant; we’re not likely talking about a future first pairing defender. However, the consistency and efficiency of his game should play well at the pro level as long as he continues to improve his physical intensity. He’ll turn pro next year and should work his way up the lineup over a few years before being ready for a role with the Jackets.

6 - Jet Greaves

Jet Greaves is a technical goalie who has had early success at the NHL level. He is a great skater who uses short, efficient routes through the crease and positions himself perfectly. He manages his depth well, balancing aggression and reservation. He’s very controlled in his movement, keeping the same stance, never moving his upper body or throwing his hands around, he is all about stability and precision. This isn’t to say he lacks athleticism. Greaves is adept at exploding laterally and stretching out to make a big backdoor save when needed to. Where he falls short is his tracking. His hands often get beat anywhere above the pad, and he can be seen failing to track the shot into his hands, and sometimes just moving the hand to the wrong location. It’s especially seen when a high shot comes after Greaves moves laterally. One shouldn’t expect him to put up the same NHL numbers in a prolonged season, but he’s still capable of being an effective goalie with enough high-level tools that could propel him to a bigger role.

7 - Jordan Dumais

Once again, Jordan Dumais missed a significant portion of the season, returning from a lingering lower-body injury on January 31st. Dumais has now appeared in just 39 league games over the past two seasons, but he jumped back into action with four points in his first four games before falling victim to Cleveland’s offensive struggles in February. Throughout his junior career, Dumais has faced criticism for his lack of size, speed, and strength, but he’s consistently proven doubters wrong by producing points wherever he plays. The skills and hockey sense are clearly there. The million-dollar question now is: where does he fit in an NHL lineup? And if it’s not in the top six, can he adapt his game to meet the needs of the Blue Jackets? This season will no doubt be a “prove it” year where Dumais must remain in the lineup and produce. Columbus is in dire need of depth scoring, and Dumais must seize the opportunity.

8 - Luca Pinelli

The Ottawa 67’s did not make the playoffs this past year for the first time in over a decade, so as you might expect, many of their players had down years, including Pinelli. A workhorse in all three zones, Pinelli’s compete level can never be questioned. He may not be big, but he is consistently successful in his pursuit of the puck, and he executes well in the middle of the ice and near the crease by outthinking and outworking bigger defenders at the junior level. He certainly has a measure of skill too, in particular a quick and powerful wrister. The big question mark is whether he can continue to find success as an offensive player at the pro level, despite not being the quickest or the biggest. Additionally, if that’s not the case, does he fit the profile of the kind of player Columbus would want to play a fourth line, penalty killing kind of role? Pinelli will turn pro next year and there could be some growing pains in his first season, but his work rate should endear him to his coaches.

9 - Guillaume Richard

Guillaume Richard was a fourth-round pick by the Blue Jackets in 2021 and just finished a full four-season career in the NCAA with the Providence Friars. Richard was once a highly touted QMJHL prospect, a top 10 draft pick who ultimately decided to go the USHL - NCAA route instead of playing in the CHL. Richard is not going to be a difference maker offensively (his highest scoring NCAA season was three goals, 18 points) but could turn into a useful defensive defenceman. He uses plus skating and efficient stickwork to suffocate opponents in the defensive zone. He is decent on retrievals and can move the puck quickly but needs to clean up his decision making when he does decide to hold onto the puck. At times he can try to do too much with the puck on the rush, which ends up in turnovers with him out of position defensively. Richard will likely season his game in Cleveland with the Monsters for the next couple years.

10 - Charlie Elick

The past few seasons haven’t exactly been easy sledding for Elick, who started out in the WHL with an underachieving Brandon team before being traded to the similarly underachieving Tri-City Americans. And those sorts of situations can be extra difficult for prospects like him who are always asked to do a lot of heavy lifting, such as killing penalties, defending late leads, and matching up against the best opponents on other teams. The good news for Elick is that these trials and tribulations are presenting great opportunities for him to hone his craft, especially since he’s being used in ways that play to his strengths, and it’s not like the work ever gets any easier for players after they turn pro. Getting to spend time playing international hockey for Canada, and winning a couple of gold medals along the way, probably helps make things more palatable too. Elick has undeniable NHL upside as a stay-at-home shutdown defender, and there won’t be any deviation from that kind of role as he continues to develop.

11 - Stanislav Svozil

After a noticeable rookie season in the AHL, Svozil wasn’t really able to do anything but put in a repeat performance in 2024-25, even if it still saw him be the Monsters’ top overall defenceman aside from Denton Mateychuk. This said, there was progress in the areas of decision making with the puck, timing, and joining the attack. We also saw a considerable cutdown on turnovers over the latter half of the season. His NHL prospects are still uncertain.

12 - William Whitelaw

Will the third time be the charm for the undersized, yet sneaky talented Whitelaw? After almost identical freshman and sophomore seasons for Wisconsin and Michigan respectively, there’s no denying Whitelaw’s offensive upside and now Western Michigan looks to be the team ready to tickle the breakout out of him. Dynamic in transition, Whitelaw’s variable set of shot releases makes him a goal scoring threat that overshadows how well he can set up teammates.

13 - Evan Gardner

After a big 2023-24 season for Saskatoon of the WHL, including taking over between the pipes in the playoffs (10-1 record!), Gardner’s 2024-25 season for Saskatoon continued to display developmental positives although he couldn’t quite repeat his feats of the previous season. The starting job was his to lose and despite his team lacking the defensive wherewithal of the previous season, he ultimately finished top 10 in the WHL in wins, goals against average, and save percentage. He has signed his ELC.

14 - Corson Ceulemans

Getting long in the tooth as a prospect, Ceulemans is entering the final year of his ELC and we’re still waiting to see the promise he displayed in his heavily pandemic-shortened draft season. Last season began much like the previous growing-pain-filled season ended before upper body surgery in January ended his season prematurely. Even though Ceulemans has shown improvement in closing gaps and winning puck races, Columbus is busy narrowing down which blueline prospects it wants to plan with.

15 - Jack Williams

Columbus won the Williams sweepstakes, signing the college free agent to a two-year ELC last spring after the Massachusetts native completed his third straight season of offensive improvement. Despite his solid numbers and sometimes eyebrow-raising offensive flair, Williams has made himself noticeable as a feisty player who causes turnovers and wins puck battles before showing strong reads. The hard-working Williams will look to put his name on the pro map already this season.

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2025 NHL PROSPECTS REPORT: #13 COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS – Top 15 NHL Affiliated Prospects https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/2025-nhl-prospects-report-13-colombus-blue-jackets-top-15-nhl-affiliated-prospects/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/2025-nhl-prospects-report-13-colombus-blue-jackets-top-15-nhl-affiliated-prospects/#respond Tue, 27 May 2025 15:37:28 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=193332 Read More... from 2025 NHL PROSPECTS REPORT: #13 COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS – Top 15 NHL Affiliated Prospects

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OTTAWA, ON - APRIL 06: Columbus Blue Jackets defenseman Denton Mateychuk (5) passes the puck during first period National Hockey League action between the Columbus Blue Jackets and Ottawa Senators on April 6, 2025, at Canadian Tire Centre in Ottawa, ON, Canada. (Photo by Richard A. Whittaker/Icon Sportswire)

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MCKEEN’S 2024-25 NHL YEARBOOK – COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS – Top 15 Prospect Profiles – Organizational Rank #11 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2024-25-nhl-yearbook-columbus-blue-jackets-top-15-prospect-profiles-organizational-rank-11/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2024-25-nhl-yearbook-columbus-blue-jackets-top-15-prospect-profiles-organizational-rank-11/#respond Sun, 22 Sep 2024 18:00:39 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=188239 Read More... from MCKEEN’S 2024-25 NHL YEARBOOK – COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS – Top 15 Prospect Profiles – Organizational Rank #11

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ALLENTOWN, PA - MARCH 26: Michigan Wolverines Forward Gavin Brindley (4) skates with the puck during the first period of the 2023 NCAA Division I Men’s Ice Hockey Regional Final between the Penn State Nittany Lions and the Michigan Wolverines on March 26, 2023, at the PPL Center in Allentown, PA. (Photo by Gregory Fisher/Icon Sportswire)

Prospect System Ranking – 22nd (Previous Rank - 11th)
GM: Don Waddell Hired: May 2024
COACH: Dean Evason Hired: July 2024

The Columbus Blue Jackets have ushered in a new regime this summer, with former Carolina Hurricanes GM Don Waddell and newly appointed Head Coach Dean Evason taking the helm. This marks the third head coach in as many years for the Blue Jackets, as Evason takes over with a mandate to set a ship that has floundered at times straight.

Luckily, he inherits a strong youth movement fueled by an influx of high-end prospects. Over the last four drafts, Columbus has selected seven players in the first round, six of whom were chosen 12th overall or higher. Anchored by an already established veteran group of Boone Jenner, Zach Werenski and Ivan Provorov, the club managed to graduate a total of five (5!) youngsters last year. Those names include: David Jiricek, Adam Fantilli, Cole Sillinger, Kent Johnson, and Yegor Chinakhov. All five will push for major roles on the team this season after showing their readiness at various levels.

Looking to join this group in 2024-25 is standout defenceman Denton Mateychuk (49th), fresh off an incredible season with the Moose Jaw Warriors, where he earned WHL Defenceman of the Year, WHL Playoff MVP, and WHL (East) First All-Star Team honors. While Mateychuk may see some time in Cleveland, he feels ready to make the leap to the NHL. Gavin Brindley (85th), who signed his pro papers after being named NCAA (B1G) Player of the Year at Michigan as the Conference scoring champion, is another promising young forward expected to make his debut soon.

The farm system in Cleveland is also strong, with several key prospects developing steadily. Defencemen Stanislav Svozil (101st) and Corson Ceulemans (128th) have recently completed their AHL rookie seasons, while Samuel Knazko is now considered a two-year veteran presence in the AHL.

On the forward side, Jordan Dumais (136th), fresh off a spectacular junior career of 325 points in 193 QMJHL games, joins the ranks. He’ll be joined by already established AHL pros like Luca Del Bel Belluz (238th) and James Malatesta. In just a few years’ time, you can add 2024 first rounder, Cayden Lindstrom (14th) to this list of reinforcements.

In their 23-year history, the Blue Jackets have made the playoffs only six times and have won just two series. However, with a major influx of young talent and several high-pedigree prospects in the pipeline, Columbus’s window that has been left ajar could be broken open in short order.

Columbus Blue Jackets Top-15 Prospects

1. Cayden Lindstrom

Lindstrom missed half of his draft-eligible season due to injury, but he just looked so utterly tantalizing in the games he was able to play in that it became undeniable that he deserved to get picked as high as he did. He's an incredibly rare kind of player, who is able to blend great footwork, soft hands and imposing physicality, sometimes all within the same shift. When all the cylinders are firing for him at once he is an unstoppable force who leaves a significant impact in different ways. His Tigers team is poised to run roughshod over the WHL over the next two seasons and challenge for back-to-back league titles, and that kind of experience should help provide an additional boost to his development. Between him and Adam Fantilli the Blue Jackets could be downright scary down the middle for the next decade or more.

2. Denton Mateychuk

Moose Jaw really leaned into their high-flying, run-and-gun style this season, to impressive results, and Mateychuk had the best seat in the house as their number one defenceman. Therein lies the secret to his success: his ability to see and break down the ice in front of him. He’s not the biggest, fastest, or most purely talented blueliner out there, and he likely never will be, but only a tiny fraction of his peers can understand the sport and feel its flow as well as he can. It also helps that he’s as competitive as they come, with an intense drive to win that is worth its weight in gold at the NHL level but is far from universal. He’ll still need to put in more work with his strength and conditioning before he’s ready for full-time duty in Columbus, but once that happens, he’ll be primed to shine.

3. Gavin Brindley

It's impossible to not root for Brindley, who is usually both the smallest player out on the ice and, simultaneously, the hardest worker. He is an absolute menace who always loves to push the pace and be right in the middle of the action. He's far from brainless or reckless, though, and is very aware and methodical with his decisions, pinpointing his pressure in ways that force turnovers and win pucks. His game is all about controlling the chaos that he creates, and he is an expert at it. There's no shortage of skill on display either, as he can weave through traffic with his skating and puck skills, and he is precise with his shooting and passes. He seems inevitably destined for the NHL with how consistently effective his presence is, but some questions remain about how high his ceiling will go.

4. Stanislav Svozil

Svozil’s scoring totals from his final year in Regina were undeniably admirable, but the help of a little-known teammate of his — some kid named Connor Bedard — might have given Blue Jackets fans the wrong idea about what his game is really about. He’s far less of an offensive generator or powerplay specialist, and moreso an even-strength puck rusher and game manager, but that’s OK, because there is value in both kinds of defensemen. He has quick feet and a pesky attitude, and he uses them in tandem to help him dodge forecheck pressure on retrievals and zone exits, as well as close gaps and provide sticky man-to-man coverage when defending. It would be nice if he was bigger or flashier with the puck, but neither of those things should prevent him from eventually carving out a spot for himself in the NHL.

5. Corson Ceulemans

The Columbus organization is overflowing with young defensemen right now, and Ceulemans feels like a bit of a forgotten man, despite being a recent 1st-round pick of the team. He missed most of his draft year due to COVID, then found himself stuck in an unexpectedly bad situation at the University of Wisconsin for two seasons, and then the situation he found himself mired in next with AHL Cleveland wasn’t much better due to extreme roster turnover and drama with the parent club. Simply put, it hasn’t been a conducive few years for a prospect who was always a bit boom-or-bust, even going back to his AJHL days. Regardless, he’s a rangy right-shot defenseman who can play with both power and finesse, and at times he’s shown flashes of just how good he can be. The Blue Jackets would be wise to continue being patient with him.

6. Jordan Dumais

Dumais is one of the most interesting case studies in the prospect world right now. He is an exceptionally smart winger who is also a dazzling magician with the puck. Using those gifts he absolutely torched the QMJHL over the past two seasons, scoring at a torrid pace of two points per game. So then why wasn’t he selected until 96th overall in the 2022 draft? It’s because he’s small, lacks strength, and is not a particularly proficient skater, and players with that combination of deficiencies rarely find success in the NHL. His chances of making it aren’t zero, and he was fully deserving of getting picked at some point in the draft, but his gaudy point totals don’t truly reflect his NHL potential. Are his strengths elite enough to fully overcome his weaknesses? That’s the big question that we’ll see play out with him moving forward.

7. Charlie Elick

Elick was a frustrating and bewildering player to scout at times last year, but Columbus was nevertheless surely thrilled to draft him where they did, because he can still become a truly impactful NHL defenceman one day. There's more than enough raw material here to work with, it just needs to be heavily and carefully refined. He's a masterful skater for a defender of his stature, and there's an old-school flavour to his toughness and penchant for laying thunderous body checks. His game will probably always be one-dimensional, because there are major limitations to his puck-handling and decision-making that are still too deep-rooted to be sufficiently removed. However, if everything else clicks for him he could turn out to be one of the best shutdown specialists in the NHL, able to systematically get stops against both the rush and the cycle.

8. William Whitelaw

The University of Michigan seems like it's becoming an unofficial farm team of the Blue Jackets, with Kent Johnson, Adam Fantilli, Gavin Brindley, and Nick Blankenburg all having played there recently. You can now add Whitelaw to the list too, after he recently used the NCAA transfer portal to leave the University of Wisconsin for new pastures that he believes will be greener for him. On paper it seems like a good fit for the two sides, as both the Wolverines and the dangerous winger prioritize mercilessly inflicting offensive damage. Whitelaw is an aggressive, menacing attacker who shoots the puck in bunches because he knows, correctly, that his shot is good enough to beat goalies from almost anywhere, but he also has the skill and the will to cut into prime shooting real estate to give himself better looks.

9. Luca Del Bel Belluz

Del Bel Belluz had an impressive freshman season as a professional hockey player, transitioning out of junior more cleanly and effectively than some might have expected. Not only were there big questions coming in about whether his skating ability would be good enough or not for him to keep up at the AHL level, he had to endure the ongoing turbulence afflicting the Blue Jackets organization, which has had a spillover effect to their farm team and has been quite disruptive for some of his young compatriots. So then, give him high marks on both fronts, for elevating his skating to another level and for successfully tuning out the noise around him. He’ll still always be more of a slow-things-down kind of forward, though, who uses his size and reach to drive possession and lug pucks to the net down in the cycle.

10. Luca Pinelli

Pinelli is an interesting case study for a prospect, because the limitations in size and skating ability are prominent and would be highly limiting at the NHL level, but he's just so solid in other areas that it's hard to doubt him. He's the primary conduit for OHL Ottawa's offense, using exceptional sense and feel to consistently be one step ahead of the opposition, and he's a deadly finisher around the net when the puck finds its way to him. He's also good at bearing down and being strong and enduring in puck protection, which is important, because that will probably be his most effective means of driving play at the professional levels, finding pucks along the boards and carrying them into more dangerous areas. The leadership role he's still growing into right now could provide a boost for his promotion chances, too.

11. James Malatesta

Malatesta is already becoming a new fan favourite in Columbus because of his infectious personality and extreme tenacity. He is a relentless buzzsaw of a player, with a motor that never seems to run out of gas. He was a big part of the Quebec Remparts team that won the 2023 QMJHL championship and then the Memorial Cup as well. A natural-born pest, opposing NHLers are going to get sick of him before he even plays a full season.

12. Guillaume Richard

Richard will be heading back to Providence College in the fall for his fourth season with the Friars, which could be considered a questionable decision. He hasn’t exactly proven that he’s ready for the professional levels, but at the same time, his development has seemingly plateaued in his current environment. As far as stay-at-home defenders go, he’s not among the biggest, fastest, or meanest, so he’ll need to find some other dimension that he can bring into his game.

13. Andrew Strathmann

Strathmann is as feisty as they come, as evidenced by three straight seasons with 100 penalty minutes or more. Unfortunately, he also has a bad habit of crossing the line with his physical play and he was suspended five separate times in 2023-24 alone. He’s not big or an especially talented skater or puck mover, so the edge that he plays with is what sets him apart, and he’ll need to walk a fine line with how he applies it.

14. Jet Greaves

Greaves is The Little Engine That Could of hockey goalies. He went undrafted and missed a full year in the OHL due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but turned pro anyway, immediately started succeeding, and hasn’t looked back since. He’s fast, focused, driven, and endlessly self-assured. Smaller goalies like him always have an uphill battle, but Columbus will be happy to keep him around so long as he continues finding ways to stop pucks and win games.

15. Evan Gardner

Gardner led the WHL in save percentage last year and won the starting job for Saskatoon during their big playoff push. Those are both incredibly impressive feats for a draft-eligible goalie who was in his rookie season in the league. However, the Blades were rock solid defensively, so he didn’t get challenged as much as other netminders. Is his upside legitimately high, or was it a one-time mirage caused by his environment?

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MCKEEN’S 2024 NHL PROSPECT REPORT – #22 Columbus Blue Jackets – Organization Overview – Top 15 Prospects https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2024-nhl-prospect-report-22-columbus-blue-jackets/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2024-nhl-prospect-report-22-columbus-blue-jackets/#respond Mon, 03 Jun 2024 14:55:22 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=186396 Read More... from MCKEEN’S 2024 NHL PROSPECT REPORT – #22 Columbus Blue Jackets – Organization Overview – Top 15 Prospects

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ANN ARBOR, MI - FEBRUARY 23: Michigan Wolverines forward Gavin Brindley (4) looks to pass during a college hockey game between the Michigan Wolverines and Notre Dame Fighting Irish on February 23, 2024 at Yost Ice Arena in Ann Arbor, MI. (Photo by Nick Wosika/Icon Sportswire)

Change finally arrived after eleven years of management by Jarmo Kekalainen, and he was relieved of his duties while President of Hockey Operations, John Davidson, looks for a replacement in the offseason. Pascal Vincent was promoted from associate coach, after the short-lived Mike Keenan tempest that embarrassed the organization. Another futile season netted them yet another high draft pick for the 2024 NHL Draft at fourth overall. They have drafted six times in the first round in the last three drafts, five of those picks were 12th or higher. So, how does an organization fall from 11th to 22nd with that many opportunities? Columbus is one of the better teams in the league with five graduated prospects as David Jiricek (6th overall) and Adam Fantilli (3rd) joined Cole Sillinger (12th), Kent Johnson (5th) and Yegor Chinakhov (21st). The team has tended to push prospects into the NHL early, and you can debate whether that hurt development as none have had a breakout yet.

As of this writing, Davidson is looking at General Manager candidates. That choice will set the direction for the organization, but with the wealth of young players, all drafted high, in their roster they will want to bolster the depth around their potential young stars. The Johnny Gaudreau free agent signing is now an isolated incident, apart from a deal for Ivan Provorov last summer that cost a first and second round pick. Those moves signaled a willingness to accelerate the timeline, but since then management has been quiet. The team does have three prospects that ranked within our top 100 in Denton Mateychuk, Gavin Brindly (34th in 2023) and Stanislav Svozil. Another defenseman in Corson Ceulemans just missed the top 100 along with the high scoring Jordan Dumais. There are some solid pieces for the new GM to work with. A fresh start will be welcomed all around.

RNK PLAYER POS AGE HT/WT TM Acquired GP G(W) A(L) PTS(GAA) PIM(SPCT)
1 Denton Mateychuk D 19 5-11/190 Moose Jaw (WHL) `22(12th) 52 17 58 75 31
2 Gavin Brindley C 19 5-9/165 Michigan (B1G) `23(34th) 40 25 28 53 28
3 Stanislav Svozil D 21 6-1/180 Cleveland (AHL) `21(69th) 57 5 18 23 24
4 Corson Ceulemans D 20 6-2/200 Cleveland (AHL) `21(25th) 47 3 9 12 12
5 Jordan Dumais RW 20 5-8/165 Halifax (QMJHL) `22(96th) 21 16 31 47 6
6 Luca Del Bel Belluz C 20 6-1/185 Cleveland (AHL) `22(44th) 58 9 22 31 12
7 Luca Pinelli C 19 5-9/165 Ottawa (OHL) `23(114th) 68 48 34 82 44
8 William Whitelaw RW 19 5-9/173 Wisconsin (B1G) `23(66th) 37 10 7 17 17
9 James Malatesta LW 20 5-9/190 Cleveland (AHL) `21(133rd) 56 12 10 22 79
          Columbus (NHL) `21(133rd) 11 2 2 4 5
10 Hunter McKown C 21 6-1/205 Cleveland (AHL) FA(3/23) 53 9 15 24 26
11 Guillaume Richard D 21 6-2/175 Providence (HE) `21(101st) 35 3 15 18 27
12 Samuel Knazko D 21 6-1/198 Cleveland (AHL) `20(78th) 44 2 10 12 12
13 Andrew Strathmann D 19 5-11/190 Youngstown (USHL) `23(98th) 48 7 32 39 120
14 Jet Greaves G 23 6-0/184 Cleveland (AHL) FA(2/22) 46 29 12 2.93 0.910
15 Mikael Pyyhtia C 22 6-0/175 Cleveland (AHL) `20(114th) 60 7 21 28 6
          Columbus (NHL) `20(114th) 17 0 2 2 0
1. Denton Mateychuk, D, Moose Jaw Warriors (WHL)

Moose Jaw really leaned into their high-flying, run-and-gun style this season, to impressive results, and Mateychuk had the best seat in the house as their number one defenseman. Therein lies the secret to his success: his ability to see and break down the ice in front of him. He’s not the biggest, fastest or most purely talented blueliner out there, and he likely never will be, but only a tiny fraction of his peers can understand the sport and feel its flow as well as he can. It also helps that he’s as competitive as they come, with an intense drive to win that is worth its weight in gold at the NHL level but is far from universal. He’ll still need to put in more work with his strength and conditioning before he’s ready for full-time duty in Columbus, but once that happens he’ll be primed to shine.

2. Gavin Brindley, C, University of Michigan (NCAA)

It's impossible to not root for Brindley, who is usually both the smallest player out on the ice and, simultaneously, the hardest worker. He is an absolute menace who always loves to push the pace and be right in the middle of all of the action. He's far from brainless or reckless, though, and is very aware and methodical with his decisions, pinpointing his pressure in ways that force turnovers and win pucks. His game is all about controlling the chaos that he creates, and he is an expert at it. There's no shortage of skill on display either, as he can weave through traffic with his skating and puck skills, and he is precise with his shooting and passes. He seems inevitably destined for the NHL with how consistently effective his presence is, but some questions remain about how high his ceiling will go.

3. Stanislav Svozil, D, Cleveland Monsters (AHL)

Svozil’s scoring totals from his final year in Regina were undeniably admirable, but the help of a little-known teammate of his — some kid named Connor Bedard — might have given Blue Jackets fans the wrong idea about what his game is really about. He’s far less of an offensive generator or powerplay specialist, and moreso an even-strength puck rusher and game manager, but that’s OK, because there is value in both kinds of defensemen. He has quick feet and a pesky attitude, and he uses them in tandem to help him dodge forecheck pressure on retrievals and zone exits, as well as close gaps and provide sticky man-to-man coverage when defending. It would be nice if he was bigger or more flashy with the puck, but neither of those things should prevent him from eventually carving out a spot for himself in the NHL.

4. Corson Ceulemans, D, Cleveland Monsters (AHL)

The Columbus organization is overflowing with young defensemen right now, and Ceulemans feels like a bit of a forgotten man, despite being a recent 1st-round pick of the team. He missed most of his draft year due to COVID, then found himself stuck in an unexpectedly bad situation at the University of Wisconsin for two seasons, and then the one he went to next with Cleveland in the AHL wasn’t much better due to extreme roster turnover and drama with the parent club. Simply put, it hasn’t been a conducive few years for success for a prospect who was always a bit boom-or-bust, even going back to his AJHL days. Regardless, he’s a rangy right-shot defenseman who can play with both power and finesse, and at times he’s shown flashes of just how good he can be. The Blue Jackets would be wise to continue being patient with him.

5. Jordan Dumais, RW, Halifax Mooseheads (QMJHL)

Dumais is one of the most interesting case studies in the prospect world right now. He is an exceptionally smart winger who is also a dazzling magician with the puck. Using those gifts he absolutely torched the QMJHL over the past two seasons, scoring at a torrid pace of two points per game. So then why wasn’t he selected until 96th overall in the 2022 draft? It’s because he’s small, lacks strength, and is not a particularly proficient skater, and players with that combination of deficiencies rarely find success in the NHL. His chances of making it aren’t zero, and he was fully deserving of getting picked at some point in the draft, but his gaudy point totals don’t truly reflect his NHL potential. Are his strengths elite enough to fully overcome his weaknesses? That’s the big question that we’ll see play out with him moving forward.

6. Luca Del Bel Belluz, C, Cleveland Monsters (AHL)

Del Bel Belluz had an impressive freshman season as a professional hockey player, transitioning out of junior more cleanly and effectively than some might have expected. Not only were there big questions coming in about whether or not his skating ability would be good enough for him to keep up at the AHL level, he had to endure the ongoing turbulence afflicting the Blue Jackets organization, which has had a spillover effect to their farm team and has been quite disruptive for some of his young compatriots. So then, give him high marks on both fronts, for elevating his skating to another level and successfully tuning out the noise around him. He’ll still always be more of a slow-things-down kind of forward, though, who uses his size and reach to drive possession and lug pucks to the net down in the cycle.

7. Luca Pinelli, C, Ottawa 67's (OHL)

Pinelli is an interesting prospect case study, because the limitations in size and skating ability are prominent and would be highly limiting at the NHL level, but he's just so solid in other areas that it's hard to doubt him. He's the primary conduit for OHL Ottawa's offense, using exceptional sense and feel to consistently be one step ahead of the opposition, and he's a deadly finisher around the net when the puck finds its way to him. He's also good at bearing down and being strong and enduring in puck protection, which is important, because that will probably be his most effective means of driving play at the professional levels, finding pucks along the boards and carrying them into more dangerous areas. The leadership role he's still growing into right now could provide a boost for his promotion chances, too.

8. William Whitelaw, RW, University of Wisconsin (NCAA)

The University of Michigan seems like it's becoming an unofficial farm team of the Blue Jackets, with Kent Johnson, Adam Fantilli, Gavin Brindley and Nick Blankenburg all having played there recently. You can now add Whitelaw to the list too, after he recently used the NCAA transfer portal to leave the University of Wisconsin for a new pasture that he believes will be greener for him. On paper it seems like a good fit for the two sides, as both the Wolverines and the dangerous winger prioritize mercilessly inflicting offensive damage. Whitelaw is an aggressive, menacing attacker who shoots the puck in bunches because he knows, correctly, that his shot is good enough to beat goalies from almost anywhere, but he also has the skill and the will to cut into prime shooting real estate to give himself better looks.

9. James Malatesta, LW, Cleveland Monsters (AHL)

Malatesta is already becoming a new fan favourite in Columbus because of his infectious personality and extreme tenacity. He is a relentless buzzsaw of a player, with a motor that never seems to run out of gas. He’s also feisty as can be, rarely backing down from physical challenges against bigger opponents. It must be impossible to be a teammate of his who wants to take a night off, because he sets such a high standard that others have to try to match it. He was a big part of the Quebec Remparts team that won the 2023 QMJHL championship and then the Memorial Cup as well, as him getting to play under a fiercely competitive coach like Patrick Roy was a match made in heaven. A natural-born pest, opposing NHLers are going to get sick of him before he even plays a full season.

10. Hunter McKown, C, Cleveland Monsters (AHL)

McKown played on a pretty bad, pretty thin Colorado College team all three years that he was in the NCAA, which meant that he had to work a little extra hard to get results. In a fortuitous twist, leaning further into that blue-collar identity is exactly what scouts wanted to see more of with him, and would have been a huge reason why Columbus offered him a contract as an undrafted free agent. Sure, he's pretty pigeonholed into being a meat-and-potatoes kind of forward, but there are always some jobs in the NHL for guys who are the cream of that particular crop. If he keeps working on his physical presence, penalty killing and ability to chip in greasy goals on a semi-regular basis he will give himself a realistic chance to stick around the league for a long time.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Subscribers can link to the full top 200 listing here

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

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

Risers

DALLAS, TX - APRIL 22: Dallas Stars center Logan Stankoven (11) reacts to a goal score during game one of the Western Conference First Round between the Dallas Stars and the Vegas Golden Knights on April 22, 2024 at American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas. (Photo by Matthew Pearce/Icon Sportswire)
Logan Stankoven (27 to 5) - Dallas Stars
  • Stankoven’s jump from one of the best players in the WHL to one of the best players in the AHL has been impressive. So has his quick start in the NHL.
Ryan Leonard (32 to 6) – Washington Capitals
  • Leonard is returning to Boston College after a Championship barely eluded him this year. However, he has proven to be an elite play driver to go with his strong off puck play.
MONTREAL, QC - FEBRUARY 11: Look on Montreal Canadiens right wing Joshua Roy (89) during warm-up before the St. Louis Blues versus the Montreal Canadiens game on February 11, 2024, at Bell Centre in Montreal, QC (Photo by David Kirouac/Icon Sportswire)
Josh Roy (63 to 35) – Montreal Canadiens
  • Roy continues to prove doubters wrong after a terrific AHL season with Laval. His skill set has become so well rounded since being drafted.
Conor Geekie (68 to 18) – Utah
  • Geekie’s power game from the middle of the ice makes him such an interesting prospect for today’s NHL. His skating continues to improve.
Mavrik Bourque (79 to 23) – Dallas Stars
  • Bourque emerged as one of the best players in the AHL this season as a sophomore professional. He’s ready to take that next step with the Stars.
Gabe Perreault (86 to 19) – New York Rangers
  • Once thought to be the third wheel on the talented Will Smith/Ryan Leonard threesome, Perreault’s progression as a play driver at Boston College this season has altered the perception that he can be a front-line NHL player.
Bradly Nadeau (109 to 34) – Carolina Hurricanes
  • Drafting early out of the BCHL has yielded inconsistent results, however Nadeau was exceptional as a freshman at Maine. Did he leave school too early though?
Jagger Firkus (112 to 47) – Seattle Kraken
  • Firkus took his game to another level this year in his final WHL season, leading the league in scoring. He’s ready to be a pro.
Gavin Brindley (122 to 66) – Columbus Blue Jackets
  • One of the most improved players in the NCAA this year, Brindley emerged as a star for the University of Michigan and really altered his projection as a potential top six forward.
Quentin Musty (125 to 51) – San Jose Sharks
  • The dynamic American winger worked hard to fine tune components of his game in Sudbury this year and deserves a bump for improving his consistency.
Jani Nyman (135 to 81) – Seattle Kraken
  • Nyman emerged as one of the top goal scorers in Finland this season as a U20 player. This, combined with his strong WJC performance, has helped push him up our board north.
Logan Mailloux (145 to 45) – Montreal Canadiens
  • Mailloux proved to be way more refined at the AHL level than previously perceived. Simply put, he was one of the best defensive prospects in the AHL this year.
Josh Doan (153 to 55) - Utah
  • What a terrific story to the end of the Coyotes franchise. Doan emerged as a potential star this season and finished the year strong in the NHL, scoring in his debut.
Riley Heidt (157 to 44) – Minnesota Wild
  • We still don’t understand how Heidt fell as far as he did in the 2023 draft, however he is proving NHL scouts wrong thus far after a remarkable year with Prince George.
Ville Koivunen (165 to 71) – Pittsburgh Penguins
  • The main piece of the Jake Guentzel to Carolina deal, Koivunen emerged as one of the top players in Liiga this year.
Ethan Del Mastro (169 to 73) – Chicago Blackhawks
  • There was little doubt that Del Mastro’s strong defensive ability would translate to the AHL level well, but he continues to improve offensively and that has altered his projection.
Theo Lindstein (185 to 91) – St. Louis Blues
  • Lindstein’s strong year for Brynas has helped to elevate his upside as a two-way defender. We may have ranked him too low in our 2023 Draft Rankings.
Carson Rehkopf (201 to 69) – Seattle Kraken
  • Consistency off the puck and a lack of engagement held Rehkopf back last year. This year marked improvement in those areas helped him emerge as a top offensive talent in the OHL.
Easton Cowan (204 to 67) – Toronto Maple Leafs
  • One of the surprises of the 2023 draft, Cowan set a new OHL record with a 42-game point streak. More than just a high energy guy now, he can be a difference maker offensively.
Seamus Casey (214 to 63) – New Jersey Devils
  • Casey continues to improve in the NCAA. He may not have elite size, but he has everything else, and it has the Devils excited about his future.
Jacob Fowler (222 to 52) – Montreal Canadiens
  • Fowler compiled a list of accolades as a freshman this year at Boston College, emerging as one of the top goaltending prospects in the game.
Fraser Minten (226 to 84) – Toronto Maple Leafs
  • After starting the year with the Leafs, Minten returned to the WHL and ended up captaining Canada at the World Juniors.
Jackson Blake (277 to 117) – Carolina Hurricanes
  • A finalist for the Hobey Baker this year, Blake became an NCAA star for North Dakota, and he now turns pro.
Erik Portillo (Unranked to 118) – Los Angeles Kings
  • Acquired by the Kings, Portillo turned pro after three years at Michigan and he was one of the best goaltenders in the AHL as a first-year pro.
Rodwin Dionicio (Unranked to 139) – Anaheim Ducks
  • Dionicio still plays a high risk, high reward game from the back end, but his offensive upside has become too large to ignore.
Fallers
EDM - Xavier Bourgault
Xavier Bourgault (from 48 to 113) – Edmonton Oilers
  • After a mediocre first professional year last season, Bourgault was even more disappointing as a sophomore with Bakersfield. The Oilers just haven’t been developing prospects well in recent years.
Eduard Sale (72 to 140) – Seattle Kraken
  • Sale’s first year in North America did not go according to plan as he struggled to be a consistent impact player in the OHL.
Jack Rathbone (96 to not ranked) – Pittsburgh Penguins
  • Perhaps we ranked Rathbone too aggressively this summer, but not only did he fail to earn a spot on Vancouver, but he’s now an NHL after thought after entering Pittsburgh’s organization via trade.
Jacob Perreault (127 to not ranked) – Montreal Canadiens
  • Perreault’s off puck play and skating just haven’t improved to the point where he can be a consistent pro and it caused the Ducks to move on from him, trading him to Montreal.
Jan Jenik (156 to not ranked) - Utah
  • Once a highly ranked prospect, Jenik continues to fall. He just hasn’t been able to take that next step and even passed through waivers this year unclaimed.
RNK PLAYER NHL POS AGE HT/WT TM GP G(W) A(L) PTS(GAA) PIM(SPCT)
1 Will Smith SJ C 19 6-0/175 Boston College (HE) 41 25 46 71 14
2 Matvei Michkov Phi RW 19 5-10/170 SKA St. Petersburg-HK Sochi (KHL) 48 19 22 41 26
3 Brandt Clarke LA D 21 6-2/185 Los Angeles (NHL) 16 2 4 6 10
4 Cutter Gauthier Ana LW 20 6-2/190 Boston College (HE) 41 38 27 65 18
5 Logan Stankoven Dal C 21 5-8/170 Dallas (NHL) 24 6 8 14 4
6 Ryan Leonard Wsh RW 19 5-11/190 Boston College (HE) 41 31 29 60 38
7 Alexander Nikishin Car D 22 6-3/195 SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) 67 17 39 56 39
8 Yaroslav Askarov Nsh G 21 6-3/175 Milwaukee (AHL) 44 30 13 2.39 0.911
9 Jesper Wallstedt Min G 21 6-3/215 Iowa (AHL) 45 22 19 2.70 0.910
10 Matthew Savoie Buf C 20 5-9/179 Wen-MJ (WHL) 34 30 41 71 10
11 Simon Edvinsson Det D 21 6-6/215 Detroit (NHL) 16 1 1 2 4
12 Jonathan Lekkerimaki Van RW 19 5-11/170 Orebro (SHL) 46 19 12 31 10
13 Dustin Wolf Cgy G 23 6-0/166 Calgary (AHL) 36 20 12 2.45 0.922
14 Devon Levi Buf G 21 6-0/192 Rochester (AHL) 26 16 6 2.42 0.927
15 Olen Zellweger Ana D 20 5-9/180 Anaheim (NHL) 26 2 7 9 4
16 Dmitri Simashev Ari D 19 6-4/198 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) 63 4 6 10 18
17 David Reinbacher Mtl D 19 6-2/185 Kloten (Sui-NL) 35 1 10 11 18
18 Conor Geekie Ari C 19 6-3/193 Wen-SC (WHL) 55 43 56 99 66
19 Gabe Perreault NYR RW 18 5-11/165 Boston College (HE) 36 19 41 60 29
20 Daniil But Ari LW 19 6-5/203 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) 55 10 11 21 10
21 Shane Wright Sea C 20 6-0/200 Coachella Valley (AHL) 59 22 25 47 18
22 Jiri Kulich Buf C 20 6-1/186 Rochester (AHL) 57 27 18 45 26
23 Mavrik Bourque Dal C 22 5-10/190 Texas (AHL) 71 26 51 77 32
24 Nate Danielson Det C 19 6-2/185 Bdn-Por (WHL) 54 24 43 67 42
25 Danila Yurov Min RW 19 6-1/175 Metallurg Magnitogorsk (KHL) 62 21 28 49 35
26 Brennan Othmann NYR LW 21 6-0/175 Hartford (AHL) 67 21 28 49 65
27 Lane Hutson Mtl D 20 5-10/160 Boston University (HE) 38 15 34 49 24
28 Tom Willander Van D 19 6-1/180 Boston University (HE) 38 4 21 25 12
29 Marco Kasper Det C 20 6-1/185 Grand Rapids (AHL) 71 14 21 35 30
30 Dalibor Dvorsky StL C 18 6-1/200 Sudbury (OHL) 52 45 43 88 17
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At McKeen’s Hockey we do a ranked affiliated prospect list twice a season. Our first is following the end of the regular season for most prospects but does not include the playoffs. It is a ranking of the top 200, plus the top 15 by team, prior to the NHL Draft. Once the NHL Draft is complete, we begin the process of updating the organizational ranking to a top 20, and then rank the top 300. That is completed in August, once the dust has settled on free agency, and any trades that are made in the meantime. We include that ranking in our McKeen’s NHL Yearbook, published in late August, Early September.

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

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

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

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

Subscribers can link to the listing here

RNK PLAYER NHL POS AGE HT/WT TM GP G(W) A(L) PTS(GAA) PIM(SPCT)
1 Will Smith SJ C 19 6-0/175 Boston College (HE) 41 25 46 71 14
2 Matvei Michkov Phi RW 19 5-10/170 SKA St. Petersburg-HK Sochi (KHL) 48 19 22 41 26
3 Brandt Clarke LA D 21 6-2/185 Los Angeles (NHL) 16 2 4 6 10
4 Cutter Gauthier Ana LW 20 6-2/190 Boston College (HE) 41 38 27 65 18
5 Logan Stankoven Dal C 21 5-8/170 Dallas (NHL) 24 6 8 14 4
6 Ryan Leonard Wsh RW 19 5-11/190 Boston College (HE) 41 31 29 60 38
7 Alexander Nikishin Car D 22 6-3/195 SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) 67 17 39 56 39
8 Yaroslav Askarov Nsh G 21 6-3/175 Milwaukee (AHL) 44 30 13 2.39 0.911
9 Jesper Wallstedt Min G 21 6-3/215 Iowa (AHL) 45 22 19 2.70 0.910
10 Matthew Savoie Buf C 20 5-9/179 Wen-MJ (WHL) 34 30 41 71 10
11 Simon Edvinsson Det D 21 6-6/215 Detroit (NHL) 16 1 1 2 4
12 Jonathan Lekkerimaki Van RW 19 5-11/170 Orebro (SHL) 46 19 12 31 10
13 Dustin Wolf Cgy G 23 6-0/166 Calgary (AHL) 36 20 12 2.45 0.922
14 Devon Levi Buf G 21 6-0/192 Rochester (AHL) 26 16 6 2.42 0.927
15 Olen Zellweger Ana D 20 5-9/180 Anaheim (NHL) 26 2 7 9 4
16 Dmitri Simashev Ari D 19 6-4/198 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) 63 4 6 10 18
17 David Reinbacher Mtl D 19 6-2/185 Kloten (Sui-NL) 35 1 10 11 18
18 Conor Geekie Ari C 19 6-3/193 Wen-SC (WHL) 55 43 56 99 66
19 Gabe Perreault NYR RW 18 5-11/165 Boston College (HE) 36 19 41 60 29
20 Daniil But Ari LW 19 6-5/203 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) 55 10 11 21 10
21 Shane Wright Sea C 20 6-0/200 Coachella Valley (AHL) 59 22 25 47 18
22 Jiri Kulich Buf C 20 6-1/186 Rochester (AHL) 57 27 18 45 26
23 Mavrik Bourque Dal C 22 5-10/190 Texas (AHL) 71 26 51 77 32
24 Nate Danielson Det C 19 6-2/185 Bdn-Por (WHL) 54 24 43 67 42
25 Danila Yurov Min RW 19 6-1/175 Metallurg Magnitogorsk (KHL) 62 21 28 49 35
26 Brennan Othmann NYR LW 21 6-0/175 Hartford (AHL) 67 21 28 49 65
27 Lane Hutson Mtl D 20 5-10/160 Boston University (HE) 38 15 34 49 24
28 Tom Willander Van D 19 6-1/180 Boston University (HE) 38 4 21 25 12
29 Marco Kasper Det C 20 6-1/185 Grand Rapids (AHL) 71 14 21 35 30
30 Dalibor Dvorsky StL C 18 6-1/200 Sudbury (OHL) 52 45 43 88 17
31 Brad Lambert Wpg C 20 6-0/180 Manitoba (AHL) 64 21 34 55 38
32 Ivan Miroshnichenko Wsh LW 20 6-1/185 Washington (NHL) 21 2 4 6 6
33 Axel Sandin Pellikka Det D 19 5-11/180 Skelleftea (SHL) 39 10 8 18 17
34 Bradly Nadeau Car LW 18 5-10/165 Maine (HE) 37 19 27 46 12
35 Joshua Roy Mtl RW 20 6-0/190 Montreal (NHL) 23 4 5 9 0
36 Denton Mateychuk CBJ D 19 5-11/190 Moose Jaw (WHL) 52 17 58 75 31
37 Brayden Yager Pit C 19 5-11/165 Moose Jaw (WHL) 57 35 60 95 20
38 Calum Ritchie Col C 19 6-2/185 Oshawa (OHL) 50 28 52 80 20
39 Joakim Kemell Nsh RW 20 5-10/185 Milwaukee (AHL) 67 16 25 41 23
40 Colby Barlow Wpg LW 19 6-0/195 Owen Sound (OHL) 50 40 18 58 27
41 Jimmy Snuggerud StL RW 19 6-1/185 Minnesota (B1G) 39 21 13 34 42
42 Matthew Coronato Cgy RW 21 5-10/183 Calgary (NHL) 34 3 6 9 4
43 Frank Nazar Chi C 20 5-10/180 Michigan (B1G) 41 17 24 41 18
44 Riley Heidt Min C 19 5-10/180 Prince George (WHL) 66 37 80 117 42
45 Logan Mailloux Mtl D 21 6-3/215 Laval (AHL) 72 14 33 47 91
46 Sebastian Cossa Det G 21 6-6/229 Grand Rapids (AHL) 40 22 9 2.41 0.913
47 Jagger Firkus Sea RW 20 5-10/155 Moose Jaw (WHL) 63 61 65 126 30
48 Mikhail Gulyayev Col D 19 5-11/170 Avangard Omsk (KHL) 64 4 8 12 8
49 Scott Morrow Car D 21 6-2/195 Massachusetts (HE) 37 6 24 30 25
50 Matthew Wood Nsh RW 19 6-3/195 Connecticut (HE) 35 16 12 28 43
51 Quentin Musty SJ LW 18 6-2/200 Sudbury (OHL) 53 43 59 102 72
52 Jacob Fowler Mtl G 19 6-1/215 Boston College (HE) 39 32 6 2.14 0.926
53 Fabian Lysell Bos RW 21 5-11/181 Providence (AHL) 56 15 35 50 37
54 Shakir Mukhamadullin SJ D 22 6-3/180 San Jose (AHL) 55 7 27 34 24
55 Josh Doan Ari RW 22 6-1/183 Arizona (NHL) 11 5 4 9 0
56 Thomas Bordeleau SJ C 22 5-9/180 San Jose (NHL) 27 6 5 11 18
57 Lian Bichsel Dal D 19 6-6/233 Rogle (SHL) 29 2 2 4 28
58 Nikolai Kovalenko Col RW 24 5-10/180 Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod (KHL) 42 11 24 35 30
59 Aatu Raty Van C 21 6-2/185 Abbotsford (AHL) 72 18 34 52 18
60 Oliver Moore Chi C 19 5-11/185 Minnesota (B1G) 39 9 24 33 8
61 Samuel Honzek Cgy LW 19 6-4/186 Vancouver (WHL) 33 10 21 31 18
62 Jakob Pelletier Cgy LW 23 5-9/170 Calgary (NHL) 13 1 2 3 2
63 Seamus Casey NJ D 20 5-9/165 Michigan (B1G) 40 7 38 45 14
64 Tristan Luneau Ana D 20 6-1/195 Anaheim (NHL) 7 1 2 3 4
65 Chaz Lucius Wpg C 20 6-1/185 Manitoba (AHL) 17 2 11 13 6
66 Gavin Brindley CBJ C 19 5-9/165 Michigan (B1G) 40 25 28 53 28
67 Easton Cowan Tor RW 18 5-10/170 London (OHL) 54 34 62 96 64
68 Zachary L'Heureux Nsh LW 20 5-11/195 Milwaukee (AHL) 66 19 29 48 197
69 Carson Rehkopf Sea LW 19 6-1/195 Kitchener (OHL) 60 52 43 95 45
70 Filip Bystedt SJ C 20 6-4/205 Linkopings (SHL) 47 8 9 17 2
71 Ville Koivunen Pit LW 20 6-0/175 Karpat (Fin-Liiga) 59 22 34 56 26
72 Noah Ostlund Buf C 20 5-11/163 Vaxjo Lakers (SHL) 38 12 11 23 4
73 Ethan Del Mastro Chi D 21 6-4/210 Rockford (AHL) 69 7 30 37 54
74 Lukas Cormier VGK D 22 5-10/180 Henderson (AHL) 58 4 16 20 33
75 Liam Ohgren Min LW 20 6-1/200 Farjestads (SHL) 26 12 7 19 12
76 Marat Khusnutdinov Min C 21 5-11/175 Minnesota (NHL) 16 1 3 4 6
77 Mackie Samoskevich Fla RW 21 5-11/190 Charlotte (AHL) 62 22 32 54 24
78 Stanislav Svozil CBJ D 21 6-1/180 Cleveland (AHL) 57 5 18 23 24
79 Zachary Bolduc StL LW 21 6-1/175 St. Louis (NHL) 25 5 4 9 6
80 Rutger McGroarty Wpg LW 20 6-1/200 Michigan (B1G) 36 16 36 52 6
81 Jani Nyman Sea RW 19 6-3/215 Ilves (Fin-Liiga) 48 26 17 43 2
82 Andrew Cristall Wsh LW 19 5-9/165 Kelowna (WHL) 62 40 71 111 46
83 Oliver Bonk Phi D 19 6-2/175 London (OHL) 60 24 43 67 32
84 Fraser Minten Tor C 19 6-1/185 Kam-Sas (WHL) 43 22 26 48 25
85 Tanner Molendyk Nsh D 19 5-11/185 Saskatoon (WHL) 50 10 46 56 18
86 David Goyette Sea C 20 5-10/175 Sudbury (OHL) 68 40 77 117 29
87 David Edstrom SJ C 19 6-3/185 Frolunda (SHL) 44 7 12 19 8
88 Anton Wahlberg Buf C 18 6-3/194 Malmo (SHL) 43 5 5 10 4
89 Emil Andrae Phi D 22 5-9/185 Lehigh Valley (AHL) 61 5 27 32 66
90 Trey Augustine Det G 19 6-1/185 Michigan State (B1G) 35 23 9 2.96 0.915
91 Theo Lindstein StL D 19 6-0/180 Brynas (HockeyAllsvenskan) 49 4 11 15 4
92 Mads Sogaard Ott G 23 6-7/195 Belleville (AHL) 32 18 9 2.45 0.916
93 Isak Rosen Buf RW 21 6-0/175 Rochester (AHL) 67 20 30 50 12
94 Maveric Lamoureux Ari D 20 6-7/214 Drummondville (QMJHL) 39 9 24 33 53
95 Drew Commesso Chi G 21 6-2/180 Rockford (AHL) 38 18 16 2.65 0.906
96 Ville Heinola Wpg D 23 6-0/180 Manitoba (AHL) 41 10 17 27 24
97 Carter Mazur Det LW 22 6-0/170 Grand Rapids (AHL) 60 17 20 37 48
98 Otto Stenberg StL C 18 5-11/180 Frolunda (SHL) 31 3 3 6 8
99 Egor Afanasyev Nsh LW 23 6-3/205 Milwaukee (AHL) 56 27 27 54 60
100 Nikita Chibrikov Wpg RW 21 5-10/170 Manitoba (AHL) 70 17 30 47 53
101 Zach Dean StL C 21 6-0/175 Springfield (AHL) 49 9 5 14 24
102 William Dufour NYI RW 22 6-2/195 Bridgeport (AHL) 55 15 10 25 35
103 Sam Rinzel Chi D 19 6-4/180 Minnesota (B1G) 39 2 26 28 20
104 Joel Blomqvist Pit G 22 6-2/185 Wilkes-Barre (AHL) 45 25 12 2.16 0.921
105 Arseni Gritsyuk NJ RW 23 5-10/170 SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) 50 19 19 38 8
106 Corson Ceulemans CBJ D 20 6-2/200 Cleveland (AHL) 47 3 9 12 12
107 Michael Hrabal Ari G 19 6-6/209 Massachusetts (HE) 30 16 12 2.59 0.912
108 Brendan Brisson VGK C 22 5-11/180 Vegas (NHL) 15 2 6 8 2
109 Owen Pickering Pit D 20 6-4/180 Swift Current (WHL) 59 7 39 46 35
110 Owen Beck Mtl C 20 5-11/185 Pbo-Sag (OHL) 57 34 47 81 18
111 William Wallinder Det D 21 6-4/190 Grand Rapids (AHL) 65 3 12 15 10
112 Xavier Bourgault Edm C 21 6-0/170 Bakersfield (AHL) 55 8 12 20 24
113 Jordan Dumais CBJ RW 20 5-8/165 Halifax (QMJHL) 21 16 31 47 6
114 Aleksi Heimosalmi Car D 20 5-11/170 Assat (Fin-Liiga) 47 2 14 16 12
115 Brandon Bussi Bos G 25 6-4/218 Providence (AHL) 41 23 10 2.67 0.913
116 Jackson Blake Car RW 20 5-10/160 North Dakota (NCHC) 40 22 38 60 26
117 Erik Portillo LA G 23 6-6/210 Ontario (AHL) 39 24 11 2.50 0.918
118 Sean Farrell Mtl C 22 5-8/175 Laval (AHL) 47 9 19 28 10
119 Kasper Halttunen SJ RW 18 6-3/205 London (OHL) 57 32 29 61 61
120 Topi Niemela Tor D 22 5-11/165 Toronto (AHL) 68 8 31 39 43
121 Ethan Gauthier TB RW 19 5-11/175 Drummondville (QMJHL) 64 36 35 71 42
122 Daniil Miromanov Cgy D 26 6-4/200 VGK-Cgy (NHL) 24 3 4 7 8
123 Ruslan Iskhakov NYI C 23 5-8/155 Bridgeport (AHL) 69 18 32 50 30
124 Shai Buium Det D 21 6-3/210 Denver (NCHC) 43 7 29 36 14
125 Jakub Dobes Mtl G 22 6-3/200 Laval (AHL) 51 24 18 2.93 0.906
126 Oliver Kapanen Mtl C 20 6-0/170 KalPa (Fin-Liiga) 51 14 20 34 32
127 Danny Nelson NYI C 18 6-3/200 Notre Dame (B1G) 30 9 14 23 32
128 Lenni Hameenaho NJ RW 19 6-0/175 Assat (Fin-Liiga) 46 14 17 31 10
129 Nick Lardis Chi LW 18 5-11/165 Brantford (OHL) 37 29 21 50 12
130 Ty Nelson Sea D 20 5-10/195 North Bay (OHL) 54 16 36 52 50
131 Isaac Howard TB LW 20 5-10/185 Michigan State (B1G) 36 8 28 36 10
132 Fyodor Svechkov Nsh C 21 6-0/185 Milwaukee (AHL) 57 16 23 39 18
133 Jeremie Poirier Cgy D 21 6-1/196 Calgary (AHL) 23 3 10 13 22
134 Reid Schaefer Nsh LW 20 6-3/215 Milwaukee (AHL) 63 7 14 21 39
135 Zack Ostapchuk Ott C 20 6-3/205 Belleville (AHL) 69 17 11 28 47
136 Nathan Gaucher Ana C 20 6-3/207 San Diego (AHL) 72 10 15 25 68
137 Rodwin Dionicio Ana D 20 6-2/207 Wsr-Sag (OHL) 60 25 48 73 108
138 Eduard Sale Sea LW 19 6-1/170 Bar-Kit (OHL) 49 15 23 38 8
139 Danil Gushchin SJ RW 22 5-8/165 San Jose (AHL) 56 20 34 54 24
140 Sean Behrens Col D 21 5-10/175 Denver (NCHC) 44 4 27 31 53
141 Christian Kyrou Dal D 20 5-10/170 Texas (AHL) 57 8 15 23 22
142 Niklas Kokko Sea G 20 6-3/185 Pelicans (Fin-Liiga) 13 9 0 1.49 0.926
143 Vasily Ponomarev Pit C 22 5-10/180 Tuc-Chi-WBS (AHL) 45 9 21 30 16
144 Ryan Winterton Sea RW 20 6-2/190 Coachella Valley (AHL) 58 22 13 35 23
145 Dmitri Buchelnikov Det LW 20 5-10/165 Admiral Vladivostok (KHL) 55 13 16 29 8
146 Oscar Fisker Molgaard Sea C 19 6-0/165 HV 71 (SHL) 50 9 12 21 6
147 Aku Raty Ari RW 22 6-1/190 Tucson (AHL) 55 15 29 44 22
148 Matyas Sapovaliv VGK C 20 6-3/180 Saginaw (OHL) 54 19 43 62 22
149 Georgii Merkulov Bos C 23 5-11/175 Providence (AHL) 67 30 35 65 20
150 Topias Vilen NJ D 21 6-1/195 Utica (AHL) 54 2 27 29 16
151 Ryan Chesley Wsh D 20 6-0/200 Minnesota (B1G) 39 2 6 8 19
152 Jayden Perron Car RW 19 5-9/165 North Dakota (NCHC) 39 11 7 18 8
153 Tristen Robins SJ C 22 5-10/175 San Jose (AHL) 42 7 11 18 12
154 Calle Odelius NYI D 19 6-0/190 Djurgardens (HockeyAllsvenskan) 10 0 4 4 2
155 Vincent Iorio Wsh D 21 6-2/190 Hershey (AHL) 60 4 10 14 30
156 Raphael Lavoie Edm RW 23 6-4/215 Bakersfield (AHL) 66 28 22 50 64
157 Ronnie Attard Phi D 25 6-3/210 Lehigh Valley (AHL) 48 10 17 27 37
158 Niko Huuhtanen TB RW 20 6-2/205 Jukurit (Fin-Liiga) 52 19 27 46 46
159 Carson Bjarnason Phi G 18 6-3/185 Brandon (WHL) 46 24 17 3.01 0.907
160 Lukas Dragicevic Sea D 19 6-1/190 Tri-City (WHL) 66 14 36 50 52
161 Leevi Merilainen Ott G 21 6-2/160 Belleville (AHL) 24 10 9 2.87 0.906
162 Tyler Kleven Ott D 22 6-4/200 Belleville (AHL) 53 5 16 21 51
163 Hunter Brzustewicz Cgy D 19 5-11/185 Kitchener (OHL) 67 13 79 92 24
164 Ryan Greene Chi C 20 6-1/180 Boston University (HE) 40 12 24 36 6
165 Damian Clara Ana G 19 6-6/214 Brynas (HockeyAllsvenskan) 34 25 8 2.23 0.913
166 Carson Lambos Min D 21 6-1/200 Iowa (AHL) 69 4 10 14 64
167 Denver Barkey Phi C 19 5-8/160 London (OHL) 64 35 67 102 28
168 Gage Goncalves TB C 23 6-1/170 Syracuse (AHL) 69 13 45 58 43
169 Arshdeep Bains Van LW 23 6-0/185 Abbotsford (AHL) 59 16 39 55 28
170 Bogdan Konyushkov Mtl D 21 5-11/175 Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod (KHL) 65 6 22 28 18
171 Alexei Kolosov Phi G 22 6-1/185 Dinamo Minsk (KHL) 47 22 21 2.39 0.907
172 Samuel Fagemo LA RW 24 6-0/195 Ontario (AHL) 50 43 19 62 26
173 Filip Mesar Mtl C 20 5-9/175 Kitchener (OHL) 45 19 33 52 12
174 Matthew Robertson NYR D 23 6-3/200 Hartford (AHL) 68 4 17 21 49
175 Adam Engstrom Mtl D 20 6-2/185 Rogle (SHL) 51 4 18 22 4
176 Michael Buchinger StL D 20 5-11/185 Guelph (OHL) 52 10 37 47 37
177 Semyon Chistyakov Nsh D 22 5-11/180 Avangard Omsk (KHL) 59 4 20 24 16
178 John Farinacci Bos C 23 5-11/197 Providence (AHL) 71 12 26 38 16
179 Angus Crookshank Ott LW 24 5-10/180 Belleville (AHL) 50 24 22 46 60
180 Yegor Sidorov Ana RW 19 6-0/180 Saskatoon (WHL) 66 50 38 88 66
181 Samu Tuomaala Phi RW 21 5-10/175 Lehigh Valley (AHL) 69 15 28 43 12
182 Logan Morrison Sea C 21 6-0/180 Coachella Valley (AHL) 64 16 25 41 4
183 Jean-Luc Foudy Col C 21 5-11/175 Colorado (AHL) 26 4 10 14 18
184 Adam Gajan Chi G 19 6-3/167 Green Bay (USHL) 43 23 12 3.35 0.893
185 Nolan Allan Chi D 21 6-2/195 Rockford (AHL) 60 5 12 17 47
186 Oskar Olausson Col RW 21 6-1/180 Colorado (AHL) 39 11 9 20 24
187 Samuel Poulin Pit C 23 6-1/205 Wilkes-Barre (AHL) 41 16 15 31 35
188 Brett Berard NYR LW 21 5-9/165 Hartford (AHL) 71 25 23 48 62
189 Colton Dach Chi C 21 6-4/205 Rockford (AHL) 48 11 15 26 39
190 Jack Thompson SJ D 22 6-0/180 Syr-SJ (AHL) 62 6 35 41 16
191 Riley Kidney Mtl C 21 5-11/170 Laval (AHL) 65 7 13 20 41
192 Roby Jarventie Ott RW 21 6-3/195 Belleville (AHL) 22 9 11 20 22
193 Carey Terrance Ana C 18 6-1/175 Erie (OHL) 56 29 23 52 25
194 Luca Del Bel Belluz CBJ C 20 6-1/185 Cleveland (AHL) 58 9 22 31 12
195 Luca Pinelli CBJ C 19 5-9/165 Ottawa (OHL) 68 48 34 82 44
196 Francesco Pinelli LA C 21 6-1/185 Ontario (AHL) 67 13 7 20 24
197 Elias Salomonsson Wpg D 19 6-1/185 Skelleftea (SHL) 31 2 9 11 58
198 Sam Colangelo Ana RW 21 6-2/205 Western Michigan (NCHC) 38 24 19 43 23
199 Sasha Pastujov Ana RW 20 6-0/185 San Diego (AHL) 46 10 13 23 14
200 Andrew Gibson Det D 19 6-3/195 Saul St. Marie (OHL) 68 12 32 44 58
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PROSPECTS: BELL – 20 Prospect Points – Gauthier, Firkus, Connelly, Hage and More https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/prospects-bell-20-prospect-points-gauthier-firkus-connelly-hage/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/prospects-bell-20-prospect-points-gauthier-firkus-connelly-hage/#respond Wed, 17 Jan 2024 13:54:58 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=185121 Read More... from PROSPECTS: BELL – 20 Prospect Points – Gauthier, Firkus, Connelly, Hage and More

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BOSTON, MA - FEBRUARY 06: Boston College Eagles forward Cutter Gauthier (19) skates with the puck during a Dunkin' Beanpot semifinal game between the Boston College Eagles and the Harvard Crimson on February 6, 2023, at TD Garden in Boston, MA. (Photo by Erica Denhoff/Icon Sportswire)

Welcome to 20 Prospect Points, a bi-weekly column where I dive into the trending prospects - drafted and draft-eligible - from around the globe.

This edition dives into the biggest news in the prospect world as of late, Cutter Gauthier’s trade to the Anaheim Ducks, as well as the return of Canadians from the World Juniors, some standout netminders in the AHL, the impressive rise of Trevor Connelly, and much more.

Drafted Prospects

#1 Unless you’ve been living under a rock, the biggest recent prospect news is Cutter Gauthier being traded to the Anaheim Ducks for defenseman Jamie Drysdale. Reports have revealed that he didn’t want to sign with the Philadelphia Flyers, sparking the move. Gauthier joins a very exciting, young group in California with Trevor Zegras, Leo Carlsson, Mason McTavish, Olen Zellweger, and Pavel Mintuykov. The future is looking extremely bright.

#2 Drafted 19th overall back in 2016 by the New York Islanders, it’s been a long, tough road for Kieffer Bellows. But could he finally be putting it all together? He joined the Toronto Marlies on a PTO and impressed with 27 points (15 goals, 12 assists) in 26 games. Now, he’s signed to an AHL deal with the team. Could the NHL be next? This is very much a story to keep an eye on.

#3 It seems that Seattle Kraken prospect Jagger Firkus took exception to not making the Team Canada World Juniors roster right out of the gate (he was added for two games filling in for injury). Back in the WHL with the Moose Jaw Warriors, he’s been absolutely on fire, with 16 points (five goals, 11 assists) in just four games. He’s up to 75 points (!) in 36 games with no signs of slowing down.

#4 Another Warrior and Team Canada returnee, Buffalo Sabres’ prospect Matt Savoie returned to the WHL to make his debut for Moose Jaw. You could say it went well, with Savoie racking up five points (two goals, three assists) after only collecting one assist throughout the World Juniors. Savoie is playing at a 2.42 point-per-game pace this season through just 12 games.

#5 Some disappointing news for Halifax Mooseheads superstar and Columbus Blue Jackets prospect Jordan Dumais, who will be out for some extended time due to requiring double hip surgery and a sports hernia repair. It’s expected that he’ll miss about six weeks, which could put him back on the ice at the end of the regular season.

#6 Alright, one more Team Canada returnee to talk about - Oliver Bonk. It seems to be a pattern that some of these Canadians have returned to their regular teams with a chip on their shoulder after failing to medal at the World Juniors. The Flyers prospect has returned to the OHL’s London Knights and has been on absolute fire. The defender has put up 14 points (six goals, eight assists) in just five games back - his most productive stretch this season. Keep an eye on him moving forward.

#7 Once thought to be in the conversion for the top pick in the 2022 NHL Draft, the Winnipeg Jets’ called Brad Lambert’s name 30th overall. Making the jump to the AHL this season - the Jets absolutely made the right call and potentially got a steal in the young Finn. Lambert was named to the AHL All-Star Classic to represent the Manitoba Moose, after collecting 25 points (12 goals, 13 assists) in 29 games. He may have slid down the draft board, but Lambert is proving to be the skilled player that many thought he could be.

#8 On to the goalies! One of the best goaltending prospects in the world, Nashville Predators’ prospect Yaroslav Askarov has been tremendous in the AHL for the Milwaukee Admirals, earning a call-up to the Preds where he was perfect in relief for 16:40 and then started a game, earning his first NHL win thanks to a .923 save percentage. It seems to have boosted his confidence in returning to the Admirals, where he’s won four straight including three shutouts. Get ready Preds’ fans - he’s coming.

#9 Speaking of excellent goaltending prospects, Minnesota Wild rearguard Jesper Wallstedt earned his first call-up and start in the NHL, granted he let in seven goals in a 7-2 loss to the Dallas Stars. He’s had a tough stretch in the AHL lately, but he still has impressive numbers through 20 games with a .917 save percentage. It won’t be long before he gets the promotion again.

#10 Askarov, Wallstedt… Damian Clara? The Italian netminder and Anaheim Ducks prospect has been tremendous in his first full season in the HockeyAllsvenskan for Brynas IF, going 15-3-0 and sporting a .907 save percentage. The 19-year-old is on a seven-game winning streak, including one shutout. The goaltender is an under-the-radar prospect despite being drafted 60th overall. Keep an eye on him.

Draft-Eligible Prospects

#11 One of the hottest draft-eligible prospects out there right now, Trevor Connelly seemingly can’t be stopped. After helping Team USA to a World Junior A Challenge bronze medal last month (and being named to the All-Star Team thanks to his 11 points in six games), he’s returned to the USHL’s Tri-City Storm on fire with nine points (three goals, six assists) in five games. He’s a player on the rise at the mid-point of the year.

#12 Speaking of prospects that are exploding right now, Zayne Parekh may need a permanent place on this list. The OHL’s Saginaw Spirit defender is seemingly unstoppable right now, on pace for the second-best OHL season for a draft-year eligible prospect all time. At this point, he’s a must-watch prospect and is almost sure to stand out in every game.

#13 Over in the WHL, a prospect that hasn’t been earning the discussion that he perhaps deserves, Clarke Caswell has been commanding attention as of late with points in nine of his last 10 games and is up to 47 points (12 goals, 35 assists) in 41 points. If you’re looking for prospects to watch in the back half of the season, be sure to check out Caswell.

#14 While he started off fairly slow (due to limited minutes in the KHL), Ivan Demidov is very much here. Now playing consistent minutes in the MHL with SKA-1946 St. Petersburg, he’s producing at an impressive rate. He has 19 points (eight goals, 11 assists) in his last nine games, playing over two points per game. Crazy what can happen if a player actually plays!

#15 Ondrej Becher was a standout performer at the World Juniors for Team Czechia, en route to a bronze medal for his team. He was instrumental in that bronze medal game, putting up five points (three goals, two assists) in the exciting final game. This should come as no surprise though given his season with the Prince George Cougars, as the Czech prospect has been excellent with 48 points (17 goals, 31 assists) in 32 games.

#16 Another WHL prospect who has been excellent this season is Medicine Hat Tigers’ Cayden Lindstrom. Unfortunately, he’ll be on the sideline for four to six weeks following surgery for an upper-body injury. Lindstrom has 46 points (27 goals, 19 assists) in 32 games and should be back to the WHL playoffs and potentially the World Under 18 Championships. Don’t expect his draft stock to be hit because of this.

#17 Konsta Helenius didn’t have a great World Juniors tournament production-wise with just two points through seven games, but he’s now back in the Liiga with Jukurit and back to putting up the points with two assists in two games (ok, the two assists came in one game). While he wasn’t a standout at the World Juniors, his draft stock remains high and being the youngest player on Team Finland, the tournament shouldn’t impact his ranking.

#18 Another prospect that should have a regular spot on this list, Macklin Celebrini has returned to Boston University on a mission with four points through his two games back. He was arguably Canada’s top forward at the World Juniors, with eight points in five games, and has continued that production back in the NCAA. His No. 1 overall ranking remains extremely firm.

#19 Michael Hage is a prospect that is very much under the radar in this draft class. The 17-year-old is currently leading the USHL’s Chicago Steel in points with 31 (14 goals, 17 assists) in 28 games and was strong in the All-American Game. He’s a player who’s on the cusp of the first round in many public rankings but should be a solid first-rounder by the time the draft rolls around.

#20 We’re looking way out with this one. Gavin McKenna, eligible for the 2026 NHL Draft and the cousin of Connor Bedard, is absolutely dominating the WHL as a 16-year-old. His 1.40 points-per-game ranks sixth all-time for a U17 player in the league, with half of the season still to go. He’s up to 49 points (16 goals, 33 assists) in 35 games and shows no signs of slowing down. It’s a long road to the 2026 NHL Draft, but it’s worth starting to follow the path of this young player.

 

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2024 WORLD JUNIORS CHAMPIONSHIP – December 31st, 2023 Game Recaps + Three Stars https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/2024-world-juniors-championship-december-31st-2023-game-recaps/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/2024-world-juniors-championship-december-31st-2023-game-recaps/#respond Mon, 01 Jan 2024 17:05:28 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=184958 Read More... from 2024 WORLD JUNIORS CHAMPIONSHIP – December 31st, 2023 Game Recaps + Three Stars

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GOTHENBURG, SWEDEN - DECEMBER 31: Rutger Mcgroarty #2 of USA battles for position against Peter Repcik #21 of Slovakia in Preliminary Round - Group B action at the 2024 IIHF World Junior Championship at Frolundaborg on December 31, 2023 in Gothenburg, Sweden. (Photo by Chris Tanouye/IIHF)

USA 10, Slovakia 2

The two undefeated teams in Group B faced off for the first game of New Year’s Eve and it didn’t turn out to be the nail biter that was expected. The USA squad asserted their dominance by beating the Slovaks 10-2 in this lopsided game, although Slovakia’s top goaltender Adam Gajan did not dress in order to rest for their quarter final matchup on January 2nd, 2024. Slovakia outshot the Americans 20-11 in the second period, but the US side tamed the onslaught with some great goaltending by Trey Augustine who finished the game allowing only 2GA with while facing 40 SOG. USA clinches first place with the win ahead of Sweden in the preliminary round. Rutger McGroarty earned himself a hat trick, leading the way for the Americans on the scoresheet. USA will meet up with Latvia in the quarterfinals and Slovakia will face off against Finland on January 2nd, 2024.

Sweden 4, Finland 5 (SO)

The Swedes secured first place in Group A, even with the shootout loss to Finland in the final game of the preliminary rounds. The Finns forechecked hard all game and didn’t allow team Sweden to gain any momentum throughout the entire 60 minutes of relegation play. The Finnish side pulled their goalie early with 2:35 left in the third period and the team responded with a nice goal from Jani Nyman who scored with only 92 seconds left in the game to secure the tie and force the game into overtime. Nothing was settled in OT, so the game would be determined by a shootout. Nyman would also come up big in the shootout by scoring on the last attempt to secure the win for Finland. Sweden will now face Switzerland in the quarterfinals next game.

Czechia 4, Switzerland 2

The game between Czechia and Switzerland started out lopsided with the Czechs outshooting the Swiss 14-5 in the first period, and were only able to get one shot by Swiss goaltender Alessio Beglieri from a power play goal from Matyas Sapovaliv. The Swiss side stuck around all game, but the Czech side iced it in the third period when team Captain Jiri Kulich buried his fourth goal of the tournament into a wide open net after a great individual effort and pass from 2024 NHL Draft prospect Tomas Galvas. With the win, Czechia ended up in third place in Group B, while the loss secures them fourth place. Czechia will now play against Canada in the quarterfinals.

Canada 6, Germany 3

Canada, coming off a 2-0 loss to Sweden two days prior needed to rebound in order to place themselves in a good playoff position. Team Canada started the game on their heels when Conor Geekie was assessed a major penalty and a game misconduct for a hit to the head only 11 seconds into the game. The Germans managed to capitalize during the five minute power play and scored a goal at 2:57 from Arizona Coyotes 2022 draft choice Julian Lutz. For most of the game the Germans stuck around until the third period when Jordan Dumais broke a 3-3 tie with a power play to help Canada move on to a 6-3 win over Germany. Macklin Celebrini again looked very good on the Canadian side and notched two goals to help Canada secure second place in Group A. The loss forces Germany into a relegation match against Norway on January 4th, 2024.

Three Stars of the Day

#1 – Rutger McGroarty – Forward – USA

The 14th overall Winnipeg Jets draft choice in the 2022 NHL Draft was buzzing all game and was rewarded capturing a hat trick against the Slovak side. McGroarty opened the scoring with a nice wrap around goal at 6:21 of the first period. He added another goal near the end of the second to help the American side go up 5-2. McGroarty completed the hat trick at the beginning of the third period which helped seal the win.

#2 – Jani Nyman – Forward – Finland

Nyman was the difference for the Finnish side by coming up big when his team needed it. The second round selection of the Seattle Kraken in 2022 has been red hot in the Liiga posting 22 points in 28 games. Nyman showed off his offensive prowess in this game by scoring the tying goal with the empty net, then followed that up with an impressive deke in the shootout to secure the win for Finland.

#3 – Macklin Celebrini – Forward – Canada

The potential first overall prospect of the 2024 NHL Draft displayed his skill yet again at this tournament potting two goals to help Canada win an important game after a loss against Sweden the game prior. The young Boston University forward was the best player on the Canadian side and came up big when the game was on the line, especially early on. He got behind the German defense to set himself up for a breakaway and buried it on the backhand to tie the game in the first period. He followed it up with some nice hustle to beat the opposing goaltender to a loose puck and bury one into an empty from an impossible angle. The win helped Canada secure second place in Group A.

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MCKEEN’S 2024 WORLD JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIP GUIDE – Team and Player Predictions – Biggest Surprises https://www.mckeenshockey.com/feature-story/mckeens-2024-world-junior-championship-guide-team-player-predictions-biggest-surprises/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/feature-story/mckeens-2024-world-junior-championship-guide-team-player-predictions-biggest-surprises/#respond Tue, 26 Dec 2023 12:31:13 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=184884 Read More... from MCKEEN’S 2024 WORLD JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIP GUIDE – Team and Player Predictions – Biggest Surprises

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The 2024 World Junior Championships are set to kick off on Boxing Day (December 26), with Gothenburg, Sweden hosting. Can Canada accomplish a three peat for the first time in over a decade? Can host Sweden capture their first gold medal in over a decade? Can the betting line favourites, the United States, live up to their high expectations? Members of the McKeen’s team have come together to bring you our predictions for the tournament.

Final Medal Standings Predictions

GOLD

USA - 5 votes

Sweden - 4 votes

Canada - 2 votes

SILVER

USA - 5 votes

Sweden - 3 votes

Canada - 2 votes

Slovakia - 1 vote

BRONZE

Canada - 5 votes

Czechia - 3 votes

Sweden - 2 votes

USA - 1 vote

Cutter Gauthier. Photo by Rena Laverty, USA Hockey.

Who Wins Tournament MVP?

Cutter Gauthier -3 votes

Jonathan Lekkerimaki - 2 votes

Also receiving votes (1): Denton Mateychuk, Lane Hutson, Matthew Poitras, Rutger McGroarty, Ryan Leonard, Will Smith

Who Wins Best Forward?

Cutter Gauthier - 2 votes

Jiri Kulich - 2 votes

Jonathan Lekkerimaki - 2 votes

Also receiving votes (1): Rutger McGroarty, Ryan Leonard, Will Smith, Macklin Celebrini, Matthew Poitras

Lane Hutson of USA during the 2023 IIHF World Junior Championship bronze medal game between USA and Sweden on January 5, 2023 in Halifax.
Photo: Simon Hastegård / BILDBYRÅN

Who Wins Best Defender?

Axel Sandin Pellikka - 5 votes

Lane Hutson - 3 votes

Denton Mateychuk - 2 votes

Also receiving votes (1): Seamus Casey

Who Wins Best Goaltender?

Trey Augustine - 3 votes

Michael Hrabal - 2 votes

Hugo Havelid - 2 votes

Also receiving votes (1): Matthias Rousseau, Adam Gajan, Jacob Fowler, Niklas Kokko

BASEL, SWITZERLAND - APRIL 27: Canada's Macklin Celebrini #17 celebrates with teammates during the Canada vs Switzerland Quarterfinal Round action at 2023 IIHF Ice Hockey U18 World Championship at St. Jakob Arena on April 27, 2023 in Basel, Switzerland. (Photo by Matt Zambonin/IIHF)

Which NHL Draft Eligible Prospect Has the Best Tournament?

Macklin Celebrini

“I know this is the obvious answer, given his status as a potential first overall pick, but it's the obvious one for a reason. He's going to be put in a position to earn significant ice time on a strong team, which isn't guaranteed of the other draft eligibles. I see him having a really strong round robin but expecting him to take over games in the medal round at such a young age might be a little too unreasonable.”

“One couldn't be faulted for making an argument that Konsta Helenius might be the guy here based on the fact that Celebrini has a lot more competition for prime offensive minutes on a team that should roll 4 lines more often than just about any participant in Gothenburg. But one look at Group A competition gives me reason to think Finland will have a hard time scoring. Canada, on the other hand, is put together such that opponents should be kept busy in so many ways that Celebrini will be able to take the bull of a 2nd line center role by the horns and run with it. That should include ample PP time as well. Whatever line he ends up pivoting, he'll be working with players who are used to generating offense. It's also a safe bet that Canada's defensemen will be solid with their breakout passes. Celebrini should show up in a scoring capacity and challenge for Canada's lead in production.”

“The obvious choice. Celebrini had a great camp, and his performance has secured him a top-six role on Team Canada. He's a dynamic talent who creates offence, has a ton of skill and plays the game at a high pace. He has the potential to have a great impact on the tournament and help Canada to secure a medal.”

“Macklin Celebrini is dominant on the Powerplay and produces at a goal per game pace solidifying himself at #1st overall.”

“Even with Matt Poitras joining Canada, Celebrini may still be the player with the best chance of having a dominant WJC tournament. He's been absolutely brilliant at BU and I see no reason for him to not continue that brilliance onto this big stage.”

“He's a hyper advanced hockey player for his age in all facets of the forward position, and he already knows how to excel against strong older competition. The Canadian coaches will give him opportunities to play his game and be himself, and he'll excel.”

Zeev Buium

“He’s going to play a pivotal role on the tournament's best roster and really establish himself as one of the best defenders in the 2024 draft class. His ability to control the pace of play from the blue-line is really going to help the Americans throughout the tournament.”

Adam Jiricek

“I think Adam Jiricek steps up and has a big tournament for Czechia. Just a perfect storm of a short tournament where a player who can struggle with consistency gets hot and plays a huge role on a team that isn’t a favourite but could still do some damage.”

Konsta Helenius

“I think Macklin Celebrini is the easy answer here as he's expected to be a catalyst for the Canadians, but Helenius is likely coming in as the 1C and arguably the top player for the Finns. I expect him to lead Team Finland in this event and likely be the offensive leader. Playing against men and excelling this season, Helenius will likely pop against U20 competition. Look for him to drive the Finnish offense, be a tournament leader in assists, and impress with his non-stop motor.”

Michael Brandsegg Nygård

“Tough, but gotta go with my boy Michael Brandsegg Nygård. I think he's going to be in the spotlight for Norway every game, which is something he isn't going to take lightly. I think he's going to rise to the occasion and be "the guy" and really turn some heads this tournament.”

What is the Biggest Surprise of the Tournament?

“This is probably not the answer that Canadians want to hear, but I think Canada ends up being a surprise disappointment. At one point they were the betting line favourite to win (if you are into that sort of thing), which I believe is unfair given the strength of some other nations in the tournament. The team draws both Sweden and Finland in the round robin. A loss to one or both of those nations would set up a quarterfinal matchup with one of Czechia or Slovakia, two teams which might scare me even more than Finland this year. I'm just not confident that this team will be able to score enough against the other top teams (even with the surprise addition of Matt Poitras), in addition to getting the kind of game stealing netminding needed to find success at the WJC's.”

Latvia - they’re going to come into the tournament, make it to the Semi's and keep it close between the big dogs in their division. This is the deepest Latvia roster we’ve ever seen at the WJC and they’re going to be playing spoiler all tournament long.”

“Whereas part of me would like to mention Team Sweden simply because it's not easy to win this tournament at home in a country whose hockey media will be religiously following your every move for 3 straight weeks (and I'm thinking the Swedes will win gold anyhow!), I'm going to tip my hat on Czechia being the big surprise over the next few weeks. The team simply has everything necessary at all five positions to rather safely finish no less than 2nd in Group B play. In addition, the sheer amount of players currently competing - and excelling - in North America has me thinking they'll be able to give both the US and Canada a real run for their money, which was obviously already the case last winter. I've now got them facing Canada in the playoffs at some point. Lastly, my interior hockey energy radar is getting massive blips anytime I hear the name Jiri Kulich, as the AHL's top scorer among U20 players was not only a force last winter with his 7 goals and 9 points, but currently leads the entire AHL in goalscoring. With his determination and a shot like his, I'm thinking we'll be seeing him light the lamp a good 10-12 times in this tournament.”

Team Slovakia - The Slovaks have brought a strong roster to Sweden, featuring eleven drafted players, including three 1st round picks and four second-rounders. They stood out at the last tournament, gave Canada a hard time in the quarterfinals and even had the best goaltender in Adam Gajan. The team is now more experienced (15 returnees) and hungry for success. Slovakia doesn't lack high-end talent (Dvorský, Mešár, Honzek) or top goaltending (Gajan) and I do believe they can medal this year. However, the absence of Juraj Slafkovský and Šimon Nemec raises concerns and the defense seems mediocre.”

Latvia’s Sandis Vilmanis finishes top 15 in tournament scoring. I think Latvia’s top-heavy offense is dangerous enough that they’ll pile up some goals and hopefully make things interesting, even if they don’t challenge much in the Round Robin. Vilmanis is the centerpiece of any offensive creation on the roster.”

Team Norway - The recently promoted Norwegian group will avoid relegation and could even avoid the relegation game altogether. They have some impressive pieces and a potential surprise star of the tournament in Michael Brandsegg-Nygård. We've seen some teams widely considered for relegation surprise before, and I think that Norway could be one of those teams that steals a big, shocking win in this event.”

Norway, for once, doesn’t get relegated. Latvia and Germany are the ones fighting for relegation due to a surprise upset by Norway against an established team, snatching valuable points which end up being the difference.”

Oliver Moore makes teams regret passing on him as he works his way up the USA lineup throughout the tournament and plays a big role in the State's success.”

Hugo Hävelid; It won't exactly be a surprise for people who have paid attention to Hävelid and the hometown crowd in Sweden, but to a wider audience, the undrafted goaltender could come away as the breakout star of the tournament. Highly athletic, Hävelid will benefit from a formidable Swedish blueline as well as a reputation for raising his form as the stakes get higher.”

The Czechs. I predict they will have a strong round robin, put up a great fight in a narrow losing effort in the semifinal against Canada or the United States, and then pull off a big upset of Sweden in the bronze medal game.”

Jordan Dumais - we will witness his offensive prowess during this tournament.”

 

 

 

 

 

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