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Prospect System Ranking – 19th (May 2025 - 13th)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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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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Columbus 25 Prospects ]]>
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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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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 |
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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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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.



| 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 |
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 |
Another long year of amazing hockey has come and passed as we oficially end the 2023 scouting season and shift from the star-studded offensive draft class to the defensive-heavy 2024 NHL draft. This year's class was super fun and had the potential to bring the big stars and deep depth that we saw in the 2015 draft. This makes it very difficult to rank the winners and losers as every team acquired some very talented athletes in their organization that should make an impact for many years to come. Some teams acquired some elite star players at draft positions they didn't think would be possible at lower picks and later rounds. Those picks make the difference between good and great drafting by finding those diamonds in the rough.
NHL hockey operations departments are made up of the best of the best in the industry and have been through more drafts and different case studies over more years than I have been alive, which creates some hesitation in handing out grades for teams that we felt drafted poorly or passed on talent or upside. It is important to remember that teams take into consideration so many intangibles and factors outside any eye test or analytics can tell us. They have considerable resources and information networks public scouting teams can only dream of.
Most importantly, people need to remember these young athletes are human beings that just had the best week of their lives and treating them disrespectfully and pre-judging a young man that has yet to fully develop mentally and physically is completely unfair. I think every fan base should be showing love and support for the future players that are going to put in blood sweat and tears for the team you cheer for and go to war against the opposition.
With all that in mind, here is how I think all 32 teams performed at the 2023 NHL Draft based on my own rankings as well as the wonderful team at McKeen’s that I have the pleasure working alongside.

1 Connor Bedard (F)
19 Oliver Moore (F)
35 Adam Gajan (G)
44 Roman Kantserov (F)
55 Martin Misiak (F)
67 Nick Lardis (F)
93 Jiri Felcman (F)
99 Alex Pharand (F)
131 Marcel Marcel (F)
167 Milton Oscarson (F)
195 Janne Peltonen (D)
It feels very fitting that the number one ranked team had the number one pick this year in the generational talent of Connor Bedard, who is expected to make an immediate impact. Kyle Davidson clearly agrees by bringing in some veteran support this summer in Taylor Hall, Nick Foligno and Corey Perry. This pick was obvious. What makes the Blackhawks stand out is what might be my favourite selection of the entire draft in Oliver Moore at 19th overall, where I, alongside Davidson, was in shock this player was still on the board—followed by selecting one of if not one of the best goaltenders in Adam Gajan. We absolutely loved Nick Lardis at McKeens, and we find this to be amazing value in the early third round. Roman Kantserov, Martin Misiak, Alex Pharand and Marcel Marcel are other great pickups to round out the real depth of this draft class for the Blackhawks as they build the next generation in Chicago.
3 Adam Fantilli (F)
34 Gavin Brindley (F)
66 William Whitelaw (F)
98 Andrew Strathmann (D)
114 Luca Pinelli (F)
156 Melvin Strahl (G)
194 Oiva Keskinen (F)
224 Tyler Peddle (F)
The Blue Jackets' dreams came true when Adam Fantilli was still waiting for them at third overall, as the rookie Hobey Baker winner would have been selected first overall in any other draft. Followed up by his Michigan teammate Gavin Brindley who we at McKeens had ranked #26. William Whitelaw ranked at #39 by McKeen’s, and Andrew Strathmann, ranked #39 by me, are amazing values. I really like Luca Pinelli at #114 and thought it was a great move to trade for the last pick in the draft and select Tyler Peddle, who was in attendance and should have been selected much higher. This will be the draft that could really put the Blue Jackets over the top to be a future contender in the Metro.
7 Matvei Michkov (F)
22 Oliver Bonk (D)
51 Carson Bjarnason (G)
87 Yegor Zavragin (G)
95 Denver Barkey (F)
103 Cole Knuble (F)
120 Alex Ciernik (F)
135 Carter Sotheran (D)
172 Ryan MacPherson (F)
199 Matteo Mann (D)
The Flyers got a player with arguably the highest upside in the class in 7th overall in Matvei Michkov alone, which is enough to rank them this high. Aside from whether there is any truth to rumours that he somehow orchestrated his way to Philadelphia, he was genuinely excited to be drafted by the organization. The possibility that he will be coming to play in North America perhaps sooner rather than later could completely alter the landscape of the rebuild for GM Daniel Briere. They followed up by selecting Oliver Bonk, who our Ontario scouts adore at McKeens, including myself. Bonk will continue to develop in London. The Carson Bjarnson pick could age very well as a good young goaltender with a long road of development ahead. Denver Barkey and Alex Cienik are great value picks at 95th and 120th.
#4 Seattle Kraken (A-)20 Eduard Sale (F)
50 Carson Rehkopf (F)
52 Oscar Fisker Mølgaard (F)
57 Lukas Dragicevic (D)
84 Caden Price (D)
116 Andrei Loshko (F)
148 Kaden Hammell (D)
168 Visa Vedenpää (G)
180 Zeb Forsfjäll (F)
212 Zaccharya Wisdom (F)
Seattle has been consistently one of the better drafting teams since they entered the league, and they continued that streak in Nashville. Eduard Sale is very much a gamble with questions about his compete lvel and lack of production against pros. However, he possesses elite finishing ability and was dominant against players his own age. He has a very high ceiling that I believe can be developed properly in the OHL, followed by the development team in Seattle. At the end of the day, with such a great prospect pool, you can take a swing for upside at #20 overall and can add a true top-line finisher for Shane Wright or Matty Beniers. The Kraken continues to favour the CHL and loaded up with more players in Carson Rehkopf, Lukas Dragicevic and Caden Price in the late second round. They had all been viewed as late first/early second round talents. Oscar Fisker Mølgaard has the potential to bring some real energy to the bottom six and PK and become a really good role player for the team. I had him ranked at #30th betting on his high motor and relentless pressure with some finishing ability.
30 Bradly Nadeau (F)
62 Felix Unger Sörum (F)
94 Jayden Perron (F)
100 Alexander Rykov (F)
126 Stanislav Yarovoy (F)
139 Charles-Alexis Legault (D)
158 Ruslan Khazheyev (G)
163 Timur Mukhanov (F)
190 Michael Emerson (F)
222 Yegor Velmakin (G)
Bradley Nadeau was the highest player selected from the BCHL after having a monster year. He was ranked #27 by McKeens, which makes for a good pick late in the first. Where Carolina impressed us was how well they drafted in the later rounds picking up some of the biggest steals of the draft in Jayden Perron who we ranked 34th and Timur Mukhanov ranked 98th. As they typically do, Carolina drafted great to add to the loaded prospect pool.
13 Zach Benson (F)
39 Anton Wahlberg (F)
45 Maxim Strbak (D)
86 Gavin McCarthy (D)
109 Ethan Miedema (F)
141 Scott Ratzlaff (G)
173 Sean Keohane (D)
205 Norwin Panocha (D)
Draft after draft Buffalo finds themselves selecting some great players but I think Zach Benson could be the final elite piece they need to take them back to the playoffs and end the long drought. Benson is the smartest player in the draft after Connor Bedard. They followed up with good picks in Anton Wahlberg and Maxim Strbak. I really like the value of Ethan Miedema and Scott Ratzlaff in rounds 4 and 5.
10 Dalibor Dvorský (F)
25 Otto Stenberg (F)
29 Theo Lindstein (D)
74 Quinton Burns (D)
76 Juraj Pekarcik (F)
106 Jakub Stancl (F)
138 Paul Fischer (D)
170 Matthew Mayich (D)
202 Nikita Susuyev (F)
Dalibor Dvorský and Otto Stenberg could be an amazing one-two punch down the middle in the near future as the Blues shift towards the future and away from the team that won them the 2019 Stanley Cup. I think Dvorsky and Stenberg both have been underrated as they tend to be looked at as “safe picks” - a term that I sometimes hate because it shouldn’t discount the true skill these players have. Because they are viewed as having lower ceilings than some other top names in the class they fell at the draft, and St. Louis took full advantage and selected the best player available. The rest of the Blues draft was very average, not making any poor selections but also not taking any swings on some big names with upside.
#8 Washington Capitals (B+)8 Ryan Leonard (F)
40 Andrew Cristall (F)
104 Patrick Thomas (F)
136 Cameron Allen (D)
200 Brett Hyland (F)
206 Antoine Keller (G)
The Capitals may not have had the luck they had hoped for in having Michkov fall to them, but they were very quick to the podium to select the NTDP gritty winger in Ryan Leonard. He brings a hard game and that’s no slight on the raw skill this kid has. After this year’s playoffs, NHL teams are looking to mold their roster after the Florida Panthers and Vegas Golden Knights and Leonard fits that profile. Many, including myself, expected Andrew Cristall to fall on draft day but to 40th overall was quite surprising and Washington took full advantage, taking some risk on a junior perimeter player. Going into the draft year we expected Cameron Allen to be the first OHL player off the board, but after a brutal season his stock plummeted. It’s hard to believe this talented young player entirely forgot how to play hockey and I think the Caps were willing to take this bet at 136.
27 Calum Ritchie (F)
31 Mikhail Gulyayev (D)
155 Nikita Ishimnikov (D)
187 Jeremy Hanzel (D)
219 Maros Jedlicka (F)
The Avalanche wouldn’t have expected to select Calum Ritchie and Mikhail Gulyayev with these very late first rounders who we ranked 19th and 24th. This is great value at these picks. I find it very interesting that they went with a very smart player who has a low ceiling and a high floor in Ritchie but then took a bit of a gamble on Gulyayev who is the polar opposite with a high ceiling and low floor. Not having many picks, and not many high ones, they can consider it a win if Colorado can get a couple NHLers from such minimal selections.
54 Jakub Dvorak (D)
78 Koehn Ziemmer (F)
118 Hampton Slukynsky (G)
150 Matthew Mania (D)
182 Ryan Conmy (F)
Jakub Dvorak has been such an underrated player all season long because he hasn’t been playing due to injury and is not flashy and doesn’t have much of a highlight reel but he might be the best defensive defenseman to come from this draft class. Big frame players like Dvorak are rare and hard to find and are typically viewed as underrated even in the NHL because they are never noticeable with the puck. Dvorak shut down all the top players in the U.S. NTDP top line, Dvorsky, Michkov and even Connor Bedard at international competitions. He makes life so hard for attackers and will be a nightmare for goal scorers in the NHL and people will wonder how he was selected so late. The Kings followed this up with good picks in Koehn Ziemmer and Matthew Mania.
63 Gracyn Sawchyn (F)
127 Albert Wikman (D)
159 Olof Glifford (G)
191 Luke Coughlin (D)
198 Stepan Zvyagin (F)
Florida was another team that capitalized on an underrated player who slid on draft day in Gracyn Sawchyn. He played on a star-studded Seattle Thunderbirds team and didn’t get the opportunity to play top minutes but that didn’t stop him from putting up over a point per game. He will continue to grow under a great development program as he gains more ice time and expect him to put up monster numbers in the WHL for the next two seasons.
61 Tristan Bertucci (D)
79 Brad Gardiner (F)
125 Aram Minnetian (D)
157 Arno Tiefensee (G)
189 Angus MacDonell (F)
221 Sebastian Bradshaw (F)
Dallas had very minimal draft capital and made the absolute most of it to no one's surprise as they usually do. Amazing value in Tristan Bertucci and Aram Minnetian.
32 David Edstrom (F)
77 Mathieu Cataford (F)
96 Arttu Kärki (D)
192 Tuomas Uronen (F)
Vegas selecting David Edstrom almost felt destined to happen as the last pick of the first round as we expected him to be selected in the first round. Great pick for the Stanley Cup winners. Arttu Karki was also my favorite Finnish defense this year and I think 96 is excellent value for a player of his skill.
4 Will Smith (F)
26 Quentin Musty (F)
36 Kasper Halttunen (F)
71 Brandon Svoboda (F)
123 Luca Cagnoni (D)
130 Axel Landén (D)
132 Eric Pohlkamp (D)
196 David Klee (F)
203 Yegor Rimashevsky (F)
The Sharks drafted the highly skilled forward Will Smith very high, and I know he has gained some real hype over the past few months to get into the top 5 but personally having him just outside the top 10 makes it very hard to justify so much talent and other options at pick 4. This is a take that really could come back to bite me but I just don't love what Smith and Musty bring to the table outside of the high offensive skill that they clearly both have. In terms of value picks I think Halttunen is the Sharks best pick. If he played in London last season, he would have been called on day one of the draft and still has the opportunity to come over next season and be one of the best players in the league right away. The Sharks drafted very well but 13 other teams just did better.
16 Samuel Honzek (F)
48 Étienne Morin (D)
80 Aydar Suniev (F)
112 Jaden Lipinski (F)
176 Yegor Yegorov (G)
208 Axel Hurtig (D)
The Flames had a solid draft and got a player we can expect the be a safe NHLer in Samuel Honzek that was expected in this range. I think Etienne Mornin could be the steal for them. This is a player that is extremely intelligent, and I personally have a lot of faith will continue to have success in his own development each season and could be viewed as a late first rounder in the near future. Aydar Suniev at 80th overall is also great value.
5 David Reinbacher (D)
69 Jacob Fowler (G)
101 Florian Xhekaj (F)
110 Bogdan Konyushkov (D)
128 Quentin Miller (G)
133 Sam Harris (F)
144 Yevgeni Volokhin (G)
165 Filip Eriksson (F)
197 Luke Mittelstadt (D)
Montréal might be the most talked about team post draft for all the wrong reasons so being dead in the middle at 16 may come as a surprise to most. The dislike for me comes from picks 101-197 where they took seven guys they could have gotten in rounds 6 or 7, and unfortunately some of those picks were in rounds 4 and 5. Jacob Fowler is a good goalie that could be huge for them, with the organization having such little depth in that department. Now Reinbacher who is the talk of Twitter and unfortunately for terrible reasons. The only argument I can understand against him is that Michkov should have been the pick, but there were many question marks surrounding the Russian and his intentions, leaving the Habs in a situation with lots of uncertainty at pick #5. So, they understandably took a player with a lot of certainty in elite defenseman David Reinbacher. He has been the only player under 18 shutting down grown professional athletes and ex-NHLers for two years. If that's not impressive enough he didn't just defend, he also produced higher than anyone in their DY-2 and DY-1 ever.
David has a good head on his shoulders and will develop all the necessary skills to round out his game to become a high-end defenseman who will eat lots of minutes and make a huge impact. He may not put up great offensive numbers or make highlight reel plays. That's ok, he plays defense for a reason. Leave that for the loads of talented players you already have and let Reinbacher make the other team's life a living hell and win hockey games, because that's what it's all about.
6 Dmitri Simashev (D)
12 Daniil But (F)
38 Michael Hrabal (G)
70 Jonathan Castagna (F)
72 Noel Nordh (F)
81 Tanner Ludtke (F)
88 Vadim Moroz (F)
102 Terrell Goldsmith (D)
134 Melker Thelin (G)
160 Justin Kipkie (D)
162 Samu Bau (F)
166 Carsen Musser (G)
Arizona may have not drafted our best player available in their slots, but they took an interesting strategy to this year's draft that might have been the best option based on the current state of the team. Dmitri Simashev was our number one ranked defenseman in the class while Danill But has displayed shades of Evgeni Malkin at times. Both played on the same team this past season. This put Arizona in a safer situation to swing on upside and internally develop them together and could very well be a big payoff. Hrabal is the pick that gives some extra value as my personal favorite goaltender in the class. Drafting all players over 6'0" is another interesting strategy that is hard to disagree with. Middle of the pack supports my mixed feelings on the drafting of the Coyotes.
#18 Winnipeg Jets (C)18 Colby Barlow (F)
82 Zachary Nehring (F)
146 Jacob Julien (F)
151 Thomas Milic (G)
210 Connor Levis (F)
Winnipeg is facing a lot of potential turnover on their roster this season. Colby Barlow makes an excellent pick for the Jets, bringing in a character Canadian guy, on and off the ice, as a key piece to build upon. You can expect Barlow to score lots of goals in the near future. The rest of the picks are very average, so they receive an average grade.
23 Gabe Perreault (F)
90 Drew Fortescue (D)
152 Rasmus Larsson (D)
178 Dylan Roobroeck (F)
183 Ty Henricks (F)
Gabe Perreault was good value at 23rd as I thought his production this season would lead to him going much higher than he should have and I think this was a good range for him. A smart player who can be a great complement to some high-end skill just like he did with the NTDP. The rest of the picks were not very average.
9 Nate Danielson (F)
17 Axel Sandin Pellikka (D)
41 Trey Augustine (G)
42 Andrew Gibson (D)
47 Brady Cleveland (D)
73 Noah Dower Nilsson (F)
117 Larry Keenan (D)
137 Jack Phelan (D)
147 Kevin Bicker (F)
169 Rudy Guimond (G)
201 Emmitt Finnie (F)
Detroit's draft was very interesting to me because I find it hard to criticize Steve Yzerman’s picks which have been excellent in the past with some home runs to show for it. Nate Danielson and Axel-Sandin Pellika are great players who will be NHLers and good ones. They just didn't strike me as the types of players Detroit has recently drafted with some hard nose battlers that are going to be warriors. I think it might take a while for either to become impact playoff players relative to some of the skill still left on the board, such as Oliver Moore at pick #9 and still available at #17. They pass with a C as most other picks were good, but just that they were good and not great, where teams ahead of them made some great picks.
56 Beau Akey (D)
184 Nathaniel Day (G)
216 Matt Copponi (F)
Beau Akey is a good pick that has a good path in front of him to refine his offensive talents and become a threat from the point for the Colts over the next couple of seasons and get a real chance to make the Oilers. Hard to judge a team with such little options at the draft.

2 Leo Carlsson (F)
33 Nico Myatovic (F)
59 Carey Terrance (F)
60 Damian Clara (G)
65 Coulson Pitre (F)
85 Yegor Sidorov (F)
97 Konnor Smith (D)
129 Rodwin Dionicio (D)
161 Vojtech Port (D)
I think passing on Fantilli will be something that will haunt Anaheim for a long time and really hurts their grade even though they are getting a great talent in Leo Carlsson. Unfortunately, I have a hard time seeing Carlsson being the 2nd best player that comes from this class and when they are a top team in the league soon this selection might be the difference between a contender and a champion. Other than that, Myatovic, Terrance and Pitre are solid picks.
11 Tom Willander (D)
75 Hunter Brzustewicz (C-)
89 Sawyer Mynio (D)
105 Ty Mueller (F)
107 Vilmer Alriksson (F)
119 Matthew Perkins (F)
171 Aiden Celebrini (D)
Willander was ranked 23rd by us at McKeens and is a great defenseman who happens to be in a star studded offensive heavy draft. I think the Canuks were guilty of drafting for need rather than best player available and that affected the grade. Other than that, there isn’t too much to like in the class other than Hunter Brzustewicz at 75 was a great selection.
15 Matthew Wood (F)
24 Tanner Molendyk (D)
43 Felix Nilsson (F)
46 Kalan Lind (F)
68 Jesse Kiiskinen (F)
83 Dylan MacKinnon (D)
111 Joseph Willis (F)
121 Juha Jatkola (G)
143 Sutter Muzzatti (F)
175 Austin Roest
218 Aiden Fink
Nashville was the host of this year’s draft and advised by new GM Barry Trotz in an interview to take some swings on high upside to add some high-end skill to the prospect pool. Well, they just didn’t do any of that and delivered a mediocre draft outside of top prospect Matthew Wood. What makes their draft so disappointing is that after 10 consecutive picks, the next best value pick was David Poiles last pick in Aiden Fink in the 7th round. Expectations were high and far from reached.
37 Ethan Gauthier (F)
115 Jayson Shaugabay (F)
179 Warren Clark (D)
193 Jack Harvey (F)
211 Ethan Hay (F)
Tampa will find a way to develop these players, especially Ethan Gauthier, because that’s what they do best within their system. I just believe they could have done it with the better options available and left talent on the table with every pick.
58 Lenni Hämeenaho (F)
122 Cam Squires (F)
154 Chase Cheslock (D)
164 Cole Brown (F)
186 Daniil Karpovich (D)
New Jersey was very inactive and didn’t take many swings this year and they are in a situation where they didn’t need to. Lenni Hameenaho was ranked 84 for us at McKeens and was a bit of a reach.
108 Hoyt Stanley (D)
140 Matthew Andonovski (D)
204 Owen Beckner (F)
207 Vladimir Nikitin (G)
215 Nicholas VanTassell (F)
Ottawa did not have many picks and none very high. Hoyt Stanley is the only pick which has had some hype going into the draft and been noticeable this season. I wouldn’t expect anyone from the class to make the roster.
#28 Pittsburgh Penguins (D-)14 Brayden Yager (F)
91 Emil Pieniniemi (D)
142 Mikhail Ye. Ilyin (F)
174 Cooper Foster (F)
217 Emil Järventie (F)
223 Kalle Kangas (D)
Another situation where good players were selected but when I look at this class, and Emil Jarventie is the best value pick in the 7th round, that is an issue for me. Yes, Brayden Yager is an excellent player with a deadly shot and a good head on his shoulders. It’s hard to give high grades when top 5-10 talents were still available where he was picked. This strikes me as more of a situation where the Penguins scouting staff were left to make the pick, more so than Dubas, and they went with the guy they targetted going into the draft rather than the best player available.
28 Easton Cowan (F)
153 Hudson Malinoski (F)
185 Noah Chadwick (D)
The Easton Cowan pick is very difficult to grade because it really could go both ways. I understand the pick because you’re getting, debatably, the hardest working player in the class whose development is skyrocketing at a high pace under the teachings of the Hunters in London. You can expect this growth to continue over the next couple seasons. It woudl appear the Leafs aren’t selecting the 28th best player currently and are banking on Cowan being a first round talent in 3-5 years, an approach I agree with. The issue I have with this pick is I really think you could have selected him later, and possibly much later. The 2nd round Is still a reach but at least you’re not leaving talent on the table in this deep draft and getting the maximum value out of each pick. I just think this was some poor asset management and the Leafs just focused on getting their guy. Time will be the true indicator.
49 Danny Nelson (F)
113 Jesse Nurmi (F)
145 Justin Gill (F)
177 Zach Schulz (D)
209 Dennis Good Bogg (D)
Islanders drafted some good leadership in a pair of Captains in Danny Nelson and Zach Shulz. When that is the best thing to be said about the selections that is an issue.
92 Christopher Pelosi (F)
124 Beckett Hendrickson (F)
188 Ryan Walsh (F)
214 Casper Nässén (F)
220 Kristian Kostadinski (D)
Beckett Hendrickson is the only reason they aren’t ranked 32nd.
21 Charlie Stramel (F)
53 Rasmus Kumpulainen (F)
64 Riley Heidt (F)
149 Aaron Pionk (D)
181 Kalem Parker (D)
213 Jimmy Clark (F)
The Wild are the only team that gets an F grade. It’s not because I don't like the players in Charlie Stramel and Rasmus Kumpulainen because they are prospects I had on my personal board, but it’s very hard to justify these picks with the options still available on the board at the time of the picks. These are just too far off the board to not trade back and still get the player you want. We at McKeens ranked both these players as 3rd round talents.
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The 2023 NHL Entry Draft has come and gone. I was fortunate enough to be in Nashville for the event, representing McKeen’s. Covering the draft is always such a whirlwind, as you try to balance conversations and social media analysis, while paying attention to each and every selection. Every year, when I reflect back on the draft, especially day two, it seems like I come across a few players that make me say, “wait…they got drafted!”
The draft itself also represents the conclusion of a season’s worth of hard work. It’s not just the draft guide. It’s all the coverage leading up to that; live viewings, video work, reports, notes, etc. This year, 99 out of McKeen’s Hockey’s Top 100 were drafted. While the accuracy of an independent scouting organization’s coverage is not truly assessed until five or ten years down the line (in comparison to actual NHL draft position), the immediate feedback given by that sort of parallel (with the opinion of NHL scouts) is encouraging and fulfilling.
So, let’s talk about my review of the draft. Chase Rochon, who was with me in Nashville, has written a comprehensive article that ranks and grades the performance of each team through his lens. I’m going to be doing something a little different. For each round, I’m going to highlight my two favourite picks and the pick that I have the most questions about. I’m also going to highlight five of my favourite players who went unselected this year.
Favourite Selection - Oliver Moore, 19th to Chicago
The opinions on Moore’s offensive upside vary. But at 19th, even if he only ends up as an Andrew Cogliano type role player, the value is great. But, if he does end up as a Dylan Larkin type, it suddenly becomes one of the best, if not the best pick in the first round. The best skater in the draft and one of the better defensive forwards in the draft, Moore was a personal favourite of ours at McKeen’s.
Favourite Selection - Ryan Leonard, 8th to Washington
Simply put, I would have taken Leonard earlier than this and preferred him to a few of the players who went ahead of him. Every year we look around the NHL playoffs and see teams finding success because of players like Leonard. This is someone who can have a similar impact in the league to the Tkachuk brothers. Leonard can really do it all on the ice; his game is so mature and consistent. This is the perfect selection for a team who wants to keep their competitive window open. Leonard may only need one year in the NCAA with Boston College.
Questionable Selection - Charlie Stramel, 21st to Minnesota
I know that his season in Wisconsin didn’t go according to plan, but why were NHL scouts so willing to give him a pass for poor play when they weren’t willing to do the same for the likes of Cam Allen or Caden Price. Because he’s a big, athletic pivot? So is a guy like David Edstrom and he went later in the first, despite showing a much steeper development curve than Stramel. If I was the Wild, I would be doing everything in my power to get him out of Wisconsin next year and into the WHL, where his power game would be highly appreciated.
Favourite Selection - Lukas Dragicevic, 57th to Seattle
I’m far from a Dragicevic hype man. I think his game is flawed and I didn’t think he deserved to be a first-round pick (unlike others on the McKeen’s team). However, in the late second round? The upside is well worth the risk outside of the top 50. Seattle is a team that has drafted extremely well, and they could afford to bank on Dragicevic’s insanely high offensive potential. They drafted Ty Nelson last year and his defensive game made great strides this year. Dragicevic can do the same.
Favourite Selection - Danny Nelson, 49th to New York Islanders
Nelson was one of the most improved players in the second half of the draft year after switching to pivot full time and emerging at the U.S. shutdown center on the U18 team. He’s got size. He’s athletic. His on puck play and scoring ability improved greatly over the year. Is he someone that is just starting to scratch the surface of his potential? Did playing behind two unreal centers in Smith and Moore hide his abilities?
Questionable Selection - Brady Cleveland, 47th to Detroit
Quite frankly, I just feel that there were better defenders on the board still at this pick. I don’t see the upside with Cleveland. I think he can be an NHL defender in some capacity. He is a physical rock in the defensive end. But I don’t see the mobility or skill that would lead to him playing a significant role for Detroit in the future. This is especially true since I believe Detroit drafted a better shut down type in Andrew Gibson only a few picks earlier.

Favourite Selection - Nick Lardis, 67th to Chicago
We ranked Lardis 32nd fully knowing that he would end up falling a bit in the draft. That doesn’t mean I have to agree with it. Lardis was one of the OHL’s best players in the second half and in the first round of the playoffs. His speed is electric, and his shot will play. Other parts of his game will need to improve, but the upside is quite high. He could be a great linemate to Connor Bedard in the future.
Favourite Selection - Jacob Fowler, 69th to Montreal
I’ve said many times on social media and in work for McKeen’s, that Fowler is my favourite netminder in the class. He’s like DJ Khaled, all he does is win. He was terrific in the USHL this year. He was terrific at the WJAC’s. He is so composed and focused in the crease. Sure, there is a need for him to improve his quickness and agility, but that can happen in the NCAA with Boston College, where he could start for a great team and be a Mike Richter contender as a freshman.
Questionable Selection - Emil Pieniniemi, 91st to Pittsburgh
Simply put, we didn’t see the upside with Pieniniemi. We ranked him 191st for a reason. The profile grades out about average across the board and that screams projection concerns. What is he at the next level? I may have been able to put all of Pittsburgh’s selections in my questionable selection spot, if I’m being honest.
Favourite Selection - Larry Keenan, 117th to Detroit
In reality, the third or fourth round was probably the right spot for Keenan to go. He’s a major long-term project. However, that doesn’t mean that I can’t love the pick. A similar player in Sam Rinzel went in the first-round last year. Keenan combines size, mobility, and skill together to give him outstanding upside if everything hits. I also love that he is heading to Penticton and then UMass, two outstanding programs. His development will be in good hands.
Favourite Selection - Luca Pinelli, 114th to Columbus
I wasn’t as high on Pinelli as some of my contemporaries who cover the OHL, but even I can admit that this was terrific value for Pinelli. If his quickness improves, he could be a really good middle six player at the NHL level; someone who can bring serious versatility to a coach in the future. His motor never quits and his vision/sense in the offensive end is high end.
Questionable Selection - Konnor Smith, 97th to Anaheim
The allure of Smith is that he’s a mammoth defender who plays an ultra-aggressive defensive game. He’s a real throwback to yesteryears. But the mobility, puck skill, and puck management will all need to improve drastically in order for him to be an NHL player. Other similar defenders have been taken out of the CHL in recent years and many have not even been signed. Inside the top 100, I would have had many other preferences…especially if the target was a potential shut down type.
Favourite Selection - Cam Allen, 136th to Washington
Allen did not have a great year, there’s no denying that. But he was arguably the top defender available heading into this season. He still has upside, even if his decision making leaves a lot to be desired. Hopefully an offseason reset, in combination with consultation from NHL coaches at development, helps to get him back on the right track. In the fifth round, you won’t find better value.
Favourite Selection - Eric Pohlkamp, 132nd to San Jose
The USHL defenseman of the year award is a pretty prestigious one to win. Guys like Owen Power, Neal Pionk, Brandon Montour, and Jeff Petry have won it in recent years. Pohlkamp is a very interesting player. His game does need a fair amount of refinement; it can be very erratic. However, he also has some very good tools, including mobility, a mammoth point shot, and a physically aggressive approach. He’ll be able to take on an immediate top four role in Bemidji State next year and we should get an idea pretty quickly as to how well his game translates to the NCAA level.
Questionable Selection - Melvin Strahl, 156th to Columbus
Strahl is a goaltender who wasn’t on our radar this year. In fact, I don’t think he was really on the radar of any independent scouting organization. For good reason it would appear too, as he struggled in the J20 this season, even getting demoted to the J18 level. I would have definitely preferred a handful of other netminders at this spot, if goaltending was the target.

Favourite Selection - Jeremy Hanzel, 187th to Colorado
Our Western scouts at McKeen’s loved Hanzel as one of the top re-entry guys available this year. He was outstanding for Seattle through the season and into the playoffs/Memorial Cup. On a Thunderbirds team that was stacked with NHL talent, Hanzel was often the team’s best defender. I would be shocked if he returns to the WHL for his overage season. He could have an immediate pro impact similar to Ryker Evans.
Favourite Selection - Filip Eriksson, 165th to Montreal
Kind of a random one here as there were a bunch of great value picks in the sixth round. We actually didn’t even have Eriksson ranked, but I would have had him ranked on my own list. He didn’t play a ton this year due to injury, but he was good at the J20 level and even looked comfortable in the SHL in a cup of coffee. The athletic tools need to improve, but the IQ will play. Can the speed and strength improve as he plays more? These are the types of players you take in the later rounds.
Questionable Selection - Yegor Yegorov, 176th to Calgary
Another questionable goaltending selection if you ask me. The stats weren’t terrific by MHL standards (to give you an idea, a .915 save percentage placed him 42nd among MHL goalies this year). He also was part of a three headed goalie platoon this year, posting the weakest stats of the three. Stats aren’t everything of course, but I love our Russian scouts and Yegorov really wasn’t someone who was brought to our attention by them. Again, give me Stephen Peck, Alexander Hellnemo, or Noah Erliden here over Yegorov.
Favourite Selection - Aiden Fink, 218th to Nashville
Fink piled up the accolades this year in the AJHL. He was the league’s MVP. He won the Centennial Cup. He was one of the best players at the WJAC’s. He’s small and he’s not a dynamic skater. That recipe was sure to make him fall. But in the seventh? That’s outstanding value for Fink, who has terrific offensive potential. Penn State will be a great spot for him too.
Favourite Selection - Tyler Peddle, 224th to Columbus
Mr. Irrelevant! Peddle took quite the mighty tumble thanks to a pretty indifferent season in the QMJHL this year on a middling Drummondville team. But he still has great power forward potential, particularly as a goal scorer. The athletic profile is interesting and at the back of the seventh round that could end up being a great pick for the Blue Jackets. The next Josh Anderson?
Questionable Selection - Sebastian Bradshaw, 221st to Dallas
Hard to truly argue against a seventh-round selection. They’re all longer shots. But Bradshaw is an interesting one. He’s a big kid, but he only played in the AYHL this year with Elite Hockey Academy, a school in Connecticut. He wasn’t the leading scorer on his team, and he didn’t exactly light up Ontario U16 and U18 before making the move south of the border. A London Knights U18 draft pick, Bradshaw seems headed to play for Brooks of the AJHL next year. A solid destination, no doubt, but I would have wanted to see him play at a higher level first. Especially given some of the players still on the board
1. Francesco Dell’Elce - Defense, St. Andrew’s College, CISAA
This one shocked me. I knew that some scouts were concerned about his slight frame and defensive IQ, but I didn’t think that he’d go completely undrafted. His offensive potential from the blueline is through the roof and I think that alone was worth a late selection. He’ll have a great chance of being selected in the coming years. He’s going to play with BCHL powerhouse Penticton next year and then head to UMass after that. Strong play at either of those spots could put him on the re-entry radar over the next few drafts.
2. Stephen Peck - Goaltender, Avon Old Farms, USHS Prep
Another one that shocked me considering that both Slukynsky and Guimond were selected. Peck helped Avon Old Farms capture the New England Prep Championship this year and he was one of my favourite goaltenders eligible this year. Tracks the play really well and is incredibly composed in his crease. He’s got a scholarship to Michigan in his back pocket, but likely suits up in the USHL or NAHL next year.
3. Joe Connor - Center, Avon Old Farms, USHS Prep
Speaking of Prep champion Avon Old Farms, insert their leading scorer Joe Connor, who had a really good year for a Prep level player. He was good for the U.S. at the Hlinka/Gretzky Cup in the summer. He played great in the prep circuit and was also solid in a cup of coffee in the USHL. Do I wish he were a more dynamic skater given his lack of size? Absolutely. But he competes hard in all areas of the ice, and I really like his odds of becoming a quality NCAA player for Northeastern in the future.
4. Hannes Hellberg - Wing, Leksands IF J20, J20 Nationell
In my opinion, Hellberg was one of the top re-entry guys available this year after he was named the J20’s top forward this year and led the J20 circuit in playoff scoring. Hellberg also only missed being first time draft eligible this year by a few weeks, with an early September birth date. He’s a big winger with a great goal scoring touch. I know that Hellberg already signed with HockeyAllsvenskan for next year, but I would have loved to see him come to the CHL to find success like Lucas Edmonds.
5. Ondrej Molnar - Wing, Erie Otters, OHL
Look, I understand why Molnar wasn’t selected. An undersized winger who had trouble getting inside the dots at the OHL level this year while playing for a bad team. Additionally, that floorball incident in Slovakia hangs over his head, forcing the move to the OHL and preventing him from competing internationally. Yet, this is also a player who came into the season as a first-round candidate because of his skill and ability to impact the game in transition. The offensive potential is still sky high.
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Twenty years ago, a player like Luca Pinelli would have been passed over in the NHL Draft. Not only is he 5’9”, but he isn’t a high-end skater either. Despite these drowning factors, there is a lot to like about Luca Pinelli and there are plenty of reasons to believe that he will be successful at the next level.
Pinelli played a large part in the success of the Ottawa 67’s this season, who finished atop the OHL standings at the end of the regular season. Pinelli was surrounded by plenty of talent, but his success began playing on “a line of his own” through the early part of the season. Despite fewer minutes early on, he was producing at an incredible rate, which bumped him up to the 67’s first powerplay unit. His production steadied out as the season continued on, and he has been fluctuating on many draft boards since that point.
What makes Luca Pinelli unique is his small area game play, he is able to create space and separation with barely any room. His edge work and deceptiveness allow him to manipulate and slip past defenders close to the net. Defenders hate defending against him because no matter how big they are, they can never seem to handle the sneaky and slippery Luca Pinelli. Pinelli has a knack for scoring goals and is always trying to get that shot off as quickly as humanly possible. He can get shots off with barely any room and his shots catch goalies off guard regularly. Now, Pinelli won’t be a play driver at the next level, he likes to use his teammates a lot and his game relies heavily upon them. He is more of a support player, but he has the ability to produce and the awareness to get himself into those high scoring areas. Pinelli fits as a middle six winger at the next level, and to get him there, his speed and acceleration will have to improve. Playing with skilled players and playmakers is a must for Pinelli, and when he does, he has a very high ceiling.
The best part of Pinelli’s skating is his ability to exit tight spaces on the ice using his edges and agility. Once he has his feet going though, he has trouble accelerating. This is the reason why he is often “floating” around the zone instead of rushing and getting himself into positions that he cannot get out of, due to his lack of speed. Pinelli isn’t going to be a quick transition player, but he is a player that uses his feet to get himself into the right spots on the ice. That factor does make him an effective transition player at this level, as he knows where the open ice is and he is usually able to get there without being caught up to. His habit of “floating” is often used to delay the play and allow himself to find an open pocket to receive the puck. At the NHL level, Pinelli’s lack of speed and quickness may slow down his progression, and it will likely take some development for his skating to get to where it needs to be.
This clip exemplifies Pinelli’s skating habits quite well. He is rarely going to be able to accelerate to a high speed to rush on offense. Instead, he takes his time and uses his smarts to find a lane and delay on offense. This allows him to receive the puck with plenty of room to get a shot off.
Another play where Pinelli recognizes an open lane and taking advantage of it. This time, he is able to accelerate at a high enough speed through the neutral zone and it gives him enough momentum to get that open space in front of the net. At the next level, he is likely not going to have this much room and ability to coast to the goal.
Here, he is able to come off of the wall with speed and control where many players would have been stuck on the wall. Just as he sees the puck pop loose, he separates himself from the wall and propels himself into the middle of the ice.
Pinelli often uses his edges to create speed and momentum, and this clip exemplifies that habit quite well.
In the first half of this clip, Pinelli’s lack of lateral mobility causes him to do a bit of a fly by and give up a dangerous opportunity against. In contrast, when he realizes that his team is going to gain possession back, he is able to turn and accelerate up the ice to create a breakaway for himself.
Grade: 50
Luca Pinelli loves to shoot the puck, but what makes his shot so effective? It is how quickly it comes off of his blade. Coming back to his hockey smarts, these are what get Pinelli into these high quality scoring spots. In these positions, he often doesn’t have much room, which is why his quick release is a crucial element in his game. He also has the ability to rifle shots towards the net with tremendous power. This combination of a quick release and high shot power is a dangerous one, and when he can get his shots on net, Pinelli is a viable scoring threat.
This is a sloppy entry into the zone, and a play that doesn’t appear very dangerous, but Pinelli has other plans. After slowly making his way into the high slot, he pre-recognizes the room and the shooting lane that he has between the defenders. He gets this shot off in the blink of an eye, before the goalie or defenders even realize that Pinelli is going to shoot this puck.
Pinelli is putting everything into these onetimers as the period comes to an end. He doesn’t stop to handle the puck or hesitate, he wants to put as much weight as possible into these shots.
When Pinelli calculates a shot, like he did here, it is certainly dangerous with his shot power. He is able to shoot through the defender and rifle a shot upstairs on the goaltender.
Here is when Pinelli could hold onto the puck a little longer and make a play. He has virtually no pressure on him, but he rushes the shot and fans on it.
Grade: 55
The effectiveness of Pinelli’s small area game is something that you will notice immediately when watching him. He seems to be able to create space and separation out of nothing, and he is often able to get himself out of high-pressure situations. Pinelli shows no fear when going up against big defenders or when being pressured from multiple angles. The combination of his hands in tight and his edges make him incredibly slippery for opponents to handle. Pinelli is also incredibly deceptive, and he is able to make defenders look lost quite often. His skills are what make Pinelli so dangerous at all times in the attacking zone.
This offensive shift exemplifies Pinelli’s small area game to perfection. He is managing to create room, despite being hounded by 6’6 defender Kasper Larsen. Using his quick feet and deceptiveness, Pinelli is able to own the corner and he is never really in danger of losing possession. He begins by shielding the puck using his body, but then he is able to create enough separation to challenge Larsen head on and slip up the wall.
This is a fantastic display of Pinelli’s hands where the defender is not able to keep up with his deceptiveness. Pinelli makes the defender think that he is going to pass by opening up his body and looking at his teammate. Once the defender overextends, Pinelli is able to slip past him with a nice move and find his teammate on the back door.
Pinelli’s awareness of space and puck placement makes this play possible. His hands are on display at three separate times on this rush; on the self-chip into the zone, on the cut to the middle, and on the saucer pass.
Another saucer pass to perfection by Pinelli. He is able to get this puck past two defensemen and send his teammate in alone on goal. He seems to be able to place the puck exactly where he wants it, at any given time.
Pinelli has trouble picking up the puck with control on two consecutive breakout passes, and it results in a goal against.
Grade: 60
One strength of Pinelli's is his awareness of space and ability to find open lanes. This is ultimately where a lot of his scoring/passing opportunities come from. This is also what makes Pinelli’s small area game so effective, he understands the separation he can create and sees any space that the opponent is giving him. At the same time, Pinelli relies on his teammates tremendously. Usually, he is not the one rushing the puck into the zone, and he is the 3rd forward in. He waits for/creates an open lane and takes it, but there is a lot of reliance on his teammates to get him the puck in these spots. Pinelli does make some careless passing decisions at times, and these typically happen when he has no confidence left in the tank. This is something that happens with Pinelli at times, he lacks confidence and the drive to do something efficient with the puck.
Pinelli is the 3rd forward on this rush, as he usually is, and his gliding into the zone opens up a lot of room for Pinelli to generate a scoring chance. He probably could have done something better with the puck, but he is constantly delaying his entry into the zone to give himself that extra space with the puck.
Seemingly every play that Pinelli makes, relies on his teammates in one way or another. You will rarely see him trying to rush the puck himself. Here is a rush where he fills a supporting role and draws the defender towards him, which opens a lane for his teammate.
Sneaky and slippery are words used to describe Pinelli quite often, and this is why. Quietly, Pinelli delays and makes his way into the slot without any defender noticing him. When he recognizes that he is in an open passing lane, he taps his stick, and by this point it is too late for the defense to catch him.
There are both good and bad decisions that Pinelli makes on this offensive shift. He does a good job controlling and picking up the puck, but he just sends a pass through the slot that could have easily been a turnover. He regroups in the offensive zone and utilizes his teammates to generate a scoring chance.
Here is when one of those risky passing decisions does not pay off. A sloppy drop pass results in a scoring chance against. This is a pass that Pinelli does not need to make, and he could have driven it further into the zone.
Smarts: 50
With Pinelli’s lack of size, he isn’t going to be the type of player to throw big hits or dominate physically. He uses his feet and hands to win battles along the boards and uses his shiftiness to create separation. There are times when Pinelli gets into a rut where he lacks confidence and drive, but when he is going into the boards with an opponent, he is doing everything he can to gain body position.
Pinelli begins this play by attempting to slip away from the defender, but the defender pins him instead. To counter, Pinelli does a great job staying strong against the boards and fighting to use his feet to maintain possession, which he does. Pinelli shows a lot of compete on this play, where he could have let up with all the pressure on him.
This is a purely lazy play by Pinelli, he gains possession with tons of time and space to either curl back up towards the point, or cut towards the middle. Instead he sends a soft pass into the middle of the ice.
Pinelli is almost afraid to go into the boards on this play. He begins on the right side of the puck and could gain body position, but instead he tries to go to the outside and beat the attacking player. He does show compete on this play, attempting to beat the defender using his feet. If the second opponent was not there, Pinelli would have won this battle.
Physicality/Compete: 55
OVERALL: 54
A note on the 20-80 scale used above. We look at five attributes (skating, shooting, puck skills, hockey IQ and physicality) for skaters and six for goalies (athleticism/quickness, compete/temperament, vision/play reading, technique/style, rebound control and puck handling). Each individual attribute is graded along the 20-80 scales, which includes half-grades. The idea is that a projection of 50 in a given attribute meant that our observer believed that the player could get to roughly NHL average at that attribute at maturity.
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Joely Stockl and Chase Rochon had the opportunity to represent McKeen’s at the 2023 NHL Combine this past weekend, and interview many players during media availability. Media Availability is the very last step in the NHL Combine for the players, and it is the last opportunity that they have to speak to the media before draft week in Nashville. Interviewing the players is a great opportunity for scouts/media to get a sense of who the players are as people, and how their character ties into their on-ice game. Joely and Chase were able to interview an astounding 30 players at the 2023 NHL Combine, and learn information about the players that you don’t see on the ice, including off-ice habits/hobbies, superstitions, offseason training, current strengths & weaknesses, and more!
Barlow on what it meant when he was named captain of the Owen Sound Attack this past season:
Bedard on his offseason plans and habits:
Connor Bedard speaks on favourite Canucks player Tyler Motte and what draws him to his hard-working game:
Bedard on his superstitions:
Benson on what it means to be a part of such a special draft class coming out of the WHL, and the steps he is going to take over the summer:
Zach Benson talks about hockey his ability to scan the ice as one of the smarter players in the draft class:
Tristan Bertucci talks about his Toronto Marlboro days:
Bertucci on being a better golfer then Colby Barlow and sports he plays outside of hockey:
Bonk on the “twin” chemistry between Cowan and Barkey, and how being sent down to the GOJHL in the 2021-2022 season helped his development:
Brzustewicz telling us what animal he would describe himself as, his experience in Kitchener, and his skillset:
Leo Carlsson talks about his future and enjoying the moment:
Leo's life away from hockey:
Cowan on his “twin” connection with Denver Barkey and the lessons he learned from a tough loss in the OHL Finals:
Easton Cowan talks about his connection with fellow OHLers, the Hunters and, teammate Sam Dickinson:
Cowan talking about his old Instagram account where he used to shoot pucks and do puck tricks with his friends:
Andrew Cristall says Logan Stankoven is the hardest player he has played against. Also says Bedard is better than Kent Johnson at inline hockey:
David Edstrom talks about his lethal shot and how he developed it:
Gardiner on the Ottawa 67’s, his strengths, and next steps over the offseason:
Riley Heidt talks about his draft interviews:
Vancouver Giants forward Samuel Honzek talking about his experience coming over from Slovakia to play in the WHL, and what it means to represent his country internationally:
Lardis talking about his experience with the Bulldogs in the second half of the season:
Lardis on improvements he wants to make over the offseason:
Lardis talks superstitions
Nick Lardis talks time away from the rink and his golf game:
Tanner Molendyk on his hobbies and superstitions:
Oliver Moore of the NTDP talks about how he developed his elite skating ability:
Moore on the top NTDP line of Smith, Perreault and Leonard and how it may have benefited his development:
Moore talking about his emotions and mindset throughout the comeback at the U18’s in the gold medal game against Sweden:
Moore going forward:
Etienne Morin tells us that he was asked what animal represents him, and his “unique” answer:
Nadeau on his experience playing alongside his brother Josh Nadeau in Penticton of the BCHL:
Bradly Nadeau talks about Mitch Marner and Seth Jarvis as who he models his game after:
Jayden Perron speaks about teammate Macklin Celebrini and activities away from the game:
Perron speaks on superstitions:
Perron, on what's next:
Pharand on his off-ice habits and various superstitions:
Luca Pinelli talking about his strengths and areas for improvement heading into next season:
Luca Pinelli talks about teammate Henry Mews and his free time away from the game:
Caden Price talking about his translatable skills and areas for improvement:
Caden Price talks about his time away from the game:
David Reinbacher on being considered the most "NHL ready" defenceman in the draft class, and what his off-season plans are:
Gracyn Sawchyn talks about the challenges of the long playoff run, and playing for the memorial cup:
Stenberg talking about the Swedish NHL players that he looks up to:
Otto Stenberg talks what he needs to do to make it to the next level:
Carey Terrance speaks on the Erie Otters and playing with top prospects in Malcom Spence and Matthew Schaefer:
Tom Willander on how his standout performance at the U18’s has improved his draft stock:
Tom talks about looking forward to playing with top prospects Lane Hutson and Macklin Celebrini:
Tom Willander talks about his draft interviews:
Matthew Wood tells us about his “interesting question” from the interviews, about what he wants to be said at his funeral:
Ziemmer talking about what it means to be a part of the special draft class from the WHL this year as a late 2004 born player:
Koehn Zeimmer speaks on competition in the WHL:
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