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Sure, the league proceeded without the participation of the Madison Capitals (regional COVID restrictions) or the Cedar Rapids Rough Riders (a Derecho huffed and puffed and blew the arena down), but the rest of the league played (an approximately) 54 game schedule with rather few disruptions.
Not only that, but in terms of quality, the league was better than ever, as a number of players who had expected to suit up for Canadian teams – both CHL and Jr. A – were given an opportunity to play for various USHL teams as their regular leagues were delayed indefinitely, or outright cancelled. Those bonus players included some that were drafted already, including Cross Hanas, Bear Hughes, and Danil Gushchin*. Other drafted players came in from the Ivy League schools, who did not play a hockey schedule this year. In addition to the likes of Henry Thrun, Jack Malone, and Austin Wong coming to the USHL after some time in college, others like Sean Farrell and Alex Laferriere, who had intended to start collegiate life this year, were forced to stay back for one more year in the Midwest.
*Gushchin, who had played the previous two seasons with Muskegon, was expected to play in Ontario with Niagara for the 2020-21 season, but with the OHL in permanent statis, he was loaned back to the Lumberjacks, where he put up his best season yet.
And then there were the draft-eligible ringers who unexpectedly joined the league and played so well that they have legitimate first round consideration at the end of it. I am thinking, of course, of Cole Sillinger, who joined Sioux Falls, before it was known when, or if, the WHL would get going, and Ayrton Martino and Jack Bar, who had played in Ontario last year and had been planning on playing in the BCHL this year before Canadian restrictions pushed them to the USHL, with Omaha and Chicago, respectively.
Of course, there were many other unexpected players in the league this year, with those mentioned only scratching the surface of the most famous names.
So, before we preview the postseason, which begins this Friday (Apr. 30), let’s pour one out for the six teams that didn’t make, and give a word to the top 1-3 draft eligible players from those squads.
One point behind Dubuque for the final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference – although far further back via points percentage (.510-.481), the USNTDP team that would have played in the USHL playoffs had they made it would have been the U17 team. The best of that group – Rutger McGroarty, Isaac Howard, Ryan Chesley, Lane Hutson, Charlie Stramel and others – are playing with the U18 team in Texas at the WU18 tournament. No draft eligibles but remember those names for next season.
By points percentage, easily the weakest team in the league. The aforementioned Jack Malone, a Vancouver draft pick, was far and away the top performer on the team, which is to be expected from a player with a year at Cornell under his belt. Among first year draft eligibles, Japanese import Yusako Ando was the most notable, although his second year in the league was worse than his first. He can create for others, but he doesn’t skate well enough to make up for his slight 5-7” frame. The only other draft eligible who ever made a positive impression on me from this roster was blueliner Austen May. The Providence commit is on the small side, but he is really fleet of foot and shows decent attention to detail off the puck.
Despite the presence of three drafted players – Alex Laferriere (LA), Noah Ellis (Vgk), and Lucas Mercuri (Car), the Buccaneers struggled this year, particularly in terms of putting the puck in the net. The drafted guys were all solid, but too few of the rest of the roster could match their output. Perhaps things would have been different if Paul Davey hadn’t of left mid-season for a stint back home in Connecticut. Davey and Scout Truman were the two most notable first time draft eligible on the roster, but neither really put their stamp on the season. If there are to be any Buccaneers drafted this year, they will be among the redraft candidates. To that end, file away the names of Matt Choupani and Remington Koepple. Choupani is a forward who lacks much in the way of physical tools but can play the puck well. Koepple is a goalie who had decent numbers in his first year in the league, although he has only average size and athleticism and he chocked in the BioSteel game, hurting his standing for some.
The Stars went heavy on the ringers partway through the season. Cross Hanas was already mentioned, but he was just one of four players brought in from the WHL Portland Winterhawks, joining Clay Hanas (no relation), Jack O’Brien, and James Stefan, as well as Charles-Alexis Legault from West Kelowna in the BCHL and Michael Mastrodomenico from AAA hockey in Quebec. Simply put, the shuffled team never gelled, and the newcomers couldn’t get into the swing of the USHL.
O’Brien was the biggest disappointment. There was some expectation that he could be a high round pick this year, but one goal and six assists in 23 games ended that sentiment. Blueliner Legault didn’t hurt his stock too much, as he still has great size and skates well and shoots from his right side. Stefan, son of former first overall pick Patrik Stefan, had enough moments to maybe convince some team to call his name in the late rounds. A kind word also to big bruising winger Gleb Veremeyev. Veremeyev isn’t an offensive threat, but one of the top PIM players in the league is a threat, nonetheless. The USHL is not a very physical league, and when a player has that size and plays with that snarl, he sometimes gets drafted, such as we saw with Nick Capone last year and Martin Pospisil in 2018.
Generally contenders, the Black Hawks find themselves out of the playoffs for the first time since 2014-15, and only the second time in 14 seasons for which there were playoffs. Fielding one of the smaller and least experienced lineups in the league, this just wasn’t their year. Their one drafted player, Toronto’s Wyatt Schingoethe, regressed heavily from his strong draft year. The team cycled through goalies, with three seeing significant minutes. Remember the name of Emmett Croteau, the best performing of their netminders, as he won’t be draft eligible until 2022.
Among players eligible this year, the most impressive were second time eligible defenseman Cooper Wylie, a USHL rookie, who can play the puck and skate well enough to make his ornery game effective, if not spectacular. He could be drafted. On the other hand, David Gucciardi, acquired in an early season trade from Youngstown, will be drafted. His game is raw, and his mistakes are often critical, but he has tools, and his instincts are good enough to think he can be a good one if he relies on his instincts all the time.
The Western Conference bottom feeders are a mystery. In the last USHL playoffs, the Stampede took home the title. In addition to their usual solid team, this year they brought in the highest profile ringer in Cole Sillinger, who didn’t disappoint, with a team leading 46 points despite only playing in 31 games. He is a sniper with an NHL style game who will be back in the WHL next year. The USHL rarely sees a player of his caliber, whether talking about skill or about reading the game, yet he couldn’t drag the Stampede upwards on his own. I would be surprised if he isn’t the first player from this year’s USH: crop to play in the NHL.
Defender Brent Johnson was one of the better draft eligible defenders in the league as well. A power play specialist with good wheels and an ornery side, his season ended right before the BioSteel All American Game due to a shoulder injury, but could hear his name called in the 50-80 range of the draft if his medicals hold up.
Although not as high profile, I also have time for second time eligible, defenseman Nate Schweitzer, who can do a lot well, but nothing spectacularly, and winger Mike Citara, who can skate and shoot. I don’t expect either to be drafted, but I wouldn’t be surprised if either was.
The Playoffs
The format this year is simple. The top four teams from each conference made it in. All series are best-of-threes. Top seed plays the fourth seed, and second seed plays the third seed. All games are hosted by the higher seed. One series per weekend until one team lifts the Clark Cup. Let’s go!

The Western Conference was incredibly tight at the top with the playoff picture not being settled until the final weekend of the regular season. The points percentage difference between Tri-City and Fargo (32 percentage points) was less than between Fargo and fifth place Des Moines (34 percentage points).
Fargo was the third best defensive team in the league, although Tri-City was the best at keeping the puck out of its net. Neither team is known for filling their opponents’ nets either, but both had generally done enough to walk away with points more often than not. In fact, they are quite evenly matched. The difference in these three games (outside of home ice advantage) is likely to rest in special teams. Fargo was mediocre on both the power play and the penalty kill, while the Storm were strong with the man advantage and almost impregnable on the penalty kill, leading the league with a breathtaking 88.3% kill rate. To Fargo’s credit, they have played far more of their season at 5-on-5 than Tri-City. And they will have to do that again this weekend to keep their season alive.
Beyond the expected close games, another reason to watch this series is the head-to-head matchup between two very interesting and talented draft eligibles. On Fargo, that would be Tristan Broz, a two-way center with a good motor and the vision to be a power play weapon. The Minnesota commit ran away with the scoring lead on his team. His numbers would be even more impressive if he had more talented teammates to play with. On Tri-City, the man of the hour is Matthew Knies. Knies started his season painfully slow, but ended it on fire, with 20 points in his final 11 games. Knies has heavier feet, but a very mature build and at his best, can take over the game. He will join Broz with the Golden Gophers next year.
Knies and Broz are not the only intriguing draft eligible players in this series. In fact, Fargo blueliner Jack Peart has a very good chance to be the highest drafted player in this series. The St. Cloud State commit split his season between Fargo and Grand Rapids High School (Mn). He is a good skater with a very strong first few steps, who plays with preternatural poise. He controls the puck like a much older player and plays a strong 200-foot game. Had Peart spent the entire season in Fargo, the final standings may have looked very different. For Fargo, also keep an eye on Aaron Huglen, a Buffalo draft pick who returned from over a full year on the sidelines after around a third of this season was done and has played a skilled game ever since.
On Tri-City, Knies is joined by a pair of intriguing draft eligible players in Hunter Strand and Carter Mazur, the latter of whom is a second time eligible player. Strand is a USNTDP alum, whose late birthday prevented him from being drafted last year. The Alaska native is a great skater and plays a patient game with the puck. Mazur has more of an East-West style game, helped along by plus edges. He can play the pest role as well and retains utility off the puck. Strand and Mazur both outscored Knies this year, but Knies already had a big reputation through his big pre-draft year and his run to end the year keeps him top of mind.
Prediction: Fargo in three. A mild upset to be sure. The return of Peart helps Fargo just as much as the loss of top blueliner Guillaume Richard hurts Tri-City. Richard is currently representing Team Canada at the WU18s in Texas. Neither team has stellar goaltending, but Fargo’s Brennan Boynton should be able to roughly match Tri-City’s Todd Scott.
Both Omaha and Sioux City put up 63 points in 53 games, but their paths to getting there could scarcely have been more different. Consider that Omaha’s goal differential was a mediocre +13, while Sioux City outscored their opponents on aggregate by 35 goals, with the league’s best – by far – defense.
The two teams are both led by high end goaltending, each starting one of the three drafted netminders in the league. For Sioux City, that man is the Swiss Akira Schmid, a New Jersey prospect, while Montreal draftee Jakob Dobes, from Czechia, mans the pipes for Omaha. Dobes was a true workhorse for the Lancers, playing in 47 of the team’s 53 games, while Schmid played roughly two-third of the time for Sioux City, as his back up was more reliable.
Schmid will need to be at his best in this series, however, as Omaha has one of the biggest offensive weapons in the league at their disposal in Ayrton Martino. Martino joined the club shortly after the calendar flipped into 2021 and took the league by storm, with the fifth best points-per-game ratio in the USHL (1.47). A great skater with a fantastic shot, Martino did not let his slight frame prevent him from dominating, and his playmaking game is just as strong as his finishing ability. If Sioux City can shut Martino down, the Lancers don’t have too many other weapons at their disposal as their secondary scoring is largely in the hands of USHL veterans like Ryan Lautenbach, Nolan Renwick and Zach Dubinsky. The Omaha roster is one of the oldest in the league.
Sioux City, on the other hand, has a few more weapons at its disposal. Detroit draft pick Chase Bradley and New Jersey pick Ethan Edwards were both in the team’s top four in scoring, while Buffalo pick Matteo Costantini showed well after joining the league mid-season. Although the Musketeers don’t have a draft eligible player the likes of Martino, don’t sleep on defenseman Shai Buium. A USHL rookie out of the Shattuck-St. Mary’s program, he combines quick hands with smooth, if not quick, feet. He plays a strong two-way game and if he were a better skater (he isn’t bad, but he isn’t great), we would be hearing more people call for him as a first round type of talent. As is, he has enough raw skill to dream on a big, late-blooming future. I am also keeping an eye on redraft candidates defenseman Daniel Laatsch and center Justin Hryckowian. Laatsch is a USNTDP alum who has great size and some burgeoning skill, but is still raw, while Hryckowian has a fun skill game, but an injury-filled history and a sub-optimal build.
Prediction: Sioux City’s depth overcomes Martino’s solo skill in three games.
Western Conference Final Prediction: Sioux City over Fargo in three games. Sioux City is just too difficult to score against and has enough offensive weapons to get the job done.

#1 Chicago Steel vs
#4 Dubuque Fighting Saints
By all accounts, this should be a washout. Chicago is, by great lengths, the top team in the USHL. They enter the postseason on an eight-game undefeated streak, and won 38 of 54 games this year, often by wide margins. Their goaltending has been shoddy at times, but far more often than not, they were able to outscore their troubles and their total of 265 goals scored was 24 more than the runners-up. Dubuque, on the other hand, won only 24 of 51 games, securing the final playoff spot in the east thanks to a win in their final game coupled with a loss from the U17 USNTDP squad.
If Dubuque is to have a hope in this series, look to their defensive players. Goalie Lukas Parik, a Los Angeles draft pick, struggled since joining the team, in late-January from the Czech second division, but shut out Green Bay in his final game, reminding us of what he is capable. On the blueline, fellow LA pick Braden Doyle teams up with Anaheim draft pick Henry Thrun to give the Fighting Saints a pair of weapons. Up front, Dubuque has a balanced attack, but the man to watch is Robert Cronin. While too old to be drafted this year Cronin is a late bloomer with speed and skill who will be a good follow next year once he joins the University of New Hampshire. The boy to watch, on the other hand, is Matthew Savoie. The 17-year-old is a 2022 draft eligible, who should have been playing in the WHL, but the uncertainty in that league led him to Dubuque, where he immediately played a central, and at time dominating, role. He’s going to be really fun to watch next year.
Looking at draft eligibles for this summer, keep your eyes on Connor Kurth and Andrei Buyalsky. Buylasky is actually the same age (born three days later) as Cronin, but as he is considered a foreign player (this is his first season in North America), the Kazakhstani forward is draft eligible while the American Cronin is not. Buyalsky is an impressive skater with impressive finishing ability. Kurth, on the other hand, has no particular big attributes to his game, but he finds a way to put up good numbers. He has a very stocky build but moves well enough regardless.
Moving on to Chicago, almost every skater on the roster is worthy of mention. Start with Montreal draft pick Sean Farrell, a USNTDP alum who would have been with Harvard this season had the Crimson actually played. Instead, he put up a breathtaking 101-point season for the Steel. His playmaking ability is simply unfair to most opponents on most nights. Then there is Matthew Coronato, a likely first round pick, who scored 48 goals in 51 games. Sure, it helps to have Farrell playing on your team, but the two actually rarely played together at even strength. Coronato is an offensive dynamo, who is content to cycle on his own for multiple full loops of the offensive end before he sees a seam to exploit.
Then there is Jack Bar, a late add to the roster from the BCHL. After a brief period acclimating to the league, he began to dominate. The defenseman likes to get deep into the offensive zone but is also a physical and committed defender. He has some first round upside. Of course, I also have to mention Mackie Samoskevich, who at one time was seen as a better draft prospect than Coronato. Samoskevich struggled somewhat after a midseason injury but is another gifted playmaker and a fantastic skater to boot.
I don’t want to get into the weeds too much, but I also expect Josh Doan (son of Shane), Ryan Ufko, and Jackson Blake to be drafted this summer, and Jack Harvey being drafted wouldn’t surprise me either. Anaheim draft pick Ian Moore has been impressive in his first season in the USHL, and 2023(!!) eligible forward Adam Fantilli is a burgeoning superstar. As good as everyone else already mentioned on this roster is, Fantilli’s upside is the highest. I am talking top three in the draft upside.
Prediction: Chicago in two, barring a complete breakdown in net. Chicago in three if the goalies stumble.
A testament to how tight the West is, the Muskegon-Green Bay series is the second most lopsided duel after Chicago-Dubuque, with .040 percentage points separating the Lumberjacks and the Gamblers. Muskegon plays an up-tempo, high-event game with red lights going off at both ends. Green Bay is best when they keep goals to a minimum, and actually ended the season with the fewest goals allowed in the conference.
Green Bay’s chances are led by a pair of Boston Bruins’ draft picks in defender Mason Lohrei and center Jake Schmaltz. The latter is a two-way forward, who after three seasons in the USHL, has figured out how to be a factor offensively. He does a lot of little things well but lacks any dynamic elements. Lohrei was a surprise second rounder last season but has grown his game even more this year. He is big, skates very well, has a big point shot and plays a tough game at all ends. The Gamblers will go as far as he can take them. Vancouver draft pick Jackson Kunz and Vegas pick Jackson Hallum are also on the roster, and while both have shown the ability to provide secondary offense, neither can make things happen on their own. 2022 eligible Ryan Greene is an interesting player, but if there is a wild card in Green Bay, it is Camden Thiesing. The Tennessee native combines skill with grit, finishing third in the league in PIMs. He will work to make things happen on his own, and when he stays out of the penalty box, he is dangerous.
Led by San Jose draft pick Danil Gushchin, Muskegon is incredibly entertaining. Gushchin is a dynamo, who is not the most consistent player, but when he is involved and engaged, is one of the top handful of forwards in the league. He is joined by a deep roster of talented players, a few of whom should be drafted this summer, many of those in their second year of eligibility. The best of that secondary bunch is center Cameron Berg. Berg finished last year hot after a slow start and didn’t miss a beat coming into this year. He has a high-end wrist shot and knows how to create space for himself to rip one off. Winger Quinn Hutson is another second-year eligible forward who made waves this year. The type of player to get to the right spot at the right time, he knows how to finish what his linemates create. On the blueline, there are a trio to watch. The offensive blueline is Jacob Guevin, a power play specialist, whose production overshadows his average tools. Alex Gagne and Hank Kempf are bigger, more physical blueliners who make life difficult for attacking forwards. I could see all three drafted this summer.
Prediction: Muskegon in three games.
Eastern Conference Final prediction: Chicago in three games over Muskegon. This would be an immensely entertaining series.
Clark Cup Final Prediction: Chicago over Sioux City in three games. It’s really hard to bet against the Steel this year.
]]>In a group that includes Russia, Sweden, the USA and Austria, the Czechs are projected to finish fourth and advance to the quarter-finals. Whatever they achieve beyond that would be a pleasant surprise.
With the unusual circumstances that have affected all teams in the tournament to varying degrees, the Czech Republic was hit hard by a second wave of COVID-19 in the autumn, resulting in a shutdown of all organized sports for much of October and November. Furthermore, many teams have been forced to quarantine for additional time due to localized positive tests. While all of the team’s CHL-based players have returned home, some have been limited to only a handful of games.
While the Czech national junior team hasn’t played this season, save for a three-game series with Slovakia back in July, 10 junior-aged players were named to the Czech senior men’s team that competed at the Karjala Cup in Finland in November.
The last two years, the Czechs were led by Anaheim Ducks prospect Lukas Dostal in goal, but he’s too old this year. Last season, Dostal missed a couple of games due to injury, which gave Lukas Parik and Nick Malik an opportunity to get into some game action. The three goalies on the roster this time will be Parik, Malik and Jan Bednar, but the starting job is wide open.
Last year’s young defense corps will be this year’s gain, with four returning defenSemen – Martin Has, Karel Klikora, Simon Kubicek, and Radek Kucerik. But the most interesting names on defense from a scouting perspective are 17-year-olds Stanislav Svozil and David Jiricek. Both were born in 2003 but their birthdays mean Svozil will be eligible to be drafted in 2021 and Jiricek in 2022. Additionally, both played at the Karjala Cup and Mlejnek indicated they both have a good shot at making the team.
“Based to their play so far, their chances are very high,” Mlejnek said at the press conference. “I don’t think they seemed out of place at all at the Karjala by being so young. They adjusted to the opportunities they were given and played with confidence. We believe that they will continue to prove that throughout December.”
Up front, the consensus top two lines based on Mlejnek’s lines in July and at the Karjala Cup in November consist of Jan Mysak centering Pavel Novak and Adam Raska and Jaromir Pytlik between Michal Teply and Filip Koffer. Novak – a 2002-born Minnesota Wild prospect – and Koffer will be playing in their first WJC while the other four all return from last year. After the top six, the talent up front drops off significantly. Marcel Barinka, who spent the past two seasons with the Halifax Mooseheads, had a solid shot at being the third-line center but declined the invitation to camp, having just signed with German club Kolner Haie and wanting to have a good camp there in anticipation of a December 17 opening to the DEL season.

While it’s not totally clear who the Czechs’ starting goalie will be, national team general manager Filip Pesan may have tipped his hand when he named Parik to the Karjala Cup roster. He played in one game there and stopped 27 of 30 shots against a Russian team that consisted exclusively of junior-aged players and will largely be the same squad that the Czechs will face in Group B in Edmonton. The other two goalies in contention are Nick Malik and Jan Bednar, who are both a year younger. At 6-4”, Parik is a big goalie who relies on his size and positioning to stop pucks, in contrast to the equally big but more acrobatic Bednar.
Has has only played in a couple games this season for second-division HC Benatky nad Jizerou, making this the first time he has played for a club in his home country since he was 16. The Washington Capitals‘ draft pick has spent two seasons with Tappara Tampere‘s junior squad in Finland, where his mobility and hockey sense were occasional issues. Has played last season in the OHL with the Guelph Storm. The right-shot defenseman is an intriguing blueliner with a promising tool set, but he looks very raw at the moment. At his first WJC he had a solid tournament with three points in six games, and will be heavily relied upon this time around.
Kubicek is a very well-rounded two-way defender who plays physical and is tough to compete against in the defensive zone, although it has been noted that his speed needs to improve if he wants to make it to the next level, which may be why he was passed over in the 2020 Draft. The late-born 2001 has been a standout the last two years for Seattle and played well at the World Juniors for the Czechs, and they will count on him to be even better this season. So far he has spent this season with HC Stadion Litomerice in the Czech second division, where he has played on the team’s top defensive pair.
A potential first-round pick for the 2021 NHL Entry Draft, Svozil debuted in the Extraliga last season as a 16-year-old and didn’t look out of place in the pros, tallying five points in 41 games. This year, he has become a regular on the Kometa Brno defense and made his senior national team debut at the Karjala Cup, although that hasn’t translated into offensive production. While not particularly big for a defenseman at 6-1” and 172lbs, he is known for his speed, allowing him to contribute offensively without sacrificing anything on the back end. Being 10 months older than fellow 17-year-old Jiricek, Svozil probably has a slightly better chance of making the team.
A second-round pick of the Montreal Canadiens in this year’s NHL Draft, 2002-born Mysak will be expected to carry the offensive load for the Czechs in his second World Junior Championship. After scoring at better than a point-per-game clip last season for Hamilton in the OHL, he is back home in Litvinov this season but has been held pointless in his first nine games of the season, averaging about 14 minutes per game on the Extraliga’s lowest-scoring team. Internationally he has shown a scoring touch, with four points in three games for the U20 national team back in July, and an assist in two games for the senior men’s team in November. In these games, he has mostly been centering a line with speedy, undersized wingers Pavel Novak and Adam Raska.
Teply is another player who has seen limited action back home in the Czech Republic after playing last season in the CHL, coming from the Winnipeg Ice to Mlada Boleslav and Litomerice, where he has played only a handful of games so far. He is a skilled and instinctive offensive-minded player whose passing skills and vision are his biggest strengths. He makes the right choices with the puck and his overall skill level is very high. He has a good, accurate wrist shot and the potential to be a good goal-scorer at the pro level. At 6-3” and 192lbs, he is one of the biggest forwards on this Czech team. In pre-tournament games, Teply has been playing the left side with Jaromir Pytlik and Filip Koffer.
A member of the Soo Greyhounds now playing for HC Litomerice in the Czech second division, Pytlik is another returning player and top-six forward on this team. Last season, he began the tournament on a line with Jan Jenik but that lasted all of 15 seconds before the team’s star forward went down with a knee injury. After that, the Czech forward lines were a mess and Pytlik played a depth role. He is a mature two-way forward who plays a very heavy, pro-ready game. The versatile New Jersey Devils prospect excels playing through traffic, prolonging possession along the wall, and finishing off plays tight to the crease. He competes hard at both ends and shows high-end anticipation as a defensive forward and penalty killer.
After spending last season with the Rimouski Oceanic, tallying 21 points and 37 penalty minutes in just 35 games and then getting drafted by the San Jose Sharks, Raska has returned to the club that developed him, split this season so far between Trinec in the Extraliga and second-league affiliate Frydek-Mistek. Raska was a depth forward at last year’s WJC but will be a top-six forward this year, lining up on Mysak’s right side, where he should get a chance to display his goal-scoring touch. While somewhat undersized at 5-10” and 168lbs, he plays bigger than his size, not shying away from the physical play, which should only improve as he bulks up.
Goaltenders:
Lukáš Pařík (Benátky nad Jizerou), Jan Bednář (Karlovy Vary), Nick Malík, Tomáš Suchánek (both Frýdek-Místek), Šimon Zajíček (Litvínov).
DefenSemen:
Karel Klikorka (Mladá Boleslav), Martin Hugo Haš (Benátky nad Jizerou), Michal Hrádek (Pardubice), Stanislav Svozil (Kometa Brno), Adam Rutar (Olomouc), David Jiříček, Vladimír Kremláček (both Plzeň), Ondřej Baláž, Michael Krutil, Šimon Kubíček, Jan Mlčák, Daniel Poizl (all Litoměřice), Radek Kučeřík (Přerov), Jiří Suhrada (Zlín).
Forwards:
Adam Najman, Jakub Rychlovský (both Liberec), Michal Gut (Sokolov), Martin Beránek (České Budějovice), Jonáš Peterek, Adam Raška (both Frýdek-Místek), Jakub Brabenec (Kometa Brno), Sebastián Malát (Plzeň), David Vitouch (Sparta Praha), David Jindra, Filip Koffer, Martin Lang, Pavel Novák, Filip Přikryl, Jaromír Pytlík, Michal Teplý, Matěj Toman (all Litoměřice), Jan Myšák (Litvínov), Ivan Ivan (Vítkovice), Martin Ryšavý (Přerov), Radek Mužík (Lulea, Sweden), Theodor Pištěk (Örebro, S), Ondřej Pšenička (Waterloo, USHL).
In a group that includes Russia, Sweden, the USA and Austria, the Czechs are projected to finish fourth and advance to the quarter-finals. Whatever they achieve beyond that would be a pleasant surprise.
With the unusual circumstances that have affected all teams in the tournament to varying degrees, the Czech Republic was hit hard by a second wave of COVID-19 in the autumn, resulting in a shutdown of all organized sports for much of October and November. Furthermore, many teams have been forced to quarantine for additional time due to localized positive tests. While all of the team’s CHL-based players have returned home, some have been limited to only a handful of games.
While the Czech national junior team hasn’t played this season, save for a three-game series with Slovakia back in July, 10 junior-aged players were named to the Czech senior men’s team that competed at the Karjala Cup in Finland in November.
The last two years, the Czechs were led by Anaheim Ducks prospect Lukas Dostal in goal, but he’s too old this year. Last season, Dostal missed a couple of games due to injury, which gave Lukas Parik and Nick Malik an opportunity to get into some game action. The three goalies on the roster this time will be Parik, Malik and Jan Bednar, but the starting job is wide open.
Last year’s young defence corps will be this year’s gain, with four returning defencemen – Martin Has, Karel Klikora, Simon Kubicek, and Radek Kucerik. But the most interesting names on defence from a scouting perspective are 17-year-olds Stanislav Svozil and David Jiricek. Both were born in 2003 but their birthdays mean Svozil will be eligible to be drafted in 2021 and Jiricek in 2022. Additionally, both played at the Karjala Cup and Mlejnek indicated they both have a good shot at making the team.
“Based to their play so far, their chances are very high,” Mlejnek said at the press conference. “I don’t think they seemed out of place at all at the Karjala by being so young. They adjusted to the opportunities they were given and played with confidence. We believe that they will continue to prove that throughout December.”
Up front, the consensus top two lines based on Mlejnek’s lines in July and at the Karjala Cup in November consist of Jan Mysak centering Pavel Novak and Adam Raska and Jaromir Pytlik between Michal Teply and Filip Koffer. Novak – a 2002-born Minnesota Wild prospect – and Koffer will be playing in their first WJC while the other four all return from last year. After the top six, the talent up front drops off significantly. Marcel Barinka, who spent the past two seasons with the Halifax Mooseheads, had a solid shot at being the third-line center but declined the invitation to camp, having just signed with German club Kolner Haie and wanting to have a good camp there in anticipation of a December 17 opening to the DEL season.

While it’s not totally clear who the Czechs’ starting goalie will be, national team general manager Filip Pesan may have tipped his hand when he named Parik to the Karjala Cup roster. He played in one game there and stopped 27 of 30 shots against a Russian team that consisted exclusively of junior-aged players and will largely be the same squad that the Czechs will face in Group B in Edmonton. The other two goalies in contention are Nick Malik and Jan Bednar, who are both a year younger. At 6-4”, Parik is a big goalie who relies on his size and positioning to stop pucks, in contrast to the equally big but more acrobatic Bednar.
Has has only played in a couple games this season for second-division HC Benatky nad Jizerou, making this the first time he has played for a club in his home country since he was 16. The Washington Capitals‘ draft pick has spent two seasons with Tappara Tampere‘s junior squad in Finland, where his mobility and hockey sense were occasional issues. Has played last season in the OHL with the Guelph Storm. The right-shot defenseman is an intriguing blueliner with a promising tool set, but he looks very raw at the moment. At his first WJC he had a solid tournament with three points in six games, and will be heavily relied upon this time around.
Kubicek is a very well-rounded two-way defender who plays physical and is tough to compete against in the defensive zone, although it has been noted that his speed needs to improve if he wants to make it to the next level, which may be why he was passed over in the 2020 Draft. The late-born 2001 has been a standout the last two years for Seattle and played well at the World Juniors for the Czechs, and they will count on him to be even better this season. So far he has spent this season with HC Stadion Litomerice in the Czech second division, where he has played on the team’s top defensive pair.
A potential first-round pick for the 2021 NHL Entry Draft, Svozil debuted in the Extraliga last season as a 16-year-old and didn’t look out of place in the pros, tallying five points in 41 games. This year, he has become a regular on the Kometa Brno defense and made his senior national team debut at the Karjala Cup, although that hasn’t translated into offensive production. While not particularly big for a defenseman at 6-1” and 172lbs, he is known for his speed, allowing him to contribute offensively without sacrificing anything on the back end. Being 10 months older than fellow 17-year-old Jiricek, Svozil probably has a slightly better chance of making the team.
A second-round pick of the Montreal Canadiens in this year’s NHL Draft, 2002-born Mysak will be expected to carry the offensive load for the Czechs in his second World Junior Championship. After scoring at better than a point-per-game clip last season for Hamilton in the OHL, he is back home in Litvinov this season but has been held pointless in his first nine games of the season, averaging about 14 minutes per game on the Extraliga’s lowest-scoring team. Internationally he has shown a scoring touch, with four points in three games for the U20 national team back in July, and an assist in two games for the senior men’s team in November. In these games, he has mostly been centering a line with speedy, undersized wingers Pavel Novak and Adam Raska.
Teply is another player who has seen limited action back home in the Czech Republic after playing last season in the CHL, coming from the Winnipeg Ice to Mlada Boleslav and Litomerice, where he has played only a handful of games so far. He is a skilled and instinctive offensive-minded player whose passing skills and vision are his biggest strengths. He makes the right choices with the puck and his overall skill level is very high. He has a good, accurate wrist shot and the potential to be a good goal-scorer at the pro level. At 6-3” and 192lbs, he is one of the biggest forwards on this Czech team. In pre-tournament games, Teply has been playing the left side with Jaromir Pytlik and Filip Koffer.
A member of the Soo Greyhounds now playing for HC Litomerice in the Czech second division, Pytlik is another returning player and top-six forward on this team. Last season, he began the tournament on a line with Jan Jenik but that lasted all of 15 seconds before the team’s star forward went down with a knee injury. After that, the Czech forward lines were a mess and Pytlik played a depth role. He is a mature two-way forward who plays a very heavy, pro-ready game. The versatile New Jersey Devils prospect excels playing through traffic, prolonging possession along the wall, and finishing off plays tight to the crease. He competes hard at both ends and shows high-end anticipation as a defensive forward and penalty killer.
After spending last season with the Rimouski Oceanic, tallying 21 points and 37 penalty minutes in just 35 games and then getting drafted by the San Jose Sharks, Raska has returned to the club that developed him, split this season so far between Trinec in the Extraliga and second-league affiliate Frydek-Mistek. Raska was a depth forward at last year’s WJC but will be a top-six forward this year, lining up on Mysak’s right side, where he should get a chance to display his goal-scoring touch. While somewhat undersized at 5-10” and 168lbs, he plays bigger than his size, not shying away from the physical play, which should only improve as he bulks up.
This year they will be without three graduated top overage forwards in Dante Hannoun, Noah Gregor, and Sean Montgomery, who combined for an impressive 101 goals. Top scorer from last year Brett Leason is still in pro camp and could play in the AHL this season if he continues to show well. If he does that is another 36 goals no longer with the roster. Does this leave the door open to another team in the WHL to dominate the 2019-2020 regular season? Does Prince Albert have the staying power to remain at the top? These articles will try to answer those questions months in advance. (Teams are listed in their projected divisional rankings). Today we look at the Western Conference. The Eastern Conference article can be found here:

Having come within an overtime goal of a trip to the Memorial Cup, the Giants are fortunate to return some outstanding players including top defender Bowen Byram (Colorado, 1st 2019). He can handle all the minutes he is given and is able to generate offense as well as anyone from the back end. Tristen Nielsen and Milos Roman (Calgary, 4th 2018) give them experienced center play while draft eligible Justin Sourdif has picked up where he left off last season and might be their most productive forward this season. Another 2020 potential draft pick is Lukas Svejkovsky, a talented right shot winger with very good playmaking skills. That balance of youthful skill and solid veterans can be seen across their lineup and is a big part of why they are favorites to win the division this season. Returning 20 year old David Tendeck (Arizona 6th, 2018), along with the younger Trent Miner (Colorado, 7th 2019) certainly helps their cause as a team looking to come out of the West.
Hosting the Memorial Cup comes with enormous pressure to have an outstanding season. Both Regina and Red Deer have been good but not the elite teams in the league in their respective host years and Kelowna will be trying to break the WHL curse of late at the Memorial Cup. Defensively, the roster is pretty strong with Kaedan Korczak (Vegas, 2nd 2019) and Jake Lee leading the way. Up front they have a couple of elite wingers in Nolan Foote (Tampa Bay, 1st 2019), and Dillon Hamaliuk (San Jose, 2nd 2019) that play a bruising power forward style of game. Draft eligible Pavel Novak showed great hands in the preseason but will have to continue that play once the games start to matter to hear his name mentioned at this season’s draft. A lot of their offense is going to come from overage players Kyle Topping and Leif Mattson, both of whom were near the 1 point per game pace last season and both look like they can shoulder even more of the heavy lifting in the early part of this season.
Last season the Blazers made the playoffs without winning half their regular season games. This year’s team has a load of potential but are likely one more season away from challenging for the top of the division. Not many teams are able to return the top three scorers from last season but the Blazers are able to do so this year. Offensively, this team has Zane Franklin who has nearly doubled his point production season over season each of the past three seasons. That steady improvement bodes well for the 20 year old who will lead a team with a number of young dynamic offensive players. Connor Zary was over one point per game last season but as a late 2001 was not eligible for last season’s NHL Entry draft. expect him to be even more prolific this year. Orrin Centazzo was the third member of that trio with 51 points last year. Add in ’03 born Logan Stankoven and Kamloops is developing some excellent forward depth that should sustain them the next couple of seasons. Defensively they possess a number of puck movers although none really appear to have the dynamic quality of a number one defender. Dylan Garand had a strong season last year and the starting job is his to lose. There is a lot of quality within this roster and they could surprise this season but it may be one year too early. Look for them to emerge as a strong contender over the next few seasons.
The Royals have seen years of stable playoff hockey and this year looks to be a bit of a struggle. They have been battling with Vancouver the past few seasons at the top of the division but it will be tough for them to compete against the top teams now. They have less scoring than last season and a review of their roster doesn’t breed a ton of confidence. Keanu Derungs, their recent import selection, will be relied upon to generate offense playing on the wing with established center Kaid Oliver upon the latter’s return from injury. The rest of the Victoria roster is really made up of depth players that will struggle against top lines across the league. There is a lot of experience in the crease for this team with 120 WHL games between Brock Gould and Shane Farkas, which should keep the team competitive but likely is not enough to ensure them a playoff spot.
The Cougars have struggled the past couple of seasons and don’t look like a team that will be turning the corner this year either. Josh Maser led the team in goals last season with 30 and will be counted on as their top producing forward. Goal scoring will be an issue again for them as import player Matej Toman has not found his offensive game since coming over from the Czech Republic. Tyson Upper is the top draft eligible forward on the roster but the best draft prospect might be Rhett Rhinehart who is a towering 6-4” defender with a bit of an old school ruggedness to his game. Taylor Gauthier has the pedigree of a top goalie but with the team in front of him has put up pretty pedestrian numbers. With goalie of the future Tyler Brennan on the roster expect this to be a 1A and 1B scenario unless they are able to move Gauthier to a contender as the season moves along.

Portland has to be the model franchise in terms of drafting players, developing them and producing the highest quality product on the ice. This year again speaks volumes about the organization. Both of the import players selected provide instant offensive talent to help replace the losses of Cody Glass, Joachim Blichfeld up front, and Jared Freadrich on the back end. This year Simon Knak and Jonas Brondberg (both 2020 draft eligible) step in and have both shown they are excellent playmakers. Cross Hanas looks ready to take a step up in responsibility after playing in the bottom six for most of last season. This year he plays the wing for Seth Jarvis who is also working his way up draft boards early. John Ludvig (Florida, 3rd 2019) sets the tone in the defensive zone with his physical, no non-sense approach to defending. This team consistently rebuilds on the fly and look to have successfully backfilled roles with a combination of internal progression and astute import draft selections. The crease is held down by Joel Hofer (St. Louis, 4th 2018), a behemoth of a man at 6-5” brought in last year to solidify the only perceived weakness on the roster. He may start 60 games this year and should finally start piling up some wins after his first 70 starts in the league.
In a division where goaltending dictates so much, the addition of import Lukas Parik (Los Angeles, 3rd 2019) could be enough to push Spokane to a clear top two finish in the division but more importantly, it provides a chance to get out of the US division in the playoffs. In front of him they have a strong group of defenders led by Filip Kral (Toronto, 5th 2018). He has a good shot and has more offensive potential than most late round picks. Up front, scoring will be by committee but Adam Beckman (Minnesota, 3rd 2019) will be counted on to improve his 32 goal season from a year ago. Somewhat surprisingly undrafted winger Luke Toporowski has something to prove this season and will be a big part of any team success that Spokane has. Jack Finley had solid numbers in a depth role last season but the 2020 draft eligible player should be able to carve out a top six role this season. Spokane’s biggest “X” factor comes from diminutive defender Ty Smith (New Jersey, 1st 2018) and how he responds to not making the Devils’ opening day roster. At his best, he is a dynamic puck mover and playmaker that can dictate the pace of play like few others can in this league.
Defensively, Everett is consistently a top team in terms of goals against. Since 2016 they have given up the fewest goals and it hasn’t even been close. In 2016-17, they led in that department by 29 goals, by 46 in 2017-18, and by 26 in 2018-19. That is domination. It is also coaching. Dennis Williams has consistently brought something to the league that other coaches have struggled to contend with and that is a tenacious, physical team defense. It hasn’t hurt that the crease has been held down very well by Carter Hart (Philadelphia, 2nd 2016), and now Dustin Wolf (Calgary, 7th 2019). Everett relies on overage and import scoring talent and Bryce Kindopp and Michal Gut will be looking to provide that this season.
Five of the top dozen teams in the entire WHL usually come from this division and it is entirely possible that all five of these teams again make the playoffs. Top scorer from last year Matthew Wedman (Florida, 7th 2019) is back in the fold targeting another career year after reaching 40 goals last season. He will have to do so with new linemates this year. Henrik Rybinski (Florida, 5th 2019), Payton Mount, and Michael Horon will all take more prominent roles within the offense this season which should give NHL scouts plenty to ponder. Defensively they will be anchored by Simon Kubicek a late ’01 who is much more than a big frame on the back end. Between the pipes they have Roddy Ross (Philadelphia, 6th 2019) perhaps the best named player in the league. He has the pro frame that NHL teams covet and has been solid in his first 25 WHL games.
Tri-City is a difficult team to bet against. Each year they seem to find a way to be more than the sum of their parts. Sasha Mutala (Colorado 5th, 2019) has grown up in this organization and carries the expectations forward with this younger roster. He and Samuel Huo will lead the next generation of Tri-City players through the 2019-20 season. The difference may come in the form of Beck Warm, a 20 year old netminder who played a league high 61 games last year with a well earned 2.94 GAA and a .916 save percentage. He led the league in shots and saves last year and that will have to continue along that path if Tri-Cities are expected to compete for the Wild Card.
***
This year the US division is again the most competitive in the WHL with the possibility of all five teams making the playoffs. Out East, the rebranded Winnipeg ICE have done a lot to reinvent the club after several struggling seasons in Cranbrook and have started strong. Saskatchewan has two teams in Saskatoon and Prince Albert that met in 2nd round of last season’s playoffs and it could easily play out that way again this season. The Central Division boils down to a Battle of Highway 2, as both Calgary and Edmonton have mature and deep rosters that can match up against anyone. There are always a few surprises as the season chugs along and it could be a Medicine Hat or an Everett who ride top end goaltending right through the playoffs. Perhaps an upstart Kamloops team is ready to compete this year. Regardless of how it all plays out, it is an exciting time to get into the local barns and watch these young players develop into future pros. Below is a top 10 of draft eligible players
Top 10 (Alphabetical Order)
Braden Schneider, Brandon
Connor McClennon, Winnipeg
Connor Zary, Kamloops
Jake Neighbours, Edmonton
Justin Sourdif, Vancouver
Kaiden Guhle, Prince Albert
Kyle Crnkovic, Saskatoon
Kasper Puutio, Swift Current
Seth Jarvis, Portland
Honorable Mentions:
Ben King, Swift Current
Carter Savoie, Sherwood Park (AJHL)
Christoffer Sedoff, Red Deer
Cross Hanas, Portland
Michael Benning, Sherwood Park (AJHL)
Pavel Novak, Kelowna
Ridly Greig, Brandon
Simon Knak, Portland
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American center Jack Hughes or Finnish Winger Kaapo Kakko?
That is the decision facing the New Jersey Devils who won the draft lottery for the second time in the past three seasons and hold the top pick in the 2019 NHL Entry Draft.
Hughes (5-foot-10, 170 pounds) led the USA Hockey National Team Development Program under-18 team in scoring while setting the NTDP career record for assists (154) and points (228) in two seasons (110 games) with the program.
He earned the highest Overall Future Projection (OFP) score of 64.50, as per the 20/80 grading system developed by McKeen's Director of Scouting Ryan Wagman.
Skating, shooting, puck skills, hockey IQ, physicality - these are the attributes measured for skaters using the 20/80 grading system to arrive at an Overall Future Projection (OFP) score.
Six areas are assessed for goalies: athleticism/quickness, compete/temperament, vision/play reading, technique/style, rebound control and puck handling.
BROADWAY KAAPO
Kakko (6-foot-2, 195 pounds) earned the next highest OFP score at 64.00.
The Turku, Finland native will go to the New York Rangers with the second pick, their highest draft position since taking Brad Park in 1966 before expansion (1967-68).
Kakko led Finland with six goals while winning gold at the 2019 World Championships at just 18 years, 102 days old to become the youngest player in IIHF history to win gold at the Under-18, Under-20, and WM (World Men) levels, supplanting Connor McDavid of Canada (19 years, 130 days) from the record books.
The Chicago Blackhawks have the number three pick with the top defenseman Bowen Byram of the Vancouver Giants next on the McKeen's OFP scale (63.40).
Seven players in total received OFP scores of at least 60.00 this season, up from five in 2018 - and just two in 2017 when the Devils selected Nino Hischier first overall.
The next five spots in the rankings are all centers - Kirby Dach of Saskatoon (63.20 OFP), Dylan Cozens of Lethbridge (61.40), the NTDP duo of Trevor Zegras (61.25) and Alex Turcotte (60.00), and Peyton Krebs of Kootenay (59.65).
ALL AMERICAN

Spencer Knight of the NTDP is the top-rated goaltender available (55.75 OFP) at No. 32 in the McKeen's rankings.
Knight will likely go in the opening round of what will be a record haul for the U.S. National Team Development Program as upwards of eight players could be taken in the top 31 selections.
As for past records, the Brandon Wheat Kings (WHL) had four players taken in the opening round of the 1979 NHL Draft - as did the Toronto Marlboros (OHA) in 1972 and the Montreal Junior Canadiens (OHA) in 1969.
Along with Hughes (1st), Zegras (6th), and Turcotte (7th), wingers Matthew Boldy and Cole Caufield are ranked at No. 12 and 13 on the McKeen's list, with defenseman Cam York at No. 17 and center John Beecher at 30th.
Caufield (5-foot-7, 165 pounds) scored 14 goals at the U18 World Junior Championship, tying Alex Ovechkin's single-tournament goals record. However, the United States lost in a shootout to Russia in the semi-finals.
There are also four others in the program ranked in the 32 to 62 range (second round) - all defensemen - Marshall Warren (35th), Alex Vlasic (54th), Henry Thrun (58th) and Drew Helleson (62nd).
In total, 16 players from the NTDP are ranked among the top 100.
SWEDE GOLD - SWEET SEIDER

Sweden won a first-ever gold medal at the U18 World Juniors.
Four blueliners on that Swedish team are first-round candidates led by Philip Broberg of AIK, named 'Top Defenceman' at the U18 tournament, and Victor Soderstrom of Brynas, ranked No. 9 and 10 respectively on McKeen's.
U18 captain Tobias Bjornfot of Djurgardens is ranked 19th and Albert Johansson of Farjestads is 26th.
Following Dominik Bokk's selection in 2018 (25th to St. Louis), Germany will produce another first-round pick this year in Adler Mannheim defenseman Moritz Seider.
The 6-foot-3, 185-pound, right-shot blueliner displayed impressive skills and maturity for his age while appearing at the 2019 World Championships (5-2-0-2).
Seider earned an OFP score of 57.50 and is ranked No. 15.
He will become the highest-selected German-born player at the NHL Draft since the Edmonton Oilers took Leon Draisaitl third overall in 2014.
Here are our final 2019 NHL Draft Rankings. They are a culmination of a season’s worth of prospect analysis and coverage on mckeenshockey.com and the tremendous work put in rinks and looking at screens and numbers from our committed team. Enjoy!
| RANK | PLAYER | POS | TEAM | HT/WT | DOB | Nation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jack Hughes | C | NTDP (USA) | 5-10/170 | 14-May-01 | USA |
| 2 | Kaapo Kakko | RW | TPS Turku (Fin) | 6-2/195 | 13-Feb-01 | Finland |
| 3 | Bowen Byram | D | Vancouver (WHL) | 6-0/195 | 13-Jun-01 | Canada |
| 4 | Kirby Dach | C | Saskatoon (WHL) | 6-3/200 | 21-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 5 | Dylan Cozens | C | Lethbridge (WHL) | 6-3/185 | 9-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 6 | Trevor Zegras | C | NTDP (USA) | 6-0/170 | 20-Mar-01 | USA |
| 7 | Alex Turcotte | C | NTDP (USA) | 5-11/185 | 26-Feb-01 | USA |
| 8 | Peyton Krebs | C | Kootenay (WHL) | 5-11/180 | 26-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 9 | Philip Broberg | D | AIK (Swe 2) | 6-3/200 | 25-Jun-01 | Sweden |
| 10 | Victor Soderstrom | D | Brynas (Swe) | 5-11/180 | 26-Feb-01 | Sweden |
| 11 | Vasili Podkolzin | RW | SKA-1946 St. Pete. (Rus Jr) | 6-1/190 | 24-Jun-01 | Russia |
| 12 | Matthew Boldy | LW | NTDP (USA) | 6-1/190 | 5-Apr-01 | USA |
| 13 | Cole Caufield | RW | NTDP (USA) | 5-7/165 | 2-Jan-01 | USA |
| 14 | Raphael Lavoie | RW | Halifax (QMJHL) | 6-4/195 | 25-Sep-00 | Canada |
| 15 | Moritz Seider | D | Adler Mannheim (DEL) | 6-3/185 | 6-Apr-01 | Germany |
| 16 | Simon Holmstrom | RW | HV 71 (Swe Jr) | 6-1/185 | 24-May-01 | Sweden |
| 17 | Cam York | D | NTDP (USA) | 5-11/175 | 5-Jan-01 | USA |
| 18 | Alex Newhook | C | Victoria (BCHL) | 5-10/195 | 28-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 19 | Tobias Bjornfot | D | Djurgardens (Swe Jr) | 6-0/200 | 6-Apr-01 | Sweden |
| 20 | Philip Tomasino | C | Niagara (OHL) | 5-11/180 | 28-Jul-01 | Canada |
| 21 | Arthur Kaliyev | RW | Hamilton (OHL) | 6-2/190 | 26-Jun-01 | USA |
| 22 | Ryan Suzuki | C | Barrie (OHL) | 6-0/180 | 28-May-01 | Canada |
| 23 | Samuel Poulin | LW | Sherbrooke (QMJHL) | 6-1/205 | 25-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 24 | Thomas Harley | D | Mississauga (OHL) | 6-3/190 | 19-Aug-01 | Canada |
| 25 | Ryan Johnson | D | Sioux Falls (USHL) | 6-0/175 | 24-Jul-01 | USA |
| 26 | Albert Johansson | D | Farjestads (Swe Jr) | 5-11/165 | 4-Jan-01 | Sweden |
| 27 | Robert Mastrosimone | LW | Chicago (USHL) | 5-10/160 | 24-Jan-01 | USA |
| 28 | Connor McMichael | C | London (OHL) | 5-11/175 | 15-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 29 | Matthew Robertson | D | Edmonton (WHL) | 6-3/200 | 9-Mar-01 | Canada |
| 30 | John Beecher | C | NTDP (USA) | 6-3/210 | 5-Apr-01 | USA |
| 31 | Pavel Dorofeyev | LW | Magnitogorsk (KHL) | 6-1/170 | 26-Oct-00 | Russia |
| 32 | Spencer Knight | G | NTDP (USA) | 6-3/195 | 19-Apr-01 | USA |
| 33 | Bobby Brink | RW | Sioux City (USHL) | 5-10/165 | 8-Jul-01 | USA |
| 34 | Brett Leason | RW | Prince Albert (WHL) | 6-4/200 | 30-Apr-99 | Canada |
| 35 | Marshall Warren | D | NTDP (USA) | 5-11/170 | 20-Apr-01 | USA |
| 36 | Egor Afanasyev | RW | Muskegon (USHL) | 6-3/205 | 23-Jan-01 | Russia |
| 37 | Ville Heinola | D | Lukko Rauma (Fin) | 5-11/180 | 3-Feb-01 | Finland |
| 38 | Nolan Foote | LW | Kelowna (WHL) | 6-3/190 | 29-Nov-00 | Canada |
| 39 | Samuel Fagemo | RW | Frolunda (Swe) | 6-0/195 | 14-Mar-00 | Sweden |
| 40 | Nick Robertson | LW | Peterborough (OHL) | 5-9/160 | 11-Sep-01 | USA |
| 41 | Nils Hoglander | RW | Rogle (Swe) | 5-9/185 | 20-Dec-00 | Sweden |
| 42 | Jamieson Rees | C | Sarnia (OHL) | 5-10/175 | 26-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 43 | Jakob Pelletier | LW | Moncton (QMJHL) | 5-9/165 | 7-Mar-01 | Canada |
| 44 | Antti Tuomisto | D | Assat Pori (Fin Jr) | 6-4/190 | 20-Jan-01 | Finland |
| 45 | Lassi Thomson | D | Kelowna (WHL) | 5-11/190 | 24-Sep-00 | Finland |
| 46 | Michal Teply | LW | Bili Tygri Liberec (Cze) | 6-3/185 | 27-May-01 | Czech |
| 47 | Brayden Tracey | LW | Moose Jaw (WHL) | 6-0/175 | 28-May-01 | Canada |
| 48 | Arseni Gritsyuk | RW | Omskie Yastreby (Rus Jr) | 5-10/170 | 15-Mar-01 | Russia |
| 49 | Yegor Chinakhov | RW | Omskie Yastreby (Rus Jr) | 6-0/175 | 1-Feb-01 | Russia |
| 50 | Mattias Norlinder | D | MoDo (Swe Jr) | 5-11/180 | 12-Apr-00 | Sweden |
| 51 | Karl Henriksson | C | Frolunda (Swe Jr) | 5-9/165 | 5-Feb-01 | Sweden |
| 52 | Vladislav Kolyachonok | D | Flint (OHL) | 6-1/185 | 26-May-01 | Belarus |
| 53 | Nikola Pasic | RW | Linkopings (Swe Jr) | 5-10/185 | 16-Oct-00 | Sweden |
| 54 | Alex Vlasic | D | NTDP (USA) | 6-6/200 | 5-Jun-01 | USA |
| 55 | Pyotr Kochetkov | G | HK Ryazan (Rus 2) | 6-1/175 | 25-Jun-99 | Russia |
| 56 | Albin Grewe | RW | Djurgardens (Swe Jr) | 5-11/190 | 22-Mar-01 | Sweden |
| 57 | Trevor Janicke | C | Central Illinois (USHL) | 5-10/195 | 25-Dec-00 | USA |
| 58 | Henry Thrun | D | NTDP (USA) | 6-2/190 | 12-Mar-01 | USA |
| 59 | Yegor Spiridonov | C | Stalnye Lisy Mag. (Rus Jr) | 6-2/195 | 22-Jan-01 | Russia |
| 60 | Patrik Puistola | LW | Tappara (Fin Jr) | 6-0/175 | 11-Jan-01 | Finland |
| 61 | Ilya Nikolayev | C | Loko Yaroslavl (Rus Jr) | 6-0/190 | 26-Jun-01 | Russia |
| 62 | Drew Helleson | D | NTDP (USA) | 6-3/195 | 26-Mar-01 | USA |
| 63 | Graeme Clarke | RW | Ottawa (OHL) | 5-11/175 | 24-Apr-01 | Canada |
| 64 | Ronnie Attard | D | Tri-City (USHL) | 6-3/210 | 20-Mar-99 | USA |
| 65 | Mads Sogaard | G | Medicine Hat (WHL) | 6-7/195 | 13-Dec-00 | Denmark |
| 66 | Oleg Zaitsev | C | Red Deer (WHL) | 6-1/185 | 7-Jan-01 | Russia |
| 67 | Isaiah Saville | G | Tri-City (USHL) | 6-1/190 | 21-Sep-00 | USA |
| 68 | Kaedan Korczak | D | Kelowna (WHL) | 6-3/190 | 29-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 69 | Adam Najman | C | Benatky nad Jizerou (Cze 2) | 5-11/175 | 23-Jan-01 | Czech |
| 70 | Mikko Kokkonen | D | Jukurit (Fin) | 5-11/200 | 18-Jan-01 | Finland |
| 71 | Michael Vukojevic | D | Kitchener (OHL) | 6-3/210 | 8-Jun-01 | Canada |
| 72 | Patrick Moynihan | RW | NTDP (USA) | 5-11/185 | 23-Jan-01 | USA |
| 73 | Michael Gildon | LW | NTDP (USA) | 6-1/195 | 21-Jun-01 | USA |
| 74 | Judd Caulfield | RW | NTDP (USA) | 6-3/205 | 19-Mar-01 | USA |
| 75 | Vladislav Firstov | LW | Waterloo (USHL) | 6-1/180 | 19-Jun-01 | USA |
| 76 | Hugo Alnefelt | G | HV 71 (Swe Jr) | 6-3/195 | 4-Jun-01 | Sweden |
| 77 | Gianni Fairbrother | D | Everett (WHL) | 6-0/195 | 30-Sep-00 | Canada |
| 78 | Jackson Lacombe | D | Shattuck-St. Mary's (USHS-MN) | 6-1/170 | 9-Jan-01 | USA |
| 79 | Ethan Keppen | LW | Flint (OHL) | 6-2/210 | 20-Mar-01 | Canada |
| 80 | Anttoni Honka | D | JyP Jyvaskyla (Fin) | 5-10/180 | 5-Oct-00 | Finland |
| 81 | Roman Bychkov | D | Loko Yaroslavl (Rus Jr) | 5-11/160 | 10-Feb-01 | Russia |
| 82 | Ryder Donovan | C | Duluth East (USHS-MN) | 6-3/185 | 4-Oct-00 | USA |
| 83 | Nathan Legare | RW | Baie-Comeau (QMJHL) | 6-0/205 | 11-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 84 | Billy Constantinou | D | Kingston (OHL) | 6-0/185 | 25-Mar-01 | Canada |
| 85 | Vojtech Strondala | C | Slavia Trebic (Cze 2) | 5-7/155 | 17-Dec-00 | Czech |
| 86 | Case McCarthy | D | NTDP (USA) | 6-1/195 | 9-Jan-01 | USA |
| 87 | Simon Lundmark | D | Linkopings (Swe) | 6-2/200 | 8-Oct-00 | Sweden |
| 88 | Zac Jones | D | Tri-City (USHL) | 5-10/175 | 18-Oct-00 | USA |
| 89 | Erik Portillo | G | Frolunda (Swe Jr) | 6-6/210 | 3-Sep-00 | Sweden |
| 90 | Daniil Misyul | D | Loko Yaroslavl (Rus Jr) | 6-3/180 | 20-Oct-00 | Russia |
| 91 | Daniil Gutik | LW | Loko Yaroslavl (Rus Jr) | 6-3/180 | 31-Aug-01 | Russia |
| 92 | Hunter Jones | G | Peterborough (OHL) | 6-4/195 | 21-Sep-00 | Canada |
| 93 | Michael Koster | D | Chaska (USHS-MN) | 5-9/175 | 13-Apr-01 | USA |
| 94 | Aliaksei Protas | C | Prince Albert (WHL) | 6-5/205 | 6-Jan-01 | Belarus |
| 95 | Blake Murray | C | Sudbury (OHL) | 6-2/190 | 5-Jul-01 | Canada |
| 96 | Cole MacKay | RW | Sault Ste Marie (OHL) | 5-10/190 | 13-Jun-01 | Canada |
| 97 | Trent Miner | G | Vancouver (WHL) | 6-0/185 | 5-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 98 | Semyon Chistyakov | D | Tolpar Ufa (Rus Jr) | 5-10/170 | 7-Aug-01 | Russia |
| 99 | Leevi Aaltonen | RW | KalPa (Fin Jr) | 5-9/175 | 24-Jan-01 | Finland |
| 100 | Antti Saarela | C | Lukko Rauma (Fin) | 5-11/185 | 27-Jun-01 | Finland |
| 101 | John Farinacci | C | Dexter (USHS-MA) | 5-11/185 | 14-Feb-01 | USA |
| 102 | Marcus Kallionkieli | LW | Sioux City (USHL) | 6-2/195 | 20-Mar-01 | Finland |
| 103 | Andre Lee | LW | Sioux Falls (USHL) | 6-4/200 | 26-Jul-00 | Sweden |
| 104 | Kirill Slepets | RW | Loko Yaroslavl (Rus Jr) | 5-10/165 | 6-Apr-99 | Russia |
| 105 | Shane Pinto | C | Tri-City (USHL) | 6-2/190 | 12-Nov-00 | USA |
| 106 | Jordan Spence | D | Moncton (QMJHL) | 5-10/165 | 24-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 107 | Keean Washkurak | C | Mississauga (OHL) | 5-10/185 | 16-Aug-01 | Canada |
| 108 | Owen Lindmark | C | NTDP (USA) | 6-0/195 | 17-May-01 | USA |
| 109 | Matej Blumel | RW | Waterloo (USHL) | 5-11/200 | 31-May-00 | Czech |
| 110 | Jack Malone | RW | Youngstown (USHL) | 6-1/190 | 13-Oct-00 | USA |
| 111 | Jayden Struble | D | St. Sebastian's (USHS-MA) | 6-0/195 | 8-Sep-01 | USA |
| 112 | Artemi Knyazev | D | Chicoutimi (QMJHL) | 5-11/180 | 4-Jan-01 | Russia |
| 113 | Maxim Cajkovic | RW | Saint John (QMJHL) | 5-11/185 | 3-Jan-01 | Slovakia |
| 114 | Matvey Guskov | C | London (OHL) | 6-1/180 | 30-Jan-01 | Russia |
| 115 | Nikita Okhotyuk | D | Ottawa (OHL) | 6-1/195 | 4-Dec-00 | Russia |
| 116 | Valeri Orekhov | D | Barys Astana (KHL) | 6-1/190 | 17-Jul-99 | Kazakhstan |
| 117 | Zdenek Sedlak | RW | Karpat Oulu (Fin) | 6-2/205 | 23-Mar-00 | Czech |
| 118 | Alexander Yakovenko | D | Muskegon (USHL) | 5-11/175 | 22-Feb-98 | Russia |
| 119 | Yannick Bruschweiler | C | GC Kusnacht Lions (Sui 2) | 5-10/175 | 29-Aug-99 | Switzerland |
| 120 | Ilya Mironov | D | Loko Yaroslavl (Rus Jr) | 6-3/200 | 15-Mar-01 | Russia |
| 121 | Albert Lyckasen | D | Linkopings (Swe Jr) | 5-10/180 | 29-Jul-01 | Sweden |
| 122 | Keegan Stevenson | C | Guelph (OHL) | 6-1/185 | 31-Dec-00 | Canada |
| 123 | Ilya Konovalov | G | Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) | 6-0/195 | 13-Jul-98 | Russia |
| 124 | Cole Schwindt | RW | Mississauga (OHL) | 6-2/185 | 25-Apr-01 | Canada |
| 125 | Domenick Fensore | D | NTDP (USA) | 5-7/155 | 7-Sep-01 | USA |
| 126 | William Francis | D | Cedar Rapids (USHL) | 6-5/210 | 16-Nov-00 | USA |
| 127 | Simon Gnyp | D | Kolner (Ger Jr) | 5-11/180 | 10-Sep-01 | Germany |
| 128 | Tuukka Tieksola | RW | Karpat Oulu (Fin Jr) | 5-10/150 | 22-Jun-01 | Finland |
| 129 | Ethan Phillips | C | Sioux Falls (USHL) | 5-9/150 | 7-May-01 | Canada |
| 130 | Linus Pettersson | RW | MoDo (Swe) | 5-7/145 | 11-Apr-00 | Sweden |
| 131 | Matias Maccelli | LW | Dubuque (USHL) | 5-11/170 | 14-Oct-00 | Finland |
| 132 | Anthony Romano | C | Sioux Falls (USHL) | 5-11/185 | 7-Oct-00 | Canada |
| 133 | Nikita Alexandrov | C | Charlottetown (QMJHL) | 6-0/180 | 16-Sep-00 | Germany |
| 134 | Arturs Silovs | G | HS Riga (Lat) | 6-4/205 | 22-Mar-01 | Latvia |
| 135 | August Hedlund | G | AIK (Swe Jr) | 6-4/185 | 7-Jan-00 | Sweden |
| 136 | Nicholas Porco | LW | Saginaw (OHL) | 6-0/175 | 12-Mar-01 | Canada |
| 137 | Joe Carroll | C | Sault Ste Marie (OHL) | 6-2/200 | 1-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 138 | Alex Beaucage | RW | Rouyn Noranda (QMJHL) | 6-1/195 | 25-Jul-01 | Canada |
| 139 | Luke Toporowski | C | Spokane (WHL) | 5-11/180 | 12-Apr-01 | USA |
| 140 | Sasha Mutala | RW | Tri-City (WHL) | 6-0/200 | 6-May-01 | Canada |
| 141 | Harrison Blaisdell | C | Chilliwack (BCHL) | 5-11/180 | 18-Mar-01 | Canada |
| 142 | Valentin Nussbaumer | C | Shawinigan (QMJHL) | 5-11/165 | 25-Sep-00 | Switzerland |
| 143 | Dustin Wolf | G | Everett (WHL) | 6-0/155 | 16-Apr-01 | USA |
| 144 | Ondrej Psenicka | RW | Sparta Praha (Cze Jr) | 6-5/195 | 7-Jan-01 | Czech |
| 145 | Juuso Parssinen | C | TPS Turku (Fin Jr) | 6-2/205 | 1-Feb-01 | Finland |
| 146 | Mitchell Brewer | D | Oshawa (OHL) | 6-0/205 | 20-Mar-01 | Canada |
| 147 | Lukas Parik | G | Liberec (Cze Jr) | 6-4/185 | 15-Mar-01 | Czech |
| 148 | Grant Silianoff | RW | Cedar Rapids (USHL) | 5-11/170 | 4-Jan-01 | USA |
| 149 | Josh Nodler | C | Fargo (USHL) | 5-11/195 | 27-Apr-01 | USA |
| 150 | Bryce Brodzinski | RW | Blaine (USHS-MN) | 6-0/195 | 9-Aug-00 | USA |
| 151 | Colten Ellis | G | Rimouski (QMJHL) | 6-1/190 | 5-Oct-00 | Canada |
| 152 | Rhett Pitlick | LW | Chaska (USHS-MN) | 5-9/160 | 7-Feb-01 | USA |
| 153 | Dillon Hamaliuk | LW | Seattle (WHL) | 6-3/190 | 30-Oct-00 | Canada |
| 154 | Aleksei Sergeev | C | Quebec (QMJHL) | 5-9/185 | 22-May-00 | Russia |
| 155 | Jack York | D | Barrie (OHL) | 6-0/190 | 17-Sep-00 | Canada |
| 156 | Jacob LeGuerrier | D | Sault Ste Marie (OHL) | 6-1/200 | 22-Nov-00 | Canada |
| 157 | Zach Uens | D | Wellington (OJHL) | 6-1/180 | 13-May-01 | Canada |
| 158 | Josh Williams | RW | Edmonton (WHL) | 6-1/195 | 8-Mar-01 | Canada |
| 159 | Elmer Soderblom | RW | Frolunda (Swe Jr) | 6-6/220 | 5-Jul-01 | Sweden |
| 160 | Kyle Topping | C | Kelowna (WHL) | 5-11/185 | 18-Nov-99 | Canada |
| 161 | Albin Sundsvik | C | Skelleftea (Swe Jr) | 6-1/185 | 27-Apr-01 | Sweden |
| 162 | Cameron Rowe | G | NTDP (USA) | 6-2/200 | 1-Jun-01 | USA |
| 163 | Filip Lindberg | G | Massachusetts (HE) | 6-0/180 | 31-Jan-99 | Finland |
| 164 | Liam Svensson | C | Frolunda (Swe Jr 18) | 6-3/195 | 2-Feb-01 | Sweden |
| 165 | Xavier Simoneau | C | Drummondville (QMJHL) | 5-6/170 | 19-May-01 | Canada |
| 166 | Pavel Gogolev | RW | Guelph (OHL) | 6-0/175 | 19-Feb-00 | Russia |
| 167 | Danil Antropov | LW | Oshawa (OHL) | 6-1/185 | 20-Dec-00 | Canada |
| 168 | Daniel D'Amico | LW | Windsor (OHL) | 5-9/185 | 26-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 169 | Vladimir Alistrov | LW | Edmonton (WHL) | 6-2/175 | 12-Feb-01 | Belarus |
| 170 | Reece Newkirk | C | Portland (WHL) | 5-11/175 | 20-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 171 | Sergei Alkhimov | LW | Regina (WHL) | 6-0/210 | 3-Jul-01 | Russia |
| 172 | Adam Beckman | LW | Spokane (WHL) | 6-1/170 | 10-May-01 | Canada |
| 173 | Alexander Campbell | LW | Victoria (BCHL) | 5-10/150 | 27-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 174 | Taylor Gauthier | G | Prince George (WHL) | 6-1/195 | 15-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 175 | Max Crozier | D | Sioux Falls (USHL) | 6-1/195 | 19-Apr-00 | Canada |
| 176 | Santeri Hatakka | D | Jokerit (Fin Jr) | 6-0/175 | 15-Jan-01 | Finland |
| 177 | Kalle Loponen | D | Hermes (Fin 2) | 5-10/185 | 13-Mar-01 | Finland |
| 178 | Eric Ciccolini | RW | Toronto Jr Canadiens (OJHL) | 5-11/160 | 14-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 179 | Aku Raty | RW | Karpat Oulu (Fin Jr) | 5-11/170 | 5-Jul-01 | Finland |
| 180 | Arvid Costmar | C | Linkopings (Swe Jr) | 5-11/180 | 7-Jul-01 | Sweden |
| 181 | Matt Brown | LW | Des Moines (USHL) | 5-9/180 | 9-Aug-99 | USA |
| 182 | Sven Leuenberger | C | Zug (Sui) | 5-10/185 | 18-Feb-99 | Switzerland |
| 183 | Jasper Patrikainen | G | Pelicans (Fin) | 6-0/175 | 1-Jul-00 | Finland |
| 184 | Jack Williams | G | Springfield (NAHL) | 6-3/175 | 21-Jun-01 | USA |
| 185 | Mikhail Abramov | C | Victoriaville (QMJHL) | 5-10/160 | 26-Mar-01 | Russia |
| 186 | Ben Brinkman | D | Minnesota (B1G) | 6-0/215 | 4-Oct-00 | USA |
| 187 | Chris Giroday | D | Green Bay (USHL) | 6-1/175 | 13-Dec-00 | Canada |
| 188 | Petr Cajka | C | Erie (OHL) | 6-0/170 | 11-Dec-00 | Czech |
| 189 | Mark Kastelic | C | Calgary (WHL) | 6-3/215 | 11-Mar-99 | USA |
| 190 | Kevin Wall | RW | Chilliwack (BCHL) | 6-0/190 | 1-Feb-00 | USA |
| 191 | Lucas Edmonds | RW | Karlskrona (Swe Jr) | 5-11/175 | 27-Jan-01 | Sweden |
| 192 | Carter Gylander | G | Sherwood Park (AJHL) | 6-5/175 | 5-Jun-01 | Canada |
| 193 | Ethan de Jong | RW | Quinnipiac (ECAC) | 5-10/170 | 12-Jul-99 | Canada |
| 194 | Wiljami Myllyla | RW | HIFK Helsinki (Fin Jr) | 6-0/170 | 9-Apr-01 | Finland |
| 195 | Yaroslav Likhachyov | RW | Gatineau (QMJHL) | 5-10/170 | 2-Sep-01 | Russia |
| 196 | Layton Ahac | D | Prince George (BCHL) | 6-2/195 | 22-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 197 | Alfred Barklund | D | Orebro (Swe Jr) | 6-2/200 | 21-Oct-00 | Sweden |
| 198 | Radek Muzik | LW | Lulea (Swe Jr) | 6-3/180 | 25-Mar-01 | Sweden |
| 199 | Marcus Pedersen | RW | Linkopings (Swe Jr) | 6-2/165 | 25-May-01 | Sweden |
| 200 | Filip Koffer | RW | Pardubice (Cze Jr) | 5-11/175 | 4-Mar-01 | Czech |
| 201 | Henri Nikkanen | C | Jukurit (Fin Jr) | 6-3/200 | 28-Apr-01 | Finland |
| 202 | Marc Del Gaizo | D | Massachusetts (HE) | 5-9/190 | 11-Oct-99 | USA |
| 203 | Tag Bertuzzi | LW | Hamilton (OHL) | 6-0/200 | 18-Feb-01 | Canada |
| 204 | Martin Hugo Has | D | Tappara (Fin Jr) | 6-4/190 | 2-Feb-01 | Czech |
| 205 | Jet Greaves | G | Barrie (OHL) | 5-11/165 | 30-Mar-01 | Canada |
| 206 | Mason Millman | D | Saginaw (OHL) | 6-1/175 | 18-Jul-01 | Canada |
| 207 | Janis Jerome Moser | D | Biel-Bienne (Sui) | 6-0/160 | 6-Jun-00 | Switzerland |
| 208 | Nick Abruzzese | C | Chicago (USHL) | 5-9/160 | 4-Jun-99 | USA |
| 209 | Logan Barlage | C | Lethbridge (WHL) | 6-4/200 | 7-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 210 | Carter Berger | D | Victoria (BCHL) | 6-0/200 | 17-Sep-99 | Canada |
| 211 | Nando Eggenberger | LW | Oshawa (OHL) | 6-2/205 | 7-Oct-99 | Switzerland |
| 212 | Tyce Thompson | RW | Providence (HE) | 6-1/180 | 12-Jul-99 | USA |
| 213 | Nolan Maier | G | Saskatoon (WHL) | 6-0/175 | 10-Jan-01 | Canada |
| 214 | Massimo Rizzo | C | Penticton (BCHL) | 5-10/180 | 13-Jun-01 | Canada |
| 215 | Matthew Steinburg | C | St. Andrew's (CHS-O) | 6-1/185 | 7-Oct-00 | Canada |
| 216 | Jake Lee | D | Seattle (WHL) | 6-1/215 | 13-Jul-01 | Canada |
| 217 | Luke Bast | D | Brooks (AJHL) | 5-9/170 | 20-Nov-00 | Canada |
100 HONOURABLE MENTION IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER:
| PLAYER | POS | TEAM | HT/WT | DOB | Nation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HM | Nathan Allensen | D | Barrie (OHL) | 5-11/180 | 3-May-01 | Canada |
| HM | Ethan Anders | G | Red Deer (WHL) | 6-1/175 | 26-Sep-00 | Canada |
| HM | Nicklas Andrews | D | Des Moines (USHL) | 5-10/185 | 6-Jul-01 | USA |
| HM | Tyler Angle | C | Windsor (OHL) | 5-9/165 | 30-Sep-00 | Canada |
| HM | Marcel Barinka | C | Halifax (QMJHL) | 6-0/165 | 3-Jan-01 | Czech |
| HM | Roman Basran | G | Kelowna (WHL) | 6-1/195 | 26-Jul-01 | Canada |
| HM | Luke Bignell | C | Barrie (OHL) | 6-0/170 | 3-Nov-00 | Canada |
| HM | Mathieu Bizier | C | Gatineau (QMJHL) | 6-1/185 | 13-May-01 | Canada |
| HM | Oscar Bjerselius | C | Djurgardens (Swe Jr) | 5-11/185 | 18-Feb-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Kaden Bohlsen | C | Fargo (USHL) | 6-3/190 | 10-Jan-01 | USA |
| HM | Samuel Bolduc | D | Blainville-Boisbriand (QMJHL) | 6-3/210 | 9-Dec-00 | Canada |
| HM | Jakob Bondesson | D | Rogle (Swe Jr) | 6-1/185 | 22-May-00 | Sweden |
| HM | Cole Brady | G | Janesville (NAHL) | 6-5/165 | 12-Feb-01 | Canada |
| HM | Alex Brannstam | D | Djurgardens (Swe Jr) | 5-11/170 | 3-Jun-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Lynden Breen | C | Central Illinois (USHL) | 5-9/165 | 31-May-01 | USA |
| HM | Jonas Brondberg | D | Vaxjo Lakers (Swe Jr) | 6-4/190 | 26-Jan-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Jeremie Bucheler | D | Victoria (BCHL) | 6-4/200 | 31-Mar-00 | Canada |
| HM | Brett Budgell | LW | Charlottetown (QMJHL) | 5-11/190 | 1-Jun-01 | Canada |
| HM | Luka Burzan | RW | Brandon (WHL) | 6-0/190 | 7-Jan-00 | Canada |
| HM | Felix Carenfelt | LW | Djurgardens (Swe Jr) | 5-10/185 | 13-Feb-00 | Sweden |
| HM | Luke Cavallin | G | Flint (OHL) | 6-1/190 | 29-Apr-01 | Canada |
| HM | Filip Cederqvist | LW | Vaxjo Lakers (Swe) | 6-1/185 | 23-Aug-00 | Sweden |
| HM | Cole Coskey | RW | Saginaw (OHL) | 6-0/190 | 1-Jun-99 | USA |
| HM | Braden Doyle | D | Lawrence Academy (USHS-MA) | 5-11/170 | 24-Aug-01 | USA |
| HM | Justin Ducharme | LW | Chicoutimi (QMJHL) | 5-10/180 | 22-Feb-00 | Canada |
| HM | Nathan Dunkley | C | London (OHL) | 5-11/195 | 3-May-00 | Canada |
| HM | Pontus Englund | D | Timra (Swe Jr) | 6-3/205 | 15-Jul-00 | Sweden |
| HM | Lucas Feuk | LW | Sodertalje (Swe Jr) | 6-0/185 | 19-Feb-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Parker Ford | C | Sioux City (USHL) | 5-8/170 | 20-Jul-00 | USA |
| HM | Ethan Frisch | D | Fargo (USHL) | 5-11/190 | 29-Oct-00 | USA |
| HM | Maxim Golod | LW | Erie (OHL) | 5-11/175 | 18-Aug-00 | Canada |
| HM | Jacob Gronhagen | C | HV 71 (Swe Jr) | 6-6/215 | 18-Jan-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Maxence Guenette | D | Val d'Or (QMJHL) | 6-1/180 | 28-Apr-01 | Canada |
| HM | Hugo Gustafsson | C | Sodertalje (Swe 2) | 5-10/160 | 23-Feb-00 | Sweden |
| HM | Mack Guzda | G | Owen Sound (OHL) | 6-4/215 | 11-Jan-01 | USA |
| HM | Aidan Harper | G | Skipjacks HC 18U (USPHL) | 6-2/170 | 28-May-01 | USA |
| HM | Ludvig Hedstrom | D | Djurgardens (Swe Jr) | 5-11/175 | 14-Apr-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Konsta Hirvonen | LW | HIFK Helsinki (Fin Jr) | 5-11/165 | 1-Nov-00 | Finland |
| HM | Eric Hjorth | D | Linkopings (Swe Jr 18) | 6-3/190 | 8-Jan-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Samuel Hlavaj | G | Lincoln (USHL) | 6-4/185 | 29-May-01 | Slovakia |
| HM | Krystof Hrabik | C | Tri-City (WHL) | 6-4/220 | 24-Sep-99 | Czech |
| HM | Rickard Hugg | C | Kitchener (OHL) | 5-11/190 | 18-Jan-99 | Sweden |
| HM | Aaron Huglen | RW | Roseau (USHS-MN) | 5-11/165 | 6-Mar-01 | USA |
| HM | Aarne Intonen | C | TPS Turku (Fin Jr) | 5-11/180 | 17-Jul-01 | Finland |
| HM | Michal Ivan | D | Drummondville (QMJHL) | 6-1/185 | 18-Nov-99 | Slovakia |
| HM | Dylan Jackson | RW | Dubuque (USHL) | 5-9/175 | 6-Sep-01 | Canada |
| HM | Ty Jackson | C | Dubuque (USHL) | 5-7/150 | 6-Sep-01 | Canada |
| HM | Taro Jentzsch | C | Sherbrooke (QMJHL) | 6-1/155 | 11-Jun-00 | Germany |
| HM | Samuel Johannesson | D | Rogle (Swe Jr) | 5-11/175 | 27-Dec-00 | Sweden |
| HM | Wilson Johansson | RW | Farjestads (Swe Jr) | 5-11/175 | 11-Oct-00 | Sweden |
| HM | Brooklyn Kalmikov | C | Cape Breton (QMJHL) | 6-0/165 | 21-Apr-01 | Canada |
| HM | David Karlstrom | C | AIK (Swe Jr) | 6-1/185 | 12-Mar-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Mans Kramer | D | Frolunda (Swe Jr) | 6-2/180 | 6-Mar-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Jami Krannila | C | Sioux Falls (USHL) | 5-10/160 | 3-Oct-00 | Finland |
| HM | Grayson Ladd | D | Windsor (OHL) | 6-1/175 | 1-Mar-01 | Canada |
| HM | Martin Lang | LW | Kamloops (WHL) | 5-11/170 | 15-Sep-01 | Czech |
| HM | Oscar Lawner | LW | Farjestads (Swe Jr) | 5-11/185 | 13-Feb-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Jonathan Lemieux | G | Val d'Or (QMJHL) | 6-0/185 | 8-Jun-01 | Canada |
| HM | Hugo Leufvenius | LW | Sarnia (OHL) | 6-3/230 | 26-Mar-99 | Sweden |
| HM | Ethan Leyh | LW | Langley (BCHL) | 6-0/190 | 7-Sep-01 | Canada |
| HM | Josh Lopina | C | Lincoln (USHL) | 6-1/175 | 16-Feb-01 | USA |
| HM | Emil Malysjev | D | Saskatoon (WHL) | 6-3/190 | 1-May-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Matias Mantykivi | C | SaiPa (Fin Jr) | 5-11/160 | 21-Jun-01 | Finland |
| HM | Jeremy McKenna | RW | Moncton (QMJHL) | 5-10/175 | 20-Apr-99 | Canada |
| HM | Billy Moskal | C | London (OHL) | 6-0/185 | 22-Mar-00 | Canada |
| HM | Derek Mullahy | G | Dexter (USHS-MA) | 6-0/180 | 20-Mar-01 | USA |
| HM | Kim Nousiainen | D | KalPa (Fin Jr) | 5-9/170 | 14-Nov-00 | Finland |
| HM | Zachary Okabe | RW | Grande Prairie (AJHL) | 5-8/165 | 4-Jan-01 | Canada |
| HM | Oliver Okuliar | LW | Sherbrooke (QMJHL) | 6-1/190 | 24-May-00 | Slovakia |
| HM | Quinn Olson | LW | Okotoks (AJHL) | 5-10/170 | 9-May-01 | Canada |
| HM | Xavier Parent | LW | Halifax (QMJHL) | 5-8/170 | 23-Mar-01 | Canada |
| HM | Tommy Pasanen | D | Sioux City (USHL) | 6-3/220 | 30-Jul-01 | Germany |
| HM | Thomas Pelletier | D | Drummondville (QMJHL) | 6-2/195 | 23-Aug-01 | Canada |
| HM | Andrew Perrott | D | Owen Sound (OHL) | 5-11/205 | 24-Aug-01 | USA |
| HM | Kari Piiroinen | G | Windsor (OHL) | 6-0/175 | 1-Jul-01 | Finland |
| HM | Lukas Pilo | D | Orebro (Swe Jr) | 6-1/185 | 7-Sep-99 | Sweden |
| HM | Garrett Pinoniemi | C | Holy Family Catholic (USHS-MN) | 5-11/150 | 15-Jun-01 | USA |
| HM | Mason Primeau | C | North Bay (OHL) | 6-5/205 | 28-Jul-01 | Canada |
| HM | Kirby Proctor | D | Des Moines (USHL) | 6-3/190 | 19-Apr-01 | Canada |
| HM | Liam Ross | D | Sudbury (OHL) | 6-2/195 | 13-May-01 | Canada |
| HM | Henrik Rybinski | RW | Seattle (WHL) | 6-0/175 | 26-Jun-01 | Canada |
| HM | Nikita Sedov | D | Regina (WHL) | 6-1/185 | 5-May-01 | Russia |
| HM | Egor Serdyuk | RW | Victoriaville (QMJHL) | 5-10/160 | 3-Jun-01 | Russia |
| HM | Nikita Shashkov | LW | Sibir Novosibirsk (KHL) | 5-11/180 | 26-Mar-99 | Russia |
| HM | Ryan Siedem | D | Central Illinois (USHL) | 6-2/190 | 25-Feb-01 | USA |
| HM | Samuel Sjolund | D | AIK (Swe Jr) | 6-1/175 | 19-May-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Hunter Skinner | D | Muskegon (USHL) | 6-2/175 | 29-Apr-01 | USA |
| HM | Dominik Sojka | C | Banska Bystrica (Svk Jr) | 6-5/210 | 16-Feb-01 | Slovakia |
| HM | Kyen Sopa | RW | Niagara (OHL) | 5-9/185 | 30-Sep-00 | Switzerland |
| HM | Tyler Spott | D | Green Bay (USHL) | 5-10/170 | 17-Jun-00 | Canada |
| HM | Matthew Struthers | C | North Bay (OHL) | 6-2/210 | 26-Dec-99 | Canada |
| HM | Roope Taponen | G | HIFK Helsinki (Fin Jr) | 6-0/165 | 14-Mar-01 | Finland |
| HM | Jacob Tortora | LW | Barrie (OHL) | 5-6/165 | 25-Jul-99 | USA |
| HM | Bobby Trivigno | LW | Massachusetts (HE) | 5-8/155 | 19-Jan-99 | USA |
| HM | Eric Uba | RW | Flint (OHL) | 6-0/195 | 17-Dec-00 | Canada |
| HM | Max Wahlgren | RW | MoDo (Swe) | 6-1/185 | 9-May-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Carl Wang | D | Sodertalje (Swe Jr) | 6-2/195 | 28-Mar-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Matteus Ward | G | Linkopings (Swe Jr) | 6-0/170 | 7-Mar-01 | Sweden |
| HM | Lukas Wernblom | C | MoDo (Swe 2) | 5-9/170 | 22-Jul-00 | Sweden |
| HM | Jonathan Yantsis | RW | Kitchener (OHL) | 6-2/210 | 28-Apr-99 | Canada |
Czech Republic

Big 6'3" winger Michal Teply is the top draft eligible forward from the Czech leagues. A clever player with very good passing skills, he makes the right choices with the puck and sees the entire ice better than many of his peers. His wrist shot is very accurate, and he can pick his spots well. He uses his teammates effectively and to simply put it, he plays the game the right way. Teply has the ceiling of a top-nine NHL winger.
Centers Jonas Peterek, Adam Najman and goalie Lukas Parik each played well for the U18 national team this past season. Peterek has good size, hockey sense and puck protection skills. He could be a good mid- to late-round pick as there are some intriguing elements in his game. Smallish Najman is a skilled playmaking center who can drive the play and finish too. He values possession and has good vision in the offensive zone. However, Najman is not the most economical skater and could work on his stride power. Parik impressed with his play reading, flexibility and lateral movement at the IIHF U18 World Championship. He carried a heavy workload but was able to hold his game together and make some critical saves.
Slovakia
Goalie Samuel Hlavaj left the Slovakian U20 league for USHL's Lincoln Stars in January. The 6-4" netminder played a total of eight games at the World Juniors and U18 World Championship. Hlavaj is a calm and relaxed goalie who reads the game well. He plays an economical style as he doesn't make many unnecessary movements. Patrik Kozel showed some promise with Sport in the Finnish U18 league this past season. He tracks the puck and reads shooters well, has a quick glove and is flexible. He could be a worthwhile late round pick if a team believes that he can put the pieces of his game together and gain consistency. Hlavaj is more likely of the two to be selected, his game is more polished and he has a higher ceiling.
Switzerland
The Swiss 2001-born agegroup does not have the talent to match some of the previous ones. However, there are some players re-entering the draft that could be worth another look. 2000-born defenseman Janis Moser was named to the World Championship team and managed well in the three games he played before suffering a wrist injury. Moser was calm in his own end, moved the puck well and showed good hockey sense. 1999 born forward Yannick Bruschweiler had a strong World Juniors tournament and got on the scoresheet with four points. Bruschweiler is a technical and agile winger who can create space with the puck and take advantage of it. A good goal-scorer who put his finishing ability on display at the World Juniors. Bruschweiler will join Zürich Lions in the Swiss top league next season.
Germany

Moritz Seider was named the rookie of the year in the DEL, the German top league where it is rare to see players make an impact at such a young age. The strong-skating defenseman reads the game really well and can join the rush when the opportunity presents itself. Calm and smart in possession, he moves the puck into good spots and can rip it from the point with accurate shots. Seider has a high ceiling and will likely be picked in the first round of the draft. Other than Seider, Germany doesn't have much high-level talent to offer this year. Goalie Tobias Ancicka, who signed a four-year contract with Lukko in Finland, could be a decent late round gamble as a long-term project.
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Day 4 Notebook
In what was a very important game for both teams, the Czech Republic scored only 37 seconds into the first period after an offensive zone turnover from the Finns. Martin Lang finished off a nice passing play from Filip Prikryl and Radek Muzik. Patrik Puistola would tie the game in the second period with a finish from the slot. The Czechs took the lead again, this time on the power play, as Jan Mysak made a great cross-ice pass finding Marcel Barinka and Filip Koffer put rebound home. They extended their lead to 4-1 with two goals in the third period, from Matej Toman and Koffer. Defenseman Santeri Hatakka scored in the final minute of the game as he joined the attack and got to the rebound, but the Finns couldn't come closer to tie the game.
The Finns came close several times to scoring more goals, but it was either Lukas Parik, the posts or crossbar that denied those scoring attempts. Coming off a great performance against Switzerland, Parik was again terrific with 47 saves today. He moved very well side to side and his glove was quick. At 6'4”, he took away large portions of the net and read the game well in front of him. With this kind of goaltening, this Czech team will definitely have good a chance to reach the medal round.
Jan Mysak was another standout from the Czechs. The winger has great hands, vision and a quick-release wrist shot. He started the tournament as the 13th forward, but he has been impressive after being promoted to the second line. Sizeable 6'2” center Jonas Peterek had a decent game. He can protect the puck well using body to keep opponents at bay. I didn't see a whole lot ot flash in his game but he did have an assist where he was left wide open in the middle as three Finns went to the corner for the puck. He then made a nice, unselfish pass despite being in a scoring position.
From the Finnish team, 2021 draft eligible center Aatu Räty was more noticeable than in the previous two games. His line had a good amount of offensive zone time and Räty was the main catalyst, displaying finesse, very good hands and poise. Like in the previous games, he was rather strong at the face-off dot, too. It was evident that he has chemistry with his older brother Aku, who was energetic and around the puck.
Patrik Puistola showed flashes of great passing and offensive vision in some situations. However, I thought he still tried to occasionally do too much on his own. While he hasn't produced a lot, it has not been due a lack of effort, as he did compete hard off the puck.
Defenseman Santeri Hatakka showcased the attributes he has been known for in Jokerit juniors: strong skating and two-way game, along with the willingness to compete in his own end. There is some offensive potential; he can move the puck quite well and his shot isn't bad either. A potential mid to late round pick with decent upside.

Team Canada ran away quickly in a 11-1 win over Belarus. They got offensive contributions from all of the four lines, however the first line of Peyton Krebs, Dylan Cozens and Alex Newhook did put up five goals. The Canadians took nine penalties, so they need to be more disciplined going forward.
Several forwards stood out for Canada in the high-scoring affair. Once more I really liked the play of Jamieson Rees. Very high skills level, is quick to pucks and plays every shift like it is his last. He set up one goal in which he separated from the defender instantly after receiving the puck at the offensive blueline. He's a dynamic, relentless player and a potential first round NHL Draft pick in my opinion.
Dylan Cozens and Peyton Krebs were excellent as well. Cozens has a complete offensive toolbox - he can be equally adept as a playmaker and goal-scorer. Very good offensive instincts and makes timely passes. Krebs is an extremely quick and clever center who attacks with speed and has excellent stick skills. The captain put his speed on display on a goal where he gained a step ahead and finished off from close range.
The player that stood out most from the Belarussian team was defenseman Vladislav Kolyachonok. He has good skating mechanics and moves well in all directions. Excels at the point where he can both distribute the puck and fire quick wristers on net. Moves the puck well and remains calm under pressure. Kolyachonok has been one of the top defensemen so far in Group A of the tournament and his draft stock is surely rising. I see a very bright future ahead for him as an all-around defenseman.
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The Czech Republic will have two returning players from last year: forward Michal Teply and defenseman Hugo Has. They will bring four forwards from North America (Marcel Barinka, Martin Lang, Filip Prikryl and Michal Toman), as well as defenseman Simon Kubicek from the WHL. Kubicek is expected to be play a key role on the backend alongside Has. Lukas Parik will likely be the starting goalie, with either Jan Skorpik or 2002 born Jan Bednar being the backup.
Two surprising cuts were made before the start of the tournament, with underage goalie Nick Malik and forward Jaromir Pytlik being left off the roster. Since the Czechs do not have too much depth on the roster, it makes these decisions somewhat odd, especially in Pytlik's case. The center has been one of the top Czech players in some of the international tournaments prior the World Championship.
Despite all of this, the Czechs will have a potent offense. The defensemen may not contribute a ton on the offensive side of things which could be an issue, but if the goalies will bring their A-game, they have a chance to reach the medal round.
Here are three players to watch:
Teply is the player to keep a close eye on from the Czech team. He's a skilled and instinctive player with impressive passing skills and vision. His overall skill level is very high – quick hands and soft touch on the puck. Has a precise wrist shot, good shooting technique and mechanics. What's more, Teply is an agile skater with good mobility and coordination at 6'3” and 187 lbs.
Has is a towering 6'4" defenseman who looks very raw right now, but could develop into a solid player when all is said and done. The right-shot blueliner has a great point shot and gets a lot of power behind his slap shot and wrister. His mobility is okay, and puck skills need some work as well. There might be some untapped potential if he can work on his above-mentioned weaknesses and elevate his offensive game. Could be a decent mid-round pick in the draft.
A smallish center with an intriguing offensive skill set. Najman sees the ice and his options very well and finds his teammates with pinpoint passing in the final third. Stylistically, I think he's more of a playmaker than scorer, but he has found the back of the net regularly with the national team, scoring eight goals this season. His strides are a bit short, not allowing to generate a whole lot of power. However, he thinks the game well and has a lot of skill.
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