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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 |
This week the 2019 OHL playoffs will kick off with first round action getting under way on Thursday. More so than any year that I can remember, the field is wide open. There are favorites to take home the J.Ross Robertson Cup, sure, but the sheer number of candidates to make it to the end is greater than previous years because of how many teams loaded up with talent at this year’s trade deadline. As difficult as it is, I will make my predictions. Just do not place any large bets or wagers based upon it.

Season Series: 5-0 for Ottawa
Analysis: A rematch of last year’s 1 versus 8 match-up in the Eastern Conference, only this time the roles are reversed. The rebuilding Bulldogs match up against the top team in the OHL in Ottawa. Hamilton has done exceptionally well as the only team from last year’s Memorial Cup to make the playoffs in their respective leagues (with nearly as many wins as Regina, Swift Current, and Acadie-Bathurst combined). Arthur Kaliyev has emerged as a star in his NHL draft year, hitting the 50 goal mark and the team did a great job of trading away valuable assets but also keeping some veteran leaders around like Matthew Strome to keep order. All that said, they do not stand much of a chance against Ottawa. The 67’s are three lines deep that can score at any time. They have a physically imposing defense that can also move the puck. And either Michael Dipietro or Cedrick Andree will likely provide top notch goaltending, even if Dipietro’s health is a question mark after being forced to leave a game recently after a high shot stung him. I do have some question marks as to how they hold up later in the playoffs, but this first round victory should be a relatively easy one, no offense meant to Hamilton.
Prediction: Ottawa in 4
Sasha Chmelevski (SJ): While he may not lead the 67’s in scoring, I feel that he is the most integral part of Ottawa’s offensive attack. When he is on, the 67’s are firing on all cylinders. He may not have had the year that I expected of him prior to the start of the year, but he remains one of the OHL’s elite offensive players because of his individual puck skill and shot generation. If Ottawa wants to take home the Eastern Conference crown, he will need to be a consistent leader.
Marco Rossi (2020): A late 2001 birthday, Rossi missed being eligible for this year’s draft by just over a week. The slick Austrian forward has been an absolute revelation as a first year Import and has met or exceeded all the expectations placed on him. His skill level is very high, but most impressive to me is his tenaciousness away from the puck. This youngster is a real puck hound who makes his presence felt in many different ways on the ice. His game is built for success in the playoffs, even if he is young. A strong performance could help solidify him as a potential top 10 selection heading into 2020 Draft season.
Jan Jenik (ARI): I could have easily mentioned Kaliyev here for Hamilton. But Jenik has been extremely noticeable since arriving at midseason. He is another player whose game is built for success in the playoffs. He plays an ‘in your face’ kind of style and is way more aggressive physically than I would have imagined. Pair that with terrific hands and a natural ability to gain the blueline with his speed and puck control and you’ve got a fierce offensive competitor who is fun to watch.

Season Series: 4-2 for Niagara
Analysis: No offense meant to North Bay. I have a great respect for legendary head coach Stan Butler. But I see this as being one of the most one-sided first round matchups. North Bay relies heavily on their first line of Justin Brazeau, Matthew Struthers, and Brad Chenier, but just do not have the depth to keep up with Niagara’s firepower up front. And while North Bay can often surprise teams in the postseason with their team commitment to defense, Niagara’s forward group may be one of the better two-way groups in the league themselves with guys like Jack Studnicka and Ben Jones anchoring the middle. In net, overager Stephen Dhillon gives Niagara an advantage too, especially with how good he was in last year’s playoffs and the experience he can take from that. The IceDogs and Battalion played a pretty lopsided final game of the regular season this past weekend and unfortunately I could see most of the games looking like that one did.
Prediction: Niagara in 4
Jason Robertson (DAL): The winner of the Eddie Powers Trophy this year as the OHL’s top scorer, Robertson has been an unstoppable force since arriving in Niagara. With the IceDogs he has averaged over two points per game. While Robertson will never be a speedster, he is so good at controlling the puck in the offensive zone and slowing down the pace to open up lanes for his linemates. This makes him such an efficient player on the powerplay because he often requires two defenders to separate him from the puck. After last year’s disappointingly abrupt run with Kingston in the playoffs, Robertson will look to take that next step with Niagara and help them reach the Eastern finals.
Jack Studnicka (BOS): Another player brought in by Niagara who has had a remarkable impact, up near the two point per game mark. Studnicka is so valuable because he excels in all situations. He is on the ice when you are a goal down or a goal up late in the third period. He is going to need to be a huge part of Niagara’s penalty killing unit, which struggled at times during the regular season. A potential OHL playoffs MVP candidate.
Justin Brazeau (UFA): Sure, he has some warts. His stride is not the prettiest. He needs work on his play away from the puck and in his own end. But you cannot ignore the fact that he is a 6-6”, 60 goal scorer in the OHL, a feat that does not occur very often. With a strong first round performance (likely to be his only chance as North Bay does not have a good chance of advancing) in a playoff atmosphere with tighter checking, perhaps he can prove to NHL scouts that he deserves an NHL contract (if he has not done enough already).

Season Series: 6-2 for Oshawa
Analysis: The Generals have owned the Petes in the season series, especially in the four games post trade deadline. In those four games, Oshawa has scored 30 goals. While Peterborough has played better of late, I just do not believe that they have the defensive chops to hang with the Generals. Oshawa rolls three very competitive scoring lines. They bring speed. They bring grit. They play in all three zones. There are some inexperienced players in their core group, but veterans like Brandon Saigeon and Nic Mattinen are battled tested after last year’s Championship victory. For as well as Hunter Jones has played this year (save for a dry spell post deadline), Kyle Keyser has been even better and should be able to turn aside the majority of Peterborough’s chances. I think Peterborough is still a year away from being a truly competitive playoff team.
Prediction: Oshawa in 5
Brandon Saigeon (COL): 18 goals in 21 playoff games for the Hamilton Bulldogs last year in helping them win an OHL Championship. What does Saigeon have in store for us this year? One of the most lethal powerplay players in the OHL because of his shot and ability to get in scoring position. Saigeon will need to be a leader on and off the ice for a younger Oshawa team that, at its core, does not have a ton of playoff experience.
Serron Noel (FLA): Really struggled in the OHL playoffs last year during his draft year, but no question that Noel is a different player now. There are not many players in the league like him with his size, speed, and skill combination. He is just so strong on the puck, especially along the wall. In the playoffs, establishing the cycle game to tire out the opposition's best defenders is such a key component and Noel can do that in his sleep. This could be a real breakout opportunity for him to hit the mainstream spotlight.
Ryan Merkley (SJ): Without question, Merkley is one of the most individually skilled players in the OHL. His ability to create offensive scoring chances from the back-end because of his skating ability and vision are nearly unrivaled. The issue is nearly everything else. A midseason trade to Peterborough and a fresh start has not done much to squash concerns as he has found himself in the doghouse with his new club on a few occasions already. If Peterborough wants to progress past the first round, they will need a motivated Merkley at both ends of the ice.

Season Series: 4-2 for Sudbury
Analysis: These division rivals have not met in the playoffs since 2011; the year that Mississauga captured the Eastern Conference and hosted the Memorial Cup. That was a second round sweep for the Majors (yes, it was before they were renamed the Steelheads). This time around, I expect Sudbury to come out on top, but it could be a close one. Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen has been sensational this year and should hypothetically give the Wolves an advantage in net, but you just never know when Jacob Ingham is going to turn in a remarkable performance. Defensively, I think these teams are fairly similar in ability. Mississauga generates more offense from their back-end. Sudbury’s defense is better in their own end. On the other hand, I do worry about Mississauga’s speed giving Sudbury’s defense some issues. That brings us to the offensive side of things. I ultimately think Sudbury has more game breakers in their line-up with the likes of Quinton Byfield and Adam Ruzicka. This could be closer than people are going to predict. Sudbury’s powerplay will need to be way better than it was in the regular season (a league worst), as teams do not go far in the playoffs without scoring on the man advantage.
Prediction: Sudbury in 6
Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen (BUF): Hands down the Goaltender of the Year this year in the OHL. No offense meant to Kyle Keyser or Michael Dipietro, but this is an easy decision. Luukkonen might even be the most valuable player in the league, if such an award existed (the Red Tilson is for Most Outstanding Player, not Valuable). I have been so impressed with Luukkonen’s composure in the crease. His ability to read the play is outstanding and because of his size and athleticism, he always seems to get himself in the right position to make key saves. He is a prime time goaltending prospect.
Quinton Byfield (2020): I have been completely captivated by Byfield when I have seen him play this year. Such a fantastic and explosive skater for a big guy. I truly feel that if his game continues to progress, he could challenge for first overall in 2020. For now, it will be interesting to see how he performs in his first playoffs in the OHL. Regardless of the outcome, the experience it provides him will only make him better in the long run, which will make the Wolves better too (at least for next year anyway).
Thomas Harley (2019): All eyes will be on this potential first round pick in the first round to see how he handles the physicality of the playoffs. As skilled as he is as an offensive defenseman, a lack of defensive intensity has been one of the most discussed weak spots. Scouts will be looking to see how he defends in the corners and in front of his net, and his overall response to being up against a more powerful offensive squad and having to play more in his own end.
I am taking Ottawa and Niagara here. While I do have some concerns over Ottawa’s special teams play and their defense’s ability to handle the forecheck and move the puck, I think Sudbury is the best matchup for them. Niagara and Oshawa is a toss-up. Kyle Keyser could shut the door, especially with a big defense in front of him. But, like Guelph, I just really like the make-up of Niagara’s team. Their team speed. Their powerplay. Their core veteran group, especially up front. And Stephen Dhillon is not chopped liver.
Like Guelph, I am all in on Niagara in the Eastern Conference. Jason Robertson, Jack Studnicka, and Akil Thomas are all nearly unstoppable right now. Plus their blueline does such a good job skating the puck out of trouble, it is difficult to pin them in their own zone, which means that you are always playing on the defensive against them.
]]>OHL Championship Series
Niagara IceDogs vs. Guelph Storm
Another toss up for me. Ask me tomorrow and I may just choose someone different. Both of their regular season matchups were decided by a single goal. Honestly, this comes down to goaltending. I give Niagara the advantage at forward. I give Guelph the advantage on defense. But in net, I think you have to tip your hat in Stephen Dhillon’s direction. Especially considering that there is no guarantee that Anthony Popovich finishes the postseason as Guelph’s starter. So...I am selecting the Niagara IceDogs as this year’s OHL Champions!
On the other hand, players can be skipped over because scouts felt that they just were not good enough. But teenagers are far from a finished product on the ice. Their games mature just as their minds and bodies do. That is why it is critical to track players as they move through their second and third years of draft eligibility. For North American players with birth dates from January 1st to September 15th, they will be eligible for three NHL drafts. For players with birth dates from September 16th to December 31st, they will be eligible for two NHL drafts. And for European players (in European leagues), extend that eligibility by one year in both cases.
In recent years, we have had a major shift in drafting philosophy, with more teams selecting players in their second and third years of eligibility. For one, these players are finding success at the NHL level, such as we have seen with Cam Atkinson, Mike Hoffman, Ryan Dzingel, Brandon Montour, and Connor Hellebuyck, to name just a few. Secondly, teams can draft more polished products who have shown a steep progression curve. And thirdly, in the case of draft and follow NCAA bound players, NHL teams will have a few years longer to decide whether they want to sign said players to one of their precious 50 contracts inside the limit.
Last year, seven “re-entry” candidates went in the first three rounds alone; Scott Perunovich, Sean Durzi, Seth Barton, Joey Keane, Logan Hutsko, Nathan Smith, Connor Dewar. And a total of 46 were taken in the draft overall. That is just a shade over 20% of all players drafted; one fifth were outside of their first year of eligibility.
In 2019, we have several high-profile re-entries who look poised to be NHL draft selections. This includes Brett Leason of the Prince Albert Raiders (and Team Canada at the WJC’s) who could even be a first round pick come June. This series of articles intends to highlight some of the candidates who could be part of that 20% this year broken into the CHL, US based and Europe based prospects. We start with the CHL.
Western Hockey League

Brett Leason - Forward - Prince Albert Raiders
There is a reason why the 6’4, 200 pound forward is receiving consideration for the first round at this point in the year. He has been at or near the top of the WHL scoring race all season long. His Prince Albert Raiders are the best team in the CHL. And he just suited up for Canada at the WJC’s.
“There were a couple of things about Leason I thought were promising last year but there were two major draw backs, his skating and his consistency. First his skating stride is still choppy, but he generates enough power that it doesn’t hold him back with his North/South style of game. He handles the puck pretty well for a man of his size and he has a great shot. His release is so quick, and he can drive a slap shot hard, low and accurately towards the net. One on one he drives the net hard and can create his own space with his size and frame. He is shooting at triple the rate of his previous seasons well over five shots per game. This season he has been remarkably consistent offensively with only one pointless game and 21 multi-point games. He has pretty good vision from below the dots and quickly gets pucks out while working hard down low. He follows his shot to the net and often keeps rebounds alive with his active stick. Defensively he can be physically imposing and can end the other team’s cycle by effectively pinning guys along the wall. He rarely is on the ice for sustained defensive zone time because of this.” (Vince Gibbons)

Luka Burzan - Forward - Brandon Wheat Kings
Many were surprised when Burzan went undrafted last year after being ranked inside the top four rounds by most publications (he was 127th at McKeens). The former gold medalist with Canada’s Hlinka team has bounced back incredibly well this year and is one of the highest scoring 2000 born players in the WHL. Many credit that to a strength increase this offseason as he put on ten pounds and is controlling the play more (stick tap to Vince Gibbons).
“Burzan is a strong skater who plays with speed and energy. He hustles all over the ice, is very aggressive in the offensive zone, likes to forecheck and dictate the play.He has grown in to a much more prominent role offensively and is playing with a whole lot more confidence and determination this year. he has developed his two-way game, and with an increased role and ice time seems to have figured things out. he has good scoring instincts as he has shown throughout his career and is second on his team in offensive stats behind only Stelio Mattheos. He has good puck skills as he carries and distributes the puck well, and he isn't afraid to drive and go to the net. He has a good wrist shot with a quick release and is shooting a lot more this season.” (Kevin Olexson)
Brett Kemp - Forward - Medicine Hat Tigers
Kemp is another 2000 born player who has taken a huge step forward in the WHL this year, as he finds himself near the top of the goal scoring race, playing alongside undersized star Trey Fix-Wolansky. In fact, Kemp has more goals in this half a season than he did the prior two seasons combined. However, a recent deal has him in Medicine Hat now (part of a trade for Josh Williams), where he has continued to put the puck in the net.
“His best asset is his shot. He has a quick release and can elevate from in close. His one-timer is particularly lethal which coupled with playing (previously) with a high-end passer in TFW (Trey Fix-Wolansky) has generated some buzz around him. He can read the play pretty well and had great chemistry with TFW as he is always ready to shoot. I am not sure that his skating or physical tools help him become anything more than a bit of farm team depth in the years ahead, but that remains to be seen.” (Vince Gibbons)

Mark Kastelic - Forward - Calgary Hitmen
Speaking of players near the top of the goal scoring race, Kastelic, a hulking 6’3, 220 pound center, has already matched last year’s goal total in less than half the games. He also serves as the captain of the Hitmen. With his size and overall game, he will be alluring to NHL scouts.
“Mark Kastelic is a big man who, this year, has been more physical and is imposing his will. He is consistently in the fabric of the game. His production is not bloated by secondary assists as 86% of his point are either goals or primary assists (Prospect-stats.com). He controls the wall in both zones and generates offense from cycling the puck. There isn’t a ton of puck handling skill, but he knows how to get the most out of his physical tools and when they are most effective. He is good around the net creating screens and chaos around the crease. He has a knack for getting his stick on the puck, particularly loose pucks around the crease. His defensive game has come around and he is consistently goal side of his man. He doesn’t cheat in his own zone and makes sure pucks get out over the blue line. Faceoff skills are some of the best in the WHL this season.” (Vince Gibbons)
Ontario Hockey League

Nando Eggenberger - Forward - Oshawa Generals
Once touted as a potential first round pick, Eggenberger had a pretty large fall from grace in 2018. He struggled to improve his numbers in the NLA and, coupled with a lackluster showing at the 2018 WJC, was subsequently not drafted. Even with his struggles, it was still a surprise as most publications had him inside their top 100 (McKeens had him at 100 exactly). So, the 6’2 power winger moved to the CHL this year to try and impress scouts by taking on a new challenge. He has tackled that challenge head on, emerging as one of Oshawa’s top offensive players and putting himself back on the map for the draft this year. A much stronger World Juniors performance also helps his cause.
“The first thing that I noticed this year about Eggenberger was that his skating was much better than I had remembered, having seen him internationally previously. He is very much a North/South type of player who uses his size well to drive the net and play below the hash marks. He possesses impressive hands in tight and has developed terrific chemistry with Jack Studnicka and Serron Noel on Oshawa’s top line. I have also been impressed with his physical engagement and commitment in all three zones. This was something that I thought had been lacking on the international stage. The progression that he has shown leads me to believe that he could end up hearing his name called this time around in June.” (Brock Otten)

Matthew Struthers - Forward - North Bay Battalion
A mid-season trade last year brought Struthers to North Bay, where he averaged nearly a point per game. But it was not enough to get the late ‘99 born center drafted. Now in his second year of eligibility, Struthers has exploded alongside Justin Brazeau (one of the OHL’s top performers this year). At 6’2, 200 pounds, he possesses the size/playmaking package that NHL scouts find alluring.
“I have always appreciated Struthers’ game, going back to his rookie season in Owen Sound; a year in which he won gold at the U17’s. The lack of power in his stride has probably kept him from back drafted, but I do think that there have been improvements made to that area this year. He has been more powerful in driving the net and has developed great chemistry with Justin Brazeau. His vision is perhaps the most impressive part of his game, as he rarely turns the puck over in the offensive zone, showing impressive patience while working the cycle. If he can maintain one of the higher point-per-game averages in the league this year, he should be a guy that NHL teams look at for a later round selection this June.” (Brock Otten)

Cole Coskey - Forward - Saginaw Spirit
Coskey is a hard-nosed forward who just continues to improve his game, year after year. That type of progression is what impresses NHL scouts. He plays in all situations for Saginaw, one of the OHL’s top teams and was a late cut of the U.S. World Junior team this year. Currently leading the Spirit in scoring, Coskey will be integral to their playoff success this year, even after they loaded up at the trade deadline by bringing in Owen Tippett and Ryan McLeod.
“The straw that stirs the drink in Saginaw. This kid plays the game hard, always engaged in all three zones. One of the better players in the league working the wall, as he is so good at getting inside position on defenders and extending possession time in the offensive zone. Skates well. Plays physical. Coskey is a prototypical checking line player for today’s NHL game. He can be a bit turnover prone with the puck on his stick, especially when operating off the rush. Coskey is at his best when he keeps things simple. But I feel that he is a very safe pro prospect who has a high chance of finally hearing his name called this year in his final year of draft eligibility.” (Brock Otten)
Quebec Major Junior Hockey League

Jeremy McKenna - Forward - Moncton Wildcats
McKenna certainly has not taken the typical path to the QMJHL. The PEI Native played in the prestigious Notre Dame program before going to Austria to play in EC Salzburg program. Upon coming to Moncton, McKenna originally struggled. But he continues to get better every year. Last year, he led the league in shots and currently leads the entire CHL in shots by a significant margin this year. He has also been among the league leaders in goals and points in the QMJHL, helping Moncton to be one of the best teams in the league.
“He has an elite shot for this level, and has really improved his release from a slow load time to one of the quickest in the Q. His shot will get him in the door. His skating has improved well in his Q career, but he won't be a speedster as a pro. He has some potential as a distributor, but his future is as a sniper. His hockey sense, especially with getting open and shooting the puck, is top-notch.” (Mike Sanderson)
Justin Bergeron - Defense - Rouyn-Noranda Huskies
One of the youngest players available last year (September 14th birth date), Bergeron was passed over at the NHL draft despite putting up some nice stats for Rouyn-Noranda. This year, he has exploded offensively for the best team in the QMJHL, and one of the best in the country. He happens to be one of the highest scoring defenders in the entire CHL for the 2000 birth year, in addition to having one of the highest +/-’s. At 6’1, he also has the size NHL scouts look for in offensive defenders. As such, he seems like a slam dunk to have his name called this time around.
“Bergeron is a very well-rounded defender with excellent skating ability. He is very agile and has the ability to make quick lateral movements. He is also really hard-to-beat on a 1-on-1 rush situation because of his excellent backward skating. Bergeron is able to pass the puck really well, in breakout situations or in offensive zone possession. But I also really like the control of his wrist shot. His wrister is accurate, hard and deceptive, as he releases it quickly and effortlessly. Bergeron’s hockey IQ is terrific. He plays well defensively, his stick is highly active and poke checks are timed without putting him at risk of getting caught flat footed and exhibits good gap control on 1-on1 situations. He makes the proper reads with or without the puck and always looks to either join the rush or create a breakout by himself. The improvement in his game over the last three years has been extremely encouraging.” (Benoit Belanger)

Taro Jentzsch - Forward - Sherbrooke Phoenix
Ironically, Jentzsch is a fellow graduate of the EC Salzburg, like the aforementioned McKenna. The first-year German import has been excellent for Sherbrooke this year and is fresh off helping Germany advance to the main draw at the World Junior Championships next year. At the Division 1 Championships, he led a German team in goals that included 2018 first rounder Dominik Bokk.
“Taro Jentzsch is drawing the attention of numerous NHL scouts in the midst of a superb rookie season with the Sherbrooke Phoenix in the the QMJHL. The versatile two-way forward’s exceptional skating ability matched with his brilliant hockey sense allows his coach to use him in all situations. He has a knack for the net offensively, while remaining responsible in the defensive zone, earning him a spot on the power play as well as time on the penalty kill. His scoring ability is equally as dangerous as his strength in distributing the puck, leaving the German winger as an unpredictable threat in offensive zone. Jentzsch’s near point per game average and +9 rating has him ranked in the top 5 among rookie forwards in the Q, in those respective domains. The European prospect looks to carry his momentum into the second half of the season when he returns to the Phoenix lineup after a stint with the German U20 national team.” (Evan Milner, writer with the Sherbrooke Phoenix)
*Special thanks to Evan Milner, Jiri Vitek, Thomas Roost, Tom Kowal, Steve Kournianos, and the entire McKeen’s scouting team for their contributions to this series of articles.
]]>The Contenders
London Knights

Currently the top ranked team in the OHL in the weekly CHL rankings, the Knights also happen to be the top preseason favorite of most in the media. This team has it all; top end scoring talent; a strong defense; quality goaltending. After getting Adam Boqvist (Chicago) from Blackhawks camp, London is still waiting on a few other stars to be assigned; Evan Bouchard (Edmonton), Alex Formenton (Ottawa), and Brady Tkachuk (Ottawa). All three seem likely to start the year in the NHL and late October is probably a more likely arrival date, if it happens at all. A safe assumption would be that London gets at least one of the above. Until then, stars like Liam Foudy (Columbus), Alec Regula (Detroit), and Boqvist will need to pace the offense. In net, overager veteran Joseph Raaymakers and Jordan Kooy (Vegas) should combine to provide quality goaltending. As with any London team, depth is a serious strength. Once the situation surrounding their top players has been given closure, look for the Knights to use their depth to acquire a few big fish to put them over the top.
Oshawa Generals
This is a veteran squad that should be considered among the favorites in the Eastern Conference. Team defense and goaltending are major strengths. At 6-1”, Nico Gross (NY Rangers) is the smallest defender who sees regular playing time, and Kyle Keyser (Boston) is a top contender for goaltender of the year. Up front, Jack Studnicka (Boston) is a serious candidate for the Red Tilson and the scoring title now that he has returned from a long stay at Bruins camp. Swiss import Nando Eggenberger (2019) is another player everyone has their eye on. Overager Matt Brassard (Vancouver) returned this past weekend too, and he should be one of the top defenseman in the OHL this season. The Generals are just a well balanced squad.
Niagara IceDogs
Along with Oshawa, the IceDogs are a preseason favorite to take home the Eastern title. Niagara has a very strong nucleus at forward with Akil Thomas (Los Angeles), Kirill Maksimov (Edmonton), Ben Jones (Vegas), and Ivan Lodnia (Minnesota), which should help them score a ton of goals. They also have a very mobile blueline, which may lack size, but makes up for it with speed, puck skill, and heart. Billy Constantinou (2019) is a player to watch here as one of the most dynamic young defenders in the OHL.
Saginaw Spirit
The Spirit received a bevy of media attention this off-season due to their recruiting efforts. The team brought in Bode Wilde (NY Islanders), Ivan Prosvetov (Arizona), and Cole Perfetti (2020). This was after they were able to bring Blade Jenkins (NY Islanders) into the fold last year. This team has a lot of depth and fans should be excited about the fact that this team is the favorite to take home the West Division. Cole Coskey (2019) is a player to watch as one of the most underrated players in the OHL. Perfetti is an electrifying offensive player and one of the top players in his age group in Ontario, as well as a potential lottery pick in 2020.
Ottawa 67’s

Maybe a year early to talk about the 67’s as a potential Memorial Cup contender, but make no mistake, this team is insanely talented. Not only do they have five NHL draft picks already, but they have several top prospects for the 2019 and 2020 drafts as well. Sasha Chmelevski (San Jose) is a top contender for the Red Tilson this year after a breakout last season. The progression he has shown as a prospect has been extremely encouraging. Austrian Import Marco Rossi (2020) is another name to watch. The recent import selection is currently touted as a potential top 5 pick in 2020 and he could have a Nico Hischier type impact for the 67’s. The only thing that this team is missing is a top flight goaltender. Look for them to go out and find one at some point. Worth noting that the 67’s currently have 12 second round picks over the next four OHL priority selections. That is some serious trade ammunition.
The Pretenders
Kingston Frontenacs
The Frontenacs loaded up last year to make a run at an OHL title that ultimately fell short. The cyclical nature of the CHL means that this team could struggle this year due to numerous high end graduations. Star Jason Robertson (Dallas) is still around, but he will be a top trade target at some point. The future of injured playmaker Gabe Vilardi (Los Angeles) also hangs in the balance as Kingston waits to see if they will get him back once he is healthy. But depth is an issue, as is goaltending. Kingston has to capitalize on a few solid trade assets to recoup what was lost previously.
Erie Otters
After an impressive four year run that saw the Otters compete for and win an OHL Championship, the time has come for this team to rebuild. There are still some solid veteran pieces in place that could keep the team afloat, like star overager Kyle Maksimovich. But this team does not have a single NHL affiliated player and that hurts. Hayden Fowler (2020), and Petr Cajka (2019) do give this team hope for the future.
Mississauga Steelheads
Another team that now lacks serious depth after some serious runs the previous years. Graduations and failed draft picks (like Jack Hughes) have left this team pretty sparse in a lot of areas heading into the year. They do have Owen Tippett (Florida) and Ryan McLeod (Edmonton) back in the fold and they should both be among the best players in the league this year. However, just how long they remain Steelheads remains to be seen.
North Bay Battalion
Like Erie, North Bay does not have a single NHL affiliated player. There is some solid firepower up front with overager Justin Brazeau, Brandon Coe (2020), and Matthew Struthers (2019), but depth is an issue. This is especially true on the back-end. The lack of experience on the blueline could mean that this North Bay team gives up a ton of goals. No Stan Butler coached Battalion team has ever given up 280+ goals against, but this year’s edition may be the first. And speaking of Butler, he is currently taking a leave of absence from behind the bench and that may be bad news for Battalion fans.
Flint Firebirds
Disastrous start to the year for the Firebirds. As of the creation of this article, Flint has yet to win and has given up an ugly 24 goals in 4 games. This team has talent, like Ty Dellandrea (Dallas), Fedor Gordeev (Toronto), and Dennis Busby (Arizona). But missing on the 6th overall Import selection this year (Jan Jenik) is a big black mark and the team just cannot seem to separate itself from the drama of their ownership under Rolf Nilsen.
Five Candidates for the Red Tilson
Nick Suzuki
Fresh off being the centerpiece of the Max Pacioretty deal, the new Montreal Canadiens prospect returns to the OHL and will look to the hit the 100 point plateau for the second year in a row. He is bound to miss some time for the WJC, but Suzuki only needs 92 points to pass Bobby Ryan as the Attack franchise’s all-time leading scorer.
Morgan Frost
Highest returning scorer from last year, the Flyers’ prospect should be a shoe-in for a spot in the top 5 in scoring. There were some who felt that Frost should have been the Red Tilson winner last year so maybe this is the year he takes it home. The Hounds offense has lost some talent to graduation, but there is enough remaining to give Frost the supporting pieces he needs.

Michael DiPietro
Reigning OHL Goaltender of the year, the Canucks prospect returns to Windsor to help a young team improve. DiPietro will likely be Canada’s starter at this year’s WJC. He is also a likely trade candidate, unless Windsor is pushing for the division. The talented netminder is one of the few gamebreakers at the position in the league.
Jack Studnicka
Nearly earned the 3rd line center spot in Boston with a strong training camp performance, but the Generals captain returns for a final OHL season and should be one of the league’s elite offensive catalysts. If the Generals are as good as many think they will be, he will be a top candidate for player of the year. His strong two-way play allows him to impact the game on so many different levels.
Sasha Chmelevski
It seems like so long ago that Chmelevski fell at the draft after a very poor draft year showing. He bounced back in a big way last year, re-inventing his game under new head coach Andre Tourigny. Now a committed player away from the puck, Chmelevski will look to lead a young Ottawa team to a championship, perhaps a year ahead of schedule.
Five Draft Eligibles to Monitor

Ryan Suzuki (Barrie Colts)
After a strong Hlinka performance, Suzuki is off to a blazing hot start as one of the early leaders in OHL scoring. Suzuki, brother of Nick, is an exceptionally talented playmaker whose vision and puck skill are game breaking qualities. As of right now, Ryan looks like the lone potential candidate for the top 10 from the OHL.
Arthur Kaliyev (Hamilton Bulldogs)
Another of the early scoring leaders is also a draft eligible forward. Kaliyev had one of the best 16 year old seasons in recent memory after scoring 30+ goals last year. He looks to round out the rest of his game in Hamilton, improving his playmaking ability and play away from the puck to match his strength on the puck and NHL quality shot.
Matvey Guskov (London Knights)
An import selection by the Knights this year, Guskov has matched the high expectations thus far, averaging over a point per game. Guskov was one of only three OHL players mentioned on Bob McKenzie’s preseason draft ranking and the playmaking Russian forward looks like a serious first round candidate come June.
Blake Murray (Sudbury Wolves)
A big, power center who is being overshadowed a bit due to the arrival of top 2020 prospect Quinton Byfield. Murray possesses all the qualities that NHL teams look for in centers these days, with size, skating, and finishing ability. Murray has the potential to be that complete package.
Michael Vukojevic (Kitchener Rangers)
Vukojevic may not be the sexiest of defenders at this point. He is not yet a truly dynamic player, but he is as steady as they come and plays the game with the composure of a five year OHL veteran. His defensive acumen projects him to be, at the very least, a terrific stay at home top four defender at the NHL level. The question is, just how much offensive ability does he possess?
]]>Our final list will run deeper – and be more definitive – but know that the names you see below are the fruit of the combined labor of the full McKeens scouting team. Covering all of the leagues touched on in the first paragraph above, we have watched them all and players in most cases were also cross-checked by multiple team members.
While the size of our list has not changed from the previous iteration, much else is different. Yes, Rasmus Dahlin still heads the ranking (hint: barring a career-threatening tragedy in the next 10 weeks, he will lead our final list as well), but the next player who maintains the same position as last time is Joel Farabee, still sitting in 12th. Alexander Alexeyev, at 29th, is the only other player in the top 31 who is ranked the same today as he was in February.

Looking at the top ten, the changes begin in the two/three slots, as we saw fit to bump Russian import Andrei Svechnikov past Czech import Filip Zadina. The latter has been strong all season long, but the two keys for us were a) he plateaued to an extent in the dying days of the regular season while Svechnikov has taken his production to a new level down the stretch. On a point per game measure, Svechnikov’s 1.64 points per game outshine Zadina’s 1.44, and the latter’s extra ten games played cannot explain away the discrepancy. The first round of the playoffs have seen this trend continue. Zadina has been very good. Svechnikov has been stellar. b) Svechnikov is four months younger than Zadina. In the grand scheme of things, that is not much. In a draft class, that is a full third of the way from one year of eligibility to the next. There is just that much greater likelihood that Svechnikov has more development potential. This factor is not destiny, but cannot be overlooked.

Quinn Hughes and Adam Boqvist, both undersized (by traditional standards, if not by modern ones) and very mobile defenders have almost switched places. Hughes, whose game grew by leaps and bounds since playing a supporting role for the US Bronze winning WJC entry ended his season in the Frozen Four. He was the youngest player in the NCAA this year and tied for 16th among all defensemen in scoring. Only one of the blueliners with more points is within even one year of his age. Through the second half of the year, he was consistently the best player on the ice whenever he stepped over the boards. He leaps from 9th last time, to 4th now. Boqvist, who dropped from 5th to 8th, is still an electrifying skater whose speed brings an extra dimension to his game. He is still highly coveted, but there is at least a hint of a red flag due to his dearth of production at the senior level in Sweden. He scored nearly one point per game in the SuperElit league, but has only one assist in 18 regular and post-season SHL games. The skill set is obvious, but his struggles against men highlight the greater gap between what he is and what he should become.
The one change to the previous top ten sees Spokane defender Ty Smith fall from 10 to 16. His offensive production in the WHL has been fantastic all the way through the Chiefs’ first round playoff exit. There have been some questions about his play off the puck, which were highlighted by a rough showing earlier in the year at the CHL Top Prospects Game. He should have another chance to boost his stock in the coming weeks as part of Canada’s entry to the World Under 18 Championships.

Taking Smith’s place in the top ten is former Exceptional Status player Joe Veleno. Huge things were expected of Veleno this year, not only due to his unique entry point into the QMJHL, but a three goal showing for Saint John at last year’s Memorial Cup certainly whetted the appetite for a huge draft season. Unfortunately, his previous team, the Saint John Sea Dogs were gutted by graduation and trades, and Veleno started off slowly, amid reports that he was taking the team’s struggles too much on his own shoulders. He scored only six goals in his 31 games in the Maritimes. A mid-season trade to Drummondville has allowed him to take off in a more competitive atmosphere, finishing the year with 48 points in 33 games for the Voltigeurs. He is also having another strong post-season, helping his team into the second round. In short, Smith has seen questions added about his projection, while Veleno has answered more of his, helping him jump up from 11th to 9th.
Without laboring over each change in the list, let us meditate briefly on the four subtractions (and four additions) to the top 31. Dropping into our second round are Jett Woo, B-O Groulx, Jack McBain, and Martin Kaut. Like Ty Smith above, none of these players necessarily did anything to harm their own standing, but were simply surpassed by some players who managed to end on a strong note. For each of the four, it can legitimately be said that there are open questions about their offensive upsides. Woo, Groulx, and Kaut may lack top half of the roster upside, while McBain did not score as much as his talent would suggest he should have in the OJHL. Like Smith, he is expected to play for Canada at the WU18 and his performance with CHLers should speak volumes about his draft standing.

Replacing those four are a trio of small defensemen who have finished strong in Rasmus Sandin, Nils Lundkvist, and Calen Addison, and one ultra-talented German forward developing in Sweden in Dominik Bokk. These four players all carry a dynamic element to their games that the four players falling to the second round do not look to have.
The next six weeks, including the completion of the North American junior playoffs as well as the WU18 competition will see several more reputations made and others tarnished, as happens every year. We try to see the whole picture, and promise not to inordinately elevate the ranking of any player simply for getting hot at the right time. Our final list will reflect not just good or bad production at the right time, but the skill sets of the best draft-eligible talent in the hockey world, leavened by their ability and success rates of those skills in actualizing as performance.
We welcome your feedback on this list and look forward to seeing our draft list through to its completion in Dallas in late June.
To link to a player page, use the tags at the bottom of the page, or from our McKeen's Draft Ranking found here It is also downloadable to an excel file.
| RANK | PLAYER | POS | TEAM | HT/WT | DOB | GP-G-A-PTS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Rasmus Dahlin | D | Frolunda (Swe) | 6-2/185 | 13-Apr-00 | 41-7-13-20 |
| 2 | Andrei Svechnikov | RW | Barrie (OHL) | 6-2/185 | 26-Mar-00 | 44-40-32-72 |
| 3 | Filip Zadina | RW | Halifax (QMJHL) | 6-0/195 | 27-Nov-99 | 57-44-38-82 |
| 4 | Quinn Hughes | D | Michigan (B1G) | 5-10/175 | 14-Oct-99 | 37-5-24-29 |
| 5 | Brady Tkachuk | LW | Boston University (HE) | 6-3/195 | 16-Sep-99 | 40-8-23-31 |
| 6 | Evan Bouchard | D | London (OHL) | 6-2/195 | 20-Oct-99 | 67-25-62-87 |
| 7 | Oliver Wahlstrom | RW | NTDP (USHL) | 6-1/205 | 13-Jun-00 | 54-40-43-83 |
| 8 | Adam Boqvist | D | Brynas (Swe Jr) | 5-11/170 | 15-Aug-00 | 25-14-10-24 |
| 9 | Joe Veleno | C | SNB-Dru (QMJHL) | 6-1/195 | 13-Jan-00 | 64-22-57-79 |
| 10 | Noah Dobson | D | Acadie-Bathurst (QMJHL) | 6-3/180 | 7-Jan-00 | 67-17-52-69 |
| 11 | Isac Lundestrom | C | Lulea (Swe) | 6-0/185 | 6-Nov-99 | 42-6-9-15 |
| 12 | Joel Farabee | LW | NTDP (USHL) | 5-11/165 | 25-Feb-00 | 54-27-37-64 |
| 13 | Barrett Hayton | C | Sault Ste Marie (OHL) | 6-1/190 | 9-Jun-00 | 63-21-39-60 |
| 14 | Jesperi Kotkaniemi | C | Assat Pori (Fin) | 6-1/190 | 6-Jul-00 | 57-10-19-29 |
| 15 | Bode Wilde | D | NTDP (USHL) | 6-2/195 | 24-Jan-00 | 53-11-25-36 |
| 16 | Ty Smith | D | Spokane (WHL) | 5-10/180 | 24-Mar-00 | 69-14-59-73 |
| 17 | K'Andre Miller | D | NTDP (USHL) | 6-3/205 | 21-Jan-00 | 50-7-17-24 |
| 18 | Akil Thomas | C | Niagara (OHL) | 5-11/170 | 2-Jan-00 | 68-22-59-81 |
| 19 | Jared McIsaac | D | Halifax (QMJHL) | 6-1/195 | 27-Mar-00 | 65-9-38-47 |
| 20 | Grigori Denisenko | LW | Loko Yaroslavl (MHL) | 5-11/175 | 24-Jun-00 | 31-9-13-22 |
| 21 | Serron Noel | RW | Oshawa (OHL) | 6-5/200 | 8-Aug-00 | 62-28-25-53 |
| 22 | Rasmus Kupari | C | Karpat Oulu (Fin) | 6-1/185 | 15-Mar-00 | 39-6-8-14 |
| 23 | Ryan McLeod | C | Mississauga (OHL) | 6-2/200 | 21-Sep-99 | 68-26-44-70 |
| 24 | Ryan Merkley | D | Guelph (OHL) | 5-11/170 | 14-Aug-00 | 63-13-54-67 |
| 25 | Mattias Samuelsson | D | NTDP (USHL) | 6-3/215 | 14-Mar-00 | 50-9-19-28 |
| 26 | Rasmus Sandin | D | Sault Ste Marie (OHL) | 5-11/185 | 7-Mar-00 | 51-12-33-45 |
| 27 | Nils Lundkvist | D | Lulea (Swe) | 5-11/180 | 27-Jul-00 | 28-2-3-5 |
| 28 | Alexander Alexeyev | D | Red Deer (WHL) | 6-3/200 | 15-Nov-99 | 45-7-30-37 |
| 29 | Calen Addison | D | Lethbridge (WHL) | 5-10/180 | 11-Apr-00 | 68-11-54-65 |
| 30 | Jacob Olofsson | C | Timra (Swe 2) | 6-2/190 | 8-Feb-00 | 43-10-11-21 |
| 31 | Dominik Bokk | LW | Vaxjo Lakers (Swe Jr) | 6-1/180 | 3-Feb-00 | 35-14-27-41 |
| 32 | Vitali Kravtsov | RW | Traktor Chelyabinsk (KHL) | 6-2/170 | 23-Dec-99 | 35-4-3-7 |
| 33 | Martin Kaut | RW | Dynamo Pardubice (Cze) | 6-1/175 | 2-Oct-99 | 38-9-7-16 |
| 34 | Jett Woo | D | Moose Jaw (WHL) | 6-0/205 | 27-Jul-00 | 44-9-16-25 |
| 35 | Benoit-Olivier Groulx | C | Halifax (QMJHL) | 6-1/195 | 6-Feb-00 | 68-28-27-55 |
| 36 | Jesse Ylonen | RW | Espoo United (Fin 2) | 6-0/165 | 3-Oct-99 | 48-14-13-27 |
| 37 | Nicolas Beaudin | D | Drummondville (QMJHL) | 5-11/175 | 7-Oct-99 | 68-12-57-69 |
| 38 | Adam Ginning | D | Linkopings (Swe) | 6-3/195 | 13-Jan-00 | 28-1-1-2 |
| 39 | Jack McBain | C | Tor. Jr Canadiens (OJHL) | 6-3/195 | 6-Jan-00 | 48-21-37-58 |
| 40 | Jonny Tychonick | D | Penticton (BCHL) | 6-0/175 | 3-Mar-00 | 48-9-38-47 |
| 41 | Ty Emberson | D | NTDP (USHL) | 6-0/195 | 24-May-00 | 53-4-18-22 |
| 42 | Ty Dellandrea | C | Flint (OHL) | 6-0/190 | 21-Jul-00 | 67-27-32-59 |
| 43 | Allan McShane | C | Oshawa (OHL) | 5-11/190 | 14-Feb-00 | 67-20-45-65 |
| 44 | Blake McLaughlin | LW | Chicago (USHL) | 6-0/165 | 14-Feb-00 | 52-23-28-51 |
| 45 | Gabriel Fortier | C | Baie-Comeau (QMJHL) | 5-10/170 | 6-Feb-00 | 66-26-33-59 |
| 46 | Kevin Bahl | D | Ottawa (OHL) | 6-6/230 | 27-Jun-00 | 58-1-17-18 |
| 47 | Sampo Ranta | LW | Sioux City (USHL) | 6-1/195 | 31-May-00 | 53-23-14-37 |
| 48 | Filip Hallander | C | Timra (Swe 2) | 6-1/185 | 29-Jun-00 | 40-9-11-20 |
| 49 | Jay O'Brien | C | Thayer Acad. (USHS-MA) | 5-10/185 | 4-Nov-99 | 30-43-37-80 |
| 50 | David Gustafsson | C | HV 71 (Swe) | 6-2/195 | 11-Apr-00 | 45-6-6-12 |
| 51 | Liam Foudy | C | London (OHL) | 6-0/185 | 4-Feb-00 | 65-24-16-40 |
| 52 | Filip Johansson | D | Leksands (Swe Jr) | 6-1/175 | 23-Mar-00 | 29-4-5-9 |
| 53 | Niklas Nordgren | RW | HIFK (Fin Jr) | 5-9/170 | 4-May-00 | 18-8-18-26 |
| 54 | Aidan Dudas | C | Owen Sound (OHL) | 5-8/170 | 15-Jun-00 | 68-31-34-65 |
| 55 | Jacob Bernard-Docker | D | Okotoks (AJHL) | 6-0/180 | 30-Jun-00 | 49-20-21-41 |
| 56 | Xavier Bernard | D | Drummondville (QMJHL) | 6-2/210 | 6-Jan-00 | 66-11-24-35 |
| 57 | Martin Fehervary | D | Oskarshamn (Swe 2) | 6-1/190 | 6-Oct-99 | 42-1-6-7 |
| 58 | Jonatan Berggren | RW | Skelleftea (Swe Jr) | 5-10/185 | 6-Jul-00 | 38-18-39-57 |
| 59 | Alexis Gravel | G | Halifax (QMJHL) | 6-2/225 | 21-Mar-00 | 20-11(3.38).890 |
| 60 | Cole Fonstad | C | Prince Albert (WHL) | 5-10/160 | 24-Apr-00 | 72-21-52-73 |
| 61 | Xavier Bouchard | D | Baie-Comeau (QMJHL) | 6-3/190 | 28-Feb-00 | 65-3-18-21 |
| 62 | Cam Hillis | C | Guelph (OHL) | 5-10/170 | 24-Jun-00 | 60-20-39-59 |
| 63 | Marcus Westfalt | C | Brynas (Swe) | 6-3/205 | 12-Mar-00 | 31-1-3-4 |
| 64 | Pavel Gogolev | RW | Peterborough (OHL) | 6-0/175 | 19-Feb-00 | 66-30-17-47 |
| 65 | Alexander Khovanov | C | Moncton (QMJHL) | 5-11/195 | 12-Apr-00 | 29-9-19-28 |
| 66 | Scott Perunovich | D | Minn-Duluth (NCHC) | 5-10/170 | 18-Aug-98 | 42-11-25-36 |
| 67 | Giovanni Vallati | D | Kitchener (OHL) | 6-1/180 | 21-Feb-00 | 65-3-23-26 |
| 68 | Olivier Rodrigue | G | Drummondville (QMJHL) | 6-0/160 | 6-Jul-00 | 31-16(2.54).903 |
| 69 | Oskar Back | C | Farjestads (Swe Jr) | 6-2/195 | 12-Mar-00 | 38-10-22-32 |
| 70 | Riley Sutter | RW | Everett (WHL) | 6-3/205 | 25-Oct-99 | 68-25-28-53 |
| 71 | Stanislav Demin | D | Wenatchee (BCHL) | 6-1/190 | 4-Apr-00 | 57-9-36-45 |
| 72 | Lenni Killinen | RW | Blues (Fin Jr) | 6-2/180 | 15-Jun-00 | 38-13-28-41 |
| 73 | Tyler Weiss | LW | NTDP (USHL) | 5-10/160 | 3-Jan-00 | 50-10-17-27 |
| 74 | Ruslan Iskhakov | C | Krasnaya Armiya (MHL) | 5-8/155 | 22-Jul-00 | 33-6-24-30 |
| 75 | Kody Clark | RW | Ottawa (OHL) | 6-1/180 | 13-Oct-99 | 56-18-21-39 |
| 76 | Patrick Giles | RW | NTDP (USHL) | 6-4/205 | 3-Jan-00 | 54-10-9-19 |
| 77 | Anderson MacDonald | LW | Moncton (QMJHL) | 6-2/205 | 16-May-00 | 58-27-18-45 |
| 78 | Jake Wise | C | NTDP (USHL) | 5-10/190 | 28-Feb-00 | 30-9-27-36 |
| 79 | Jakub Lauko | C | Pirati Chomutov (Cze) | 6-0/175 | 28-Mar-00 | 42-3-6-9 |
| 80 | Adam Samuelsson | D | NTDP (USHL) | 6-6/240 | 21-Jun-00 | 54-4-20-24 |
| 81 | Philipp Kurashev | C | Quebec (QMJHL) | 6-0/190 | 12-Oct-99 | 59-19-41-60 |
| 82 | Sean Durzi | D | Owen Sound (OHL) | 6-0/195 | 21-Oct-98 | 40-15-34-49 |
| 83 | Kirill Marchenko | RW | Mamonty Yugry (MHL) | 6-3/190 | 21-Jul-00 | 31-8-8-16 |
| 84 | Jakub Skarek | G | Dukla Jihlava (Cze) | 6-3/200 | 10-Nov-99 | 21GP(2.41).913 |
| 85 | Milos Roman | C | Vancouver (WHL) | 6-0/190 | 6-Nov-99 | 39-10-22-32 |
| 86 | Blade Jenkins | LW | Saginaw (OHL) | 6-1/195 | 11-Aug-00 | 68-20-24-44 |
| 87 | Danila Galenyuk | D | St. Petersburg (MHL) | 6-1/200 | 10-Feb-00 | 20-1-5-6 |
| 88 | Kyle Topping | C | Kelowna (WHL) | 5-11/185 | 18-Nov-99 | 66-22-43-65 |
| 89 | Tyler Madden | C | CIL-TC (USHL) | 5-10/155 | 9-Nov-99 | 50-15-19-34 |
| 90 | Jack Drury | C | Waterloo (USHL) | 5-11/180 | 3-Feb-00 | 54-23-40-63 |
| 91 | Alec Regula | D | London (OHL) | 6-3/200 | 6-Aug-00 | 67-7-18-25 |
| 92 | Ivan Morozov | C | Mamonty Yugry (MHL) | 6-1/180 | 5-May-00 | 30-11-12-23 |
| 93 | Jachym Kondelik | C | Muskegon (USHL) | 6-6/225 | 21-Dec-99 | 43-16-16-32 |
| 94 | Riley Damiani | C | Kitchener (OHL) | 5-9/165 | 20-Mar-00 | 64-19-18-37 |
| 95 | Samuel Fagemo | RW | Frolunda (Swe Jr) | 5-11/195 | 14-Mar-00 | 37-19-11-30 |
| 96 | Jack St. Ivany | D | Sioux Falls (USHL) | 6-2/200 | 22-Jul-99 | 51-6-30-36 |
| 97 | David Lilja | C | Karlskoga (Swe 2) | 5-11/175 | 23-Jan-00 | 37-3-5-8 |
| 98 | Curtis Douglas | C | Bar-Wsr (OHL) | 6-8/235 | 6-Mar-00 | 66-22-24-46 |
| 99 | Luka Burzan | C | MJ-Bdn (WHL) | 6-0/185 | 7-Jan-00 | 72-15-25-40 |
| 100 | Linus Karlsson | C | Karlskrona (Swe Jr) | 6-1/180 | 16-Nov-99 | 42-27-25-52 |
| 101 | Kristian Reichel | C | Red Deer (WHL) | 6-1/170 | 11-Jun-98 | 63-34-23-57 |
| 102 | Toni Utunen | D | LeKi (Fin 2) | 5-11/175 | 27-Apr-00 | 28-2-10-12 |
| 103 | Dmitri Zavgorodny | LW | Rimouski (QMJHL) | 5-9/175 | 11-Aug-00 | 62-26-21-47 |
| 104 | Samuel Bucek | LW | Chicago (USHL) | 6-1/215 | 19-Dec-98 | 47-19-23-42 |
| 105 | Nathan Dunkley | C | Kgn-Ldn (OHL) | 5-11/195 | 3-May-00 | 60-21-36-57 |
| 106 | Carter Robertson | D | Ottawa (OHL) | 6-2/180 | 15-Jan-00 | 57-5-13-18 |
| 107 | Albin Eriksson | RW | Skelleftea (Swe Jr) | 6-4/205 | 20-Jul-00 | 38-22-18-40 |
| 108 | Ryan O'Reilly | RW | Madison (USHL) | 6-2/200 | 21-Mar-00 | 42-20-12-32 |
| 109 | Nando Eggenberger | LW | Davos (Sui) | 6-2/185 | 7-Oct-99 | 36-3-2-5 |
| 110 | Tyler Tucker | D | Barrie (OHL) | 6-1/205 | 1-Mar-00 | 59-3-20-23 |
| 111 | Axel Andersson | D | Djurgardens (Swe Jr) | 6-0/180 | 10-Feb-00 | 42-6-25-31 |
| 112 | Alexey Polodyan | LW | St. Petersburg (MHL) | 5-11/165 | 30-Jul-98 | 21-5-6-11 |
| 113 | Jack Perbix | RW | Elk River (USHS-MN) | 6-1/175 | 13-Sep-00 | 25-19-42-61 |
| 114 | Nico Gross | D | Oshawa (OHL) | 6-1/185 | 26-Jan-00 | 58-4-10-14 |
| 115 | Declan Chisholm | D | Peterborough (OHL) | 6-1/185 | 12-Jan-00 | 47-3-17-20 |
| 116 | Ivan Prosvetov | G | Youngstown (USHL) | 6-4/175 | 5-Mar-99 | 18-9(2.87).913 |
| 117 | Kevin Mandolese | G | Cape Breton (QMJHL) | 6-3/180 | 22-Aug-00 | 15-13(3.46).884 |
| 118 | Vladislav Kotkov | RW | Chicoutimi (QMJHL) | 6-4/205 | 8-Jan-00 | 61-21-28-49 |
| 119 | Jonathan Gruden | C | NTDP (USHL) | 5-11/175 | 4-May-00 | 53-25-26-51 |
| 120 | Anthony Del Gaizo | C | Muskegon (USHL) | 5-11/195 | 31-Jan-98 | 58-39-32-71 |
| 121 | Justus Annunen | G | Karpat Oulu (Fin Jr) | 6-4/215 | 11-Mar-00 | 26GP(2.31).907 |
| 122 | Olof Lindbom | G | Djurgardens (Swe Jr) | 6-2/185 | 23-Jul-00 | 20GP(3.10).897 |
| 123 | Matthew Struthers | C | OS-NB (OHL) | 6-2/210 | 26-Dec-99 | 62-23-22-45 |
| 124 | Alex Steeves | C | Dubuque (USHL) | 5-11/185 | 10-Dec-99 | 53-18-36-54 |
| 125 | Ben Copeland | C | Waterloo (USHL) | 5-10/180 | 27-Apr-99 | 58-17-42-59 |
| OTHER DRAFT CANDIDATES | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jett Alexander | G | North York (OJHL) | 6-4/190 | 8-Nov-99 |
| Yaroslav Alexeyev | LW | Sherbrooke (QMJHL) | 5-9/160 | 17-Jan-99 |
| Justin Almeida | C | Moose Jaw (WHL) | 5-9/160 | 6-Feb-99 |
| Seth Barton | D | Trail (BCHL) | 6-2/175 | 18-Aug-99 |
| Justin Bergeron | D | Rouyn Noranda (QMJHL) | 6-0/180 | 14-Sep-00 |
| Erik Betzold | RW | Koln (Ger) | 5-11/165 | 18-Jan-00 |
| Brandon Biro | RW | Penn State (B1G) | 5-11/165 | 11-Mar-98 |
| Mikhail Bitsadze | C | Dynamo Moscow (Rus) | 5-11/170 | 18-Nov-99 |
| Shawn Boudrias | RW | Gatineau (QMJHL) | 6-4/195 | 14-Sep-99 |
| Jakob Brahaney | D | Kingston (OHL) | 6-1/185 | 26-Mar-99 |
| Justin Brazeau | RW | North Bay (OHL) | 6-5/220 | 2-Feb-98 |
| Dennis Busby | D | Flint (OHL) | 5-10/190 | 6-Jan-00 |
| Michael Callahan | D | Central Illinois (USHL) | 6-2/195 | 23-Sep-99 |
| Ryan Chyzowski | LW | Medicine Hat (WHL) | 6-0/190 | 14-May-00 |
| Powell Connor | D | Chilliwack (BCHL) | 6-1/175 | 4-May-00 |
| Connor Corcoran | D | Windsor (OHL) | 6-1/185 | 7-Aug-00 |
| Paul Cotter | C | Lincoln (USHL) | 6-0/190 | 16-Nov-99 |
| Angus Crookshank | LW | Langley (BCHL) | 5-11/185 | 2-Oct-99 |
| Max Crozier | D | Nanaimo (BCHL) | 6-1/185 | 19-Apr-00 |
| Ethan de Jong | RW | Prince George (BCHL) | 5-10/170 | 12-Jul-99 |
| Jack DeBoer | C | NTDP (USA) | 6-2/190 | 17-Aug-00 |
| Semyon Der-Arguchintsev | C | Peterborough (OHL) | 5-10/160 | 15-Sep-00 |
| Lukas Dostal | G | Kometa Brno (Cze) | 6-1/165 | 22-Jun-00 |
| Grigori Dronov | D | Magnitogorsk (Rus) | 6-2/205 | 10-Jan-98 |
| Justin Ducharme | LW | Acadie-Bathurst (QMJHL) | 5-11/180 | 22-Feb-00 |
| Daniel Dvorak | G | Hradec Kralove (Cze) | 6-3/160 | 9-Jan-00 |
| Jesper Eliasson | G | Troja/Ljungby (Swe) | 6-3/200 | 21-Mar-00 |
| Caleb Everett | D | Saginaw (OHL) | 6-1/185 | 20-Jan-00 |
| Christian Felton | D | Kimball Union (USHS-NH) | 6-0/190 | 4-Feb-00 |
| Trey Fix-Wolansky | RW | Edmonton (WHL) | 5-8/185 | 26-May-99 |
| Eric Florchuk | C | Saskatoon (WHL) | 6-1/175 | 10-Jan-00 |
| Carson Focht | C | Calgary (WHL) | 6-0/180 | 4-Feb-00 |
| Adam Gajarsky | RW | Kometa Brno (Cze) | 5-10/175 | 4-Mar-00 |
| Jeremi Gerber | RW | Bern (Sui) | 6-1/185 | 1-Mar-00 |
| Damien Giroux | C | Saginaw (OHL) | 5-10/175 | 3-Mar-00 |
| Jack Gorniak | LW | West Salem High (USHS-WI) | 5-11/180 | 15-Sep-99 |
| Matthew Grouchy | RW | Quebec (QMJHL) | 6-1/190 | 19-Nov-99 |
| Glenn Gustafsson | C | Orebro (Swe) | 5-10/200 | 4-Sep-98 |
| Curtis Hall | C | Youngstown (USHL) | 6-2/195 | 26-Apr-00 |
| Kevin Hancock | LW | Owen Sound (OHL) | 5-11/185 | 2-Mar-98 |
| Jordan Harris | D | Kimball Union (USHS-NH) | 5-11/180 | 7-Jul-00 |
| Reece Harsch | D | Seattle (WHL) | 6-3/195 | 7-Jan-99 |
| Brady Hinz | C | Peterborough (OHL) | 5-9/150 | 3-May-00 |
| Mitchell Hoelscher | C | Ottawa (OHL) | 5-11/160 | 27-Jan-00 |
| Mac Hollowell | D | Sault Ste Marie (OHL) | 5-9/170 | 26-Sep-98 |
| Krystof Hrabik | C | Bili Tygri Liberec (Cze) | 6-4/210 | 24-Sep-99 |
| David Hrenak | G | St. Cloud State (NCHC) | 6-2/190 | 5-May-98 |
| Riley Hughes | RW | St. Sebastian's (USHS-MA) | 6-1/175 | 27-Jun-00 |
| Jere Huhtamaa | G | Blues (Fin) | 6-2/190 | 10-Apr-00 |
| Logan Hutsko | RW | Boston College (HE) | 5-10/175 | 11-Feb-99 |
| Jacob Ingham | G | Mississauga (OHL) | 6-3/185 | 10-Jun-00 |
| Jere Innala | LW | HPK (Fin) | 5-9/175 | 17-Mar-98 |
| Michal Ivan | D | Acadie-Bathurst (QMJHL) | 6-1/185 | 18-Nov-99 |
| Georgi Ivanov | C | Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (Rus) | 6-0/190 | 25-Sep-98 |
| Jan Jenik | RW | Benatky nad Jizerou (Cze) | 6-1/165 | 15-Sep-00 |
| Jack Jensen | C | Eden Prairie (USHS-MN) | 6-0/195 | 31-Aug-00 |
| Joey Keane | D | Barrie (OHL) | 6-0/185 | 2-Jul-99 |
| Brett Kemp | C | Edmonton (WHL) | 6-0/165 | 23-Mar-00 |
| Michael Kesselring | D | New Hampton School (USHS-NH) | 6-4/185 | 13-Jan-00 |
| Juuso Ketola | D | Assat Pori (Fin) | 5-11/210 | 18-Mar-00 |
| Patrick Khodorenko | C | Michigan State (B1G) | 6-0/205 | 13-Oct-98 |
| Liam Kirk | C | Sheffield (EIHL) | 6-2/160 | 3-Jan-00 |
| Semyon Kizimov | RW | Lada Togliatti (Rus) | 6-0/175 | 19-Jan-00 |
| Jordan Kooy | G | London (OHL) | 6-2/185 | 30-Apr-00 |
| Ivan Kosorenkov | RW | Victoriaville (QMJHL) | 5-10/185 | 22-Jan-98 |
| Demetrios Koumontzis | LW | Edina (USHS-MN) | 5-10/185 | 24-Mar-00 |
| Nikolai Kovalenko | RW | Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (Rus) | 5-10/175 | 17-Oct-99 |
| Filip Kral | D | Spokane (WHL) | 6-1/170 | 20-Oct-99 |
| Renars Krastenbergs | LW | Oshawa (OHL) | 5-11/185 | 16-Dec-98 |
| Cole Krygier | D | Lincoln (USHL) | 6-3/195 | 5-May-00 |
| Daniel Kurovsky | LW | Vitkovice (Cze) | 6-4/215 | 4-Mar-98 |
| Michal Kvasnica | RW | Frydek-Mistek (Cze) | 6-1/190 | 7-Apr-00 |
| Owen Lalonde | D | Guelph (OHL) | 6-0/180 | 1-Feb-00 |
| Jackson Leppard | LW | Prince George (WHL) | 6-1/200 | 18-Jan-00 |
| David Levin | C | Sudbury (OHL) | 5-10/180 | 16-Sep-99 |
| Mitchell Lewandowski | RW | Michigan State (B1G) | 5-9/175 | 17-Apr-98 |
| Adam Liska | C | Kitchener (OHL) | 5-11/185 | 14-Oct-99 |
| John Ludvig | D | Portland (WHL) | 6-0/185 | 2-Aug-00 |
| Brady Lyle | D | Owen Sound (OHL) | 6-1/205 | 6-Jun-99 |
| Guillaume Maillard | C | Geneve-Servette (Sui) | 6-0/200 | 11-Oct-98 |
| James Malm | C | Vancouver (WHL) | 5-9/180 | 25-Jun-99 |
| Anton Malyshev | D | Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (Rus) | 6-0/180 | 27-Feb-00 |
| Riley McCourt | D | Flint (OHL) | 5-11/170 | 26-Jun-00 |
| Aidan McDonough | LW | Thayer Academy (USHS-MA) | 6-1/175 | 6-Nov-99 |
| Nolan McElhaney | D | Cushing Academy (USHS-MA) | 6-3/175 | 22-Apr-99 |
| Jeremy McKenna | RW | Moncton (QMJHL) | 5-10/175 | 20-Apr-99 |
| Albert Michnac | LW | Mississauga (OHL) | 6-0/180 | 18-Oct-98 |
| Amir Miftakhov | G | Irbis Kazan (Rus) | 6-0/160 | 26-Apr-00 |
| Artyom Minulin | D | Swift Current (WHL) | 6-2/200 | 1-Oct-98 |
| Travis Mitchell | D | Muskegon (USHL) | 6-2/195 | 25-Nov-99 |
| Billy Moskal | C | London (OHL) | 6-0/185 | 22-Mar-00 |
| Nolan Moyle | RW | Green Bay (USHL) | 6-1/185 | 13-Apr-99 |
| Arttu Nevasaari | RW | Karpat Oulu (Fin) | 5-11/180 | 23-Jan-00 |
| Tristen Nielsen | C | Calgary (WHL) | 5-9/180 | 23-Feb-00 |
| Kirill Nizhnikov | RW | Sudbury (OHL) | 6-2/190 | 29-Mar-00 |
| Linus Nyman | RW | Kingston (OHL) | 5-9/160 | 11-Jul-99 |
| Andrei Pavlenko | RW | Edmonton (WHL) | 6-1/175 | 4-Apr-00 |
| Radovan Pavlik | RW | Hradec Kralove (Cze) | 5-9/175 | 18-Feb-98 |
| Ryan Peckford | LW | Moose Jaw (WHL) | 6-0/190 | 4-Mar-99 |
| Matej Pekar | C | Muskegon (USHL) | 6-0/170 | 10-Feb-00 |
| Ville Petman | C | Lukko Rauma (Fin) | 5-10/180 | 18-Jan-00 |
| Mathias Emilio Pettersen | C | Muskegon (USHL) | 5-10/170 | 3-Apr-00 |
| Jacob Pivonka | C | NTDP (USA) | 5-11/200 | 28-Feb-00 |
| Karel Plasek | RW | Kometa Brno (Cze) | 5-10/155 | 28-Jul-00 |
| Dylan Plouffe | D | Vancouver (WHL) | 6-0/195 | 27-Apr-99 |
| Martin Pospisil | C | Sioux City (USHL) | 6-2/180 | 19-Nov-99 |
| Josh Prokop | C | Vernon (BCHL) | 5-10/175 | 30-Jan-00 |
| Cole Purboo | RW | Windsor (OHL) | 6-3/205 | 18-Jun-99 |
| Vincent Purpura | G | Omaha (USHL) | 6-3/195 | 29-Oct-98 |
| Jacob Ragnarsson | D | Almtuna (Swe) | 5-11/170 | 23-Sep-99 |
| Jack Randl | LW | Omaha (USHL) | 5-11/180 | 7-May-00 |
| Connor Roberts | C | Flint (OHL) | 6-4/210 | 22-Feb-00 |
| Alexander Romanov | D | Krasnaya Armiya Moskva (Rus) | 5-11/185 | 6-Jan-00 |
| Nikita Rtishchev | RW | CSKA Moscow (Rus) | 6-1/195 | 23-May-00 |
| Merrick Rippon | D | Ottawa (OHL) | 6-0/190 | 27-Apr-00 |
| Radim Salda | D | Saint John (QMJHL) | 6-0/185 | 18-Feb-99 |
| Santeri Salmela | D | KOOKOO (Fin) | 6-1/195 | 10-Jun-00 |
| Akira Schmid | G | Langnau (Sui) | 6-4/165 | 12-May-00 |
| Phillip Schultz | C | Rodovre (Den) | 6-0/195 | 24-Jul-00 |
| Zdenek Sedlak | RW | Karpat Oulu (Fin) | 6-2/205 | 23-Mar-00 |
| Peetro Seppala | D | KOOKOO (Fin) | 6-1/175 | 17-Aug-00 |
| Bulat Shafigullin | LW | Reaktor Nizhnekamsk (Rus) | 6-1/165 | 29-Dec-99 |
| Yegor Sharangovich | C | Dinamo Minsk (Rus) | 6-2/195 | 6-Jun-98 |
| Alexander Shepelev | D | Chelyabinsk (Rus) | 6-2/185 | 17-Mar-98 |
| Marsel Sholokhov | RW | Chelyabinsk (Rus) | 5-10/170 | 12-Jan-98 |
| Graham Slaggert | C | NTDP (USA) | 5-11/185 | 6-Apr-99 |
| Egor Sokolov | LW | Cape Breton (QMJHL) | 6-3/225 | 7-Jun-00 |
| Zach Solow | RW | Northeastern (HE) | 5-9/185 | 6-Nov-98 |
| Riley Stotts | C | Calgary (WHL) | 6-0/175 | 5-Jan-00 |
| Vladislav Syomin | D | SKA-Neva St. Petersburg (Rus) | 6-3/215 | 17-Feb-98 |
| Matt Thiessen | G | Steinbach (MJHL) | 6-2/190 | 9-Jun-00 |
| Michael Vorlicky | D | Edina (USHS-MN) | 6-1/165 | 17-Jul-00 |
| Pavel Vorobey | D | Kunlun Red Star (Rus) | 6-3/195 | 10-Sep-97 |
| Lukas Wernblom | C | MoDo (Swe) | 5-9/170 | 22-Jul-00 |
| Chase Wouters | C | Saskatoon (WHL) | 5-11/180 | 8-Feb-00 |
| Wyatte Wylie | D | Everett (WHL) | 6-0/190 | 2-Nov-99 |
| Vladislav Yeryomenko | D | Calgary (WHL) | 6-0/185 | 23-Apr-99 |
| Libor Zabransky | D | Kelowna (WHL) | 6-1/190 | 26-May-00 |
| Egor Zamula | D | Calgary (WHL) | 6-3/170 | 30-Mar-00 |
| Danila Zhuravlyov | D | Irbis Kazan (Rus) | 6-0/165 | 8-Apr-00 |
Eastern Conference
#1 - Hamilton Bulldogs vs. #8 - Ottawa 67’s
Season Series: Hamilton leads 5-0

Analysis: The Conference Champion Bulldogs face off against the 67’s after the Steelheads won on the final Sunday, securing the number 7 seed. Hamilton has been the cream of the crop of the Eastern Conference for the vast majority of the season. They have been extremely active in trades this year to give them the best chance of coming out of the East. The Bulldogs added Robert Thomas (St. Louis), Riley Stillman (Florida), Nic Caamano (Dallas), Ryan Moore, and Nic Mattinen (Toronto) to an already stacked lineup, giving Ottawa an extremely daunting challenge in round one. This team rolls three powerhouse offensive lines with Matthew Strome (Philadelphia), Will Bitten (Montreal), Mackenzie Entwistle (Arizona), Marian Studenic (New Jersey), and Brandon Saigeon being other top options. Forward Arthur Kaliyev (2019) is another name to watch. He is the first 16 year old to score 30 goals in the OHL since Alex Galchenyuk and he is a potential lottery pick next year as a power winger. In net, the Bulldogs boast one of the OHL’s most improved players this year in Kaden Fulcher (Detroit).

Ottawa, on the other hand, is a very young team. In a few years’ time, they could be Memorial Cup contenders. They could have five players drafted in the first three rounds this year (Kody Clark, Mitchell Hoelscher, Merrick Rippon, Kevin Bahl, and Carter Robertson). Offensively, they are paced by Sasha Chmelevski (San Jose), Travis Barron (Colorado), Austen Keating (2018) and Tye Felhaber. Chmelevski was a much hyped prospect who fell hard at last year’s draft (all the way to the 6th), but he has returned much stronger this season. His play away from the puck has greatly improved and it has taken his game to another level. But for all their talent offensively, the 67’s have had a very difficult time keeping the puck out of their own net this year. Overager Olivier Tremblay has not provided the stability that the team had hoped for when they brought him in early this year.
This one has all the makings of a quick series. This Ottawa team, as talented as they are young, is not yet ready for this type of challenge. The Bulldogs are one of the deepest teams in the OHL and their offensive firepower is likely to overwhelm an inexperienced defense and inconsistent netminder. One particular thing worth watching is the 67’s struggling penalty kill going up against one of the league’s best powerplay units from Hamilton. This has to be troubling for Ottawa because they also happen to be one of the league’s most undisciplined teams. And while Ottawa does have some great young offensive talent, the Bulldogs have one of the oldest defensive units in the league and are likely to limit the offensive chances of the 67’s. I look for Robert Thomas to have a big series here (and a big playoff performance overall). His points per game has taken a big dip since joining the Bulldogs, but I think he explodes this postseason.
Prediction: This Hamilton team is just too experienced and too talented for the 67’s. They have the advantage in nearly every area and should dominate. If Ottawa was getting better goaltending, I would say that they might be able to steal a game or two, but I do not even see that happening. Hamilton in 4.
#2 - Barrie Colts vs. #7 - Mississauga Steelheads
Season Series: Mississauga leads 4-2

Analysis: If I was a betting man, I would bet that this is the match-up that Barrie wanted to avoid in the opening round. In fact, it was probably the match-up every team wanted to avoid in the first round. Mississauga has underachieved all season long, but they have shown some signs of finally coming to life the last month or so. Offensive talent is not to be questioned. Their first two lines include names like Michael McLeod (New Jersey), Ryan McLeod (2018), Owen Tippett (Florida), Trent Fox, Albert Michnac (2018), and Mathieu Foget. This group of six matches up well against any top six in the Eastern Conference and it helps to explain why the Steelheads are the third highest scoring team in the Conference. And this excludes their leading scorer, defenseman Nic Hague (Vegas), who was the first OHL defender to score 30+ since Allan Rourke. But keeping the puck out has been a challenge at times. Swedish import and defensive stalwart Jacob Moverare (Los Angeles) has been injured and that has really challenged their younger defensive players to play more minutes than they are ready for. Furthermore, young netminder Jacob Ingham (2018) has had an awful sophomore season that has seen him essentially lose the starting job to Emanuel Vella.

This is potentially trouble because Barrie is the highest scoring team in the Conference and the 3rd highest scoring in the OHL. Their first line of Andrei Svechnikov (2018), Aaron Luchuk (Ottawa), and Dmitry Sokolov (Minnesota) has been absolutely shredding teams of late. The supporting offensive cast includes guys like Ryan Suzuki (2019), Jason Willms (2018), and Zach Magwood who work extremely hard in all three zones and bring energy that exhausts the opposition so that the first line can go to work. The Colts do not have any stars on the blueline, but they are a tight knit unit who work well with Barrie’s forwards to play a terrific team defense. In net, overager Leo Lazerev starts and while he does not necessarily win any games outright for the Colts, he is a mostly reliable presence. It should be noted that he has yet to win an OHL playoff series in his career and probably goes into this match-up with just as many question marks as Mississauga’s tenders.
There is no question that this is not your average #2 versus #7 seed match-up. This is especially true when you consider the fact that Mississauga largely dominated the season series, winning all three games in the new year by a combined score of 18-10. For whatever reason, the speed of Mississauga’s forwards gives the defense of Barrie a tough time and Lazerev has an .840 save percentage against the Fish this season. This is complicated even more by the fact that Andrei Svechnikov has been suspended for the first four games of the series for a head check. But I admit, I have a tough time picking Mississauga to win this series. I do not trust their defense to be able to handle Barrie’s depth up front. And if these games go to an offensive shootout like they did in the regular season, I think Barrie ends up coming out on top this time. Mississauga’s Mathieu Foget has also been suspended for the first four games of the series and his loss might actually be felt more because of Mississauga’s lack of depth. His acquisition really triggered the turnaround for the team. Barrie also needs to stay out of the box. In the regular season, they gave Mississauga almost double the amount of powerplays that they received and it cost them dearly with the Steelheads clicking at over 30% with the man advantage. If they can stay out of the box, and Lazerev can make a few saves, I still like Barrie to come out on top.
Prediction: The result of this series would not surprise me either way, even with the difference in seeding. But depth is critical in the playoffs and Barrie has the advantage there. I am excited to see how the Svechnikov/Luchuk/Sokolov unit handles the pressure of the playoffs. Svechnikov, in particular, can really cement himself as the #2 prospect available in the draft with a strong postseason performance once he returns from suspension (as long as Barrie does not get swept). Barrie in 7.
#3 - Kingston Frontenacs vs. #6 - North Bay Battalion
Season Series: Kingston leads 3-1

Analysis: This is an intriguing match-up because of how differently these two teams approached the OHL season. Kingston brought in Gabe Vilardi (Los Angeles), Max Jones (Anaheim), Cliff Pu (Buffalo), Sean Day (New York Rangers), and Mitchell Byrne at the deadline to bolster an already solid line-up and make them contenders to come out of the East. While they failed to secure a division banner, the results post deadline have been mostly extremely positive. A healthy and re-invigorated Vilardi has provided the biggest boost, as his 1.87 points per game in Kingston is second to only Jordan Kyrou (St. Louis) in the OHL. His strength, on and off the puck, makes him a dominant force in all three zones and the type of player who works to tire and grind out opposing defenses.

The North Bay Battalion were sellers at the deadline this year, shipping out veterans Cam Dineen (Arizona), and Brett McKenzie (Vancouver). Those moves only worked to light a fire under the Battalion roster and the team actually improved their record in the New Year thanks to the play of new acquisitions Matthew Struthers (2018), and Jake Henderson, as well as veterans Justin Brazeau (2018), and Adam Thilander (2018). Brazeau, in particular, is a player to watch. The 6-5” winger finished just inside the Top 20 of league scoring and was named as the East’s most underrated player in the recent coaches poll that was released.
If we are measuring up these two teams, we need to give the edge to Kingston in nearly every area. The Fronts lead the season series 3-1, winning the three most recent games (February on). The biggest advantage Kingston has is in net with Jeremy Helvig (Carolina) manning the crease. The overager and veteran netminder has 19 OHL playoff games under his belt and is unquestionably one of the league’s top netminders. Meanwhile, the Battalion will rely on either Christian Propp (2018) or Julian Sime, who have a combined zero OHL playoff appearances. Kingston also has a heavy advantage on special teams, with their powerplay and penalty killing units operating at a higher level. With Robertson and Vilardi operating down low on the powerplay, North Bay is going to need to stay out of the box to have any chance in this series. One wild card to keep an eye on is the health of Max Jones. Jones has been out since the end of January after undergoing surgery on a broken finger. It is likely he returns at some point in these playoffs and he can be a major x-factor.
Prediction: Ultimately, Kingston’s experience and leadership should carry them to a relatively easy victory in this match-up. Gabe Vilardi and Sean Day won a Memorial Cup together last year. Mitchell Byrne won an OHL Championship last year. And Cliff Pu and Max Jones won an OHL Title and Memorial Cup in 2016. Kingston in 5.
#4 - Niagara IceDogs vs. #5 - Oshawa Generals
Season Series: Tied at 1 game apiece

Analysis: Two teams that do not see a ton of each other match-up in round one. Niagara and Oshawa also happen to be two of the hotter teams in the OHL heading into the playoffs. The IceDogs are a team that rely on speed and energy to play an up tempo and offensively oriented style of game. They get after it on the forecheck and have a powerplay that has been much improved since the acquisition of overager Sam Miletic (Pittsburgh) from London. On top of Miletic, Niagara has a trio of offensive weapons that they rely on in Kirill Maksimov (Edmonton), Akil Thomas (2018), and Ben Jones (Vegas).

Oshawa, on the other hand, prefers to slow things down and grind it out in the offensive end. Their fearless leader is Jack Studnicka (Boston), an excellent two-way center who makes an impact in so many different ways. A pair of first time draft eligible forwards support Studnicka; Serron Noel (2018), and Allan McShane (2018). Defenseman Matt Brassard (Vancouver) is also critical to their offensive success. He was one of the highest scoring defenders in the league in the second half and finished the year 7th in defensive scoring.
If we are truly comparing these two teams, it is difficult to determine who has a clear advantage. In goal, the nod should be given to Oshawa and their starter Kyle Keyser (Boston). Keyser has been a stable presence in net this year, definitely more so than Stephen Dhillon who has struggled for Niagara this year, or the inexperienced Colton Incze. Up front, I give the slight edge to Niagara because of their explosiveness and depth. On defense, the two teams boast slightly inexperienced units who are mobile, but can be mistake prone. Ultimately, I see two things possibly tipping the favor in Niagara’s direction. The first is special teams play. As mentioned, Niagara’s powerplay has been performing at a high level lately and Oshawa has one of the league’s worst penalty killing units. The second is home ice advantage, which Niagara owns after finishing the regular season on a 7 game winning streak.
Prediction: With home ice advantage, better special teams play, and a slightly more explosive offense, I like Niagara to win this series. Their goaltending concerns me slightly, but between Dhillon or Incze, they should be able to make enough big saves to at least get the IceDogs into the second round. But this one will be close. Niagara in 7.
Western Conference
#1 - Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds vs. #8 - Saginaw Spirit
Season Series: SSM leads 7-1

Analysis: The juggernaut Greyhounds kick off their Memorial Cup push against the Saginaw Spirit, whose five game losing streak to end the season forced them down the standings and into this first round match-up. Sault Ste. Marie has nine NHL draft picks on their roster and two more potential first rounders for 2018. Up front, Boris Katchouk (Tampa Bay), Taylor Raddysh (Tampa Bay), Jack Kopacka (Anaheim), Tim Gettinger (New York Rangers), Barrett Hayton (2018), and the underrated Hayden Verbeek pace the attack. But the real star is OHL 2nd leading scorer Morgan Frost (Philadelphia), one of the breakout stars of this season. On the backend, the Hounds are equally strong, led by Conor Timmins (Colorado), and Rasmus Sandin (2018). Neither seem to make a mistake with the puck and both are just as good in their own end as they are offensively. In net, Matthew Villalta (Los Angeles) has been a steady presence who makes the saves when he needs to.

Saginaw’s strength actually starts in net where overager Evan Cormier (New Jersey) keeps the Spirit in a lot of games that they do not deserve to be in. This is important because the Spirit struggle to score goals. They were only one of three teams in the OHL to not score 200 goals on the season and the other two finished dead last in their conferences (Flint and Sudbury). Furthermore, their powerplay was a league worst 14.7%. There is definitely some offensive talent on this team, but the team’s best days are ahead of them as guys like Blade Jenkins (2018), Nicholas Porco (2019), Ryan Stepien (2020), Aidan Prueter (2020), and Damien Giroux (2018) gain experience. In fact, the team’s only NHL drafted forward, Brady Gilmour (Detroit) finished 9th in team scoring.
In all honesty, this series should not be close and is not likely to be close. The Spirit have a talented young roster, but they are not currently an equal to the Greyhounds. Sault Ste. Marie has the advantage in nearly every area except maybe goaltending. Even then, Evan Cormier can only do so much. Heck, we might see the Greyhounds score more shorthanded goals than the Spirit score powerplay goals in the series.
Prediction: I want to say that Evan Cormier can do enough to steal a game for the Spirit in this series, but I cannot even see the Spirit winning a game. The Greyhounds are just too strong. SSM in 4.
#2 - Kitchener Rangers vs. #7 - Guelph Storm
Season Series: Kitchener leads 5-3

Analysis: This is an interesting first round match-up between two teams that did not end the regular season the way they wanted to. Kitchener, a strong team all season, struggled down the stretch, although managed to hang on to their Division crown. Meanwhile, the Guelph Storm were one of the league’s worst teams in the last few months that saw them lose their grip on the #6 spot in the West. Kitchener loaded up at the deadline by bringing in Logan Brown (Ottawa), Givani Smith (Detroit), Mario Culina, and Austin McEneny. I think it would be fair to say that Kitchener is still waiting to see the best out of three of those four, with Culina playing well so far as a starter. It has been the guys around all season like Adam Mascherin (Florida), Kole Sherwood (Columbus), Joseph Gareffa, Logan Stanley (Winnipeg), and Riley Damiani (2018) that have been driving the team’s success. Moving into the playoffs, it will be about whether the newer faces can finally find chemistry or not. The health of defensive stalwart Connor Hall (Pittsburgh) could also impact the series.

Guelph, as mentioned, has also struggled down the stretch, especially when it comes to preventing goals. Goaltender Anthony Popovich (2018) appeared to tire of late after seeing a huge jump in workload this season. The defensive group, led by Ryan Merkley (2018), and Dmitri Samorukov (Edmonton) also struggled, to the point where Merkley was a healthy scratch at times down the stretch. The Storm do have a hard working forward group who is capable of icing multiple scoring lines. The offensive leaders are unquestionably Isaac Ratcliffe (Philadelphia) and Cam Hillis (2018), who along with Alexei Toropchenko (St. Louis) form a quality first line.
Looking at this series a little more under the microscope, it is probably closer than people are making it out to be. The special teams match-up pretty well. Neither team has a dominant goaltender that one would qualify as a game-changer (no offense meant to Culina or Popovich). Both teams struggled down the stretch with team chemistry issues. The tipping point for me is experience. The Rangers have the clear advantage there, especially on the defensive end. Guys like Logan Stanley and Austin McEneny, who won a Memorial Cup together with Windsor last year, should really help to stabilize things, even without Connor Hall. I also look for longtime Rangers like Mascherin or Connor Bunnaman (Philadelphia) to really step up offensively to get this team over the first round hump.
Prediction: As mentioned, I feel like Kitchener’s experience advantage will help them come out on top in this series. I also feel that they have a much better team defense approach that likely plays out better for success in the playoffs. Guelph has talent, but they play a very high risk game that, without a ton of playoff experience, could be their undoing. It will be close, but Kitchener in 6.
#3 - Sarnia Sting vs. #6 - Windsor Spitfires
Season Series: Sarnia leads 5-1

Analysis: No offense meant to the rest of the Windsor Spitfires, but this match-up is about two things. The Sarnia offense (2nd best in the OHL) versus the goaltending of Michael DiPietro (Vancouver). The dynamic DiPietro is one of the few goaltenders in the OHL who is capable of stealing a series victory for his team. The Spitfires rebuilt, dealing off the majority of their veterans held over from their Memorial Cup victory last year, but decided to hang on to their star netminder for this reason. They battle hard in the offensive end behind the likes of Curtis Douglas (2018), Cole Purboo (2018), Cody Morgan (2019), Luke Boka, and Matthew MacDougall (2018). And they play smart in their own end thanks to Connor Corcoran (2018), Nathan Staios (2019), Grayson Ladd (2019), and Zach Shankar. But this team has zero NHL drafted players outside of DiPietro and are incredibly inexperienced.

The Sting, conversely, were one of the biggest buyers throughout this OHL season, bringing in talented veterans like Cam Dineen (Arizona), Jonathan Ang (Florida), and Michael Pezzetta (Montreal). The lifeblood of the team is Jordan Kyrou (St. Louis), the league’s leader in points per game this year and possibly the best offensive player in the OHL. He is currently zero for three in first round appearances and is likely to do everything in his power to finally reach the second round (and beyond). You could likely argue that overager Justin Fazio is the team’s second most important player in the series, especially considering that he has to match-up against DiPietro. The margin for error is slim.
One of Sarnia’s biggest strengths is on the powerplay where Kyrou, Adam Ruzicka (Calgary), and Drake Rymsha (Los Angeles) have a combined 34 powerplay goals this year. Problem is, Windsor takes among the least amount of penalties in the OHL so as long as Windsor can continue to stay out of the box, Sarnia is going to need to beat DiPietro 5 on 5. The question I have is, how will Windsor manage to score goals, at least enough goals to win this 7 game series? It will not be with the man advantage either (likely) as the Sting have the league’s top penalty killing unit. I am slightly worried about Sarnia’s inexperienced defense though, but that concern is more directed towards round two or three (if the Sting advance that far). Sarnia will need big guys like Ruzicka, Pezzetta, Jordan Ernst, and Hugo Leufvenius (2018) to crowd DiPietro’s space as much as possible and really make him uncomfortable. Shoot, shoot, and shoot some more. Windsor fans can tell you, sometimes the best way to beat Michael DiPietro is through sheer luck and bad bounces.
Prediction: As much as I want to predict a Windsor victory, I do not see it in the cards. DiPietro will steal a few games and he will make Sarnia sweat. But the offensive firepower of Sarnia, combined with the inexperience of Windsor’s defense is likely to give the Sting too many scoring chances for the Spitfires’ star netminder to handle. Sarnia in 6.
#4 - Owen Sound Attack vs. #5 - London Knights
Season Series: London leads 4-2

Analysis: As is usually the case, the 4/5 matchup in the Western Conference looks to be the closest match-up of the first round, and subsequently the most difficult to prognosticate. London traded off the vast majority of their big guns to retool to fight another day. Instead, the team played inspired hockey down the stretch led by a host of younger players eager to make their mark. When talking about London, we have to start with defenseman Evan Bouchard (2018), the lifeblood of the Knights. His 87 points are the highest by a blueliner since Ryan Ellis hit the 100 point mark in 2011. The speedy Alex Formenton (Ottawa) is also playing the best hockey of his OHL career thus far with 12 goals in 14 games to close out the regular season. And you cannot talk about London without mentioning how good the “kid” line of Liam Foudy (2018), Billy Moskal (2018), and Nathan Dunkley (2018) has been since the trade deadline. This trio was challenged to step up their games with increased ice time and they all responded accordingly.

Owen Sound, on the other hand, was expected to be one of the top teams in the OHL this year but struggled to keep their star players healthy all year and subsequently struggled to perform consistently. That is, until the last few months when they have been, arguably, the OHL’s best. This team is scary good when healthy and they are now finally healthy. They roll three outstanding scoring lines, including a top unit of Jonah Gadjovich (Vancouver), Kevin Hancock (2018), and Nick Suzuki (Vegas) that has been one of the OHL’s best over the last two seasons. They also have one of the OHL’s top offensive blueliners in Sean Durzi (2018), who if he did not get injured, likely could have challenged Bouchard for the defenceman scoring title. It is in net where Owen Sound has struggled this season as Olivier Lafreniere and Mack Guzda (2019) have battled to find consistency. No question, Owen Sound has to have their offense rolling to win because they are not going to win many 2-1 games.
So who has the advantage going into this match-up? Experience wise, the nod has to be given to Owen Sound...and by a wide margin. The Attack are returning the vast majority of a roster that lost in the Conference finals last season. The Knights are an extremely well coached team, but they are relying on a lot of rookies and sophomores in key roles and that can often prove to be a recipe for disaster in the postseason. The deciding factor in this series probably comes down to the goaltending. So long as Owen Sound can get at least adequate goaltending from one of Lafreniere or Guzda, they should win this series. But if their goaltending struggles and team is forced to constantly play catch-up, the series tips in London’s favor, a team with nothing to lose.
Prediction: I have to give the nod to Owen Sound here because now that they are fully healthy, they look like a tough team to stop. This is especially true for a team as inexperienced as London; even if they are extremely talented. The Attack can get the saves they need to win this one, even if London pushes them and makes them sweat. Owen Sound in 6
OHL Finals Prediction
When the field is finally narrowed down to two teams who battle it out for OHL supremacy, I expect those two teams to be the Kingston Frontenacs and the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds.
From the East I like Kingston for a couple reasons. The first is experience. As I already alluded to, they have a lot of players on that roster who have already won a Memorial Cup or OHL Championship (or both). That type of leadership goes a long way in the playoffs. The second is special teams play. The great Scotty Bowman always said combined special teams play was a great indicator of postseason success. Well the Fronts have the best powerplay in the league and the second best penalty kill. The third is goaltending. Jeremy Helvig is a veteran netminder who is about as consistent as they come. I have a ton of confidence in his ability to make saves when he needs to.
From the West, I like the Soo Greyhounds as they have looked about as dominant as anyone in the OHL has over the last few years. Their 116 points is the most since Barrie put up 116 in 2010. This team has it all. Special teams success. Good goaltending. Speed. Physicality. But most of all...depth. Drew Bannister’s players rarely seem to take a shift off and they rarely make mistakes with the puck. That composure at both ends of the ice makes them the favorite.
For the OHL Title, I am taking the Soo Greyhounds to win their first J. Ross Robertson Cup since they won back to back championships in the early 90ś.
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