[04-May-2026 15:31:54 UTC] PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Class 'WP_Widget' not found in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/widgets/mckeens_news_feed_widget.php:3 Stack trace: #0 {main} thrown in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/widgets/mckeens_news_feed_widget.php on line 3 [04-May-2026 15:31:55 UTC] PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Class 'WP_Widget' not found in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/widgets/mckeens_sidebar_menu_widget.php:3 Stack trace: #0 {main} thrown in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/widgets/mckeens_sidebar_menu_widget.php on line 3 [04-May-2026 15:31:45 UTC] PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Call to undefined function add_action() in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/shortcodes/mckeens_display_editorials.php:22 Stack trace: #0 {main} thrown in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/shortcodes/mckeens_display_editorials.php on line 22 [04-May-2026 15:31:46 UTC] PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Call to undefined function add_action() in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/shortcodes/mckeens_display_tabs.php:50 Stack trace: #0 {main} thrown in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/shortcodes/mckeens_display_tabs.php on line 50 [04-May-2026 15:31:47 UTC] PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Call to undefined function add_action() in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/shortcodes/mckeens_heading.php:15 Stack trace: #0 {main} thrown in /home/mckeens/public_html/wp-content/themes/understrap-child/inc/shortcodes/mckeens_heading.php on line 15 Riley Damiani – McKeen's Hockey https://www.mckeenshockey.com The Essential Hockey Annual Sun, 10 Mar 2024 19:23:37 +0000 en-US hourly 1 NHL: BELL – 2024 Trade Deadline – Insight into Each NHL Team’s New Prospects https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/nhl-bell-2024-trade-deadline-insight-nhl-teams-prospects/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/nhl-bell-2024-trade-deadline-insight-nhl-teams-prospects/#respond Wed, 13 Mar 2024 14:00:01 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=185647 Read More... from NHL: BELL – 2024 Trade Deadline – Insight into Each NHL Team’s New Prospects

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ANAHEIM, CA - JANUARY 08: Anaheim Ducks right wing Jacob Perreault (64) on the ice making his NHL debut during the first period of an NHL hockey game against the New York Rangers played on January 8, 2022 at the Honda Center in Anaheim, CA. (Photo by John Cordes/Icon Sportswire)

The 2024 NHL Trade Deadline has come and gone. Some teams bolstered their lineup with the hopes of a deep playoff run (I’m looking at you, Vegas Golden Knights), and others sold off help now for potential later (Calgary Flames). 

While the focus of the trade deadline is always the big NHL names that move teams - the Jake Guentzals, the Noah Hanafins, the Tomas Hertls - quite often there are names attached to these big moves that fly under the radar. Sure, some of the top prospects might get a mention or two, but the unsigned guys, the guys that likely need a fresh start, and some of the forgotten names get, well, forgotten.

If your team acquired a new prospect within the two weeks leading up to the deadline, I’ve got you covered. Here’s a brief scouting report on every prospect moved over the 14 days leading up to the 2024 NHL Trade Deadline.

Zakhar Bardakov, F, Colorado Avalanche

Zakhar Bardakov embodies the classic power forward archetype, standing at an imposing 6-foot-2, 198 pounds. His prowess lies in net-front presence, excelling in board battles, and tip-ins. While possessing a powerful and accurate shot, Bardakov's offensive awareness and overall skill is a work in progress. Though not the fastest skater, his adequate skating is complemented by a strong penalty-killing ability and relentless forechecking. Expect Bardakov to evolve into a bottom-six winger, contributing on special teams and wearing down opponents.

Cole Brady, G, Dallas Stars

Cole Brady displays promise with good reflexes and occasional moments of brilliance. However, consistency remains a challenge for him. With continued development, the 6-foot-5 netminder has the potential to get a look in the NHL, but that role very much remains to be determined. Fine-tuning his technique and enhancing consistency are crucial steps for reaching his full potential and continuing to climb the ladder.

Riley Damiani, C, Calgary Flames

Despite standing at 5-foot-10, Riley Damiani's speed and strong work ethic make him a valuable prospect in the pipeline. Known for defensive play initially, Damiani has showcased offensive potential, particularly on the power play, with a good shot and adept plays in tight spaces. However, enhancing his offensive consistency is a priority. Damiani is projected to be a reliable two-way center contributing at the NHL level, likely in the bottom six.

David Edstrom, C, San Jose Sharks

David Edstrom, a raw, yet talented center with a 6-foot-3, 190-pound frame, exhibits effective skating, decent acceleration, and balance. While not flashy, he uses his size and strength for puck protection and board battles. Edstrom demonstrates offensive potential with a strong shot and glimpses of playmaking ability. Despite solid defensive efforts, his awareness can be inconsistent. With added muscle and refined defensive skills, Edstrom has the potential to be a top-six center excelling on both ends of the ice. More likely, expect him to fit into the middle six.

Artyom Grushnikov, D, Calgary Flames

Artyom Grushnikov may lack offensive flair, but his exceptional skating and hockey IQ make him a coveted asset in any farm system. Known for shutting down plays in the neutral zone and maintaining tight gap control, Grushnikov reads the game well. He’s not going to appear often on the scoreboard, but he occasionally contributes with his skating ability. Expect Grushnikov to develop into a reliable, shutdown defenseman excelling in his own zone.

Jeremy Hanzel, D, Nashville Predators

Jeremy Hanzel could be a hidden gem for the Nashville Predators. The defender combines modern offensive skills with intelligence. Hanzel, a deceptive puck handler, creates space and finds teammates with slick moves. While his defensive game is under development, Hanzel's offensive potential is evident. Refining defensive awareness and positioning is crucial for him to become a well-rounded defenseman.

Ville Koivunen, F, Pittsburgh Penguins

Selected likely too low in the 2021 NHL Draft (51st overall), Ville Koivunen may not be a guaranteed star, but he does have the potential to develop into just that. Skilled, with a nose for the net, Koivunen's shifty puck handling and high hockey IQ make him a very promising player. While his defensive awareness could stand to improve, Koivunen's overall game is strong. With added strength, he could become a top-six winger, and be a key returning piece in the Jake Guentzal trade.

Cruz Lucius, RW, Pittsburgh Penguins

Cruz Lucius, a right-wing prospect, boasts an impressive offensive skill set thanks to his ability as a playmaker. Standing at 6-foot, 179 pounds, Lucius’ key contributions come in his own end though through his retrievals and support in the defensive end. He lacks the shot that his brother, Chaz, has, but don’t underestimate it. The biggest opportunity for Lucius is to add a level of consistent pace to his play, which will be a determining factor in his future success.

Jan Mysak, F, Anaheim Ducks

Jan Mysak brings a well-rounded skill set to the Anaheim Ducks, with strong hockey IQ and vision. His above-average skating aids offensive transitions, and his versatility allows him to play center and wing. Mysak's scoring threat is enhanced by a strong shot and the ability to find open ice. Mysak was on a strong path forward in his development, and it will be interesting to see how he does with the change of scenery. A personal favourite since the NHL Draft, I believe Mysak could develop into a top-six winger still.

Dmitri Ovchinnikov, F, Minnesota Wild

Dmitri Ovchinnikov possesses good hands and a knack for scoring in tight spaces. Playing a smart, offensive game with a strong compete level, Ovchinnikov plays a very fast game and utilizes his agility effectively. While not the biggest player at 5-foot-10, he plays a bigger game and consistently pushes the pace of play. Continued development and added strength could see Ovchinnikov as a reliable middle-six forward with an intriguing offensive upside.

Jacob Perreault, W, Montreal Canadiens

Montreal Canadiens fans have reason to be excited about Jacob Perreault, a right-handed winger with a strong skating stride and elite shot. He seems to have taken a bit of a step back in his development, but a move to a new organization in his home province could be just what he needs to get back on track. His play off the puck will be one of the biggest question marks moving forward, as he’s been quite inconsistent. If the Habs development team can get him on track, Perreault could still become a dangerous NHL sniper.

Mathias Emilio Pettersen, W, Dallas Stars

You never truly know how a prospect is going to develop, and Mathias Emilio Pettersen is an example of that. Drafted 167th overall in 2018, he’s progressed very well and has become a very reliable asset in the AHL. His vision and ability to set up teammates are top-notch, accompanied by a powerful and accurate shot. Questions about his size and strength linger, but if he continues on the path he’s on, Pettersen has the potential to be a bottom-six, contributing forward.

Vasili Ponomaryov, C, Pittsburgh Penguins

Pittsburgh Penguins fans can anticipate excitement with Vasili Ponomaryov, a tenacious two-way center excelling in puck pursuit and offensive spark. His stickhandling and creativity make him a threat in transition, and relentless forechecking creates turnovers. Ponomarev's balance and lower-body strength contribute to his competitiveness. With tightened defensive play and improved positioning, Ponomarev could evolve into a reliable middle-six pivot. He’s been another favourite of mine since his draft year.

Calle Själin, D, Buffalo Sabres

Calle Själin, a 24-year-old lefty, is a reliable puck-moving defender who makes smart decisions in his own zone. While not a physical force, his effective defending stems from skating and positioning. His offensive upside does appear to be quite limited, he tends to be a safer, more passive player which will always limit the excitement he brings to the ice. But Själin's reliability and intelligence could be enough to earn him a look in the future, maybe even carve out a spot on a bottom-pairing line.

Kirill Slepets, W, Toronto Maple Leafs

Kirill Slepets is a winger who brings tremendous speed, and solid skill and creativity. Slepets' ability to navigate defenders and create scoring chances is impressive, particularly on the power play. He’s on the smaller size at 5-foot-10, 165 pounds, but his skating might just be enough to make up for that. With his KHL contract ending, the Russian forward could be an intriguing option for the Maple Leafs next season if he decides to sign.

Graham Sward, D, Colorado Avalanche

Graham Sward, a two-way defenseman, demonstrates solid positioning and awareness. Standing at 6-foot-3, 192 pounds, his high on-ice intelligence compensates for some much-needed skating improvements. His movement of the puck is strong, especially in transition. Sward's ability to read plays and make smart decisions positions him as a potential reliable bottom-pair defenseman, but his movement does need some improvements to reach that potential.

Ty Taylor, G, Edmonton Oilers

The future is uncertain for Ty Taylor, drafted by Tampa Bay back in 2018. With an uninspiring NCAA career and mixed performance in professional leagues, including playing in Scotland, Taylor's pro aspirations may be quickly fading. He has good size at 6-foot-4, 201 pounds, and has had glimpses of technically sound play (especially back in his BCHL days), but he has yet to take significant steps forward since his draft year. Granted - goalies are weird.

Jack Thompson, D, San Jose Sharks

Jack Thompson is a well-rounded defenseman who can contribute offensively and excels in his own zone. Thompson's major asset is his skating, allowing him to thrive in all three zones. Not afraid to join the rush, he possesses a booming slapshot and efficient breakout passes. Defensively, Thompson is positionally sound and reads the play well. While not the biggest defender, his mobility allows him to shut down plays effectively. With continued development, Thompson has the potential to be a top-four force contributing on both ends.

Luke Toporowski, C, Minnesota Wild

Luke Toporowski is a centreman with a high motor and relentless work ethic. His speed creates scoring chances, and his well-rounded two-way game is evident. He did seem to be stalling in his development this season, but a move to the Minnesota pipeline could be just what he needs to get on the right track. Toporowski's good defensive awareness and positioning suggest he could become a valuable two-way center with continued development.

Cade Webber, D, Toronto Maple Leafs

Maple Leafs fans can anticipate the imposing presence of Cade Webber on the blue line, standing at an impressive 6-foot-6. Known for his physicality that challenges opponents, his zone exits are a strength. Don’t expect him to be on the scoresheet too often though, as his offensive talent is not what attracts scouts to his game. Instead, Webber has the potential to become a shutdown defenseman, contributing effectively on the penalty kill. He could be a piece that the Maple Leafs have long been searching for.

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MCKEEN’S 2023-24 NHL YEARBOOK – DALLAS STARS – Top 20 Prospect Profiles – Organizational Rank #21 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2023-24-nhl-yearbook-dallas-stars-top-20-prospect-profiles-organizational-rank-21-2/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2023-24-nhl-yearbook-dallas-stars-top-20-prospect-profiles-organizational-rank-21-2/#respond Fri, 29 Sep 2023 14:35:15 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=182030 Read More... from MCKEEN’S 2023-24 NHL YEARBOOK – DALLAS STARS – Top 20 Prospect Profiles – Organizational Rank #21

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SAINT PAUL, MN - OCTOBER 08: Dallas Stars Center Logan Stankoven (57) looks on during the NHL game between the Dallas Stars and Minnesota Wild, on October 8th, 2022, at Xcel Energy Center in Saint Paul, MN. (Photo by Bailey Hillesheim/Icon Sportswire)

Top 20 Dallas Stars Prospects Rankings

1. Logan Stankoven - C

Stankoven has the endurance of the Energizer Bunny and the tenacity of Taz the Tasmanian Devil. He has arguably the best motor in all of junior hockey, and he is relentlessly competitive shift over shift and game over game. The Kamloops Blazers are a big draw locally, and their star centre has always been worth the price of admission because he is wildly entertaining to watch, not just when he's scoring (which he does a lot), but also because of the heroic effort he always puts forth. The Blazers hosted the Memorial Cup last year, and Stankoven led the tournament in points. He has a mantle full of gold medals and other awards, adding to that significantly in the past two seasons. He is a textbook example that a player his size can be a truly elite prospect.

2. Lian Bichsel - C

Bichel is an uproariously entertaining player to watch, partially because there are so few top prospects out there like him. He's a huge, hulking teen who plays with an old-school edge and seems to highly enjoy throwing his body around. His hits can be absolutely bone-rattling and easily knock opponents off their feet. Don't mistake him for some mindless goon, though: he's whip smart and knows how to be physically dominant without getting into penalty trouble. He's also a powerful skater with long strides. Combine that skating with his frame and strength and good luck trying to slow him down when he gets a head of steam going with the puck on his stick. He left a serious mark playing for the Swiss at the World Juniors, giving fans a great taste of how impactful he will be on the smaller North American ice.

3. Thomas Harley - D

The plan with Harley was always to take the slow and steady route with his development, and even though he looked more than NHL-ready in 34 games with Dallas in 2021-22, the Stars elected not to change course, putting back him in the AHL for most of last season. The results have been very noticeable. While his point totals aren't eye-popping, he has made impressive progression in his overall game, becoming a much more consistent and reliable player. He was jogging with the Texas Stars, got himself warmed up, and when he got called up to Dallas late in the year, he began sprinting. With his reach, mobility, puck skill, and poise he is incredibly well-equipped for how the game is played these days. It's very easy to get excited about just how good Harley could be when he reaches the prime years of his career.

4. Mavrik Bourque - C

Bourque found his footing as an AHL rookie almost immediately, and while his scoring totals so far are more modest than gaudy, the points will definitely come soon, and in bunches! He's a heady, hardworking centre who watches, learns, and improves with an almost machine-like consistency. He's quiet and subtle in ways that lure opponents into a false sense of security, but when he gets the puck on his stick, Bourque is an assassin. There are few prospects in the entire sport who can work a power play from the half wall like he can. He is an expert passer, with an underrated shot to back it up. Bourque will make the NHL sooner rather than later in a support role, and it won't take him long to work his way up to his natural place in the top six.

5. Christian Kyrou – D

Kyrou’s post draft year ended up being a really good one in the OHL as he emerged as one of the top defensemen in Ontario. Nearly every facet of his game progressed in a positive way, giving encouragement to both Stars management and Stars fans that he can develop into a quality puck mover at the NHL level. Without question, Kyrou’s tremendous point shot and his slick four-way mobility remain his two best assets, and his likely calling card to an NHL career. However, his explosiveness, defensive engagement, and decision making all showed great improvement, giving him a better outlook. Splitting the year between Erie and Sarnia, Kyrou really increased his physical intensity level in the defensive end, making him a more assertive two-way player and one who required less sheltering at the junior level. Of course, the pro level will offer an even greater challenge in this regard for Kyrou. Patience will likely be required as he continues to improve his defensive zone effectiveness. However, if afforded the opportunity to quarterback the powerplay, his offensive production could carry over immediately. In a best case scenario, Kyrou could develop into a top unit powerplay quarterback and a reliable top four defender at even strength

6. Tristan Bertucci - D

Much like John Marino in New Jersey, Bertucci has a real chance to develop into a dependable two-way defender thanks to his length, smarts, and mobility. He had 37 points in his final 38 games with Flint, emerging as a dominant two-way leader for the Firebirds. The key will be building upon that this season to become a more consistent defensive leader at the OHL level. A competent powerplay quarterback, Bertucci has high end four-way mobility, and he does a really good job of getting pucks on net to help generate second chance opportunities. As a defender, he has a clear understanding of how to defend in the modern style. He is aggressive in stepping up early on attackers, using his quickness to stay with puck carriers and his length to disrupt them. There is a need to add strength to improve his assertiveness in high traffic situations and to be more consistent in 50/50 battles. There is also a need to refine his approach as his over-aggressiveness can take him out of position at both ends of the ice. After a few seasons in the OHL, the Stars could definitely have another potential top four defender on their hands if his development goes according to plan.

7. Matej Blumel - LW

Blumel was originally drafted by the Edmonton Oilers in 2019, but went unsigned, becoming a free agent two years later, after which he was scooped up by Dallas in the summer of 2022. In this situation, one team's loss is another's gain, as the Czech winger became an immediate fit within the Stars organization. He started his first season in the AHL at a torrid scoring pace and was quickly and deservedly called up to the big club, where he scored his first NHL goal during a six-game tryout. He was back down on the farm for the remainder of the season after that, but maintained his status as one of the top forwards on the team. His shot is undoubtedly his best asset, dangerous as both a wrister and one-timer, but he also does a pretty good job with his puck protection and cycling, and isn't a liability when he has to defend.

8. Riley Damiani - C

This has been an incredibly trying season for Damiani. Not only has his development hit a wall, but it’s also like he has taken a step backwards compared to his first two professional seasons. His counting stats were down, and he has just not been influencing the play like he had beforehand. Making matters even more confusing, the Texas Stars were one of the best teams in the AHL and were rolling all four forward lines, with incredible results. Plus-minus is a flawed stat, but on a team full of pluses, his big minus stuck out disconcertingly. At his best, Damiani is a top notch puck handler and play driver, making high-end passes, using his anticipation and awareness to stay ahead of the flow, and displaying tenacity in battles. However, that version of Damiani hasn't been seen a lot lately, and his absence has become quite concerning.

9. Ayrton Martino - LW

Martino just gets better year over year, and it only took him until his second season in the NCAA to emerge as the best forward on Clarkson, just like he was previously with both St. Michael's in the OJHL and Omaha in the USHL. He is a dynamic, offense-generating winger, who uses his explosive acceleration to burst through spaces, hits an excellent top gear that can easily gain separation from opposing defenders to lead to breakaways or odd-man rushes, and has little trouble corralling, deking, or passing the puck in full flight. He is also a legitimate driver on the power play, showing how well he can also play at lower speeds. Martino is going back to college for at least one more season, and it won't be a surprise if the Stars push hard to get him signed and turned pro next spring.

10. Francesco Arcuri - C

Arcuri definitively cemented himself as one of the best goal-scorers currently in the OHL, and that prowess made him a trade target for Kitchener in their championship aspirations last season. He wasted little time acclimating to his new surroundings and continuing his net-filling ways, eventually helping the Rangers upset the Windsor Spitfires (and former teammate Shane Wright) in the opening round of the playoffs. Arcuri is a big-bodied winger who can also make plays fairly well but has limitations with his quickness and skating. Interestingly, that is a very similar profile to Jason Robertson, another former member of the OHL's Kingston Frontenacs who was also drafted by the Stars. While it would be unfair to compare Arcuri too closely to one of the NHL's newest superstars, just how much can his game also grow if his development is handled the exact same way by the team?

11. Antonio Stranges - LW

It wasn’t the easiest transition to pro hockey for Stranges, which may have been expected given his unique style of play and reliance on the 10 to 2, mohawk stride. However, he finished strong and that provides optimism heading into this year that he can be more consistent.

12. Aram Minnetian - D

We certainly didn’t expect Minnetian to fall to the fourth round at this year’s draft. However, the smooth skating defender needs to develop a clear identity on the ice and improve his decision making. Dallas should get a better indication of the finished product after a few years at Boston College.

13. Brad Gardiner - C

Gardiner is a versatile forward who was a recent third round selection by Dallas out of Ottawa in the OHL. He can play multiple positions and fill multiple roles. His offensive upside remains a question mark but he is set for a big ice time increase this season with the 67’s.

14. Artyom Grushnikov - D

While there was some hope that his offensive game would develop in the OHL, it is very clear now that what you see is what you get with Grushnikov. He’s a defensive workhorse, but his offensive game is fairly limited. He will turn pro this year with Texas.

15. Matthew Seminoff - RW

Seminoff earned a contract from Dallas thanks to a terrific season for Kamloops last year. An intelligent and tenacious off puck player, he could project as a Michael Bunting type down the line.

16. Chase Wheatcroft - C

Talk about a breakout season. Wheatcroft scored more points and goals last year than he did in all of his other WHL seasons combined. OA signings out of the CHL can be difficult to project, but Wheatcroft is a very intriguing prospect thanks to his high-level skills, quick release, and an ability to navigate traffic well.

17. Kyle McDonald - RW

Another OA free agent signing out of the CHL, McDonald is a big power forward with a terrific shot. He has clear scoring potential if he can continue to improve his skating. He had a tremendous playoffs with North Bay last year.

18. Matthew Murray - G

Last year, we all got our wish as the “other Matt Murray” got some games in with Dallas, providing those that cover the league with an abundance of double Matt Murray jokes. In all seriousness, Murray, a former UMass standout, continues to improve and could push for a backup role soon.

19. Gavin White - D

The last two seasons in the OHL have been very kind to White as he captured back-to-back OHL Championships with Hamilton and Peterborough. There are still some concerns over his ability to defend at the pro level, but the skating is high level.

20. George Fegaras

Drafted out of tier two in Ontario, Fegaras was always going to be a long-term project. After playing last year in the USHL, the Stars should get a better indication of what they have as Fegaras jumps to NCAA Cornell this season. Lots of good attributes, but are any truly above average?

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MCKEEN’S 2023 NHL PROSPECT REPORT – #18 Dallas Stars https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2023-nhl-prospect-report-18-dallas-stars/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2023-nhl-prospect-report-18-dallas-stars/#respond Wed, 17 May 2023 11:40:09 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=181039 Read More... from MCKEEN’S 2023 NHL PROSPECT REPORT – #18 Dallas Stars

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The Stanley Cup finalists of 2020 have successfully built a new young core, through some outstanding drafting, around some of the key pieces from that championship run that are still with the team. A rare accomplishment, that did not require a teardown. The 2017 Draft was a key turning point that saw them land Miro Heiskanen (3rd), Jason Robertson (39th) and Jake Oettinger (26th). All three are among the best at their positions in the NHL and just entering their prime. They form the new core along with 26-year-old Roope Hintz, emerging as a star this season, followed by an electric playoff. They have also graduated two excellent young players in Wyatt Johnston who scored 24 goals as an NHL rookie, centering the third line and playing on the second power play unit. Thomas Harley (2019 - 18th overall) on defense has emerged during the playoffs, playing over 15 minutes a night and chipping in on offense.

The fact that Harley is currently our fourth ranked Dallas prospect speaks to the high-end talent on the horizon. In our top 200 ranking, Dallas has Logan Stankoven at #22, Mavrik Bourque #26, Lian Bischel #53 and Harley #72. The depth drops off to a certain degree at that point, but the scouting department has a knack for hitting it out of the park with late first, and second round picks. GM Jim Nill has not been particularly active in the trade market in recent years, perhaps as a result. He did move this year’s first round pick for Nils Lundkvist in a package at the start of the season, however. It is the model to win within a salary cap era, if you can keep introducing impactful talent on entry level contracts combined with character veterans.

SAINT PAUL, MN - OCTOBER 08: Dallas Stars Center Logan Stankoven (57) looks on during the NHL game between the Dallas Stars and Minnesota Wild, on October 8th, 2022, at Xcel Energy Center in Saint Paul, MN. (Photo by Bailey Hillesheim/Icon Sportswire)
  1. Logan Stankoven

Stankoven has the endurance of the Energizer Bunny and the tenacity of Taz the Tasmanian Devil. He has arguably the best motor in all of junior hockey, and he is relentlessly competitive shift over shift and game over game. The Kamloops Blazers are a big draw locally, and their star center is always worth the price of admission because he is wildly entertaining to watch, not just when he's scoring (which he does a lot), but also because of the heroic effort he always puts forth. The Blazers are hosting the Memorial Cup this year, and it's hard to imagine another prospect who is more well-equipped to handle that spotlight than Stankoven, who already has a mantle full of gold medals and other awards. He is a textbook example that a player his size can be a truly elite prospect.

2. Mavrik Bourque

Bourque found his footing as an AHL rookie almost immediately, and while his scoring totals so far are more modest than gaudy, the points are definitely going to come soon in bunches. He's a heady, hardworking center who watches and learns and improves with an almost machine-like consistency. He's quiet and subtle in ways that lure opponents into a false sense of security, but when he gets the puck on his stick, he is an assassin. There are few prospects in the entire sport who can work a powerplay from the half wall like he can. He is an expert passer, with an underrated shot to back it up. Bourque will make the NHL sooner rather than later in a support role, and it won't take him long to work his way up to his natural place in the top six.

3. Lian Bichsel

Bichel is an uproariously entertaining player to watch, because there are so few top prospects out there like him. He's a huge, hulking teen who plays with an old-school edge and seems to highly enjoy throwing his body around. His hits can be absolutely bone-rattling and easily knock opponents off their feet. Don't mistake him for some mindless goon, though: he's whip smart and knows how to be physically dominant without getting into penalty trouble. He's also a powerful skater with long strides. Combine that skating with his frame and strength and good luck trying to slow him down when he gets a head of steam going with the puck on his stick. He left a serious mark playing for the Swiss at the World Juniors, giving fans a great taste of how impactful he will be on the smaller North American ice.

4. Thomas Harley

The plan with Harley was always to go the slow and steady route with his development, and even though he looked more than NHL-ready in 34 games with Dallas last season the Stars elected not to change course, putting him in the AHL for most of this season. The results have been readily noticeable. While his point totals aren't eye-popping, he has made impressive progression in his overall game, becoming a much more consistent and reliable player. He was jogging with the Texas Stars, got himself warmed up, and when he got called up to Dallas late in the year he began sprinting. With his reach, mobility, puck skill and poise he is incredibly well-equipped for how the game is played these days, it's very easy to get excited about just how good Harley might be when he reaches the prime years of his career.

5. Christian Kyrou

Kyrou's progress over the past few seasons has been rapid, and there is good reason to believe that it will continue. His skating isn't at the same level as his older brother Jordan, who is one of the best skaters in the entire NHL, but you'd be hard pressed to find a better influence for the younger Christian to closely learn tips and tricks from. He loves having the puck on his stick and is shifty and elusive at creating space for himself, especially coming off the offensive blueline, aggressively circling the outside of the zone or deking through bodies in the interior as he scans for defensive openings to exploit. Isn't shy at all about firing pucks himself, which is great because he knows how to get into dangerous shooting areas and has a high-end shot for a defender. Projects very well as a powerplay quarterback and is trending upwards as a transporter.

6. Matej Blumel

Blumel was originally drafted by the Edmonton Oilers in 2019, but ended up becoming a free agent two years later and was then scooped up by Dallas in the summer of 2022. In this situation one team's loss is another's gain, as the Czech winger became an immediate fit within the Stars organization. He started his first season in the AHL at a torrid scoring pace and was quickly and deservedly called up to the big club, where he scored his first NHL during a six-game tryout. He's been back down on the farm ever since but has maintained his status as one of the top forwards on the team. His shot is incomparably his best asset, dangerous as both a wrister and one-timer, but he also does a pretty good job with his puck protection and cycling and isn't a liability when he has to defend.

7. Riley Damiani

This has been an incredibly trying season for Damiani. Not only has his development hit a wall, but it’s also almost like he has taken a step backwards compared to his first two professional seasons. His counting stats are down, and he's just not influencing the play like he did before. Making matters even more confusing, the Texas Stars are one of the best teams in the AHL and have been rolling all four forward lines, with incredible results. Plus-minus is a flawed stat, but on a team full of pluses his big minus sticks out disconcertingly. At his best he is top notch puck handler and play driver, makes high-end passes, uses his anticipation and awareness to stay ahead of the flow, and is tenacious in battles. However, that version of Damiani hasn't been seen a lot lately, and his absence has become quite concerning.

8. Ayrton Martino

Martino just gets better year over year, and it only took him until his second season in the NCAA to emerge as the best forward on Clarkson, just like he was previously with both St. Michael's in the OJHL and Omaha in the USHL. He is a dynamic offense-generating winger, who uses his explosive acceleration to burst through spaces, hits an excellent top gear that can easily gain separation from opposing defenders to lead to breakaways or odd-man rushes, and has little trouble corralling, deking or passing the puck in full flight. He is also a legitimate driver on the powerplay, showing how well he can also play at lower speeds. Martino is going back to college for at least one more season, and it won't be a surprise if the Stars push hard to get him signed and turned pro next spring.

9. Francesco Arcuri

Arcuri definitively cemented himself as one of the best goal-scorers currently in the OHL, and that prowess made him a trade target for Kitchener in their championship aspirations. He wasted little time acclimating to his new surroundings and continuing his net-filling ways, and recently helped the Rangers upset the Windsor Spitfires (and former teammate Shane Wright) in the opening round of the playoffs. He is a big-bodied winger who can also make plays fairly well but has limitations with his quickness and skating. Interestingly, that is a very similar profile to Jason Robertson, another former member of the OHL's Kingston Frontenacs who was also drafted by the Stars. While it would be unfair to compare Arcuri too closely to one of the NHL's newest superstars, just how much can his game also grow if his development is handled the exact same way by the team?

10. Antonio Stranges

The Texas Stars have been ludicrously deep at forward all season, so it speaks volumes that Stranges played well enough to force his way up from the ECHL and into the lineup, albeit on an inconsistent basis. Amazingly, he kept finding ways to generate offense and produce points despite the lack of steady playing time and scrambled linemates. As unique and unconventional as his mohawk skating style is, it's undeniable that it works. He's just so elusive, unpredictable and naturally quick that it makes him hard to contain or anticipate. As much attention as his skating derives, he is also an underrated handler, playmaker and shooter. Texas is set to lose a number of forwards to free agency this summer, and there is simply no way that Stranges doesn't get a full-time roster spot and a bigger slice of the pie next season.

 

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MCKEEN’S 2022-23 NHL YEARBOOK – DALLAS STARS – Top 20 Prospects https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2022-23-nhl-yearbook-dallas-stars-top-20-prospects/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2022-23-nhl-yearbook-dallas-stars-top-20-prospects/#respond Sun, 18 Sep 2022 16:48:44 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=177531 Read More... from MCKEEN’S 2022-23 NHL YEARBOOK – DALLAS STARS – Top 20 Prospects

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Wyatt Johnston of the Windsor Spitfires. Photo by Luke Durda/OHL Images

1 - Wyatt Johnston         C

The 23rd overall selection in the 2021 NHL Draft, Wyatt Johnston was a surprise to some to be a 1st round pick, but Johnston is looking like one of the best players from the draft at the moment after a massive breakout year, solidifying the case for his draft positioning. The former 6th overall selection in the 2019 OHL Draft had a strong rookie year, finishing with 30 points (12G,18A) in 53 games. Unfortunately, during the 2020-2021 season, Johnston did not play due to the Covid-19 shutdown. The only chance for Johnston to showcase himself that year was the U18 World Championship where he displayed his ability to adapt to a depth role while still producing. During the 2021-2022 season, Johnston took the OHL by storm and became one of the most dangerous players in the league. Finishing the season with 124 points (46G,78A) in 68 games, which was 1st in the league in points, 3rd in the league in goals, 2nd in the league in assists and first on the team in points, goals and assists. Johnston’s best assets are his hockey sense and playmaking. He has the ability to take over a game because of his strong awareness in all three zones, knowing when to play aggressive or conservative. He’s strong defensively because of the intensity he brings on forechecks and in board battles, outworking his opponents often with an active stick and physicality. He’s able to read and anticipate plays very well, timing his passes perfectly and seeing passing lanes before they open, always making him a threat with the puck. He’s able to attack high danger scoring areas consistently and understands how to take advantage of a vulnerable opponents. Going into the 2022-2023 season, Johnston will once again look to dominate the league and be a player that every team will hate to play against. - DK

2 - Logan Stankoven C

You have to be a very special prospect with truly elite traits to succeed in hockey when you only stand 5'8”, and that description fits Stankoven to a T. He was picked by the Dallas Stars 49th overall in 2021, though there are likely already other teams that are second-guessing not snagging the reigning CHL Player of the Year first when they had the chance. His hockey sense and work ethic are both exceptional, allowing him to be an impactful player on a shift-over-shift basis. He is seemingly always in the thick of the play because he has an Energizer Bunny motor that never quits and because he knows exactly where he needs to be and what he needs to do to help his team. He is especially tenacious on the forecheck, pickpocketing unsuspecting enemies, intercepting opposing passes and getting to loose pucks first. When he gets the puck on his stick his hands and feet work together in seamlessly frenetic motion, making him shifty and elusive, and he has a lethal shot that he can deposit through the smallest of openings and with a disguised release. The captain of the Kamloops Blazers, he exudes confidence and leadership, and amplifies his game in the biggest situations, as evidenced by his play in the WHL playoffs (17 goals and 31 points in 17 games) and also with the gold medal-winning Canadian team at the 2022 World Juniors (10 points in seven games). With equally talented young forwards like Jason Robertson, Wyatt Johnston and Mavrik Bourque to play with in the Stars organization it is easy to foresee Stankoven becoming a big-time point producer and fan favorite whenever he reaches the NHL. - DN

3 - Mavrik Bourque C

Mavrik Bourque is the offensive catalyst that led the Shawinigan Cataractes to win their first President Cup ever as the oldest franchise in the QMJHL. Bourque stands out from everyone else with his superior hockey sense that allows him to dominate a game with exceptional passing and playmaking abilities. Due to his smaller size, in combination with average skating ability, Bourque fell all the way to the end of the first round to the Dallas Stars in 2020. However, he has worked feverishly to improve his quickness and the results have spoken for themselves. Additionally, Bourque is now much stronger on the puck, making him so efficient at playing through traffic. He can just beat you in so many ways. Aged out of the QMJHL Bourque will join the Texas Stars in the AHL this upcoming season where he’ll look to make an immediate impact at this level. There may even be an outside chance that Bourque makes the Stars out of camp, given that they do have some openings at the forward position. But he will need to show that he is quick enough and strong enough to compete against men consistently. Bourque has the potential to become a top six forward at the NHL level and is easily one of the best prospects from the QMJHL. - EB

4 - Thomas Harley D

Even if Harley struggled at times in his NHL debut last season, the hope is that it was ultimately best for his development. He had performed well in the AHL and was ready for that next challenge. Even if his minutes and responsibilities were sheltered, the experience allowed him the opportunity to gain confidence at the NHL level. There were times where he struggled with his decision making and positioning, and there were others where he flashed his potential as a top four puck mover. Harley is at his best with the puck on his stick, where he can use his long strides to chew up ground as he pushes into the offensive zone. His skating ability (overall) is extremely impressive given his length. Over his OHL career, Harley has improved his defensive play a lot, especially in terms of his physicality, however the pro level has offered new challenges. He will need to continue to improve his strength and confidence to use his body to defend effectively at the NHL level. This coming season, he has an outstanding opportunity to make a profound impact as the replacement for John Klingberg, both at even strength and on the powerplay. With a new coaching staff in place, perhaps they can bring out the best in Harley and he can become a full time NHL contributor. - BO

5 - Ty Dellandrea C

Playing in his second pro season, Dellandrea had an excellent AHL campaign for Texas last year, finishing second in team scoring. The former 13th overall pick can still struggle with his offensive consistency, but he does so many other things well that it gives him a solid NHL projection. Best case scenario? Dellandrea continues to improve his play with the puck and his ability to make skilled plays through traffic. His shot is an asset, and he can play a power game, using his size and strength to get to the net and win battles along the wall. This leads him to become a quality middle six center not unlike someone like Mike Fisher. Worst case scenario? Dellandrea still develops into a quality fourth line center and penalty killer because of his speed, tenacity, and defensive potential. He is a very safe bet to be an NHL player in some capacity. This coming season, he will battle with some other Stars prospects (some of whom might currently be ahead of him on the depth chart) for a fourth line role with Dallas. Even if he has to spend another year in the AHL, it could be good for his development as an offensive player as he would build further confidence. - BO

6 - Riley Damiani C

Two years ago, Damiani was the breakout star of the Stars’ system. His outstanding freshman pro season led him to being named the AHL’s Rookie of the Year. Even though he was not able to mimic that same success last year (with the AHL operating at a higher level due to the elimination of the taxi squad at the NHL level), he remains a quality pro prospect. He even got his first taste of NHL action and scored his first NHL goal. Damiani is an extremely intelligent, playmaking pivot. He makes up for his lack of size with excellent vision and anticipation in the offensive end. He is also slippery with good agility and confidence on his edges, making him tough to contain as he eludes checks and sticks to keep plays alive. Like any smaller player who finds success at the pro level, Damiani is also a hard worker who is not afraid of playing through traffic or taking a hit to make a play. As such, he is an easy player to cheer for. This season, he will likely return to the AHL to continue improving upon his quickness and strength on the puck. He is probably at least another year away from being a full time NHL player. His potential as an NHL player is that of a middle six center who can excel on the powerplay and help to make his wingers better. - BO

7 - Lian Bichsel D

Bichsel was recently selected 18th overall by the Dallas Stars in the 2022 draft. He plays a high-energy game with a combination of size, physicality, and puck moving ability. Standing at 6’5” and 220 pounds, Bichsel is able to control gaps, defend the rush and make crushing hits against his opponents. While he is big, he still has the ability to be a factor in transition, generating speed with his skating stride while protecting the puck using his large frame. As a 17-year-old he was able to carve up a large role playing in the SHL for Leksands, playing up to 20 minutes of ice time per game, due to his physical defensive presence. That, plus his potential upside as a puck mover, is why the Stars felt comfortable using a mid-first round selection on him. There is some offensive potential for Bichsel, too, as he has shown he is willing to skate down low in the offensive end and utilize the give-and-go with his teammates. Last season, in 11 J20 games, Bichsel produced 7 points, while putting up three points in 29 SHL games in a more purely defensive-minded role. A late season concussion truly put a damper on Bichsel’s season as he was not able to showcase his skill at the U18’s against high-end competition of his own age. However, that did not hurt his draft stock as the Stars are banking on the strong physical presence and the potential offensive upside. Bichsel will look to maintain a top-4 role on Leksands in the SHL for the upcoming season while showcasing more of his offensive skills. - ZS

8 - Antonio Stranges LW

The 123rd overall selection in the 2020 NHL Draft, Antonio Stranges had a great season being one of the leaders and top producers on the Knights. The former 21st overall selection in the 2018 OHL Draft had a solid rookie season, finishing with 34 points (13G,21A) in 66 games. During the 2019-2020 season, Stranges didn’t have a big leap in production but showed good growth and finished with 40 points (19G,21A) in 61 games. In the 2020-2021 season, Stranges got the opportunity like some others to play in the AHL, which was an exception made because of the OHL being shutdown. Although he only played nine games, he still got great experience testing his abilities against pro’s and he managed to get one assist in his time in the AHL. During the 2021-2022 season, Stranges made the return to the OHL and came back hot, finishing with 84 points (31G,53A) in 60 games, which was 16th in the league for points, 11th in the league for assists, and 2nd on the team in all categories. Stranges best assets are his skating and puck handling. If you’ve watched Stranges play, you know about his mohawk skating and how well he utilizes it. He’s able to lead breakouts and drive play in transition consistently because he navigates through traffic so well and finds open space easily. Not only can he accelerate quickly and play with great pace, but he’s also very strong at beating opponents 1-1 with his quick and deceptive hands and great creativity. Going into the 2022-2023 season, Stranges will make his return to the AHL and look to gain more experience and test his abilities against pros. - DK

9 - Ayrton Martino LW

Perhaps the thing that sticks out most about Ayrton Martino is the fact that he’s scored everywhere he’s played. At the OJHL level, Martino dominated, routinely outclassing the lower competition level he faced through sheer skill. His tools carried him to USHL success, and his offensive abilities made him a productive freshman at Clarkson University. Martino was one of Clarkson’s most productive wingers as a freshman and figures to get a larger role moving forward. Martino’s offensive production comes from a wide variety of sources, and it’s the fact that he’s not over-reliant on one outstanding offensive tool that gives confidence that he’ll continue to score at the college level and perhaps even the pro level. Martino possesses great vision, and he’s always looking to make a creative pass. He doesn’t have great straight-line speed, but he’s good at manipulating what speed he does have to create space in his own zone. His edges do a lot of the work in helping give him time with the puck, but he may need to add another gear to his game to maintain his production as a pro. Martino should be a regular top scorer for Clarkson for the foreseeable future, and assuming he keeps that trajectory he’ll remain among the Stars’ more notable forward prospects. The real test for Martino will be seeing if his scoring will translate to the professional game. He has the overall skill level to do it, and the brain to effectively solve the problems pro hockey will present, but the main question is if he can get stronger and handle the physical rigors of playing against men. - EH

10 - Christian Kyrou        D

The 50th overall selection in the 2022 NHL Draft, Christian Kyrou was one of the most divisive prospects in the OHL last year because of his high-end talent and skill, but some concerns around his skating. There is no doubt that Kyrou is a highly offensive defenseman with great instincts and awareness, but there are times where his skating hinders his ability to create space and separate himself from opponents. During the 2019-2020 season, Kyrou played 21 games in the OHL, but was unable to produce any points. With the OHL shutdown due to Covid-19, Kyrou had a big offseason to improve and come in stronger for the next season. In 2021-2022, Kyrou had a great season on a Sarnia Sting team that finished 3rd lowest in goals for, not giving him much to work with. Kyrou was still able to finish the season with 60 points (18G,42A) in 68 games which resulted in 3rd on his team in points, 4th in points by a defenseman, and also 3rd in goals by a defenseman. Kyrou’s best assets are his puck handling and his shot. Kyrou was the go-to player for the Otters the majority of the time in transition and in the offensive zone, being able to drive play with great poise, never looking overwhelmed with the puck. He’s able to use his quick hands to beat opponents 1-1 and deceive defenders to open up space. No matter where he was in the offensive zone, Kyrou was a scoring threat. His shot is both very quick and powerful, being able to get dangerous shots off with little time or space. Going into the 2022-2023 season, Kyrou will once again be the #1 defenseman for the Otters, playing heavy minutes and in all situations. If he is able to improve his skating, he will be one of the best offensive defensemen in the OHL. - DK

11 - George Fegaras

A pre-draft favourite of McKeen’s scouting director Brock Otten, Fegaras is an athletic two-way defender who will play in Muskegon (USHL) this year before attending Cornell the following year.

12 - Artyom Grushnikov

The offensive game is pretty much non-existent at this point, but Grushnikov did help Hamilton capture an OHL title this year as a pure, shutdown defender. His combination of size and mobility gives him an NHL projection.

13 - Ben Gleason

The former free agent signing is coming off his best AHL season to date and has put himself back in contention for an NHL roster spot. A mobile defender, Gleason’s defensive game has improved a lot in recent seasons.

14 - Francesco Arcuri

It was a breakout year for Arcuri, as he emerged as one of Kingston’s (OHL) most consistent offensive players. Arcuri is great in puck protection scenarios but still needs to upgrade his skating.

15 - Ryan Shea

The former Northeastern captain was way better in his second AHL season than his first, putting him in line for a potential NHL call up at some point this year. Shea is a mobile two-way blueliner with good vision.

16 - Fredrik Karlstrom

Likely being groomed to be a checking line center for Dallas, Karlstrom was used similarly by Texas in the AHL as a rookie pro last year. He will return to Texas this season with the hope that his offensive production increases.

17 - Conner Roulette

Roulette is a highly intelligent playmaking winger with Seattle of the WHL. If he can find a way to improve his skating further, he could be a potential pro.

18 - Matthew Seminoff

A competitive forechecker and tireless worker, Seminoff went much lower in the NHL draft than anticipated. The Kamloops winger will look to be a more consistent offensive player this coming season.

19 - Gavin White

White won an OHL Championship with Hamilton this past season. He is a highly mobile, offensive defender who is best classified as a late bloomer. He still needs to work on his defensive game, especially his ability to win battles in traffic, but there is upside.

20 - Jack Bar

A right shot defender with good mobility and physicality, Bar is a very raw prospect. His freshman year with Havard had some ups and downs, but Dallas knew they would have to be patient with his development.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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2021-22 TOP 15 PROSPECTS: DALLAS STARS – RANK: #26 – TIER V https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/top-15-prospects-dallas-stars-rank-26-tier/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/top-15-prospects-dallas-stars-rank-26-tier/#respond Fri, 10 Sep 2021 15:56:16 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=172300 Read More... from 2021-22 TOP 15 PROSPECTS: DALLAS STARS – RANK: #26 – TIER V

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Dallas Stars

#26 Dallas - I love the Stars' most recent draft, but too many years of low upside picks keeps them down here....for now.

CEDAR PARK, TX - MARCH 12: Texas Stars defender Thomas Harley warms up prior to AHL game featuring the Colorado Eagles and the Texas Stars on March 12, 2021 at the HEB Center in Cedar Park, TX. (Photo by John Rivera/Icon Sportswire)
  1. Thomas Harley

It was a very strong first professional season for the standout defensive prospect, as Harley’s 0.66 points per game was the second best rate by a U20 defender in the AHL this millennium (minimum 30 games played) behind John Carlson’s 2010 season when he posted a 0.81 rate. The fleet of foot, 6’3 defender certainly met the high expectations placed upon him and he proved that he may be ready for a full time NHL spot as early as this upcoming season.

Harley is incredibly dangerous when attacking because of his length, fluid stride, and puck skill. He is incredibly aggressive in leading the attack and rarely passes up on the opportunity to take a chance to create offense. Throughout his OHL career, he worked hard to improve his defensive play and to become a more physically assertive defender. This continues at the pro level. He will also need to learn to pick his spots better and become less of a high-risk attacker. However, his potential is sky high and with Dallas’ defensive gaps heading into this season, there is a strong chance that he earns a spot straight out of training camp. - BO

  1. Mavrik Bourque

At the junior level, the end of the season was a disappointment for Bourque and his Shawinigan Cataractes team. However, he was able to finish the year in the AHL, leaving a great impression with the Texas Stars as he scored one goal and made four assists in six games. This past season, we have really seen the extent of his talent as a playmaker. His good vision of the game and his intelligence on the ice were evident night after night. He has proven that he can be a key player on his team and in the QMJHL, especially on the powerplay.

Bourque has worked hard to polish his game further and the Stars have to be happy with the way he progresses every year. It is likely that the Stars see him playing another junior year, before moving to the pros in the AHL for a full season after that. Bourque should be among the leading scorers in the QMJHL with Shawinigan this season and may also earn a role with Canada at the World Junior Championships. Within a few years, he should develop into a quality second line center for the Stars. - BB

  1. Logan Stankoven

With seven goals in six games, Stankoven was the only WHL player to average over a goal per game this year (albeit in a small sample size). Additionally, he wore an “A” for Canada at the U18’s and had eight points in seven games, good for fifth in team scoring. We, at McKeen’s, had him ranked considerably higher than Dallas selected him in 2021 and believe greatly in his potential to develop into a top-notch NHL forward.

Obviously, the biggest concern with Stankoven is his lack of size as he measures in at 5’8. In 2016, a 5’7 Alex Debrincat fell to the second round as NHL scouts questioned his ability to score at the NHL level at that height. Obviously, the Blackhawks now look like geniuses for taking that chance. Smaller players still need to possess a couple key characteristics to excel at the NHL level, quickness and toughness. Stankoven possesses both. He can also put the puck in the net. Not only does he have excellent goal scoring instincts, but he can also rifle the puck. Armed with a quick and accurate wrist shot, Stankoven is a nightmare for opposing goaltenders from both the perimeter and the slot, as he has shown a consistent ability to pick corners and beat them cleanly. He may take a little time to develop because he will need to continue to get quicker and stronger given his size, but the upside is alluring if you are willing to be patient. - McKeen’s Draft Guide 2021

  1. Wyatt Johnson

A talented playmaking center, Wyatt Johnston stood out for Team Canada at the U18’s due to his suffocating two-way play and the versatility he provided for the Gold medal winners. While his skating ability will need to continue to improve, the rest of his game is very sound. A highly cerebral player, he is able to alter the pace of play and manipulate coverage to highlight his strengths as a passer. Difficult to separate from the puck and difficult to contain in the slot, Johnston projects as a hard-nosed two-way pivot who can play in any situation at the pro level.

If Johnston succeeds in becoming an NHL player, it will be because of how well he thinks the game. It is a cliched statement but an apt one in this case. He is an effective forechecker because of his ability to get his stick in exit lanes and because of his ability to read the breakout attempt. However, Johnston also sees the ice well as a passer in the offensive zone. He always seems to have his head up when in control of the puck, surveying for the best passing option. As mentioned, he also alters pace really well, manipulating the play around him to suit the coverage he is facing. Johnston will be a leader for the Windsor Spitfires this coming OHL season, where he will look to further develop his offensive skill set. - McKeen’s Draft Guide 2021

  1. Riley Damiani

Talk about a breakout season! After Damiani saw his production drop in his final OHL season with Kitchener, the expectations for him in his first pro season were fairly tempered. But after averaging a point per game for Texas, the former OHL captain was named the AHL’s Rookie of the Year. Many recipients of this award have gone on to have long NHL careers and his AHL performance last year certainly has changed the narRative surrounding his status as a prospect.

A high energy, skilled playmaker, Damiani’s success has always been tied to his work rate and ability to read and breakdown opposing defenses. His skating, particularly his explosiveness, looked improved in Texas this year and it allowed him to drive the pace of play more consistently. Damiani projects as the kind of versatile forward that NHL coaches love. He can navigate and control the half wall in offensive schemes with his vision and creativity. He can kill penalties and work as the F1 in puck retrievals. As he gains further strength, Damiani has a chance to become a quality middle six player for the Dallas Stars. Even after a strong AHL season, he is likely still another season away from being a consistent contributor at the NHL level. - BO

  1. Ayrton Martino

After joining the Omaha Lancers in time for the second game after the calendar flipped to 2021, Martino was electric, putting up 56 points in 38 games, involved in 40% of all goals scored by the team while he was there. As such, we at McKeen’s had him ranked fairly high for the draft, only to be shocked that he was still available for Dallas in the early third round in 2021.

It doesn’t take too many viewings of Martino to understand the kind of player he is and what he brings to the table. We are talking about plus straight-ahead speed and high-end puck skills and playmaking instincts. Martino has exceptional coordination and touch, making him tough to strip the puck from. If we factor in playmaking, it is simply safe to say that he made his linemates, previously anonymous USHL veterans, into near point-per-game players. His highlight reel aside, Martino is far from a perfect player. While he keeps his feet moving in his own zone, as mentioned above, that is too often just spinning around near the blueline waiting for a fast break. He will need to prove that he won’t be pushed around at higher levels and will take his talents to Clarkson next year.  - McKeen’s Draft Guide 2021

  1. Jack Bar

A rookie with the Chicago Steel this year, Bar started off slowly as he adjusted to playing at a higher level (coming out of St. Andrew’s College previously). The right-handed shooter was focused on his own zone game, killing penalties, and basically just getting his feet wet in the offensive zone. As February drew to a close, Bar’s game hit a new level.

Bar’s true, sustainable upside isn’t really yet known. He is a strong, forceful skater and likes to activate deep into the offensive end. His stickhandling is fine, if unrefined. He can play with the puck at top speed and force his way through the defense without coughing it up, even if he rarely looks graceful doing it. He can fit his game into a number of styles and game situations. He will never be a big point accumulator, but I believe that he can be a solid, trustworthy contributor to the attack, and that facet should improve over time as he settles into a middle pairing role. Bar will be attending Harvard next year as they rejoin the NCAA after a yearlong hiatus. A long-term project, he could prove to be an exceptional fifth round selection. - McKeen’s Draft Guide 2021

  1. Artyom Grushnikov

Things were really looking up for Grushnikov this year. He had signed on to play with Hamilton of the OHL to anchor their blueline and hopefully demonstrate the offensive skills that were previously a bit of a mystery due to him consistently playing a level up in Russia and on their national teams. A very fluid mover and strong defensive stalwart, Grushnikov was subsequently left with nowhere to play this year (including an odd snub from the Russian U18 team). Yet, the Stars still made him a second-round selection in 2021, without him playing a game all season.

At the very least, Grushnikov should be able to become a high-end defensive player at the next level because of his defensive instincts, plus mobility, reach, and physicality. However, his offensive game is a question mark, as alluded to earlier. At this point, he is a huge wild card. Grushnikov will finally suit up for Hamilton this upcoming OHL season and the expectations remain high. He will get all the ice time that he can handle and by season’s end, Dallas should have a better idea of what they have in him moving forward. - McKeen’s Draft Guide 2021

  1. Antonio Stranges

By now, most hockey enthusiasts know Stranges’ for his dynamic mohawk skating style and his creativity with the puck. Stranges loves to employ the 10/2 stride to build speed and has the utmost confidence in his edgework and lateral quickness to help him beat defenders wide. Due to his combination of skill, creativity, and explosiveness, Stranges possesses among the highest offensive potential of any forward in the Dallas system.

However, his game still requires a lot of refinement. This was evident in a small audition in the AHL this past season with the OHL on hold, as Stranges’ play without the puck, ability to get to the net, and his decision making with the puck all showed to be areas of weakness. This coming season in the OHL with London will be huge for him. He will finally be given the opportunity to play a first line role and he should flourish with that added responsibility. If there is a coach that can get Stranges to buy into playing a more complete and refined game, it is Dale Hunter. By the end of the coming season, we should have a much greater idea of the type of potential Stranges’ possesses at the NHL level and how likely he is to reach it. - BO

  1. Conner Roulette

A skilled and intelligent winger with the Seattle Thunderbirds of the WHL, Roulette’s body of work this year for scouts to go off of was pretty limited. Due to the late start, he was limited to only 11 games with Seattle before having to depart for the World Under 18’s. As part of the gold medal winning entry for Canada, Roulette played a depth role and did not see consistent ice time.

He is a very well-rounded offensive player. He shows an ability to score in a variety of ways, although his best asset may be his quick and explosive wrist shot, which can beat goaltenders clean from a distance. He is also a highly intelligent offensive player who shows good vision and anticipation, making the most of his skills despite a lack of dynamic physical tools. The concern is that Roulette is an average sized player with some skating limitations. Roulette is neither quick nor dynamic, requiring him to rely on his hands and processing ability to make plays at a slower pace. This was very evident at the Under 18’s, where Roulette struggled to keep up with the pace of Canada’s quicker forwards. Additionally, Roulette will need to increase his physical intensity and improve his strength on the puck. With a greater focus on strength and conditioning, Roulette could easily break out in a large way in the future, much like Minnesota Wild prospect Adam Beckman. - McKeen’s Draft Guide 2021

  1. Jacob Peterson

A highly intelligent two-way forward, Peterson signed with Dallas after a breakout season in the SHL last year with Farjestad. Given his mature and reliable approach, he could move quickly through the organization if he performs well at training camp and in the AHL to start.

  1. Evgeni Oksentyk

Slippery like an eel, the undersized Belarussian forward finds ways to slip through traffic, using his dynamic edgework and balance to create scoring chances. Already signed with Dallas, he will be loaned back to Belarus for the upcoming season before likely making the jump to the AHL.

  1. Dawson Barteaux

Barteaux will never be confused with Miro Heiskanen. He is not flashy. However, the right shot defender is a reliable presence in the defensive end. He will continue his development at the AHL level this year and projects as a potential third pairing type for Dallas in the future.

  1. Jordan Kawaguchi

The cousin of former NHL’er Devin Setoguchi, Kawaguchi was recently signed by Dallas as a free agent after four great years at the University of North Dakota. The talented playmaking center will hope to be an immediate impact player with Texas of the AHL this season in hopes of moving quickly through the organization.

  1. Adam Scheel

Another free agent signing by the Stars out of UND, Scheel is the reigning NCHC goaltender of the year after a terrific junior season in college. He also showed well in a brief stint in the AHL to close out last year. Look for Scheel to emerge as the starter for Texas this season and he could push for an NHL opportunity sooner, rather than later.

 

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McKeen’s Fantasy Prospects Rankings https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-fantasy-prospects-rankings/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-fantasy-prospects-rankings/#respond Tue, 31 Aug 2021 18:44:56 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=172177 Read More... from McKeen’s Fantasy Prospects Rankings

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Ranking prospects can be difficult. There are many factors to consider. Adding another layer as impactful as fantasy hockey value can make a big impact on rankings.

As a fantasy GM, it can be difficult to distinguish between NHL value and fantasy value. What a NHL team values and ranks high on their depth chart, may not resonate with your needs as a fantasy GM trying to build a dynasty.

To help you rank prospects for your fantasy league, I have ranked the top 30 forwards, 20 defenders and ten goalies.

For the skaters, I only considered players under 25-years-old and with less the 50 career regular season games played. For goalies, under 25-years-old and less than 25 career games played.

There are many scoring categories in fantasy hockey, but for purposes of this list, I am only considering goals and assists, and keeper dynasty leagues.

Some of the factors that I took into consideration for the rankings include a wide range. Some examples are draft pedigree, age, production at the pro level to date (NHL, AHL, Europe) and opportunity to make the roster. The last one is a big one as I place a lot of value in two factors.

What are the players long term upside, or potential or offensive ceiling?

What is the expected arrival date for the player to break into the NHL?

I have also broken this list of the top 60 prospects up positionally as all fantasy leagues have positional requirements. Depending on your league the positional value may increase or decrease based on scoring.

For goalies, I rank them based on how soon I expect them to arrive in the NHL and score them on win expectations.

ANAHEIM, CA - MARCH 10: Anaheim Ducks Left Wing Trevor Zegras (46) in action during a game against the Los Angeles Kings played on March 10, 2021 at the Honda Center in Anaheim, CA. (Photo by John Cordes/Icon Sportswire)

Forward Rankings

1. Cole Caufield, RW - Montreal Canadiens

The Hobey Baker Award winner made his debut in the playoffs and is the early favorite for the Calder. He will become a 50-goal scorer.

2. Trevor Zegras, C - Anaheim Ducks

The WJC MVP dominated the AHL and is ready to become the Ducks number one center.

3. Alex Newhook, C - Colorado Avalanche

Turned pro and made his NHL debut including some playoff games. He’s too good for the AHL already and will force his way into a top six role.

4. Marco Rossi, C - Minnesota Wild

A lost season to injury and sickness will be difficult to overcome. But not impossible. Look for Rossi to challenge for the first line center position out of training camp.

5. Philip Tomasino, C - Nashville Predators

Tomasino has dominated at every level he has played, OHL, WJC, AHL. He will make his NHL debut this season and could quickly earn a top six role.

6. Anton Lundell, C - Florida Panthers

Signed his ELC this summer and will be coming to North America after developing his offensive game in the Liiga. Viewd as a two-way player in his draft year he may have been underrated for fantasy purposes.

7. Nick Robertson, LW - Toronto Maple Leafs

Breaking into the Leafs top six is a tall order, but Robertson is a proven goal scorer that has earned the opportunity.

8. Quinton Byfield, C - Los Angeles Kings

Byfield still has a year of OHL eligibility, his playing options are either in the OHL or with the Kings. If the OHL played last year he would have been there but took full advantage of the opportunity in the AHL and looks NHL ready.

9. Morgan Frost, C - Philadelphia Flyers

A gifted offensive producer has done so in the AHL but has yet to translate that to the NHL. This year should be the 22-year-olds breakout season

10. Peyton Krebs, C - Vegas Golden Knights

The Knights are thin down the middle opening the door wide for Krebs to step into the number one pivot role. He may need one more year of seasoning.

11. Matt Boldy, LW - Minnesota Wild

After a solid sophomore season and outstanding WJC, Boldy signed his ELC and produced over a point-per-game in the AHL. The Wild could have multiple Calder candidates.

12. Dylan Cozens, C/RW - Buffalo Sabres

The Sabres may not have a good track record of developing prospects but Cozens already has 41 games of NHL experience and will be a top six player for a long time.

13. Alex Turcotte, C - Los Angeles Kings

A full season of pro hockey in the AHL, but has yet to play a NHL game. The Kings are taking their time in developing Turcotte which will pay off in the long run.

14. Lucas Raymond, LW - Detroit Red Wings

The Wings fourth overall pick is coming to North America but knowing how the Wings like to over ripen players, look for Raymond to spend a full season in the AHL before he is inserted into the first line.

15. Eeli Tolvanen, LW - Nashville Predators

The expectations for Tolvanen have gone up and down, and the Preds have been patient. Now is the time for the sniper to show offensive consistency.

16. Grigori Denisenko, LW - Florida Panthers

Split time between the NHL and AHL in his first season in North America, and may require a little more development in the AHL

17. Connor McMichael, C - Washington Capitals

Benefited from the Pandemic cancelling the OHL, which allowed him to play in the AHL where he showed he was ready for the next level.

18. Alexander Holtz, RW - New Jersey Devils

Goal scoring winger will require more seasoning before he is NHL ready but riding shotgun for either Jack Hughes or Nico Hischier has a lot of upside potential.

19. Cole Perfetti, C - Winnipeg Jets

Saw action in the AHL, WJC and World Championship. Where will he play next year? His options are back to the OHL or make the jump to the NHL. He may be a year or two away, but “Goal” Perfetti will have an impact when he arrives.

20. Barrett Hayton, LW - Arizona Coyotes

Hayton has bounced between the AHL, NHL and even Liiga in the past two years, not to mention some international tournament play as well. Wherever he plays, AHL or NHL next year, it would be good for his development to play on one team and get a big role.

21. Samuel Poulin, LW - Pittsburgh Penguins

Almost made the cut last year but was returned to junior as the QMJHL was open for business. Poulin will turn pro next year, and the Penguins desperately need some youth.

22. Seth Jarvis, C Carolina Hurricanes

Jarvis began the year in the AHL and was doing great. Then the WHL resumed play and he was returned and will likely payout his final season in the WHL before returning to pro full time.

23. Vitali Kravtsov, RW - New York Rangers

Bouncing back-and-forth from Russia to North America is cause for concern, but Kravtsov rebound nicely in the KHL. Expectations are he is an NHL player now but will need to produce to hold that position.

24. Vasili Podkolzin, RW - Vancouver Canucks

Canucks fans are excited for the Russian winger, but this may be a case where his NHL value exceeds his fantasy value.

25. Joe Veleno, C - Detroit Red Wings

The wings are developing Veleno slowly but steadily. The big question is what will his upside be? Is he a good second line center, or a great third line guy?

26. Arthur Kaliyev, LW - Los Angeles Kings

Arguably a boom or bust fantasy player. Kaliyev is a goal scorer, and a very good one. But he needs to score to contribute and make the NHL.

27. Alex Barre-Boulet, C- Tampa Bay Lightning

With the two-time Stanley Cup Champions forced to make some offseason roster moves for salary cap compliance, Barre-Boulet could be the benefactor of a vacated top six position.

28. Ryan Poehling, LW - Montreal Canadiens

After his incredible NHL debut, Poehling has been developing in the AHL and is close to NHL ready. Don’t count on too many more three goal games, but his AHL time is coming to an end.

29. Jack Studnicka, C - Boston Bruins

Studnicka played in 20 regular season games with the Bruins and if the Bruins lose David Krejci in the offseason look for Studnicka to fill the void.

30. Riley Damiani, C - Dallas Stars 

Wrapping up the top 30 with a sleeper. Damiani had a monster AHL rookie season with 36 points in as many games and was named the AHL Rookie of The Year. He has some players to leap over to get an NHL roster spot, but Don’t think he can’t do just that.

SAN JOSE, CA - APRIL 14: Anaheim Ducks Defenceman Jamie Drysdale (34) skates with the puck during the NHL hockey game between the Anaheim Ducks and the San Jose Sharks on April 14, 2021 at the SAP Center in San Jose, CA. (Photo by Bob Kupbens/Icon Sportswire)

Defense Rankings

  1. Jamie Drysdale - Anaheim Ducks

Made the NHL out of his draft year and is poised to take the reigns as the Ducks top defender. He could be a Calder candidate

2. Evan Bouchard - Edmonton Oilers

Bouchard could be lethal on the power play with McDavid and Draisaitl. Barrie signed until 2024, but the Oilers will be looking to Bouchard to quarterback their powerplay in the future.

3. Bowen Byram - Colorado Avalanche

The Avalanche have a deep blueline, but Byram has number one defender upside. Look for Byram and Makar to be 1A and 1B

4. Moritz Seider - Detroit Red Wings

Seider is making GM Steve Yzerman look pretty good for drafting him when he did. There was some surprise the draft floor when his name was called sixth overall.

5. Jake Bean - Columbus Blue Jackets

His 44 NHL games played is almost enough to disqualify him from the list, almost. Now in a new home in Columbus and new opportunity.

6. Scott Perunovich - St. Louis Blues

Perunovich lost the season to injury, but at this time last year I was predicting him to make the Blues to start the season and end it as a top four player and PP quarterback.

7. Rasmus Sandin - Toronto Maple Leafs

With three Leaf defenders making over $5 million, there is only one opening for a top four in Toronto. Sandin is poised to secure that job

8. Nils Lundkvist - New York Rangers

The exile of Anthony DeAngelo opened the door for Lundkvist. After leading the SHL in defense scoring and being named the top defender in the SHL, it is time for him to debut on Broadway.

9. Caled Addison - Minnesota Wild

Addison had a great rookie year in the AHL posting 22 points. Look for the Wild to embrace their youth next year and Addison will be in their mix with Rossi and Boldy.

10. Cam York - Philadelphia Flyers

York has been a dominant player for USA and at the NCAA level with Michigan. He is ready to take his game to the pro level and should dominate for a season in the AHL before making an impact in the NHL.

11. Victor Soderstrom - Arizona Coyotes

Soderstrom played all over the map last year, seeing games in Allsvenksen, the WJC, AHL and making his NHL debut. The departure of OEL opens the door for Soderstrom and Chychrun to inherit the top pairing duties

12. Pierre-Olivier Joseph - Pittsburgh Penguins

The Penguins will soon need to turn to their young players as the Crosby-Malkin era winds down. Joseph is by far their top prospect in defense

13. Ryan Merkley - San Jose Sharks

The former first overall OHL Draft pick has tremendous fantasy and offensive upside. The concern is he could be more like other recent OHL grads Sean Day due to poor defensive decision making, or Tony DeAngelo with off ice problems. A boom-or-bust prospect.

14. Thomas Harley - Dallas Stars

The Ryan Suter signing will block Harley out of the top four for now, but he will play his way into it in a year or two.

15. Conor Timmins - Arizona Coyotes

After losing a development season in 2018-19 to injury, he was surpassed on the Av’s depth chart by Cale Makar and Bowen Byram. A fresh start on a rebuilding team with less roster blockers increases his fantasy value tremendously.

16. Jake Sanderson - Ottawa Senators

One of the biggest 2020 draft risers, Sanderson fantasy stock has cooled off during his freshman season in the NCAA where he scored two goals and 15 points in 22 games at the University of North Dakota. It was a solid freshman season, but his sophomore year should be more impressive.

17. Ville Heinola - Winnipeg Jets

Heinola has spent the past two years bouncing between the NHL, the AHL, the WJC and Liiga. Odds are he is a full time Jet this year competing for top four minutes

18. Alex Alexeyev - Washington Capitals

The big Russian defenseman has spent the past five years in North America (minus 55 KHL games due to COVID). He may have one more year of AHL development ahead of him, but like the Penguins, the Caps will be looking to some of the kids to make an impact soon.

19. Braden Schneider - New York Rangers

It was a great season for Schneider producing over a point-per-game in his final junior campaign, he was impressive for Canada at the WJC and made the Men’s World Championship Team Canada as well. A full AHL season is likely next before he breaks the Rangers roster.

20. Wyatt Kalynuk - Chicago Blackhawks

Seth Jones will get all the minutes he can handle as the Hawks top defender, but don’t sleep on Kalynuk who posted nine points in 21 games with the Hawks last year, and another ten in only eight AHL games. He’s a player.

BOSTON, MA - APRIL 16: Boston Bruins goalie Jeremy Swayman (1) stares down a shot during a game between the Boston Bruins and the New York Islanders on April 16, 2021 at TD garden in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Fred Kfoury III/Icon Sportswire)

Goalie Rankings

1. Spencer Knight - Florida Panthers

After a dominant NCAA sophomore season highlighted with a Team USA WJC Gold Medal, and a Hobey Baker nomination, Knight made his NHL debut and was getting playoff starts over Bobrovsky. It’s simply a matter of time (immediately or next season) before he is an NHL All-Star

2. Yaroslav Askarov - Nashville Predators

Pump the brakes if you think the Pekka Rinne retirement means Askarov instantly becomes a NHL starting goalie. He needs more development time for that, but it will happen soon enough.

3. Cayden Primeau - Montreal Canadiens

One could argue that a large part of why Montreal chose to expose Carey Price and his contract in the expansion draft is because they know what they have coming down the pipe with Cayden Primeau. That is the next franchise goalie.

4. Justus Annunen - Colorado Avalanche

With both Darcy Kuemper and Pavel Francouz in the final years of their contracts, Annunen could inherit the crease to a Stanley Cup contending team if he has a strong full season in the AHL. His resume to-date suggests this is highly probable.

5. Jeremy Swayman - Boston Bruins

Swayman fantasy hockey stock is soaring after his sparkling NHL debut posting a 7-3-0 record with a 1.5 GAA and .945 SV%. The fact that the future of Tuukka Rask is in limbo doesn’t hurt either.

6. Pyotr Kochetkov - Carolina Hurricanes

The Canes crease had a complete makeover this summer with the additions of Frederik Andersen and Antti Raanta on two-year contracts. This buys the 22-year-old Kochetkov some extra development time before he becomes the team’s starting goalie.

7. Lukas Dostal - Anaheim Ducks

The 2020 Liiga Best Goalie Award winner was too dominant in the Liiga and when the AHL resumed, he was brought over to North America. He quickly became the Gulls top goalie. The 21-year-old should get a full season of development in the AHL with John Gibson as the Ducks starting goalie, for now.

8. Daniil Tarasov - Columbus Blue Jackets

The 6-5 Russian goalie has posted impressive stats in the Liiga and the KHL before making his AHL debut last season. His 4-2 record in the AHL was a good indication that he can play in North America as well.

9. Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen - Buffalo Sabres

At the time this was written, the Buffalo goalies under contract are Craig Anderson and Aaron Dell. One can only assume they will add a legit starting goalie, or they are chasing the Shane Wright lottery. Either way, don’t expect to see much of UPL in the crease this season as he would be best served playing top minutes in the AHL

10. Joel Hofer - St. Louis Blues

The Blues have invested for a long time with Binnington in the crease. This gives Hofer all the time he needs to develop in the AHL.

 

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

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

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

PROSPECT CRITERIA

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

RANK PLAYER NHL POS AGE HT/WT ACQUIRED
1 Alexis Lafreniere NYR LW 19 6-1/195 `20(1st)
2 Tim Stutzle Ott C 18 6-1/185 `20(3rd)
3 Quinton Byfield LA C 18 6-4/215 `20(2nd)
4 Trevor Zegras Ana C 19 6-0/170 `19(9th)
5 Kirill Kaprizov Min LW 23 5-10/200 `15(135th)
6 Lucas Raymond Det LW 18 5-11/170 `20(4th)
7 Dylan Cozens Buf C 19 6-3/185 `19(7th)
8 Bowen Byram Col D 19 6-0/195 `19(4th)
9 Peyton Krebs VGK C 19 5-11/180 `19(17th)
10 Jake Sanderson Ott D 18 6-1/185 `20(5th)
11 Moritz Seider Det D 19 6-3/185 `19(6th)
12 Jamie Drysdale Ana D 18 5-11/175 `20(6th)
13 Igor Shesterkin NYR G 25 6-1/190 `14(118th)
14 Alexander Holtz NJ RW 18 6-0/190 `20(7th)
15 Cole Perfetti Wpg LW 19 5-10/180 `20(10th)
16 Marco Rossi Min C 19 5-9/185 `20(9th)
17 Vasili Podkolzin Van RW 19 6-1/190 `19(10th)
18 Victor Soderstrom Ari D 19 5-11/180 `19(11th)
19 Nick Robertson Tor LW 19 5-9/160 `19(53rd)
20 Cole Caufield Mtl RW 19 5-7/165 `19(15th)
21 Yaroslav Askarov Nsh G 18 6-3/175 `20(11th)
22 Spencer Knight Fla G 19 6-3/195 `19(13th)
23 Philip Broberg Edm D 19 6-3/200 `19(8th)
24 Jack Quinn Buf RW 19 6-0/180 `20(8th)
25 Matthew Boldy Min LW 19 6-1/190 `19(12th)
26 Nils Lundkvist NYR D 20 5-11/180 `18(28th)
27 Seth Jarvis Car RW 18 5-10/175 `20(13th)
28 Ty Smith NJ D 20 5-10/180 `18(17th)
29 Grigori Denisenko Fla LW 20 5-11/185 `18(15th)
30 Barrett Hayton Ari C 20 6-1/190 `18(5th)
31 Alex Newhook Col C 19 5-10/195 `19(16th)
32 Thomas Harley Dal D 19 6-3/190 `19(18th)
33 Alex Turcotte LA C 19 5-11/185 `19(5th)
34 Vitali Kravtsov NYR RW 21 6-3/185 `18(9th)
35 Philip Tomasino Nsh C 19 5-11/180 `19(24th)
36 Connor McMichael Wsh C 19 5-11/175 `19(25th)
37 Dawson Mercer NJ C 19 6-0/180 `20(18th)
38 Ilya Sorokin NYI G 25 6-2/180 `14(78th)
39 Gabriel Vilardi LA RW 21 6-3/200 `17(11th)
40 Ryan Merkley SJ D 20 5-11/170 `18(21st)
41 Alexander Romanov Mtl D 20 5-11/185 `18(38th)
42 Kaiden Guhle Mtl D 18 6-2/190 `20(16th)
43 Samuel Poulin Pit LW 19 6-1/205 `19(21st)
44 K'Andre Miller NYR D 20 6-3/205 `18(22nd)
45 Scott Perunovich StL D 22 5-10/175 `18(45th)
46 Evan Bouchard Edm D 21 6-2/195 `18(10th)
47 Braden Schneider NYR D 19 6-2/200 `20(19th)
48 Juuso Valimaki Cgy D 22 6-2/205 `17(16th)
49 Cam York Phi D 19 5-11/175 `19(14th)
50 Anton Lundell Fla C 19 6-1/185 `20(12th)
51 Morgan Frost Phi C 21 5-11/180 `17(27th)
52 Owen Tippett Fla RW 21 6-1/200 `17(10th)
53 Albert Johansson Det D 19 5-11/165 `19(60th)
54 Liam Foudy CBJ C 20 6-0/175 `18(18th)
55 Kieffer Bellows NYI LW 22 6-0/200 `16(19th)
56 Arthur Kaliyev LA RW 19 6-2/190 `19(33rd)
57 Oliver Wahlstrom NYI RW 20 6-1/205 `18(11th)
58 Nils Hoglander Van RW 20 5-9/185 `19(40th)
59 Matias Maccelli Ari LW 20 5-11/170 `19(98th)
60 Tobias Bjornfot LA D 19 6-0/200 `19(22nd)
61 Jacob Bernard-Docker Ott D 20 6-0/180 `18(26th)
62 Connor Zary Cgy C 19 6-0/180 `20(24th)
63 Dominik Bokk Car RW 20 6-1/180 T(StL-9/19)
64 Ryan Suzuki Car C 19 6-0/180 `19(28th)
65 Dylan Samberg Wpg D 21 6-3/190 `17(43rd)
66 Jake Bean Car D 22 6-1/175 `16(13th)
67 Josh Norris Ott C 21 6-1/195 T(SJ-9/18)
68 Rasmus Kupari LA C 20 6-1/185 `18(20th)
69 Jakob Pelletier Cgy LW 19 5-9/165 `19(26th)
70 Drake Batherson Ott RW 22 6-1/190 `17(121st)
71 Jan Jenik Ari RW 20 6-1/180 `18(65th)
72 John-Jason Peterka Buf LW 18 5-11/190 `20(34th)
73 Kirill Marchenko CBJ LW 20 6-3/190 `18(49th)
74 Bode Wilde NYI D 20 6-2/195 `18(41st)
75 John Beecher Bos C 19 6-3/210 `19(30th)
76 Tyler Madden LA C 21 5-10/155 T(Van-2/20)
77 Jack Studnicka Bos C 21 6-1/170 `17(53rd)
78 Jake Oettinger Dal G 22 6-4/210 `17(26th)
79 Alex Formenton Ott LW 21 6-2/165 `17(47th)
80 Matthew Robertson NYR D 19 6-3/200 `19(49th)
81 Calen Addison Min D 20 5-10/180 T(Pit-2/20)
82 Ty Dellandrea Dal C 20 6-0/185 `18(13th)
83 Akil Thomas LA C 20 5-11/170 `18(51st)
84 Mavrik Bourque Dal C 18 5-10/180 `20(30th)
85 Ian Mitchell Chi D 21 5-11/175 `17(57th)
86 Jason Robertson Dal LW 21 6-2/195 `17(39th)
87 Hendrix Lapierre Wsh C 18 5-11/180 `20(22nd)
88 Brendan Brisson VGK C 19 5-11/180 `20(29th)
89 Theodor Niederbach Det C 18 5-11/175 `20(51st)
90 Zac Jones NYR D 20 5-10/175 `19(68th)
91 Robert Mastrosimone Det LW 19 5-10/160 `19(54th)
92 Joe Veleno Det C 20 6-1/195 `18(30th)
93 Rodion Amirov Tor LW 19 6-0/170 `20(15th)
94 Jake Neighbours StL LW 18 5-11/195 `20(26th)
95 Julien Gauthier NYR RW 23 6-4/225 T(Car-2/20)
96 Justus Annunen Col G 20 6-4/215 `18(64th)
97 Egor Zamula Phi D 20 6-4/175 FA(9/18)
98 Shane Pinto Ott C 20 6-2/190 `19(32nd)
99 Noel Gunler Car RW 19 6-2/175 `20(41st)
100 Ridly Greig Ott C 18 5-11/165 `20(28th)
101 Jesse Ylonen Mtl RW 21 6-1/185 `18(35th)
102 Samuel Fagemo LA RW 20 6-0/195 `19(50th)
103 Mattias Norlinder Mtl D 20 5-11/180 `19(64th)
104 Olli Juolevi Van D 22 6-3/200 `16(5th)
105 Kristian Vesalainen Wpg LW 21 6-3/205 `17(24th)
106 Raphael Lavoie Edm RW 20 6-4/195 `19(38th)
107 Jan Mysak Mtl C 18 5-11/180 `20(49th)
108 Cayden Primeau Mtl G 21 6-3/180 `17(199th)
109 Pavel Dorofeyev VGK LW 20 6-1/170 `19(79th)
110 Morgan Barron NYR C 22 6-2/200 `17(174th)
111 Ville Heinola Wpg D 19 5-11/180 `19(20th)
112 Dylan Holloway Edm C 19 6-0/205 `20(14th)
113 Jack Dugan VGK RW 22 6-2/185 `17(142nd)
114 Alexander Khovanov Min C 20 5-11/195 `18(86th)
115 Jacob Perreault Ana RW 18 5-11/195 `20(27th)
116 Jake Evans Mtl C 24 6-0/185 `14(207th)
117 Adam Beckman Min LW 19 6-1/170 `19(75th)
118 Jett Woo Van D 20 6-0/205 `18(37th)
119 Nolan Foote NJ LW 20 6-3/190 T(TB-2/20)
120 Logan Brown Ott C 22 6-6/220 `16(11th)
121 Martin Kaut Col RW 21 6-1/175 `18(16th)
122 Jack Rathbone Van D 21 5-10/175 `17(95th)
123 Ozzy Wiesblatt SJ RW 18 5-10/185 `20(31st)
124 Ryan O'Rourke Min D 18 6-0/180 `20(39th)
125 Lukas Reichel Chi LW 18 6-0/170 `20(17th)
126 Jordan Harris Mtl D 20 5-11/180 `18(71st)
127 Lukas Dostal Ana G 20 6-1/170 `18(85th)
128 Egor Afanasyev Nsh RW 19 6-3/205 `19(45th)
129 Conor Timmins Col D 22 6-1/185 `17(32nd)
130 Lassi Thomson Ott D 20 6-0/190 `19(19th)
131 Eeli Tolvanen Nsh RW 21 5-10/175 `17(30th)
132 Kasper Simontaival LA RW 18 5-9/180 `20(66th)
133 Roni Hirvonen Tor C 18 5-9/165 `20(59th)
134 Thomas Bordeleau SJ C 18 5-9/180 `20(38th)
135 Benoit-Olivier Groulx Ana C 20 6-1/195 `18(54th)
136 Tyler Kleven Ott D 18 6-4/200 `20(44th)
137 Tyson Foerster Phi C 18 6-1/195 `20(23rd)
138 Helge Grans LA D 18 6-2/205 `20(35th)
139 Jonathan Dahlen SJ LW 23 5-11/185 T(Van-2/19)
140 Marat Khusnutdinov Min C 18 5-11/175 `20(37th)
141 Alexander Alexeyev Wsh D 21 6-3/200 `18(31st)
142 Pierre-Olivier Joseph Pit D 21 6-2/170 `17(23rd)
143 Topi Niemela Tor D 18 5-10/160 `20(64th)
144 Oskari Laaksonen Buf D 21 6-2/165 `17(89th)
145 Filip Hallander Tor LW 20 6-1/185 T(Pit-8/20)
146 Serron Noel Fla RW 20 6-5/205 `18(34th)
147 Martin Chromiak LA LW 18 6-0/185 `20(128th)
148 Shakir Mukhamadullin NJ D 18 6-3/180 `20(20th)
149 Mattias Samuelsson Buf D 20 6-3/215 `18(32nd)
150 Janne Kuokkanen NJ LW 22 6-1/190 T(Car-2/20)
151 Ryan Johnson Buf D 19 6-0/175 `19(31st)
152 Sean Farrell Mtl C 19 5-8/175 `20(124th)
153 Martin Fehervary Wsh D 21 6-1/190 `18(46th)
154 Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen Buf G 21 6-4/195 `17(54th)
155 Will Lockwood Van RW 22 5-11/175 `16(64th)
156 Isac Lundestrom Ana C 21 6-0/185 `18(23rd)
157 Michael DiPietro Van G 21 6-0/195 `17(64th)
158 Jonatan Berggren Det RW 20 5-10/185 `18(33rd)
159 Kevin Bahl NJ D 20 6-6/230 T(Ari-12/19)
160 Aliaksei Protas Wsh C 19 6-5/205 `19(91st)
161 Reilly Walsh NJ D 21 5-11/180 `17(81st)
162 Nick Abruzzese Tor C 21 5-9/160 `19(124th)
163 Tyler Tucker StL D 20 6-1/205 `18(200th)
164 Arseni Gritsyuk NJ RW 19 5-10/170 `19(129th)
165 Klim Kostin StL C 21 6-3/195 `17(31st)
166 Brayden Tracey Ana LW 19 6-0/175 `19(29th)
167 Joel Hofer StL G 20 6-3/160 `18(107th)
168 Joey Anderson Tor RW 22 6-0/195 T(NJ-10/20)
169 Yegor Spiridonov SJ C 19 6-2/195 `19(108th)
170 Sam Colangelo Ana RW 19 6-1/205 `20(36th)
171 Joey Keane Car D 21 6-0/185 T(NYR-2/20)
172 Jared McIsaac Det D 20 6-1/195 `18(36th)
173 Jamieson Rees Car C 19 5-10/175 `19(44th)
174 Ivan Morozov VGK C 20 6-1/180 `18(61st)
175 Rem Pitlick Nsh C 23 5-11/200 `16(76th)
176 Tyce Thompson NJ RW 21 6-0/170 `19(96th)
177 Michael McLeod NJ C 22 6-2/195 `16(12th)
178 Jaret Anderson-Dolan LA C 21 5-11/190 `17(41st)
179 Dustin Wolf Cgy G 19 6-0/165 `19(214th)
180 Antti Tuomisto Det D 19 6-4/190 `19(35th)
181 Brett Berard NYR LW 18 5-9/155 `20(134th)
182 Luke Evangelista Nsh RW 18 5-11/170 `20(42nd)
183 Joel Blomqvist Pit G 18 6-1/180 `20(52nd)
184 Joni Ikonen Mtl C 21 5-10/170 `17(58th)
185 Olivier Rodrigue Edm G 20 6-1/165 `18(62nd)
186 Lucas Elvenes VGK RW 21 6-0/175 `17(127th)
187 Anthony Angello Pit RW 24 6-5/205 `14(145th)
188 Tuukka Tieksola Car RW 19 5-10/160 `19(121st)
189 Declan Chisholm Wpg D 20 6-1/190 `18(150th)
190 Cole Koepke TB LW 22 6-1/195 `18(183rd)
191 Valtteri Puustinen Pit RW 21 5-9/185 `19(203rd)
192 Ty Smilanic Fla C 18 6-1/175 `20(74th)
193 Patrik Puistola Car LW 19 6-0/175 `19(73rd)
194 Justin Barron Col D 19 6-2/190 `20(25th)
195 Andrew Peeke CBJ D 22 6-3/210 `16(34th)
196 Michael Vukojevic NJ D 19 6-3/210 `19(82nd)
197 Alec Regula Chi D 20 6-3/200 T(Det-10/19)
198 Connor Corcoran VGK D 20 6-1/185 `18(154th)
199 Jeremy Swayman Bos G 22 6-1/190 `17(111th)
200 Pyotr Kochetkov Car G 21 6-1/175 `19(36th)
201 Mikey Anderson LA D 21 6-0/195 `17(103rd)
202 Carter Savoie Edm LW 18 5-9/190 `20(100th)
203 Samuel Walker TB C 21 5-11/160 `17(200th)
204 William Wallinder Det D 18 6-4/190 `20(32nd)
205 Jack Drury Car C 20 5-11/180 `18(42nd)
206 Emil Andrae Phi D 18 5-9/185 `20(54th)
207 Cal Petersen LA G 26 6-3/190 FA(7/17)
208 Jeremie Poirier Cgy D 18 6-0/200 `20(72nd)
209 Tarmo Reunanen NYR D 22 6-0/180 `16(98th)
210 Simon Holmstrom NYI RW 19 6-1/185 `19(23rd)
211 Aleksi Saarela Fla RW 23 5-11/200 T(Chi-10/19)
212 Anton Johannesson Wpg D 18 5-9/155 `20(133rd)
213 Lauri Pajuniemi NYR RW 21 6-0/185 `18(132nd)
214 Morgan Geekie Car C 22 6-2/180 `17(67th)
215 Shane Bowers Col C 21 6-2/190 T(Ott-11/17)
216 Sasha Chmelevski SJ C 21 5-11/190 `17(185th)
217 Ruslan Iskhakov NYI C 20 5-8/155 `18(43rd)
218 Cole Schwindt Fla RW 19 6-2/185 `19(81st)
219 Hugo Alnefelt TB G 19 6-3/195 `19(71st)
220 Nikita Okhotyuk NJ D 20 6-1/195 `19(61st)
221 Sampo Ranta Col LW 20 6-2/205 `18(78th)
222 Alexander Volkov TB LW 23 6-1/190 `17(48th)
223 Alexander True SJ C 23 6-5/205 FA(7/18)
224 John Leonard SJ C 22 5-11/190 `18(182nd)
225 Carl Grundstrom LA LW 23 6-0/195 T(Tor-1/19)
226 Dmitri Semykin TB D 20 6-3/200 `18(90th)
227 Cal Foote TB D 22 6-4/215 `17(14th)
228 Jean-Luc Foudy Col C 18 5-11/175 `20(75th)
229 Alex Barre-Boulet TB C 23 5-10/165 FA(3/18)
230 Tristen Robins SJ RW 19 5-10/175 `20(56th)
231 Max Gildon Fla D 21 6-3/190 `17(66th)
232 Nikita Alexandrov StL C 20 6-0/180 `19(62nd)
233 Michael Benning Fla D 18 5-9/180 `20(95th)
234 Justin Sourdif Fla RW 18 5-11/175 `20(87th)
235 Tanner Laczynski Phi C 23 6-1/200 `16(169th)
236 Eamon Powell TB D 18 5-11/165 `20(116th)
237 Kaedan Korczak VGK D 19 6-3/190 `19(41st)
238 Drew Commesso Chi G 18 6-1/180 `20(47th)
239 Nikolai Kovalenko Col RW 21 5-10/175 `18(171st)
240 Pius Suter Chi C 24 5-11/170 FA(7/20)
241 Wade Allison Phi RW 23 6-2/205 `16(52nd)
242 Bobby Brink Phi RW 19 5-10/165 `19(34th)
243 Lukas Cormier VGK D 18 5-10/180 `20(68th)
244 David Farrance Nsh D 21 5-11/190 `17(92nd)
245 Roby Jarventie Ott RW 18 6-2/185 `20(33rd)
246 Dmitri Voronkov CBJ LW 20 6-4/190 `19(114th)
247 German Rubtsov Phi C 22 6-2/190 `16(22nd)
248 Vitaly Abramov Ott RW 22 5-9/175 T(CBJ-2/19)
249 Alex Laferriere LA RW 19 6-0/175 `20(83rd)
250 Trey Fix-Wolansky CBJ RW 21 5-8/185 `18(204th)
251 Isaac Ratcliffe Phi LW 21 6-5/200 `17(35th)
252 Kale Clague LA D 22 6-0/180 `16(51st)
253 Landon Slaggert Chi LW 18 5-11/180 `20(79th)
254 Wyatt Kalynuk Chi D 23 6-1/180 FA(7/20)
255 Mikko Kokkonen Tor D 19 5-11/200 `19(84th)
256 Kevin Mandolese Ott G 20 6-4/180 `18(157th)
257 Daniil Tarasov CBJ G 21 6-5/185 `17(86th)
258 Evan Barratt Chi C 21 6-0/190 `17(90th)
259 Tyler Benson Edm LW 22 6-0/200 `16(32nd)
260 Yegor Korshkov Tor RW 24 6-4/215 `16(31st)
261 Hunter Skinner NYR D 19 6-2/175 `19(112th)
262 Riley Damiani Dal C 20 5-9/165 `18(137th)
263 Ryan McLeod Edm C 21 6-2/205 `18(40th)
264 Ilya Konovalov Edm G 22 6-0/195 `19(85th)
265 Will Cuylle NYR LW 18 6-3/205 `20(60th)
266 Evan Vierling NYR C 18 6-0/165 `20(127th)
267 Emil Heineman Fla LW 19 6-0/180 `20(43rd)
268 Zayde Wisdom Phi RW 18 5-10/195 `20(94th)
269 Hunter Jones Min G 20 6-4/195 `19(59th)
270 Ty Tullio Edm RW 18 5-10/165 `20(126th)
271 Jordan Spence LA D 19 5-10/165 `19(95th)
272 Dmitri Zavgorodny Cgy LW 20 5-9/175 `18(198th)
273 Alex Beaucage Col RW 19 6-1/195 `19(78th)
274 Matiss Kivlenieks CBJ G 24 6-2/190 FA(5/17)
275 Artyom Zub Ott D 25 6-2/200 FA(5/20)
276 Urho Vaakanainen Bos D 22 6-0/185 `17(18th)
277 Dmitri Samorukov Edm D 21 6-2/180 `17(84th)
278 Michal Teply Chi LW 19 6-3/185 `19(105th)
279 Colby Ambrosio Col C 18 5-8/170 `20(118th)
280 Mads Sogaard Ott G 20 6-7/195 `19(37th)
281 Jeremy Lauzon Bos D 23 6-3/205 `15(52nd)
282 Dennis Gilbert Col D 24 6-2/200 T(Chi-10/20)
283 Trent Frederic Bos C 22 6-4/215 `16(29th)
284 Lucas Carlsson Chi D 23 6-0/190 `16(110th)
285 Zack Macewen Van RW 24 6-3/205 FA(3/17)
286 Brandon Hagel Chi LW 22 6-1/175 FA(10/18)
287 Vasily Ponomarev Car C 18 5-10/180 `20(53rd)
288 Jakub Zboril Bos D 23 6-1/200 `15(13th)
289 Garrett Pilon Wsh RW 22 5-11/190 `16(87th)
290 Jeremy Bracco Car RW 23 5-9/180 FA(10/20)
291 Dylan Sikura VGK RW 25 6-0/170 T(Chi-9/20)
292 Kyle Capobianco Ari D 23 6-1/180 `15(63rd)
293 Sami Niku Wpg D 24 6-0/175 `15(198th)
294 John Farinacci Ari C 19 5-11/185 `19(76th)
295 Jackson Lacombe Ana D 19 6-1/170 `19(39th)
296 David Cotton Car LW 23 6-3/205 `15(169th)
297 Erik Portillo Buf G 20 6-6/210 `19(67th)
298 Jacob Truscott Van D 18 6-1/170 `20(144th)
299 Mikhail Berdin Wpg G 22 6-2/165 `16(157th)
300 Cam Hillis Mtl C 20 5-10/170 `18(66th)
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McKeen’s 2020-21 Hockey Yearbook: Dallas Stars Top 20 Prospects https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-21-hockey-yearbook-dallas-stars-top-20-prospects/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-21-hockey-yearbook-dallas-stars-top-20-prospects/#respond Wed, 25 Nov 2020 21:52:59 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=167693 Read More... from McKeen’s 2020-21 Hockey Yearbook: Dallas Stars Top 20 Prospects

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

  1. Thomas Harley, D (18th overall, 2019. Previous ranking: 1)

A smooth, but explosive skater, Harley has such a large impact on the offensive side of things because of how he dictates the pace of play exiting the offensive zone. An aggressive puck mover, he looks to lead the rush or jump up into the play. With his size and reach, he can be difficult to separate from the puck as he cuts through the neutral zone and this makes him an elite level facilitator. Last season, he gained confidence in his shot and in his ability to use his mobility to create lanes and make better, more calculated decisions at the blueline. Improving his shot accuracy is necessary as too often his point shots are high and wide. Defensively, Harley became more aggressive in using his size down low, especially when trying to separate players from the puck along the wall, although he needs to continue increasing his intensity level. Overall, he became a much more consistent defensive player, improving his gap control and decision making in his own end, trusting his mobility. He is far from a shutdown defender, but he has progressed. He is still on track to be a top four defenseman at the NHL level. – BO

  1. Jake Oettinger, G (26th overall, 2017. Previous ranking: 2)

At just 21 years of age, Oettinger received the lion’s share of starts with AHL Texas after three seasons of NCAA play at Boston University. With a muscular 6-5” frame, he is a menacing behemoth of a netminder before even taking into account his skill and athleticism. His lateral movement and save selection, particularly with his glove, are superb, and he holds rebounds that other goalies can’t shut down themselves. He tracks pucks well through traffic and, while his footwork is a little flawed, he has improved in getting to the right spots in the crease to see shots with his chest and pads first. Mature and composed, he plays deep in the crease and relies more on his size and smarts than pure, reactionary reflexes. With both Ben Bishop and, more recently, Anton Khudobin, signed through the 2022-23 season, Oettinger will likely get another full season (or two) of starts with Texas before forcing the NHL club’s hand into finding room for him at the top level. - TD

  1. Ty Dellandrea, C (13th overall, 2018. Previous ranking: 3)

As an offensive player, Dellandrea looked much more confident and stronger with the puck on his stick last season, allowing him to dictate play from the middle and prolong possession in the offensive end. While his creativity and overall puck skill may not have progressed to the level that you might expect from a lottery selection, he remains a high-end offensive option because of his vision, hockey sense, and tenacity. An aggressive player, he excels playing through traffic, rather than avoiding it, and he does the majority of his damage near the crease and in the middle, where you have to excel to play in the NHL. Dellandrea is also a strong two-way presence and faceoff man. He can be counted on to excel in any situation and can play any role asked of him. For this reason, it would not be shocking to see him make Dallas next season, skipping the AHL entirely. He could play as a middle six center and kill penalties at a high level.  His high-end potential remains to be seen. He could end up as either a second- or third-line center and eventually should be a member of Dallas’ leadership group. – BO

  1. Mavrik Bourque, C (30th overall, 2020. Previous ranking: NA)

On the right day, Bourque looks like a future first line center who is transformative in the offensive zone. Once his team gains the offensive zone, he takes over. The puck is glued to his stick and he finds ways to create room for himself with great body control and edge work. He is a natural power play driver, finding options from the half wall and the far side of the faceoff dot creating scoring chances. More of a playmaker than a scorer, Bourque has a pretty lethal shot as well. He can beat goalies with his wrist shot or his slapper and he can elevate the puck from in tight. He gets pucks under control and into shooting position very quickly, or he can slow the game down as needed. A gritty player, he will take a hit to complete a play despite his small stature. So even if he isn’t scoring, he can contribute. On balance, he will present his team with a nice blend of a high skill, high compete game, bringing a consistency of effort pretty much every game. Bourque can succeed even when playing without high end linemates and can make those around him better.  – RW

  1. Jason Robertson, LW (39th overall, 2017. Previous ranking: 4)

Posting numbers good for fifth in points and third in goals among AHL rookies last season, Robertson paced the struggling Texas Stars in scoring and was a dangerous option on a shift-to-shift basis. While he will never be the fastest or most agile skater, he possesses silky hands, deft one-on-one moves, and outstanding puck-protection skills. His upper-body strength, especially at his age, is incredible; he is near impossible to push off the puck and can run the cycle or brush up against the boards like a seasoned pro. Without the puck, he likes to play along the perimeter looking for open spaces to receive passes. His shot is quick and heavy, and worthy of being a triggerman on a future NHL power play unit. His skating, however, is a genuine and large concern; his feet are slow, and he shows very little spark in his acceleration. The Stars are a team desperate for help on offense, and Robertson is the team’s most dynamic scoring prospect, as well as the most ready for the NHL. - TD

  1. Riley Damiani, C (137th overall, 2018. Previous ranking: 5)

Damiani is at his best when he keeps his feet moving in the offensive end and is tenacious in his pursuit of the puck. He has a high level of skill when in possession and can create in traffic by making defenders miss. His shot is good, but he is better classified primarily as a playmaker. He is also a competent two-way forward who works hard on the backcheck and can be an effective penalty killer. One aspect of Damiani’s game that needed to improve last season was his skating ability, in particular his first few steps, given his lack of size. While he looked more explosive, this will need continued improvement at the professional level. Additionally, he was not as consistent of a pest this past year and needs to be aggressive and fearless at all times like he had been over the past two seasons. Damiani projects as a quality third line forward at the NHL level, with the likelihood that he shifts to the wing. His skill set as a tenacious playmaker works best when he can control the half wall and work at retrievals. Additionally, he may be better in defensive situations as a winger. – BO

  1. Antonio Stranges, LW (82nd overall, 2020. Previous ranking: NA)

Stranges’ potential to become an elite offensive player is still alluring to some, allowing the Stars to overlook his spotty record of OHL production to draft him in the third round. His hands are elite. He has the ability to make multiple defenders miss when playing through traffic. Additionally, his skating style, while unique (he utilizes the 10-to-2 technique), generates a ton of power and makes him difficult to contain once he gains a step on the opposition. While his shot is an area of concern, his finishing ability in tight is not. He is particularly strong on his backhand, a lost art in today’s game. Nonetheless, his game has many warts. Turnovers are a major issue currently as he attempts to go through defenses at poor times, exhibiting a lack of vision and anticipation. This got him stapled to the bench at various times last season. His play away from the puck also leaves a lot to be desired, making him fairly one dimensional. The potential is still sky high for Stranges, but he needs to play with more consistent responsibility. – BO

  1. Dawson Barteaux, D (168th overall, 2018. Previous ranking: 6)

Barteaux plays a simple but solid defensive game. His game revolves around his feet as he is a very smooth skater with excellent four-direction ability. His recovery speed and gap control are both very good and form the basis of his overall solid defensive game. Offensively he has some skills but as more of a puck mover than as a play maker. When he reads and makes the safe play, he is highly effective, but when he tries to be more dynamic offensively, he tends to get himself into trouble. He is an effective shooter and likes to wind up and crack one but needs to pick his spots a better. Barteaux is at his most effective generating zone exits and using his pace into the neutral zone. While his skating is smooth, he isn’t really an end to end puck rusher as he doesn’t make decisions quick enough offensively to be constantly dangerous. Physically he can hold his own although he does need to get stronger to manage his own zone at the pro level. – VG

  1. Evgeni Oksentyuk, RW/LW (162nd overall, 2020. Previous ranking: NA)

The diminutive Belarussian forward was one of the more intriguing second year eligible players available at this year’s draft after a very strong first season in North America with Flint. He may be small at 5-8”, but he is quick, and he plays a fearless game. This really helped his adjustment to the OHL where he led the upstart Firebirds in scoring. Oksentyuk is a wizard with the puck, consistently making defenders miss as he pushes the pace and attacks the middle of the ice. Equal parts playmaker and goal scorer, he possesses a very well-rounded offensive game. It is a matter of whether scouts see his offensive ability translating to the NHL level as he unlikely to be a bottom six player. Having returned to Belarus to play out the pandemic, the early reports are disappointing, as Oksentyuk has been playing in a depth role, but we still expect his combination of agility and dazzling puck skills to help him force his way up the roster in time. – BO

  1. Daniel Ljungman, C (154th overall, 2020. Previous ranking: NA)

Ljungman’s draft season got off to a great start at the Hlinka Gretzky Cup, where his four goals helped Sweden capture the bronze. The rest of his season was indifferent as consistency issues prevented him from being a high impact player at other tournaments and in the SuperElit league (23 points, only 21st among U18 players). He possesses a high skill level as well as a very well-developed ability to read the game, giving him a higher ceiling than his point totals suggest. He has a plus shot and release and operates best as a shot first center who can create through traffic with his quick hands. His skating will need to be upgraded if he wishes to become a true impact offensive player, especially on North American ice where he would have less room to operate. In the meantime, it seems that Ljungman is already taken steps forward, as 17 points in his first 12 games back in the junior level to start this season helped him force his way to the SHL.  – BO

  1. Adam Mascherin, LW (100th overall, 2018 [Originally: 38th overall, 2016 [Florida]. Previous ranking: 7)

Taken as a re-draft in the fourth round of the 2018 draft, after previously being selected by Florida in 2016’s second round, Mascherin brought one of the best shots in junior hockey to the Dallas organization. Unfortunately, his 2019-20 season gave him little opportunity to display that shot - and his evolving offensive creativity - as injuries and inconsistency plagued his sophomore pro campaign. It took him 17 games to score his first goal of the season, and only three more followed in 13 other games before a shoulder injury shut him down for the remainder of the season. When he is healthy, he is a shooter’s shooter, capable of ripping wristers with speed and accuracy from the blueline in on any goaltender. While shooting is his most valuable attribute, he has quick hands and a knack for drawing space to himself before feeding an open linemate. He is not the quickest skater but has the body strength necessary of a 5-10” forward who can’t make up for it with length. Still only 22, he will need more AHL time to fully hash out a clear future role on a big-league team, but the potential is there. - TD

  1. Joel Kiviranta, LW/RW (Undrafted Free Agent, signed May 31, 2019. Previous ranking: 8)

An intelligent winger with a competitive mindset, Kiviranta bleeds versatility. Capable of playing, and excelling, in many roles, the Finn has become a steal for an aging Stars organization needing youth and speed at the big-league level. Signed as a 23-year-old undrafted free agent, after three consecutive seasons with double-digit goals in the Swedish Liiga, Kiviranta initially had trouble adjusting to the North American game and looked a step behind. As the season progressed with AHL Texas, the 5-10” forward dazzled with creativity on offense as a top-line winger and a reliable presence on the penalty kill. His skating improved and his understanding of the game looked as refined as a ten-year North American pro as the season hit its mid-point, and he posted 12 points in 14 games during one stretch. He is a terrific defender and played heavy PK minutes in the AHL during his rookie year. He is expected to be deployed similarly with Dallas in the near future as an energy-line speedster with the versatility of someone who can play spot top-six minutes, a-la soon-to-be UFA Mattias Janmark, as soon as next season. - TD

  1. Nicholas Porco, LW (142nd overall, 2019. Previous ranking: 9)

It certainly was a disappointing third OHL season for Porco, who saw his goal production drop from 20 in his draft year, to only nine this past season. He fell down the depth chart in Saginaw and was subsequently dealt to Barrie, and as part of a young rebuilding team, he struggled to be a consistent contributor. Porco’s strength remains his skating ability. He is an absolutely electric skater who possesses elite level explosiveness. This allows him to be extremely visible in transition. When he does not have the puck on his stick however, he has a tendency to disappear. He needs to find a way to be a more consistent player away from the puck and be someone who can use his speed to create and fill open lanes through the middle. Next season, Porco will be playing for an NHL contract. He certainly has the potential to have a big year in Barrie, where they will be counting on him to be a top six forward. Anything less than a 30 goal, point per game year should be labeled a disappointment. – BO

  1. Joel L’Esperance, C/RW (Undrafted Free Agent, signed Jul. 1, 2018. Previous ranking: 10)

Signed as a free agent out of Michigan Tech, L’Esperance joined the Dallas organization before the Texas Stars’ run to the Calder Cup Finals in 2018. He has since pushed out seasons of 30 and 25 goals (before the cancellation, he was well on his way to 30 again) and was an AHL All-Star in both of his full pro seasons. As a two-way, right-shooting centerman with size and a goal-scoring touch, he would probably be playing NHL hockey on a team with less center depth than the Stars. He is a high energy centerman who plays a game that fits someone smaller than his 6-2”, 215lb self, shooting at high volumes and playing a heavy forechecking style. He has solid technical skating skill for a relatively large forward in spite of top speed that lags. He has a splendid wrist shot and his hockey IQ has carried over nicely from his four-year run in the college ranks. Nearing his 25th birthday, L’Esperance’s game is as well-rounded as it is going to get and he will need to impress the Stars brass one way or another soon, though it is possible he sticks with another organization eventually. - TD

  1. Oskar Back, C/RW (75th overall, 2018. Previous ranking: 11)

A big center with good skating and two-way play. Back’s hands and puck skills are good, but not better than average. He is more of a bottom six talent than anything else. He plays a strong 200ft game with a team-first mentality. He can be used in all situations. He moved up to the SHL last season but did not take a big step forward as a player. He was still more of a role player at the WJC for Sweden. I would like to see him play with more poise and competitiveness and use his size and skating to be more of a force. His puck skills do not stand out and I can’t see him becoming a productive player at a high level if he does not compete harder to create and produce for his team. If not, there is not much upside in his game rather than being a reliable bottom six center. He will play next season in the SHL again. - JH

  1. Rhett Gardner, C/LW (116th overall, 2016. Previous ranking: 12)

Gardner was perhaps the most overlooked player in this system coming into last season, but the North Dakota alum made his mark on the organization in his first full pro season. When the injury bug hit the Dallas Stars in the early going of the 2019-20 season, it was Gardner’s smarts and versatility that made him a useful recall throughout an eight-game NHL trial run. A tenacious, heavy defensive center with long reach and the speed to pressure opposing defensemen on the forecheck, Gardner rarely makes mistakes and is easy for coaches to trust in all situations. He shines on the penalty kill, where his active stick and constantly moving feet at the top or center of the zone keeps the puck on the outside. Strong on faceoffs and down low in the offensive zone, Gardner can be a facilitator of sorts, but is better suited to play a shutdown depth role. - TD

  1. Fredrik Karlstrom, C (90th overall, 2016. Previous ranking: 13)

The 22-year-old center/winger had his best SHL season so far. He did that on a team that struggled partially thanks to a high shooting percentage. He finished the season on a strong note putting up at least one point in nine of his last 12 games. He saw more ice-time at the end as well. Over half of his production came in the last 12 contests of the 52-game season. Karlstrom has good size and good skating abilities. His puck skills are fine but not more than average. His all-around game is good as well. If he can keep up how he finished the season and be a more productive player more consistently, then maybe he has middle six forward potential. He does not play with a physical edge to his game though so he will really need to find offensive effectiveness to become that player. Next season, he will be loaned back to SHL for another season. - JH

  1. Jerad Rosburg, D (Undrafted Free Agent, signed Mar. 9, 2020. Previous ranking: 14)

Son of long-time NFL coach Jerry Rosburg, Jerad Rosburg has a bit of the football player in his work on the ice. For starters, he has great size and plays with a very physical mentality. He uses his big frame to force opponents away from danger areas in his own zone and is known to make a few big hits. His defensive game, both in terms of physically stopping opponents as well as outthinking them, are the main keys of his game. The Maryland native is also willing to push the pace offensively, although he is unlikely to succeed in that approach as a pro. His hands are quick enough to provide some offensive utility, but Rosburg’s surest path to the NHL is as a blue-collar, hard-working part of a bottom pairing, with some penalty killing options thrown in for good measure. He might not need more than a single year in the AHL before he is ready to acclimate to the NHL. - RW

  1. Jacob Peterson, C (132nd overall, 2017. Previous ranking: 15)

A smart two-way center/winger with good speed. Peterson competes well and makes players around him better. He does not have any standout puck skills but uses his speed and competitiveness to create. He plays a smart game way from the puck and is a reliable bottom six player, with a strong forechecking element to his game. He is an efficient forechecker who relies on his smarts rather than aggression to be effective. His offensive hockey sense is not particularly high though, so long-term Peterson should be thought of as bottom six two-way forward. He produced well enough in his first SHL season in a smaller role, playing 10-11 minutes per game. Next season he is shifting from Frolunda to Farjestad and will hopefully get a bigger role. – JH

  1. Nicholas Caamano, RW (146th overall, 2016. Previous ranking: UR)

The third player on this list with a background including the Flint Firebirds, Caamano has the least upside of anyone in this top 20, yet a floor high enough to have spent some time suiting up for the Stars in their recent run to the Stanley Cup Finals. Consider him as you might consider Kiviranta and L’Esperance, but Caamano is the third wheel in that group as he lacks Kiviranta’s skating ability, and L’Esperance’s physical tools. Caamano at least showed last season that he could be a moderate offensive contributor at the AHL level, while proving that his hands can work quickly, even if his feet are heavy. He can play a responsible game, handling defensive zone shifts as well as holding his own on the penalty kill. Barring a significant improvement in his skating, Caamano is who he is, usable depth who, in the right circumstances, can lock down a fourth line NHL role. - RW

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

NHL RNK PLAYER POS AGE HT/WT TM Acquired
Ana 1 Trevor Zegras C 19 6-0/170 Boston University (HE) `19(9th)
Min 2 Kirill Kaprizov LW 23 5-10/200 CSKA (KHL) `15(135th)
Col 3 Bowen Byram D 19 6-0/195 Vancouver (WHL) `19(4th)
Buf 4 Dylan Cozens C 19 6-3/185 Lethbridge (WHL) `19(7th)
Fla 5 Spencer Knight G 19 6-3/195 Boston College (HE) `19(13th)
VGK 6 Peyton Krebs C 19 5-11/180 Winnipeg (WHL) `19(17th)
Ari 7 Victor Soderstrom D 19 5-11/180 Brynas (Swe) `19(11th)
Mtl 8 Cole Caufield RW 19 5-7/165 Wisconsin (B1G) `19(15th)
Van 9 Vasili Podkolzin RW 19 6-1/190 SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) `19(10th)
Edm 10 Philip Broberg D 19 6-3/200 Skelleftea AIK (Swe) `19(8th)
Tor 11 Nick Robertson LW 19 5-9/160 Peterborough (OHL) `19(53rd)
Col 12 Alex Newhook C 19 5-10/195 Boston College (HE) `19(16th)
Det 13 Moritz Seider D 19 6-3/185 Grand Rapids (AHL) `19(6th)
Fla 14 Grigori Denisenko LW 20 5-11/185 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) `18(15th)
Min 15 Matthew Boldy LW 19 6-1/190 Boston College (HE) `19(12th)
NJ 16 Ty Smith D 20 5-10/180 Spokane (WHL) `18(17th)
LA 17 Alex Turcotte C 19 5-11/185 Wisconsin (B1G) `19(5th)
Nsh 18 Philip Tomasino C 19 5-11/180 Nia-Osh (OHL) `19(24th)
Pit 19 Samuel Poulin LW 19 6-1/205 Sherbrooke (QMJHL) `19(21st)
Wsh 20 Connor McMichael C 19 5-11/175 London (OHL) `19(25th)
LA 21 Gabriel Vilardi RW 21 6-3/200 Ontario (AHL) `17(11th)
NYR 22 Igor Shesterkin G 24 6-1/190 Hartford (AHL) `14(118th)
Dal 23 Thomas Harley D 19 6-3/190 Mississauga (OHL) `19(18th)
Ari 24 Barrett Hayton C 20 6-1/190 Arizona (NHL) `18(5th)
NYR 25 Nils Lundkvist D 20 5-11/180 Lulea (Swe) `18(28th)
LA 26 Arthur Kaliyev RW 19 6-2/190 Hamilton (OHL) `19(33rd)
Cgy 27 Juuso Valimaki D 21 6-2/205 DNP - Injured `17(16th)
Det 28 Jared McIsaac D 20 6-1/195 Hal-Mon (QMJHL) `18(36th)
NYR 29 Vitali Kravtsov RW 20 6-3/185 Hartford (AHL) `18(9th)
Edm 30 Evan Bouchard D 20 6-2/195 Bakersfield (AHL) `18(10th)
NYR 31 K'Andre Miller D 20 6-3/205 Wisconsin (B1G) `18(22nd)
Edm 32 Raphael Lavoie RW 19 6-4/195 Hal-Chi (QMJHL) `19(38th)
NYI 33 Ilya Sorokin G 25 6-2/180 CSKA (KHL) `14(78th)
Det 34 Albert Johansson D 19 5-11/165 Farjestads (Swe) `19(60th)
Ari 35 Matias Maccelli LW 19 5-11/170 Ilves Tampere (Fin) `19(98th)
Van 36 Nils Hoglander RW 19 5-9/185 Rogle (Swe) `19(40th)
Ari 37 Jan Jenik RW 20 6-1/180 Hamilton (OHL) `18(65th)
Phi 38 Cam York D 19 5-11/175 Michigan (B1G) `19(14th)
Phi 39 Morgan Frost C 21 5-11/180 Lehigh Valley (AHL) `17(27th)
Ana 40 Lukas Dostal G 20 6-1/170 Ilves Tampere (Fin) `18(85th)
LA 41 Tobias Bjornfot D 19 6-0/200 Ontario (AHL) `19(22nd)
SJ 42 Ryan Merkley D 20 5-11/170 London (OHL) `18(21st)
NYI 43 Kieffer Bellows LW 22 6-0/200 Bridgeport (AHL) `16(19th)
NYI 44 Oliver Wahlstrom RW 20 6-1/205 Bridgeport (AHL) `18(11th)
LA 45 Rasmus Kupari C 20 6-1/185 Ontario (AHL) `18(20th)
CBJ 46 Liam Foudy C 20 6-0/175 London (OHL) `18(18th)
LA 47 Tyler Madden C 20 5-10/155 Northeastern (HE) T(Van-2/20)
Mtl 48 Alexander Romanov D 20 5-11/185 CSKA (KHL) `18(38th)
NYI 49 Bode Wilde D 20 6-2/195 Bridgeport (AHL) `18(41st)
Ott 50 Jacob Bernard-Docker D 20 6-0/180 North Dakota (NCHC) `18(26th)
Cgy 51 Jakob Pelletier LW 19 5-9/165 Moncton (QMJHL) `19(26th)
LA 52 Akil Thomas C 20 5-11/170 Nia-Pbo (OHL) `18(51st)
Wpg 53 Dylan Samberg D 21 6-3/190 Minn-Duluth (NCHC) `17(43rd)
Chi 54 Ian Mitchell D 21 5-11/175 Denver (NCHC) `17(57th)
Ott 55 Josh Norris C 21 6-1/195 Belleville (AHL) T(SJ-9/18)
NYR 56 Matthew Robertson D 19 6-3/200 Edmonton (WHL) `19(49th)
VGK 57 Pavel Dorofeyev LW 19 6-1/170 Magnitogorsk (KHL) `19(79th)
Dal 58 Jake Oettinger G 21 6-4/210 Texas (AHL) `17(26th)
Ott 59 Drake Batherson RW 22 6-1/190 Belleville (AHL) `17(121st)
LA 60 Samuel Fagemo RW 20 6-0/195 Frolunda (Swe) `19(50th)
Col 61 Justus Annunen G 20 6-4/215 Karpat Oulu (Fin) `18(64th)
Bos 62 John Beecher C 19 6-3/210 Michigan (B1G) `19(30th)
Phi 63 Egor Zamula D 20 6-4/175 Calgary (WHL) FA(9/18)
NYR 64 Zac Jones D 19 5-10/175 Massachusetts (HE) `19(68th)
CBJ 65 Kirill Marchenko LW 20 6-3/190 SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) `18(49th)
VGK 66 Jack Dugan RW 22 6-2/185 Providence (HE) `17(142nd)
StL 67 Scott Perunovich D 22 5-10/175 Minn-Duluth (NCHC) `18(45th)
Bos 68 Jack Studnicka C 21 6-1/170 Providence (AHL) `17(53rd)
Dal 69 Ty Dellandrea C 20 6-0/185 Flint (OHL) `18(13th)
Min 70 Calen Addison D 20 5-10/180 Lethbridge (WHL) T(Pit-2/20)
NYR 71 Julien Gauthier RW 22 6-4/225 Charlotte (AHL) T(Car-2/20)
Van 72 Olli Juolevi D 22 6-3/200 Utica (AHL) `16(5th)
NJ 73 Nolan Foote LW 19 6-3/190 Kelowna (WHL) T(TB-2/20)
NJ 74 Janne Kuokkanen LW 22 6-1/190 Cha-Bng (AHL) T(Car-2/20)
Ott 75 Alex Formenton LW 21 6-2/165 Belleville (AHL) `17(47th)
Det 76 Robert Mastrosimone LW 19 5-10/160 Boston University (HE) `19(54th)
NYR 77 Morgan Barron C 21 6-2/200 Cornell (ECAC) `17(174th)
Mtl 78 Jesse Ylonen RW 20 6-1/185 Pelicans (Fin) `18(35th)
Car 79 Dominik Bokk RW 20 6-1/180 Rogle (Swe) T(StL-9/19)
Nsh 80 Egor Afanasyev RW 19 6-3/205 Windsor (OHL) `19(45th)
Ana 81 Benoit-Olivier Groulx C 20 6-1/195 Hal-Mon (QMJHL) `18(54th)
Min 82 Alexander Khovanov C 20 5-11/195 Moncton (QMJHL) `18(86th)
Det 83 Joe Veleno C 20 6-1/195 Grand Rapids (AHL) `18(30th)
NJ 84 Kevin Bahl D 20 6-6/230 Ottawa (OHL) T(Ari-12/19)
Car 85 Ryan Suzuki C 19 6-0/180 Bar-Sag (OHL) `19(28th)
Van 86 Jett Woo D 20 6-0/205 Calgary (WHL) `18(37th)
Mtl 87 Mattias Norlinder D 20 5-11/180 MODO (Swe 2) `19(64th)
Min 88 Adam Beckman LW 19 6-1/170 Spokane (WHL) `19(75th)
Bos 89 Jeremy Swayman G 21 6-1/190 Maine (HE) `17(111th)
Wpg 90 Kristian Vesalainen LW 21 6-3/205 Manitoba (AHL) `17(24th)
Tor 91 Filip Hallander LW 20 6-1/185 Lulea (Swe) T(Pit-8/20)
Fla 92 Owen Tippett RW 21 6-1/200 Springfield (AHL) `17(10th)
Car 93 Jake Bean D 22 6-1/175 Charlotte (AHL) `16(13th)
Ott 94 Shane Pinto C 19 6-2/190 North Dakota (NCHC) `19(32nd)
Col 95 Martin Kaut RW 20 6-1/175 Colorado (AHL) `18(16th)
Van 96 Jack Rathbone D 21 5-10/175 Harvard (ECAC) `17(95th)
Tor 97 Nick Abruzzese C 21 5-9/160 Harvard (ECAC) `19(124th)
Bos 98 Urho Vaakanainen D 21 6-0/185 Providence (AHL) `17(18th)
Wsh 99 Alexander Alexeyev D 20 6-3/200 Hershey (AHL) `18(31st)
NYI 100 Simon Holmstrom RW 19 6-1/185 Bridgeport (AHL) `19(23rd)
LA 101 Jaret Anderson-Dolan C 21 5-11/190 Ontario (AHL) `17(41st)
Car 102 Joey Keane D 21 6-0/185 Hfd-Cha (AHL) T(NYR-2/20)
Wsh 103 Martin Fehervary D 20 6-1/190 Hershey (AHL) `18(46th)
StL 104 Tyler Tucker D 20 6-1/205 Bar-Fnt (OHL) `18(200th)
SJ 105 Yegor Spiridonov C 19 6-2/195 Stalnye Lisy Magnitogorsk (MHL) `19(108th)
NJ 106 Joey Anderson RW 22 6-0/195 Binghamton (AHL) `16(73rd)
Col 107 Conor Timmins D 21 6-1/185 Colorado (AHL) `17(32nd)
StL 108 Klim Kostin C 21 6-3/195 San Antonio (AHL) `17(31st)
Mtl 109 Cayden Primeau G 21 6-3/180 Laval (AHL) `17(199th)
SJ 110 Jonathan Dahlen LW 22 5-11/185 Timra IK (Swe 2) T(Van-2/19)
NJ 111 Reilly Walsh D 21 5-11/180 Harvard (ECAC) `17(81st)
Buf 112 Oskari Laaksonen D 21 6-2/165 Ilves Tampere (Fin) `17(89th)
NJ 113 Arseni Gritsyuk RW 19 5-10/170 Omskie Yastreby (MHL) `19(129th)
Wsh 114 Aliaksei Protas C 19 6-5/205 Prince Albert (WHL) `19(91st)
Cgy 115 Dustin Wolf G 19 6-0/165 Everett (WHL) `19(214th)
StL 116 Joel Hofer G 20 6-3/160 Portland (WHL) `18(107th)
VGK 117 Ivan Morozov C 20 6-1/180 SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) `18(61st)
Mtl 118 Jake Evans C 24 6-0/185 Laval (AHL) `14(207th)
Nsh 119 Eeli Tolvanen RW 21 5-10/175 Milwaukee (AHL) `17(30th)
Wpg 120 Ville Heinola D 19 5-11/180 Lukko Rauma (Fin) `19(20th)
VGK 121 Lucas Elvenes RW 21 6-0/175 Chicago (AHL) `17(127th)
TB 122 Cole Koepke LW 22 6-1/195 Minn-Duluth (NCHC) `18(183rd)
Ana 123 Isac Lundestrom C 20 6-0/185 San Diego (AHL) `18(23rd)
NYR 124 Tarmo Reunanen D 22 6-0/180 Lukko Rauma (Fin) `16(98th)
Mtl 125 Jordan Harris D 20 5-11/180 Northeastern (HE) `18(71st)
Ana 126 Brayden Tracey LW 19 6-0/175 MJ-Vic (WHL) `19(29th)
Phi 127 Tanner Laczynski C 23 6-1/200 Ohio State (B1G) `16(169th)
Chi 128 Alec Regula D 20 6-3/200 London (OHL) T(Det-10/19)
Buf 129 Mattias Samuelsson D 20 6-3/215 Western Michigan (NCHC) `18(32nd)
Car 130 Jamieson Rees C 19 5-10/175 Sarnia (OHL) `19(44th)
Edm 131 Olivier Rodrigue G 20 6-1/165 Moncton (QMJHL) `18(62nd)
Fla 132 Serron Noel RW 20 6-5/205 Osh-Kit (OHL) `18(34th)
Det 133 Antti Tuomisto D 19 6-4/190 Assat Pori (Fin Jr) `19(35th)
Dal 134 Jason Robertson LW 21 6-2/195 Texas (AHL) `17(39th)
Mtl 135 Joni Ikonen C 21 5-10/170 DNP - Injured `17(58th)
Nsh 136 Rem Pitlick C 23 5-11/200 Milwaukee (AHL) `16(76th)
Ott 137 Logan Brown C 22 6-6/220 Belleville (AHL) `16(11th)
TB 138 Samuel Walker C 21 5-11/160 Minnesota (B1G) `17(200th)
Phi 139 Wade Allison RW 22 6-2/205 Western Michigan (NCHC) `16(52nd)
Wpg 140 Declan Chisholm D 20 6-1/190 Peterborough (OHL) `18(150th)
NJ 141 Tyce Thompson RW 21 6-1/180 Providence (HE) `19(96th)
VGK 142 Connor Corcoran D 20 6-1/185 Windsor (OHL) `18(154th)
Ana 143 Jackson Lacombe D 19 6-1/170 Minnesota (B1G) `19(39th)
NYR 144 Lauri Pajuniemi RW 21 6-0/185 TPS Turku (Fin) `18(132nd)
Car 145 Tuukka Tieksola RW 19 5-10/160 Karpat Oulu (Fin Jr) `19(121st)
CBJ 146 Andrew Peeke D 22 6-3/210 Cleveland (AHL) `16(34th)
Ana 147 Axel Andersson D 20 6-0/180 Moncton (QMJHL) T(Bos-2/20)
Car 148 Patrik Puistola LW 19 6-0/175 Tap-Juk-Koo (Fin) `19(73rd)
NJ 149 Michael McLeod C 22 6-2/195 Binghamton (AHL) `16(12th)
Car 150 Pyotr Kochetkov G 21 6-1/175 SKA-VIT (KHL) `19(36th)
NJ 151 Michael Vukojevic D 19 6-3/210 Kitchener (OHL) `19(82nd)
NYI 152 Ruslan Iskhakov C 20 5-8/155 UConn (HE) `18(43rd)
Wpg 153 Sami Niku D 23 6-0/175 Manitoba (AHL) `15(198th)
TB 154 Hugo Alnefelt G 19 6-3/195 HV 71 (Swe) `19(71st)
NJ 155 Nikita Okhotyuk D 19 6-1/195 Ottawa (OHL) `19(61st)
NYR 156 Hunter Skinner D 19 6-2/175 London (OHL) `19(112th)
LA 157 Mikey Anderson D 21 6-0/195 Ontario (AHL) `17(103rd)
Col 158 Shane Bowers C 21 6-2/190 Colorado (AHL) T(Ott-11/17)
NYI 159 Joshua Ho-Sang RW 24 6-0/175 Bri-SA (AHL) `14(28th)
LA 160 Cal Petersen G 25 6-3/190 Ontario (AHL) FA(7/17)
Col 161 Sampo Ranta LW 20 6-2/205 Minnesota (B1G) `18(78th)
Wpg 162 Mikhail Berdin G 22 6-2/165 Manitoba (AHL) `16(157th)
Bos 163 Jeremy Lauzon D 23 6-3/205 Providence (AHL) `15(52nd)
Nsh 164 David Farrance D 21 5-11/190 Boston University (HE) `17(92nd)
Van 165 Will Lockwood RW 22 5-11/175 Michigan (B1G) `16(64th)
NYI 166 Sebastian Aho D 24 5-10/175 Bridgeport (AHL) `17(139th)
Wpg 167 Logan Stanley D 22 6-7/225 Manitoba (AHL) `16(18th)
Buf 168 Ryan Johnson D 19 6-0/175 Minnesota (B1G) `19(31st)
Van 169 Michael DiPietro G 21 6-0/195 Utica (AHL) `17(64th)
VGK 170 Kaedan Korczak D 19 6-3/190 Kelowna (WHL) `19(41st)
Car 171 Jack Drury C 20 5-11/180 Harvard (ECAC) `18(42nd)
StL 172 Nikita Alexandrov C 19 6-0/180 Charlottetown (QMJHL) `19(62nd)
Col 173 Nikolai Kovalenko RW 20 5-10/175 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) `18(171st)
Nsh 174 Juuso Parssinen C 19 6-2/205 TPS Turku (Fin) `19(210th)
Chi 175 Pius Suter C 24 5-11/170 ZSC Lions (NLA) FA(7/20)
Fla 176 Aleksi Saarela RW 23 5-11/200 Rfd-Spr (AHL) T(Chi-10/19)
Bos 177 Trent Frederic C 22 6-4/215 Providence (AHL) `16(29th)
CBJ 178 Dmitri Voronkov LW 20 6-4/190 Ak Bars Kazan (KHL) `19(114th)
Ott 179 Lassi Thomson D 19 6-0/190 Ilves Tampere (Fin) `19(19th)
Car 180 Morgan Geekie C 22 6-2/180 Charlotte (AHL) `17(67th)
CBJ 181 Trey Fix-Wolansky RW 21 5-8/185 Cleveland (AHL) `18(204th)
Ott 182 Vitaly Abramov RW 22 5-9/175 Belleville (AHL) T(CBJ-2/19)
TB 183 Alexander Volkov LW 23 6-1/190 Syracuse (AHL) `17(48th)
Tor 184 Mikko Kokkonen D 19 5-11/200 Jukurit (Fin) `19(84th)
Ott 185 Kevin Mandolese G 20 6-4/180 Cape Breton (QMJHL) `18(157th)
CBJ 186 Daniil Tarasov G 21 6-5/185 Assat Pori (Fin) `17(86th)
LA 187 Carl Grundstrom LW 22 6-0/195 Ontario (AHL) T(Tor-1/19)
LA 188 Kale Clague D 22 6-0/180 Ontario (AHL) `16(51st)
Ott 189 Artyom Zub D 24 6-2/200 SKA St. Petersburg (KHL) FA(5/20)
Edm 190 Tyler Benson LW 22 6-0/200 Bakersfield (AHL) `16(32nd)
Det 191 Jonatan Berggren RW 20 5-10/185 Skelleftea AIK (Swe) `18(33rd)
Tor 192 Yegor Korshkov RW 24 6-4/215 Toronto (AHL) `16(31st)
Dal 193 Riley Damiani C 20 5-9/165 Kitchener (OHL) `18(137th)
VGK 194 Zach Whitecloud D 23 6-2/210 Chicago (AHL) FA(3/18)
Buf 195 Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen G 21 6-4/195 Cincinnati (ECHL) `17(54th)
Car 196 David Cotton LW 23 6-3/205 Boston College (HE) `15(169th)
Chi 197 Wyatt Kalynuk D 23 6-1/180 Wisconsin (B1G) FA(7/20)
Min 198 Hunter Jones G 19 6-4/195 Peterborough (OHL) `19(59th)
LA 199 Jordan Spence D 19 5-10/165 Moncton (QMJHL) `19(95th)
Cgy 200 Dmitri Zavgorodny LW 20 5-9/175 Rimouski (QMJHL) `18(198th)
Col 201 Alex Beaucage RW 19 6-1/195 Rouyn-Noranda (QMJHL) `19(78th)
TB 202 Dmitri Semykin D 20 6-3/200 SKA-1946 St. Petersburg (MHL) `18(90th)
CBJ 203 Matiss Kivlenieks G 24 6-2/190 Cleveland (AHL) FA(5/17)
StL 204 Ville Husso G 25 6-3/205 San Antonio (AHL) `14(94th)
Phi 205 Bobby Brink RW 19 5-10/165 Denver (NCHC) `19(34th)
NYI 206 Otto Koivula C 22 6-4/220 Bridgeport (AHL) `16(120th)
Car 207 Eetu Makiniemi G 21 6-2/180 KOOVEE (Fin 2) `17(104th)
NYI 208 Anatoli Golyshev RW 25 5-8/180 Avtomobilist Yekaterinburg (KHL) `16(95th)
Chi 209 Evan Barratt C 21 6-0/190 Penn State (B1G) `17(90th)
Buf 210 Erik Portillo G 20 6-6/210 Dubuque (USHL) `19(67th)
Fla 211 Cole Schwindt RW 19 6-2/185 Mississauga (OHL) `19(81st)
Chi 212 Michal Teply LW 19 6-3/185 Winnipeg (WHL) `19(105th)
Ott 213 Mads Sogaard G 19 6-7/195 Medicine Hat (WHL) `19(37th)
Buf 214 Jonas Johansson G 24 6-4/205 Rochester (AHL) `14(61st)
TB 215 Cal Foote D 21 6-4/215 Syracuse (AHL) `17(14th)
StL 216 Niko Mikkola D 24 6-5/200 San Antonio (AHL) `15(127th)
NYI 217 Robin Salo D 21 6-1/190 SaiPa (Fin) `17(46th)
Bos 218 Jakub Zboril D 23 6-1/200 Providence (AHL) `15(13th)
Buf 219 Will Borgen D 23 6-2/200 Rochester (AHL) `15(92nd)
Pit 220 Pierre-Olivier Joseph D 21 6-2/170 Wilkes-Barre (AHL) `17(23rd)
SJ 221 Sasha Chmelevski C 21 5-11/190 San Jose (AHL) `17(185th)
Ari 222 Kyle Capobianco D 23 6-1/180 Tucson (AHL) `15(63rd)
Det 223 Keith Petruzzelli G 21 6-5/180 Quinnipiac (ECAC) `17(88th)
Wsh 224 Garrett Pilon RW 22 5-11/190 Hershey (AHL) `16(87th)
NJ 225 Nikola Pasic RW 19 5-10/185 Karlskoga (Swe 2) `19(189th)
TB 226 Alex Barre-Boulet C 23 5-10/165 Syracuse (AHL) FA(3/18)
Edm 227 Ryan McLeod C 20 6-2/205 Bakersfield (AHL) `18(40th)
NYI 228 Samuel Bolduc D 19 6-3/210 BLB-She (QMJHL) `19(57th)
Ott 229 Joey Daccord G 24 6-2/195 Belleville (AHL) `15(199th)
StL 230 Hugh McGing C 22 5-9/180 Western Michigan (NCHC) `18(138th)
Edm 231 Cooper Marody C 23 6-0/180 Bakersfield (AHL) T(Phi-3/18)
Tor 232 Jeremy Bracco RW 23 5-9/180 Toronto (AHL) `15(61st)
Phi 233 German Rubtsov C 22 6-2/190 Lehigh Valley (AHL) `16(22nd)
Wsh 234 Brian Pinho C 25 6-1/195 Hershey (AHL) `13(174th)
Col 235 Logan O'Connor RW 24 6-0/170 Colorado (AHL) FA(7/18)
Buf 236 Casey Fitzgerald D 23 5-11/190 Rochester (AHL) `16(86th)
NJ 237 Daniil Misyul D 19 6-3/180 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl (KHL) `19(70th)
Ari 238 John Farinacci C 19 5-11/185 Harvard (ECAC) `19(76th)
Edm 239 Aapeli Rasanen C 22 6-0/195 Boston College (HE) `16(153rd)
Pit 240 Anthony Angello RW 24 6-5/205 Wilkes-Barre (AHL) `14(145th)
Mtl 241 Cam Hillis C 20 5-10/170 Guelph (OHL) `18(66th)
Cgy 242 Mathias Emilio Pettersen RW 20 5-9/170 Denver (NCHC) `18(167th)
SJ 243 Alexander True C 23 6-5/205 San Jose (AHL) FA(7/18)
NYI 244 Reece Newkirk C 19 5-11/175 Portland (WHL) `19(147th)
Dal 245 Dawson Barteaux D 20 6-0/180 RD-Wpg (WHL) `18(168th)
Bos 246 Jack Ahcan D 23 5-8/185 St. Cloud State (NCHC) FA(3/20)
Det 247 Seth Barton D 21 6-2/175 Mass-Lowell (HE) `18(81st)
Fla 248 Max Gildon D 21 6-3/190 New Hampshire (HE) `17(66th)
Ari 249 Aku Raty RW 19 6-0/175 Karpat Oulu (Fin) `19(151st)
Wpg 250 David Gustafsson C 20 6-1/195 Winnipeg (NHL) `18(60th)
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MCKEEN’S 2020 NHL PROSPECT REPORT – DALLAS STARS – ORGANIZATIONAL RANK: 29 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-nhl-prospect-report-dallas-stars-organizational-rank-29/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-nhl-prospect-report-dallas-stars-organizational-rank-29/#respond Tue, 08 Sep 2020 19:29:01 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=167189 Read More... from MCKEEN’S 2020 NHL PROSPECT REPORT – DALLAS STARS – ORGANIZATIONAL RANK: 29

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dallas stars logoDallas Stars

If you look at the overall organizational rankings in this guide, you will see the Stars not too far from the bottom as third weakest system. Some teams near Dallas in the org rankings make intuitive sense. The last ranked St. Louis Blues traded some pieces for immediate NHL help and other prospects are already full-fledged NHL’ers. The Calgary Flames rarely have a full slate of picks and have made a few reaches over the years as well. The Sharks are in a similar boat to Calgary. Pittsburgh routinely moves their picks early.

Then we have Dallas, which doesn’t fit the stereotype for those other shallow systems. Prior to the 2019 draft, in which the Stars made only four selections, the organization had averaged a full seven picks per year over the previous five drafts. Those six draft classes include seven first round picks. Yet here we are. How do we explain this unfortunate sequence of events?

To Dallas’ credit, the past six drafts have produced three graduates, including two first rounders, in Miro Heiskanen, Denis Guryanov, and Roope Hintz. Further, the top of this system. Particularly the top three which is entirely made up of former first rounders, is quite strong. Unfortunately, the system thins out rapidly after the upper crust of Harley, Oettinger, and Dellandrea. In fact, after a second tier of three players, few of the remaining players on this list would feature at all on the top prospect lists of many other organizations.

Where did Dallas go wrong? There are two main culprits. First up, we have the entire 2014 draft class. Like 26 of the other 30 players selected in the first round in 2014, Dallas’ pick, Julius Honka, has exhausted his prospect eligibility, with 87 games played at the NHL level. Then again, if you follow the Stars, you are probably aware that the offensive blueliner has burned his bridges to the Lonestar State and possibly to the NHL as a whole, having returned last season to Finland, where he was overshadowed by his younger brother Anttoni, a Carolina prospect.  Would you believe that Honka was, hands down, the best outcome Dallas had from that draft class. Not a single one of the other eight players they selected that June remain in the system, nor has a single one played a minute of NHL hockey.

The remainder of the answer to that question is tied up in a single player. That being 2016 first round pick Riley Tufte. Dallas’ 2016 draft class has already played a cumulative 20 NHL games, none of which were credited to Tufte. If Tufte continues his current trajectory, he will not reach the NHL, much less match the 20 games played by Rhett Gardner and Nicholas Caamano. Taken 25th overall out of Blaine High School in Minnesota, the gargantuan Tufte dominated competition in high school (over three points per game) but struggled when he played more advanced competition in the USHL for Fargo, with 14 points in 27 games. Dallas bet on the physical tools.

Tufte was part of two NCAA champions with Minnesota-Duluth, but never as a top contributor or play driver. When he got to the AHL for the first time last year, he simply bombed, with a meagre total of three goals and 15 points in 53 games. He could not play at the pace required of the level, which includes both his skating and his ability to move the puck in the right direction. Through four years, he has simply not developed, and he will need to completely change his development trajectory to have a chance of playing in the NHL at any point. The 2016 draft class has had its share of disappointments, so Tufte is not alone in that measure, but if he was even still viable as an NHL prospect, the Stars would have been a few slots higher on the org rankings this year.

Thomas Harley of the Mississauga Steelheads. Photo by Terry Wilson / OHL Images.
Thomas Harley of the Mississauga Steelheads. Photo by Terry Wilson / OHL Images.
  1. Thomas Harley, D (18th overall, 2019. 2019 Rank: 2)

One of the better defensemen in the OHL, Harley had a strong draft +1 year with the Mississauga Steelheads. Expectations were quite high for him this season and he was able to meet those, even if he was left off Canada’s WJC team.

A smooth, but explosive skater, Harley is able to have such a large impact on the offensive side of things because of how he dictates the pace of play exiting the offensive zone. An aggressive puck mover, he is always looking to lead the rush or jump up into the play. With his size and reach, he can be difficult to separate from the puck as he cuts through the neutral zone and this makes him an elite level facilitator.

His work as a powerplay quarterback took some nice steps forward this season as he gained confidence in his shot and in his ability to use his mobility to create lanes and make better, more calculated decisions at the blueline. Improving the accuracy of his shot is going to be a next step as too often his point shots are high and wide, when a better placed low shot would create a greater scoring chance.

As a defensive player, Harley needed to progress and he became more aggressive in using his size down low, especially when trying to separate players from the puck along the wall. However, as a net front presence, he will need to continue increasing his intensity level. Overall, he became a much more consistent defensive player, improving his gap control and decision making in his own end, trusting his mobility. He is far from a shutdown defender, but he has progressed without a doubt.

The question is, will Harley be in the NHL next year? I believe that he has the capability, depending on how Dallas wishes to fill out their third pairing. However, another year in the OHL would not be a bad thing for his development, allowing him to continue becoming a more comfortable and confident two-way defender. He is still on track to be a top four defenseman at the NHL level. - BO

  1. Jake Oettinger, G (26th overall, 2017. 2019 Rank: 5)

The Dallas Stars have not had a denoted goaltender of the future since Jack Campbell was drafted 11th overall in the 2010 NHL Draft. Though Campbell, now a Maple Leaf, eventually became one of the premier backup goaltenders in hockey, he was a bust of epic proportions as a Stars prospect and appeared in just one game with Dallas. Selecting a goaltender in round one of the Draft is always a risk, but this time around, it appears the risk will pay off in the form of Jake Oettinger, a future high-tier NHL starter. Drafted 26th overall in 2017, Oettinger -- at just 21 -- received the lion’s share of starts with AHL Texas after three seasons of NCAA play at Boston University.

With a muscular 6-5” frame, he is a menacing behemoth of a netminder before even taking into account his skill and athleticism. His lateral movement and save selection, particularly with his glove, are superb, and he holds rebounds that other goalies can’t shut down themselves. He tracks pucks well through traffic and, while his footwork is a little flawed, he has improved in getting to the right spots in the crease to see shots with his chest and pads first. Mature and composed, he plays deep in the crease and relies more on his size and smarts than pure, reactionary reflexes.

With Ben Bishop signed through 2023 and Anton Khudobin, the league leader in save percentage, expressing a desire to re-sign with the Stars, Oettinger will likely get another full season of starts with Texas (if there is a 2020-21 AHL season) before joining the NHL fray. - TD

  1. FRISCO, TX - SEPTEMBER 12: Ty Dellandrea #60 of the Dallas Stars poses for his official headshot for the 2019-2020 season on September 12, 2019 at the Comerica Center in Frisco, Texas. (Photo by Glenn James/NHLI via Getty Images)  *** Local Caption *** Ty Dellandrea
    FRISCO, TX - SEPTEMBER 12: Ty Dellandrea #60 of the Dallas Stars (Photo by Glenn James/NHLI via Getty Images) 
    Ty Dellandrea, C (13th overall, 2018. 2019 Rank: 1)

A former 13th overall selection by the Stars, Dellandrea had an excellent final year in the OHL before entering the pro level next season. He captained the Flint Firebirds to a strong season and was a key member of Team Canada’s gold medal entry at the 2020 World Junior Championships.  As an offensive player, Dellandrea looked much more confident and stronger with the puck on his stick, allowing him to dictate play from the middle and prolong possession in the offensive end.

While his creativity and overall puck skill may not have progressed to the level that you might expect from a lottery selection, he remains a high end offensive option because of his vision, hockey sense, and tenacity. An aggressive player, he excels playing through traffic, rather than avoiding it and he does the majority of his damage near the crease and in the middle, where you have to excel to play in the NHL.

Dellandrea is also a strong two-way presence and faceoff man. He can be counted on to excel in any situation and can play any role asked of him. For this reason, it would not be shocking to see him make Dallas right out of the CHL next season, skipping the AHL entirely. He could play as a third- or fourth-line center and kill penalties at a high level.  Dellandrea’s high end potential remains to be seen. He could end up as either a second- or third-line center and should be a member of Dallas’ leadership group eventually. - BO

  1. Jason Robertson, LW (39th overall, 2017. 2019 Rank: 3)

After leading the Ontario Hockey League, arguably the world’s best junior hockey league, in points, Robertson walked into his first pro season with lofty expectations on his shoulders. Like any other physical task, the 2017 second rounder handled it with ease. Posting numbers good for fifth in points and third in goals among AHL rookies, Robertson handily paced the restructuring, struggling Texas Stars in scoring and was a dangerous option on a consistent shift-to-shift basis.

While he will never be the fastest or most agile skater, the Michigan native possesses silky hands, deft one-on-one moves, and outstanding puck-protection skills. His upper-body strength, especially at his age (playing out the whole season at 20 years old) is incredible; he is near impossible to push off the puck and can run the cycle or brush up against the boards like a seasoned pro.

Without the puck, he likes to play at the perimeter and find open spaces of ice to receive passes, contrary to a traditional 6-2” power forward who would generally just drive the net. His shot is quick and heavy, and worthy of being a triggerman on a future NHL power play unit. His skating, however, is a genuine and large concern; his feet are slow, and he shows very little spark in his acceleration. The Stars are a team desperate for help on offense, and Robertson is the team’s most dynamic scoring prospect. His value is only increased with left wing being his most common position, one of little depth on the NHL roster. - TD

  1. FRISCO, TX - SEPTEMBER 12: Riley Damiani #70 of the Dallas Stars poses for his official headshot for the 2019-2020 season on September 12, 2019 at the Comerica Center in Frisco, Texas. (Photo by Glenn James/NHLI via Getty Images)  *** Local Caption *** Riley Damiani
    FRISCO, TX - SEPTEMBER 12: Riley Damiani #70 of the Dallas Stars. (Photo by Glenn James/NHLI via Getty Images) 
    Riley Damiani, C (137th overall, 2018. 2019 Rank: 6)

After a very strong draft +1 season with the Rangers two years ago, Damiani took a bit of a step backward this past year from a production standpoint. However, he remains a high energy offensive forward who projects as an NHL player.

Damiani is at his best when he keeps his feet moving in the offensive end and is tenacious in his pursuit of the puck. He has a high level of skill when in possession and can create in traffic by making defenders miss. While his shot is good, he is most definitely classified better as a playmaker, first and foremost. Damiani is also a competent two-way forward who works hard on the backcheck and, as such, can be an effective penalty killer.

One aspect of Damiani’s game that needed to improve this past season was his skating ability, in particular his first few steps, given his lack of size. While he did look more explosive, this will need to improve further at the professional level. Additionally, he was not as consistent of a pest this past year, so he will need to find a way to be aggressive and fearless at all times like he had been over the past two seasons.

Damiani projects as a quality third line forward at the NHL level, with it being highly possible that he shifts to the wing at the pro level. His skill set as a tenacious playmaker works best when he can control the half wall and work at retrievals. Additionally, he may be better in defensive situations as a winger. - BO

  1. Dawson Barteaux, D (168th overall, 2018. Pre-season: 16)

Barteaux plays a simple but solid defensive game. His game revolves around his feet as he is a very smooth skater with excellent four-direction ability. His recovery speed and gap control are both very good and form the basis of his overall solid defensive game. Offensively he has some skills but as more of a puck mover than as a play maker. When he reads and makes the safe play, he is highly effective, but when he tries to be more dynamic offensively he tends to get himself into trouble.

He is an effective shooter and likes to wind up and crack one but needs to pick his spots a better. Barteaux is at his most effective generating zone exits and using his pace into the neutral zone. While his skating is smooth, he isn’t really an end to end puck rusher as he doesn’t make decisions quick enough offensively to be constantly dangerous. Physically he can hold his own although he does need to get stronger to manage his own zone at the pro level. – VG

  1. Adam Mascherin, LW (100th overall, 2018 [Originally: 38th overall, 2016 [Florida]. 2019 Rank: 7)

Taken as a re-draft in the fourth round of the 2018 draft, after previously being selected by Florida in 2016’s second round, Mascherin brought one of the best shots in junior hockey to the Dallas organization. Unfortunately, his 2019-20 season gave him little opportunity to display that shot - and his evolving offensive creativity - as injuries and inconsistency plagued his sophomore pro campaign. It took him 17 games to score his first goal of the season, and only three more followed in 13 other games before a shoulder injury shut him down for the remainder of the season.

When he is healthy, he is a shooter’s shooter, capable of ripping wristers with speed and accuracy from the blueline in on any goaltender. While shooting is his most valuable attribute, he has quick hands and a knack for drawing space to himself before feeding an open linemate. He is not the quickest skater but has the body strength necessary of a 5-10” forward who can’t make up for it with length. Still only 22, he will need more AHL time to fully hash out a clear future role on a big-league team, but the potential is there. - TD

  1. Joel Kiviranta, LW/RW (Undrafted Free Agent, signed May 31, 2019. 2019 Rank: 19)

An intelligent winger with a competitive mindset, Kiviranta bleeds versatility. Capable of playing, and excelling, in many roles, the Finn has become a steal for an aging Stars organization needing youth and speed at the big-league level. Signed as a 23-year-old undrafted free agent, after three consecutive seasons with double-digit goals in the Swedish Liiga, Kiviranta initially had trouble adjusting to the North American game and looked a step behind.

As the season progressed with AHL Texas, the 5-10” forward dazzled with creativity on offense as a top-line winger and a reliable presence on the penalty kill. His skating improved and his understanding of the game looked as refined as a ten-year North American pro as the season hit its mid-point, and he posted 12 points in 14 games during one stretch.

He is a terrific defender and played heavy PK minutes in the AHL during his rookie year. He is expected to be deployed similarly with Dallas in the near future as an energy-line speedster with the versatility of someone who can play spot top-six minutes, a-la soon-to-be UFA Mattias Janmark, as soon as next season. - TD

  1. Nicholas Porco, LW (142nd overall, 2019. 2019 Rank: 12)

It certainly was a disappointing third OHL season for Porco, who saw his goal production drop from 20 in his draft year, to only nine this past season. He fell down the depth chart in Saginaw and was subsequently dealt to Barrie, and as part of a young rebuilding team, he struggled to be a consistent contributor.

Porco’s strength remains his skating ability. He is an absolutely electric skater who possesses elite level explosiveness. This allows him to be extremely visible in transition. When he does not have the puck on his stick however, he has a tendency to disappear. He needs to find a way to be a more consistent player away from the puck and be someone who can use his speed to create and fill open lanes through the middle.

Next season, Porco will be playing for an NHL contract. He certainly has the potential to have a big year in Barrie, where they will be counting on him to be a top six forward. Anything less than a 30 goal, point-per-game year should be labeled a disappointment. - BO

  1. Joel L’Esperance, C/RW (Undrafted Free Agent, signed Jul. 1, 2018. 2019 Rank: 11)

Signed as a free agent out of Michigan Tech, L’Esperance joined the Dallas organization before the Texas Stars’ run to the Calder Cup Finals in 2018. He has since pushed out seasons of 30 and 25 goals (before the cancellation, he was well on his way to 30 again) and was an AHL All-Star in both of his full pro seasons.

As a two-way, right-shooting centerman with size and a goal-scoring touch, he would probably be playing NHL hockey on a team with less center depth than the Stars. He is a high energy centerman who plays a game that fits someone smaller than his 6-2”, 215lb self, shooting at high volumes and playing a heavy forechecking style. He has solid technical skating skill for a relatively large forward in spite of top speed that lags. He has a splendid wrist shot and his hockey IQ has carried over nicely from his four-year run in the college ranks.

Nearing his 25th birthday, L’Esperance’s game is as well-rounded as it is going to get and he will need to impress the Stars brass one way or another soon, though it is possible he sticks with another organization eventually. - TD

  1. Oskar Back, C/RW (75th overall, 2018. 2019 Rank: 15)

A big center with good skating and two-way play. Back’s hands and puck skills are good, but not better than average. He is more of a bottom six talent than anything else. He plays a strong 200ft game with a team-first mentality. He can be used in all situations.

He moved up to the SHL last season but did not take a big step forward as a player. He was still more of a role player at the WJC for Sweden. I would like to see him play with more poise and competitiveness and use his size and skating to be more of a force.

His puck skills do not stand out and I can’t see him becoming a productive player at a high level if he does not compete harder to create and produce for his team. If not, there is not much upside in his game rather than being a reliable bottom six center. He will play next season in the SHL again. - JH

  1. Rhett Gardner, C/LW (116th overall, 2016. 2019 Rank: UR)

Gardner was perhaps the most overlooked player in this system coming into last season, but the North Dakota alum made his mark on the organization in his first full pro season. When the injury bug hit the Dallas Stars in the early going of the 2019-20 season, it was Gardner’s smarts and versatility that made him a useful recall throughout an eight-game NHL trial run.

A tenacious, heavy defensive center with long reach and the speed to pressure opposing defensemen on the forecheck, Gardner rarely makes mistakes and is easy for coaches to trust in all situations. He shines on the penalty kill, where his active stick and constantly moving feet at the top or center of the zone keeps the puck on the outside. Strong on faceoffs and down low in the offensive zone, Gardner can be a facilitator of sorts, but is better suited to play a shutdown depth role. - TD

  1. Fredrik Karlstrom, C (90th overall, 2016. 2019 Rank: UR)

The 22-year-old center/winger had his best SHL season so far. He did that on a team that struggled partially thanks to a high shooting percentage. He finished the season on a strong note putting up at least one point in nine of his last 12 games. He saw more ice-time at the end as well. Over half of his production came in the last 12 contests of the 52-game season. Karlstrom has good size and good skating abilities.

His puck skills are fine but not more than average. His all-around game is good as well. If he can keep up how he finished the season and be a more productive player more consistently, then maybe he has middle six forward potential. He does not play with a physical edge to his game though so he will really need to find offensive effectiveness to become that player. Next season, he will be loaned back to SHL for another season. - JH

  1. Jerad Rosburg, D (Undrafted Free Agent, signed Mar. 9, 2020. 2019 Rank: IE)

Son of long-time NFL coach Jerry Rosburg, Jerad Rosburg has a bit of the football player in his work on the ice. For starters, he has great size and plays with a very physical mentality. He uses his big frame to force opponents away from danger areas in his own zone and is known to make a few big hits. His defensive game, both in terms of physically stopping opponents as well as outthinking them, are the main keys of his game.

The Maryland native is also willing to push the pace offensively, although he is unlikely to succeed in that approach as a pro. His hands are quick enough to provide some offensive utility, but Rosburg’s surest path to the NHL is as a blue-collar, hard-working part of a bottom pairing, with some penalty killing options thrown in for good measure. He might not need more than a single year in the AHL before he is ready to acclimate to the NHL. - RW

  1. Jacob Peterson, C (132nd overall, 2017. 2019 Rank: UR)

A smart two-way center/winger with good speed. Peterson competes well and makes players around him better. He does not have any standout puck skills but uses his speed and competitiveness to create. He plays a smart game way from the puck and is a reliable bottom six player, with a strong forechecking element to his game. He is an efficient forechecker who relies on his smarts rather than aggression to be effective.

His offensive hockey sense is not particularly high though, so long-term Peterson should be thought of as bottom six two-way forward. He produced well enough in his first SHL season in a smaller role, playing 10-11 minutes per game. Next season he is shifting from Frolunda to Farjestad and will hopefully get a bigger role. - JH

 

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