[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 Santeri Virtanen – McKeen's Hockey https://www.mckeenshockey.com The Essential Hockey Annual Wed, 30 Dec 2020 19:35:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 McKeen’s 2020-21 Hockey Yearbook: Winnipeg Jets Top 20 Prospects https://www.mckeenshockey.com/uncategorized/mckeens-2020-21-hockey-yearbook-winnipeg-jets-top-20-prospects/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/uncategorized/mckeens-2020-21-hockey-yearbook-winnipeg-jets-top-20-prospects/#respond Wed, 30 Dec 2020 19:35:16 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=167904 Read More... from McKeen’s 2020-21 Hockey Yearbook: Winnipeg Jets Top 20 Prospects

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McKeen's Top 20 Winnipeg Jets 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. Cole Perfetti, C/LW (10th overall, 2020. Previous ranking: NA)

Perfetti may not possess high end size or speed, but there are so many things to like about his game His best asset is his hockey sense. While he doesn’t possess game breaking speed, he can break down opposing defenses by being one step ahead of them. His preferred spot is the half wall, where he can survey the ice, quick hands and quick feet biding him time to make plays. He is a constant threat with the puck and turnovers are rare. He anticipates gaps, rebounds, and passes before they happen, and isn’t afraid to take a hit to make something happen. Perfetti possesses excellent edgework and lateral quickness. He is hard to contain due to his unpredictability. His wrist shot and release are terrific. He is creative in transition. There is doubt if he can stay down the middle at the next level. Perfetti also has steps to take as a two-way player, who can be relied upon in any situation. With his high-end hockey sense, he can likely improve some of his faults. He is a potential game breaking offensive forward who could one dayfind his way to the top of NHL scoring races. – BO

  1. Dylan Samberg, D (43rd overall, 2017. Previous ranking: 1)

The three years since Winnipeg used a second round pick on Samberg saw the big blueliner play a key role in two WJCs for Team USA, win two NCAA championships with Minnesota-Duluth and add 25 pounds to fill out his impressive frame, without any degradation in his quickness. He is a very good skater for his size, which is especially notable in his ability to recover after the puck goes the other way. While he can be physically imposing, playing the body against all manner of opponents, his off-the-puck game is much more than just a matter of brute force. He positions himself well and has a gigantic wingspan, allowing him to use that reach to break up rushes cleanly and legally. With the puck, he is functional enough to earn some second unit power play duties. He has a strong shot with a quick release. Moreover, he moves the puck well, without ever looking fancy. Samberg, more than anything else, makes the right play to put his team in an advantageous position. Finally signed to an ELC, Samberg could see NHL ice next season. - RW

  1. Kristian Vesalainen, LW/RW (24th overall, 2017. Previous ranking: 2)

At 6-4” and 228, Vesalainen can be an intimidating physical force, using his size to bust his way to the goal with pure momentum and strength. He is also an elite skater. Nimble and with impressive footwork, he achieves top speed quickly and is able to get separation on defenders when motoring through open ice. More of a shooter than a passer, he is deadly with his wrist shot anywhere from the faceoff dots in and is aware enough to open up passing lanes for teammates while looking shot. Despite his impressive raw package of skills, Vesalainen is perplexingly inconsistent and lacks assertiveness. Slow to adjust to the size of North American ice, he is prone to disappearing for a string of shifts and does not put up enough shots for a player as lethal with the puck as he is. 2019-20 was his first full season in N.A. competition and if he can figure out how to put his skillset together, he can be a top-line scoring winger; at worst, he is a rugged middle-six depth contributor. - TD

  1. Ville Heinola, D (20th overall, 2019. Previous ranking: 3)

Heinola showed promise in his eight-game NHL stint, but was eventually sent to the AHL before being returned to Finland. He plays with plenty of poise and makes sound decisions with the puck. He sees the ice really well and snaps accurate, crisp passes in all zones from simple outlets to longer passes up the rink. He has swift hands and picks pucks quickly off the wall to make plays. He also works well on the power play as his vision and passing skills are assets. He has an accurate shot from the point, whether it be a slap shot or wrister. He reads the game well defensively, has a quick stick and keeps tight gaps. However, Heinola could use his size more effectively in battles. He moves pretty well, but his skating is not high end, especially considering his size. He lacks explosive initial burst and could be quicker from a standstill and smooth out his forward stride. He makes up for the lack of quickness with his situational awareness. He has top pairing NHL potential, but the middle-pair is a more realistic projection. - MB

  1. Declan Chisholm, D (150th overall, 2018. Previous ranking: 4)

One of the better skaters out of the OHL, Chisholm is aggressive in leading the attack out of the defensive zone, using first step quickness to create separation from forecheckers, and his speed and edgework to gain the opposing blueline. A competent powerplay QB, he creates lanes with agility and lateral quickness. Finally, his gap control defensively is solid as he stays ahead of incoming attackers and has learned to trust his mobility to play more aggressively to take away space. Increased strength and improved engagement elevated his effectiveness. This will be the area that Chisholm will need to continue to work on, as well as his decision making in transition. He will likely need some time to gain the confidence necessary to play aggressively as a pro. Previously, Chisholm had trouble with turnovers, but cleaned that up this past year, and gets a better feel for when to take a risk. He will likely need several years of seasoning at the pro level before he is ready for an NHL role, but he projects as a number 4-6 defender who can also quarterback the powerplay. The key will be just how much his defensive game progresses. – BO

  1. Anton Johannesson, D (133rd overall, 2020. Previous ranking: NA)

Johannesson has missed a good chunk of the last two years to injury, which, when combined with his smaller frame, allowed the Jets to draft him in the fifth round. When healthy, he has showcased why he his high-end skills. A confident and competent mover, Johannesson excels in transition, using an effortless stride, strong agility, and quick hands to lead the attack. On the power play he is a very dangerous weapon because of how well he gets his shot through to the net and his ability to walk around defenders to create gaps in coverage. With the puck on his stick, it is rare to see him commit a turnover as his vision and decision making is sound. Needless to say, his upside as an offensive defender is very high. His size has held him back from being a consistently effective player in the defensive end. He isn’t strong in front of the net or along the boards and his overall awareness is raw. There is hope that as he fills out, he can become an adequate defensive player as his offensive skill set is definitely dynamic enough to play in the NHL. – BO

  1. Sami Niku, D (198th overall, 2015. Previous ranking: 5)

Three years removed from his dominant rookie AHL season, Niku has refined his craft and looks more like a future NHLer than a flash-in-the-pan. He impresses with splendid technical skating skill and inventiveness in moving the puck out and into the offensive zone. A superb puck-handler, he calls for the puck often and directs traffic through the neutral zone at even strength and the power play. His patience with the puck has improved significantly. Though he has improved defensively, he hasn’t looked entirely comfortable in his NHL stints, posting poor possession numbers and few points in transition while battling for ice time against veterans. Fighting through injuries -- including a preseason car accident with Vesalainen beside him -- Niku was not able to stamp himself into the NHL with regularity yet, with some hesitance and inconsistency in his play, but he very well could clinch a spot on their thinning blueline as soon as next season. As a seventh rounder, any NHL games played Niku registers is above market value for Winnipeg, but the 23-year-old’s story is only just beginning. - TD

  1. Mikhail Berdin, G (157th overall, 2016. Previous ranking: 6)

One of the most entertaining players at any position in the AHL, Berdin’s talent level is matched only by his swagger. A hard-nosed and fierce competitor in the crease, the Russian held up exceptionally through backstopping a Manitoba team that sat at the bottom of the Central Division all season, posting a .910 save percentage and a record near .500 in spite of a weak defense in front of him. Athletic and creative in the blue paint, his anticipation and play-reading improved mightily from his 2018-19 rookie pro season, but he mostly relies on his reflexes and impressive foot quickness. While puck-handling is not the most important skill a goaltender can have, Berdin’s talent and confidence with the puck is Brodeur-esque and capable of forcing a team to abandon any forechecking or dump-and-chase style. His selection of his tools and aggression can hurt him at times, but he can make difficult saves look easy consistently with his high-energy style. A sixth rounder in 2016, Berdin is a legit NHL prospect who could even push an NHL like Connor Hellebuyck for starts in the future. - TD

  1. Logan Stanley, D (18th overall, 2016. Previous ranking: 7)

Time on ice is not a publicly available statistic in the AHL, but I have a feeling Logan Stanley is near the top of the boards. A 6-7”, 242lb behemoth capable of logging heavy minutes with consistency and presenting opposing forwards with long, impassable gaps and borderline unfair stick length, the 22-year-old is exactly what the Jets thought they were taking in the middle of the 2016 first round. His defensive game is one of the most polished out of any pro in his age group, but his offensive game has been fairly impressive as well, showing out during power-play deployments with his booming slap shot and improved technical skating ability -- he already moved around pretty well for a big man. What is frustrating in his game, though, are his inconsistent and confusing reads; he can pass the puck into a dangerous situation or sell out for a hit and give up inside position at times, and that will have to be coached out of him. Otherwise, Stanley plays such a simple stay-at-home game that I can’t imagine he would have much trouble playing in the NHL for a decade plus, perhaps starting with next season. – TD

  1. Daniel Torgersson, LW (40th overall, 2020. Previous ranking: NA)

A burgeoning power forward, Torgersson has shown an ability to complement skilled players extremely well in a top six role. He skates well enough to keep up with them in a straight line and has good explosiveness for his size. He can cover the puck and win battles with his reach and strength is hard to contain around the net and on the rush. A physical player, he shows well in all three zones, competing hard on the forecheck and along the wall in his own end. However, his skill set as an offensive player is only average, which suggests that his upside may be limited to the bottom six player at the NHL level, an assessment that his home club of Frolunda may agree with, as they have only sporadic time up with the senior side, regardless of his great production at the junior level. If he can improve his release and his ability to create with the puck at full speed, there may be more upside. – BO

  1. David Gustafsson, C (60th overall, 2018. Previous ranking: 8)

It should go without saying that the Jets rushed Gustafsson to the NHL last season. Playing 22 games for Winnipeg at age 19, he had a Shot Attempt % of 29.9%, per NHL.com, worse than any forward who played in more than four games. Were it not for a fortuitous PDO, he likely would have seen the back of the NHL much sooner. To his credit, Gustafsson was much better in his 13 game stint in the AHL and was far more impressive playing on the top line for Sweden at the WJC, helping his homeland to a Bronze Medal. It should also be said that playing up a level or two is nothing new for the center, as he played two full seasons in the SHL as a teenager before coming to North America. Gustafsson is a large-framed center with a great track record on the draw. He is quicker than he is fast, plays a very reliable two-way game and is strong on his stick. Due to always playing above his age class, his offensive upside is still a mystery, but Gustafsson has enough in his bag to make it in a bottom six role assuming he lacks the skill set to play top six. - RW

  1. Santeri Virtanen, C (105th overall, 2017. Previous ranking: 9)

Virtanen plays a tenacious, purposeful two-way game. He manages well in the corners and along the boards – the physical attributes are there. He reads the game well and provides puck support. He is very strong at face-offs. More of a defensive forward, he can be utilized on the penalty kill due to his defensive reliability. He has pretty good puck handling skills and a fine shot as well. In order to be able to play in the NHL, his skating will have to improve. Not the most efficient skater, he often takes wide turns. His first few strides are clumsy. He could improve his endurance and be more agile as well. Virtanen had a very promising start to the 2019-20 season but couldn’t quite maintain that level of play for the remainder of the campaign. Next season will be very important as he will need to contribute more offensively. At this point in time, he projects as a depth forward at the NHL level. - MB

  1. Nathan Smith, C (91st overall, 2018. Previous ranking: 10)

Drafted as a 19-year-old, Smith has one of the more interesting, unique stories among all prospects in this book. In his first year of draft eligibility, Smith was playing high school hockey. That, in and of itself, is not that interesting. But he was not playing in Minnesota, or Massachusetts. No, Smith was playing high school hockey in Florida. The Tampa native was crushing all comers in the Sunshine State, but surprisingly more than held his own when he moved up a few notches to play with Cedar Rapids of the USHL. His skating was maybe a little unrefined, with more experience playing roller hockey than ice hockey growing up, but he was clever and showed a gift for playmaking. Smith is comfortable playing in the middle of the ice and has proven himself to be effectively creative with the puck after a successful freshman season at Minnesota State. His skating has also improved from what he showed in the USHL. We are still years away from knowing how Smith will turn out, but he has already come so far. - RW

  1. Arvid Holm, G (167th overall, 2017. Previous ranking: 12)

Holm is starting to look like a sneaky good pick by the Jets from 2017. He never had the big numbers playing on a bottom team in the junior league but was since picked up by Farjestad in the SHL which is a big organization with a strong program for goalies. Holm has since been a big surprise to many. He has the size that you want in a modern goalie, and he reads the play well with good vision. He now plays better positionally as well. Holm showed strong consistency and his team won 20 of his 30 starts. He is not a goalie with any standout tools, but the athleticism and his hockey sense both seem to be above average. He has recently signed with Winnipeg but will play the next season in the SHL. With the latest season in mind I would not rule out him to be a fringe starter/backup-goalie in the NHL in the future. - JH

  1. Leon Gawanke, D (136th overall, 2017. Previous ranking: 13)

From an emerging but still, to this point, under-scouted hockey culture in Germany, Gawanke was top-ten in points and assists among rookie defensemen in the AHL in 2019-20 with Manitoba, a team starved of offense. This is an encouraging sign of things to come from a highly entertaining, risk-taking 21-year-old with little pro experience under his belt. Demonstrating a veteran-like ability to cut passes through traffic and walk the blueline on the power play, he is a very dangerous offensive defenseman, especially with his powerful slap shot. Never afraid to activate himself in transition, his powerful strides and quick acceleration allows him to jump into things with ease. Of course, he can get into trouble this way and will need to polish his anticipation and aggression, but he is still only 21 and has less than 50 pro games under his belt. With time, he can be a middle-pair puck-rusher with power play deployment. - TD

  1. Simon Lundmark, D (51st overall, 2019. Previous ranking: 14)

Smooth skating defensive prospect. Picked in the second round in 2019, Lundmark now looks more to be a depth prospect, as he did not take any big steps developmentally last season. If Lundmark reaches the NHL, it is most likely a bottom pair/7th defenseman role. He lacks the tools to be an offensively productive defenseman and is not that strong in defending his own end either. He moves the puck and his feet well and can be a solid breakout passer. He has played a bottom pair in SHL for two seasons now and will need to take a step forward in his team hierarchy to come closer to the NHL. For him to do that he will need to be more than a solid breakout passer. He sometimes complicates things and can get into trouble if he is under pressure from forecheckers. He will also need to be a stronger player in his own end when his team does not have the puck. If he does that, I can see value in a puck-moving defenseman in a third pairing role. - JH

  1. Kristian Reichel, C (Undrafted Free Agent, signed Jun. 15, 2020. Previous ranking: 15)

Undrafted out of the WHL, Reichel earned a two-year, two-way contract as one of the few bright spots on a dim Moose team in 2019-20. Signed as a fill-in depth player, the 22-year-old worked hard until earning a permanent top-six role alongside other Europeans such as Vesalainen and Gustafsson before the season was paused and eventually cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. A sneaky and selective goal scorer, the Czech shoots hard and at a high percentage, thanks to an uncanny ability to locate dead spots in the ice, and he is ready for a shot before the defense can mark him. He is not much of a passer but can carry the puck low into the zone. Fast and intelligent, he can play a solid defensive game as well as flexibly play all three forward positions. Reichel proved he is a legitimate prospect after coming back from an injury early last season. Now he needs to show what his ultimate ceiling could be. – TD

  1. Eric Comrie, G (Waivers: Dec. 19, 2019. Originally: 59th overall, 2013 [Winnipeg]. Previous ranking: UR)

Always some team’s idea of a great third goaltender, someone you are comfortable subbing in for an injured regular for a month, but he now has 211 games of professional experience under his belt already and he still hasn’t definitively stamped out a claim for a regular NHL job. Comrie is a well-coached, technically competent netminder. His physical tools are only adequate though, which tells me that he is fairly likely to be maximizing his potential. If he can prove that wrong, he wouldn’t be the first goalie to bloom in his mid-20’s or later, but it doesn’t look likely. He can be a little stiff, with chunky movements, but the aforementioned technical ability along with a composed demeanor and never-quit approach, helps Comrie not get any less than his maximum. He doesn’t have any one obvious weakness, but likewise there is little to suggest he is ready for a bigger role. – RW

  1. Pavel Kraskovsky, C (164th overall, 2014. Previous ranking: 16)

Just as Kraskovsky seems to have lost a step from the peak of his prospectdom, he is taking a step forward as an offensive force in Russia. He was always correctly viewed as a defensive specialist, considering his career high through five full seasons in the KHL, where his career high was 18 points. Perhaps his first few months this year are portending of his turning a corner, but it isn’t likely. He has soft hands and plays the puck well, but his feel for finishing – not to mention his lengthy track record in that domain – is usually well below par. As he recently signed a two year extension with his lifelong club, Lokomotiv Yaroslavl, this will be the last we report on Kraskovsky in this space, but even if he does one day come to North America, his ceiling would be as a low offense fourth liner who might be able to help out on the penalty kill. It’s not nothing, but it likely will be nothing for Winnipeg. – RW

  1. Henri Nikkanen, C (113th overall, 2019. Previous ranking: 18)

Another big, European center with a questionable offensive skill, there is a greater chance that Nikkanen has a greater ceiling than Kraskovsky, but also a greater chance that he never even reaches what Kraskovsky is capable of. Nikkanen put up impressive numbers in the Finnish junior ranks, but he doesn’t really have any big tools that provide confidence that he can continue to produce against men, when the game gets quicker. His skill with the puck, controlling in confined spaces, does give him a chance to get some action on a fourth line, with the caveat that despite his impressive size, he is not an aggressive player, which is to say that he is less likely to be supplement those bottom line minutes with time on the penalty kill. He also needs to show that he can keep up with the quicker pace physically, as his feet can seem heavy at times. What Nikkanen has working in his favor is his young age, giving him time to gain comfort in his physique. - RW

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MCKEEN’S 2020 NHL PROSPECT REPORT – WINNIPEG JETS – ORGANIZATIONAL RANK: 28 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-nhl-prospect-report-winnipeg-jets-organizational-rank-28/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-nhl-prospect-report-winnipeg-jets-organizational-rank-28/#respond Wed, 09 Sep 2020 11:08:44 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=167197 Read More... from MCKEEN’S 2020 NHL PROSPECT REPORT – WINNIPEG JETS – ORGANIZATIONAL RANK: 28

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winnjetsWinnipeg Jets

How the mighty have fallen. A few short years ago, the Winnipeg Jets were crowned as having the best system in hockey. Not only that, in 2015, the Hockey news went so far as to predict the Jets winning the 2019 Stanley Cup on the strength of that incredible prospect pool. This was a team that, in the previous three draft classes, had used first round picks on the likes of Josh Morrissey, Nikolaj Ehlers, Kyle Connor, and Jack Roslovic. Jacob Trouba and Mark Scheifele were young NHLers looking like solid contributors and the team was well on the way to positioning themselves for another high pick (they took Patrik Laine second overall in the 2016 draft).

The Jets have made the playoffs three times in the last five years – reaching the Conference finals in 2018, but that Hockey News prediction did not come to fruition, indeed losing to Calgary in four games in the play-in portion of these very unique NHL playoffs. Netminder Connor Hellebuyck could not make a big enough difference, after a regular season with many considering him a Vezina favorite this summer.

Unfortunately, the probability of being competitive will only shrink from here on out. Those great draft picks from the mid 10’s are now deep into their second contracts, making it that much more difficult to supplement the roster with complementary talent to carry the Jets over the top. After this offseason, the young trio of Roslovic, Sami Niku, and Mason Appleton, will all be RFAs looking at second contracts. The aforementioned Trouba was already traded away, last offseason, to the Rangers for a package including a 2019 first round pick (Ville Heinola) and blueliner Neil Pionk.

If all of the previous paragraph were not enough, the Jets now find themselves with one of the shallowest prospect classes in the NHL and in the bottom five by any measure. How did we get here?

  • Trading away picks: The Jets did not have a first round pick in 2018, and had only 11 picks in total over the past two drafts
  • They missed on too many early and middle-round picks. 2016 first rounder Logan Stanley has been very slow to develop (although many might reasonably note that a slow ascension was always in the cards for the gigantic blueliner). 2017 third rounder Johnathan Kovacevic looked really rough in his AHL rookie season. Last year’s draft class, almost to a man, did not take the sought-after steps forward in their D+1 season.
  • The team has not supplemented its draft spoils with free agent talent. Their signing of Kristian Reichel – who had already been with the AHL Manitoba Moose for two full seasons – to an NHL Entry Level Contract in June gives the organization two prospects who joined as undrafted free agents.
  • The prospect pool is exceptionally heavy on the blueline, to the detriment of the players up front.

Let’s take a minute to discuss that last point. Of the 15 players we have seen fit to highlight here, seven are defenders, including four of the top five and five of the top seven (for what it’s worth, all of the defenders in the top seven are left-handed shots). Defensemen are generally tougher to scout than forwards, as their off-puck responsibilities usually take longer to learn thoroughly. That longer development time also tends to lead to more room for the player to fall short of a given developmental benchmark, and either fail to meet expectations, or flame out altogether.

This could all change again very quickly, but Winnipeg would do well to start re-stocking the shelves with skilled forwards very soon.

  1. WINNIPEG, MB - SEPTEMBER 13: Dylan Samberg #88 of the Winnipeg Jets poses for his official headshot for the 2018-2019 season on September 13, 2018 at the Bell MTS Iceplex in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. (Photo by Jonathan Kozub/NHLI via Getty Images) *** Local Caption ***Dylan Samberg
    WINNIPEG, MB - SEPTEMBER 13: Dylan Samberg #88 of the Winnipeg Jets. (Photo by Jonathan Kozub/NHLI via Getty Images)
    Dylan Samberg, D (43rd overall, 2017. 2019 Rank: 2)

When the Jets selected Samberg in the second round of the 2017 draft, it looked like an overdraft. He was clearly physically gifted but had spent the bulk of his draft year playing high school hockey for Hermantown. High schoolers are inherently riskier than players from pretty much every other development track, as they are usually playing opponents who are younger, smaller, and less talented. Three years later, Samberg as a second rounder looks like a steal. Those three seasons saw him play a key role in two WJCs for Team USA, win two NCAA championships with Minnesota-Duluth and add 25 pounds to fill out his impressive frame, without any degradation in his quickness.

Samberg is a very good skater for his size, which is especially notable in his ability to recover after the puck goes the other way. While he can be physically imposing, playing the body against all manner of opponents, no matter their size, his off-the-puck game is much more than just a matter of using brute force to succeed. He positions himself well and has a gigantic wingspan, allowing him to use that reach to break up rushes cleanly and legally.

With the puck, he is functional enough to earn some second unit power play duties. He has a strong shot, with a quick release, although he could not match the seven goals scored as a sophomore. Moreover, he moves the puck well, without ever looking fancy. Samberg, more than anything else, makes the right play to put his team in an advantageous position. Finally signed to an ELC, Samberg is not on the list of eligible players for Winnipeg’s 2020 playoff run, but with five UFA’s on the blueline, could see NHL ice next season. - RW

  1. Kristian Vesalainen, LW/RW (24th overall, 2017. 2019 Rank: 1)

Vesalainen tore up the Finnish Liiga as an 18-year-old against grown men in his draft-plus-one year, scoring 39 points in 44 games in one of the world’s top pro leagues. His transition to the North American style of hockey has been slow, but you can feel what Winnipeg sees in the Helsinki native. At 6-4” and 228, the big Finn can be an intimidating physical force, using his size to bust his way to the goal with pure momentum and strength. But for someone that large, Vesalainen is also an elite skater. Nimble and with impressive footwork, he achieves top speed quickly and is able to get separation on defenders when motoring through open ice.

More of a shooter than a passer, the 21-year-old is deadly with his wrist shot anywhere from the faceoff dots in and is aware enough to open up pass lanes for teammates while looking shot. While few prospects in the Western Conference have the raw package of skills that Vesalainen boasts, he is a perplexingly inconsistent and lacks assertiveness. Slow to adjust to the size of North American ice, which many in hockey believes hurts more skilled players, Vesalainen is prone to disappearing for a string of shifts and does not put up enough shots for a player as lethal with the puck as he is.

2019-20 was his first full season in N.A. competition and if he can figure out how to put his skillset together, he can be a top-line scoring winger; at worst, he is a rugged middle-six depth contributor. A monster year in the AHL would help him out mentally. - TD

  1. WINNIPEG, MB - SEPTEMBER 12: Ville Heinola #36 of the Winnipeg Jets poses for his official headshot for the 2019-2020 season on September 12, 2019 at the Bell MTS Iceplex in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. (Photo by Jonathan Kozub/NHLI via Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Ville Heinola
    WINNIPEG, MB - SEPTEMBER 12: Ville Heinola #36 of the Winnipeg Jets  (Photo by Jonathan Kozub/NHLI via Getty Images)
    Ville Heinola, D (20th overall, 2019. 2019 Rank: 3)

Heinola played in three different leagues in 2019-20. He surprised many people by making the Jets roster out of training camp. He showed promise in his eight-game stint but was sent to the AHL. Eventually, he spent most of the season with Lukko in Finland. He had a surprisingly slow start to the Liiga season, but he was able to elevate his game and played very well at times.

He plays with plenty of poise and makes sound decisions with the puck. He sees the ice really well and snaps accurate, crisp passes all over the ice – can make a simple outlet or longer passes up the ice. He has swift hands and picks pucks quickly off the wall to make a play. He also works well on the power play as his vision and passing skills are assets. He has an accurate shot from the point, whether it be a slap shot or wrister.

He reads the game well defensively, has a quick stick and keeps tight gaps. However, Heinola could use his size more effectively in battles. He moves pretty well, but his skating is not high end, especially considering his size. He lacks explosive initial burst and could be quicker from a standstill. He could also smooth out his forward stride. He makes up for the lack of quickness with his situational awareness.

Overall, Heinola is an excellent playmaker and puck mover whose poise stands out. He has top pairing NHL potential, but I think he will more realistically end up as a middle-pairing defenseman. He will return to North America to try to make the NHL roster again next season. - MB

  1. Declan Chisholm, D (150th overall, 2018. 2019 Rank: 15)

The Jets left it to the last minute to sign Chisholm, a talented offensive defender out of the OHL. One of the better skating OHL defenders, he uses this mobility to influence the game in a lot of different ways.

He is aggressive in leading the attack out of the offensive zone, using his first step quickness to create separation from forecheckers, and using his speed and edgework to gain the opposing blueline. Chisholm also is a competent powerplay QB, who creates lanes with his agility and lateral quickness. Excluding Alec Regula (who plays the net front on the powerplay), only Ryan Merkley was more efficient with the man advantage this past season. Finally, his gap control defensively is solid as he stays ahead of incoming attackers and has learned to trust his mobility to play more aggressively to take away space.

Defensively, Chisholm really took some nice steps forward with the Petes in his final OHL season. He had previously struggled to win challenges consistently along the wall and in front of the net due to being too passive. However, increased strength and improved desire to engage elevated his effectiveness. Moving forward, this will be the area that Chisholm will need to continue to work on. He will likely need some time to gain the confidence necessary to play aggressively as a pro.

Another area that he will likely need to hone in on at the pro level will be his decision making in transition. Previously, Chisholm had trouble with turnovers, but cleaned that up this past year. With the speed increasing at the pro level, his effectiveness as a puck mover may be masked initially until he gains the confidence necessary to take chances. He will likely need several years of seasoning at the pro level before he is ready for an NHL role, but he projects as a number 4-6 defender who can also quarterback the powerplay. The key will be just how much his defensive game progresses. - BO

  1. WINNIPEG, MB - SEPTEMBER 12: Sami Niku #8 of the Winnipeg Jets poses for his official headshot for the 2019-2020 season on September 12, 2019 at the Bell MTS Iceplex in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. (Photo by Jonathan Kozub/NHLI via Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Sami Niku
    WINNIPEG, MB - SEPTEMBER 12: Sami Niku #8 of the Winnipeg Jets. (Photo by Jonathan Kozub/NHLI via Getty Images)
    Sami Niku, D (198th overall, 2015. 2019 Rank: 5)

Now three years removed from one of the most dominant rookie seasons by a defenseman in the history of the AHL, Niku has refined his craft and looks more like a future NHLer than the flash-in-the-pan seventh-rounder he was once seen as. In 2017-18, he took home the Eddie Shore award as the AHL’s top defenseman as well as spots on the first All-Star team and all-rookie team with his offensive brilliance (74-16-38-54), dazzling onlookers with his splendid technical skating skill and his inventiveness in moving the puck out and into the offensive zone.

A superb puck-handler, the Finnish blueliner calls for the puck often and directs traffic through the center zone at even strength and on the power play. The most notable thing he has improved upon is his patience with the puck, rushing fewer passes and plays as the situation calls for it, and his periodic tastes of the NHL has likely helped him accomplish that. Though he has improved defensively, he hasn’t looked entirely comfortable in his aforementioned NHL stints, posting poor possession numbers and few points in transition while battling for ice time against some veterans.

Fighting through injuries -- including a preseason car accident with Vesalainen beside him -- Niku was not able to stamp himself onto this Jets season but could clinch a spot on their thinning blueline as soon as next season. As a seventh-rounder, any NHL games played Niku registers is above market value for Winnipeg, but the 23-year-old’s story is only just beginning. - TD

  1. Mikhail Berdin, G (157th overall, 2016. 2019 Rank: 18)

One of the most entertaining players at any position in the AHL, Berdin’s talent level is matched only by his swagger. A hard-nosed and fierce competitor in the crease, the Russian held up exceptionally through backstopping a Manitoba team that sat at the bottom of the Central Division all season, posting a .910 save percentage and a record near .500 in spite of a weak defense in front of him.

Athletic and creative in the blue paint, his anticipation and play-reading improved mightily from his 2018-19 rookie pro season, but he mostly relies on his reflexes and impressive foot quickness. While puck-handling is not the most important skill a goaltender can have, Berdin’s talent and confidence with the puck is Brodeur-esque and capable of forcing a team to abandon any forechecking or dump-and-chase style. His selection of his tools and aggression can hurt him at times, but he can make difficult saves look easy consistently with his high-energy style. A sixth-rounder in 2016, Berdin is a legit NHL prospect who could even push an NHL like Connor Hellebuyck for starts in the future. - TD

  1. Logan Stanley, D (18th overall, 2016. 2019 Rank: 4)

Time on ice is not a publicly available statistic in the AHL, but I have a feeling Logan Stanley is near the top of the boards. A 6-7”, 242lb behemoth capable of logging heavy minutes with consistency and presenting opposing forwards with long, impassable gaps and borderline unfair stick length, the 22-year-old is exactly what the Jets thought they were taking in the middle of the 2016 first round.

His defensive game is one of the most polished out of any pro in his age group, but his offensive game has been fairly impressive as well, showing out during power-play deployments with his booming slap shot and improved technical skating ability -- he already moved around pretty well for a big man.

What is frustrating in his game, though, are his inconsistent and confusing reads; he can pass the puck into a dangerous situation or sell out for a hit and give up inside position at times, and that will have to be coached out of him. Otherwise, Stanley plays such a simple stay-at-home game that I can’t imagine he would have much trouble playing in the NHL for a decade plus, perhaps starting with next season. - TD

  1. David Gustafsson, C (60th overall, 2018. 2019 Rank: 6)

It should go without saying that the Jets rushed Gustafsson to the NHL last season. Playing 22 games for Winnipeg at age 19, he had a Shot Attempt % of 29.9%, per NHL.com, worse than any forward who played in more than four games. Were it not for a fortuitous PDO, he likely would have seen the back of the NHL much sooner. To his credit, Gustafsson was much better in his 13-game stint in the AHL and was far more impressive playing on the top line for Sweden at the WJC, helping his homeland to a Bronze Medal.

It should also be said that playing up a level or two is nothing new for the center, as he played two full seasons in the SHL as a teenager before coming to North America. Gustafsson is a large-framed center with a great track record on the draw. He is quicker than he is fast, plays a very reliable two-way game and is strong on his stick. Due to always playing above his age class, his offensive upside is still a mystery, but Gustafsson has enough in his bag to make it in a bottom six role assuming he lacks the skill set to play top six. - RW

  1. Santeri Virtanen, C (105th overall, 2017. 2019 Rank: 13)

Virtanen plays a tenacious, purposeful two-way game. He manages well in the corners and along the boards – the physical attributes are there. He reads the game well and provides puck support. He is very strong at face-offs. More of a defensive forward, he can be utilized on the penalty kill due to his defensive reliability. He has pretty good puck handling skills and a fine shot as well.

In order to be able to play in the NHL, his skating will have to improve. Not the most efficient skater, he often takes wide turns. His first few strides are clumsy. He could improve his endurance and be more agile as well. Virtanen had a very promising start to the 2019-20 season but couldn’t quite maintain that level of play for the remainder of the campaign. Next season will be very important as he will need to contribute more offensively. At this point in time, he projects as a depth forward at the NHL level. - MB

  1. Nathan Smith, C (91st overall, 2018. 2019 Rank: UR)

Drafted as a 19-year-old, Smith has one of the more interesting, unique stories among all prospects in this book. In his first year of draft eligibility, Smith was playing high school hockey. That, in and of itself, is not that interesting. But he was not playing in Minnesota, or Massachusetts. No, Smith was playing high school hockey in Florida. The Tampa native was crushing all comers in the Sunshine State, but surprisingly more than held his own when he moved up a few notches to play with Cedar Rapids of the USHL.

His skating was maybe a little unrefined, with more experience playing roller hockey than ice hockey growing up, but he was clever and showed a gift for playmaking. Smith is comfortable playing in the middle of the ice and has proven himself to be effectively creative with the puck after a successful freshman season at Minnesota State. His skating has also improved from what he showed in the USHL. We are still years away from knowing how Smith will turn out, but he has already come so far. - RW

  1. Michael Spacek, C (108th overall, 2015. 2019 Rank: 10)

2019-20 was supposed to be a season of positive transition and progress for Spacek, but it was everything else. After posting 41 points in 2018-19, good for third on the Moose in scoring, the 23-year-old Czech played himself into a role as the first-man-up for the Jets, even getting a quick promotion in November, but went downhill from that point on, including spending time as a healthy scratch and being reassigned to the Ontario Reign on loan.

Spacek is a playmaker on offense who excels at opening up space for his teammates and driving play with his surprising strength for a 5-11” centerman, and while he can do too much at times, he is a fairly responsible defensive player who played penalty kill for the Moose and held his own.

Spacek is now one of several players, amid the NHL/AHL seasons being delayed, who have signed overseas contracts that include out-clauses, allowing them to return to North America; a restricted free agent at the end of this season, the 2015 fourth-rounder might have already played his final game in the Jets system. - TD

  1. Arvid Holm, G (167th overall, 2017. 2019 Rank: UR)

Holm is starting to look like a sneaky good pick by the Jets from 2017. He never had the big numbers playing on a bottom team in the junior league but was since picked up by Farjestad in the SHL which is a big organization with a strong program for goalies. Holm has since been a big surprise to many. He has the size that you want in a modern goalie, and he reads the play well with good vision. He now plays better positionally as well.

Holm showed strong consistency and his team won 20 of his 30 starts. He is not a goalie with any standout tools, but the athleticism and his hockey sense both seem to be above average. He has recently signed with Winnipeg but will play the next season in the SHL. With the latest season in mind I would not rule out him to be a fringe starter/backup-goalie in the NHL in the future. - JH

  1. Leon Gawanke, D (136th overall, 2017. 2019 Rank: 19)

From an emerging but still, to this point, under-scouted hockey culture in Germany, Gawanke was top-ten in points and assists among rookie defensemen in the AHL in 2019-20 with Manitoba, a team starved of offense. This is an encouraging sign of things to come from a highly entertaining, risk-taking 21-year-old with little pro experience under his belt.

Demonstrating a veteran-like ability to cut passes through traffic and walk the blueline on the power play, he is a very dangerous offensive defenseman, especially with his powerful slap shot. Never afraid to activate himself in transition, his powerful strides and quick acceleration allows him to jump into things with ease. Of course, he can get into trouble this way and will need to polish his anticipation and aggression, but he is still only 21 and has less than 50 pro games under his belt. With time, he can be a middle-pair puck-rusher with power play deployment. - TD

  1. Simon Lundmark, D (51st overall, 2019. 2019 Rank: 7)

Smooth skating defensive prospect. Picked in the second round in 2019, Lundmark now looks more to be a depth prospect, as he did not take any big steps developmentally last season. If Lundmark reaches the NHL, it is most likely a bottom pair/7th defenseman role. He lacks the tools to be an offensively productive defenseman and is not that strong in defending his own end either.

He moves the puck and his feet well and can be a solid breakout passer. He has played a bottom pair in SHL for two seasons now and will need to take a step forward in his team hierarchy to come closer to the NHL. For him to do that he will need to be more than a solid breakout passer. He sometimes complicates things and can get into trouble if he is under pressure from forecheckers. He will also need to be a stronger player in his own end when his team does not have the puck. If he does that, I can see value in a puck-moving defenseman in a third pairing role. - JH

  1. Kristian Reichel, C (Undrafted Free Agent, signed Jun. 15, 2020. 2019 Rank: IE)

Undrafted out of the WHL, Reichel earned a two-year, two-way contract as one of the few bright spots on a dim Moose team in 2019-20. Signed as a fill-in depth player, the 22-year-old worked hard until earning a permanent top-six role alongside other Europeans such as Vesalainen and Gustafsson before the season was paused and eventually cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

A sneaky and selective goal scorer, the Czech shoots hard and at a high percentage, thanks to an uncanny ability to locate dead spots in the ice, and he is ready for a shot before the defense can mark him. He is not much of a passer but can carry the puck low into the zone. Fast and intelligent, he can play a solid defensive game as well as flexibly play all three forward positions. Reichel proved he is a legitimate prospect after coming back from an injury early last season. Now he needs to show what his ultimate ceiling could be. - TD

 

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Winnipeg Jets 2019-20 Prospect Review: Top 20 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/winnipeg-jets-2019-20-prospect-review-top-20/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/winnipeg-jets-2019-20-prospect-review-top-20/#respond Sat, 14 Sep 2019 13:36:35 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=162642 Read More... from Winnipeg Jets 2019-20 Prospect Review: Top 20

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Having sat at the helm of the Winnipeg Jets since a few weeks before the 2011 Entry Draft – in other words, since the team left Atlanta - Kevin Cheveldayoff is now one of the longest tenured GMs in the sport. The length and stability of his tenure, as the team rose from an absolute also-ran into one often considered among the second tier of Stanley Cup candidates is a testament to the patient team building espoused by the man known as “Chevy” and the True North Sports and Entertainment Limited ownership group.

Considering Winnipeg’s reputation as a frigid outpost with very limited entertainment options, the team had to grow organically, through the draft and player development. It was easy to build with key pieces when the team was struggling. They were not trading their picks and they tended to pick high. In Chevy’s first draft, the Jets nabbed Mark Schiefele seventh overall. In his second go round, Jacob Trouba was selected with the ninth overall pick.

It wasn’t until 2015 when they finally had to wait through the first half of the draft before making a selection, but that worked out well, too, as the Jets picked twice in round one, selecting Kyle Connor and Jack Roslovic. It was really only in 2018 that the plan began to change in Manitoba.

The team had made the postseason only once in its first six seasons as the Winnipeg Jets, and had turned things on, with young Patrik Laine sniping without end and 2012 draft pick Connor Hellebuyck emerging as a high-end workhorse in net. They were suddenly one of the best teams in the league. As top teams do – but as Cheveldayoff had never had to do before – they went about supplementing that largely home grown core through trade, sending their 2018 first round pick (and a few other pieces) to St. Louis for center Paul Stastny. The Jets made it to the Western Conference Finals before bowing out.

For a team that was used to picking twice in the first round, it must have felt like years before they got to call out a name at the end of the second round.

Last season was another strong one for the Jets, although not as consistently so. Regardless, they once again traded away their first-round pick, this time sending it to the New York Rangers (again, along with some stocking stuffers) for big center Kevin Hayes, a pending free agent. It should be noted here that Stastny was also a pending free agent at the time of the 2018 trade and he had signed with Vegas in the offseason, despite Winnipeg trying to retain him. Back to the present, the Jets were knocked out in the first round this time. Hayes did not perform well.

The Jets were now looking at two years outside of the first round and knowing Hayes would not be resigned, they had nothing to show for it. So, they sent the rights of RFA Trouba (my, how time has passed) to the Rangers to get their original pick back. They had a first-round pick, but that was one of only five picks they got to make in Vancouver.

While the Winnipeg Jets lack hardware to show from the last two seasons, they proved that they could reach close to the NHL pinnacle with a pure draft and development philosophy. There are still some nice pieces in the pipeline, but the system now lacks depth. Their drafted and developed players are moving on to second and third contracts and are getting very expensive. Can they turn the trick again?

-Ryan Wagman

WINNIPEG, MB – March 12: Winnipeg Jets defenseman Sami Niku (83) prepares to take a shot during the regular season game between the Winnipeg Jets and the San Jose Sharks on March 12, 2019 at the Bell MTS Place in Winnipeg MB. (Photo by Terrence Lee/Icon Sportswire)
Winnipeg Jets defenseman Sami Niku (83)  (Photo by Terrence Lee/Icon Sportswire)

1 Kristian Vesalainen, LW/RW (24th overall, 2017. Last Year: 1) Vesalainen is a strong skater with very good speed to achieve separation from defensemen. He has good quickness in his first few strides and shows quite nimble footwork for a player of his size. Much more of a shooter than a playmaker, he has a highly accurate wrist shot with a quick release. He can also score with a slap shot or one-timer. He has decent passing skills and offensive instincts. He likes to drive the net and can gain the inside position around the net. On the downside, he can be invisible for overly long periods, mainly at 5-on-5. He needs to be more involved in the game and also show some more intensity with greater consistency. Vesalainen has the potential to develop into a solid, versatile middle-six winger who can provide offensive punch. - MB

2 Dylan Samberg, D (43rd overall, 2017. Last Year: 5) A raw high schooler when the Jets used a second-round pick on Samberg, he has done nothing except collect hardware in the two years since. Actually, that isn’t true. He has also ground down some of the rougher edges of his game to the point where he is one of the better two-way defenders in college hockey and perhaps the best of the traditional, big-man defensive prospects in the game. He reads the ice like a 10-year pro and anticipates opposing forays, allowing him to get his stick on seemingly everything. He has also developed his offensive game nicely. He moves the puck well on the power play, finding teammates down low with sharp diagonal passes against the run of play. He has a hard shot too, suggesting he can continue playing on the man advantage when he finally turns pro. I’m not saying he is the next Brent Burns/Shea Weber, but he is built in that mold and has top pairing upside. - RW

3 Ville Heinola, D (20th overall, 2019. Last Year: IE) Heinola is a smooth skating, offensively gifted defenseman with terrific hockey sense. He has very good offensive vision and displays remarkable poise with the puck. He has already proven that he can run the power play in the Liiga like a seasoned veteran. He gets his shots through and moves the puck with crisp passes. He is effective at carrying the puck up ice, yet also has good playmaking skills from the back end. He is calm under pressure and has swift hands to control the puck well I tight spaces. He makes plays in all areas of the ice. He is not very physical but has good gap control and understands the principles of defending. Heinola has a high ceiling and projects as a firs or second pairing NHL defenseman. - MB

4 Logan Stanley, D (18th overall, 2016. Last Year: 6) Standing at 6-7” tall, Stanley is a difficult guy to miss when he is out on the ice. The physical beast is one of the tallest prospects (or player of any level) in hockey, and his high-end defensive game leans heavily on his near-incomparable length. With his long and impassable gaps, active stick, and ability to take any opposing forward off the puck, his defensive game is one that seems NHL ready at just 20 years old. The former first rounder has a developing offensive game, using his booming slap shot, hockey sense, and passing skill to make something happen consistently at the other end. The main issue displayed during his first pro year with AHL Manitoba is his lack of technical skating skill, which hinders his acceleration and momentum and limits his NHL potential even if he moves well for his size. There is reason to believe he can grow on it and reach his top-four ceiling, but it will take some time. - TD

5 Sami Niku, D (198th overall, 2015. Last Year: 4) His struggles at the NHL level last season made an elephant in the room of Sami Niku’s development, but his prospect ceiling -- and floor -- remain high as a surprisingly talented former seventh-round pick. With Winnipeg in 2018-19, he failed to have any of the success he had in the AHL the season prior, but still displayed flashes of absolute brilliance as a depth two-way defender. A splendid skater with fantastic puck-moving skills and smarts, he fits the Jets’ up-and-down style well and looked increasingly comfortable with a regular role alongside Ben Chiarot. His offensive game is well versed, but his defensive game -- most notably his initial blue line defense and discipline with moving the puck out -- will have to improve. At worst, he is a third-pair defenseman with some power-play time in the future. - TD

6 David Gustafsson, C (60th overall, 2018. Last Year: 8) Gustafsson has looked good in the early stages of this pre-season. He looks a bit faster and stronger and looks to earn a bigger role in the SHL while aiming to be the first line center for Sweden’s WJC run later in a few months. He is an average skater and his puck skills are similar, but he relies heavily on his high end compete level. With his size and strength, he can be a force to face. His NHL potential is more of a middle six or bottom six center than someone for the top six, but he has a good chance to reach that and will probably be an NHLer within two or three years. He scored 12 points in each of his two SHL season as but should be able to at least double that this upcoming season, his last as a teenager. - JH

7 Simon Lundmark, D (51st overall, 2019. Last Year: IE) A smooth skating, puck-moving defenseman. Lundmark has good size and reach but lacks elite skill and can be both sloppy and soft in his game. That said, he shows good vision and plays a calm game with poise. He played full time in the SHL over the second half of last season. He has top six NHL defenseman potential. He doesn’t really have any elite skills in his toolkit and looks more to be an effective in five-on-five play than a power play or penalty kill specialist. He needs to work on his shot to be a better point-producing defenseman and he also needs to get stronger and to compete more in the more physical aspect of the game. His skating, vision, and reach will help him be effective with his stick defensively. Next season, he is expected to play regularly in SHL from the start. - JH

8 Giovanni Vallati, D (153rd overall, 2018. Last Year: 13) Vallati progressed very well this year following an offseason trade from Kitchener to Oshawa. His size and mobility combination make him very effective at both ends of the ice. He is very difficult to beat to the outside because of his feet and reach, and he closes in on dump ins very quickly to get play started the other way. Vallati also possesses a good low point shot, which he uses to create second chance opportunities when operating the point. As an NHL prospect, his upside is that of an all situations second or third pairing defender. Without elite puck skill, there may be some concerns as to how his offensive game translates, but his mobility and size should play in the defensive end. - BO

9 Harrison Blaisdell, C (134thoverall, 2019. Last Year: IE) Blaisdell had a very good year for the Chilliwack Chiefs in the BCHL, with 33 goals and 58 points in 51 games, and added to that with an impressive showing in the World Junior A Challenge with four goals and five points in six games. The speedy center is a strong two-way player who plays an up-tempo style and a quick transition game. He has a solid frame, really quick hands, with a really good shot and rapid release. He has been successful at every level and will continue to do just that as he heads to the University of North Dakota next season. He has great leadership qualities, along with some versatility, and projects to be a bottom six forward at his peak. - KO

10 Michael Spacek, C (108th overall, 2015. Last Year: 9) As one of the finest defensive players in the Winnipeg system, Spacek has a clear NHL future due solely to his hard work and intensity in all three zones, but he can be better than a defensive specialist. The Czech native’s high-end two-way game has translated well from the WHL to pro hockey, as his shot, passing skill, and of course, his maturity and responsibility as a defender has impressed in the Winnipeg system. He is a decent skater, has solid stick-quickness, and features a very quick wrist shot release with enough velocity to fool defenders. His issue right now comes down to consistency, as his shot is sorely underused, he does not do much offensively without the puck on his blade, and he can go missing for long stretches. He is a very reliable player and is sure to eventually get his shot in the big leagues, but he will first need a little more seasoning. - TD

11 Jansen Harkins, C (47th overall, 2015. Last Year: Not ranked) After a slow start to his pro career, Harkins experienced his best season yet last year (70-15-16-31) and is starting to look like the second-rounder Winnipeg drafted in 2015. The gritty, intelligent center ended up in the ECHL for a brief moment last season, and looked like a certified bust, but his 2018-19 season was an impressive one that exhibited his three-zone excellence, his nifty puck-handling skills, and his smarts as a passer and cycle player. With good speed and discipline, he can and does play all three forward spots pretty frequently and is adaptable enough to move up and down the lineup. He is still a long-term project who needs to work on assertiveness and skating, but he has finally shown up as a prospect. - TD

12 Joona Luoto, LW/RW (Undrafted Free Agent, signed Jun. 15, 2019. Last Year: IE) Luoto is a strong, physical winger who plays with high energy and competes hard in each and every shift. He is a puck hound who wins most of his board and corner battles and is tough to play against in that sense. He does not quit on plays and is very dependable. He scored a fair bit in juniors, but he was not a point producer for Tappara in the Liiga as he was mostly deployed on the third or fourth line, without many opportunities on the power play. That said, there were occasions when he displayed fine technical skills and a goal-scoring touch. He is not a speedster, but he has good hockey sense and moves into good spots. He has a chance to be a checking line winger in the NHL. - MB

13 Santeri Virtanen, C (105th overall, 2017. Last Year: 10) Virtanen is a competitive and reliable center who has shown really well at the international stage. He plays a tenacious game without the puck, battles hard for pucks, and consistently provides puck support. He reads plays well, making himself available for passes and getting into position defensively. He is not the most skilled prospect but plays a straightforward game with the puck and can chip in offensively from time to time. Virtanen's skating is quite ordinary, and he needs to add agility, quickness and endurance. He is versatile, can play up and down the lineup and is a good penalty killer. He may not have a very high ceiling, but he could eventually develop into a third- or fourth-line center at the NHL level. - MB

14 Clinston Suess, LW (129th overall, 2014. Last Year: 14) After tearing it up with Minnesota State-Mankato for four full seasons, Suess was expected to jump right into the AHL and carry that offensive firepower into the Manitoba Moose lineup. However, his season came to an early end when he got into a scramble in a mid-December game and he missed the rest of the season with an upper-body injury, finishing with just the 12 points (8G, 4A) he accrued before his injury. Though his health did not cooperate last season, he still brings with him a solid ceiling of depth power forward scorer, due to his high-end upper-body strength, nose for the net, and ability to sense developing plays well. At 25 and having never played a full pro season, Suess is still a question mark, but a very intriguing one. - TD

15 Declan Chisholm, D (150th overall, 2018. Last Year: Not ranked) A smooth skating offensive blueliner, Chisholm saw his production increase greatly in his first post-draft season in Peterborough. He starts the breakout very effectively by making a clean exit pass or by using his mobility to create rushing lanes that he can exploit. He has worked hard to cut down on his turnovers and improve his decision making. Defensively, he has improved his strength down low and is competing hard, but consistency is still an issue. There are still lapses of concentration. Additionally, he will need to improve his point shot if he wishes to be a powerplay QB at the NHL level. Chisholm projects as a third pairing puck mover who can line up alongside a more defensively oriented blueliner. - BO

16 Luke Green, D (79th overall, 2016. Last Year: 17) The bad luck with injuries that Green has sustained in the last two seasons should not affect his best attribute – his skating. He is a very solid skater on his edges or in a straight line and it has been his best path to success in his career. However, a shoulder injury suffered in a prospect tournament in 2017 and a concussion last season restricted his availability to just 27 games over the last two seasons combined. Green has great hockey sense with and without the puck, a great puckhandler with an equally strong first pass; he just needs to see more of the ice to grow. He projects to be a jack-of-all-trades finesse two-way defender who can handle the middle-pair and powerplay minutes in the NHL, but he needs health and more time to marinade. - MS

17 Pavel Kraskovsky, C (164th overall, 2014. Last Year: 19) After a promising youth career, Kraskovsky has struggled to reach the next level, and unfortunately injuries have played a significant role in this lack of development. He may have not missed the train yet although he may need to breath some new air after being part of the Lokomotiv Yaroslavl system for his whole life. He is gifted with good size and excellent two-way abilities and he may become a solid bottom-six player for the Jets, but he needs to restart his development path and play a full, injury-free season. At this point, however, Kraskovsky is just a long shot to make the NHL. His contract with Lokomotiv runs out next year and it is likely that he will try to get to Winnipeg at that time. - ASR

18 Mikhail Berdin, G (157th overall, 2016. Last Year: 18) A star at the USHL level with Sioux Falls, Berdin wasted no time getting adjusted to the higher competition of the pro-affiliated levels, posting outstanding numbers with both ECHL Jacksonville (16-8-2, .912 Sv%, 2.66 GAA) and AHL Manitoba (12-11-0, .927, 2.34) as a 21-year-old. Extremely athletic and hard-nosed, Berdin plays a fundamentally refined game that minimizes high-danger chances. He also possesses the last-resort agility to shut down anything that he can’t immediately get to. His puck-handling is incredible as well, as he can single-handedly force an opposing team to abandon a dump-and-chase scheme midway through games. He will need to improve his tool selection and anticipation, but the tools for a mid-tier NHL starter exists within the Russian stopper. - TD

19 Leon Gawanke, D (136th overall, 2017. Last Year: Not ranked) Gawanke is a great result of drafting a determined player from a lesser-known international program and letting him take advantage of the international experience he is sure to get. He is expected to be a mainstay on the Team Germany blueline throughout his professional career, and has played in three world junior championships, albeit in Division 1A with his native country. Either way, that plethora of experience has paid off for Gawanke, who is more than just a booming shot. He is a risk-taking offensive defender who loves to skate with the puck and make plays. His defensive play needs work, but his raw offensive game will propel him in the pro ranks. He will need time with the Moose but could be a power play quarterback at the NHL level with his shot and his smarts. - MS

20 Henri Nikkanen, C (113th overall, 2019. Last Year: IE) Prior to last season, Nikkanen was considered a potential first or second round pick for the 2019 NHL Draft. Unfortunately for him – but fortunately for Winnipeg – after having a rough season and missing the WU18 championships, the skilled center fell all the way to the fourth round. He has shown flashes of high-end skill in the offensive zone, He can carry the puck into the zone displaying fast stickhandling and smooth hands. He is a decent skater with solid agility, though his top speed is average, and his balance could use some work. He plays a solid defensive game, takes away time and space from opponents and can cover his man in the defensive zone. Nikkanen has nice skill, but his game might be too bland for the NHL and there are also questions marks around his hockey sense for the time being. - MB

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Winnipeg Jets Prospect System Overview https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/winnipeg-jets-prospect-system-overview/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/winnipeg-jets-prospect-system-overview/#respond Fri, 14 Sep 2018 14:21:29 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=150358 Read More... from Winnipeg Jets Prospect System Overview

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For prospect hounds such as ourselves, and presumably you, the Winnipeg Jets of the last few years were a model organization. Not only were they building from within, but they were focusing on high upside talent at the draft. Whether they were drafting early (as they often did) or late, they drafted skill.

There were, of course, exceptions such as the somewhat perplexing decision to select the towering Logan Stanley with the 18th overall pick in 2016, leaving players like Kieffer Bellows, Henrik Borgstrom, Sam Steel, and Alex DeBrincat on the board. But their other first round pick, Patrik Laine, was so good, it was easy to hand-wave away the Stanley selection.

Winnipeg’s 2017 draft followed that trend again, taking a super high upside forward in Kristian Vesalainen in the first round and following it up with a toolsy, yet very raw defender in Dylan Samberg with their second pick.

Coming into this past season, the Jets still seemed to have a loaded organization when it came to high end prospects. Of that crew, only one player, albeit their best one, Kyle Connor, graduated to the NHL. And he certainly lived up to expectations as well, with 57 points in 75 games. A few other rookies got some time in the NHL, but only Connor graduated from prospect status.

Between the loss (in a good way) of their top prospect, in addition to the trade top 10 challenger Erik Foley to St. Louis along with their first round pick in this year’s draft (again, in a good way for those two -Stastny was very good in his brief stay in Manitoba) and the generally late choices they got by virtue of a successful season at the NHL level, one would have expected a mild drop off in the overall strength of the system. Instead, the system seems to have cratered.

On the one hand, there are still some very talented players at the top. Vesalainen’s stock is as high as ever after a fantastic rookie season in Liiga and Jack Roslovic was only four NHL games away from graduating and should capture a regular NHL job out of training camp this year.

Other than those two though, and perhaps a few other more tangential depth pieces, Winnipeg saw way too many young players regress in 2017-18. The above-mentioned Stanley was healthy but ends his OHL career having never dominated the league over a lengthy stretch. Poolman dealt with injuries and struggled in his first, seemingly rushed, NHL looks.

And those were among the better performers in the Winnipeg system. Most of the other prospects of note were lucky to tread water. Some were not as lucky. Spare a thought to Jansen Harkins, a former second round pick who was ranked s their number seven prospect last summer. He was entering his rookie season as a pro but had had cameos in both last two seasons after his WHL was eliminated and looked good. Not this time. He struggled to assert himself with the Moose and ended up spending time in the ECHL.

Harkins, and all the others, are still young enough to be given every opportunity to recover, but the Jets have surrendered the model development organization mantle.

1 Kristian Vesalainen, LW/RW (24th overall, 2017. Last Year: 3rd) After inexplicably falling to the 24th overall pick in the 2017 draft, Vesalainen had as good a year as he possibly could have, returning to his native Finland for the full season, scoring close to a point per game for HPK, and then helping Karpat to a Liiga championship after switching teams on loan. He was, by 10 points, the leading U20 player in Finland. As good as the numbers were, the skills are even better. All of his offensive tools grade out as high end, and the puck skills are near elite. He has a strong, 6-4”, NHL-ready frame, although it is possible that he spends another year in Europe before getting his NHL shot, as he has yet to sign an ELC. Either way, he is a future top six winger.

MINNEAPOLIS, MN - SEPTEMBER 21: Winnipeg Jets center Jack Roslovic (52) skates with the puck during a preseason NHL game between the Minnesota Wild and Winnipeg Jets on September 21, 2017 at Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul, MN. The Wild defeated the jets 1-0.(Photo by Nick Wosika/Icon Sportswire)
Jack Roslovic

2 Jack Roslovic, C/RW (25th overall, 2015. Last Year: 2nd) As mentioned above, Roslovic was only a few more NHL games away from losing his eligibility for this list (we don’t count playoff games for this purpose). He topped the point per game mark in his second go round in the AHL. He was a bit tentative in the NHL and his possession numbers underwhelmed, the skill set to play a regular middle six role, whether up the middle or in the wing, is still there. He is a strong skater with a very good shot and puck skills. Additional experience should allow him to play a more assertive style, much like he jumped into the AHL as a 19-year-old and dominated like few teenagers do. Considering the Jet’s depth at center, expect Roslovic to mostly play right wing for now.

3 Mason Appleton, C/RW (168th overall, 2015. Last Year: 10th) A prime example of how the Jets built one of the previously best and deepest systems in the NHL, Appleton was not a great skater in his draft year, but had always shown puck skills and vision, whether it was in his one year in the USHL, or prior to that as a Wisconsin prepster. He hit the ground running with Michigan State as a freshman and never looked back, turning pro after his sophomore campaign. His AHL rookie season was sensational, as he finished fourth in the league in scoring. His skating is much improved from his amateur days and he has also upped his finishing ability. Once an afterthought, now Appleton should be first in line when the Jets need to call up a forward.

4 Sami Niku, D (198th overall, 2015. Last Year: 9th) The number two scoring defenseman in his AHL rookie campaign Niku, drafted one round after Appleton, is another poster example of the benefits of drafting for skill in all rounds. He even scored a goal in his one game NHL cameo. A solid skater with fantastic puck moving and puck protection skills, he fits the modern game to a ‘T’.  He is on the lean side and does not project to be a force in his own end or along the boards, but when his tea has the puck, he won’t need to be. If he can show more subtlety when shooting, he could be a near perfect power play weapon. Numbers might keep him in the AHL for another year, but his time should come soon enough.

5 Dylan Samberg, D (43rd overall, 2017. Last Year: 8th) Although Samberg has yet to demonstrate that he could be an offensive factor from the blueline, he has all of the tools you want to see in a defender whose priority is to drive the transition from defense to offense. He generally makes the simple play instead of trying for flash. He reads game situations at a surprisingly advanced level, considering how he only had 14 games above high school level before joining Minnesota-Duluth this year, where he helped spearhead a young blueline into a surprise national championship. Samberg is probably more of a #4/5 than a #2/3 going forward, but he looks like a future contributor, even if it will be a quiet contributor.

Logan Stanley
Logan Stanley

6 Logan Stanley, D (18th overall, 2016. Last Year: 4th) As mentioned above, Logan Stanley is big. At 6-7”, 227, he is easily among the biggest prospects – in fact, players of any stripe - in the sport. Stanley is more than just a Coke-Machine on ice, though. He moves very well for his size, and pretty well for any size, and can flash some offensive instinct. He knows how to use his size for good effect, and his reach in particular is elite. His 42-point season with the Kitchener Rangers was a fitting high on which to end his junior career, but his 16 points in 19 postseason games really hinted at the best case scenario. The Jets will be patient with Stanley as he explores his upside, but at worst, he will play in a bottom pairing role in the NHL.

7 Tucker Poolman, D (127th overall, 2013. Last Year: 5th) Although Poolman was given the opportunity to make the Jets out of camp last year, he was caught in a numbers game, dressing for only three of the team’s first 11 games before being sent back down to the Moose. He was up and down between the AHL and NHL throughout the year, but never really got settled in either league and only appeared in 43 games combined. Although given only limited and sheltered minutes with the Jets, to Poolman’s credit, he put up strong possession numbers. He still flashed some of the two-way abilities that made him such a coveted, if late-blooming NCAA prospect. He skates well for a bigger player and has some puck moving ability. Already 25 years old, this is Poolman’s last year on this list, one way or another.

8 David Gustafsson, C (60th overall, 2018. Last Year: IE) The first name called out by the Winnipeg brass in the 2018 draft, Gustafsson is a broad-shouldered pivot who has already shown the ability to hold his own against men with a solid age 17 season in the SHL. More smart than anything else, his general lack of speed ensured that he was still available through most of two rounds. He projects as more of a shooter than a playmaker, which is more due to lack of creativity than inability to create plays for his teammates. Between his reads, size, strength, and temperament, he will be a handful no matter where he stands. He is signed for three more years with HV71 but expect the Jets to try to buy him out of that pact before it expires.

9 Michael Spacek, C (108th overall, 2015. Last Year: 13th) After a strong junior career both in the WHL and representing his native Czech Republic (he played in three WJCs and two WU18s) Spacek had a fine, if understated start to his pro career with the Moose. He demonstrated that his slightly undersized frame could withstand the rigors of playing against men and he provided secondary scoring to boot with 17 goals. Although not the toolsiest of players, he showed a nice shot, with the one-timer being a legitimate weapon from the slot. His skills play up somewhat thanks to good hockey sense, although the overall package speaks to a bottom six upside. One of many such prospects in this system, Spacek is closer than most of the others to being able to slot into the NHL lineup.

Santeri Virtanen
Santeri Virtanen

10 Santeri Virtanen, C (105th overall, 2017. Last Year: 6th) A gamble on tools, the Jets selected Virtanen with a fourth-round pick in 2017 despite being limited to 25 games at all levels in his draft year after a very impressive showing at the WU18s. It is too early to curse a player with the “injury-prone” label, nut after playing only 37 games at all levels this year, he is trending that way. Virtanen is an excellent skater with impressive hockey IQ, and enough puck skills to project as a two-way forward, but he needs to stat on the ice much more. He will be returning to Finland this year after a year in the USHL. Until he plays more regularly, he is a wild card.

11 Eric Comrie, G (59th overall, 2013. Last Year: 12th) There was a time not all that long ago, that Eric Comrie was ahead of Connor Hellebuyck in the Winnipeg pipeline. He had higher draft pedigree and some international experience. That ship has long since sailed. It is hard to blame Comrie for that though. He is an adequate all-around goalie whose best attributes are his glove hand and his ability to read the play, but goalie development is rarely linear. At least, it wasn’t for Hellebuyck. Comrie, on the other hand, has been inching his way forward over the last three seasons in the AHL, with a career best .916 save percentage last year. As his reward, he will be slightly favored to win the NHL backup job this year.

12 Brendan Lemieux, LW (Trade: Feb. 11, 2015. Last Year: 19th) Playing more like his father Claude every year, Brendan Lemieux is a beefy player with good speed and a mean streak that burns hot over the long Manitoba winters. It is not a boast to note his second in the AHL 170 penalty minutes, but they do give a good indication of the type of player that he is. To his credit, he also more than doubled his previous AHL point totals, in ten fewer games than the previous year. If he can contain his temper just a touch more, he could have an NHL future as a pest. So far, that proposition is not a sure thing.

13 Giovanni Vallati, D (153rd overall, 2018. Last Year: IE) While we were less than impressed on the whole with the Jets’ 2018 draft class, we applauded their selection of Vallati in the fifth round. Once a first-round pick in the OHL entry draft, he has quietly put up two solid seasons for Kitchener since then. A smooth skating blueliner, he has flashed high end smarts and a burgeoning physical game, although none of those traits has been all that consistent, or all at the same time, thus far. He has upside as a defensive defenseman who is not a liability on the puck, but he is still young enough to hope for more in time.

14 Clinston (C.J.) Suess, LW (129th overall, 2014. Last Year: unranked) Suess, formerly known as C.J. Franklin, ended his NCAA eligibility on a high note, with career highs in both goals and assists, and being named a Hobey Baker award finalist, after leading Minnesota Stake-Mankato to their first NCAA tournament in three seasons. Although Suess is not blessed with a full glowing tool set, he plays a gritty, team-first game and shows a good understanding of the game, enabling what tools he does have to play up. He is likely no more than a fourth line winger at the highest level, but he is a good example of why teams are wise to take late round chances on college bound players in the draft.

15 Laurent Brossoit, G (UFA: Jul. 1, 2018. Last Year: 6th (Edmonton)) Brossoit had appeared in NHL games for four straight years for the Edmonton Oilers, with last year’s 14 games representing a career high. His .883 save percentage in that span was not, unfortunately for him, a career low. The Oilers had been hoping that he could be a reliable backup to Cam Talbot in the NHL, but the former Calgary sixth round pick was clearly not up to the task. Perhaps with the Jets, his third organization – all Central Canadian clubs – will be the place for him to shine. He will have a chance to compete against Eric Comrie for the backup job for the Jets, but for all of his technical competence and rebound control, his struggles reading the play make him the underdog in this race.

16 Skyler McKenzie, C (198th overall, 2018. Last Year: unranked) Around 11 inches shorter and close to 60 pounds lighter than Logan Stanley, McKenzie finished his WHL career with two near identical seasons of 84 and 87 points, topping 40 goals both times. Although he lacks any one standout tool, all of them – barring physicality, of course – grade out as above average. He played in all situations for Portland but will most likely be sheltered as a pro until he proves that he can withstand the tighter game of the AHL. Even as the game is growing less averse to smaller, skilled players, when you are small as McKenzie, you have to keep proving yourself before the caveats are removed from your point totals.

Luke Green
Luke Green

17 Luke Green, D (79th overall, 2016. Last Year: 14th) The number one overall pick of the 2014 QMJHL entry draft, Green struggled to actuate his tools through most of his junior career. While his production was far stronger in his last year on a per-game basis, injuries limited him to only 14 regular season games with Sherbrooke. He is a solid skater with above average hockey sense, but his offensive tools have not yet convinced that they can play at a high level as a pro. As he enters his rookie season in the AHL, he will also have to prove that the whispers of attitude problems that followed him in junior will not be an impediment to his ability to actuate his skills.

18 Mikhail Berdin, G (157th overall, 2016. Last Year: unranked) Originally drafted out of the Russian 18U program, Berdin came to North America and excelled in the USHL over two seasons, even earning the third string role for the Russian WJC squad last year. Although he has yet to be truly tested at an advanced level, Berdin displays a lot of attributes that suggest that good things are in his future. He is athletic and hard-nosed. He is also perhaps the most skilled and definitely the most daring puck handling goalie among all affiliated prospects. He will play pucks that other goalies don’t even think about. So it isn’t so surprising that he scored an empty net goal last season with Sioux Falls.

19 Pavel Kraskovsky, C (164th overall, 2014. Last Year: 15th) Now a three-year KHL veteran, Kraskovsky has settled in as a 200-foot player who makes up in own zone responsibility what he lacks in offensive skills. He actually has solid puck skills but has not yet figured out how to turn that into offensive production. For the most part, Kraskovsky is a high IQ player who understands the game and knows how to make the safe, coaching friendly plays. Big and rangy, he has yet to fully fill out his 6-4” frame. The Jets are in no rush to bring him to North America and considering that he just signed a two year contract extension with Lokomotiv Yaroslavl, Kraskovsky isn’t in a rush either.

20 JC Lipon, RW (91st overall, 2013. Last Year: 17th) A bruising winger who has seemingly plateaued at around 30 points a year in the AHL, Lipon has the skating and hockey IQ to play a role in the NHL, but he will never play as more than a fourth liner. His offensive limitations may prevent him from getting back to the NHL, which he experienced in a nine-game trial in the 2015-16 season, but his impressive physical game, with big hits at open ice and along the boards, along with the wheels and responsibility to help out on the PK, could lead to a long career as an unheralded energy line player.

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USHL Playoff Preview: New format, wild results https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/ushl-playoff-preview-format-wild-results/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/ushl-playoff-preview-format-wild-results/#respond Fri, 20 Apr 2018 20:21:45 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=147957 Read More... from USHL Playoff Preview: New format, wild results

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Looking to add more drama to its postseason, this season is the first in which the USHL has extended the playoffs through the addition of a best-of-three wildcard round, adding two teams to the festivities from each conference. Whereas the league had previously included only the top four from each conference in the playoffs, this year, the fifth and sixth teams received an extra chance as well.

The new setup sees the top two teams from each conference receive a bye week while the third through sixth teams played up to three games in three nights, all at the home arena of the higher ranked squad.

Perhaps in opposition to expectations, the wild card round saw three upsets in its four series. In the Eastern conference, third seed Muskegon fell in three games to sixth seed and defending champions, Chicago, a series capped by a game three overtime winner. Meanwhile, the fifth seed, Dubuque, won the first two games in Green Bay, negating the need for a winner-take-all finale.

In the Western Conference, third seed Fargo eliminated sixth seed Tri-City in short order, winning their two games by a combined score of 8-1. Fourth seed Sioux Falls feel to fifth seed Lincoln in three games. Like with the Muskegon-Chicago series, the home team won the first game, before dropping the next two, with the finale going to overtime.

The Conference semifinals begin tonight (Friday, April 20, 2018) with Youngstown hosting Dubuque, with the other three series beginning tomorrow evening.

Eastern Conference

Team USA (1) vs Chicago Steel (6)

This matchup may not be the mismatch the seeds suggest that it is. During the regular season, Team USA’s league games are effectively split between the USNTDP U17 and U18 squads. This arrangement was great for development, but usually pretty bad for the standings. Since rejoining the USHL in 2009-10, the USNTDP split team has only reached the postseason twice, and not since the 2011—12 season. Of the players who led this team during the regular season. Most of the top contributors will be unavailable for the postseason, as the bulk of the U18 squad, and some of the better U17 players, are currently in Russia representing flag and country at the World Under 18 Championships.

The leftover players are still very talented on the whole, but lacking in high impact. The players most likely to push the USNTDP onward are 2019 draft prospects Ryder Rolston, Matthew Boldy, and Trevor Zegras up front, and Henry Thrun from the blueline. All three forwards were point per game players in the regular season and are potential high end prospects for next year.

Jack Dugan, photo by Hickling Images.
Jack Dugan, photo by Hickling Images.

The Steel are led by one of the top drafted prospects in the league in Jack Dugan, a Vegas pick and one of the best non USNTDP draft prospects for this year in Blake McLaughlin. The two made up two-thirds of a great top line over the first half of the season, but were split up around mid-season after a coach firing reminiscent of what took place in Flint of the OHL last year. They also have a very promising 2019 prospect of their own in Robert Mastrosimone. Steel games have been high event games this year. Only the USNTDP has scored more and no other playoff team (including the ousted wild-card entrants) have surrendered more. That said, if they stick with Finnish import Oskar Autio in net, they have a very good chance of getting to the conference finals.

Blake McLaughlin.
Blake McLaughlin.

Draft eligible players to watch: For Chicago, pay attention to Blake McLaughlin. After exploding in the first half of the season, his production slowed measurably in the second half, but he scored twice in the wild card round. He is a dark horse pick in the late first round or early second round. For the US squad, Erik Middendorf is one of a select few who were not taken to Russia for the WU18 tournament. He is a decent two-way player who can skate. The Colorado College commit could be taken in the seventh round if he shows some offensive punch here.

Prediction: As they played Autio throughout the wild card round, I expect the status quo to remain for the best of five here. Chicago in five.

Youngstown Phantoms (2) vs Dubuque Fighting Saints (5)

Representing Exhibit A in why the Western Conference was the stronger one this year, both combatants here surrendered more goals than they scored this year, not something you would expect from a playoff team, much less the second seed from the East. Both teams have veteran rosters, with Dubuque bringing more size, although Youngstown plays a rougher game. The Phantoms somewhat make up for the time they spend in the penalty box by having a fairly strong penalty kill. Dubuque has been much more mediocre when it comes to special teams this year.

Alex Steeves
Alex Steeves

The Fighting Saints could have been much stronger this year, as their rosters includes three players drafted by NHL teams in Casey Staum (Mtl), Cole Guttman (TB) and Santeri Virtanen (Wpg). Unfortunately, injuries have meant that Dubuque has spent the majority of the season without any of the three and are not expected to have those players now either. Their offensive attack will be spearheaded by forwards Quinn Preston and Alex Steeves, the latter of whom is draft eligible. Joshua Maniscalco, a former USNTDP member, has been very productive from the blueline as well. Their goaltending looks to be a weakspot, despite Cole Weaver’s great work in shutting down Green Bay in the Wild Card round.

The Phantoms have more offensive weapons at their disposal, including Matthew Berry, Chase Gresock, and Michael Regush. They lack much offensive punch from their defensive corps, although midseason acquisition Michael Callahan has provided solid puck movement. The teams’ biggest strength, however comes from their stoppers. They likely expected to have Chicago draft pick Wouter Peeters claim the starters job this year – and he has been pretty good - but Russian import Ivan Prosvetov has been even better. No matter which netminder they choose for the playoffs, they will have a clear edge over Dubuque in the crease.

Curtis Hall. Photo by Hickling Images/courtesy of the USHL.
Curtis Hall. Photo by Hickling Images/courtesy of the USHL.

Draft eligible players to watch: From Dubuque, it can only be Alexander Steeves. The Notre Dame commit has a big engine and real offensive juice. The team’s leading scorer (seventh league-wide) always wants the puck on his stick and knows what to do when he gets it. From Youngstown, the pre-season pick would have been Curtis Hall, but he has shown that his lack of puck skill severely limits his upside. My personal favorite here is the goalie Prosvetov, who can absolutely dominate at his best. But he may not get the nod as Peeters is also very good. So I will pick Michael Callahan. He is not an exciting prospect, but the Providence commit does a lot of things quietly well.

Prediction: Youngstown in four. Between the top notch goaltending and the more diverse offensive attack, they will be tough to beat, especially under the assumption that Dubuque continues to play shorthanded.

Western Conference

Waterloo Black Hawks (1) vs Lincoln Stars (5)

The Waterloo-Lincoln series should be closer than the two teams’ relative place in the USHL standings would suggest. They both scored a hair under 200 goals on the season, although Waterloo has a team-level GAA of around 0.25 better. A factor that should play a role here is special teams play. Both teams are strong on the penalty kill, with Lincoln’s 84.7% kill rate coming second in the USHL. Waterloo, at 83.8% was not far behind. On the power play, however, the Black Hawks more than make up for the shortcoming when down a man. They had the league’s second best man advantage, scoring 23.6% of the time. Lincoln could only convert on 15.6% of their power plays.

Drury, Jack 2That Waterloo power play was a result of some strong offensive talent. Draft eligible Jack Drury is by far the league’s top power play producer with 12 goals and 22 assists coming on the man advantage. The team captain sees the ice well and knows how to take advantage of the extra space a power play brings. Speedy Ben Copeland, veteran Jackson Cates and midseason addition Benjamin Finkelstein (Fla) make them hard to stop.

The goalie battle is also strong here. Both teams feature drafted goalies, on the roster with Matej Tomek (Phi) playing for Waterloo and Tomas Vomacka (Nsh) for Lincoln, but there is no guarantee that either of the latter get the nod. In the wild-card round, the Stars went with normal backup Derek Schaedig, after a rough outing in game one by Vomacka. The Black Hawks also have Jared Moe, one of the better draft eligible goalies in the league pushing Tomek for playing time.

Paul Cotter
Paul Cotter

Draft Eligible Players to Watch: From Waterloo, pay attention to Drury. His offensive output has been fantastic and has the requisite hockey IQ expected from a legacy player (Son of Ted Drury) and Harvard commit. The question hanging over his prospect value is whether he can produce enough at even strength. From Lincoln, keep an eye on Paul Cotter, who scored the overtime winner in game 3 of the wild card round. He is a good skater with a nice shot and outstanding questions about his upside.

Prediction: Waterloo in four. Lincoln is the most penalized team in the league, with a gap of 129 minutes between them and the runners-up. That will really hurt them as the Black Hawks can take advantage, and will take advantage, over and over again, presuming Lincoln continues to play their brand of hockey.

Omaha Lancers (2) vs Fargo Force (3)

This series promises to be the exact inverse of the above-discussed matchup of Team USA and the Chicago Steel. While the other series should be full of end-to-end rushes, and blaring goal sirens, Omaha vs Fargo is a matchup of the two stingiest teams in the league. Fargo surrendered 133 goals on the season, while Omaha allowed only 143. Both teams enter hot, with Fargo having won five in a row and nine of ten, while Omaha is riding an eight game winning streak.

The goaltending on both sides is stellar. The expected starter for Omaha, Zach Driscoll, finished second in the league with a .934 save percentage. Fargo’s Strauss Mann came in third, at .932. Should, for any reason, either team need to turn to its backup, Fargo’s Ryan Bischel came in fifth in save percentage and Omaha’s Vincent Purpura finished eighth. Omaha’s offensive attack is led by undersized Czech veteran Filip Suchy, who came in second in league scoring with 69 points. Noah Cates (Phi) and Cole Gallant also both finished with over 50 points. Cates, in particular, is a talented player of the puck. Fargo only had one 50 point scoring in Grant Hebert, but Danish import Jacob Schmidt-Svejstrup would have also reached that plateau were it not for time missed for the WJC and a subsequent injury. Fargo also has a number of defensemen who can contribute to the attack, including Ty Farmer, Spencer Meir, and Robbie Stucker (Clb).

Both teams are good on the PK, sharing identical 83.5% kill rate. On the power play, we see some separation. Omaha was very good this year, scoring on 19% of their man up opportunities. Fargo, on the other hand, put everyone to shame, with a USHL high 24.5% power play success rate. Neither team is overly penalty prone, though, so this element may be diminished in significance during this series.

Draft Eligible Players to Watch: Fargo has an older roster on the whole, without any first time eligible players of note. That said, 20 year old Danish winger Schmidt-Svejstrup turned a lot of heads with his goal scoring exploits at the beginning of the season. He lacks pace and likes to fly the zone early, but he knows how to get himself into scoring position. He finished the season with 26 goals in 40 games. On Omaha, Ryan Savage had the most pre-season hype, but has been largely disappointing. Defenseman Travis Mitchell plays a muscular, disruptive style on the blueline, and could be a late round pick, but the real player to watch is left winger Jack Randl. The Michigan commit has promising offensive touch and will be relied upon in the second wave of attack for the Lancers.

Prediction: This is the closest matchup of the round. Omaha wins in five, thanks to better offensive depth. Lots of close, one goal (or two, with the latter being an empty netter) decisions.

Should the first round proper prediction play out, the Conference finals will pit Waterloo against Omaha in the West and Youngstown against Chicago in the East. In that scenario, I see Omaha shutting down Waterloo and Youngstown outscoring Chicago to set up a Clark Cup matchup between Omaha and Youngstown. In this battle of second seeds, Omaha proves the old adage that “defense wins championships” and brings home their eighth Clark Cup championship, and their first since 2007-08.

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Scouting Reports: USHL – Santeri Virtanen (Fighting Saints – Winnipeg), Jack Dugan (Steel – Vegas) https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/scouting-reports-ushl-santeri-virtanen-fighting-saints-winnipeg-jack-dugan-steel-vegas/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/scouting-reports-ushl-santeri-virtanen-fighting-saints-winnipeg-jack-dugan-steel-vegas/#respond Fri, 27 Oct 2017 13:40:03 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=134134 Read More... from Scouting Reports: USHL – Santeri Virtanen (Fighting Saints – Winnipeg), Jack Dugan (Steel – Vegas)

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After missing much of last season Santeri Virtanen fell to the Winnipeg Jets at 105. A versatile forward who will be skating in North America for the first time this season. Jack Dugan was a later round (142) gamble by Vegas and is off to a hot start with the Chicago Wolves with six goals in five games.

A note on the 20-80 scale used below. We look at five attributes (skating, shooting, puck skills, hockey IQ and physicality) for skaters and six for goalies (athleticism/quickness, compete/temperament, vision/play reading, technique/style, rebound control and puck handling). Each individual attribute is graded along the 20-80 scales, which includes half-grades. The idea is that a projection of 50 in a given attribute meant that our observer believed that the player could get to roughly NHL average at that attribute at maturity.

Santeri Virtanen 2017 Draft (105th - Winnipeg Jets)
Position: C, Shoots L H/W: 6-2", 195 lbs
Stats to date (GP-G-A-PTS-PIMS) Dubuque Fighting Saints, USHL (5-1-1-2-0)

Santeri Virtanen, photo by Stephen Gassman Photography.
Santeri Virtanen, photo by Stephen Gassman Photography.
Skating: Has a great motor. Great acceleration. Feet are always moving. Used as F1 as he gets up and down the ice quicker than most and the long strides do not seem to tire him out. Grade: 60

Shot: Has a hard, yet inaccurate one-timer. Will not rush off a shot. Scored from a one-timer along the half-wall, finding the five-hole of a sliding goaltender. Would like to see him shoot more often to prove that he can be an offensive force. Grade: 50

Skills: Relies on speed, positioning and reads more than his hands to move the puck. Generally makes good puck decisions, but fancy stickwork is not really his game. Hands are soft enough. Grade: 55

Smarts: Very good sense for where teammates are positioned on the ice. Plays the F1 role on the PK. Forechecks very hard, can create turnovers through pressure on the puck carrier. Always involved in the action. Diligent backchecking as well. Takes very long shifts, although there does not seem to be any degradation in his effort level or execution as they near the end. Has decent faceoff technique.  Grade: 60

Physicality: Will take a hit to make a play. Has a pro-sized frame and enough core strength to make it work. Not the most aggressive player and plays a generally very clean game. That all said, does not stick to the periphery and can withstand moderate punishment. Grade: 45

Summary: A fourth round steal last year by the Jets, Virtanen was prevented from playing for Dubuque in 2016-17 due to a severe injury that kept him in his native Finland, and sidelined until very late in the season. Now fulfilling his commitment to the Fighting Saints, Virtanen is adjusting nicely to the North American game in the early goings of the USHL campaign. Although the point total is not yet eye-catching, he is often the most noticeable player on the ice. Projects as a strong bottom six forward with special teams utility. There may also be more there given a few more weeks to acclimate to the style of his new team and new league.

Overall Future Projection (OFP): 55.25

Jack Dugan 2017 Draft (142nd - Vegas Golden Knights)
Position: LW, Shoots R H/W: 6-2", 185 lbs
Stats to date (GP-G-A-PTS-PIMS) Chicago Steel, USHL (5-6-2-8-0)

Jack Dugan, photo by Hickling Images.
Jack Dugan, photo by Hickling Images.
Skating: Has nice acceleration over short distances. Average over distance and lacking in breakaway speed. His first few steps give him an edge in races for loose pucks but Dugan will rarely outsprint an opponent over greater lengths. Grade: 50

Shot: Patient before shooting. Waits to find a shooting lane and given enough touches, can unleash a strong, low wrist shot addressed for the five-hole. Has a goalscorer’s instincts. Senses danger and pounces. Grade: 55

Skills: Strong vision. Has nice touch-passing ability in traffic. Does well to maintain possession with the puck attached to the toe of his stick. Has plus puck skills. Scored a beautiful goal on a rush, deking the netminder while being checked from behind. Comfortable using his linemates. Not a pure shooter, despite his Cy Young scoring line in the early going. Expect to see more assists as the season progresses. Grade: 55

Smarts: Tends to play passive in his own zone. Often used as F1 on the forecheck. Provides solid pressure on the puck carrier in both the offensive and neutral zones. Has a tendency to blow coverage in his own zone to chase the play. Lacking attention to detail away from the puck. Not exactly a two-way player yet. Grade: 50

Physicality: Not one to instigate physical play, but has a big frame that allows him to avoid backing down at the USHL level. Gets his stick involved in puck battles, but not as much getting his body into the fray. Would like to see him use his natural advantage more often. Grade: 45

Summary: Drafted by Vegas in his second year of eligibility, Jack Dugan, a Providence commit, was a big scorer in the New York State prep ranks. He has picked up right where he left off with the jump up in level of competition, tied for the USHL lead in both goals and points after three weeks of regular season action. While he lacks in any one standout tool, his offensive instincts are such that they play up when his team is on the puck. With more attention to the game away from the puck – and this means more than just chasing loose pucks – he could project as a nice sleeper prospect in the burgeoning Vegas system. A long-term project at this point, he is at least doing enough to stay on the radar. The fear I have as an evaluator is that his early offensive successes will lessen the urgency of working on the remainder of his game.

Overall Future Projection (OFP): 52

 

 

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Winnipeg – System Overview https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/winnipeg-system-overview/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/winnipeg-system-overview/#respond Sat, 16 Sep 2017 12:14:37 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=131586 Read More... from Winnipeg – System Overview

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The goaltender paradox is one of the last and most difficult-to-overcome issues remaining in hockey. On the one hand, some of the best goaltenders of all time were lightly regarded as amateurs – or not regarded at all – while many netminders that were highly touted as amateurs, never establish themselves in the NHL. On the other hand, an NHL team could be talented and deep from first line to fourth, first pairing to third, and be sunk by mediocre goaltending while some mediocre teams are lifted to great heights by a talented netminder playing at the top of his game at the right time.

The modern-era Winnipeg Jets understand that before they moved back to Winnipeg, in their time as the Atlanta Thrashers, the organization used the second-overall pick of the 2002 draft on a big, athletic netminder from Finland named Kari Lehtonen. Lehtonen was – and still is – not a horrible goalie by NHL standards, but hindsight tells us that they would have been better off selecting Jay Bouwmeester (who went third).

*In fairness to Lehtonen, 2002 was a poor draft year in retrospect. As at times frustrating is his career has been, the number of players selected in 2002 after him who were clearly more valuable over their careers can be counted on one hand – Bouwmeester, Duncan Keith, Alex Steen, Valtteri Filpulla, Frans Nielsen.

Since that time, the combined Thrashers/Jets franchise has been much more conservative with the goaltending position at the draft. In 15 subsequent drafts, they have twice used second round picks on goalies, and never higher. Of course, that does not mean that they have solved goaltending. Like the rest of us, they have long known the pain of inconsistency between the pipes. To understand that pain, it is sufficient to know that the only goaltender in franchise history with more starts than Lehtonen has been Ondrej Pavelec, who finally played his last eight games in a Jets uniform last season.

Moving back to the premise of the first paragraph above, the Jets have tended to draft very well. Two years ago, Hockey Prospectus ranked their system as the best in hockey and last year, they still ranked sixth. They rarely are in contention for high-end free agents and GM Kevin Cheveldayoff tends to be very shy when it comes to trades, so their roster is largely home grown.

Thankfully, the roster is good. Very good. Forwards like Mark Scheifele, Blake Wheeler, and Patrik Laine are legit superstars. The next wave, featuring Nikolaj Ehlers, Bryan Little, and Matheiu Perrault, is similarly inspiring. On the blueline, they feature diverse talents like Dustin Byfuglien, Jacob Trouba, and Josh Morrissey. And the Jets currently have an abundance of very talented young players ready to reinforce what is already on-hand. There are good arguments for four of the top five listed below to spend this coming season in the NHL.

Not the perfect roster, but they have been good. They took more shots at even strength than their opponents in two of the last three years. Yet only once in that span did they make the playoffs, a minimalist appearance in which they were swept in the first round by Anaheim. And for all of that, their success will be predicated on the work of the goalies. They have not been able to develop front end goalies, and unless Steve Mason proves the answer, that mystery will continue to haunt this franchise.

WINNIPEG, MB Ð April 08: Jets Kyle Connor (81) skates with the puck during the NHL game between the Winnipeg Jets and the Nashville Predators on April 08, 2017 at the MTS Centre in Winnipeg MB. (Photo by Terrence Lee/Icon Sportswire)
Jets Kyle Connor (81) (Photo by Terrence Lee/Icon Sportswire)

1 Kyle Connor – One of the best players in NCAA as a freshman, Connor was not physically ready for the NHL even if his skill set was (and remains) high end. He struggled over 20 games with the Jets, but after going back to the AHL, emerged as one of the best players in the circuit by year’s end. Owns an incredibly quick release which scarcely needs one touch before firing. Will never be a physically dominant player, but cannot fault his effort. Should form a great 1-2 scoring punch with Patrik Laine for years to come.

2 Jack Roslovic – The top under-20 scorer in the AHL last season, Roslovic justified the decision to leave Miami (Ohio) after only one season. The former first round pick (taken the same year as Connor) plays a very mature game with great vision and puck skills. A solid-average skater, his offensive output is more meat-and-potatoes than creative, but still very effective. Plays with a very high work rate and is strong for his size. Has second line upside.

Jack Roslovic
Jack Roslovic
GRAND FORKS, NORTH DAKOTA - APRIL 14: Czech Republic vs Finland preliminary round - 2016 IIHF Ice Hockey U18 World Championship. (Photo by Matt Zambonin/HHOF-IIHF Images)
Kristian Vesalainen (Photo by Matt Zambonin/HHOF-IIHF Images)

3 Kristian Vesalainen – Shuffled between teams in SHL, Liiga and SuperElit, it should be little wonder that Vesalainen struggled to produce offense with any consistency during the regular season. Finally playing amongst his peers at the WU18 tournament, he took off, with 13 points in seven games for the Silver medal winners. He is a big power forward with an excellent shot and a mature all-around game. Should be able to use his size to his advantage against men next year.

4 Logan Stanley – Drafted as a gamble on elite height with good hockey intelligence, Stanley’s post draft season was blighted by injuries, but when he played, he was beginning to show some of the promise that the Jets saw in him when they used the 18th overall selection in 2016 on him. An incredible skater for his height, he is extremely difficult to skate around. He is very strong on the puck and has a cannon for a point shot. Given better health, his point totals should take off.

5 Tucker Poolman – Dynamic and intelligent, Poolman can do a little bit of everything on the ice. Strong in his own zone, he rarely made the wrong decision in his collegiate career. Likes to pinch in with the knowledge that his skating prowess will allow him to get to his own zone in plenty of time. Has a strong, lanky body and will occasionally lay out bigger bodies with thunderous checks. Has a decent point shot, but is more effective at moving the puck smartly to teammates.

6 Santeri Virtanen – After spending the vast majority of his draft season injured, Virtanen exploded in the last five games of the season for TPS U20 and was one of the top players on Finland’s U18 team. He is a high end skater who has a rare extra gear. A very dangerous penalty killer. Plays with bravery, getting into lanes late to block shots or using his aggressive stick to create turnovers. Very high hockey IQ. Excited to see what he can do when fully healthy.

7 Jansen Harkins – A highly intelligent two-way forward, his offense in the WHL had stalled at plus, but not dominant levels. More a playmaker than a shooter, he exhibits very good vision and passing chops. He has a good frame for the pro game, but is not an overly physical player, relying on positioning and anticipation more than intimidation in his own end. Projecting as a middle six center, he is the type of player for whom his AHL stay could be brief.

8 Dylan Samberg – Raw, but incredibly toolsy, Samberg was a smart, calculated gamble in the second round this year. He combines plus size with great mobility and a strong point shot. Likes to pinch in deep, he is able to get back in time if the offensive charge does not go as planned. Patient with the puck and capable of executing long passes, he will not likely dazzle with his carrying ability. His strength is functional, but projects for more. Off to Minnesota-Duluth this year.

9 Sami Niku – A slightly undersized offensive defenseman, Niku will be making his North American debut this year. He is a smooth skater who hits top speed quickly and has an accurate, if not very hard, point shot. His real strength is his high end puck play. He can deliver crisp, long passes, that are easy to handle by his teammates. Also strong carrying the puck with speed up the ice. He will not be a quick AHL study, but has eventual top four upside.

10 Mason Appleton – Another example of the Jets drafting talented, skilled players in the late rounds, Appleton was by far the best player on a moribund Michigan State squad last year, and arguably as a freshman as well. The Jets seemed to agree, coaxing him out of school with an ELC this offseason. Strong on the half-wall, he plays the puck with patience and great vision. Not the fastest, but very agile. Responsible in his own end. Hands are quicker than his feet.

11 Erik Foley – An athletic winger with plus wheels, Foley can both produce offense at a respectable clip, while looking like a passenger, led along by better players. He has finishing ability and good net drive, featuring plus acceleration, but his hands often look stiff. He can protect the puck, leveraging his core strength and positioning against the wall, but struggles more when trying to stickhandle in tight. Can succeed if he plays a physical, power game.

12 Eric Comrie – Currently the top goaltending prospect in the Jets’ system, through two seasons in the AHL, Comrie has proven that he can handle a pro workload but not that he can be better than average between the pipes. He is athletic and minimizes second chances, but is prone to the snowballing effect, where one bad goal quickly leads to another. Small by modern netminding standards, he relies on lateral agility and scrambling to cover the net.

13 Michael Spacek – A strong scorer at both the international and junior levels, Spacek has all of the offensive tools, including skating prowess, a hard arsenal of shots, and slick hands that allow him to project as a potential middle six contributor at the highest level. Although he is a hard worker, and puts forth a commendable effort at backchecking and taking care of things in his own end, his lack of size or strength will hamper his speed of ascent.

14 Luke Green – An above average skater, Green has struggled to keep his career on the path he seemed to be on when Saint John made him the number one choice in the 2014 QMJHL Entry draft. He has the talent, and the all-zones awareness to project onto a future second pairing, but has also shown a disappointing propensity to wilt as the pressure mounts. Forced his way out of Saint John last year as he was being asked to play more at forward in deference to Thomas Chabot and Jakub Zboril. Has a chance to end his junior career on a high note.

15 Pavel Kraskovsky – The tall and lanky Russian pivot took a big step forward this season, his second full season in the KHL. A two-way player, he has good hands and playmaking instincts in the offensive zone, and is positionally mature in his own zone. More of a support player than one who can lead a top six line, he is currently on a one year deal with his hometown Lokomotiv Yaroslavl. Another year of progress like last year and the Jets should be working to entice him to cross the pond.

16 Chase De Leo – Pesky, undersized De Leo took a step back offensively in his second go-round in the AHL. Partially, it was a function of regression in his percentages and partially from being less involved offensively. He has enough slippery skating ability and quickness in his hands to be able to provide offense from a bottom six role in the NHL in the near future. He could probably contribute this season without embarrassing himself if the opportunity arose.

17 JC Lipon – AHL vet Lipon plays a physical game that is much bigger than his average size. After scoring at a nice clip in 2015-16, his offensive game fell off last year, while he still continued to rack up loyalty rewards for frequent use of the penalty box. A strong two-way forward, he might be more highly considered by Jets’ brass if he could only reign in his aggression on the ice. Could produce more offense with his shot and surprisingly nimble hands if he could stay out of the box.

18 Johnathan Kovacevic – Drafted this year in his third year of eligibility, Kovacevic exploded onto the prospect map this year, his freshman season with Merrimack. He is a big, calm puckmoving defenseman. A good skater for his size, he generally opts for the safe, simple play instead of risking something more flashy. Has great reach and leverages his large frame well at both ends. Already 20 years old and as big as he will get, the question is how much more development is in there?

19 Brendan Lemieux – The son of super-agitating Claude Lemieux, as a junior, Brendan Lemieux was the spitting image of his old man. He could contribute second line offensive numbers and was hell to play against. As a first year pro, only the latter half of that equation remained in place. He is a good skater with nice puck playing ability, but he got so caught up in the agitation, that he rarely had time to contribute to the offense. Also, spending that much time in the penalty box is no longer fashionable.

20 Nelson Nogier – Literally as unexciting as a prospect can be while still being a prospect, Nogier had a quietly steady first full pro season, spent mostly in the AHL, but also including 10 games up with the Jets. A modern-day defensive defenseman, he specializes in retrieving the puck in his own end and getting it moving again towards the offensive. Once the puck is out, he has little involvement although he is a good skater, and his point shot, when he takes one, is hard enough.

With many young players already starring in the NHL, the Jets system is not as strong as it recently was, but through continuing their approach of drafting high end skill whenever possible – ensuring that a high proportion of their picks have at least one skill that grades out as well above average – they are in a position to continue filling out the NHL roster from within. They recognize the inherent limitations they face from a player procurement perspective and continue to maximize the routes open to them.

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2017 NHL Team Draft Grades: Central Division – Winnipeg Jets https://www.mckeenshockey.com/prospects-blog/2017-nhl-team-draft-grades-central-division-winnipeg-jets/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/prospects-blog/2017-nhl-team-draft-grades-central-division-winnipeg-jets/#respond Thu, 29 Jun 2017 21:45:53 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=130534 Read More... from 2017 NHL Team Draft Grades: Central Division – Winnipeg Jets

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Shortly after 1:00pm CST, on Saturday, June 24, 2017, the defending Stanley Cup champion Pittsburgh Penguins selected William Reilly, a defenseman from RPI as the 217th player selected, bringing the 2017 Entry Draft to an end. With a few days of hindsight between me and the bowels of the United Center, the urge to spew out hot takes flushed away, it is time to analyze the strategies and selections employed by the league’s 31 teams.

CHICAGO, IL - JUNE 23: A general view of the Draft logo at the podium on stage prior to the first round of the 2017 NHL Draft on June 23, 2017, at the United Center, in Chicago, IL. (Photo by Patrick Gorski/Icon Sportswire)
CHICAGO, IL - JUNE 23: A general view of the Draft logo at the podium on stage prior to the first round of the 2017 NHL Draft on June 23, 2017, at the United Center, in Chicago, IL. (Photo by Patrick Gorski/Icon Sportswire)

The analysis will focus on the first five rounds, as it is clear to most long-time observers that the final two rounds are often taken up with long-shots, favours to regional scouts, or a myriad of reasons. I will, of course, call out some astute late picks, but will not judge a team for the names called in the final hour. The apocryphal story of Pekka Rinne, drafted as an eighth round after-thought in 2004 based mostly on his play in game warm-ups. Few other scouts would have seen him at all, and he has had a very good career, which is not yet over. For the most part, though, those picks have little statistical likelihood of having NHL careers and teams should not be judged there.

Finally, all grades are incomplete. Actual winners and losers in this draft class will not be known until 2023 at the earliest, after those who will have “made it” will have played out their entry-level contracts. What I am looking at here is whether, knowing what we know now, the drafting team got good value.

Each draft class will be graded using the 20-80 scale that we use in our player specific scouting reports throughout the site. In this context, a 50 is essentially an average grade in light of the picks the team had on draft day. A 20 would mean the draft is an untimigated disaster while an 80 would be the best draft class of all time. As those things can only be truly seen in retrospect, most classes will trend towards 50 at this point, so pay attention to those we see as outliers.

RD # CS MCK PLAYER P AGE HT/WT TEAM
1 24 7-E 9 Kristian VESALAINEN LW 18 6-3/205 Frolunda (Swe)
1 24 7-E 9 Kristian VESALAINEN LW 18 6-3/205 Frolunda (Swe Jr)
1 24 7-E 9 Kristian VESALAINEN LW 18 6-3/205 HPK (Fin)
2 43 67-N 82 Dylan SAMBERG D 18 6-3/190 Hermantown (USHS-MN)
2 43 67-N 82 Dylan SAMBERG D 18 6-3/190 Waterloo (USHL)
3 74 155-N 119 Johnathan KOVACEVIC D 20 6-4/215 Merrimack (HE)
4 105 54-E 46 Santeri VIRTANEN C 18 6-2/195 TPS Turku (Fin Jr)
5 136 200-N hm Leon GAWANKE D 18 6-1/185 Cape Breton (QMJHL)
6 167 NR   Arvid HOLM G 19 6-4/215 Karlskrona (Swe Jr)
7 198 176-N   Skyler MCKENZIE LW 19 5-8/160 Portland (WHL)
7 211 NR   Croix EVINGSON D 20 6-4/215 Shreveport (NAHL)
RD # PLAYER P TEAM GP (W) G (L) A (T) PTS (GA) PIM (Sv%)
1 24 Kristian VESALAINEN LW Frolunda (Swe) 26 1 5 6 2
1 24     Frolunda (Swe Jr) 10 4 0 4 14
1 24     HPK (Fin) 9 1 0 1 0
2 43 Dylan SAMBERG D Hermantown (USHS-MN) 25 10 18 28 43
2 43     Waterloo (USHL) 6 1 1 2 0
3 74 Johnathan KOVACEVIC D Merrimack (HE) 36 3 16 19 30
4 105 Santeri VIRTANEN C TPS Turku (Fin Jr) 5 2 4 6 0
5 136 Leon GAWANKE D Cape Breton (QMJHL) 54 8 24 32 26
6 167 Arvid HOLM G Karlskrona (Swe Jr) 7 17   2.91 0.906
7 198 Skyler MCKENZIE LW Portland (WHL) 72 42 42 84 60
7 211 Croix EVINGSON D Shreveport (NAHL) 59 12 40 52 125

Winnipeg Jets - Draft Grade 55

GRAND FORKS, NORTH DAKOTA - APRIL 14: Czech Republic vs Finland preliminary round - 2016 IIHF Ice Hockey U18 World Championship. (Photo by Matt Zambonin/HHOF-IIHF Images)

This Jets draft class can be characterized by a series of home run swings on players who have great tools but, for one reason or another, have not yet fully actualized them over a full season. First rounder Kristian Vesalainen, a steal at 24th overall after we had ranked him 9th, justifies their trading down in the round as part of Expansion Draft maneuvering. He has first line upside and demonstrated that by dominating at the WU18s, but disappointed in the regular season as he flitted between playing Liiga, SuperElit, and the SHL. A more stable playing environment could see him take off next year. In the second round, the Jets drafted Dylan Samberg, an intriguing blueliner who combines size and skills, but spent much of the season under the radar with Hermantown high school. Then again, winning the state Class A championship for the second year in a row, meant he wasn’t all that under the radar. An impressive late season stint with Waterloo of the USHL also proved that he wasn’t simply beating up on overwhelmed 14 year olds. The Jets later returned to the U18 Finland squad with the fourth round selection of Santeri Virtanen.

POPRAD, SLOVAKIA - APRIL 22: Finland's Santeri Virtanen #22 carries the puck during semifinal round action at the 2017 IIHF Ice Hockey U18 World Championship. (Photo by Andrea Cardin/HHOF-IIHF Images)
Santeri Virtanen

Virtanen was supposed to play with Dubuque of the USHL, but was hurt in pre-season and missed most of the year. He finally returned to action in the waning weeks of the season back in Finland and was seemingly back at full strength at the U18s where he showed a high end hockey IQ and strong skating.

In addition to Samberg, the Jets drafted another pair of offensively inclined blueliners in Johnny Kovacevich, a double overager who impressed as a freshman with Merrimack, and Leon Gawanke, a German import who put up good numbers in the QMJHL with Cape Breton.

Best value: Santeri Virtanen, C, TPS U20 (4/105): Virtanen was so impressive at the U18 tournament that we gave serious consideration to ranking him at the back end of the first round candidates. That may have been premature, but his puck skills and hockey smarts are both well worthy of a much higher pick. Full health next season would leave the other 30 teams shaking their heads.

Biggest head-scratcher: Arvid Holm, G, Karlskrona J20 (6/167): As stated at the top of the article, there are no bad 6th round picks. Only ones that make you ask, “who?” Holm has size, but had only so-so production in SuperElit. If your biggest head-scratcher came in the sixth round, you probably had a decent draft.

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Jets add another Finnish forward to join Laine and Vesalainen – Virtanen impresses at both ends of the rink https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/jets-add-finnish-join-laine-vesalainen-virtanen-impresses-ends-rink/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/jets-add-finnish-join-laine-vesalainen-virtanen-impresses-ends-rink/#respond Sat, 24 Jun 2017 16:13:31 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=130390 Read More... from Jets add another Finnish forward to join Laine and Vesalainen – Virtanen impresses at both ends of the rink

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The Winnipeg Jets add another Finnish forward to join Patrik Laine and Kristian Vesalainen, taken early in the first round. Santeri Virtanen missed most of the season but impressed at the World Under 18 tournament.

POPRAD, SLOVAKIA - APRIL 22: Finland's Santeri Virtanen #22 carries the puck during semifinal round action at the 2017 IIHF Ice Hockey U18 World Championship. (Photo by Andrea Cardin/HHOF-IIHF Images)
POPRAD, SLOVAKIA - APRIL 22: Finland's Santeri Virtanen #22 carries the puck during semifinal round action at the 2017 IIHF Ice Hockey U18 World Championship. (Photo by Andrea Cardin/HHOF-IIHF Images)

McKeen's 2017 NHL Draft Guide

As the season was getting underway, it was understood by many that Virtanen would be spending his draft season in the USHL with Dubuque, and did suit up for two preseason games for the Fighting Saints before suffering injury. He was enough of a known entity to be named to the USHL Top Prospect game despite not appearing in a single regular season game. As it turned out, it was not until mid-spring that the rangy and versatile forward was ready to return to the rink. Instead of going back to Dubuque, Virtanen returned to his native Finland and finished the season with TPS’ U20 squad.

Named to the Finnish team for the WU18 tournament, he reminded scouts about his abilities on one of the biggest stages available for a draft eligible player. Six points in even games for the tournament runners-up was nice, but it was his two-way game that truly sparkled. He was a very dangerous penalty killer and scored a beauty of a shorthanded goal against Canada, showing a promising first few steps to get to a loose puck, a second gear to break free, and nice stick-handling and shot release to beat the Canadian goaltender.

He is very effective away from the puck, using a strong sense of positioning and stick work to make offensive forays very difficult for opponents. Considering how strong he looked in April after not playing for six months or so suggests that he may be the sleeper of the draft. A good second rounder who may end up more valuable than many first rounders.

Detailed scouting report from Marco Bombino, May 18th, 2017

Skating: Virtanen has good speed once he gets his legs going, as he is able to pull away from opponents, but his first few strides and edge work need work. He has decent mobility with fairly good agility and backwards skating, but there is room for improvement. Grade: 50

Shot: He can finish effectively around the net and possesses good scoring touch. He can score with a wrister or backhander as both shot types are of high quality. He is willing to go to the net and pay the price to score. Grade: 55

Skills: Virtanen has pretty good hands and delivers the puck with simple, smart passes. He can receive passes well even off his skates, showcasing impressively soft hands. He is strong on the puck and excellent in the face-off dot as he demonstrated repeatedly at the U18 World Championships in April. Grade: 60

Smarts: Active away from the puck and extremely reliable defensively thanks to his smart reads without the puck. Maintains good gap control with his defensive anticipation and can also block shots if needed. He uses his stick well to take away passing options in the defensive zone. He provides puck support, moving into open space to create passing options. His body positioning is solid at both ends of the rink. Also of note is his versatility, comfortable and accustomed to playing both as center and on the wing. Grade: 65

Physicality: Physically effective and consistently utilizes his size to his advantage. Virtanen will battle for loose pucks and take hits to make plays. He is strong along the boards and tough to knock off the puck due to his great strength and balance. Already has a pro-sized frame. Grade: 55

Summary: Santeri Virtanen missed the overwhelming majority of the season due to injury, but rocketed up draft consideration lists with a very strong finish to his season. He had several strong games for TPS juniors, then made an impact at the U18 World Championship tournament in Slovakia. A two-way center, he has the hockey sense, puck skills and physical attributes to be a top three round selection in the 2017 NHL Draft, with the second round not being out of the question. He has performed well in critical moments of the games and shown the drive and determination on the ice that are required to succeed at the highest levels.

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McKeen’s 2017 NHL Draft Rankings (Subscribers) – Top 125 – May 31st, 2017 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2017-nhl-draft-rankings-subscribers-top-125-31st-2017/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2017-nhl-draft-rankings-subscribers-top-125-31st-2017/#respond Wed, 31 May 2017 14:16:51 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=129780 Read More... from McKeen’s 2017 NHL Draft Rankings (Subscribers) – Top 125 – May 31st, 2017

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MCKEEN'S 2017 NHL DRAFT GUIDE - Learn more here!

Nico Hischier will make National Hockey League history as the first name called in Chicago at the 2017 NHL Entry Draft.

The New Jersey Devils hold the first overall selection having won the draft lottery, and will be looking at three prospects in particular who have risen to the top of the 2017 draft class.

MONTREAL, CANADA - DECEMBER 27: Switzerland's Nico Hischier #18 leans in for the face-off during preliminary round action against the Czech Republic at the 2017 IIHF World Junior Championship. (Photo by Andre Ringuette/HHOF-IIHF Images)
Switzerland's Nico Hischier #18 leans in for the face-off during preliminary round action against the Czech Republic at the 2017 IIHF World Junior Championship. (Photo by Andre Ringuette/HHOF-IIHF Images)

Hischier is a very attractive choice having 'checked all the boxes' during an outstanding North American debut with the Halifax Mooseheads. The native of Naters, Switzerland led all rookie scorers in the QMJHL and finished 10th in league scoring, while delivering strong performances for his country at both the U20 and U18 World Junior Championships (WJC).

A fast and dynamic skater with high-end puck skills, Hischier distinguished himself for his two-way diligence and his ability to contribute in every area of the ice and - by extension - the game. He possesses a high hockey IQ and is a very creative player combining both structure and innovation.

It will be an agonizing decision if New Jersey opts to pass on Hischier in favour of the other prime attraction - Nolan Patrick of the Brandon Wheat Kings.

The Winnipeg native entered the 2016-17 season as the consensus top choice after a standout season in which he tied for the league playoff scoring lead with 30 points in 21 games (13-17-30) and earned WHL Playoff MVP honours.

Nolan Patrick of the Brandon Wheat Kings. Photo by Tim Smith/Brandon Sun
Nolan Patrick of the Brandon Wheat Kings. Photo by Tim Smith/Brandon Sun

Patrick was injured during that playoff run however and underwent sports hernia surgery last July. His groin/abdominal problems would re-surface after playing in Brandon's opening five games, and sideline him for 34 games and force him to miss the U20 WJC.

Returning in January, Patrick still managed to finish fifth on the Wheat Kings in scoring with 20 goals and 46 points despite playing in just 33 games.

However he suffered another health setback late in the regular season - an unspecified upper-body injury - and missed the WHL playoffs.

Nolan Patrick would be the first Manitoban selected first overall in the NHL draft - with Nico Hischier set to become the first-ever Swiss-born player.

A third option emerged for New Jersey this spring at the U18 WJC where defenceman Miro Heiskanen turned in a commanding performance for Finland and effectively threw his hat into the ring.

MONTREAL, CANADA - JANUARY 2: Finland's Miro Heiskanen #2 lets a shot go during relegation round action against Latvia at the 2017 IIHF World Junior Championship. (Photo by Andre Ringuette/HHOF-IIHF Images)
Finland's Miro Heiskanen #2 lets a shot go during relegation round action against Latvia at the 2017 IIHF World Junior Championship. (Photo by Andre Ringuette/HHOF-IIHF Images)

It makes some sense for the Devils to consider adding a potential building block on the blueline given the loss of Adam Larsson in last summer's Taylor Hall deal.

Heiskanen would be the first Finnish-born player to go first overall.

CENTRE STAGE

Gabriel Vilardi of the Windsor Spitfires sits at No. 4 on the McKeen's Top 125 - ranking the best prospects available for the 2017 NHL Entry Draft.

Gabriel Vilardi of the Windsor Spitfires. Photo by Terry Wilson / OHL Images.
Gabriel Vilardi of the Windsor Spitfires. Photo by Terry Wilson / OHL Images.

The 6-foot-3, 200-pound forward led Windsor with 29 goals and 61 points - in just 49 games - and then played a central role in helping the Spitfires win the Memorial Cup, highlighted by a four-assist performance in a win over the top-ranked Erie Otters.

Big, highly-skilled, and ultra competitive, Vilardi brings plenty of meat to the plate - but the skating has raised concerns about how impactful an NHLer he can be. Described as a 'knock kneed' skater, he will have to continue upgrading his quickness and explosiveness.

The Kingston, Ontario native can play on the wing but showcased at the Top Prospects Game in January that he is very effective playing in the middle.

The fifth-ranked prospect is Casey Mittelstadt, the top American-born player.

Mittelstadt ripped apart the high school circuit averaging 2.56 points per game (64 points in 25 games) and earning Minnesota’s distinguished Mr. Hockey award as the state’s top senior skater. He fell short though of leading his hometown Eden Prairie to a state championship, falling in the semi-finals.

Mittelstadt was questioned about returning for his senior year amid concerns that his development could be stunted. However, he helped allay some of those concerns with impressive stints in the USHL, wrapped around his high school season, recording 30 points in 24 games - for a 1.25 points-per-game average which was tops in the league.

Sharp-shooting winger Owen Tippett of the Mississauga Steelheads is next at No. 6.

The Peterborough, Ontario native infuriated with his inconsistent (and incomplete) defensive work habits but, at the end of the day, may be the best goal-scoring prospect in this draft class.

He finished fifth in the OHL with 44 goals and added another 10 goals in 20 playoff games.

Slick-skating defenceman Cale Makar of the Brooks Bandits is ranked seventh.

The Calgary, Alberta native was among this season's biggest risers - shooting up the draft chart and dazzling with his skating and skills while leading Brooks to the RBC Cup final.

Makar still has plenty of growing to do in terms of learning how to harness and deploy his exceptional talents. His education will be in good hands for his upcoming freshman season at the University of Massachusetts. Makar may benefit most by staying on the NCAA collegiate route for at least two years, though the lure of the NHL is all powerful.

Sorting out the rest of the top 10 has been a convoluted journey since the initial rankings were published last fall. That's not unusual - but this season the rankings seemed to be in a larger state of flux. There's not much to separate the next dozen or so players - all of whom could conceivably land a top 10 spot.

Cody Glass of the Portland Winterhawks
Cody Glass of the Portland Winterhawks

Cody Glass of the Portland Winterhawks was another big riser, moving up from 24th - in the preliminary ranking - to grab the No. 8 position.

A cerebral two-way pivot with good size and skill, the Winnipeg native led Portland and tied for seventh in WHL scoring during a spectacular breakout season - in which he more than tripled his rookie numbers from 2015-16.

Glass begins a run of centremen with seven of the next ten players being pivots; Michael Rasmussen (10th), Elias Pettersson (11th), Martin Necas (12th), Robert Thomas (15th), Nick Suzuki (16th), and Lias Andersson (17th).

KLIM PICKINGS

The wildcards for this year's draft will begin with swift-skating Swedish defenceman Timothy Liljegren

The native of Kristianstad, Sweden has been a prime name for 2017 since he was 16 years old - and was ranked No. 4 on our preliminary list. However, he was sidelined early by a bout of mononucleosis and struggled to find his game after returning.

There's no denying the physical gifts as he is a strong, fast skater with a good skill set featuring a heavy wristshot.

Klim Kostin
Klim Kostin

However, his hockey sense and overall decision making have continually come into question as the scrutiny on his game intensified. He doesn't seem to possess an innate feel for pressure and can be prone to stickchecks and turning pucks over on outlets. Can this part of his make-up develop and mature? Perhaps. It's a risk NHL teams must weigh before considering him as a top selection.

Another 'hot potato' pick will be Dynamo Moscow forward Klim Kostin who began the season at No. 5 in the rankings following a solid showing at the Ivan Hlinka Memorial. The Penza native captained Russia and led his team in scoring (5-4-3-7) while flashing an intriguing mix of size, skill and creativity.

He also put in a decent showing at the Canada-Russia series in November, albeit not enough for World Junior team coach Valeri Bragin to include him on the U20 roster. However, Kostin underwent season-ending shoulder surgery in January and missed an opportunity to further convince NHL scouts at the U18 WJC in April.

Strong and skilled with the puck, Kostin can create openings with his stickhandling and 1-on-1 abilities, but must work on his skating and consistency.

Eeli Tolvanen
Eeli Tolvanen

Eeli Tolvanen also watched his stock soften as the season progressed after beginning as a top 10 pick (8th).

The native of Vihti, Finland tied for third in the USHL with 30 goals and then helped Sioux City reach the Clark Cup Finals. Tolvanen possesses sharp offensive instincts and a lethal shot, yet there are concerns about how his slight frame and dimensional game will translate to higher levels.

No player fell further in the rankings this season than towering Russian winger Nikita Popugaev.

The Moscow native fired 19 goals in his first 25 games with Moose Jaw, however his play tailed off in December and he was dealt a month later to Prince George where he continued to sputter.

Popugaev brings great size at 6-foot-6 and 220 pounds as well as a strong shooting arsenal. His skating needs to come along though, particularly his footwork and overall agility.

But the bigger concern is how badly he wants it - as his work ethic and defensive play regressed to alarming levels over the second half.

PLENTY OF FINNISH

Finland gave advance warning that they would be a big factor at the 2017 NHL Draft when they captured gold at the 2016 U18 WJC.

It was Finland's first gold medal at the event since winning the first two tournaments in 1999 and 2000 - and was accomplished with a predominantly underage blueline.

They followed up this year at the U18's with a silver medal, led by the splendid duo of Miro Heiskanen and Urho Vaakanainen.

Heiskanen's exploits were well chronicled, however Vaakanainen's play may have turned just as many NHL heads. His smooth skating, subtle skills, and innate feel for the game were on full display throughout.

Vaakanainen could turn out to be one of the best players from this draft.

Expect the Finns to be high profile at this draft - as they could place up to seven players in the opening round plus another half dozen in the second.

In all, there are 16 Finnish-born players in the McKeen's Top 125 including a number of potential sleepers such as Joni Ikonen (59th), Aleksi Heponiemi (65th), Emil Oksanen (76th) and U18 WJC captain Aarne Talvitie (77th).

Finland's Santeri Virtanen #22 carries the puck during semifinal round action at the 2017 IIHF Ice Hockey U18 World Championship. (Photo by Andrea Cardin/HHOF-IIHF Images)
Finland's Santeri Virtanen #22 carries the puck during semifinal round action at the 2017 IIHF Ice Hockey U18 World Championship. (Photo by Andrea Cardin/HHOF-IIHF Images)

Gritty two-way centre Santeri Virtanen threw his name into the ring with an impressive showing at the U18 WJC after missing most of the season to injury.

His late rise wasn't a total surprise as he had initially been slotted as a potential 50-70 pick after a good showing at the Ivan Hlinka last fall.

RANK PLAYER POS TEAM HT/WT DOB Nation
1 Nolan Patrick C Brandon (WHL) 6-2/200 19-Sep-98 Canada
2 Nico Hischier C Halifax (QMJHL) 6-1/175 4-Jan-99 Switzerland
3 Miro Heiskanen D HIFK Helsinki (Fin) 6-0/170 18-Jul-99 Finland
4 Gabriel Vilardi C Windsor (OHL) 6-3/200 16-Aug-99 Canada
5 Casey Mittelstadt C Eden Prairie (USHS-MN) 6-1/200 22-Nov-98 USA
6 Owen Tippett RW Mississauga (OHL) 6-1/200 16-Feb-99 Canada
7 Cale Makar D Brooks (AJHL) 5-11/180 30-Oct-98 Canada
8 Cody Glass C Portland (WHL) 6-2/180 1-Apr-99 Canada
9 Kristian Vesalainen LW Frolunda (Swe) 6-3/205 1-Jun-99 Finland
10 Michael Rasmussen C Tri-City (WHL) 6-6/215 17-Apr-99 Canada
11 Elias Pettersson C Timra (Swe 2) 6-2/165 12-Nov-98 Sweden
12 Martin Necas C Kometa Brno (Cze) 6-0/170 15-Jan-99 Czech
13 Urho Vaakanainen D JyP Jyvaskyla (Fin) 6-0/185 1-Jan-99 Finland
14 Juuso Valimaki D Tri-City (WHL) 6-2/205 6-Oct-98 Finland
15 Robert Thomas C London (OHL) 6-0/190 2-Jul-99 Canada
16 Nick Suzuki C Owen Sound (OHL) 5-11/185 10-Sep-99 Canada
17 Lias Andersson C HV 71 (Swe) 5-11/200 13-Oct-98 Sweden
18 Isaac Ratcliffe LW Guelph (OHL) 6-5/200 15-Feb-99 Canada
19 Erik Brannstrom D HV 71 (Swe) 5-10/175 2-Sep-99 Sweden
20 Timothy Liljegren D Rogle (Swe) 6-0/190 30-Apr-99 Sweden
21 Klim Kostin C Dynamo Moscow (Rus) 6-3/195 5-May-99 Russia
22 Eeli Tolvanen RW Sioux City (USHL) 5-10/175 22-Apr-99 Finland
23 Conor Timmins D Sault Ste Marie (OHL) 6-1/185 18-Sep-98 Canada
24 Kailer Yamamoto RW Spokane (WHL) 5-8/160 29-Sep-98 Canada
25 Jason Robertson LW Kingston (OHL) 6-2/195 22-Jul-99 USA
26 Ryan Poehling C St. Cloud State (NCHC) 6-2/195 3-Jan-99 USA
27 Nicolas Hague D Mississauga (OHL) 6-6/215 5-Dec-98 Canada
28 Josh Norris C NTDP (USA) 6-1/195 5-May-99 USA
29 Shane Bowers C Waterloo (USHL) 6-1/185 30-Jul-99 Canada
30 Cal Foote D Kelowna (WHL) 6-4/215 13-Dec-98 USA
31 Henri Jokiharju D Portland (WHL) 6-0/180 17-Jun-99 Finland
32 Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen G HPK (Fin) 6-4/195 9-Mar-99 Finland
33 Jaret Anderson-Dolan C Spokane (WHL) 5-11/190 12-Sep-99 Canada
34 Kole Lind RW Kelowna (WHL) 6-1/180 16-Oct-98 Canada
35 Jesper Boqvist C Brynas (Swe) 6-0/180 30-Oct-98 Sweden
36 Grant Mismash LW NTDP (USA) 6-0/185 19-Feb-99 USA
37 Keith Petruzzelli G Muskegon (USHL) 6-5/180 9-Feb-99 USA
38 Pierre-Olivier Joseph D Charlottetown (QMJHL) 6-2/165 1-Jul-99 Canada
39 Maxime Comtois C Victoriaville (QMJHL) 6-2/200 8-Jan-99 Canada
40 Adam Ruzicka C Sarnia (OHL) 6-4/205 11-May-99 Slovakia
41 Morgan Frost C Sault Ste Marie (OHL) 5-11/170 14-May-99 Canada
42 Filip Chytil C Zlin (Cze) 6-0/180 5-Sep-99 Czech
43 Nikita Popugaev LW Prince George (WHL) 6-6/220 20-Nov-98 Russia
44 Jake Oettinger G Boston University (HE) 6-4/210 18-Dec-98 USA
45 Josh Brook D Moose Jaw (WHL) 6-1/185 15-Jun-99 Canada
46 Santeri Virtanen C TPS Turku (Fin Jr) 6-2/195 11-May-99 Finland
47 Kyle Olson C Tri-City (WHL) 5-11/165 22-Mar-99 Canada
48 Evan Barratt C NTDP (USA) 6-0/190 18-Feb-99 USA
49 Max Gildon D NTDP (USA) 6-3/190 17-May-99 USA
50 MacKenzie Entwistle RW Hamilton (OHL) 6-3/180 14-Jul-99 Canada
51 Stelio Mattheos RW Brandon (WHL) 6-1/195 14-Jun-99 Canada
52 Marcus Davidsson C Djurgardens (Swe) 6-0/190 18-Nov-98 Sweden
53 Michael DiPietro G Windsor (OHL) 6-0/195 9-Jun-99 Canada
54 David Farrance D NTDP (USA) 5-11/190 23-Jun-99 USA
55 Stuart Skinner G Lethbridge (WHL) 6-3/210 1-Nov-98 Canada
56 Matthew Strome LW Hamilton (OHL) 6-4/210 6-Jan-99 Canada
57 Alex Formenton LW London (OHL) 6-2/165 13-Sep-99 Canada
58 Eemeli Rasanen D Kingston (OHL) 6-7/215 6-Mar-99 Finland
59 Joni Ikonen C Frolunda (Swe Jr) 5-10/170 14-Apr-99 Finland
60 Scott Reedy C NTDP (USA) 6-1/205 4-Apr-99 USA
61 Sasha Chmelevski C Ottawa (OHL) 5-11/190 9-Jun-99 USA
62 Filip Westerlund D Frolunda (Swe) 5-11/180 17-Apr-99 Sweden
63 Ian Mitchell D Spruce Grove (AJHL) 5-11/175 18-Jan-99 Canada
64 Maxim Zhukov G Green Bay (USHL) 6-3/190 22-Jul-99 Russia
65 Aleksi Heponiemi C Swift Current (WHL) 5-10/150 9-Jan-99 Finland
66 Ostap Safin LW Sparta Praha (Cze Jr) 6-4/200 11-Feb-99 Czech
67 Jack Studnicka C Oshawa (OHL) 6-1/170 18-Feb-99 Canada
68 Nick Henry RW Regina (WHL) 5-11/190 4-Jul-99 Canada
69 Markus Phillips D Owen Sound (OHL) 6-0/200 21-Mar-99 Canada
70 Jarret Tyszka D Seattle (WHL) 6-2/190 15-Mar-99 Canada
71 Kirill Maksimov RW Niagara (OHL) 6-2/195 1-Jun-99 Russia
72 Jake Leschyshyn C Regina (WHL) 5-11/185 10-Mar-99 Canada
73 Alexei Toropchenko RW MVD Balashikha (Rus Jr) 6-3/190 25-Jun-99 Russia
74 Kirill Slepets LW Loko Yaroslavl (Rus Jr) 5-10/165 6-Apr-99 Russia
75 Olle Eriksson Ek G Farjestads (Swe Jr) 6-2/185 22-Jun-99 Sweden
76 Emil Oksanen LW Espoo United (Fin 2) 6-1/190 25-Sep-98 Finland
77 Aarne Talvitie C Espoo Blues (Fin Jr) 5-10/200 11-Feb-99 Finland
78 Reilly Walsh D Proctor Academy (USHS-NH) 5-11/180 21-Apr-99 USA
79 Ivan Lodnia RW Erie (OHL) 5-10/180 31-Aug-99 USA
80 Jonah Gadjovich LW Owen Sound (OHL) 6-2/210 12-Oct-98 Canada
81 Ben Mirageas D Chicago (USHL) 6-1/180 8-May-99 USA
82 Dylan Samberg D Hermantown (USHS-MN) 6-3/190 24-Jan-99 USA
83 Antoine Morand C Acadie-Bathurst (QMJHL) 5-10/180 18-Feb-99 Canada
84 Morgan Geekie C Tri-City (WHL) 6-2/180 20-Jul-98 Canada
85 Alexei Lipanov C MVD Balashikha (Rus 2) 6-0/165 17-Aug-99 Russia
86 Jack Badini C Chicago (USHL) 6-0/200 19-Jan-98 USA
87 Brady Lyle D North Bay (OHL) 6-1/205 6-Jun-99 Canada
88 Lucas Elvenes C Rogle (Swe Jr) 6-0/175 18-Aug-99 Sweden
89 Zach Gallant C Peterborough (OHL) 6-2/190 6-Mar-99 Canada
90 Lane Zablocki RW Red Deer (WHL) 5-11/190 27-Dec-98 Canada
91 Kevin Hancock C Owen Sound (OHL) 5-11/185 2-Mar-98 Canada
92 Alexandre Texier C Grenoble (Fra) 6-0/190 13-Sep-99 France
93 Noel Hoefenmayer D Ottawa (OHL) 6-0/190 6-Jan-99 Canada
94 Nate Schnarr C Guelph (OHL) 6-3/180 15-Jun-99 Canada
95 Jonas Rondbjerg RW Vaxjo Lakers (Swe Jr) 6-0/175 31-Mar-99 Denmark
96 Ivan Chekhovich LW Baie-Comeau (QMJHL) 5-10/180 14-Jan-99 Russia
97 Robin Salo D Sport (Fin) 6-1/190 13-Oct-98 Finland
98 Luke Martin D Michigan (B1G) 6-4/215 20-Sep-98 USA
99 Cale Fleury D Kootenay (WHL) 6-1/205 19-Nov-98 Canada
100 Mikey Anderson D Waterloo (USHL) 6-0/195 25-May-99 USA
101 Mason Shaw C Medicine Hat (WHL) 5-9/180 3-Nov-98 Canada
102 Linus Nyman RW Kingston (OHL) 5-9/160 11-Jul-99 Finland
103 Gustav Lindstrom D Almtuna (Swe 2) 6-2/190 20-Oct-98 Sweden
104 Marian Studenic RW Hamilton (OHL) 6-0/165 28-Oct-98 Slovakia
105 Jack Rathbone D Dexter (USHS-MA) 5-10/175 20-May-99 USA
106 Artyom Minulin D Swift Current (WHL) 6-2/200 1-Oct-98 Russia
107 Kalle Miketinac C Frolunda (Swe Jr) 5-11/190 2-Apr-99 Sweden
108 Dmitri Samorukov D Guelph (OHL) 6-2/180 16-Jun-99 Russia
109 Ian Scott G Prince Albert (WHL) 6-3/175 11-Jan-99 Canada
110 Austen Keating C Ottawa (OHL) 6-0/170 7-May-99 Canada
111 Maksim Sushko RW Owen Sound (OHL) 6-0/185 10-Feb-99 Belarus
112 Tyler Inamoto D NTDP (USA) 6-2/195 6-May-99 USA
113 Ty Lewis LW Brandon (WHL) 5-11/180 5-Mar-98 Canada
114 Drake Batherson C Cape Breton (QMJHL) 6-1/190 27-Apr-98 Canada
115 Rickard Hugg C Leksands (Swe Jr) 5-10/185 18-Jan-99 Sweden
116 Scott Walford D Victoria (WHL) 6-1/195 12-Jan-99 Canada
117 Jordy Bellerive C Lethbridge (WHL) 5-10/195 2-May-99 Canada
118 Matthew Kellenberger D Oakville (OJHL) 6-0/175 11-Jan-99 Canada
119 Johnathan Kovacevic D Merrimack (HE) 6-4/215 2-Jul-97 Canada
120 Nick Campoli C North York (OJHL) 5-11/190 16-Feb-99 Canada
121 Mario Ferraro D Des Moines (USHL) 5-11/185 17-Sep-98 Canada
122 Michael Pastujov LW NTDP (USA) 6-0/195 23-Aug-99 USA
123 Tyler Steenbergen C Swift Current (WHL) 5-10/190 7-Jan-98 Canada
124 Mark Rubinchik D Saskatoon (WHL) 6-0/180 21-Mar-99 Russia
125 Kasper Kotkansalo D Sioux Falls (USHL) 6-2/200 16-Nov-98 Finland
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