[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 Xavier Wendt – McKeen's Hockey https://www.mckeenshockey.com The Essential Hockey Annual Sun, 19 Apr 2026 18:07:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 2026 NHL DRAFT: TOP 32 PRIOR TO THE 2026 IIHF U18 MEN’S WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/2026-nhl-draft-top-32-prior-2026-iihf-u18-mens-world-championship/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/2026-nhl-draft-top-32-prior-2026-iihf-u18-mens-world-championship/#respond Sun, 19 Apr 2026 18:03:12 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=199497 Read More... from 2026 NHL DRAFT: TOP 32 PRIOR TO THE 2026 IIHF U18 MEN’S WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP

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Caleb Malhotra

It’s time for the McKeen’s Hockey scouting team to update their rankings for the 2026 NHL Draft. Many junior leagues around the globe are in the thick of the playoffs and we have the IIHF U18’s upcoming. This top 100 will serve as our final ranking before our Draft Guide release, which expands us to a top 300.

Gavin McKenna is holding firm on his first overall ranking on our board thanks to some adjustments and strong play post world juniors with Penn State. We’re hoping that he gets the nod to represent Canada at the IIHF World Championships, which would be a terrific measuring stick for him.

Pushing up our list are Brantford Bulldogs center Caleb Malhotra and Swedish defender Malte Gustafsson. Malhotra has shown terrific progression over the course of the OHL season and has been outstanding through the first two rounds of the OHL playoffs. Meanwhile Gustafsson has shown remarkable poise across various levels in Sweden and offers great athletic tools and two-way upside.

Other significant “risers” from our previous list include Quebec forward Maddox Dagenais, North Bay center Ryder Cali, Moncton defender Tommy Bleyl, Slovak defender Adam Goljer, and Russian netminder Dmitri Borichev. All have played significantly well in the second half of their respective seasons and have pushed up our boards due to the upside that they possess. Dagenais brings elite athletic tools and a heavy shot to the table and has shown considerable improvement in the second half from a consistency perspective. Cali is one of the draft’s youngest players and has found confidence in his on-puck play, causing us to re-evaluate his upside. Bleyl is one of the draft’s most dynamic offensive defenders and his strong play has given us no choice but to adjust our ranking of him accordingly. Goljer is an athletic two-way defender who has played well against men in the Slovak pro league this year, but he’s shown offensive upside when playing against his peers. Borichev is the draft’s netminding crown jewel with a great frame, elite athleticism, and improving technical abilities.

Fresh off the release of our annual three part look at the top “re-entry” candidates available, several have made the cut in our top 100. Edmonton defender Ethan MacKenzie, Prince Albert netminder Michal Orsulak, Czech defender Tomas Galvas, Victoria defender Timofei Runtso, Chicoutimi forward Liam Lefebvre, and Sioux Falls defender Matthew Grimes. You can find more info about each player in the aforementioned three-part series.

We’re very excited to see what the end of the season has in store and how that impacts our final ranking. As usual, you can expect our annual draft guide to be released in early June.

RK PLAYER POS TEAM HT/WT DOB GP G A PTS PIM
1 Gavin McKenna LW Penn State (NCAA) 5-11/170 20-Dec-07 35 15 36 51 36
2 Ivar Stenberg LW Frolunda (SHL) 5-11/185 30-Sep-07 43 11 22 33 6
3 Chase Reid D Soo Greyhounds (OHL) 6-2/185 30-Dec-07 45 18 30 48 30
4 Caleb Malhotra C Brantford (OHL) 6-0/170 2-Jun-08 67 29 55 84 51
5 Carson Carels D Prince George (WHL) 6-2/195 23-Jun-08 58 20 53 73 66
6 Keaton Verhoeff D North Dakota (NCAA) 6-4/210 19-Jun-08 36 6 14 20 29
7 Alberts Smits D Jukurit (Fin-Liiga) 6-3/205 2-Dec-07 38 6 7 13 20
8 Viggo Bjorck C Djurgardens (SHL) 5-9/175 12-Mar-08 42 6 9 15 12
9 Malte Gustafsson D HV 71 (SHL) 6-4/200 11-Jun-08 27 0 3 3 4
10 Daxon Rudolph D Prince Albert (WHL) 6-2/205 6-Mar-08 68 28 50 78 75
11 Oscar Hemming LW Boston College (NCAA) 6-4/195 13-Aug-08 19 1 7 8 18
12 Tynan Lawrence C Boston University (NCAA) 6-0/185 3-Aug-08 18 2 5 7 2
13 Ethan Belchetz LW Windsor (OHL) 6-5/225 30-Mar-08 57 34 25 59 45
14 Adam Novotny LW Peterborough (OHL) 6-1/205 13-Nov-07 58 34 31 65 22
15 Elton Hermansson RW MoDo Hockey (Allsvenskan) 6-1/180 5-Feb-08 38 11 10 21 22
16 Maddox Dagenais C Quebec (QMJHL) 6-3/195 27-Mar-08 62 30 32 62 31
17 Oliver Suvanto C Tappara (Fin-Liiga) 6-3/210 3-Sep-08 48 2 9 11 16
18 Ryan Lin D Vancouver (WHL) 5-11/175 18-Apr-08 53 14 43 57 35
19 Wyatt Cullen LW USN U18 (USDP) 5-11/175 8-Sep-08 34 12 22 34 37
20 Xavier Villeneuve D Blainville-Boisbriand (QMJHL) 5-11/160 29-Sep-07 37 6 32 38 35
21 Nikita Klepov RW Saginaw (OHL) 6-0/180 27-Jun-08 67 37 60 97 43
22 Ilia Morozov C Miami (NCAA) 6-3/195 3-Aug-08 36 8 12 20 27
23 Alexander Command C Orebro (Swe J20) 6-1/185 16-Jun-08 30 17 27 44 61
24 Mathis Preston RW Spo-Van (WHL) 5-11/175 21-Jul-08 46 18 26 44 34
25 Tommy Bleyl D Moncton (QMJHL) 6-0/160 1-Dec-07 63 13 68 81 33
26 JP Hurlbert LW Kamloops (WHL) 6-0/185 11-Apr-08 68 42 55 97 45
27 Juho Piiparinen D Tappara (Fin-Liiga) 6-2/200 10-Aug-08 29 0 3 3 8
28 Adam Goljer D HK Dukla Trencin (Slovakia) 6-3/195 7-Jun-08 43 4 7 11 40
29 Jaxon Cover LW London (OHL) 6-2/175 13-Feb-08 67 20 32 52 48
30 Gleb Pugachyov C Chaika Nizhny Novgorod (MHL) 6-3/200 25-Mar-08 33 10 14 24 36
31 Ryder Cali C North Bay (OHL) 6-1/210 6-Sep-08 47 16 20 36 24
32 Dmitri Borichev G Loko-76 Yaroslavl (MHL) 6-3/200 19-Jun-08 24 12 8 2.25 0.929
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2026 NHL DRAFT: TOP 100 PRIOR TO THE 2026 IIHF U18 MEN’S WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/2026-nhl-draft-top-100-prior-2026-iihf-u18-mens-world-championship/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/2026-nhl-draft-top-100-prior-2026-iihf-u18-mens-world-championship/#respond Sun, 19 Apr 2026 17:58:39 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=199491 Read More... from 2026 NHL DRAFT: TOP 100 PRIOR TO THE 2026 IIHF U18 MEN’S WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP

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Caleb Malhotra
It’s time for the McKeen’s Hockey scouting team to update their rankings for the 2026 NHL Draft. Many junior leagues around the globe are in the thick of the playoffs and we have the IIHF U18’s upcoming. This top 100 will serve as our final ranking before our Draft Guide release, which expands us to a top 300.

Gavin McKenna is holding firm on his first overall ranking on our board thanks to some adjustments and strong play post world juniors with Penn State. We’re hoping that he gets the nod to represent Canada at the IIHF World Championships, which would be a terrific measuring stick for him.

Pushing up our list are Brantford Bulldogs center Caleb Malhotra and Swedish defender Malte Gustafsson. Malhotra has shown terrific progression over the course of the OHL season and has been outstanding through the first two rounds of the OHL playoffs. Meanwhile Gustafsson has shown remarkable poise across various levels in Sweden and offers great athletic tools and two-way upside.

Other significant “risers” from our previous list include Quebec forward Maddox Dagenais, North Bay center Ryder Cali, Moncton defender Tommy Bleyl, Slovak defender Adam Goljer, and Russian netminder Dmitri Borichev. All have played significantly well in the second half of their respective seasons and have pushed up our boards due to the upside that they possess. Dagenais brings elite athletic tools and a heavy shot to the table and has shown considerable improvement in the second half from a consistency perspective. Cali is one of the draft’s youngest players and has found confidence in his on-puck play, causing us to re-evaluate his upside. Bleyl is one of the draft’s most dynamic offensive defenders and his strong play has given us no choice but to adjust our ranking of him accordingly. Goljer is an athletic two-way defender who has played well against men in the Slovak pro league this year, but he’s shown offensive upside when playing against his peers. Borichev is the draft’s netminding crown jewel with a great frame, elite athleticism, and improving technical abilities.

Fresh off the release of our annual three part look at the top “re-entry” candidates available, several have made the cut in our top 100. Edmonton defender Ethan MacKenzie, Prince Albert netminder Michal Orsulak, Czech defender Tomas Galvas, Victoria defender Timofei Runtso, Chicoutimi forward Liam Lefebvre, and Sioux Falls defender Matthew Grimes. You can find more info about each player in the aforementioned three-part series.

We’re very excited to see what the end of the season has in store and how that impacts our final ranking. As usual, you can expect our annual draft guide to be released in early June.

RK PLAYER POS TEAM HT/WT DOB GP G A PTS PIM
1 Gavin McKenna LW Penn State (NCAA) 5-11/170 20-Dec-07 35 15 36 51 36
2 Ivar Stenberg LW Frolunda (SHL) 5-11/185 30-Sep-07 43 11 22 33 6
3 Chase Reid D Soo Greyhounds (OHL) 6-2/185 30-Dec-07 45 18 30 48 30
4 Caleb Malhotra C Brantford (OHL) 6-0/170 2-Jun-08 67 29 55 84 51
5 Carson Carels D Prince George (WHL) 6-2/195 23-Jun-08 58 20 53 73 66
6 Keaton Verhoeff D North Dakota (NCAA) 6-4/210 19-Jun-08 36 6 14 20 29
7 Alberts Smits D Jukurit (Fin-Liiga) 6-3/205 2-Dec-07 38 6 7 13 20
8 Viggo Bjorck C Djurgardens (SHL) 5-9/175 12-Mar-08 42 6 9 15 12
9 Malte Gustafsson D HV 71 (SHL) 6-4/200 11-Jun-08 27 0 3 3 4
10 Daxon Rudolph D Prince Albert (WHL) 6-2/205 6-Mar-08 68 28 50 78 75
11 Oscar Hemming LW Boston College (NCAA) 6-4/195 13-Aug-08 19 1 7 8 18
12 Tynan Lawrence C Boston University (NCAA) 6-0/185 3-Aug-08 18 2 5 7 2
13 Ethan Belchetz LW Windsor (OHL) 6-5/225 30-Mar-08 57 34 25 59 45
14 Adam Novotny LW Peterborough (OHL) 6-1/205 13-Nov-07 58 34 31 65 22
15 Elton Hermansson RW MoDo Hockey (Allsvenskan) 6-1/180 5-Feb-08 38 11 10 21 22
16 Maddox Dagenais C Quebec (QMJHL) 6-3/195 27-Mar-08 62 30 32 62 31
17 Oliver Suvanto C Tappara (Fin-Liiga) 6-3/210 3-Sep-08 48 2 9 11 16
18 Ryan Lin D Vancouver (WHL) 5-11/175 18-Apr-08 53 14 43 57 35
19 Wyatt Cullen LW USN U18 (USDP) 5-11/175 8-Sep-08 34 12 22 34 37
20 Xavier Villeneuve D Blainville-Boisbriand (QMJHL) 5-11/160 29-Sep-07 37 6 32 38 35
21 Nikita Klepov RW Saginaw (OHL) 6-0/180 27-Jun-08 67 37 60 97 43
22 Ilia Morozov C Miami (NCAA) 6-3/195 3-Aug-08 36 8 12 20 27
23 Alexander Command C Orebro (Swe J20) 6-1/185 16-Jun-08 30 17 27 44 61
24 Mathis Preston RW Spo-Van (WHL) 5-11/175 21-Jul-08 46 18 26 44 34
25 Tommy Bleyl D Moncton (QMJHL) 6-0/160 1-Dec-07 63 13 68 81 33
26 JP Hurlbert LW Kamloops (WHL) 6-0/185 11-Apr-08 68 42 55 97 45
27 Juho Piiparinen D Tappara (Fin-Liiga) 6-2/200 10-Aug-08 29 0 3 3 8
28 Adam Goljer D HK Dukla Trencin (Slovakia) 6-3/195 7-Jun-08 43 4 7 11 40
29 Jaxon Cover LW London (OHL) 6-2/175 13-Feb-08 67 20 32 52 48
30 Gleb Pugachyov C Chaika Nizhny Novgorod (MHL) 6-3/200 25-Mar-08 33 10 14 24 36
31 Ryder Cali C North Bay (OHL) 6-1/210 6-Sep-08 47 16 20 36 24
32 Dmitri Borichev G Loko-76 Yaroslavl (MHL) 6-3/200 19-Jun-08 24 12 8 2.25 0.929
33 Jack Hextall C Youngstown (USHL) 6-0/190 23-Mar-08 59 20 38 58 28
34 William Hakansson D Lulea (SHL) 6-4/205 8-Oct-07 22 0 2 2 8
35 Marcus Nordmark LW Djurgardens (Swe J20) 6-1/180 4-May-08 25 14 24 38 48
36 Tobias Trejbal G Youngstown (USHL) 6-4/190 9-Nov-07 42 30 9 2.12 0.916
37 Brooks Rogowski C Oshawa (OHL) 6-6/225 28-Jun-08 46 15 27 42 17
38 Ben MacBeath D Calgary (WHL) 6-2/185 4-Mar-08 67 7 44 51 16
39 Alexander Bilecki D Kitchener (OHL) 6-1/180 9-May-08 66 9 20 29 43
40 Egor Shilov C Victoriaville (QMJHL) 6-1/180 30-Apr-08 63 32 50 82 29
41 Niklas Aaram Olsen RW Orebro (Swe J20) 6-0/185 19-Apr-08 29 20 20 40 22
42 Tomas Chrenko C HK Nitra (Slovakia) 5-11/170 2-Nov-07 44 9 22 31 10
43 Samu Alalauri D Pelicans (Fin-U20) 6-2/200 31-May-08 40 6 19 25 4
44 Jakub Vanecek D Tri-City (WHL) 6-1/190 25-Feb-08 59 14 21 35 20
45 Thomas Vandenberg C Ottawa (OHL) 6-0/180 8-Sep-08 59 25 25 50 20
46 Liam Ruck RW Medicine Hat (WHL) 6-0/175 21-Feb-08 68 45 59 104 36
47 Alessandro Di Iorio RW Sarnia (OHL) 6-0/190 17-Mar-08 45 12 19 31 16
48 Adam Andersson C Leksands (Swe J20) 6-3/200 2-Jul-08 30 3 14 17 24
49 Ryan Roobroeck C Niagara (OHL) 6-3/215 25-Sep-07 49 30 28 58 26
50 Pierce Mbuyi LW Owen Sound (OHL) 5-10/160 17-Apr-08 68 32 43 75 85
51 Ethan MacKenzie D Edmonton (WHL) 6-0/170 2-Sep-06 59 22 36 58 42
52 Filip Ruzicka G Brandon (WHL) 6-7/230 24-Mar-08 42 26 14 3.19 0.906
53 Maksim Sokolovskii D London (OHL) 6-8/235 12-Jul-08 44 2 6 8 49
54 Markus Ruck C Medicine Hat (WHL) 5-11/170 21-Feb-08 68 21 87 108 28
55 Simas Ignatavicius C Geneva-Servette (Sui-NL) 6-3/195 22-Oct-07 52 7 6 13 43
56 Beckham Edwards C Sarnia (OHL) 6-1/180 6-Jan-08 64 19 26 45 14
57 Giorgos Pantelas D Brandon (WHL) 6-2/215 24-Apr-08 68 6 31 37 50
58 Charlie Morrison D Quebec (QMJHL) 6-3/195 12-Oct-07 41 4 9 13 58
59 Adam Nemec LW Sudbury (OHL) 6-1/175 18-Oct-07 31 14 21 35 15
60 Tobias Tvrznik G Wenatchee (WHL) 6-4/180 29-Jul-07 39 16 18 3.1 0.913
61 Casey Mutryn RW USN U18 (USDP) 6-3/200 5-Jul-08 55 14 23 37 87
62 Michal Orsulak G Prince Albert (WHL) 6-4/225 26-Aug-07 36 28 4 2.22 0.907
63 Axel Elofsson D Orebro (Swe J20) 5-10/165 3-Jun-08 32 9 32 41 20
64 Nikita Scherbakov D Toros Neftekamsk (VHL) 6-5/190 23-Oct-07 35 4 6 10 24
65 Jonas Lagerberg Hoen RW Leksands (Swe J20) 6-2/175 24-Oct-07 9 9 7 16 33
66 Landon Nycz D Massachusetts (NCAA) 6-2/200 4-Oct-07 35 1 2 3 2
67 Adam Valentini LW Michigan (NCAA) 5-11/185 11-Apr-08 40 11 16 27 46
68 Viktor Fyodorov C Torpedo-Gorky NN (VHL) 5-10/175 21-Feb-08 32 2 6 8 8
69 Mans Gudmundsson D Farjestads (Swe J20) 6-2/170 9-Jun-08 35 1 24 25 10
70 Casper Juustovaara Karlsson LW Lulea (SHL) 5-9/170 25-Oct-07 31 4 2 6 6
71 Tomas Galvas D Bili Tygri Liberec (Czechia) 5-10/155 11-Feb-06 32 8 16 24 10
72 Jonah Sivertson RW Prince Albert (WHL) 6-3/195 27-Aug-08 66 24 29 53 41
73 Landon Amrhein LW Calgary (WHL) 6-4/190 6-Apr-08 64 10 21 31 12
74 Timofei Runtso D Victoria (WHL) 6-2/185 6-Jul-07 68 11 33 44 28
75 Liam Lefebvre C Rim-Chi (QMJHL) 6-3/205 15-May-07 59 32 27 59 86
76 Vladimir Dravecky D Brantford (OHL) 6-0/185 19-Dec-07 58 9 19 28 24
77 Beckett Hamilton RW Red Deer (WHL) 5-11/175 28-Mar-08 67 24 38 62 14
78 Wiggo Sorensson C Boro/Vetlanda HC (Swe Division 2) 5-11/180 15-Apr-08 29 20 18 38 14
79 Jakub Frolo C Ilves (Fin-U20) 6-1/195 5-Dec-07 37 10 30 40 103
80 Landon Hafele C Green Bay (USHL) 6-0/185 18-Sep-07 52 15 27 42 69
81 Brady Knowling G USN U18 (USDP) 6-5/200 9-Mar-08 28 12 10 3.73 0.88
82 Zach Olsen RW Saskatoon (WHL) 6-1/200 16-Mar-08 57 18 16 34 79
83 Matthew Grimes D Sioux Falls (USHL) 6-1/185 19-May-07 60 9 26 35 54
84 Chase Harrington LW Spokane (WHL) 6-0/195 30-Oct-07 61 28 29 57 105
85 Jakub Floris D Lukko (Fin-U20) 6-3/190 19-Feb-08 38 10 8 18 10
86 Noel Pakarinen LW Kiekko-Espoo (Fin-U20) 6-2/200 9-Jul-08 31 13 17 30 30
87 Malcom Gastrin C MoDo Hockey (Swe J20) 6-0/155 19-Aug-08 24 9 16 25 8
88 Nils Bartholdsson RW Rogle (Swe J20) 5-10/175 25-Apr-08 32 23 19 42 20
89 Elisei Ryabkin D MHK Dynamo Moskva (MHL) 6-1/180 8-Jul-08 48 3 16 19 25
90 Spencer Bowes C Ottawa (OHL) 6-0/175 19-Sep-07 67 23 19 42 28
91 Victor Plante LW USN U18 (USDP) 5-9/165 10-Mar-08 50 19 21 40 65
92 Vertti Svensk D SaiPa (Fin-U20) 6-0/165 9-Nov-07 33 3 28 31 80
93 Jean-Cristoph Lemieux C Wsr-Sby (OHL) 6-0/185 19-Jun-08 56 20 23 43 28
94 Vilho Vanhatalo RW Tappara (Fin-U20) 6-4/195 18-Jan-08 38 10 9 19 43
95 Brian McFadden D Thayer Academy (USHS-MA) 6-5/180 8-Jan-08 29 2 15 17  
96 Lars Steiner RW Rouyn-Noranda (QMJHL) 5-10/175 12-Nov-07 44 30 25 55 44
97 Luke Schairer D USN U18 (USDP) 6-3/195 30-Jan-08 55 1 16 17 67
98 KJ Sauer C Andover High (USHS-MN) 6-3/200 24-Oct-07 15 8 17 25 42
99 Filip Novak LW Sparta Praha (Czechia U20) 6-1/195 7-Mar-08 28 11 24 35 60
100 Rian Chudzinski RW Moncton (QMJHL) 6-1/190 30-Dec-07 54 21 17 38 71
HM Joe Erickson C Blake School (USHS-MN) 6-4/200 21-Apr-08 28 32 32 64 4
HM Alan Shaikhlislamov RW Tolpar Ufa (MHL) 6-1/185 4-Sep-08 31 18 17 35 15
HM Dmitri Kubantsev RW Vernon (BCHL) 6-1/195 28-May-08 47 15 38 53 52
HM Yaroslav Fedoseyev D Chelmet Chelyabinsk (VHL) 6-1/180 5-Nov-07 25 1 5 6 25
HM Cole Zurawski RW Owen Sound (OHL) 6-1/190 6-Feb-08 63 24 22 46 34
HM Yegor Rybkin G Chaika Nizhny Novgorod (MHL) 6-7/205 3-Dec-07 11 5 2 2.56 0.915
HM Zach Lansard RW Regina (WHL) 6-0/175 29-Jul-08 68 24 32 56 33
HM Harrison Boettiger G Kelowna (WHL) 6-2/190 11-Dec-07 41 25 10 2.83 0.911
HM Luka Arkko LW Pelicans (Fin-U20) 6-3/210 14-Jan-08 42 11 14 25 10
HM Evan Jardine LW Youngstown (USHL) 6-0/180 23-Oct-07 53 27 34 61 70
HM Cole Tuminaro D Chicago (USHL) 6-3/220 24-Jan-07 54 5 11 16 148
HM Romain L'Italien C Cape Breton (QMJHL) 6-1/195 7-Apr-08 52 17 30 47 33
HM Xavier Wendt G Tri-City (WHL) 6-1/165 24-Jan-08 43 18 20 3.25 0.905
HM Caelan Joudrey C Wenatchee (WHL) 6-4/180 17-Jan-08 67 19 10 29 56
HM Dakoda Rheaume-Mullen D Michigan (NCAA) 6-0/180 18-Dec-06 40 4 14 18 20
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2026 NHL DRAFT – MID-SEASON RANKING – TOP 64 with Honourable Mentions – Closing gap between top prospects https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/2026-nhl-draft-mid-season-ranking-top-64-honourable-mentions-closing-gap-top-prospects/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/2026-nhl-draft-mid-season-ranking-top-64-honourable-mentions-closing-gap-top-prospects/#respond Sat, 31 Jan 2026 18:59:16 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=198440 Read More... from 2026 NHL DRAFT – MID-SEASON RANKING – TOP 64 with Honourable Mentions – Closing gap between top prospects

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ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA - JANUARY 4: Sweden's Ivar Stenberg #15 looks on during a stoppage in play against Finland during Semifinal Round action at the 2026 IIHF World Junior Championship at Grand Casino Arena on January 4, 2026 in St. Paul, Minnesota, USA. (Photo by Micheline Veluvolu/IIHF)

With the World Juniors firmly in the rear-view mirror and many “junior” leagues past the halfway point of their seasons, it is time to update and expand the McKeen’s Hockey 2026 draft rankings. This time around we are bringing you a top 64, in addition to several honourable mentions.

While many in the industry seem to be wavering on the concept of Gavin McKenna being the top player available, he remains at the top of our list. We understand the apprehensiveness, but we also believe that McKenna still possesses the highest upside of any player available this year; plus, his performance in the NCAA has ticked up post WJC’s. However, we also believe that the gap is razor thin at this point between McKenna and several of the players we have ranked behind him. In particular, Ivar Stenberg received a fair amount of support from our team to be ranked ahead of McKenna.

While the race for first overall will be fascinating as June approaches, the debate over the top defenseman available will rage even more intensely. Verhoeff remains ranked first in this grouping, but there are arguments to be made that any of Reid, Smits, or Carels could be or should be the top defenseman selected. One thing is for certain; it is a good year to be drafting in the top five if your organization needs a quality young defender.

Caleb Malhotra, Oscar Hemming, Alexander Command, Wyatt Cullen, and Maddox Dagenais are among our highest climbers compared to the previous ranking. Malhotra suddenly finds himself competing for an OHL scoring title, showing tremendous improvement as an offensive play driver over the course of the last few months. The Oscar Hemming saga finally reached a conclusion after he joined Boston College at the end of December. While the offensive production has been only mediocre, his impact on the ice has been incredibly impressive as a freshman power forward; it’s cliche but he’s passing the eye test on a consistent basis. Command has been terrific for both Sweden internationally and in the J20 league, and he plays a competitive and fast paced game from the center position. Wyatt Cullen hasn’t played a lot this year, but when he has, he’s been outstanding for the NTDP. Lastly, Dagenais is finally putting everything together for the Quebec Remparts, as the former first overall pick in the QMJHL draft is becoming more confident in being able to utilize his physical gifts.

Our largest “fallers” were Xavier Villeneuve, Mathis Preston, Ryan Roobroeck, and Beckham Edwards. While we respect Villeneuve’s offensive upside as one of the draft’s most dynamic playmakers, we also wonder how much his game has truly grown in the last calendar year as one of this draft’s oldest first time eligible players. The offensive production just hasn’t been at an elite level the last few months. Can a trade to Vancouver (WHL) help Mathis Preston find more consistency and urgency in his game? Roobroeck’s offensive production has definitely improved over the last few months, but like Villeneuve, we wonder how much his game has truly improved this year as a third year junior player. Lastly, Beckham Edwards is a power skating forward with a goal scorer’s touch, but, the offensive consistency has been majorly lacking this year and it brings to light concerns over his projection and ceiling.

What about the goalies? Initially, our team wasn’t enamored with the talent level for the position this year, however, some performances over the last few months have helped to change our mind. We have three goaltenders ranked inside of our top 64, with Tobias Trejbal of Youngstown (USHL) sitting at the top of that list. Trejbal has been outstanding in the USHL this year and the UMass commit has the size and athleticism combination to make him a potential NHL starting netminder.

You can expect our next update towards the end of March as we expand to a top 100 ranking.

RANK PLAYER POS TEAM HT/WT DOB GP G A PTS PIM
1 Gavin McKenna LW Penn State (NCAA) 5-11/170 12/20/2007 22 10 19 29 19
2 Ivar Stenberg LW Frolunda (SHL) 5-11/185 9/30/2007 29 7 21 28 6
3 Keaton Verhoeff D North Dakota (NCAA) 6-4/210 6/19/2008 22 6 11 17 23
4 Chase Reid D Soo Greyhounds (OHL) 6-2/185 12/30/2007 39 18 27 45 30
5 Alberts Smits D Jukurit (Fin-Liiga) 6-3/205 12/2/2007 34 6 7 13 12
6 Carson Carels D Prince George (WHL) 6-2/195 6/23/2008 37 12 28 40 42
7 Tynan Lawrence C Muskegon (USHL) 6-0/185 8/3/2008 13 10 7 17 6
8 Viggo Bjorck C Djurgardens (SHL) 5-9/175 3/12/2008 29 4 4 8 10
9 Caleb Malhotra C Brantford (OHL) 6-0/170 6/2/2008 45 23 38 61 37
10 Ethan Belchetz LW Windsor (OHL) 6-5/225 3/30/2008 43 29 16 45 35
11 Oscar Hemming LW Boston College (NCAA) 6-4/195 8/13/2008 6 0 3 3 8
12 Adam Novotny LW Peterborough (OHL) 6-1/205 11/13/2007 37 22 21 43 8
13 Ryan Lin D Vancouver (WHL) 5-11/175 4/18/2008 42 11 39 50 33
14 Daxon Rudolph D Prince Albert (WHL) 6-2/205 3/6/2008 45 21 33 54 42
15 Oliver Suvanto C Tappara (Fin-Liiga) 6-3/210 9/3/2008 34 2 5 7 14
16 Elton Hermansson RW MoDo Hockey (Allsvenskan) 6-1/180 2/5/2008 29 9 7 16 14
17 Ilia Morozov C Miami (NCAA) 6-3/195 8/3/2008 24 7 7 14 25
18 Xavier Villeneuve D Blainville-Boisbriand (QMJHL) 5-11/160 9/29/2007 35 6 30 36 35
19 Malte Gustafsson D HV 71 (SHL) 6-4/200 6/11/2008 16 0 3 3 2
20 Juho Piiparinen D Tappara (Fin-Liiga) 6-2/200 8/10/2008 28 0 3 3 8
21 Alexander Command C Orebro (Swe U20) 6-1/185 6/16/2008 24 13 22 35 30
22 Wyatt Cullen LW USN U18 (USDP) 5-11/175 9/8/2008 17 3 11 14 2
23 JP Hurlbert LW Kamloops (WHL) 6-0/185 4/11/2008 45 31 41 72 26
24 Nikita Klepov RW Saginaw (OHL) 6-0/180 6/27/2008 45 28 32 60 27
25 Mathis Preston RW Spokane (WHL) 5-11/175 7/21/2008 36 14 18 32 32
26 Jaxon Cover LW London (OHL) 6-2/175 2/13/2008 45 14 20 34 40
27 William Hakansson D Lulea (SHL) 6-4/205 10/8/2007 22 0 2 2 8
28 Giorgos Pantelas D Brandon (WHL) 6-2/215 4/24/2008 45 2 18 20 30
29 Brooks Rogowski C Oshawa (OHL) 6-6/225 6/28/2008 31 7 18 25 10
30 Maddox Dagenais C Quebec (QMJHL) 6-3/195 3/27/2008 43 20 17 37 23
31 Tomas Chrenko C HK Nitra (Slovakia) 5-11/170 11/2/2007 33 6 16 22 6
32 Marcus Nordmark LW Djurgardens (Swe U20) 6-1/180 5/4/2008 21 10 20 30 42
33 Egor Shilov C Victoriaville (QMJHL) 6-1/180 4/30/2008 42 22 37 59 23
34 Ryan Roobroeck C Niagara (OHL) 6-3/215 9/25/2007 45 27 26 53 26
35 Jakub Vanecek D Tri-City (WHL) 6-1/190 2/25/2008 36 10 15 25 16
36 Pierce Mbuyi LW Owen Sound (OHL) 5-10/160 4/17/2008 45 23 27 50 65
37 Jack Hextall C Youngstown (USHL) 6-0/190 3/23/2008 38 12 25 37 22
38 Thomas Vandenberg C Ottawa (OHL) 6-0/180 9/8/2008 37 17 17 34 14
39 Vladimir Dravecky D Brantford (OHL) 6-0/185 12/19/2007 37 7 16 23 20
40 Alessandro Di Iorio RW Sarnia (OHL) 6-0/190 3/17/2008 28 10 9 19 8
41 Vilho Vanhatalo RW Tappara (Fin-U20) 6-4/195 1/18/2008 29 10 8 18 14
42 Ryder Cali C North Bay (OHL) 6-1/210 9/6/2008 24 11 5 16 4
43 Tommy Bleyl D Moncton (QMJHL) 6-0/160 12/1/2007 42 7 44 51 22
44 Tobias Trejbal G Youngstown (USHL) 6-4/190 11/9/2007 27 20 5 2.04 0.924
45 Charlie Morrison D Quebec (QMJHL) 6-3/195 10/12/2007 24 2 4 6 23
46 Oscar Holmertz C Linkopings (Swe U20) 6-0/190 3/21/2008 25 7 14 21 2
47 Nikita Scherbakov D Salavat Yulayev Ufa (KHL) 6-5/190 10/23/2007 7 0 0 0 4
48 Victor Plante LW USN U18 (USDP) 5-9/165 3/10/2008 34 16 13 29 55
49 Adam Goljer D HK Dukla Trencin (Slovakia) 6-3/195 6/7/2008 33 4 6 10 26
50 Luke Schairer D USN U18 (USDP) 6-3/195 1/30/2008 36 0 9 9 55
51 Niklas Aaram-Olsen RW Orebro (Swe U20) 6-0/185 4/19/2008 22 17 15 32 12
52 Gleb Pugachyov C Chaika Nizhny Novgorod (MHL) 6-3/200 3/25/2008 27 8 13 21 20
53 Simas Ignatavicius C Geneva-Servette (Sui-NL) 6-3/195 10/22/2007 44 5 6 11 41
54 Lars Steiner RW Rouyn Noranda (QMJHL) 5-10/175 11/12/2007 24 12 12 24 26
55 Dmitri Borichev G Loko-76 Yaroslavl (MHL) 6-3/200 6/19/2008 17 8 6 1.79 0.942
56 Adam Andersson C Leksands (Swe U20) 6-3/200 7/2/2008 23 2 13 15 22
57 Alexander Bilecki D Kitchener (OHL) 6-1/180 5/9/2008 44 7 15 22 24
58 Axel Elofsson D Orebro (Swe U20) 5-10/165 6/3/2008 26 7 24 31 18
59 Xavier Wendt G Tri-City (WHL) 6-1/165 1/24/2008 28 17 9 2.42 0.929
60 Adam Valentini LW Michigan (NCAA) 5-11/185 4/11/2008 24 6 13 19 40
61 Beckham Edwards C Sarnia (OHL) 6-1/180 1/6/2008 45 14 17 31 14
62 Samu Alalauri D Pelicans (Fin-U20) 6-2/200 5/31/2008 32 6 17 23 4
63 Ben MacBeath D Calgary (WHL) 6-2/185 3/4/2008 43 6 27 33 12
64 Liam Ruck RW Medicine Hat (WHL) 6-0/175 2/21/2008 46 27 37 64 26
HM Simon Katolicky LW Tappara (Fin-U20) 6-4/195 7/24/2008 24 5 9 14 16
HM Timofei Runtso D Victoria (WHL) 6-2/185 7/6/2007 45 7 26 33 22
HM Layne Gallacher C Brantford (OHL) 6-1/180 2/16/2008 21 5 7 12 2
HM Landon Amrhein LW Calgary (WHL) 6-4/190 4/6/2008 39 7 16 23 6
HM Filip Ruzicka G Brandon (WHL) 6-7/230 3/24/2008 27 19 7 2.97 0.908
HM Wiggo Sorensson C Boro/Vetlanda (Swe Div 2) 5-11/180 4/15/2008 24 13 16 29 2
HM Viktor Fyodorov C Torpedo-Gorky NN (VHL) 5-10/175 2/21/2008 27 2 5 7 6
HM Landon Nycz D Massachusetts (NCAA) 6-2/200 10/4/2007 24 1 1 2 0
HM Brady Knowling G USN U18 (USDP) 6-5/200 3/9/2008 17 6 8 3.60 0.880
HM Casey Mutryn RW USN U18 (USDP) 6-3/200 7/5/2008 36 7 18 25 32
HM Tobias Tvrznik G Wenatchee (WHL) 6-4/180 7/29/2007 31 13 15 2.89 0.919
HM Jonas Lagerberg Hoen RW Leksands (Swe U20) 6-2/175 10/24/2007 9 9 7 16 33
HM Olivers Murnieks C Saint John (QMJHL) 6-1/190 7/31/2008 29 6 12 18 14
HM Colin Fitzgerald C Pbo-Soo (OHL) 6-2/210 4/1/2008 44 13 12 25 48
HM Adam Nemec LW Sudbury (OHL) 6-1/175 10/18/2007 8 4 6 10 0
HM Chase Harrington LW Spokane (WHL) 6-0/195 10/30/2007 44 17 23 40 73
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2026 NHL DRAFT – MID-SEASON RANKING – TOP 32 – Closing gap between top prospects https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/2026-nhl-draft-mid-season-ranking-top-32-closing-gap-top-prospects/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/2026-nhl-draft-mid-season-ranking-top-32-closing-gap-top-prospects/#respond Sat, 31 Jan 2026 18:56:46 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=198435 Read More... from 2026 NHL DRAFT – MID-SEASON RANKING – TOP 32 – Closing gap between top prospects

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ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA - JANUARY 4: Sweden's Ivar Stenberg #15 looks on during a stoppage in play against Finland during Semifinal Round action at the 2026 IIHF World Junior Championship at Grand Casino Arena on January 4, 2026 in St. Paul, Minnesota, USA. (Photo by Micheline Veluvolu/IIHF)

With the World Juniors firmly in the rear-view mirror and many “junior” leagues past the halfway point of their seasons, it is time to update and expand the McKeen’s Hockey 2026 draft rankings. This time around we are bringing you a top 64, in addition to several honourable mentions.

While many in the industry seem to be wavering on the concept of Gavin McKenna being the top player available, he remains at the top of our list. We understand the apprehensiveness, but we also believe that McKenna still possesses the highest upside of any player available this year; plus, his performance in the NCAA has ticked up post WJC’s. However, we also believe that the gap is razor thin at this point between McKenna and several of the players we have ranked behind him. In particular, Ivar Stenberg received a fair amount of support from our team to be ranked ahead of McKenna.

While the race for first overall will be fascinating as June approaches, the debate over the top defenseman available will rage even more intensely. Verhoeff remains ranked first in this grouping, but there are arguments to be made that any of Reid, Smits, or Carels could be or should be the top defenseman selected. One thing is for certain; it is a good year to be drafting in the top five if your organization needs a quality young defender.

Caleb Malhotra, Oscar Hemming, Alexander Command, Wyatt Cullen, and Maddox Dagenais are among our highest climbers compared to the previous ranking. Malhotra suddenly finds himself competing for an OHL scoring title, showing tremendous improvement as an offensive play driver over the course of the last few months. The Oscar Hemming saga finally reached a conclusion after he joined Boston College at the end of December. While the offensive production has been only mediocre, his impact on the ice has been incredibly impressive as a freshman power forward; it’s cliche but he’s passing the eye test on a consistent basis. Command has been terrific for both Sweden internationally and in the J20 league, and he plays a competitive and fast paced game from the center position. Wyatt Cullen hasn’t played a lot this year, but when he has, he’s been outstanding for the NTDP. Lastly, Dagenais is finally putting everything together for the Quebec Remparts, as the former first overall pick in the QMJHL draft is becoming more confident in being able to utilize his physical gifts.

Our largest “fallers” were Xavier Villeneuve, Mathis Preston, Ryan Roobroeck, and Beckham Edwards. While we respect Villeneuve’s offensive upside as one of the draft’s most dynamic playmakers, we also wonder how much his game has truly grown in the last calendar year as one of this draft’s oldest first time eligible players. The offensive production just hasn’t been at an elite level the last few months. Can a trade to Vancouver (WHL) help Mathis Preston find more consistency and urgency in his game? Roobroeck’s offensive production has definitely improved over the last few months, but like Villeneuve, we wonder how much his game has truly improved this year as a third year junior player. Lastly, Beckham Edwards is a power skating forward with a goal scorer’s touch, but, the offensive consistency has been majorly lacking this year and it brings to light concerns over his projection and ceiling.

What about the goalies? Initially, our team wasn’t enamored with the talent level for the position this year, however, some performances over the last few months have helped to change our mind. We have three goaltenders ranked inside of our top 64, with Tobias Trejbal of Youngstown (USHL) sitting at the top of that list. Trejbal has been outstanding in the USHL this year and the UMass commit has the size and athleticism combination to make him a potential NHL starting netminder.

You can expect our next update towards the end of March as we expand to a top 100 ranking.

RANK PLAYER POS TEAM HT/WT DOB GP G A PTS PIM
1 Gavin McKenna LW Penn State (NCAA) 5-11/170 12/20/2007 22 10 19 29 19
2 Ivar Stenberg LW Frolunda (SHL) 5-11/185 9/30/2007 29 7 21 28 6
3 Keaton Verhoeff D North Dakota (NCAA) 6-4/210 6/19/2008 22 6 11 17 23
4 Chase Reid D Soo Greyhounds (OHL) 6-2/185 12/30/2007 39 18 27 45 30
5 Alberts Smits D Jukurit (Fin-Liiga) 6-3/205 12/2/2007 34 6 7 13 12
6 Carson Carels D Prince George (WHL) 6-2/195 6/23/2008 37 12 28 40 42
7 Tynan Lawrence C Muskegon (USHL) 6-0/185 8/3/2008 13 10 7 17 6
8 Viggo Bjorck C Djurgardens (SHL) 5-9/175 3/12/2008 29 4 4 8 10
9 Caleb Malhotra C Brantford (OHL) 6-0/170 6/2/2008 45 23 38 61 37
10 Ethan Belchetz LW Windsor (OHL) 6-5/225 3/30/2008 43 29 16 45 35
11 Oscar Hemming LW Boston College (NCAA) 6-4/195 8/13/2008 6 0 3 3 8
12 Adam Novotny LW Peterborough (OHL) 6-1/205 11/13/2007 37 22 21 43 8
13 Ryan Lin D Vancouver (WHL) 5-11/175 4/18/2008 42 11 39 50 33
14 Daxon Rudolph D Prince Albert (WHL) 6-2/205 3/6/2008 45 21 33 54 42
15 Oliver Suvanto C Tappara (Fin-Liiga) 6-3/210 9/3/2008 34 2 5 7 14
16 Elton Hermansson RW MoDo Hockey (Allsvenskan) 6-1/180 2/5/2008 29 9 7 16 14
17 Ilia Morozov C Miami (NCAA) 6-3/195 8/3/2008 24 7 7 14 25
18 Xavier Villeneuve D Blainville-Boisbriand (QMJHL) 5-11/160 9/29/2007 35 6 30 36 35
19 Malte Gustafsson D HV 71 (SHL) 6-4/200 6/11/2008 16 0 3 3 2
20 Juho Piiparinen D Tappara (Fin-Liiga) 6-2/200 8/10/2008 28 0 3 3 8
21 Alexander Command C Orebro (Swe U20) 6-1/185 6/16/2008 24 13 22 35 30
22 Wyatt Cullen LW USN U18 (USDP) 5-11/175 9/8/2008 17 3 11 14 2
23 JP Hurlbert LW Kamloops (WHL) 6-0/185 4/11/2008 45 31 41 72 26
24 Nikita Klepov RW Saginaw (OHL) 6-0/180 6/27/2008 45 28 32 60 27
25 Mathis Preston RW Spokane (WHL) 5-11/175 7/21/2008 36 14 18 32 32
26 Jaxon Cover LW London (OHL) 6-2/175 2/13/2008 45 14 20 34 40
27 William Hakansson D Lulea (SHL) 6-4/205 10/8/2007 22 0 2 2 8
28 Giorgos Pantelas D Brandon (WHL) 6-2/215 4/24/2008 45 2 18 20 30
29 Brooks Rogowski C Oshawa (OHL) 6-6/225 6/28/2008 31 7 18 25 10
30 Maddox Dagenais C Quebec (QMJHL) 6-3/195 3/27/2008 43 20 17 37 23
31 Tomas Chrenko C HK Nitra (Slovakia) 5-11/170 11/2/2007 33 6 16 22 6
32 Marcus Nordmark LW Djurgardens (Swe U20) 6-1/180 5/4/2008 21 10 20 30 42
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2026 NHL Draft: McKeen’s Early Season Favourites – GOALIES – Carter Casey, Ryder Fetterolf, Parker Snell, William Lacelle, Xavier Wendt https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/2026-nhl-draft-mckeens-early-season-favourites-goalies-carter-casey-ryder-fetterolf-parker-snell-william-lacelle-xavier-wendt/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/2026-nhl-draft-mckeens-early-season-favourites-goalies-carter-casey-ryder-fetterolf-parker-snell-william-lacelle-xavier-wendt/#respond Sat, 01 Nov 2025 12:17:56 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=197555 Read More... from 2026 NHL Draft: McKeen’s Early Season Favourites – GOALIES – Carter Casey, Ryder Fetterolf, Parker Snell, William Lacelle, Xavier Wendt

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Time for another series at McKeen’s from our scouting staff. The 2026 NHL Draft season is well under way, and our scouts have been busy soaking in the action around the globe. Analyzing early season play can be difficult, perhaps even a bit of a ruse. Hot starts aren’t always sustainable, and cold starts are not always indicative. However, players can still catch our attention in positive ways and that’s what this series intends to highlight.

These are Liam Crouse’s GOALIES

Carter Casey
Medicine Hat Tigers - Goalie - 6-foot-2, 181 pounds

Coming into the draft season, few goalies stood out with a D-1 resume as intriguing as Casey's. As a high school goalie from Minnesota with rather uninspiring numbers compared to others who garnered NHL attention in the past, Casey wasn’t on many radars until an untimely injury to the Waterloo Blackhawks starter, which got Casey the call-up. In just 5 regular-season games, Casey won the starter’s crease and took Waterloo to within one goal of winning the Clark Cup, posting a .918 save percentage across all 15 playoff games. Now, in his draft year, Casey has transitioned to the WHL part of an American wave of goalies entering the CHL due to the new rule changes.

In the small amount of WHL action Casey has seen, he has been nothing short of spectacular. In his 30+ save shutout performance over Portland in just his second ever start, Casey played the game nearly perfectly in every moment. He’s demonstrated that at least when he is in the zone, he may possess elite-level traits in every major skill. He’s calm yet moves with intensity, plays aggressively yet knows how to control his depth, has explosiveness and mobility yet is smart and calculated, anticipating and tracking play at a high level. Yet his hands are his best asset, and as of now, are arguably the best I have seen in a draft-eligible goalie.

It’s hard to poke holes through his game so far. The only minor technical concerns he has are potentially inconsistent rebound control and a stance where he can resort to getting low and narrow with some double coverage of his hands over his pads. But at the same time, he’s shown excellent rebound technique in many situations, and with how well he tracks pucks and recovers, he is always mitigating a rebound by being right there. The biggest concern is that his goalie partner, Jordan Switzer, is currently monopolizing the crease. And while it is a strong possibility that Casey could eventually take over, so far and for the foreseeable future, Casey won’t be getting the same opportunity as some of the other goalies in his class, which isn’t ideal for his development. But the skillset is enough to like where Casey looks like he could be a potential starter in the NHL and a strong candidate for a top 64 pick.

Casey gets to the top of the crease on a quick low-to-high slot pass. Shows off the quickness, gets set, and makes a great high glove save with perfect tracking.

Casey aggressively challenges the shooter, establishes really good backflow to match the shooter’s pace, and with great patience, makes an easy stop, staying with the play the whole way.

Casey takes a good route over to follow the player with the puck using a simple shuffle, then adjusts deeper to match the shooter coming in closer, then stuffs the shot with a projected blocker and great eyes on the puck all the way.

Ryder Fetterolf
Ottawa 67’s - Goalie - 6-foot-0, 185 pounds

Another blue-chip American goalie who transitioned to CHL hockey before heading to the NCAA after going 49-0-0 in USHS Prep last year, Ryder Fetterolf is currently one of the best-performing draft-eligible goalies, becoming the leading netminder for a promising Ottawa 67’s team.

Similar to the second round pick from the OHL last year, Jack Ivankovic, Ryder Fetterolf is an undersized goalie oozing with loads of raw physical potential. His skating already looks to be the best in the class, being very precise and extremely quick on his feet. He also possesses a high degree of mobility and has tons of leg power, where he can explode from any position and rob shooters. An intense and aggressive goalie, Fetterolf plays the position with incredible purpose, giving maximal effort on every shuffle and every slide. Due to his aggressive nature, he can be a little erratic at times, moving excessively. But he has a very strong base in his stance, is great positionally managing angles and routes effectively, and is a great tracker, and has shown a decent level of cognitive processing already.

While Fetterolf lacks the size of the normal NHL goalie, it shouldn’t diminish his talent and potential. His level of play early on is very promising, and while he has some areas of his game to tighten up, like rebounds and being calmer in the net, his work ethic and runway as the starter for a great team should give him ample opportunity to improve throughout the year. He’s also fortunate that goalies similar to him, such as Jack Ivankovic, have been breaking down the barrier of small goalies shouldn’t be drafted high, which means that being a top 64 pick is certainly not out of the question.

Fetterolf makes a strong push off the post, exploding laterally and upward through the crease to make the stop.

Here, Fetterolf is reading the play extremely well. He’s matching the speed really well, adjusts deeper to account for the pass, and then uses incredible agility to quickly change direction and stretch out.

Again, Fetterolf uses good routes, adjusting his depth, making a quick and fast push over to the center, grabs more ice, uses backflow to adjust deeper, and makes a good glove save.

Parker Snell
Edmonton Oil Kings - Goalie - 6-foot-2, 179 pounds 

Parker Snell is one of the major Canadian draft-eligible goalies this year, coming out of a decorated CSSHL career before becoming a tandem with the Edmonton Oil Kings, where he’s off to a hot start.

The 6-foot-2 goaltender plays much bigger than his height would suggest. He holds an upright upper body and long, projected arms; he keeps wider of the body to appear to take up more net than his peers of the same size. What’s really impressive, though, is how stable his stance is throughout his movement. Snell’s arms never even twitch unless he’s making a save with his hands. His whole upper body moves as one structured unit with so much precision that it’s hard to believe he’s just 17 years old. It gives him a huge efficiency advantage. His hands are always in the best position to make a save whenever he’s traveling, and he moves so smoothly, with his upper body never lagging. To see this level of detail and calmness in the net already is a major green flag and gives the impression that he has a strong work ethic to achieve such technique and should continue to develop rapidly.

This isn’t to say he lacks raw skills either. He’s an exceptional skater, using the shuffle as his preferred method. He’s quick, and even though he never likes to show it, it’s clear that Snell has a great deal of mobility and power locked away there, as one does not move that smoothly without mobile joints. He tracks pucks perfectly. He will never lose sight of the puck, regardless of where it goes. His saves are thoughtful and meticulous, and he makes sure to track the puck all the way in and then tracks them out, recovering after rebounds with grace. Despite being 4 inches smaller on paper, he plays exactly like Anthony Stolarz, with how he positions himself, and is exceedingly calm and deliberate. There isn’t anything wild about the goalie; he plays in a way where you know what to expect of him, making him a reliable and projectable option, which could potentially lead him to being the number one goalie of this class.

Snell lets out a bad rebound here, but he recovers, making an athletic stretch-out save, having his glove nice and projected.

At the start of the clip, Snell does a great job tracking the pass quickly out from behind the line to the slot. He makes a really good push, extremely smooth and controlled, with some quickness to get out there. Then later, he follows a high-to-low pass, in a perfectly stable stance, calm push, and a really great route to get the stop.

Here, he follows a royal road uphill pass perfectly. He takes a good route to gain depth on the shot, traveling parallel with the puck. He leads with his eyes, then his full upper body moves as one unit with perfectly projected gloves.

William Lacelle
Rimouski Oceanic - Goalie - 6-foot-1, 172 pounds

As a D-1, no goalie was more impressive than William Lacelle over the course of the full year. A rare QMJHL first-round pick, Lacelle ran away with the starter's crease in Rimouski last year after severely outplaying St-Hilaire, a former 3rd string on Team Canada at the world juniors, while being 4 years younger than him. Lacelle boasted a .909 SV% with a whopping 27-5-3 record, becoming one of the best starting goalies in the QMJHL at 16, doing so at 5-foot-11 at the time. This year, Lacelle has hit the ground running, shouldering even more of the workload and putting Rimouski on his back so far.

Lacelle is a born competitor. With Rimouski transitioning into a rebuilding period, Lacelle has to work overtime to keep them afloat and is the best player on the ice in a Rimouski jersey night in and night out to steal games. Lacelle appears to be the pinnacle of athleticism in this class at present. He has incredible control over his edges, and with his gifted mobility, he’s able to explode in any direction when prompted. He loves to aggressively challenge shooters when he can, opting for the old-school challenge at the hash marks to establish gap control on breakaways. He makes the aggressive style work due to his ability to quickly adjust his feet and his awareness of his angling and gauging the shooter’s speeds.

Unlike other aggressive/athletic goalies, such as Samuel Meloche, who possesses similar innate abilities and size, Lacelle is not erratic. He moves with maximum intensity every play, yet is still able to keep his body stable and in check. He has some work to do, particularly on rebounds and potentially his hands, but as a raw goalie prospect with his mental feats of competitiveness and performance, he’s one of the most intriguing goalies in the class.

Lacelle pops up from an RVH to the top of the crease for a slot shot very quickly. He makes a great save, then reacts quickly to the bouncing rebound and explodes laterally to make an awesome save.

A 1-on-0 situation here on Lacelle, he stays very patient on his feet, establishes great backflow to gap the shooter, and calmly stays with the puck all the way to make an easy save.

As Lacelle begins to see the high-to-low pass, he begins to quickly retreat to his post, where he stays open as he recognizes cross-ice passing opportunities. When the pass comes, he just has to make small movements over to get square, thanks to his depth control, and makes the save.

Xavier Wendt
Tri-City Americans - Goalie - 6-foot-1, 165 pounds

As a product of Shattuck St. Mary’s, Wendt was one of the USA’s top goalie prospects coming into this season, and like so many high-end American goalies have done, Wendt has entered the CHL in place of the USHL, joining Tri-City. So far, he’s been running away with the starting job, as he’s a beacon of light for an uninspiring Americans squad with a seemingly unreliable backup.

Xavier Wendt may, in fact, be the fastest goalie in the draft class. His explosive pushes are akin to similarly sized Dustin Wolf, zipping around the crease smoothly like he weighs nothing at all. If Lacelle is the peak of athleticism, Wendt is the peak of skating. His quickness and precision have been astounding so far. He can engage in play at a moment’s notice and be able to seemingly teleport through his crease at will. He’s very smart with his depth management and knows which routes to take, always looking for an opportunity to grab more ice to fill out more net when he can.

If there were a dictionary for the gold standard goalie stance, it would have a picture of Xavier Wendt in it. He holds his gloves in front of him, covers up high very well, and has an appropriate knee bend and hip flexion. It allows him to be very light on his feet, yet always ready for a shot. Wendt has also shown cognitive aptitude, processing play very quickly, and tracking pucks very well. Combining his skating and positioning with an intense play-style and athleticism makes for an extremely exciting goalie to watch, and someone who could go very far in the NHL if he continues developing.

On a rush cross-ice pass, Wendt makes an unbelievably fast and smooth push over. He takes a smart route deeper in the crease and was so fast that he could slide and keep his upper body upright, where others would have had to stretch out instead.

Here, Wendt is simply shuffling along with the play. Stays a bit deeper, so he maximizes travel time. He uses that picture-perfect stance, keeping it nice and stable through motion, and on the last push, he quickly finds the puck and makes a nice glove save.

Completely disengaged from the play as his defense has full possession, an unexpected turnover forces Wendt to jump into being ready. He gets to the top of the crease in a flash, out of being fully relaxed, gets set, and snags a crazy glove save.

 

 

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