[16-Apr-2026 04:15:58 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 [16-Apr-2026 04:16:00 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 [16-Apr-2026 04:15:54 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 [16-Apr-2026 04:15:55 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 [16-Apr-2026 04:15:57 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 Zack Macewen – McKeen's Hockey https://www.mckeenshockey.com The Essential Hockey Annual Fri, 25 Nov 2022 15:52:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 NHL: CULLEN – 20 FANTASY POINTS – Veterans, Jenner, Hertl, Skinner and Fowler Finding their Pace + More https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/nhl-cullen-20-fantasy-points-veterans-jenner-hertl-skinner-fowler-finding-pace/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/nhl-cullen-20-fantasy-points-veterans-jenner-hertl-skinner-fowler-finding-pace/#respond Fri, 25 Nov 2022 15:52:32 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=179682 Read More... from NHL: CULLEN – 20 FANTASY POINTS – Veterans, Jenner, Hertl, Skinner and Fowler Finding their Pace + More

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Each week I dive into the numbers and offer some insights that should help when it comes time to make fantasy hockey decisions.

This week, more veterans that are picking up the pace after slow starts, including Boone Jenner, Tomas Hertl, Jeff Skinner, Cam Fowler and more.

COLUMBUS, OH - OCTOBER 20: Columbus Blue Jackets center Boone Jenner (38) during the first period in a game between the Columbus Blue Jackets and the Nashville Predators on October 20, 2022, at Nationwide Arena in Columbus, Ohio. (Photo by Graham Stokes/Icon Sportswire)

#1 Columbus Blue Jackets center Boone Jenner was an intriguing value play coming into the season because of the possibility that he could end up playing on a line with Johnny Gaudreau. He managed one goal and four points in the first 10 games of the season but has picked up the pace since then. In his past nine games, Jenner has seven goals, 10 points, 35 shots on goal, 14 hits, and 12 blocked shots. That is ticking a lot of boxes for fantasy managers.

#2 After scoring a goal in the first game of the season, San Jose Sharks center Tomas Hertl did not light the lamp again until the 14th game of the season. After a slow start, Hertl is re-establishing his place as a quality point producer and has four goals and 12 assists in the past 12 games. He is centering San Jose’s top line, with Timo Meier and Kevin Labanc on the wings, and the trio is controlling 57.7% of expected goals and 70.0% of actual goals during five-on-five play.

#3 Following a bounce-back season in 2021-2022, when he scored 33 goals, Buffalo Sabres left winger Jeff Skinner opened this season with no goals and two assists through the first six games. Since then, Skinner has nine goals and 19 points with 47 shots on goal in 14 games. Skinner typically does most of his scoring at even strength (28 goals at evens, five on the power play last season) but has notched a power play goal in back-to-back games.

#4 St. Louis Blues center Robert Thomas is known primarily for his playmaking ability, but he has added a new wrinkle to his offensive repertoire. In the past eight games, Thomas has two goals and 10 points, with 18 shots on goal. That shot rate of 2.25 shots per game is higher than usual for Thomas and has elevated his shots per game rate for this season to 1.68 shots on goal per game, the highest rate of his career. If Thomas is going to be a more willing shooter, that could unlock additional goal-scoring production.

#5 Phillip Danault continues to be a strong addition to the Los Angeles Kings. The two-way center has contributed four goals and 13 points in his past 16 games and his line, with Trevor Moore and Viktor Arvidsson has been excellent. They have controlled 62.0% of expected goals and 65.1% of goals during five-on-five play.

#6 Third year Buffalo Sabres center Dylan Cozens appears to be coming into his own, with five goals and 15 points in 20 games. In the past four games, Cozens has four points (1 G, 3 A) but has also put 19 shots on goal. That elevated shot rate would bode well for his future point production. Cozens has rolled through a variety of linemates this season but has had some interesting results with rookies Jack Quinn and J.J. Peterka on his wings. That line has controlled 70.9% of expected goals during five-on-five play in the small sample of 41 minutes together.

#7 Veteran Anaheim Ducks defenseman Cam Fowler managed just one assist through 15 games this season, but suddenly pucks are going in and Fowler has tallied eight points (2 G, 6 A) during a five-game point streak. Fowler is averaging 25 minutes of ice time per game this season, the highest average time on ice in his career. It says something unfortunate about the Anaheim power play that Fowler is tied for the team lead with three power play points.

#8 It appears that Detroit Red Wings defenseman Filip Hronek is finding his form. In the past eight games, Hronek has put up 10 points (5 G, 5 A) with 26 shots on goal. While Hronek is not going to continue scoring on 11.3% of his shots, his improving shot rate is encouraging. Hronek is averaging 2.26 shots on goal per game, clearly better than any of his previous NHL seasons. Hronek’s six power play points leads Detroit defensemen.

#9 Tampa Bay Lightning left winger Alex Killorn started the season with three points (1 G, 2 A) in eight games and whispers started about whether the 33-year-old could still fill a complementary offensive role with Tampa Bay. Consider the past 11 games his response. Killorn has 12 points (5 G,7 A) though he has just 19 shots on goal. That’s where the concern lies with Killorn. He is averaging 1.53 shots on goal per game this season and that is, rather comfortably, the lowest per-game shot rate of his career.

#10 With forwards Scott Laughton and Travis Konecny out of the Flyers lineup, Noah Cates, Morgan Frost, and Zack MacEwen are getting top-six forward time and Cates and Frost are on Philadelphia’s top power play unit. Cates has six points (2 G, 4 A) and 18 shots on goal in the past nine games. Frost scored a goal in Philadelphia’s last game, but that gives him two points (1 G, 1 A) in his past 16 games. MacEwen has three assists in the past five games and has played more than 17 minutes in each of the past three games. Taking this into account, Philadelphia’s eight-game winless streak is not so mysterious.

#11 One of the reasons that the Arizona Coyotes have not collapsed as expected is that second year goaltender Karel Vejmelka has been outstanding. The 26-year-old netminder is on a good run recently. In his past eight appearances, he has won five of seven decisions and has a tidy .939 save percentage. Vejmelka showed some promise as a rookie last season, but there was little reason to believe that he would suddenly be a game-changing force.

#12 As injuries continue to plague the Caroina Hurricanes goaltenders, Pyotr Kochetkov has picked up more playing time. The 23-year-old signed a four-year contract extension, so he is looking like Carolina’s goaltender of the future and has a .908 save percentage in a handful of starts for the Hurricanes. It also looks like Kochetkov will get more action to prove that he is NHL ready. Playing behind a strong Hurricanes team brings fantasy value for any goaltender so Kochetkov has some appeal as long as he is in the NHL.

#13 As the Toronto Maple Leafs try to figure out how to overcome injuries to defensemen Jake Muzzin T.J. Brodie, and Morgan Rielly, GM Kyle Dubas acquired Conor Timmins from the Arizona Coyotes. Timmins has had his own difficulty staying healthy and the 24-year-old blueliner has played in just 41 NHL games but has a track record of positive shot differentials in that relatively small NHL sample. Timmins has seven assists in 41 NHL games, but has been able to contribute offensively in both the OHL and AHL. Of course, Timmins really has the golden ticket when it comes to the Maple Leafs – he played three seasons for the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds of the Ontario Hockey League.

#14 Last season, Calgary Flames defenseman Nikita Zadorov played a career-low 16:55 per game. This season, the punishing 6-foot-5 blueliner has played a career-high 20:44 per game. That increase in ice time has resulted in greater production. Zadorov is averaging 2.16 shots on goal per game, easily the top mark for his career. He is registering three hits per game, the fourth time in his career he has reached that threshold. Zadorov has also recorded 1.26 blocked shots per game, the third highest rate of his career. All of this is to say that Zadorov is finding himself in unusual territory – he is relevant for fantasy managers in deep leagues.

#15 November’s five-on-five individual expected goals per 60 minutes leaders (minimum 50 minutes): Brady Tkachuk (1.79), Pat Maroon (1.60), Timo Meier (1.52), Tage Thompson (1.45), and Kyle Connor (1.45).

The next five: Sheldon Dries (1.42), William Carrier (1.40), Zach Hyman (1.40), Sonny Milano (1.39), and Nikita Kucherov (1.38).

That Top 10 includes several forwards that tend to ply their trade on the fourth line, as well as Milano, who was widely available in the off season after the Anaheim Ducks cut him loose.

#16 Buffalo Sabres center Tage Thompson could be a sleeper candidate for the Rocket Richard Trophy as the league’s top goal-scorer. Thompson has 13 goals in 20 games, which puts him three behind the three-way tie at the top between Connor McDavid, Jason Robertson, and Bo Horvat, but Thompson has turned into an elite shot generator. In the past 14 games, Thompson has scored a dozen goals on 80 shots, an average of 5.71 shots per game.

#17 The skaters with the highest rate of five-on-five expected goals for per 60 minutes in November (minimum 50 minutes): Matthew Tkachuk (4.44), Brady Tkachuk (4.40), Jimmy Vesey (4.10), Nikita Kucherov (3.96), and Erik Brannstrom (3.96).

The next five: Jack Quinn (3.91), Claude Giroux (3.74), Tim Stutzle (3.70), Chad Ruhwedel (3.68), and Chris Kreider (3.67).

Looking for potential value from that group, Quinn might be most intriguing. The Sabres rookie is widely available in fantasy leagues and has seven points (2 G, 5 A) in his past seven games.

#18 There are five lines that have played at least 50 minutes together at five-on-five this season that have scored at least six goals per 60 minutes. The highest scoring trio is Edmonton’s Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Connor McDavid, and Zach Hyman (7.35 GF/60), which is not a big surprise, thanks to No. 97. The line with the second highest scoring rate is Detroit’s Dominik Kubalik, Dylan Larkin, and David Perron (6.70), which is a little more unexpected. Vancouver’s line of Andrei Kuzmenko, Elias Pettersson, and Ilya Mikheyev (6.58) ranks third. The Islanders line of Josh Bailey, Mathew Barzal, and Oliver Wahlstrom (6.18) ranks fourth. Dallas’ dominant top line of Jason Robertson, Joe Pavelski, and Roope Hintz (6.00) rounds out the top five.

#19 The lowest-scoring line, goalless in nearly 65 minutes together, was San Jose’s Tomas Hertl between Timo Meier, and Alexander Barabanov. Remember the stats from point No. 2, about how dominant Hertl and Meier have been with Kevin Labanc and that’s an indicator of how much a change of one player can affect the outcome for a line.

#20 There are three lines that have played at least 50 minutes together that have controlled more than 69% of expected goals during five-on-five play. All three lines play for the New Jersey Devils. Jesper Boqvist, Dawson Mercer, and Yegor Sharangovich (73.9 xGF%) rank first. Erik Haula, Jack Hughes, and Jesper Bratt (70.8 xGF%) rank second. Tomas Tatar, Nico Hischier, and Fabian Zetterlund (69.3 xGF%) rank third. Dominant play like that up and down the lineup should make it no surprise that the Devils just had a 13-game winning streak.

*Advanced stats via Natural Stat Trick and Evolving Hockey.

 

 

 

 

 

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MCKEEN’S 2022-23 NHL YEARBOOK – PHILADELPHIA FLYERS – NHL Player Profiles https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2022-23-nhl-yearbook-pihiladelphia-flyers-nhl-player-profiles/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2022-23-nhl-yearbook-pihiladelphia-flyers-nhl-player-profiles/#respond Fri, 16 Sep 2022 20:59:20 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=177476 Read More... from MCKEEN’S 2022-23 NHL YEARBOOK – PHILADELPHIA FLYERS – NHL Player Profiles

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BOSTON, MA - JANUARY 13: Philadelphia Flyers goalie Carter Hart (79) in warm up before a game between the Boston Bruins and the Philadelphia Flyers on January 13, 2022, at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Fred Kfoury III/Icon Sportswire)

FORWARDS

Sean Couturier

What the Flyers get out of Sean Couturier will be their x-factor. Their workhorse center was limited to only 29 games after a back injury and subsequent surgery ended his season. He was having a tough year even before that, scoring only 7 points at five-on-five despite playing in a top-line role with Giroux and Konecny. In a normal year, he gives the Flyers a chance to win every game with how effective he is at driving the bus against top matchups, bringing the rest of the team along with him. Last year was a normal year for him in the play-driving department, but he didn’t have the scoring to back it up. The concern for Philly now is what is Couturier’s “new normal.” Is a guy who has played through a lot of injuries and last year was his most serious to date. Some players heal from back surgery, but it can also derail careers. Couturier plays a less physically demanding game than most shutdown center, so it’s possible that he can get back to his old self. Entering the first year of an eight-year contract, the Flyers future rests on his shoulders.

Kevin Hayes

It’s hard to think of a player who had a tougher season than Kevin Hayes. Between the tragic passing of his brother in the off-season and undergoing two abdominal surgeries the previous year, he was a guy everyone was rooting for. Unfortunately, he spent more time on the IR than on the ice yet again, this time with an infection in his groin that had to be drained. With the Flyers in rebuild mode, they’re hoping he can be a good leader for some of the new talent coming in and that he can return his 2019-20 form. While never a star, Hayes was a good goal-scorer and played an important role in bolstering the Flyers transition game. He was excellent at using his big body to create space for guys like Farabee and Konecny and getting them the puck with some space. With three core muscle procedures, it’s uncertain if he can play that type of workload again, but he remains the Flyers best option at 2C for the time being.

Joel Farabee

Two seasons were all the Flyers needed to see to make Joel Farabee part of their core, signing him to a six-year deal before the start of last season. To say it was rocky would be an understatement. He started the year off with a bang, scoring in his first three games and followed it up with a stretch of having only one goal through American Thanksgiving (about 14 games) before going on another three-game streak where he found the back of the net. The rest of the year followed a similar patter, scoring in bunches and going dormant for a stretch of 10+ games. It’s not that different than most goal-scorers, but the concern with Farabee is that there’s no shot volume or chance creation to back it up. He’s the type who will score a lot of tap-in goals or create off turnovers, so he’s more prone to streaks like this than others. He made improvements as a passer, but the Flyers will be hoping for more consistency out of him next year. Unfortunately, he will be recovering from neck surgery to start the year and won’t be available until November at the earliest.

James van Riesmdyk

Once the master of making skilled plays in front of the net, van Riemsdyk still has something to offer as a scoring winger. The way that he creates offense might be a little one-dimensional as a rebound hound, but JVR’s always brought a strong game away from the puck. One of the better forecheckers in the league while he was in his prime and someone who can help kill the clock while playing with a lead. Surprisingly led the Flyers in goals last year with a meager 24 tallies, nine of them coming on the power play, and was one of the few players who gave them some form of consistency. He plays the type of game where he’s easy to slide onto any line and give you decent results, which makes him an intriguing trade option while he’s in the final year of his contract. The Flyers are in a position to pump up his value if this is the route they want to go, as he was one of the few guys who produced on a terrible power play last year and will always score a healthy amount of goals because he creates so many chances from close range. Pairing him with a great passer or a strong territorial line could fetch Philadelphia a decent return come March.

Travis Konecny

Figuring out Travis Konecny’s ceiling will be an important part of the Flyers next chapter. Not even three years ago, he looked like a player who could regularly score 20+ goals and be one of the better right-wingers in the league. The past two seasons he has scored 27 total goals in 129 games, stuck in a major shooting percentage rut last year. There were parts of Konecny’s game that stayed consistent, as he still has the wheels to gain the zone and create off the rush like he used to. The shot volume is there, but the chance creation isn’t as high quality as it used to be. Part of it might be not having Claude Giroux by his side, as the two had great chemistry with stretch plays to get Konecny rush chances with speed. He had to alter his game a bit the past year, moving to a line with Sean Couturier or Scott Laughton and acting as more of a playmaker. Konecny had trouble getting space to shoot on his own, but his passing still gives him some high-end skill. He made the most out of a revolving door of linemates last year, leading the Flyers in assists and showing that he isn’t just a guy who can score off the rush. His play has been inconsistent the past two years, but he started to look like a guy who can drive his own line without an elite talent to supplement him. He should be the Flyers top offensive option behind Couturier next year.

Scott Laughton

A solid middle-six forward who won’t move the needle but keep the dial at a neutral pace when he’s out there. Laughton will have flashes of high-end skill and will go on a scoring tear from time-to-time, but for the most part he’s just a steadying presence who will work hard and stick to his assignments. The Flyers depend on him more than his statline suggests, as he has spent a lot of time alongside Kevin Hayes and James van Riemsdyk the past couple of years with some special teams’ time on top of that. He had to pick up a lot of slack with Couturier out last year, used all over the lineup and he eventually found some chemistry with Travis Konency. The two connected on some great deflection plays and injected some life into the Flyers offense for a brief spell. Like for most of his career, it was just a brief spell for Laughton and a head injury in early March all but ended his season. With new forwards coming into the fold, Laughton will likely slide into more of a pure third line role, but he is the type coaches will move up if the one of the top lines needs a spark.

Owen Tippett

It might not feel like it, but Owen Tippett is entering his third NHL season, albeit the first one where he actually has an opening night lineup spot penciled in. He showed in Florida that he isn’t afraid to shoot the puck and can command the offensive zone when he’s out there. The ability to score at the NHL level, however, is another story. He is currently stuck on 18 career goals in 115 games. He showed some improvement last year getting to the 10-goal mark but still leaving some goals on the table relative to how much offense he creates in volume. It’s nothing out of the ordinary for a prospect who scored from distance at lower levels, but him taking the next step would go along way for the Flyers rebuild. If he doesn’t, he’s still a solid winger and having a guy in your lineup who can create chances is still a plus. Injuries should keep him in the Flyers lineup come training camp, but he is more of a sleeper pick for being an impact player next year.

Cam Atkinson

One of John Tortella’s trusty horses from the Blue Jackets, Cam Atkinson was an early fan-favorite for the Flyers last year. He got off to a roaring start with six goals in his first seven games, which summed up how most of the season went for him as it was a tale of peaks and valleys. He scored only twice in November but responded well after that. He was the most reliable player on the Flyers for offense and all-around play during the doldrums of the season, tallying 28 points in 32 games from December through February. He ended the season on a tough note with only 5 goals in his last 21 games and recorded only 3 assists in his last 12. On the whole, it was a solid bounce-back year for the former Jackets sniper, although the process of getting there was a little rocky. He’s a shoot-first player and that’s not going to change but carrying so much of a workload for the Flyers seemed to wear on him as the season went on. You can usually count on his line to be on the right side of the goal and scoring chance battle and that fell off dramatically as the season went on. Inconsistent linemates from trades and injuries along with becoming a “go-to” guy at 33 years of age will do that. He should be a fixture in the Flyers lineup and is one of their more proven goal-scorers along with van Riemsdyk.

Morgan Frost

There were reasons to be excited about Morgan Frost’s potential heading into 2021. He showed flashes of becoming a future top-six player in his brief stint with the Flyers two years ago, showing a great knack for the details of the game as well as being a great playmaker. Shoulder surgery prematurely ended his 2021 season, and he didn’t make the Flyers out of training camp to start last year. Called up in late November, the former first round pick had an okay start centering a line with Cam Atkinson and Joel Farabee, getting on the scoresheet and looking like the guy they saw back in late 2019. As the season went on and the Flyers struggles continued, Frost became more of just another guy than a difference maker. Not doing anything bad but struggling to standout. Part of that is being relegated to a more of a grind line role and the other is just him struggling to translate his high-end skill to the pace of the game. They go hand-in-hand when you’re a player like Frost whose best skill is his passing and vision. It’s tough to setup any plays when the puck is always in the corner or you’re chasing the game. He’s an interesting puzzle piece for John Tortorella. There’s a lot of raw skill with Frost and encouraging him to lead the play a little more and use the tools that got him drafted could go a long way to him sticking around at the NHL level.

DEFENSE

Tony DeAngelo

Given yet another chance to turn his career around, DeAngelo’s one-year deal with the Hurricanes appeared to do just that. He quarterbacked a power play that was top-third in the league for most of the year and earned a promotion to the team’s top defense pair with Jaccob Slavin after a couple months. It was a good setup for him with Slavin handling most of the work along the boards and DeAngelo just needing to read the play and jump in when he needed to. It allowed him to play to his strengths and spend more time in the offensive zone, an area where he’s very proficient. That said, it also showed his limitations. He’s a smaller defenseman who doesn’t handle forecheck pressure well and his passive nature in the defensive zone left him open to some blown assignments and misreads. The hope is that his talents on offense would outweigh the bad and that he could keep his emotions in check, which he did up until the playoffs when the games got tougher. The Flyers will have a more difficult time utilizing DeAngelo in the same role unless Provorov has a rebound season. There is a lot he can do for a power play that will be restructured this year, but they aren’t as well-equipped to play him top-pair minutes and his five-on-five impact will take a hit. DeAngelo was able to coast for most of the year in Carolina and he won’t have that luxury with the Flyers.

Ivan Provorov

There are tough minutes and then there is playing top-pairing minutes on a struggling team. Provorov fell into that class, playing his usual 24-25 minutes a night and going through the motions once the Flyers fell into a rut. At the age of 25, he has a career’s worth of miles on his tires and his level of play usually follows the rest of the team. When the Flyers are good, Provorov’s an effective, mobile top-pair defenseman who does a little of everything for you. When the team is struggling, he has a hard time helping the team dictate the play. It might speak to his own limitations as a player that even if he has the conditioning to play heavy minutes, he doesn’t have the skillset to carry the defense on his back. Provorov still does a lot of things well and skates better than most forwards, but his game is a little more reactionary now. He’s more effective at angling off forwards into a corner than going for the poke-check at the line. He can make safe plays out of the zone to mitigate damage but gets knocked off the puck more often now when retrieving dump-ins. The mistakes added up more than they used to, and the Flyers plans to supplement him were foiled with Ryan Ellis’ injury problems. He will be the most interesting player to watch under the new coaching staff, as John Tortorella and Brad Shaw have a great track record with defensemen and will find a way to take some of the burden in the d-zone off Provorov.

Travis Sanheim

One of the few players on the Flyers who objectively had a good year and the only Flyer defenseman to post a positive on-ice goal differential. Sanheim’s accomplishments last year might not seem like a big deal, but it was a big development for the Flyers in what was as tumultuous year. Having a player who didn’t let the team’s struggles drag down his own game is a big deal for a rebuilding team and potentially gives them a building block. Sanheim has more of a “jack of all trade” skillset by the eye but had more moments where he could drag the Flyers back into a game with a great rush or a pass to setup a scoring chance. The downside for the Flyers is that they already signed him to a two-year deal that will take him to UFA status after this season, giving them huge decision to make. You’d figure Sanheim would figure into their long-term plans. He showed last year that he can drive play and bounce-back in a tough environment, but with three defensemen already making over $5 mil., things start to get dicey. As good as Sanheim is, he doesn’t produce a lot of points and that could work in the Flyers favor as far as a new contract goes. Seeing if he can repeat his success from last year will likely be the deciding factor on if he’s part of the Flyers long-term plans.

Rasmus Ristolainen

Ristolainen’s first season as a Flyer was similar to his many years as a Sabre. Poor underlying numbers mixed with a wide range of opinions on his play from observers. Casted in more of a pure defensive role, Ristolainen acted as a safety valve for Travis Sanheim, not used on the power play and staying high in the zone instead of pinching for offense. It’s a little different from his peak years, as Buffalo got a lot of mileage out of him on the power play, an area of the game he thrived in. With the Flyers, he almost never touched the puck and if he did, it was gone within a second. His job was to throw hits and protect the front of the net. Whether or not he did that depends on who you ask but the Flyers saw enough to want to keep him around for five more years, re-signing him around the trade deadline despite interest from other teams. Shutdown defensemen come in all forms and players who throw their weight around like Ristolainen are still highly regarded in hockey circles. It gets magnified when they’re casted in a pure defensive role and you see a lot of good mixed with bad. Some might see Ristolainen putting himself out of position to throw a big hit or chasing a mistake, others might laud him for his willingness to play physical. Tortorella’s been one to value players like him (see Dan Girardi and David Savard) so he should continue to get heavy defensive usage in Philly next year.

GOALTENDING

Carter Hart

There might be no goaltender in the NHL being asked to do more with less than Philadelphia’s Carter Hart. The Flyers, who have struggled for years to establish a consistent baseline in net, responded to a lackluster third year in the league for Hart by adding a struggling reclamation project in Martin Jones in 2021-22 – then thanked Hart for a moderate statistical bounce-back by walking Jones in free agency and failing to replace him with just a month and change left before opening night.

The woes aren’t entirely the team’s fault, as there was little way to predict that Russian-born prospect goaltender Ivan Fedotov would be detained by the Russian military and hospitalized after being sent to a remote detention center. Still, it’s hard once again to piece together what the Flyers are hoping for as they enter the 2022-23 campaign offering Hart no backup outside of prospect Felix Sandstrom. Hart’s game is based on a foundation that sees the Canadian netminder operate from a central reset position, hinging out to challenge shots as they approach but returning to a consistent and established ‘home base’ once the action has died down. That makes it hard to feel overly confident that he can regain his form, which relies on accuracy and precision to go with predictive tracking over reactionary movements, when being asked to provide high-volume reps behind a team that still hasn’t managed to right the ship. If he can’t start off the year with his technique in top form, he’ll be trying to fix his game from a tougher position if he doesn’t have reinforcements. The good news, though, is that the vote of confidence the team is clearly giving him with their current goaltending depth offerings could be the catalyst he needs to shake off the goalie ‘twistys’ he seemed to suffer during his last few years. It’s too early to write off what Philadelphia is trying to do – even if it’s also too early to applaud it, per se.

Projected starts: 60-65 

 

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McKeen’s 2020-21 Hockey Yearbook: Vancouver Canucks Top 20 Prospects https://www.mckeenshockey.com/uncategorized/mckeens-2020-21-hockey-yearbook-vancouver-canucks-top-20-prospects/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/uncategorized/mckeens-2020-21-hockey-yearbook-vancouver-canucks-top-20-prospects/#respond Mon, 21 Dec 2020 22:39:00 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=167869 Read More... from McKeen’s 2020-21 Hockey Yearbook: Vancouver Canucks Top 20 Prospects

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McKeen's Top 20 New York Rangers 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. Vasili Podkolzin, RW (10th overall, 2019. Previous ranking: 1)

Podkolzin is a dynamic winger with a lot of good assets in his toolbox. He is a strong skater with terrific balance and is technically solid. He can get to top speed within a few strides. He is exceptionally good at puck protection and has a creative hockey mind. He works hard and plays a physical game. He still lacks a bit of consistency in his production, but he has been a teenager playing against men and he gets pushed out physically when he tries to create. He is not a typical transition player; he likes to play tight to the body and create from down low which makes a lack of physical strength a natural problem. Podkolzin also sometimes tries to be too creative instead of just making the easy play. He will always aid his team’s puck possession with elite skills and do good things with that possession. Although he did not score many points, his underlying numbers were good, and it is expected that he will receive a bigger role in the KHL this season. He has one more year with St Petersburg after which he could compete for a top six role with the Canucks. - JH

  1. Nils Hoglander, LW (40th overall, 2019. Previous ranking: 2)

WJC star Hoglander plays intensively and is particularly strong in the corners and around the net. He will set up a power play or drive the play all over the ice. His passes to the slot were more frequent during the WJC than in the SHL as he was constantly trying to create. He is small and is not to able to break away from his opponents in the corners in the same way at the senior level as he did at the World Juniors, and that could be a concern as he prepares to transition to North America and the NHL, as his game prevails through stick handling, covering the puck and making quick turns and creative plays. That type of game will be tough for him in the NHL and he will need to vary his game. Hoglander was supposed to start the 2020-21 season with the Canucks organization, trying to earn a spot in the NHL; While he waits for the NHL to start, he has returned to the SHL, where his offensive game has begun to take off. - JH

  1. Olli Juolevi, D (5th overall, 2016. Previous ranking: 3)

After playing his first nearly full season as a professional with AHL Utica, Juolevi seemed to be playing back to the same high level as made him the fifth overall pick in 2016. He brings a high hockey IQ and composure to any situation and as he grew more comfortable facilitating more scoring chances as well. He is a good skater, a good puck handler, and the type of player you forget is on the ice until he helps out in scoring or putting the puck in the net himself. He should certainly be making his long-awaited debut with the Canucks’ bottom pairing in 2020-21, where he will stay until he has mastered the NHL game enough to move up the lineup. Juolevi will simply have to be more physical to differentiate himself and to earn added trust from the coaching staff, learning to protect himself better in an organization that is not known for their grit. - SC

  1. Jett Woo, D (37th overall, 2018. Previous ranking: 4)

Woo has the potential to play on a second pairing but lacks the offensive toolkit that many were expecting after his eye-popping seasons in Moose Jaw. He is an effective, physical, in-your-face defender who skates well and competes hard for every inch of ice. He is tenacious in his own zone using big hits, stick checks, good reads and aggression to minimize the opponent’s ability to get to his net. His gap control is good, and opponents know he will step up if they bobble the puck or show any hesitation in the neutral zone. He is a fine passer, capable of making good plays to start the transition, however his decision making in the offensive zone is concerning. His vision is good, but he frequently tries to do too much and turns over the puck at inopportune times. While Woo is capable of recovering better than most, he is more the complementary defender than the one the dictates the offense. He plays the game the right way and has an edge and abrasiveness in handling himself. He is willing to jump into the rush and has the speed to get himself into the play as a trailer. - VG

  1. Jack Rathbone, D (95th overall, 2017. Previous ranking: 5)

From the moment Rathbone stepped on the ice at Harvard, even as a freshman, he made an impact. While there is usually an adjustment period for rookies when transitioning to college hockey, especially for those who come straight from prep school as he did, some, like Rathbone, are exceptions. An offensive defenseman, last year he ranked fourth on the team in scoring, leading all Crimson defenders. His shot is characterized by a quick release. He appeared on the team’s second penalty kill unit and the first power play unit. He was possibly the team’s best puck mover on the power play. He is excellent at running the unit from the point. Defensively, he has a very active and quick stick and is able to poke check effectively, minimizing the negative impact of his smaller stature. Rahtbone’s offensive capabilities as well as his solid defensive skills give him a legitimate chance at making the NHL in a top half of roster role, a journey which will move to the professional ranks next season. - JS

  1. Will Lockwood, RW (64th overall, 2016. Previous ranking: 6)

On the small side, but incredibly feisty, Lockwood spent the full four seasons at the University of Michigan, before finally signing an ELC with the Canucks shortly after COVID-19 paused play the world over. The former USNTDP grinder had an up-and-down collegiate career with the Wolverines, but his best two seasons were certainly his last two. He is a strong skater who can flash creativity with the puck in the offensive zone, can tend to play too deliberately as well, negating his inherent skill set. When he plays decisively, Lockwood has been a disruptive presence at the collegiate level. He plays a physical game, especially when he plays angry and relishes open ice checking. He is the type of player who could be ready for the NHL within one season of turning pro, but whose reasonable upside is never more than a bottom six winger, who could frustrate with the hints of more, but who can’t show it consistently enough for the possibility to be reasonable. - RW

  1. Michael DiPietro, G (64th overall, 2017. Previous ranking: 7)

DiPietro brings a new definition to the word ‘focus’ with an ultra-dialed-in and intense personality. He performs reliably well every game and gives maximum effort, no matter the opponent. He has a good track record for performing well under pressure and for keeping a good attitude, going above and beyond when it comes to athleticism, which he must due to his smaller size. He reads plays well and does well in one on one situations however he will have to battle harder to get to his position in net scrambles, as he works towards a permanent NHL role. The future is bright for DiPietro, who is so naturally gifted with the right instincts, attitude, and athleticism needed to be a top level goaltender, look for him to have a go at an NHL job within the next season should he start off the upcoming season the same way with Utica. - SC

  1. Zack MacEwen, RW (Undrafted Free Agent, signed Mar. 3, 2017. Previous ranking: 8)

MacEwen is not a cookie cutter smooth-skating type. Instead he is the hard working, crash and bang guy that brings a lot of energy to a roster. He is not the most graceful of skaters and does not stand out for skill either, but he does well at completing the little things. He is a steady net front presence, forces turnovers, and plays the body at the right times. A little clumsy at times, he has learned to be a good backchecker and defend well in his own zone, however he still needs to work on his passing in order to avoid turnovers and better contribute to the breakout. It is no surprise that MacEwen has earned a spot on the Vancouver Canucks 2020 playoff roster as he brings the right energy and can get the job done in a way that the other players cannot, which is why he is an asset to their bottom six, and should continue to play at the highest level as long as his cap hit remains low. – SC

  1. Jacob Truscott, D (144th overall, 2020. Previous ranking: NA)

In every game with the USNDTP, there will be one or two moments where Truscott authors a play that makes you take notice. And each of those moments were substantially different. Those good plays would not be at all possible if he were not an above average skater, with impressive acceleration, very good edges and pivots and top speed, and mostly incredible backwards skating. The package plays into his heads-up game. He reads and processes the game fast and is very decisive when the situation calls for action. He can react correctly to a broken play. He can also excel in driving the play, as he can set and alternately vary the pace. He plays with mature composure. On the other hand, Truscott lacks flash. He has a decent wrist shot from the point, but not a power play quarterback rocket. He can skate with the puck but doesn’t often execute high level trickery. He can time the odd big hit but lacks the big frame to play that style with regularity. At the end of the day, he can leverage what he has into a long and successful career on a good team’s second pairing. – RW

  1. Joni Jurmo, D (82nd overall, 2020. Previous ranking NA)

Jurmo is a big-risk/big-reward player. The physical tools are impossible to miss. He skates beautifully, with a fast and powerful stride. His edges are solid and his has four-way mobility, and the speed is remarkable. His carries out of his own end are thrilling. On the other hand, he is still incredibly raw. He has not often shown the ability to slow the game down, regroup and let the play come to him. He has shown significant improvement in his own zone work this year, to his credit, reading the play better and forcing opposing forwards to the outside, but he still has a way to go in this regard. There could also be some concern that he lacks experience at high levels, or at prestigious age-group tournaments. Jurmo recently moved from the Jokerit system to JyP, where he is expected to play in Liiga this season. If Vancouver can be patient, he represents a potential play on a future top four defender with dynamic qualities. He has come a long way in the last two seasons and still has room for added development. He might not get there, but it was a gamble worth taking. – RW

  1. Kole Lind, RW (33rd overall, 2017. Previous ranking: 9)

Lind has finally had the breakout confidence-replenishing year that staff and writers were hoping for. He is a good shooter and good at making quick plays and reacting to what is going on around him. He can be relied upon to play special teams, however he is not the smoothest of skaters, but he makes up for it in the way he gets to the net and his work ethic on the forecheck. Lind will certainly have to get faster and more agile on his blades, but his hands and his passing are good and lead him oftentimes to contributing to good scoring opportunities or assisting on plays. He will most likely earn his chance to crack the Canucks lineup this coming season as a potential third liner alternating in the bottom six if he finds another gear for his skating and on ice agility while continuing to work on his two way play. - SC

  1. Brogan Rafferty, D (Undrafted Free Agent, signed 1, 2019. Previous ranking: 10)

After leading the AHL Utica Comets in points for defensemen it is safe to say that Rafferty is a strong and dependable defenseman in the Vancouver pipeline. All of his skills are good, and his positioning and hockey IQ are what lead him to stand out, earning points in nearly every game. He will need to get a bit tougher when it comes to physicality and taking the body, but aside from that there is nothing of concern. He brings a great two-way game and is nearly always in the right position which could be an asset for the Canucks looking into next season, despite this past season only being Rafferty’s rookie year. A late bloomer, his potential may be surprisingly high because of the progression he has had so far, however when he gets the call up look to see him as part of the bottom four to start proving himself. - SC

  1. Aidan McDonough, LW (195th overall, 2019. Previous ranking: 12)

McDonough’s value may turn out to be higher than his seventh-round draft pick status. After graduating from prep school at Thayer Academy, McDonough spent one season in the USHL with the Cedar Rapids RoughRiders before entering the collegiate ranks. As a freshman, he was one of the highest-scoring players for Northeastern and the highest-scoring freshman by a mile and earned the team’s rookie of the year award. He has a big frame but could be stronger on the puck, although he is not afraid to engage in puck battles. While he needs to pump his legs on his strides, he is very hard to contain in the offensive zone as he glides around. McDonough is a sharp passer and can score from multiple spots but buzzes frequently around the net. While he certainly held his own as a freshman, he is still raw and needs to refine his game more before turning pro. - JS

  1. Marc Michaelis, RW (Undrafted Free Agent, signed Mar. 19, 2020. Previous ranking: 13)

The NCAA’s top scorer over the past four seasons, Michaelis was a First Team WCHA All American through each of his four seasons at Minnesota State. The slight German winger already had a lengthy history of high-level international play, including two appearances at the World Championships for his homeland before signing as a free agent with Vancouver a few days into the COVID-19 lockdown. Michaelis makes himself seen through high end skating ability, which allowed him to skate laps around the WCHA competition, as well as very interesting playmaking potential, with vision and creativity. The skating will have to be his ticket to the NHL though, as his playmaking ability has been more a function of brains than pure skill, leaving in question how much those brains will allow him to play up as a pro. If Michaelis makes the adjustment to the pro pace and continues to make his presence felt in the offensive end, he could push himself up to the highest level for a lengthy stay. – RW

  1. Dmitri Zlodeyev, C (175th overall, 2020. Previous ranking: NA)

Zlodeyev is a strong two-way center who shows extremely well off the puck. He uses his strong skating to apply pressure on the forecheck and was one of the anchors of Russia’s penalty killing unit at the U18 level. Additionally, he excels at the faceoff dot. As an offensive player, he is at his best working the half wall, where he can use his quick feet to elude checks and create lanes to attack. He is more of a playmaker than a goal scorer but is willing to drive the net and can finish from in tight with a quick release. The remaining question is his upside. Zlodeyev is a skill player, but it is not clearly enough yet to project to a scoring line role in North America, and without the strength to play in a bottom six role, he may be stuck as a tweener. His early work this year in the VHL (Russia’s second men’s league) is promising enough that he might just make it work, even if he is only in the early stages of his journey. – BO

  1. Linus Karlsson, C (Trade: Feb. 25, 2019. Originally: 87th overall, 2018 [San Jose]. Previous ranking: 14)

A big center with nice hands who was acquired in a pure Swedish prospect trade, as Jonathan Dahlen was sent the other way to San Jose. Karlsson is not as a big name in Sweden as Dahlen is but Karlsson is a decent prospect in his own right, and he scored 40 points in Allsvenskan as a 20-year-old. He is an offensive minded center with an above average shot and above average hands. He is not elite an any way but a decent depth prospect, and if everything goes well, he could be a good third line option in the future. He needs to work on his skating and play at a faster pace to reach the highest level. He will have a couple more years of development before he can be ready to compete for a spot. I would be surprised if he has a long NHL career, but I can definitely see him being a good SHL player in near future. – JH

  1. Guillaume Brisebois, D (66th overall, 2015. Previous ranking: 11)

The last three seasons with the Utica Comets for Brisebois have not gone as originally hoped since his near fifty-point final season in the QMJHL. Brisebois has struggled to produce a similar offensive output and anywhere near the success he had in major junior. He plays with grit and passion and brings a focus to every game that is admirable as he is always ready to make a play. The downside to his game is the fact that he has not been able to find the same confidence as he once had, and he has struggled to even get his passing game going. The hope is that next season Brisebois will finally find the extra gear he once seemed to have and reach his potential before it is too late. He will most likely be able to qualify for one more crack at a roster spot on the Canucks, hoping to find a home at the bottom of the defensive rotation. - SC

  1. Arvid Costmar, C (215th overall, 2019. Previous ranking: 15)

The 215th pick in 2019 took good steps during the season. He was a steady top line center for the junior team and played big minutes. His production went up and he doubled his goal total last season despite playing 15 games less than the year before. He received some cups of tea at the senior level as well, but without success. In Allsvenskan he had a more diminished role when he played. His skating speed needs to improve but is a skilled offensive-minded player with good hands. His puck skills excel well on the power play as he likes to set up the play. He is also skilled one-on-one and can make nice dekes. For next season, I would like to see him earn a top six role on an Allsvenskan team and compete for a WJC roster spot. To do so he will need to work on his all-around game and play at a higher pace. – JH

  1. Petrus Palmu, LW/RW (181st overall, 2017. Previous ranking: 16)

One of the smallest drafted prospects around, Palmu tore up the OHL as an Import player, but has spent the bulk of the past three seasons back in Finland. At every stop, he has left little doubt but that he is a dynamic, productive offensive player, with only the mild exception of his 12-game stint in the AHL in 2018-19. Just from a tools perspective, he isn’t the most impressive. He skates well, but questionably whether he is fleet enough to overcome his size concern. He has fast hands, and reads the game well, but neither approaching elite. He is not a sniper. But somehow, he has made it all work well together to give him an overall package that has been greater than the sum of his parts. Like all players of his stature, even ones who play with his courage, Palmu will need to prove himself anew at every new level, and next up is the AHL, to which he is expected to play this year. - RW

  1. Carson Focht, C (133rd overall, 2019. Previous ranking: 17)

Drafted as a moderately offensive second year eligible, Focht’s post draft performance was somewhat disappointing, as he failed to take his game to another level in the WHL. Not meeting expectations is not new for Focht, the one-time seventh overall pick in the WHL Bantam Draft. This is not to imply that his professional prospects are dead, as his game has elements that could fit in a bottom six role. He has decent size, and he can play with some grit up and down the ice. When his team has possession, he some smooth hands and the wherewithal to keep the play moving in the right direction. On the right day, he can even look like a sniper, with a very quick release on his snapshot. He just doesn’t do it all at once, or consistently. Still unsigned, it is unclear where he will play this year, as he turns 21 in early February. - RW

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

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

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

PROSPECT CRITERIA

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

RANK PLAYER NHL POS AGE HT/WT ACQUIRED
1 Alexis Lafreniere NYR LW 19 6-1/195 `20(1st)
2 Tim Stutzle Ott C 18 6-1/185 `20(3rd)
3 Quinton Byfield LA C 18 6-4/215 `20(2nd)
4 Trevor Zegras Ana C 19 6-0/170 `19(9th)
5 Kirill Kaprizov Min LW 23 5-10/200 `15(135th)
6 Lucas Raymond Det LW 18 5-11/170 `20(4th)
7 Dylan Cozens Buf C 19 6-3/185 `19(7th)
8 Bowen Byram Col D 19 6-0/195 `19(4th)
9 Peyton Krebs VGK C 19 5-11/180 `19(17th)
10 Jake Sanderson Ott D 18 6-1/185 `20(5th)
11 Moritz Seider Det D 19 6-3/185 `19(6th)
12 Jamie Drysdale Ana D 18 5-11/175 `20(6th)
13 Igor Shesterkin NYR G 25 6-1/190 `14(118th)
14 Alexander Holtz NJ RW 18 6-0/190 `20(7th)
15 Cole Perfetti Wpg LW 19 5-10/180 `20(10th)
16 Marco Rossi Min C 19 5-9/185 `20(9th)
17 Vasili Podkolzin Van RW 19 6-1/190 `19(10th)
18 Victor Soderstrom Ari D 19 5-11/180 `19(11th)
19 Nick Robertson Tor LW 19 5-9/160 `19(53rd)
20 Cole Caufield Mtl RW 19 5-7/165 `19(15th)
21 Yaroslav Askarov Nsh G 18 6-3/175 `20(11th)
22 Spencer Knight Fla G 19 6-3/195 `19(13th)
23 Philip Broberg Edm D 19 6-3/200 `19(8th)
24 Jack Quinn Buf RW 19 6-0/180 `20(8th)
25 Matthew Boldy Min LW 19 6-1/190 `19(12th)
26 Nils Lundkvist NYR D 20 5-11/180 `18(28th)
27 Seth Jarvis Car RW 18 5-10/175 `20(13th)
28 Ty Smith NJ D 20 5-10/180 `18(17th)
29 Grigori Denisenko Fla LW 20 5-11/185 `18(15th)
30 Barrett Hayton Ari C 20 6-1/190 `18(5th)
31 Alex Newhook Col C 19 5-10/195 `19(16th)
32 Thomas Harley Dal D 19 6-3/190 `19(18th)
33 Alex Turcotte LA C 19 5-11/185 `19(5th)
34 Vitali Kravtsov NYR RW 21 6-3/185 `18(9th)
35 Philip Tomasino Nsh C 19 5-11/180 `19(24th)
36 Connor McMichael Wsh C 19 5-11/175 `19(25th)
37 Dawson Mercer NJ C 19 6-0/180 `20(18th)
38 Ilya Sorokin NYI G 25 6-2/180 `14(78th)
39 Gabriel Vilardi LA RW 21 6-3/200 `17(11th)
40 Ryan Merkley SJ D 20 5-11/170 `18(21st)
41 Alexander Romanov Mtl D 20 5-11/185 `18(38th)
42 Kaiden Guhle Mtl D 18 6-2/190 `20(16th)
43 Samuel Poulin Pit LW 19 6-1/205 `19(21st)
44 K'Andre Miller NYR D 20 6-3/205 `18(22nd)
45 Scott Perunovich StL D 22 5-10/175 `18(45th)
46 Evan Bouchard Edm D 21 6-2/195 `18(10th)
47 Braden Schneider NYR D 19 6-2/200 `20(19th)
48 Juuso Valimaki Cgy D 22 6-2/205 `17(16th)
49 Cam York Phi D 19 5-11/175 `19(14th)
50 Anton Lundell Fla C 19 6-1/185 `20(12th)
51 Morgan Frost Phi C 21 5-11/180 `17(27th)
52 Owen Tippett Fla RW 21 6-1/200 `17(10th)
53 Albert Johansson Det D 19 5-11/165 `19(60th)
54 Liam Foudy CBJ C 20 6-0/175 `18(18th)
55 Kieffer Bellows NYI LW 22 6-0/200 `16(19th)
56 Arthur Kaliyev LA RW 19 6-2/190 `19(33rd)
57 Oliver Wahlstrom NYI RW 20 6-1/205 `18(11th)
58 Nils Hoglander Van RW 20 5-9/185 `19(40th)
59 Matias Maccelli Ari LW 20 5-11/170 `19(98th)
60 Tobias Bjornfot LA D 19 6-0/200 `19(22nd)
61 Jacob Bernard-Docker Ott D 20 6-0/180 `18(26th)
62 Connor Zary Cgy C 19 6-0/180 `20(24th)
63 Dominik Bokk Car RW 20 6-1/180 T(StL-9/19)
64 Ryan Suzuki Car C 19 6-0/180 `19(28th)
65 Dylan Samberg Wpg D 21 6-3/190 `17(43rd)
66 Jake Bean Car D 22 6-1/175 `16(13th)
67 Josh Norris Ott C 21 6-1/195 T(SJ-9/18)
68 Rasmus Kupari LA C 20 6-1/185 `18(20th)
69 Jakob Pelletier Cgy LW 19 5-9/165 `19(26th)
70 Drake Batherson Ott RW 22 6-1/190 `17(121st)
71 Jan Jenik Ari RW 20 6-1/180 `18(65th)
72 John-Jason Peterka Buf LW 18 5-11/190 `20(34th)
73 Kirill Marchenko CBJ LW 20 6-3/190 `18(49th)
74 Bode Wilde NYI D 20 6-2/195 `18(41st)
75 John Beecher Bos C 19 6-3/210 `19(30th)
76 Tyler Madden LA C 21 5-10/155 T(Van-2/20)
77 Jack Studnicka Bos C 21 6-1/170 `17(53rd)
78 Jake Oettinger Dal G 22 6-4/210 `17(26th)
79 Alex Formenton Ott LW 21 6-2/165 `17(47th)
80 Matthew Robertson NYR D 19 6-3/200 `19(49th)
81 Calen Addison Min D 20 5-10/180 T(Pit-2/20)
82 Ty Dellandrea Dal C 20 6-0/185 `18(13th)
83 Akil Thomas LA C 20 5-11/170 `18(51st)
84 Mavrik Bourque Dal C 18 5-10/180 `20(30th)
85 Ian Mitchell Chi D 21 5-11/175 `17(57th)
86 Jason Robertson Dal LW 21 6-2/195 `17(39th)
87 Hendrix Lapierre Wsh C 18 5-11/180 `20(22nd)
88 Brendan Brisson VGK C 19 5-11/180 `20(29th)
89 Theodor Niederbach Det C 18 5-11/175 `20(51st)
90 Zac Jones NYR D 20 5-10/175 `19(68th)
91 Robert Mastrosimone Det LW 19 5-10/160 `19(54th)
92 Joe Veleno Det C 20 6-1/195 `18(30th)
93 Rodion Amirov Tor LW 19 6-0/170 `20(15th)
94 Jake Neighbours StL LW 18 5-11/195 `20(26th)
95 Julien Gauthier NYR RW 23 6-4/225 T(Car-2/20)
96 Justus Annunen Col G 20 6-4/215 `18(64th)
97 Egor Zamula Phi D 20 6-4/175 FA(9/18)
98 Shane Pinto Ott C 20 6-2/190 `19(32nd)
99 Noel Gunler Car RW 19 6-2/175 `20(41st)
100 Ridly Greig Ott C 18 5-11/165 `20(28th)
101 Jesse Ylonen Mtl RW 21 6-1/185 `18(35th)
102 Samuel Fagemo LA RW 20 6-0/195 `19(50th)
103 Mattias Norlinder Mtl D 20 5-11/180 `19(64th)
104 Olli Juolevi Van D 22 6-3/200 `16(5th)
105 Kristian Vesalainen Wpg LW 21 6-3/205 `17(24th)
106 Raphael Lavoie Edm RW 20 6-4/195 `19(38th)
107 Jan Mysak Mtl C 18 5-11/180 `20(49th)
108 Cayden Primeau Mtl G 21 6-3/180 `17(199th)
109 Pavel Dorofeyev VGK LW 20 6-1/170 `19(79th)
110 Morgan Barron NYR C 22 6-2/200 `17(174th)
111 Ville Heinola Wpg D 19 5-11/180 `19(20th)
112 Dylan Holloway Edm C 19 6-0/205 `20(14th)
113 Jack Dugan VGK RW 22 6-2/185 `17(142nd)
114 Alexander Khovanov Min C 20 5-11/195 `18(86th)
115 Jacob Perreault Ana RW 18 5-11/195 `20(27th)
116 Jake Evans Mtl C 24 6-0/185 `14(207th)
117 Adam Beckman Min LW 19 6-1/170 `19(75th)
118 Jett Woo Van D 20 6-0/205 `18(37th)
119 Nolan Foote NJ LW 20 6-3/190 T(TB-2/20)
120 Logan Brown Ott C 22 6-6/220 `16(11th)
121 Martin Kaut Col RW 21 6-1/175 `18(16th)
122 Jack Rathbone Van D 21 5-10/175 `17(95th)
123 Ozzy Wiesblatt SJ RW 18 5-10/185 `20(31st)
124 Ryan O'Rourke Min D 18 6-0/180 `20(39th)
125 Lukas Reichel Chi LW 18 6-0/170 `20(17th)
126 Jordan Harris Mtl D 20 5-11/180 `18(71st)
127 Lukas Dostal Ana G 20 6-1/170 `18(85th)
128 Egor Afanasyev Nsh RW 19 6-3/205 `19(45th)
129 Conor Timmins Col D 22 6-1/185 `17(32nd)
130 Lassi Thomson Ott D 20 6-0/190 `19(19th)
131 Eeli Tolvanen Nsh RW 21 5-10/175 `17(30th)
132 Kasper Simontaival LA RW 18 5-9/180 `20(66th)
133 Roni Hirvonen Tor C 18 5-9/165 `20(59th)
134 Thomas Bordeleau SJ C 18 5-9/180 `20(38th)
135 Benoit-Olivier Groulx Ana C 20 6-1/195 `18(54th)
136 Tyler Kleven Ott D 18 6-4/200 `20(44th)
137 Tyson Foerster Phi C 18 6-1/195 `20(23rd)
138 Helge Grans LA D 18 6-2/205 `20(35th)
139 Jonathan Dahlen SJ LW 23 5-11/185 T(Van-2/19)
140 Marat Khusnutdinov Min C 18 5-11/175 `20(37th)
141 Alexander Alexeyev Wsh D 21 6-3/200 `18(31st)
142 Pierre-Olivier Joseph Pit D 21 6-2/170 `17(23rd)
143 Topi Niemela Tor D 18 5-10/160 `20(64th)
144 Oskari Laaksonen Buf D 21 6-2/165 `17(89th)
145 Filip Hallander Tor LW 20 6-1/185 T(Pit-8/20)
146 Serron Noel Fla RW 20 6-5/205 `18(34th)
147 Martin Chromiak LA LW 18 6-0/185 `20(128th)
148 Shakir Mukhamadullin NJ D 18 6-3/180 `20(20th)
149 Mattias Samuelsson Buf D 20 6-3/215 `18(32nd)
150 Janne Kuokkanen NJ LW 22 6-1/190 T(Car-2/20)
151 Ryan Johnson Buf D 19 6-0/175 `19(31st)
152 Sean Farrell Mtl C 19 5-8/175 `20(124th)
153 Martin Fehervary Wsh D 21 6-1/190 `18(46th)
154 Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen Buf G 21 6-4/195 `17(54th)
155 Will Lockwood Van RW 22 5-11/175 `16(64th)
156 Isac Lundestrom Ana C 21 6-0/185 `18(23rd)
157 Michael DiPietro Van G 21 6-0/195 `17(64th)
158 Jonatan Berggren Det RW 20 5-10/185 `18(33rd)
159 Kevin Bahl NJ D 20 6-6/230 T(Ari-12/19)
160 Aliaksei Protas Wsh C 19 6-5/205 `19(91st)
161 Reilly Walsh NJ D 21 5-11/180 `17(81st)
162 Nick Abruzzese Tor C 21 5-9/160 `19(124th)
163 Tyler Tucker StL D 20 6-1/205 `18(200th)
164 Arseni Gritsyuk NJ RW 19 5-10/170 `19(129th)
165 Klim Kostin StL C 21 6-3/195 `17(31st)
166 Brayden Tracey Ana LW 19 6-0/175 `19(29th)
167 Joel Hofer StL G 20 6-3/160 `18(107th)
168 Joey Anderson Tor RW 22 6-0/195 T(NJ-10/20)
169 Yegor Spiridonov SJ C 19 6-2/195 `19(108th)
170 Sam Colangelo Ana RW 19 6-1/205 `20(36th)
171 Joey Keane Car D 21 6-0/185 T(NYR-2/20)
172 Jared McIsaac Det D 20 6-1/195 `18(36th)
173 Jamieson Rees Car C 19 5-10/175 `19(44th)
174 Ivan Morozov VGK C 20 6-1/180 `18(61st)
175 Rem Pitlick Nsh C 23 5-11/200 `16(76th)
176 Tyce Thompson NJ RW 21 6-0/170 `19(96th)
177 Michael McLeod NJ C 22 6-2/195 `16(12th)
178 Jaret Anderson-Dolan LA C 21 5-11/190 `17(41st)
179 Dustin Wolf Cgy G 19 6-0/165 `19(214th)
180 Antti Tuomisto Det D 19 6-4/190 `19(35th)
181 Brett Berard NYR LW 18 5-9/155 `20(134th)
182 Luke Evangelista Nsh RW 18 5-11/170 `20(42nd)
183 Joel Blomqvist Pit G 18 6-1/180 `20(52nd)
184 Joni Ikonen Mtl C 21 5-10/170 `17(58th)
185 Olivier Rodrigue Edm G 20 6-1/165 `18(62nd)
186 Lucas Elvenes VGK RW 21 6-0/175 `17(127th)
187 Anthony Angello Pit RW 24 6-5/205 `14(145th)
188 Tuukka Tieksola Car RW 19 5-10/160 `19(121st)
189 Declan Chisholm Wpg D 20 6-1/190 `18(150th)
190 Cole Koepke TB LW 22 6-1/195 `18(183rd)
191 Valtteri Puustinen Pit RW 21 5-9/185 `19(203rd)
192 Ty Smilanic Fla C 18 6-1/175 `20(74th)
193 Patrik Puistola Car LW 19 6-0/175 `19(73rd)
194 Justin Barron Col D 19 6-2/190 `20(25th)
195 Andrew Peeke CBJ D 22 6-3/210 `16(34th)
196 Michael Vukojevic NJ D 19 6-3/210 `19(82nd)
197 Alec Regula Chi D 20 6-3/200 T(Det-10/19)
198 Connor Corcoran VGK D 20 6-1/185 `18(154th)
199 Jeremy Swayman Bos G 22 6-1/190 `17(111th)
200 Pyotr Kochetkov Car G 21 6-1/175 `19(36th)
201 Mikey Anderson LA D 21 6-0/195 `17(103rd)
202 Carter Savoie Edm LW 18 5-9/190 `20(100th)
203 Samuel Walker TB C 21 5-11/160 `17(200th)
204 William Wallinder Det D 18 6-4/190 `20(32nd)
205 Jack Drury Car C 20 5-11/180 `18(42nd)
206 Emil Andrae Phi D 18 5-9/185 `20(54th)
207 Cal Petersen LA G 26 6-3/190 FA(7/17)
208 Jeremie Poirier Cgy D 18 6-0/200 `20(72nd)
209 Tarmo Reunanen NYR D 22 6-0/180 `16(98th)
210 Simon Holmstrom NYI RW 19 6-1/185 `19(23rd)
211 Aleksi Saarela Fla RW 23 5-11/200 T(Chi-10/19)
212 Anton Johannesson Wpg D 18 5-9/155 `20(133rd)
213 Lauri Pajuniemi NYR RW 21 6-0/185 `18(132nd)
214 Morgan Geekie Car C 22 6-2/180 `17(67th)
215 Shane Bowers Col C 21 6-2/190 T(Ott-11/17)
216 Sasha Chmelevski SJ C 21 5-11/190 `17(185th)
217 Ruslan Iskhakov NYI C 20 5-8/155 `18(43rd)
218 Cole Schwindt Fla RW 19 6-2/185 `19(81st)
219 Hugo Alnefelt TB G 19 6-3/195 `19(71st)
220 Nikita Okhotyuk NJ D 20 6-1/195 `19(61st)
221 Sampo Ranta Col LW 20 6-2/205 `18(78th)
222 Alexander Volkov TB LW 23 6-1/190 `17(48th)
223 Alexander True SJ C 23 6-5/205 FA(7/18)
224 John Leonard SJ C 22 5-11/190 `18(182nd)
225 Carl Grundstrom LA LW 23 6-0/195 T(Tor-1/19)
226 Dmitri Semykin TB D 20 6-3/200 `18(90th)
227 Cal Foote TB D 22 6-4/215 `17(14th)
228 Jean-Luc Foudy Col C 18 5-11/175 `20(75th)
229 Alex Barre-Boulet TB C 23 5-10/165 FA(3/18)
230 Tristen Robins SJ RW 19 5-10/175 `20(56th)
231 Max Gildon Fla D 21 6-3/190 `17(66th)
232 Nikita Alexandrov StL C 20 6-0/180 `19(62nd)
233 Michael Benning Fla D 18 5-9/180 `20(95th)
234 Justin Sourdif Fla RW 18 5-11/175 `20(87th)
235 Tanner Laczynski Phi C 23 6-1/200 `16(169th)
236 Eamon Powell TB D 18 5-11/165 `20(116th)
237 Kaedan Korczak VGK D 19 6-3/190 `19(41st)
238 Drew Commesso Chi G 18 6-1/180 `20(47th)
239 Nikolai Kovalenko Col RW 21 5-10/175 `18(171st)
240 Pius Suter Chi C 24 5-11/170 FA(7/20)
241 Wade Allison Phi RW 23 6-2/205 `16(52nd)
242 Bobby Brink Phi RW 19 5-10/165 `19(34th)
243 Lukas Cormier VGK D 18 5-10/180 `20(68th)
244 David Farrance Nsh D 21 5-11/190 `17(92nd)
245 Roby Jarventie Ott RW 18 6-2/185 `20(33rd)
246 Dmitri Voronkov CBJ LW 20 6-4/190 `19(114th)
247 German Rubtsov Phi C 22 6-2/190 `16(22nd)
248 Vitaly Abramov Ott RW 22 5-9/175 T(CBJ-2/19)
249 Alex Laferriere LA RW 19 6-0/175 `20(83rd)
250 Trey Fix-Wolansky CBJ RW 21 5-8/185 `18(204th)
251 Isaac Ratcliffe Phi LW 21 6-5/200 `17(35th)
252 Kale Clague LA D 22 6-0/180 `16(51st)
253 Landon Slaggert Chi LW 18 5-11/180 `20(79th)
254 Wyatt Kalynuk Chi D 23 6-1/180 FA(7/20)
255 Mikko Kokkonen Tor D 19 5-11/200 `19(84th)
256 Kevin Mandolese Ott G 20 6-4/180 `18(157th)
257 Daniil Tarasov CBJ G 21 6-5/185 `17(86th)
258 Evan Barratt Chi C 21 6-0/190 `17(90th)
259 Tyler Benson Edm LW 22 6-0/200 `16(32nd)
260 Yegor Korshkov Tor RW 24 6-4/215 `16(31st)
261 Hunter Skinner NYR D 19 6-2/175 `19(112th)
262 Riley Damiani Dal C 20 5-9/165 `18(137th)
263 Ryan McLeod Edm C 21 6-2/205 `18(40th)
264 Ilya Konovalov Edm G 22 6-0/195 `19(85th)
265 Will Cuylle NYR LW 18 6-3/205 `20(60th)
266 Evan Vierling NYR C 18 6-0/165 `20(127th)
267 Emil Heineman Fla LW 19 6-0/180 `20(43rd)
268 Zayde Wisdom Phi RW 18 5-10/195 `20(94th)
269 Hunter Jones Min G 20 6-4/195 `19(59th)
270 Ty Tullio Edm RW 18 5-10/165 `20(126th)
271 Jordan Spence LA D 19 5-10/165 `19(95th)
272 Dmitri Zavgorodny Cgy LW 20 5-9/175 `18(198th)
273 Alex Beaucage Col RW 19 6-1/195 `19(78th)
274 Matiss Kivlenieks CBJ G 24 6-2/190 FA(5/17)
275 Artyom Zub Ott D 25 6-2/200 FA(5/20)
276 Urho Vaakanainen Bos D 22 6-0/185 `17(18th)
277 Dmitri Samorukov Edm D 21 6-2/180 `17(84th)
278 Michal Teply Chi LW 19 6-3/185 `19(105th)
279 Colby Ambrosio Col C 18 5-8/170 `20(118th)
280 Mads Sogaard Ott G 20 6-7/195 `19(37th)
281 Jeremy Lauzon Bos D 23 6-3/205 `15(52nd)
282 Dennis Gilbert Col D 24 6-2/200 T(Chi-10/20)
283 Trent Frederic Bos C 22 6-4/215 `16(29th)
284 Lucas Carlsson Chi D 23 6-0/190 `16(110th)
285 Zack Macewen Van RW 24 6-3/205 FA(3/17)
286 Brandon Hagel Chi LW 22 6-1/175 FA(10/18)
287 Vasily Ponomarev Car C 18 5-10/180 `20(53rd)
288 Jakub Zboril Bos D 23 6-1/200 `15(13th)
289 Garrett Pilon Wsh RW 22 5-11/190 `16(87th)
290 Jeremy Bracco Car RW 23 5-9/180 FA(10/20)
291 Dylan Sikura VGK RW 25 6-0/170 T(Chi-9/20)
292 Kyle Capobianco Ari D 23 6-1/180 `15(63rd)
293 Sami Niku Wpg D 24 6-0/175 `15(198th)
294 John Farinacci Ari C 19 5-11/185 `19(76th)
295 Jackson Lacombe Ana D 19 6-1/170 `19(39th)
296 David Cotton Car LW 23 6-3/205 `15(169th)
297 Erik Portillo Buf G 20 6-6/210 `19(67th)
298 Jacob Truscott Van D 18 6-1/170 `20(144th)
299 Mikhail Berdin Wpg G 22 6-2/165 `16(157th)
300 Cam Hillis Mtl C 20 5-10/170 `18(66th)
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MCKEEN’S 2020 NHL PROSPECT REPORT – VANCOUVER CANUCKS – ORGANIZATIONAL RANK: 13 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-nhl-prospect-report-vancouver-canucks-organizational-rank-14/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/mckeens-2020-nhl-prospect-report-vancouver-canucks-organizational-rank-14/#respond Mon, 21 Sep 2020 13:01:28 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=167304 Read More... from MCKEEN’S 2020 NHL PROSPECT REPORT – VANCOUVER CANUCKS – ORGANIZATIONAL RANK: 13

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vancanucksVancouver Canucks

As of the day of this writing (Jul. 10, 2020), there have been three truly notable occurrences in the world of Vancouver Hockey. From most recent to earliest:

  • Reports surfaced of the Canucks exploring a possible trade of Brock Boeser, possibly related to their desire to re-sign mid-season trade pickup Tyler Toffoli
  • Vancouver was seemingly a strong consideration to be named as one of the NHL’s hub cities, as the league sought to complete it season. Eventually, Vancouver fell short with Edmonton named Hub host for the Western Conference and Toronto handling the duties for the Eastern Conference
  • The Vancouver Canucks parted ways somewhat acrimoniously with their highly touted Director of Amateur Scouting (and a McKeens Hockey alum!) Judd Brackett.

You might have been able to guess that this space will focus on the third item in the above list, and not because of Brackett’s ties to our humble enterprise.

Brackett had been with Vancouver since 2008-09, starting as an Amateur Scout, and rising to the role of Director of Amateur Scouting in 2015-16. Brackett worked in the USHL before moving to the Canucks organization, and as a onetime collegiate player himself, was never averse to selecting players on the NCAA route. That started with his first ever pick, the aforementioned Boeser, at the time lighting it up for the Waterloo Black Hawks, and spent two strong seasons at the University of North Dakota before turning pro.

Boeser was the first of eight college-bound players drafted in Brackett’s five drafts. While it is too early to pass judgement on many of those, every single one of them is trending in the right direction and looking like they will provide great value for where they were drafted. Think Adam Gaudette and Quinn Hughes, in addition to Boeser, in the NHL, Tyler Madden who was the bait in the Toffoli trade, and top 15 prospects Will Lockwood, Jack Rathbone, and Aidan McDonough.

Brackett’s tenure was most notable for its draft day focus on players of skill, as opposed to size. Of the collegians, only Boeser and McDonough had average or better size. His five first round picks averaged a hair under 6-1”, and 185 pounds. Not small, but not bangers either. In fact, the Canuks were just as likely to look for grit as free agents, such as the signings of the unsigned CHL’ers Zack MacEwen and Jalen Chatfield. The former is on this list and spent 17 games up with the Canucks this season to boot.

If you can acquire good depth later on, why spend valuable assets at the draft on those same types who could end up as free talent acquisitions down the road? If anything, Brackett’s Canucks would seek players long on brains and intangibles (leadership types, gritty despite moderate size) in the later rounds, after the high skill players had already been taken off the board. Those types include the likes of the aforementioned Lockwood and Madden, but also Guillaume Brisebois, Kole Lind, Toni Utunen, etc.).

Based on comments from Vancouver GM Jim Benning, the replacement Director of Amateur Scouting in Vancouver will require more synergy with the rest of the Hockey Operations Department, particularly the GM himself. This doesn’t tell us how the Canucks will draft this October (presumably) but that second or third round pick might look less like Nils Hoglander, and more like Nikita Tryamkin or Cole Cassels. These were the last two third rounders selected by Vancouver before Brackett’s regime began. Vancouver’s loss will be Minnesota’s gain – the Wild just recently hired him to take on the same position he held with Vancouver – and the incoming Director of Amateur Scouting will lack the benefit of a first round pick to really give us a sense of what’s coming.

VANCOUVER, BC - JUNE 21:  Vasily Podkolzin puts on a hat after being selected tenth overall by the Vancouver Canucks during the first round of the 2019 NHL Draft at Rogers Arena on June 21, 2019 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. (Photo by Derek Cain/Icon Sportswire)
VANCOUVER, BC - JUNE 21: Vasily Podkolzin puts on a hat after being selected tenth overall by the Vancouver Canucks during the first round of the 2019 NHL Draft at Rogers Arena on June 21, 2019 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. (Photo by Derek Cain/Icon Sportswire)
  1. Vasili Podkolzin, RW (10th overall, 2019. 2019 Rank: 2)

An elite NHL prospect who, as a teenager, plays on one the big clubs in the KHL, St Petersburg, where he had a limited role, playing less than nine minutes per game last season. Podkolzin is a dynamic winger with a lot of good assets in his toolbox. He is a strong skater with terrific balance and is technically solid. He can get to top speed with ease within a few strides. He is exceptionally good at puck protection and has a creative hockey mind. He works hard and plays a physical game.

He still lacks a bit of consistency in his production, and I can see two explanations for that. One is that he still is a teenager physically playing against men and he gets pushed out physically when he tries to create. He is not a typical transition player; he likes to play tight to the body and create from down low which makes a lack of physical strength a natural problem. When he gets stronger his style of play will fit well with the modern NHL game.

The other explanation is that he tries to be too creative and lacks instincts to just make the easy play, especially when his game is struggling, and he is lacking confidence. Podkolzin will always aid his team’s puck possession with elite skills and do good things with that possession. Although he did not score many points, his underlying numbers were good, and it is expected that he will receive a bigger role in the KHL this upcoming season. He has one more year with St Petersburg but after that I can see him competing for a top six role with the Canucks. - JH

  1. Nils Hoglander, LW (40th overall, 2019. 2019 Rank: 7)

Hoglander is exciting to watch and is an expert on the lacrosse-goal move, which he has used with success in both the SHL and the WJC. At the WJC he was excellent on the top line with and was one of the most productive players in the tournament. His production at the SHL level was not as impressive, at least not in line with the reputation of a soon to be NHLer.

Hoglander plays intensively and is particularly strong in the corners and around the net. He will set up a power play or drive the play all over the ice. At the WJC he showcased some nice playmaking ability and a fast thinking mind deep into the offensive zone. His passes to the slot were more frequent than in the SHL as he was constantly trying to create.

One obvious answer to the question why he was more dangerous at the WJC is his role. In the SHL he rarely played more than 12 minutes per game. Another issue is that he is small and is not to able to break away from his opponents in the corners in the same way at the senior level and that could be a concern as his game prevails through stick handling, covering the puck and making quick turns and creative plays. That type of game will be tough for him in the NHL and he will need to vary his approach.

Hoglander was supposed to start next season with the Canucks trying to earn a spot in the NHL; Now he will start in the SHL while he waits for the NHL to start. I don’t think he is ready to play in the NHL right away and when he makes it, I am not yet sure if he is dynamic enough for a top six role. - JH

  1. Olli Juolevi, D (5th overall, 2016. 2019 Rank: 4)

In the last year or so, Juolevi had been highly associated with injury and speculation as to if he would – or could - ever make a comeback befitting a top five pick. After playing his first nearly full season as a professional with the AHL Utica Comets, earning 25 points in 45 games, he seemed to be playing back to the same high level as he was before.

Juolevi brings a high hockey IQ and composure to any situation and as he became more comfortable throughout the season, he ended up facilitating more scoring chances as well. He is a good skater, a good puck handler, and the type of player you forget is on the ice until he helps out in scoring or putting the puck in the net himself. With the Vancouver organization the potential is there for Juolevi to become a top two defenseman at some point, but the worry is simply that he struggles to remain healthy enough to do so in the future.

By next season he should certainly be making his long-awaited debut with the Canucks’ bottom pairing, where he will stay until he has mastered the NHL game enough to be moved up the lineup. Juolevi will simply have to be more physical to differentiate himself and to earn added trust from the coaching staff, meaning that he does not have to go out and kill his opponents but he will need to protect himself better in an organization that is not known for their grit. - SC

  1. Jett Woo, D (37th overall, 2018. 2019 Rank: 6)

Woo regressed a bit this year production-wise and that has left expectations at a more realistic level as he starts his pro career. He has the potential to play on a second pairing but does not have the offensive toolkit that many were expecting after his eye-popping seasons in Moose Jaw.

He is an effective, physical in-your-face defender who skates well and competes hard for every inch of ice. He is tenacious in his own zone using a combination of big hits, stick checks, good reads and aggression to minimize the opponent’s ability to get to his net. His gap control is good, and opponents know he will step up if they bobble the puck or show any hesitation in the neutral zone.

He is a fine passer, capable of making good plays that start the transition, however his decision making in the offensive zone is concerning. His vision is good in that he sees the ice well, but he frequently tries to do too much and turns over the puck at inopportune times. While Woo is capable of recovering better than most, he is more the complementary defender on a pairing rather than the one that dictates the offense.

He plays the game the right way and has a real edge and abrasiveness to how he handles himself. Offensively he has some skills, his puck handling is pretty good, and he moves down the wall offensively well but his decision making when under pressure is a concern. He is willing to jump into the rush and has the speed to get himself into the play as a trailer where he is most effective generating offense. His even strength points were less than half of his production this year which is a bit concerning for anyone expecting him to be an offensively dynamic blueliner at the pro level. - VG

  1. Jack Rathbone, D (95th overall, 2017. 2019 Rank: 16)

A fourth-round draft pick, Rathbone has improved well even in just two years at Harvard. The Massachusetts native was a captain at his prep school for two years. He entered college hockey as a freshman with nothing more than four games at the USHL level as far as high-level competition under his belt.

While in high school, he was named to the All-USA Hockey First Team in 2016-17 and the All-USA Hockey Second Team in 2017-18. As a freshman at Harvard, he was named to the ECAC All-Rookie team. As a sophomore, Rathbone was named to the ECAC First All-Star Team, the All-Ivy League First Team and the NCAA First All-American Team.

From the moment Rathbone stepped in, even as a freshman, he made an impact. While there is usually an adjustment period for rookies when transitioning to college hockey, especially for those who come straight from prep school, that didn’t hinder Rathbone. An offensive defenseman, he ranked fourth on the team in scoring and led all Crimson defenders. His shot is characterized by a quick release. He appeared on the team’s second penalty kill unit and the first power play unit. Rathbone was possibly the team’s best puck mover on the power play. He is excellent at running the unit from the point.

Defensively, Rathbone has a very active and quick stick and is able to poke check effectively. Rahtbone’s offensive capabilities as well as his solid defensive skills give him a legitimate chance at making the NHL in a top half of roster role, a journey which will move to the professional ranks next season, as Vancouver recently signed him to an entry level contract. - JS

  1. Will Lockwood, RW (64th overall, 2016. 2019 Rank: 5)

On the small side, but incredibly feisty, Lockwood spent the full four seasons at the University of Michigan, before finally signing an ELC with the Canucks shortly after COVID-19 paused play the world over. The former USNTDP grinder had an up-and-down collegiate career with the Wolverines, but his best two seasons were certainly his last two.

He is a strong skater who can flash creativity with the puck in the offensive zone, can tend to play too deliberately as well, negating his inherent skill set. When he plays decisively, Lockwood has been a disruptive presence at the collegiate level. He plays a physical game, especially when he plays angry and relishes open ice checking.

He is the type of player who could be ready for the NHL within one season of turning pro, but whose reasonable upside is never more than a bottom six winger, who could frustrate with the hints of more, but who can’t show it consistently enough for the possibility to be reasonable. - RW

  1. Michael DiPietro, G (64th overall, 2017. 2019 Rank: 8)

DiPietro brings a new definition to the word ‘focus’ with an ultra-dialed-in and intense personality. He performs reliably well every game and gives maximum effort, no matter the opponent. He has a good track record for performing well under pressure and for keeping a good attitude, going above and beyond when it comes to athleticism, which he must, due to his smaller size. He reads plays well and does well in one on one situations, however, he will have to battle harder to get to his position in net scrambles, as he works towards a permanent NHL role.

The future is bright for DiPietro, who is so naturally gifted with the right instincts, attitude, and athleticism needed to be a top level goaltender, look for him to have a go at an NHL job within the next season should he start off the upcoming season the same way with Utica. - SC

  1. Zack MacEwen, RW (Undrafted Free Agent, signed Mar. 3, 2017. 2019 Rank: 15)

MacEwen is not a cookie cutter smooth-skating type. Instead he is the hard working, crash and bang guy that brings a lot of energy to a roster. He is not the most graceful of skaters and does not stand out for skill either, but he does well at completing the little things. He is a steady net front presence, forces turnovers, and plays the body at the right times.

A little clumsy at times, he has learned to be a good backchecker and defend well in his own zone, however he still needs to work on his passing in order to avoid turnovers and better contribute to the breakout. It is no surprise that MacEwen has earned a spot on the Vancouver Canucks 2020 playoff roster as he brings the right energy and can get the job done in a way that the other players cannot, which is why he is an asset to their bottom six, and should continue to play at the highest level as long as his cap hit remains low. - SC

  1. Kole Lind, RW (33rd overall, 2017. 2019 Rank: 11)

Lind has finally had the breakout confidence-replenishing year that staff and writers were hoping for. He is a good shooter and good at making quick plays and reacting to what is going on around him. He can be relied upon to play special teams; however he is not the smoothest of skaters, but he makes up for it in the way he gets to the net and his work ethic on the forecheck.

Lind will certainly have to get faster and more agile on his blades but his hands and his passing are good and lead him oftentimes to contributing to good scoring opportunities or assisting on plays. He will most likely earn his chance to crack the Canucks lineup this coming season as a potential third liner alternating in the bottom six if he finds another gear for his skating and on ice agility while continuing to work on his two way play. - SC

  1. Brogan Rafferty, D (Undrafted Free Agent, signed 1, 2019. 2019 Rank: UR)

After leading the AHL Utica Comets in points for defensemen it is safe to say that Rafferty is a strong and dependable defenseman in the Vancouver pipeline. All of his skills are good, and his positioning and hockey IQ are what lead him to stand out, earning points in nearly every game. He will need to get a bit tougher when it comes to physicality and taking the body, but aside from that there is nothing of concern.

He brings a great two-way game and is nearly always in the right position which could be an asset for the Canucks looking into next season, despite this past season only being Rafferty’s rookie year. A late bloomer, his potential may be surprisingly high because of the progression he has had so far, however when he gets the call up look to see him as part of the bottom four to start proving himself. - SC

  1. Guillaume Brisebois, D (66th overall, 2015. 2019 Rank: 12)

The last three seasons with the Utica Comets for Brisebois have not gone as originally hoped since his near fifty-point final season in the QMJHL. Brisebois has struggled to produce a similar offensive output and anywhere near the success he had in major junior. He plays with grit and passion and brings a focus to every game that is admirable as he is always ready to make a play.

The downside to his game is the fact that he has not been able to find the same confidence as he once had, and he has struggled to even get his passing game going. The hope is that next season Brisebois will finally find the extra gear he once seemed to have and reach his potential before it is too late. He will most likely be able to qualify for one more crack at a roster spot on the Canucks, hoping to find a home at the bottom of the defensive rotation. - SC

  1. Aidan McDonough, LW (195th overall, 2019. 2019 Rank: UR)

McDonough’s value may turn out to be higher than his seventh-round draft pick status. After graduating from prep school at Thayer Academy, McDonough spent one season in the USHL with the Cedar Rapids RoughRiders before entering the collegiate ranks. As a freshman, he was one of the highest-scoring players for Northeastern and the highest-scoring freshman by a mile and earned the team’s rookie of the year award.

He has a big frame but could be stronger on the puck, although he is not afraid to engage in puck battles. While he needs to pump his legs on his strides, he is very hard to contain in the offensive zone as he glides around. McDonough is a sharp passer and can score from multiple spots but buzzes frequently around the net. While he certainly held his own as a freshman, he is still raw and needs to refine his game more before turning pro. - JS

  1. Marc Michaelis, RW (Undrafted Free Agent, signed Mar. 19, 2020. 2019 Rank: IE)

The NCAA’s top scorer over the past four seasons, Michaelis was a First Team WCHA All American through each of his four seasons at Minnesota State. The slight German winger already had a lengthy history of high-level international play, including two appearances at the World Championships for his homeland before signing as a free agent with Vancouver a few days into the COVID-19 lockdown.

Michaelis makes himself seen through high end skating ability, which allowed him to skate laps around the WCHA competition, as well as very interesting playmaking potential, with vision and creativity. The skating will have to be his ticket to the NHL though, as his playmaking ability has been more a function of brains than pure skill, leaving in question how much those brains will allow him to play up as a pro. If Michaelis makes the adjustment to the pro pace and continues to make his presence felt in the offensive end, he could push himself up to the highest level for a lengthy stay. - RW

  1. Linus Karlsson, C (Trade: Feb. 25, 2019. Originally: 87th overall, 2018 [San Jose]. 2019 Rank: UR)

A big center with nice hands who was acquired in a pure Swedish prospect trade, as Jonathan Dahlen was sent the other way to San Jose. Karlsson is not as a big name in Sweden as Dahlen is but Karlsson is a decent prospect in his own right, and he scored 40 points in Allsvenskan as a 20-year-old.

He is an offensive minded center with an above average shot and above average hands. He is not elite in any way but a decent depth prospect, and if everything goes well, he could be a good third line option in the future. He needs to work on his skating and play at a faster pace to reach the highest level. He will have a couple more years of development before he can be ready to compete for a spot. I would be surprised if he has a long NHL career, but I can definitely see him being a good SHL player in near future. - JH

  1. Arvid Costmar, C (215th overall, 2019. 2019 Rank: UR)

The 215th pick in 2019 took good steps during the season. He was a steady top line center for the junior team and played big minutes. His production went up and he doubled his goal total last season despite playing 15 games less than the year before. He received some cups of tea at the senior level as well, but without success.

In Allsvenskan he had a more diminished role when he played. His skating speed needs to improve but is a skilled offensive-minded player with good hands. His puck skills excel well on the power play as he likes to set up the play. He is also skilled one-on-one and can make nice dekes. For next season, I would like to see him earn a top six role on an Allsvenskan team and compete for a WJC roster spot. To do so he will need to work on his all-around game and play at a higher pace. - JH

 

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Vancouver Canucks 2019-20 Prospect Review: Top 20 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/vancouver-canucks-2019-20-prospect-review-top-20/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/vancouver-canucks-2019-20-prospect-review-top-20/#respond Sat, 14 Sep 2019 13:21:23 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=162634 Read More... from Vancouver Canucks 2019-20 Prospect Review: Top 20

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For as much as the last four postseason-less seasons (and five of the last six) have been dismaying to Vancouver fans, there is currently a great deal of hope in the future. The rebuild has not been seamless, but a number of the high picks made by the franchise in the last few years are panning out.

2013 top ten pick Bo Horvat was given a letter to ear on his chest last year and took a step forward into being a star, if not quite a superstar, with a career high 61 points. 2015 first rounder Brock Boeser was the first gem of the current rebuild to emerge, giving the Canucks a probable 30+ goal machine after he had scored over 25 goals in each of his first two season, despite being limited to under 70 games played in each. He was followed last season by the explosive Elias Pettersson, a true game breaker who took the league by storm as a rookie, with 66 points in his way to capturing the Calder Trophy.

Other young players have also stepped forward in smaller roles, including netminder Thatcher Demko, who is healthy and ready to earn the backup job in the NHL . Beefy Jake Virtanen is also rounding out his game to be a dependable bottom six power forward, a useful player even if he never meets the expectations heaped on him as a former top ten draft pick. Later round find Adam Gaudette’s rookie season was more challenging, but his upside is still tantalizing.

Some of the players mentioned above will form the core of the next competitive Vancouver team. Others will fill in valuable, low cost roles. But if you have been paying attention, you will have noticed that something is missing from the above names. Specifically, five of the six are forwards and the other is a goalie. There were no defensemen named.

That’s about to change. Read on and you will note that eight of the Vancouver top 20 prospects are blueliners. Not only that, but there are three in the top six, including the top prospect in the system. Quinn Hughes, the aforementioned top prospect has had fans drooling ever since the Canucks called his name at the draft in Dallas. More on him below, but he got his feet wet over five games with the Canucks at the end of last season and is set to star for the team from day one this year. The number four prospect, Olli Juolevi. Was actual drafted higher in his year than Hughes. He was enjoying a great start to his North American professional career before a knee injury put an early end to his season. It might not take long for him to join Hughes in the NHL as a top four defender. Number six prospect Jett Woo is unlikely to play in the NHL this year (possible cameo notwithstanding), but he took a huge step forward with his offensive game last year and now projects as another possible top four defenseman.

The jump from these players may not be soon enough for some Vancouver fans, or those in the front office, especially after the team traded a first round pick in either 2020 or 2021 to Tampa Bay in a package for grinding/scoring winger JT Miller. Clearly, they want to be good enough very soon to avoid that pick being a lottery pick. The core is in place, but we do not yet know how long it will all take to gel.

-Ryan Wagman

VANCOUVER, BC - MARCH 30: Vancouver Canucks Defenceman Quinn Hughes (43) skates up ice during their NHL game against the Dallas Stars at Rogers Arena on March 30, 2019 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Vancouver won 3-2 in a shootout. (Photo by Derek Cain/Icon Sportswire)
Vancouver Canucks Defenceman Quinn Hughes (43)  (Photo by Derek Cain/Icon Sportswire)

1 Quinn Hughes, D (7th overall, 2018. Last Year: 2) In a group with Cale Makar, Erik Brannstrom, and Bowen Byram as the best defensive prospects in hockey. Hughes is an electric skater and the ideal modern-day quarterback. His hands are as quick as his feet leading to dynamic play whenever he is on the ice. A great four-way skater, he also adds an element of unpredictability to the game, making him very tough to defend. Despite being undersized, he has learned to use his stick to come away with the puck from board battles. He will gamble occasionally when pressured at the point. Usually, thanks to his sublime skill level, he wins. When he loses, an odd-man rush will occur, although to his credit, he gets back very quickly. Hughes is ready for the NHL and can log heavy minutes and led the power play. He will have to prove that he can defend at the NHL level to avoid being protected, but he has star level talent. - RW

2 Vasili Podkolzin, RW (10th overall, 2019. Last Year: IE) Podkolzin had a busy season last year, playing in three leagues, two world championships, and he lined up for team Russia on more than 30 occasions. He showed phenomenal talent in most of these games, imposing his game on the opposition with his technique and skating, and of course, scoring a lot. He is a potential franchise player for the Canucks. He plays hard and with fierce determination, but at the same time he is a disciplined player who can be incredibly dangerous when the game opens up and he can use his explosive first three or four steps. A fantastic goal scorer and overall complete player, Podkolzin is expected to move overseas once his entry-level KHL deal runs out in April 2021. - ASR

3 Thatcher Demko, G (36th overall, 2014. Last Year: 4) The former Boston College goaltender is a beast in the net and a future starting goalie with the Canucks. Demko sees the play very well and his form is structured but fluid enough to prove his agility and energetic nature in the net. At times he can tend to over push and force himself out of position but with more NHL games under his belt he will settle into the pace better. He stays focused and his tracking abilities lead him to control rebounds very well. There is not much to be said about his puck abilities as he is not a goaltender that actively strives to play the puck a lot, however Demko is very smart when he deflects pucks and can read the play very well. His composure in net and the way he faces every puck is indicative of his readiness to move up to the top level and he is set on the NHL for this season. - SC

4 Olli Juolevi, D (5th overall, 2016. Last Year: 3) Although Juolevi has been battling injury, he is still considered to be one of Vancouver’s top prospects. He is a smart defenseman capable of reading the play and being one step ahead. He is a spot on passer and he can shoot from anywhere on the ice with speed and precision. Being back to one hundred percent will be big for Juolevi when he starts back with Utica this season. He will need to readjust to the pace of the breakouts and turnovers at the AHL pace so as to not fall behind or be dummied on any potential odd man rushes. His goal should be to keep his feet moving equally in all zones of the ice and to get back to playing a physical game. Having taken a slight detour, he still has the potential to be a top pairing blueliner with the Canucks once he is back to feeling confident and comfortable in the minor leagues. - SC

5 Will Lockwood, RW (64th overall, 2016. Last Year: 8) Outside of the All-World skill players, Lockwood has long been one of my favorite prospects to watch, both as a junior and in college. Recovered from the injury that curtailed his sophomore campaign, he was much more involved in the offensive attack as a junior, without losing that sandpaper edge that had previously defined his game. He will barge in on the forecheck and make life very difficult for the defensemen and goalies who try to play the puck out. He has quick feet that allow him to get and maintain ideal positioning. Even though he has only recently become a top six scoring option, he is a skilled forward and has a knack for turning blasé possessions into legit scoring chances. While the Canucks were rumored to be trying to get Lockwood under contract he has elected to return to Ann Arbor for his senior year. He projects to a middle six role in the NHL within one to two years. - RW

6 Jett Woo, D (37th overall, 2018. Last Year: 10) Woo has put the injury woes of his draft year behind him and turned in a very impressive offensive season. Scoring 66 points in 62 game has helped to stave off worry that he was destined to be a bottom pairing defender. He looks much more likely to take a top four role in the NHL someday. His physical play and compete level stand out as he battles for every loose puck, and every inch of ice in his own zone. He uses a nice combination of strength and quickness to control his own zone. Offensively, he moves the puck well and has a good shot. He isn’t scared to carry the puck in deep and trusts that his forwards will cover his position. His movement along the blue line opens up lanes to receive or send a pass through making him a valued part of the offense. - VG

7 Nils Hoglander, LW (40th overall, 2019. Last Year: IE) Hoglander’s puck skills, tenacity and strong balance are individual assets that had him ranked in the first round by some and a case can be made that the Canucks got a steal with him in the second round. We didn’t have him the first round and that’s more a case of his whole game. His hockey sense doesn’t suggest him to be a top six driver in the NHL. Individually, there is a lot to like with Hoglander but if we want someone to drive play for his teammates, make others better, controlling the pace, there are concerns. Even though he is small in size, he plays fearless physically and with some edge to his game. He is aggressive and intense and will always keep a defense occupied when on the ice. He will play another year in SHL, hopefully in a bigger role. - JH

8 Michael DiPietro, G (64th overall, 2017. Last Year: 9) It was a season to forget for DiPietro, a talented netminder out of the OHL. He was ripped apart by the San Jose Sharks in an emergency recall start, (which never should have happened), and he suffered an ankle injury in the OHL playoffs just as he was regaining his confidence. He is mature and determined and should bounce back and eventually become an NHL netminder. It may take patience and time as there will be an adjustment period. He is highly athletic, but one who is undersized by today’s standards. He relies on his reads and his athleticism to make saves and he can be a real game changer because of it. At the pro level, there are often growing pains for these types of goaltenders because the game moves faster, the top part of the net becomes an easier target, and confidence can wane. But DiPietro remains a very solid pro prospect and should eventually develop into an asset. - BO

9 Tyler Madden, C (68th overall, 2018. Last Year: 13) They are not common, but once in a while you cross a prospect who had skill but could not produce a great deal in his draft year and before, but then upon moving up a level, finds a new, more exciting level of offensive production. In most of these cases, the player in question had high hockey IQ, but was either playing with lesser talents, and/or being forced to play in a more defensive-oriented role. As McKeens is blessed with smart readers, I know you have figured out that Madden is one such player. The son of Selke winner John Madden, he is smart enough to read this site, too, but also to play in any situation for his team. He plays a skilled game, with good positioning in both zones and the ability to drive possession. He is on an upward trajectory and currently looks like a future middle six option. - RW

10 Lukas Jasek, RW (174th overall, 2015. Last Year: 12) An underdog type of player, Jasek has the ability to sneak past opponents and get into open ice without notice, giving him a leg up on his counterparts. He is a lightweight and a rather small looking player but his deceptiveness is scary when it comes to how aggressive he is on the puck. He plays with energy and passion and never gives up on a play. Due to his energetic style of play however, he can sometimes seem scattered and out of position because his work ethic is so high and strives to do so much at once. He will need to spend another season adjusting to the ice size in North America as well as the pace of the game to better know how to use his energy and where to focus most on the ice. Jasek is a hard-working, developing player with the potential to join Vancouver in a bottom six role but he will have to get bigger and strive for a more focused game. - SC

11 Kole Lind, RW (33rd overall, 2017. Last Year: 6) For a player who had a lot of success in the WHL, Lind has had a difficult adjustment to the AHL pace with Utica. He is not the quickest nor the smoothest of skaters but works hard to keep up with the play. His shot is a rocket and his release is impressive but he lacks the ability to consistently get to the net which is a problem. He has matured a lot over the course of his first professional year and his positional play has likewise gotten a lot better. Should he continue to develop his positional game at this pace, he will be mature enough to be called up to Vancouver but his skating will still need to improve a lot in order to earn a full time bottom six NHL spot. Lind brings the right attitude and skill to his game but he will need to keep up with the play and drive the net harder to get into better scoring positions next season. - SC

12 Guillaume Brisebois, D (66th overall, 2015. Last Year: 14) Brisebois is a dynamic and energetic defender who can easily maneuver his way down the ice or weave his way from the blueline down to the slot. He has great hands and can shoot the puck from all angles. However, his adjustment to the AHL level with Utica has been a little rocky as he does not have the time that he used to have with the puck that he had in the QMJHL. Although he still likes to play the outside he will need to work to up his confidence to walk the line a little more and create more space for himself. It will not be as easy for him to walk in and get quality scoring chances as a pro and he will have to find other ways to create chances for himself. Brisebois has the skill to be a bottom four defenseman but he will have to start thinking outside the box to generate more chances. - SC

13 Ethan Keppen, LW (122nd overall, 2019. Last Year: IE) Keppen is a power winger with good vision in the offensive end, a rarity for junior aged players. While he can drive the net using his strength on the puck, he is most effective working the cycle deep in the offensive zone, prolonging possession time and opening up passing lanes with his motor and determination. He finished second in the OHL last year among draft eligible players in even strength primary assists. He also possesses a heavy shot and the confidence to use it, something that should see him develop into a very well rounded offensive player. As he improves his skating to become a little more explosive, and as his ability to make plays at a quicker pace improves, Keppen could become a very good prospect for Vancouver. His projection is that of a middle six winger, but one who is several years away from helping the big club. - BO

14 Toni Utunen, D (130th overall, 2018. Last Year: 17) Utunen is a reliable defenseman whose biggest asset is definitely his hockey sense. He reads the game well. Maintains good gap control and is positionally sound. He can keep opposing forward to the outside. He moves the puck with short passes and gets pucks up the ice quickly. He possesses strong leadership qualities and does not hesitate to sacrifice his body as a shot blocker. Utunen is neither flashy nor creative, but he makes very few mistakes with the puck. His skating won’t wow you, but he has the foot speed, nobility, and backwards skating ability to hold his own in the Liiga. That said, there are questions about whether he has sufficient upside to develop into more than a third pairing NHL defenseman. - MB

15 Zach MacEwen, C (Undrafted Free Agent, signed Mar. 3, 2017. Last Year: 20) MacEwen is a great player to watch, a strong, gritty power forward who stops at nothing to put the puck in the net. He plays a simple game all over the ice, always making sure to keep his feet moving. He is not the smoothest of skaters but he has a good jump to his stride and can go from one zone to another in just a few strides. He is an efficient player but at times over-skates his forechecks and gets caught too deep or behind the play. For a bigger forward who plays with as much intensity as MacEwen does, he will have to make sure to be more careful with how he plays and pay better attention to how deep he gets caught on plays. His speed is at par but he will need to clean up his game and work on discipline next season to secure a bottom six forward spot at the highest level. - SC

16 Jack Rathbone, D (95th overall, 2017. Last Year: Not ranked) A wild stallion from the blueline in his draft year, Rathbone was difficult to adequately scout, playing for a Massachusetts area prep school, with four games with Youngstown as a change of pace. He took the rare step of returning to his school after being drafted, keeping him firmly under the radar. Now that he has finally spent a full season playing top level competition for Harvard, we can see what Rathbone really is. He is an undersized, offensive defenseman. He gets his feet moving quickly, although his top speed is less than I would like for a blueliner his size. He has good vision and likes to load up for a long bomb pass. Considering both size and play style, he cannot play effectively in the greasy areas. He still has a long way to go before the Canucks will know what they have, but last year was a step in the right direction. - RW

17 Jack Malone, RW (180th overall, 2019. Last Year: IE) After a season in a depth role for Youngstown, Malone played with far greater assertiveness in his draft year finishing second on the Phantoms, and in the top 15 leaguewide  in scoring. More a playmaker than a finisher, he does play enough around the crease area to get his share of goals from in tight, but he really shines when he executes cutting paces off the rush and with pace to a steaking linemate. His skating had also shown marked improvement as his draft year progressed, to the point where he can now blow past defenders with some regularity. Malone still has a lot to work on with his game, such as not forcing plays and tightening up his own zone work. He has talent, but not enough to play on a top six, making his ability to defend more important. - RW

18 Josh Teves, D (Undrafted Free Agent, signed Mar. 12, 2019. Last Year: IE) Teves has a gift of getting the puck up the ice. He is not the fastest skater, but he can find the seams for getting the puck onto the offensive zone. He makes a good first pass. He is also an excellent backwards skater. He can really freeze the puck in the corners in win puck battles with impressive strength, even at 6-0”, 170 lbs. With that size, he may be able to hang in the NHL for stretches, but not necessarily as a defenseman. He played some on the wing for Princeton as a test when they needed more offense, and it is possible that Vancouver might try using him like that if they are unsatisfied with his defensive coverage. In 2017-18, when the team was at its best, he put up 33 points in 31 games, with a hefty percentage of that on the man advantage. The next season will go a long way in seeing how the Canucks want to develop him. - RC

19 Jonah Gadjovich, LW (55th overall, 2017. Last Year: 11) Gadjovich is a difficult player to watch because his skating is so weak, but his strength on the puck, paired with his shooting ability, make up for his lack of movement. His hockey sense is good and he sees the play well from all areas of the ice. With Utica last year, many of his best shifts were spent on the powerplay in front of the net where his strength and hockey sense were best demonstrated. He is a bottom six forward at best in the NHL but his work ethic may take him further if he can improve his start up speed and work on his fluidity and being lighter and more comfortable on his skates. Gadjovich has a good attitude and work ethic and his redeeming qualities, such as his physicality and good hands, paired with his high hockey IQ, feed hope for his continued development, starting with a better season in 2019-20. - SC

20 Mitch Eliot, D (Undrafted Free Agent, signed Dec. 14, 2018. Last Year: IE) Eliot, a free agent signing out of Sarnia last season, is a very similar player to Jalen Chatfield, who Vancouver also signed out of the OHL a few years ago. He skates well and is a well-rounded defender who can play in all situations. Defensively, he takes away space with his mobility and his strength. Offensively, he can move the puck and attack the offensive zone, confidently handling the puck when leading the rush. The question is, can he do any of these things at an elite level? The answer would be no at this current time, but a few seasons in the AHL could elevate his skill set to the point where he could be a reliable two-way third pairing defender. - BO

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Vancouver Canucks Prospect System Overview https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/vancouver-canucks-prospect-system-overview/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/vancouver-canucks-prospect-system-overview/#respond Fri, 14 Sep 2018 14:58:51 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=150350 Read More... from Vancouver Canucks Prospect System Overview

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There are teams that have depth throughout their organization. They draft from everywhere, and affiliated players of theirs dot rosters across the planet, from their own AHL and ECHL affiliates, and found here and there on various CHL teams, on college campuses in the US and on teams in the best European leagues. And if a player passes through the draft and catches their eyes, the team does not hesitate to sign that player as an undrafted free agent to round out the system.

Those teams have high end talent, young men who are destined to challenge for roles atop the NHL lineup, they have versatile players who can be plugged in and play wherever and however needed. And they have depth in numbers, understanding that not all shiny new prospects reach their projected ceilings. It is always good to have players in the system who can hold their own without too much embarrassment, ready to fill in at a moment’s notice, even if the filling is only for a moment.

The Canucks do not have all of that in their system. They have some, but not everything.

They have players from everywhere. Prospects from the Vancouver system spent last year in the AHL of course. There were a few collegians. They had eyes on players from the top leagues in both Sweden and Finland, as well as the top flights of both Russia and the Czech Republic. They did not have anybody who was playing in the QMJHL (which is not all that rare), but there were Canucks’ prospects playing in the OHL, WHL, USHL and even the MJHL and in a Massachusetts prep school.

As will be discussed in more detail below, this organization certainly has its share high end prospects, with 6-9 of these players projected as top half of lineup players and up to four of them who could for whom stardom could be in the offing.

The Canucks also have a second tier below those guys, a tier perhaps five or six deep with guys who could fit into that comfortable middle of the team. The Canucks don’t need to count on these guys, but they are glad to have them. But what the Canucks lack is that depth. When we talk about depth, we are usually looking at guys already in the AHL, who have some professional experience and are ready to contribute, even if those contributions are mild.

When the Canucks needed a decent player to come up as an injury replacement, their options were painfully limited. Instead of using that as an opportunity to give a potential future contributor a cup of NHL coffee, instead they had to bring up older journeymen, such as Ashton Sautner (five games), Jayson Megna (one game), Philip Holm (one game), and Michael Chaput (nine games). Those four players combined for a grand total of two points, both from Sautner.

This lack of viable depth is a direct result of questionable drafting in the later rounds. Those top players were selected early, but the Canucks have neglected to sign a number of recent late round picks, such as Carl Neill and Tate Olson from their 2015 draft class and fully two thirds of their 2016 draft class in Cole Candella, Jakob Stukel, Rodrigo Abols, and Brett McKenzie.

The Canucks seem to be acing the hardest part of the rebuild but are flunking the easiest portion.

Elias Pettersson
Elias Pettersson

1 Elias Pettersson, C/LW (5th overall, 2017. Last Year: 2nd) Among the handful of most dynamic prospects in the game, Pettersson laid the SHL to waste in his age 18 season, winning both league rookie of the year and MVP awards. His season with Vaxjo was simply one of the best by a teenager in any European league ever. A ridiculously talented sniper, his shot is near elite on a few fronts. The release is incredibly quick, but his patience with the puck helps the release seem even quicker. A talented dangler, he can use his hips to great effect to sell a deke. Unlike many scoring sensations of his ilk, Pettersson is also responsible in his own end.  One of the top candidates to win the Calder this season, he should pair with the Canucks’ other recent Calder finalist to give the team two high caliber goal scorers for years to come.

2 Quinn Hughes, D (7th overall, 2018. Last Year: IE) The most dynamic draft eligible defenseman in North America last season, Hughes played a minor role as a double under-ager for Team USA at the WJC and then saw his game absolutely take off over the second half of the NCAA season. By the end, he was the engine for Michigan’s Frozen Four team. A brilliant skater and thrilling puck handler, his rushes up the ice are breathtaking, yet he still has the wherewithal to slow the game down in the offensive end. As he acclimatized to the collegiate game, Hughes also began to show more reliability in his defensive responsibilities. If he did not elect to return to the Wolverines for his sophomore season, he would have stood a chance of playing in the NHL right away. Hughes looks like Vancouver’s future number one defender.

3 Olli Juolevi, D (5th overall, 2016. Last Year: 1st) As much as Olli Juolevi has been somewhat disappointing since being drafted fifth overall in 2016, thanks to an underwhelming follow up campaign with the London Knights, make no mistake, but he is still trending towards a career with first pairing potential. Instead of going back to London for a third go-round, Juolevi returned home to Finland instead, spending the year with TPS, where he impressed playing for the first time against men, while dominating in his third WJC. He is an excellent passer and puck mover who has an advanced understanding of the game and rarely makes the wrong play. He is expected to come back to North America this year and challenge for an NHL job, although some time in the AHL would not hurt him, or the rebuilding Canucks.

4 Thatcher Demko, G (36th overall, 2014. Last Year: 7th) Drafted as a true freshman out of Boston College, Demko improved his save percentage year over year over year during his collegiate career, going from .919 to .925 to .935 before leaving campus for the professional world. In that final year, he was named Hockey East Player of the Year, was an NCAA East All American, and took home the Mike Richter Award as the best netminder in the country. While his first season in the AHL was occasionally rocky, he rebounded in his second season, finishing tied for sixth in save percentage in the league.  Demko has ideal size for the net, and grades out very highly for his calm demeanor, ability to read the play, mature technical form, and ability to stifle second chances. Expect him to battle for an NHL job out of camp this year.

Jonathan Dahlen
Jonathan Dahlen

5 Jonathan Dahlen, LW/C (Trade: Feb. 27, 2017 [Ottawa]) Last Year: 4th) Coming off a season in which he was named best forward and MVP of Sweden’s second tier men’s league (Allsvenskan), Dahlen, who was on loan at Timra, is ready for the AHL game. He has never been a high-end skater, but the smallish winger has improved a fair bit in that area since he was drafted and there is no longer reason to believe that it will hold him back. Both his puck skills and his hockey smarts are at very high levels, and he has proven able to score at every single level he has played at thus far in his burgeoning career. He will need some time in the AHL to get used to the rougher physical game in North America but should be able to find himself playing in in the NHL by the end of the season.

6 Kole Lind, RW (33rd overall, 2017. Last Year: 6th) The Canucks would have been very pleased to track Lind’s development in his first post draft season. He showed the ability to play with greater pace and was more assertive all around. Already an accomplished offensive player, he contributed eight more points for Kelowna this year, even though he played in 12 fewer games. He is a gifted puck player who couples finishing skills with the instincts of a playmaker. He does not play a soft game, although he could stand to put on a few pounds as he prepares for a full season as a professional, likely in the AHL. He could be knocking on the NHL door before the season is out.

7 Adam Gaudette, C (149th overall, 2015. Last Year: 9th) It is easy to look at the gaudy point totals of the 2018 Hobey Baker Award winner and think that Gaudette is a sure-fire top prospect. He is not without skill. He skates well, has a nice shot and is a very talented playmaker and stick handler. He even played some on the PK with Northeastern and has a well-developed hockey IQ. The reason why we cannot rank him higher up this list is that a very hefty proportion of his offensive output cam on the man advantage (27 of 60 points). Yes, there were former first rounders in the NCAA that could not match his even strength output, but there are questions about whether he is dynamic enough to continue to earn time on the power play as a pro. Either way, he will have a chance to play in Vancouver this year.

8 Will Lockwood, RW (64th overall, 2016. Last Year: 11th) A skilled grinder, Lockwood plays with an immense amount of energy that brings to mind a slightly taller Brendan Gallagher. This is not to say that Lockwood is a future 30 goals scorer in the NHL, but he is a future fan favorite. A born hustler, he has the wheels to match his intensity, and despite underwhelming point totals over the years, a fair bit of individual skill lurking in his stick. As he prepares to return from major shoulder surgery to fix an injury sustained in the WJC, he will have to show that he can rein in his physical proclivities and play smart when playing tough might not be the answer. If he can remain healthy, he should rank higher on this list next year.

9 Michael DiPietro, G (64th overall, 2017. Last Year: 8th) If you don’t like DiPietro, “you must not like winning.” That quote, reportedly spoken by DiPietro to unnamed team officials during interviews at the NHL scouting combine last year will follow him throughout his career, wherever it takes him. He had reason to be cocky, having just come off leading his Windsor Spitfires to a Memorial Cup championship on home ice. Although his numbers slumped somewhat as Windsor iced a much younger, less talented roster this year, he is still the same athletic, hyper-competitive netminder who reads the ice well and controls rebounds. He will head back to the OHL for one more season and is expected to challenge for a spot with Team Canada at the next WJC – in Vancouver.

Jett Woo
Jett Woo

10 Jett Woo, D (37th overall, 2018. Last Year: IE) Like Lockwood above, Woo is a hard-hitting throwback type of player who missed a large chunk of last season with a shoulder injury. In Woo’s case, as it was hist draft year, not only did it take away crucial development time, but also likely hurt his draft stock, leaving him on the board for Vancouver’s second round pick. A defender whose game is predicated on a dollop of hockey IQ and a heaping of truculence, he has shown just enough offensive skill and mobility to suggest better health could allow him to profile as a top four blueliner at the highest level. Is work ethic and other intangibles should help him maximize his abilities.

11 Jonah Gadjovich, LW (55th overall, 2017. Last Year: 10th) Somewhat of a surprise selection to represent Team Canada at last year’s WJC, the former 46 goal scorer with Owen Sound took on more of a depth line role at the prestige tournament, killing penalties and scrumming for space in front of the opponent’s net on the power play. An instinctual goal scorer, he has an impressively long reach and a strong shot when he can lean on one from the slot. Gadjovich has a big, burly frame, and while that helps him at times, it works against him at others, as his first few steps can be sluggish. Further, while his strength was a clear asset in the OHL, he was so much more physically mature than most of the competition, that he often left observers wanting more. He is ready for AHL action.

12 Lukas Jasek, RW (174th overall, 2015. Last Year: not ranked) Jasek was puttering along anonymously in the lower reaches of the Czech hockey system, occasionally popping up (and not doing anything) at an international tournament for his age group. He finally spent most of last year in the top Czech division and did relatively well for a 20-year-old (second in league scoring among the 21U set) while he dazzled in the European Champions Hockey League for Bili Tygri. To top it off, he came to Utica at the tail end of the season and put up seven points in six games. An energetic, conscientious player, he plays hard and recognizes scoring chances well, making up for a moderate skill set.

13 Tyler Madden, C (68th overall, 2018. Last Year: IE) A chip off the old block. Madden, whose father John was a Selke Award winner in the 1990s with New Jersey, is a defense first center with some skill. Short and slight, he is more than just a defensive specialist as he has flashed plus skills as a playmaker and puckhandler, while his shot makes up in timing what it lacks in force. As he moves to offensive powerhouse Northeastern for the next few years, he will have every opportunity to not only add bulk to his underdeveloped frame, but also to explore the extent of his offensive skills as he is very refined away from the puck.

Guillaume Brisebois
Guillaume Brisebois

14 Guillaume Brisebois, D (66th overall, 2015. Last Year: 12th) Tall, yet slight, Brisebois is a strong skater who took his lumps last year as an AHL rookie but played well enough throughout to maintain his standing as a prospect. He is not a flashy player but moves the puck with efficiency. He plays well away from the puck and was trusted with heavy usage with a Utica team that much in the way of high end skill. Mostly playing a finesse game, he has the frame to handle burly opposition, although he still looks as if he could use 10-15 more pounds of bulk to give back as good as he gets. A second AHL season will go a long way to letting the Canucks know what they have in Brisebois.

15 Matthew Thiessen, G (192nd overall, 2018. Last Year: IE) The top draft eligible netminder in any of the Tier I leagues across Canada, Thiessen gained some public notoriety as he backstopped the Steinbach Pistons to the MJHL championship and a spot in the RBC Cup. Athletic and competitive, he has decent size for the modern game and has demonstrated a strong ability to read the play in front of him. As with any netminder (or skater for that matter) coming out of a lower level of competition such as the MJHL, he will have to answer questions about his ability to perform at a high level against better opponents. He will get his first chance to step up next year, playing with Dubuque of the USHL, before moving on to Maine, in Hockey East.

16 Matt Brassard, D (188th overall, 2017. Last Year: not ranked) Although he went undrafted in his first year of eligibility, the Canucks took a chance on the puck moving Brassard after a strong age 18 season split between Barrie and Oshawa of the OHL. He rewarded them with even better performance at age 19 last year, although it was not enough for Vancouver to extend an ELC his way (yet). A decent at best skater, Brassard has good offensive tools between his point shot and his puck handling skills. While he also has good size, he does not it to good effect. His defensive zone reads are also unrefined which will impact his potential to advance if it is not addressed.

17 Toni Utunen, D (130th overall, 2018. Last Year: IE) Small, and not very toolsy, everything about Utunen plays up thanks to his highly advanced hockey IQ. While he rarely flashes high end skill, he is seemingly always in the right place to impact the game positively for his team. It could be by starting the transition out of his own zone, as he is equally comfortable carrying the puck out or passing it upstream to a waiting teammate. It could also be his fearlessness in getting into the shooting lane while killing a penalty. It could be the fact that he spent his draft year playing with men in Finland, splitting the year between the top two leagues in the land. Expect this sleeper to play a bigger role this year.

18 Petrus Palmu, LW/RW (181st overall, 2017. Last Year: not ranked) Ten or fifteen years ago, a player of Palmu’s stature would likely have been passed over at the draft, as 5-7” just would not play in that era, no matter how fast or skilled the player was. Even today, a player as small as he is needs to prove himself over and over before getting the call. Vancouver selected Palmu in his third year of draft eligibility, after he doubled his offensive output from 49 too 98 points for Owen Sound. Having completed his CHL eligibility, he went back to Finland and had a very strong rookie season, earning an ELC. Prone to overhandling, he is stronger than he looks and can take a hit to make a play, although he will never be a force at any level. He should spend this upcoming season in the AHL.

19 Jalen Chatfield, D (UDFA: Mar. 13, 2017. Last Year: 19th) A teammate of Michael DiPietro’s on the Memorial Cup winning Windsor Spitfires in 2016-17, Chatfield showed enough two-way potential, along with intangibles, to earn an ELC as an undrafted free agent towards the end of the OHL regular season. While his offensive game cratered in his professional debut, to his credit, he never really looked out of place with the Comets. Chatfield profiles as no more than a third pairing, or seventh defenseman in the NHL, but his hockey IQ is refined enough that he could carve out a long career despite a lack of any one high end tool.

20 Zack MacEwen, C (UDFA: Mar. 3, 2017. Last Year: 13th) A big rugged forward signed as an undrafted free agent out of Gatineau in the QMJHL, MacEwen struggled with parts of the transition to the pros. On the one hand, he was able to contribute offensively at a reasonable clip, finishing fourth in team scoring with Utica – and tops among prospect eligible players. On the other hand, he struggled on the other side of the puck. As flawed as the plus-minus metric is, it can be telling, and MacEwen’s negative 22 (second worst on the team) is a black mark. Between his great size and willingness to crash and bang, he could carve out a role at the bottom of an NHL lineup, but needs to prove he can be reliable in his own end.

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Vancouver – System Overview https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/vancouver-system-overview/ https://www.mckeenshockey.com/nhl-blog/vancouver-system-overview/#respond Sat, 16 Sep 2017 12:01:40 +0000 https://www.mckeenshockey.com/?p=131580 Read More... from Vancouver – System Overview

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An old team with little to be hopeful for in either the near or mid-term future, the Vancouver Canucks managed to brighten an otherwise dark system with two deadline day swaps. For a team that had been spinning its wheels since a somewhat surprising competitive 2014-15 season, a concrete step towards the future before the twin expirations of the twin Sedin contracts was thought unlikely, if not impossible.

With the Sedins on pace to cede the label of team leader to up-and-comer Bo Horvat, the need to placate the heroes of the 2010-11 Stanley Cup run has subsided. In the space of two days, GM Jim Benning dealt Alexandre Burrows and his expiring contract to Ottawa for scoring winger Jonathan Dahlen, less than 12 months removed from being a second round draft pick and completing a near point-per-game tour-de-force in the Allsvenskan, Sweden’s second men’s league.

The next day, they sent Jannik Hansen, in the midst of a down season, to San Jose in exchange for former first round pick Nikolay Goldobin, who was also at close to a point-per-game in his second full season in the AHL. As part of this trade, Vancouver also picked up a conditional 2017 fourth rounder, which they later swapped for picks in the fifth and sixth rounds.

While those that wanted to see the Canucks competitive right away may have chafed at the deals, the Canucks were not going to succeed with a few more weeks of games with Hansen and Burrows patrolling the wings. Already in last place with two aging and expensive veterans, Benning heeded the sage advice of baseball immortal Branch Rickey, on dealing with fellow future Hall of Famer Ralph Kiner, a star on an otherwise non-competitive club. “Son, we can finish last without you.”

The much derided Benning accepted the inevitability that the Canucks would continue to scuffle at or near the bottom of the standings with those two and made the best of it, accepting pretty compelling offers to move on. While Dahlen and Goldobin are both with their own flaws - questions about footspeed for the former and a reputation for one-way play for the latter – they are both young, talented and far more likely to be viable contributors on the next competitive Canucks team.

The Canucks are still rather far from the path back to contention, and seem likely to play out the final year of the Sedin deals this year, before they will feel free to fully complete the tear-down. Expectations may have been marginally more optimistic had the team not wiped out the top end of the 2014 draft. From two first round picks, one (Jake Virtanen) is perhaps 12 months from bust territory and they gave up on the other (Jared McCann) very early, shipping him to Florida for stay-at-home defenseman Erik Gudbranson. While there is still work to be done, at long last, with a fairly promising top five in the system, Canucks fans can begin to see a happier future for their club.

Olli Juolevi of the London Knights was selected by the Vancouver Canucks in the first round of the 2016 NHL Entry Draft in Buffalo, NY on Friday June 24, 2016. Photo by Aaron Bell/CHL Images
Olli Juolevi of the London Knights was selected by the Vancouver Canucks in the first round of the 2016 NHL Entry Draft in Buffalo, NY on Friday June 24, 2016. Photo by Aaron Bell/CHL Images

1 Olli Juolevi – His top tier point totals during his draft year were always going to be hard to top, especially as many of his elite teammates had since turned pro. So the fact that Juolevi equaled his regular season point total should be looked at favorably. A fantastic skater, he is among the calmest puck carrying blueliners you are likely to find. Puck skills and game reads are also top quartile, if not decile. He may be ready for the NHL, but one final year of junior hockey wouldn’t hurt in the meantime.

GRAND FORKS, NORTH DAKOTA - APRIL 15: Sweden's Elias Pettersson #21 skates with the puck while LatviaÕs Vlads Vulkanovs #13 defends during preliminary round action at the 2016 IIHF Ice Hockey U18 World Championship. (Photo by Matt Zambonin/HHOF-IIHF Images)
Sweden's Elias Pettersson #21 (Photo by Matt Zambonin/HHOF-IIHF Images)

2 Elias Pettersson – One of the best puck skill players available in the 2017 draft class, Pettersson was near a point-per-game player as a 17 year old playing among men in Sweden’s Allsvenskan. As good as his puck skills are, his hockey IQ may be its equal. He is versatile, able to play both center and on the wings. He seems to see the game a few steps ahead of everyone else, leading to generally correct decisions. Moving up to the SHL this year, his biggest area for improvement is accepting the simple play more often.

3 Brock Boeser – Although his sophomore season was injury riddled, affecting his production even when he was healthy, Boeser was still an elite goal scorer at the NCAA level. Despite his extremely high marks for his shooting ability, he is not selfish with the puck and utilizes his linemates very well. He also shows admirable commitment to the game away from puck, often used on the PK with North Dakota. With four goals in a nine game NHL cameo at year’s end, Vancouver has gotten a taste of what’s to come.

MONTREAL, CANADA - DECEMBER 26: Sweden's Jonathan Dahlen #27 skates during preliminary round action against Denmark at the 2017 IIHF World Junior Championship. (Photo by Andre Ringuette/HHOF-IIHF Images)
MONTREAL, CANADA - DECEMBER 26: Sweden's Jonathan Dahlen #27 - 2017 IIHF World Junior Championship. (Photo by Andre Ringuette/HHOF-IIHF Images)

4 Jonathan Dahlen – Vancouver’s prize for keeping Alexandre Burrows for as long as they did, Dahlen was both a teammate and a linemate of Elias Pettersson last year in Timra. While Pettersson is staying in Sweden for now, Dahlen, a 2016 second rounder, is coming over to North America. More agile than fast, Dahlen gets high grades for his shot, puck skills and hockey IQ. Son of long-time NHLer’ Ulf Dahlen, his time in the AHL may be short. Looks like a future top six forward.

5 Nikolay Goldobin – After coming over in trade from San Jose, Goldobin spent most of the rest of the season in the NHL with Vancouver, scoring three times in 12 games. The former San Jose first rounder, he is a plus puckhandler, with a number of tricks up his sleeve to get past pesky defenders. An offense first player with plus acceleration, he has spent much of the last two years in the Sharks’ system learning to be more active away from the puck. The work will come in handy for his new organization.

6 Kole Lind – The kind of player who does everything well, but nothing exceptionally, Lind is also notable for his plus hustle. He has great work ethic and with a bit more consistency, he projects as a power forward down the line. During prolonged offensive shifts, the second round pick can often be found parked in front of the opponent’s net, which is where he does most of his damage on the scoresheet. Will need to show this year that he can produce without some of the high producing veterans now aged out of the league.

7 Thatcher Demko – The last great hope from the doomed draft class of 2014, Demko had a solid, if occasionally shaky rookie pro season with Utica. He has a very large frame and moves very well for his size to boot, but his positioning is still in the development stages. So while he gets from post to post relatively quickly, his long, spidery legs leaves him with a sizable five-hole when in motion. Bumps aside, he has all of the attributes you look for when projecting workhorse starts.

8 Michael DiPietro – If not Demko, the Canucks used a third round pick this year on the undersized but ultra-competitive DiPietro, fresh off backstopping his Windsor Spitfires to an unexpected Memorial Cup Championship. A very athletic netminder, he reads plays well and is aggressive about securing his crease. Very calm between the pipes as well, rarely over-committing himself for a given shot. He will eventually give Demko a run for his money as netminder of the future in Vancouver.

9 Adam Gaudette – An unheralded prospect in the USHL in his draft year, Gaudette has taken multiple steps forward in his two years with Northeastern. Now one of college hockey’s premier offensive players, he combines above average puck handling and offensive vision. Questions remain about his pace as he can struggle to keep up against faster opponents, but he will have the chance to answer some of them this year, as at least one of his linemates (Zach Aston-Reese) has turned pro.

10 Jonah Gadjovich – A big bodied forward who makes most of his noise from in front of the net, Gadjovich more than tripled his previous goal scoring production, ending his draft year with 46, before struggling throughout Owen Sound’s long playoff run. On the downside, his skating comes and goes, which may be more effort related as he can get to impressive top speeds on occasion. In general, his effort has been known to waver in the late stages of the game.

11 Will Lockwood – Deployed as a two-way, energy forward with the USNTDP, the Canucks drafted Lockwood in the third round in 2016, betting on his tools playing up. Through his freshman year with Michigan, they may be rewarded. He is a high work rate player who always finds his way to the puck. A grinder, he has skill, but has yet to learn his limits, and will sometimes try to do too much, getting into trouble. Projects as a bottom six winger who can provide secondary offense and penalty kill utility.

12 Guillaume Brisebois – A lanky, puck-moving defender, Brisebois is mobile and loves to join the rush as a lead option. Very effective as a power play quarterback in the junior ranks, he is also proficient in his own zone, using his long reach to close gaps and snuff out opposition rushes. After improving his offensive output year-over-year throughout his QMJHL career, he should be ready to face the challenges of the AHL game.

13 Zack MacEwen – Not the toolsiest player in the system, MacEwen has worked his way into an offensive role in the Q, crashing and banging his way from being passed over in the draft three times, to signing a free agent contract with the Canucks late this season. He has a decent enough shot, but his hands may not be an asset at the next level. His physical play will determine his ultimate upside as a pro.

14 Dmitri Zhukenov – Drafted out of Russia in 2015, Zhukenov spent two years learning the North American game in the QMJHL, but will continue his career next year back in Russia with Avangard Omsk. A high motor skilled center, he has above average offensive instincts and is a hard worker in his own zone as well. Due to the undersized forward’s contract situation for the near future, this is a rare case where the “Russian Factor” affects his ranking.

15 Griffen Molino – Another late bloomer, Molino developed into a strong two-way forward as an undrafted player at Western Michigan. Although his offensive numbers appear middling, he can display good offensive vision and some playmaking ability. A solid skater, he is patient with the puck and has plus possession ability. He should be able to play in the NHL in some role, but his ceiling is admittedly limited.

16 Jordan Subban – Smaller and less heralded than his brothers Pernell Karl and Malcolm, Jordan Subban is an exciting player who has power play specialist potential, but is vulnerable in the back through lack of strength or reach, or for lack of effort. He has a very nice wrist shot and is strong with the puck, but his opportunity will be largely a function of whether his coach believes he can fulfill a specific role. As Vancouver’s new head coach was behind the bench in Utica over the past two years, that comfort level may now be in place.

17 Jack Rathbone – One of the top talents playing prep hockey in New England this year, the Harvard commit was able to overcome his small stature at that level through plus skating and always pushing the play forward. He likes to pinch in deep and float around, waiting for a chance to strike. There will be a big adjustment once he moves on to play against a better level of competition, but he has some of the tools needed to be an impact player down the road.

18 Evan McEneny – A decent skating blueliner, the Canucks stole him as a free agent after he went undrafted after being limited by injury to two games in his first draft year. After completing his OHL career, his rookie pro season was mostly spent in the ECHL, but he continued to produce decent offensive numbers in his first AHL season. He has good size, but has never been very physical.

19 Jalen Chatfield – Another undrafted free agent in the Vancouver system, Chatfield is more of a defensive-minded player than McEneny. Generally one of the go-to defensive defensemen on the Memorial Cup winning Windsor Spitfires. His skating is above average, but he lacks the stick handling skills to provide much more than concise first passes to help clear his own zone.

20 Brett McKenzie – Fitting to end this list with another late bloomer, the Canucks drafted McKenzie in the seventh round during his second year of eligibility. McKenzie plays a power forward game when he is on the puck and can be a solid threat barreling down the wing. He can finish himself or dish off to teammates due to advanced vision. May be returned to the OHL for an overage season.

The preponderance of undrafted players making up the back half of the above list is a reminder of the dark recent past that this organization is only now starting to climb out of. While there are certainly many players who have gone from undrafted to long-time NHLers, many more never make it, or have limited roles if they do.

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