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Draft Profile: Will Bitten

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2016 NHL Draft

C/RW Will Bitten

Flint Firebirds (OHL)

Steve Kournianos  |  03/16/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of the Flint Firebirds

Profile

Position: Center/Right Wing
Shoots: Right
Height/Weight: 5’10 171 lbs
Born: July 10th, 1998, Gloucester, ON
The Draft Analyst Ranking: 20th (February)
Obtained: Drafted in the first round (7th overall) by the Plymouth Whalers in the 2014 OHL Priority Selection (the Plymouth franchise was renamed the Flint Firebirds for the 2015-16 season).
Notes: 2015-16: Leads Flint in scoring with 65 points in 65 games…Ranks first on the Firebirds in goals (30) and assists (35)…Won 174 of 429 faceoffs (40.1 percent)…Played for Team Orr at the 2016 CHL Top Prospects Game…Appeared in one game for Team OHL at the 2015 CHL Canada-Russia Super Series…Recorded a goal and an assist in five games for Team Canada’s gold medal –winning entry at the 2015 U18 Ivan Hlinka Memorial Cup…2014-15: Ranked 14th among OHL rookies in scoring with 31 points…Recorded two goals and three assists in five games for Team Canada-Red at the 2015 World U17 Hockey Challenge.

Regular Season

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2014-15 Plymouth (OHL) 63 15 16 31 0.49 -11
*2015-16 Flint (OHL) 64 30 35 65 1.01 -24

*Through 16 March 2016

Scouting Report

Feisty sparkplug with superior vision who’s dealt with a ton of adversity while serving as Flint’s captain and leader during its chaotic inaugural OHL season. To say Bitten carries his team is an understatement; he’s scored 30 goals on the team who averages under three goals a game. But there’s more to his game than offense, as he’s used in all situations and serves as Flint’s top option for both the power play and the penalty kill.

Bitten is somewhat undersized, but he has tremendous balance and escapability. He is a very good skater with excellent breakaway speed, and can beat defenders to the outside or turn them inside-out thanks to a variety of on-the-go jukes and fakes. He’s a disciplined solider who follows instruction, always willing to dial down his role in order to do what’s best of the team. Bitten knows what to do with the puck, owning a soft set of hands and excellent hand-eye coordination. He’s one of the draft’s best at making something out of nothing, and we think he’d be one of the circuit’s top scorers had he had more finishers to work with.


Draft Profile: Pascal Laberge

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2016 NHL Draft

C/W Pascal Laberge

Victoriaville Tigres (QMJHL)

Steve Kournianos  |  03/19/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of the QMJHL

Profile

Position: Center/Wing
Shoots: Right
Height/Weight: 6’1, 175 lbs
Born: April 9, 1998, Chateauguay, QC
The Draft Analyst Ranking: 18th (March)
Obtained: Selected by Gatineau in the first round (second overall) in the 2014 QMJHL Entry Draft…Traded from Gatineau to Victoriaville for Yan-Pavel Laplante and Tommy Veilleux on December 24, 2013.
Notes: 2015-16: Leads Victoriaville in assists (43), points (66) and shots (182) in 55 games through March 19th…Has won 45.7 percent of 411 faceoffs through March 19th…Recorded at least one point in nine straight games from November 27th, 2015 to January 3rd, 2016…Scored two goals and added an assist for Team Orr at the 2016 CHL Top Prospects Game…Missed a combined total of 12 games after twice breaking his hand…2014-15: Tied for 17th in rookie scoring with 10 goals and 21 assists in 58 games…Won 41.4 percent of 626 faceoffs…Had four assists in five games for Team Canada-Black at the 2014 World U17 Hockey Challenge.

Regular Season

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2014-15 Gatineau (QMJHL) 27 4 6 10 0.37 -6
2014-15 Victoriaville (QMJHL) 31 6 15 21 0.68 -3
*2015-16 Victoriaville (QMJHL) 55 23 43 66 1.20 -2

Playoffs

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2014-15 Victoriaville (QMJHL) 2 0 0 0 0.00 -3

Scouting Report

If there was ever a prospect who manages to go about his business without the kind of ballyhoo you’d expect from one of Quebec’s top amateur players, it’s definitely Pascal Laberge. The slick offensive dynamo went from being a top pick in the QMJHL draft to draft prospect obscurity, but a memorable performance at the CHL Top Prospects Game in January shed light on what’s been an excellent pre-draft season. Laberge can play both center and wing, although his ability to elude or confront detection and fire off a lethal shot with a quick release makes us think he’d be a tremendous compliment to a top-notch set-up guy.

Laberge is a good skater with a compact style yet strong enough to deal with a hit while maintaining possession. He keeps the puck close to his body, and his ability to change gears can catch a gambling defenseman flat footed. And while it’s cliché to say a skill player would be a devastating adversary with time and space on his side, Laberge truly is a player you don’t want to sleep on, as he unpredictable both with and without the puck. A true offensive threat who needs to get stronger and learn how to because an equal contributor in his own end.

Draft Profile: Charlie McAvoy

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2016 NHL Draft

RHD Charlie McAvoy

Boston University Terriers (Hockey East)

Steve Kournianos  |  03/25/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of Getty Images

Profile

Position: Defensemen
Shoots: Right
Height/Weight: 6’0 208 lbs
Born: December 21, 1997, Long Beach, NY
The Draft Analyst Ranking: 27th (March)
Obtained: Committed to Boston University on August 13th, 2013
Notes: 2015-16: Named to Hockey East All-Rookie Team after leading Boston University defensemen in points (24) and assists (21)…Recorded four assists in a playoff win over Massachusetts-Amherst — the first Terrier blueliner to do so since 2009 (Matt Gilroy)…Appeared in seven games for Team USA as they won the bronze medal at the 2016 Under-20 World Junior Championship…Played for Team Plante at the 2015 All-American Top Prospects Game, where he recorded an assist in a 6-4 win over Team Roenick…2014-15: Topped all Team USA defensemen in goals (7), assists (33) and points (40)…Placed third among defensemen in assists (4) and points (4) to help Team USA win gold at the 2015 Under-18 World Championship…Registered a goal and two assists in four games as Team USA won the 2015 U18 Five Nations Tournament in the Czech Republic…Scored a goal in four games to help Team USA win the 2014 U18 Four Nations Tournament in Sweden…2013-14: Finished third in scoring among Team USA defenseman with 19 points, trailing only 2015 NHL first round draft picks Zach Werenski and Noah Hanifin…Recorded a goal and two assists in six games as Team USA won gold at the 2014 World Under-17 Hockey Challenge…Had a goal and two assists in four games as Team USA captured 2014 Five Nations Tournament in Sundvall, Sweden…Notched a goal and an assist in three games to help Team USA take the 2013 Four Nations Cup in Prievidza, Slovakia…Selected in the sixth round (113th overall) by Kitchener in the 2013 OHL Priority selection.

Regular Season

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2013-14 US U17 (NTDP) 54 7 12 19 0.35
2014-15 US U18 (NTDP) 63 7 33 40 0.63
2015-16 Boston University (Hockey East) 37 3 22 25 0.68 +10

Scouting Report

Sturdy two-way defenseman who immediately became a key cog on Boston University’s blueline. A native of Long Island who was reared in the Gulls’ program before a run with last year’s NTDP under-18 squad, McAvoy is built for the modern game – thick, explosive and assertive. He’s a strong skater with excellent balance and superior mobility both up and across the ice. McAvoy loves to join the rush and can read a play as good as any of his draft-eligible peers – something we saw last year as a defenseman on Team USA.

He’s a confident puck carrier who attacks openings with speed, but can also slow it down and patiently weigh his options. Always moving his feet, McAvoy is capable of slipping through gaps without the puck, or stickhandling around traffic while keeping the puck close to his body. He has a heavy shot that can be delivered with accuracy, and his passes are tape to tape, An undervalued part of his game is physicality, which gets him in hot water as he’s still learning the difference between a timely, legal bone-crushing hit and gross negligence of the rule book.

Draft Profile: Rasmus Asplund

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2016 NHL Draft

C Rasmus Asplund

Farjestad BK (SHL)

Steve Kournianos  |  03/30/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of the SHL

Profile

Position: Center
Shoots: Left
Height/Weight: 5’11, 176 lbs
Born: December 3, 1997 Filipstad, Sweden
The Draft Analyst Ranking: 23rd (March)
Obtained: Signed two-year contract extension with Farjestad BK (SHL) on December 18th, 2015.
Notes: 2015-16: Tied for sixth among SHL junior players with all 12 of his points coming at even strength…Won 50 percent of his faceoffs (178-356), the best among Swedish League juniors…Fired 41 shots in 46 games, averaging 13:40 of ice time a game…Scored three goals and added two assists in seven games for Team Sweden at the 2016 World Junior Championship…Picked up an assist in three games for Team Sweden at the 2015 U18 Four Nations Tournament in Finland…2014-15: Split the season between Farjestad’s senior and junior clubs…Led J20 Superlit with a 68.2 percent faceoff percentage…Played in three games for Team Sweden at the 2014 U20 Four Nations Tournament in Prerov, Czech Republic…Scored two goals and added an assist at the 2014 U18 Ivan Hlinka Memorial Cup…Scored two goals and added three assists in five games at the U18 World Championship.

Regular Season

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2014-15 Farjestad J20 (Superelit) 19 8 17 25 1.32
2014-15 Farjestad (SHL) 35 2 1 3 0.09 E
2015-16 Farjestad (SHL) 46 4 8 12 0.26 +10

Playoffs

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2015-16 Farjestad (SHL) 46 4 8 12 0.26 +10

Scouting Report

An excellent two-way center who didn’t take long to earn a full-time job in Sweden’s top league. Asplund was a polished sophomore for Farjestad in 2015-16, centering the third line and performing spot duty in the top six along with fellow 2016 draft eligible Oskar Steen and 2015 first rounder Joel Eriksson Ek. However, it was a breakout performance for Team Sweden while subbing for an injured William Nylander at the 2016 world junior championship which gave him dual-continent recognition, finishing the tournament with five points as Sweden’s de facto top center.

Asplund is quick and shifty, using his speed and turning ability to gain time and space. He has a good touch around the net, positioning his stick in the right place and takes a beating to complete a play. His SHL numbers might not show it, but he’s a very good scorer with a quick, accurate shot. Asplund is strong on the puck and can make plays across the ice or diagonally while traveling at a high rate of speed. His work ethic off the ice is excellent, and it shows — he’s a tenacious forechecker and competes every shift from start to finish. Asplund is far from physical, but his excellent work in the faceoff circle coupled with his smarts makes him a perfect fit for the NHL’s puck-possession game.

Draft Profile: Sam Steel

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2016 NHL Draft

C Sam Steel

Regina Pats (WHL)

Steve Kournianos  |  04/5/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of Troy Fleece / Regina Leader-Post

Profile

Position: Center
Shoots: Left
Height/Weight: 5’11, 176 lbs
Born: February 3, 1998 Sherwood Park , AB
The Draft Analyst Ranking: 24th (March)
Obtained: Selected by the Regina Pats in the first round (second overall) in the 2013 WHL Bantam Draft.
Notes: 2015-16: Ranked third on Regina in assists (47) and tied for third in points (70)…Recorded points in 16 of his last 23 regular season games…Thirty of his 37 assists were primary…Ranked 29th in the WHL in shootout efficiency (3 for 8)…Played for Team Cherry at the 2016 CHL Top Prospects Game…Recorded a goal and two assists in five games to help Team Canada win the gold medal at the 2015 under-18 Ivan Hlinka Memorial Cup…2014-15: Placed third among WHL rookies in scoring with 54 points in 61 games…Registered second-most assists (37) among first-year players…Netted a goal and two assists in five games for Team Canada-Black at the 2014 World U17 Hockey Challenge.

Regular Season

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2014-15 Regina (WHL) 61 17 37 54 0.89 +10
2015-16 Regina (WHL) 72 23 47 70 0.97 -8

Playoffs

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2014-15 Regina (WHL) 2 0 0 0 0.00 -1
*2015-16 Regina (WHL) 5 4 5 -9 1.80 -3

*Through April 5th, 2016

Scouting Report

Steel made immediate noise in the WHL after Regina made him the second overall pick in 2013, placing among the leaders in scoring categories, and bridging his team’s rebuilding gap. He’s part of an impressive group of 1998-born draft eligibles to come out of Western Canada, and some might say he’s at or near the top of an impressive list of WHL forwards. Steel is an excellent scorer from the center ice position, with the smarts to augment an elite finesse game. He’s very good around the net, using his quick hands and keen vision to create multiple opportunities without the benefit of time or space. Slight of frame, Steel relies on his first-step quickness and acceleration to distance himself from opposing checkers. He keeps his head up as he blasts through the neutral zone, cutting, curling and shifting in order to maintain possession. He doesn’t like to get hit, but plays a feisty enough game to get involved as long as he doesn’t have to pay a heavy price along the boards.

A power play specialist with a penchant for delivering in the clutch, Steel has a very good shot that he wires hard off the pass or off his back foot. He simply doesn’t use it enough, but he gets a mulligan when you consider he uses common sense more than constantly deferring to the shot or pass on first impulse. He plays in all situations and can be groomed as a realistic two-way option for the pivot.

Draft Profile: Samuel Girardi

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2016 NHL Draft

LHD Samuel Girard

Shawinigan Cataractes (QMJHL)

Steve Kournianos  |  04/07/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of The QMJHL

Profile

Position: Defenseman
Shoots: Left
Height/Weight: 5’10, 165 lbs
Born: May 12th, 1998 Roberval, QC
The Draft Analyst Ranking: 28th (March)
Obtained: Selected by the Shawinigan Cataractes in the first round (third overall) in the 2014 QMJHL Entry Draft.
Notes: 2015-16: Named the QMJHL’s best defenseman after leading all blueliners in assists (64) and points (74)…His 74 points were the most by any CHL defenseman this season, and ranked first among all draft-eligible rearguards…Played for Team Cherry at the 2016 CHL Top Prospects Game…Led all defensemen with three assists and tied for the scoring lead among defensemen with three points in two games for Team QMJHL at the 2015 CHL-Russia Series…Led Team Canada defensemen with a goal and two assists in five games as they won the gold medal at the 2015 under-18 Ivan Hlinka Memorial Cup…2014-15: Named to QMJHL All-Rookie Team after he led first-year defensemen with 38 assists and 43 points – good for 12th in the league and a Shawinigan single-season record for rookie defensemen…Netted a goal and two assists in five games for Team Canada-Black at the 2014 World U17 Hockey Challenge.

Regular Season

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2014-15 Shawinigan (QMJHL) 64 5 38 43 0.67 +15
2015-16 Shawinigan (QMJHL) 67 10 64 74 1.10 +24

Playoffs

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2014-15 Shawinigan (QMJHL) 7 0 2 2 0.29 +5
*2015-16 Shawinigan (QMJHL) 5 1 3 4 0.80 +7

Through April 6th, 2016

Scouting Report

Playing with the burden of great expectations is never easy, but the swift-skating Girard lived up to his reputation as an elite scoring rearguard by topping all CHL blueliners in scoring – a distinction he held almost from start to finish. He was the third overall pick in the 2014 QMJHL draft (behind Pascal Laberge and fellow defender Luke Green), and he’s distinguished himself by playing a style efficient yet flashy at the same time.

Scouts long have projected pro-level playmaking abilities, and Girard hasn’t let them down, leading rushes up the ice with speed and decisiveness. He has very good first-step quickness and excellent top-end speed. He has above-average balance for a defenseman listed at 5’10, owning a good, strong stride. His lateral movement is excellent, using a strong lower body to cover ground in a hurry if a play expands the ice on the periphery.Girard’s bread and butter, however, is playmaking. He’s an exceptional puck distributor with a soft set of hands, using them to corral hard or inaccurate passes. He makes crisp passes on the tape and with authority — forehand or back – and leads the man with consistency. Patient and aware, Girard does not own a good shot, and will acquiesce to the pass nine times out of 10. Moreover, he is far from physical, but his positioning is developing and his reads are excellent. A real leader who will instantly improve a team’s breakout and power play capability.

IIHF U18 World Championship: Day One

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2016 IIHF U18 World Championship

Prospect Notes: Day One

Finland, U.S. score big wins in tournament openers
Steve Kournianos | 04/15/2016 | New York |

Photo courtesy of the Grand Forks Herald

Grand Forks (The Draft Analyst) — The United States opened defense of its under-18 world championship with an 8-2 rout of Russia. But don’t let the score fool you – the game was tied 2-2 late in the second period until the Americans exploded for six unanswered goals. Meanwhile, Finland’s strong entry gave up a two-goal lead late to the stingy Czechs before outlasting them for a 4-3 shootout win. Switzerland scored a 5-4 win in overtime against Latvia, and Slovakia edged Denmark by the same score. You can find box scores and lineups here.



Prospect Notes



United States

Center Clayton Keller (Ranked No. 13): Keller took his regular spot on Team USA’s top line, and the star pivot delivered, registering two goals and an assist, and winning 11 of 16 in the dot. He was all over the place – darting and weaving around Russia’s inexperienced defenders, picking off passes and identifying untenable schemes. He exploded up the ice for the game’s opening score, taking a bullet stretch pass from Adam Fox (more on him later) and rifling a wrister home. He’s carried the offensive load for the U.S. all season, but don’t forget how clutch he was to last year’s stacked squad which took home gold.

Fox to Keller U18

Center Logan Brown (Ranked No. 17): The Americans should be grateful that this top draft prospect has dual citizenship, because he not only fills a void on their roster, but he’d create a matchup nightmare had he played for Canada. Nevertheless, Brown was too much to handle for most of the teenage Russians, and he had a handful of solid looks before wiring in a one-timer during garbage time. The 6’6 behemoth moves so well for such a towering figure, and he displayed his vision and touch with a soft lead pass to a streaking Kailer Yamamoto for a power play goal.

Right wing Kailer Yamamoto (2017 eligible): Yamamoto is the sublime offensive talent who’s been shredding the WHL for Spokane. Both he and fellow 2017-eligible Casey Mittelstadt showed good chemistry (they were teammates at the U18 Hlinka last August), and his quick-strike mentality is something this year’s NTDP lacked in terms of it support scoring. He’s not very big (5’8/160), but he makes up for it with speed, quickness and escapability. Yamamoto finished with a pair of goals and two assists, and his performance was reminiscent of what Keller did for Team USA a year ago in Switzerland.

Defenseman Adam Fox (Ranked No. 64): We’ll go on record and state that the Long Island native is the best defenseman on Team USA, and has been for quite some time. A wonderful skater with elite passing abilities, Fox is a cool customer under pressure, and his home run pass to spring Keller for the opening goal was just one example of his over two dozen notable plays on the night. This kid can thread the needle with authority while skating backwards or sideways – a rare gift not often found in teenagers. He’s committed to Harvard, but don’t forget that Kitchener in the OHL owns his rights.

Finland

Right wing Eeli Tolvanen (2017 eligible): Speedy whirling Dervish with an explosive first step and sick set of hands. Tolvanen is one of several highly-skilled Finnish forwards who is wise beyond his years. He starred for Sioux City this season, and his production (38 points in 49 games) put him in an elite group of recent USHL under-17 stars like Kyle Connor, Kieffer Bellows and Keller. Tolvanen is 5’10, 174 pounds, but he can bring it with a heavy shot from either forehand or back. He scored a nifty goal off a rush down the wing, lifting the puck under the bar from practically the goal line. Tolvanen also added an assist and finished with a game-high seven shots.

Center Aapeli Rasanen (Ranked No. 52): This is the fifth tournament we’ve viewed where Rasanen was participating, and we simply can’t get enough of this two-way wizard. There’s some serious potential there, and the best part is that he didn’t even factor in the scoring. Rasanen was a beast on the penalty kill, using a non-stop motor and active stick to cause confusion and uncertainty during a lengthy Czech five-on-three. He won 20 of 27 draws (74%) and blocked a handful of shots.

Right wing Eetu Tuulola (Ranked No. 97): Either he’s playing with a sense of urgency or working with a skating guru (or both), but this power forward looked a bit quicker against a pretty loose Czech zone defense. This is one big boy – 6’3, 227 pounds – who with one shot can destroy the puck, his stick, skates, the goalie…whatever. His handling of the puck and confidence while bombing through the neutral zone seems to have improved. Tuulola picked up an assist and had three shots.

Left wing Juha Jaaska (Ranked No. 150): Speedy and strong two-way forward who impressed with his compete level, which is why he’s always stood out. Jaaska plays without fear, and he’s at his best when taking the puck strong to the net. He kills penalties extremely well, but there’s more to his game than responsible play. Jaaska is a victim of circumstance, as Finland’s scoring depth is the greatest it’s been in years. There’s a good bet he’d flourish with an expanded role.

Slovakia

Center/Right wing Samuel Solensky (Ranked No. 172): Diminutive force who captains a thin Slovak squad in terms of 1998-born draft eligibles. Make no mistake; he plays alongside talent. However, he’s been Slovakia’s go-to guy for the last few tournaments dating back to the Hlinka, so it shouldn’t come as a surprise he was named player of the game, finishing with a pair of goals and a plus-3. Solensky’s balance improved since we last saw him, but he played against Denmark, so we’ll see how he handles bigger bodies.

Czech Republic

Center Kristian Reichel (Ranked No. 72): Reichel didn’t have a strong game, let alone a dominant one, and there were times when he looked indecisive – a rarity for someone we’ve been tracking since the Hlinka. He’s a playmaking pivot who’s generally low maintenance, but he seemed to be fighting it against structured Finnish coverage. He’s a competitor, nonetheless, and he combined with possible first rounder Libor Hajek for a textbook zone entry, creating time and space for Hajek to find Filip Zadina (2018 draft) in the slot for a goal.

Defenseman Libor Hajek (Ranked No. 31): With his strong rookie campaign for the rebuilding Saskatoon Blades now complete, we got a chance to see Hajek on the international stage for the first time since the Hlinka. He was on the top pairing at both even strength and for special teams situations, displaying smoothness and reliability in the face of a relentless Finnish forecheck that kept the Czechs pinned in their zone for long periods. Hajek knows when to attack and when to stay back, and he played it far safer once he realized the Finns were carving up the Czech forwards with pressure. We’re expecting a big tournament from him.

IIHF U18 World Championship: Day Two

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2016 IIHF U18 World Championship

Prospect Notes: Day Two

Sweden outlasts Latvia, Canada rips Danes in U18 action
Steve Kournianos | 04/16/2016 | New York |

Photo courtesy of Minas Panagiotakis

Grand Forks (The Draft Analyst) — Sweden’s youthful exuberance proved successful against the apprehensive Latvians, who needed the strength of goalie Mareks Mitens to come within seconds of a colossal preliminary-round upset. But left wing Alex Nylander one-timed the game tying goal with 19 seconds remaining in regulation, and defenseman Jacob Moverare went short-side high from a bad angle for a 4-3 win with just seconds left in the extra session. Canada, which won the bronze a year ago, struggled with Denmark through 20 minutes before exploding for eight unanswered goals immediately following a lengthy blackout in between the first and second periods. Captain Tyson Jost had two goals and three assists, while right wing Jordan Kyrou scored four goals as Canada cruised to a 10-2 romp. You can find box scores and lineups here.



Prospect Notes



Canada

Defenseman Jakob Chychrun (Ranked No. 2): It’s been a while since Chychrun represented Canada in a marquee tournament, and the U18’s proximity to both draft day and the North American scouting community adds to the pressure of playing in a best-on-best. No disrespect to his parent Sarnia Sting, but we’ve been waiting for the free-wheeling nature of international hockey to bring Chychrun’s elite skill set to the forefront, and boy did he deliver. He had an assist – a beauty of a pass for a high-slot redirect during a power play (an assist the IIHF failed to register) and six shots. But the key for a two-way defenseman like Chychrun is knowing when to create, when to attack and when to acquiesce, and he was on point with all three. He’s a wonderful skater, and took the puck with authority from his own end into enemy territory on a handful of occasions. He missed the net on a couple of chances, but his overall game was relatively flawless, albeit against a vastly inferior Danish squad..

Defenseman Logan Stanley (Ranked No. 60): Canada’s edict to its players was evident from the onset – everyone shoot the puck. Stanley has a cannon, and his bomb in the first period (one of his six shots for the game) was tipped home to open the scoring. We’ve knocked his reads and man coverage before, but he’s always had good instincts once the puck is worked around in the cycle. We get the upside – it’s significant, and he showed flashes of top-pairing potential during the regular season. He gave the Danes a lot of trouble, and his size and reach interdicted anything thrown his way.

Defenseman Dante Fabbro (Ranked No. 21): It was good to see a stud prospect like Fabbro reunited with his elite-level Hlinka teammates, and the improvements he made in both shot selection and shot accuracy were on display against Denmark. He’s always been a hard, accurate passer, and he worked the puck around with authority throughout the evening. Quick and decisive, Fabbro had three assists and five shots, and even clanged one off the post, showing no signs that his BCHL-trained offense won’t be translatable at higher levels. All things considered, however, his defensive play was inconsistent. He’s simply not physical, and on one occasion misplayed a zone entry, displaying matador defense in allowing the puck carrier along the far wall to blow past him for a partial break.

Left wing Beck Malenstyn (2016 eligible): If this Calgary Hitmen grinder played the WHL regular season the way he’s looked internationally, he’d be a lock for the draft’s first round. He’s a physical force and emotional leader, using a strong frame to out-muscle opponents. Malenstyn made a heady play on Canada’s second goal, driving the net and batting in his own rebound. He has leadership qualities and hustles to no end, and if he keeps it up, evaluators may be willing to overlook his lack of production with Calgary.

Right wing Jordan Kyrou (Ranked No. 81): Kyrou scored four goals – three from near the goal and one on a blistering wrist shot from the high slot – and had an overall strong game. He’s known as a pass-first winger, but the Danes presented him with plenty of open ice to use his speed and gave him all the room he needed around the goal mouth. Kyrou clicked with center Tyson Jost, who finished with two goals and three assists. Kyrou kept dropping in our rankings because, quite frankly, he’s a turnover machine. Team Canada’s structure, however, suits him well, and it was the best game he’s played in months.





Sweden

Left wing Alexander Nylander (Ranked No. 6): Great players don’t have to be great all the time, which may or may not have been Nylander’s approach towards the Latvia game. He was on the perimeter most of the match, looking disinterested and treating the game like a scrimmage — which is what it was until Latvia rallied to take a 3-2 lead deep into the third. Still, there was Nylander and his elite release, waiting unchecked in the left circle with seconds to go in regulation. He didn’t have many options, but with 19 seconds remaining on the clock and his squad trailing by a goal, the Swedish sniper blasted a bouncing puck upstairs for the tying goal. He’ll face a huge test in his next match against the Americans, but you know what they say about great players…

Defenseman Jacob Moverare (Ranked No. 56): Sweden’s lacked an explosive and creative blueliner for quite a few year-groups, but Moverare is the closest it had to offer against the lowly Latvians. He’s a hard passer with good mobility and enough upstairs to know when to speed it up or slow it down. I wouldn’t call his hockey sense excellent, but it’s good enough to work with for a kid with top-four upside. He’s been known to display flash and dazzle on his way up ice, but his game winner in overtime was a simple, heady play in which he attacked a huge Latvian gap, then took the puck to the outside before rifling a puck into the tiniest of openings under the crossbar. We’re sold that it is he who is the better prospect than fellow rearguard and HV71 teammate Jacob Cederholm, but we want to see more of the flashy Moverare as the tournament progresses .


IIHF U18 World Championship: Day Three

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2016 IIHF U18 World Championship

Prospect Notes: Day Three

Finland, U.S. and Canada remain perfect, Russians win
Steve Kournianos | 04/16/2016 | New York |

Photo courtesy of Matt Zambonin

Grand Forks (The Draft Analyst) — The standings became clearer after three days, with no real surprises from the tournament heavyweights. Although the Russians came to Grand Forks at somewhat of a disadvantage (albeit, self inflicted), they scored their first win thanks to an overtime goal by left wing Pavel Dyomin for a 2-1 win over Switzerland. The Americans showcased their scoring depth, using six different goal scorers to drub Sweden 6-1. Finland used a relentless forecheck to pressure the Slovaks in a 4-2 triumph, and Canada held off a determined Czech squad after jumping out to an early lead in its 3-1 victory. You can find box scores and lineups here.



Prospect Notes



United States

Left Wing Kieffer Bellows (Ranked No. 15): A tank on skates who toyed with the Swedes from start to finish, Bellows is as consistent as they come. All the things we noticed about him during previous viewings — size, strength, shot and spirit — were ubiquitous in his second match of the competition. He made his breakaway goal early in the second period look effortless, taking a nifty pass from defenseman Adam Fox before skating in alone and wiring a laser up and over the glove side for a 2-0 lead. Bellows is a nasty competitor who will use his stick to keep you honest, but he’s just as capable at using it to control the puck as if it were on a string.




Right Wing Graham McPhee (Ranked No. 169): McPhee, the son of former Washington Capitals general manager George McPhee, played a complete game against the Swedes. He’s bounced around from line to line the entire season, so his unimpressive stat line (14 points in 53 games) is somewhat understandable when you consider the type of elite program he plays for. He’s a big kid who plays with intensity, but he combined agility and smarts in yesterday’s win. The Boston College-bound McPhee made a dandy of a play in the second period, taking the pass on his forehand and gliding towards the near corner before firing a bullet through a maze of sticks and onto defenseman Ryan Lindgren’s tape for a tap-in. He may never blossom into a goal scoring winger, but he’s fast, strong and smart enough to make a mark at any level.

Left wing Casey Mittelstadt (2017 eligible): Mittelstadt contunues to impress, scoring his first goal of the tournament with a hard wrist shot to open the scoring late in the first. He was one of Team USA’s top players at the 2015 Hlinka, and you can clearly see he is playing with a ton of confidence. Mittelstadt’s an excellent stickhandler in traffic, and his impressive upper-body strength allows him to rip a heavy shot with accuracy. The more you watch him play, the less he seems like a kid recently removed from his senior year of high school. Mittelstadt, who plays in the USHL, is a prime example of a player who thinks before he acts, and the Minnesota Golden Gophers are getting a real prized recruit.

Defenseman J.D. Greenway (Ranked No. 93): Greenway is a project defenseman with a ton of potential, but he’s always pegged us as one who is extremely raw. He’s got the tools to make either smart, effective plays, or plays that will bring you out of your seat, with the former more prevalent than the latter. Still, we got a glimpse of his mobility and touch with a gorgeous shorthanded goal late in the second period. Greenway used his long stride and reach to cover ground in a hurry, then lugged the puck wide on his forehand to tuck in a backhander at the far post. This instance — as impressive as it may be — is few and far between, however, so his upside remains that of a reliable depth defenseman with very good mobility.

Finland

Left wing Kristian Vesalainen (2017 eligible): A power forward blossoming into a top-10 threat for the 2017 draft, Vasalainen displayed dominance against the Slovaks, finishing with a goal and two assists and displaying elite talents. He’s an excellent skater, and excels in all aspects of puck control. He made a notable entry on a goal by Janne Kuokkanen, taking the puck in traffic and weaving around several opponents before firing a bullet pass for a deflection. He scored a goal of his own a period earlier, receiving a gorgeous backhand lead pass from center Aapeli Rasanen for a breakaway and beating goalie Roman Durny with a snap shot over his glove. It’s scary to think that the kid won’t turn 17 until June, yet has already played 19 games for Frolunda’s senior team in Sweden.

Right wing Janne Kuokkanen (Ranked No. 51): Kuokkanen is quietly having a strong tournament, using his two-way smarts, quickness and awareness to consistently make plays in all three zones. He’s somewhat lanky, yet the brutes on Slovakia’s back didn’t always win their one-on-one battles with him. Kuokkanen is an excellent stickhandler who likes to hold on to the puck until the last possible second, and there are times when he will settle down a seemingly untenable situation. He scored a big insurance goal in the third period, combining with the aforementioned Vesalainen for a tap in on the doorstep.

Right wing Joona Koppanen (Ranked No. 119): While other Finnish skill players get the plum job of top-six minutes in a best-on-best tournament, Koppanen does yeoman work as a depth center, but does so with tremendous attention to detail and effort. He’s a tremendous penalty killer who takes good routes and occupies the right areas, and he’s won 15 of 20 draws since the tournament began. Koppanen excelled in previous tournaments when the Finns didn’t have as much scoring depth as they’re displaying in Grand Forks, so keep that in mind before thinking his ceiling is low.

Canada

Goaltender Evan Fitzpatrick (Ranked No. 96): Goalies have a tendency of using the U18’s as a springboard up the draft board, but Fitzpatrick was a stud way before Grand Forks. A big-bodied butterfly netminder with impeccable net presence, Fitzpatrick is the biggest reason Canada escaped with a win against the Czechs, stopping 38 of 39 shots as his teammates struggled to tilt the ice in his favor. His performance was far from Herculean — most of the Czech shots were from far distances and/or bad angles. But his rebound control was excellent, and never once did we see him fail to cover his angles as he moved side to side. He made a nice left pad stop on a breakaway in the second period, but lost sight of the puck for a second, requiring defenseman Logan Stanley to slide and block the rebound attempt at the yawning cage.

IIHF U18 World Championship: Day Four

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2016 IIHF U18 World Championship

Prospect Notes: Day Four

Americans, Finns roll to big wins
Steve Kournianos | 04/18/2016 | New York |

Photo courtesy of Minas Panagiotakis

Grand Forks (The Draft Analyst) — Team USA continued its assault on international squads with their third straight blowout win – this time a 12-1 annihilation of Latvia. Center Clayton Keller (a goal and two assists) was one of five players with three or more points, with center Trent Frederic leading the way with a hat trick and an assist. Keller’s three-point night vaulted him past current NHL stars Patrik Kane and Phil Kessel to become the national program’s all-time leading scorer with 182 points. The Americans improved to 3-0, outscoring their opponents by a staggering 26-4 margin since the tournament began late last week. Finland also remained perfect thanks to a 4-1 win over Denmark. Right wing Eeli Tolvanen scored twice, right wing Janne Kuokkanen scored for the third straight game, and center Aapeli Rasanen added two assists as the Finns dominated the winless Danes, outshooting their Nordic neighbors 46-10. You can find box scores and lineups here.



Prospect Notes



United States

Center Trent Frederic (Ranked No. 83): Frederic is an outstanding two-way center who was somewhat “demoted” to the third line following the addition of pivot Logan Brown. He entered the game against Latvia with only one assist to show for two blowout games worth of work, but he did his job in the defensive zone nonetheless. He hammered home a shot from the right circle for his first goal, then added separate markers on the power play and while shorthanded to complete the hat trick. Big, strong and skilled, Frederic may not be able to crack the draft’s top-30, but he could be added to the list of NTDP’ers (J.T. Miller, Jack Roslovic) who used the U18’s to vault up the draft charts.

Right wing Will Lockwood (Ranked No. 108): It’s always good to see the worker bees get rewarded with ice time, and what better situation to put in a speedster like Lockwood than a laugher against a doormat? The Michigan-bound winger plays feisty and maneuvers at a high rate of speed, and he looked quite comfortable on the power play, making smart choices with his entries. He fits into the “underappreciated” category of top NCAA recruits, but the Wolverines shouldn’t take long to realize his skill, when combined with a laudable work ethic, makes Lockwood a viable top-six option, even as a freshman. He finished with a season-high three assists.

Left wing Zach Walker (2016 Eligible): Walker is a Boston College-bound depth player who loves to play physical and use his upper-body strength to lean on opponents. He’s a big kid (6’0/200) who can play either wing position, and at one point we started to feel bad for the Latvians because they didn’t have an answer for his assertiveness. He toes that fine line between undisciplined and momentum-changing, but he chipped in with a flukey goal and an assist. His physicality will come into play if/when the Americans play against Canada or Finland.

Finland

Center Otto Makinen (Ranked No. 57): A talented playmaking pivot with excellent vision and shiftiness, Makinen has dominated a few tournaments, but he’s clearly taking a team-first approach in this one. His chemistry with wingers Janne Kuokkanen and Emil Oksanen (2017 eligible) is solid, and they orchestrate lengthy cycles which clearly wore down the Danes. He made a beautiful set-up for Kuokannen to open the scoring, pressing off a dump in and finishing his check before looting the second puck carrier for a backhand feed into the hash marks. He’s not lightning quick, but he’s got enough of a stride to cover ground and close on a defender before launching into him.

IIHF U18 World Championship: Day Five

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2016 IIHF U18 World Championship

Prospect Notes: Day Five

Swedes, Czechs and Russians roll on, Canada wins third straight
Steve Kournianos | 04/19/2016 | New York |

Photo courtesy of Minas Panagiotakis

Grand Forks (The Draft Analyst) — The tournament continued up its expected trajectory, with the quarterfinal round now set following the relegation of Denmark and Latvia — two nations that went a combined 0-8. Sweden bounced back for a putrid effort against the Americans on Saturday with an 8-1 rout of Switzerland. Fueled by star wing Alexander Nylander’s six-point effort, the Swedes can clinch second place in Group A with a win over Russia on Tuesday. The Russians won their second straight after they blanked rival Latvia 8-0. Forwards Maxim Marushev and Mikhail Bitsadze each scored twice to pace the attack. The Czechs took their turn thumping Denmark, beating them 9-2. Center Ondrej Najman led the charge with a pair of goals and three assists. Lastly, the Canadians made it three for three with a solid 3-1 triumph over the Slovaks. Team Canada captain Tyson Jost had two assists to tie Nylander for the tournament scoring lead with eight points. You can find box scores and lineups here.



Prospect Notes



Canada

Center Tyson Jost (Ranked No. 14): Maybe it’s an archaic view, but we like it when a team’s captain just happens to be their best player. Jost epitomizes the lead-by-example trait, hustling in all three zones and using all six of his senses to ensure the Canadians can dictate the tempo of a given game. He was too much for the Slovkas to handle, which is important when you consider he’s been knocked for not being physical enough. When it comes to hockey’s special talents, you’d overlook it anyway. But he was engaged in scrums and took a hit (sometimes two and three) to complete a play. Jost’s put on quite a show on the ice he’ll grace as a freshman at North Dakota in the fall.





Defenseman David Quenneville (Ranked No. 134): Quenneville is easily one of the more undervalued defense prospects for the upcoming draft, but we can understand why his listed height (5’9) would scare some folks away. The only thing scary, however, is watching this powder keg launch into bigger forwards and paste them either into the boards or onto their backsides. He has abnormal upper-body strength, and he doesn’t need to pick up momentum in order to gain enough strength to knock a guy on his keister. The best part? He’s a brilliant offensive defenseman with a heavy shot and patient enough to wait for lanes to open before unloading. He was Medicine Hat’s go-to guy, and he quickly became one for Team Canada in a short period of time. He took a nifty backdoor feed from Tyson Jost and cut right towards the cage before tucking a backhander home. If his game was basketball, he’d be a point forward, and a reliable one at that.

Russia

Defenseman Mikhail Sergachev (Ranked No. 10): It seemed as though Sergachyov was handed the burden of carrying an underage group of blueliners following Team Russia’s pre-tournament meldonium debacle. But it’s he who has been a bit of an on-ice passenger through three games. He’s not logging a ton of ice time, and he was not used consistently as Russia’s top penalty-killing or power play pairing in a game where infractions were aplenty. Keeping things in perspective, we understand that it’s foolish to get worked up over this – he’s still an elite defender with sharp insticts and an absolute howitzer from the point. Sergachev’s defensive game is solid as well, as he blocked several shots and was able to pin and hold long enough for support to secure the puck.

Sweden

Left wing Alexander Nylander (Ranked No. 6): Fitting that the Swedish sniper broke out of a mini slump with a six-point effort on the very day he was deservedly named the Onatario Hockey League’s Rookie of the Year. Nylander was quiet in the opener against the Latvians until a late tying goal, and was invisible in the blowout loss to the Americans on Saturday. He torched the Swiss, however, as they simply couldn’t contain him inside or out. He showed the quintissential Nyalnder patience by outwaiting Swiss goalie Matteo Ritz and whipping the puck upstairs for a goal in the first period , then pulled out the bag of tricks to posterize Kaj Suter and wire one home late in the 2nd.

Czech Republic

Center Ondrej Najman (Ranked No. 145): Heady two-way pivot who turned out a tremendous performance, scoring twice and adding three assists. Flanked by power wing Matyas Kantner (Flint, OHL) and 2017 draft eligible lightning bug Pavel Kousal, Najman used his size and strength on the forecheck to create a turnover, then escape with the loose puck en route to the right circle, where he blistered a shot high on the glove side. He’s a smart and responsible player, and his decision to dart right to the back of the net in anticipation of a feed down low early in the third period proved correct — Najman beat both defenders to the puck and centered into the slot before anyone could react. Kantner took it and slammed it home, and just like that it was 4-1 in favor of the Czechs. He was Johnny-on-the-spot once more, this time midway through the third when he crashed the net and potted a rebound through a maze of players in the crease area. Through three games, Najman’s become the Czech Republic’s de facto first-line center.

IIHF U18 World Championship: Day Six

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2016 IIHF U18 World Championship

Prospect Notes: Day Six

Puljujarvi debuts, but no surprises as usual suspects advance to Quarterfinals
Steve Kournianos | 04/20/2016 | New York |

Photo courtesy of Minas Panagiotakis

Grand Forks (The Draft Analyst) — The opening round of the 2016 under-18 world championship is complete, with Team USA and the Canadians sweeping their way towards the top seed in their respective group. Sweden opened up Tuesday’s action with a convincing 5-1 win over Russia thanks to Lias Andersson, a top prospect for the 2017 draft who scored twice. Canada made it four wins in as many games with a solid 3-1 win over Finland, which didn’t get the expected boost in the debut of draft-eligible phenom Jesse Puljujarvi. The Slovaks rallied to edge the rival Czech Republic, as Samuel Solenksy’s shorthanded tally in the third was followed by Samuel Bucke’s game winner late. Lastly, the Americans took care of Switzerland thanks to timely saves from goalie Joseph Woll and a pair of goals from 2017 draft blue chipper Casey Mittelstadt in a 4-0 win. You can find box scores and lineups here.



Quarterfinal-1 (1:00 pm EST)
1A United States
4B Czech Republic

Quarterfinal-2 4:45 pm EST
2B Finland
3A Russia

Quarterfinal-3 7:00 pm EST
1B Canada
4A Switzerland

Quarterfinal-4 8:30 pm EST
2A Sweden
3B Slovakia


Quarterfinal-1 (Thursday, April 21 — 1:00 pm EST)
1A United States
4B Czech Republic

Quarterfinal-2 (Thursday, April 21 — 4:45 pm EST)
2B Finland
3A Russia

Quarterfinal-3 (Thursday, April 21 — 7:00 pm EST)
1B Canada
4A Switzerland

Quarterfinal-4 (Thursday, April 21 — 8:30 pm EST)
2A Sweden
3B Slovakia



Prospect Notes



Sweden

Center/Right wing Oskar Steen (Ranked No. 86): Steen is a goal scorer who battles through having an average build to get himself into prime scoring areas. He’s a puck pursuer who gets involved every shift, and his elusiveness is a big reason why he managed to keep a regular shift with Farjestad’s senior club. He’s part of Sweden’s “Havoc Line”, flanking speedy pivot Linus Lidstrom (ranked No. 122) with pesky Jesper Bratt (ranked No. 91) on the left. Blessed with a hard shot and a quick release, Steen fired a game-high eight shots, one of which was a rebound goal off a point shot by stud 2017 prospect Tim Liljegren. An undervalued trait is his ability to deaden a bouncing puck whether moving or static. And he can play a little center too – he won both his faceoffs and covered up the defensive-zone slot on several occasions.

Center Lias Andersson (2017 eligible): An outstanding performance by one of Sweden’s top prospects for next year’s NHL draft in Chicago, Andersson centered the top line between left wing Alex Nylander (ranked No. 6) and right wing Elias Pettersson (2017 eligible). They combined to press a normally-reliable Russian defense corps, forcing turnovers which they quickly converted to scoring chances. Andersson is a horse along the boards, using either his lower or upper body strength to pin opponents. He opened the scoring in the first after a lengthy period of puck dominance in Russia’s end, taking the puck from the near corner and backhanding a shot home. He scored again during Sweden’s three-goal spurt in the second, curling towards the net from the near boards before snapping a bullet for a power play goal. He took a game-high 22 faceoffs, winning 15.

United States

Goalie Joseph Woll (2016 Eligible): Woll is a Boston College recruit with the plum job of backstopping the international hockey equivalent of a freight train. He was impressive in last week’s 34-save performance against Sweden, and although he faced only 15 shots in Tuesday’s 4-0 shutout against Switzerland, the kid made the tough saves when the outcome was surprisingly (at one point) in doubt. The Swiss had a clear break-in right off the opening draw, and Woll remained square and low, slowly retreating back towards the goal line before stopping the backhand attempt and swatting away the rebound. He’s a classic butterfly netminder who looks like he’s giving away too much between the pads, but his reset quickness and net presence eventually fools the shooter into thinking there’s a chance. He didn’t have to work hard, but he paid attention and reacted properly.

Finland

Right wing Jesse Puljujarvi (Ranked No. 7): It seemed like everyone was hoping for last week’s Finnish league playoff series between Puljujarvi’s Karpat and Patrik Laine’s (ranked No. 3) Tappara to end in a four-game sweep —  all but guaranteeing one would be released in time to play at the U18’s. The series wound up going seven, with Laine advancing to the finals while Puljujarvi chose to cross the Atlantic and suit up once more for his country. The problem is that crossing said ocean takes quite a while, which is why we gave Puljujarvi a mulligan for his pedestrian performance in Tuesday’s 3-1 loss to Canada.

To be fair, we didn’t expect the kind of record-breaking output  we saw him unleash at the world juniors three months back– apples and oranges, we say. First off, he not only was rested, but also trained with the same linemates (Laine and Carolina Hurricanes prospect Sebastian Aho) for almost two weeks prior to execution. Not to mention the fact that he was playing on his home turf and didn’t have to travel far. There were no exhibition games or scrimmages to loosen him up prior to the match with Canada; no doormat to debut against. On Tuesday, Puljujarvi was fed to the proverbial wolves in the form of a Canadian juggernaut who enjoyed all the aforementioned luxuries while already boasting a pretty darn good lineup to begin with. Still, the power forward was able to create from either wing position, using quick, accurate passes to set teammates up for one-timers – one which required a highlight-reel glove save from Canadian goalie Evan Fitzpatrick (ranked No. 96). Puljujarvi may have looked as if he was skating through gravel, but that’s certainly the exception and not the rule. The Finns are better off with him in the lineup, which is a scary though considering how stacked they already were.

IIHF U18 World Championship: Quarterfinals

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2016 IIHF U18 World Championship

Prospect Notes: Quarterfinals

U.S. meets Finland, Canada plays Sweden in Saturday’s U18 semis
Steve Kournianos | 04/22/2016 | New York |

Photo courtesy of Minas Panagiotakis

Grand Forks (The Draft Analyst) — The United States, the defending under-18 champions, kept its medal streak alive with an 8-0 thrashing of the Czech Republic, while Canada, Finland and Sweden also advanced with wins in their respective quarterfinals. The Americans improved to 5-0 thanks to a goal and two assists from leading scorer Clayton Keller. Team USA has outscored their opponents by a 38-4 margin but play a tough Finnish squad which outlasted the Russians 4-3. Speedy wing Eeli Tolvanen had a hat trick, and Jesse Puljujarvi chipped in with a goal and an assist for Finland, which lost in overtime to Team USA in last year’s gold medal game. Canada dispatched Switzerland with a 9-1 rout, with captain Tyson Jost netting a hat trick and two assists to up his tournament scoring lead to 14 points in five games. Team Canada’s opponent in the semis will be Sweden, which used seven different goal scorers to trounce Slovakia 7-2. Lastly, the Latvians beat Denmark 5-1 in the opener of their best-of-three relegation series, with the winner securing a spot in next year’s tournament in Slovakia. You can find box scores and lineups here.



Prospect Notes



Canada

Center Mike McLeod (Ranked No. 9): McLeod has everything you’d want in a draft prospect — speed, creativity, size and an exceptional compete level. He’s displayed these special skills in spurts, but otherwise he’s had a marginal tournament. And while the Swiss were easy pushovers, the two goals he scored personified why he’s ranked so high — using his speed and vision to make plays. He broke his tournament schneid in the second period with a nifty backhand roof job after he began the play with a speedy zone exit and entry. He capped off his best night of the competition with a pressure-induced Swiss turnover before darting to the net to one-time home a feed from right wing Owen Tippett (2017 eligible). He’s also won 61 percent of his draws (38-24), and three of his six shots for the tournament came in yesterday’s win.





Sweden

Center Linus Lindstrom (Ranked No. 13): Sweden’s improving two-way pivot who plays with a sense of urgency every shift. He isn’t the best finisher, but Lindstrom clearly understands his role as a center who adds a key component on a team lacking in elite scoring depth. The Slovaks made things interesting with a first-period tally from Adam Ruzicka (2017 eligible), but it was Lindstrom’s “Havoc Line” with Oskar Steen and Jesper Bratt which won the draw, took the puck up ice and pressed the Slovaks into a chance that led to defenseman Erik Brannstrom’s tying goal. Lindstrom consistently attacks the puck, and in this instance he dropped off a pass and went right to the net to cause problems. Good things happen every time his line is on the ice — they combined for 12 shots and Bratt later scored a goal of his own on a different line. And although he took a hooking penalty early in the third that led to Slovak power play goal, the fact that he was able to skate up ice from his own crease area to even up the numbers confirms the work he’s done to improve his skating.

Slovakia

Left wing/Right wing Samuel Buckek (2017 eligible): We’ve talked about Slovakia’s depth for next year’s draft, and Bucek is a big reason why. A two-way power forward who loves to shoot the puck, he plays in a depth role for the USHL’s Chicago Steel, but in Grand Forks he’s been the Slovaks’ top dog, using his long reach and heady play to create chances, especially during trench warfare in either end of the ice. It was Bucek who help Slovakia beat the rival Czech Republic with a tie-breaking goal late in the third period of Wednesday’s 4-3 win. He entered the match with Sweden with four goals in four games, and picked up a nice assist on the power play in the third. After making a crisp pass to get the Slovaks into Swedish territory, he showed quick skate-to-stick transition skills on a loose puck, then centered from the left circle for a goal.

Finland

Center Otto Somppi (Ranked No. 100): Somppi’s rookie season with Halifax (QMJHL) was a bit inconsistent, so we looked at his U18 nomination as a good chance to help his draft stock. And although he’s operated in a depth capacity without much of any production (one assist in five games), Somppi’s been dominant in the faceoff dot, leading the circuit with a 72 percent success rate (61-24). The addition of Jesse Puljujarvi caused some line shuffling, and it was Somppi who bumped fellow pivot Otto Makinen down to the third line while the latter was promoted to center the aforementioned Puljujarvi and Janne Kuokkanen. He played like his pesky self against the Russians, using his active stick and speed to press opposing puck carriers. Somppi also revealed a consistent backchecking presence, which we rarely saw in our (limited) viewings of his play with Halifax. He’s far from physical — Somppi rarely finishes a check and acquiesces to the stick rather than the body way too often. But he looked good on Finland’s second power play unit and made a handful of controlled zone entries.

Defenseman Markus Niemelainen (Ranked No. 103): Will just get this out of the way and move on — Niemelainen is a Marc Staal clone. Now, you can interpret that any way you want. Is he:

A) Pre-draft Marc Staal?
B) Pre-knee injury Marc Staal?
C) Pre-eye injury Marc Staal?
D) Present-day Marc Staal?

In our view, he’s somewhere between options A and A and B, which any Rangers fan will tell you is a good thing. He won’t dazzle you — 99 out of every 100 plays he makes are cookie cutter and will keep you glued to your seat. But they are mostly smart plays, nonetheless, and we don’t see his play in Grand Forks that much different than what he does for the OHL’s Saginaw Spirit. He was winning his 50/50 battles, using his long stride and reach to prevent seemingly quicker players from gaining control in the Finnish end. He was hit or miss with his breakout passes, and should look to patent that left point wrister as he uses it a lot, sometimes to a fault.

Russia

span style=”font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif;”>Right wing Yaroslav Alexeyev (2017 Draft eligible): Alexeyev is a natural playmaker with speed who plays the wing. He was Russia’s consistent threat in previous games, showing good chemistry playing on a line with Mikhail Bitsadze — both of who are undersized at under six feet tall. Alexeyev has a short, choppy skating style and likes to hang around the outside, rarely involving himself in physical activity. He is a finesse player who looks more comfortable with time and space presented to him rather than making the smart, subtle plays to create it for himself. That being said, he made a nice play taking the puck wide and centering it to the point from behind the near post, a play resulting in Russia’s second goal. He capped the scoring in the third with a one-timer on the power play.

IIHF U18 World Championship: Semifinals

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2016 IIHF U18 World Championship

Prospect Notes: Semifinals

Finland, Sweden stun North American favorites
Steve Kournianos | 04/24/2016 | New York |

Photo courtesy of Matt Zambonin

Grand Forks (The Draft Analyst) — The games between four countries expected to challenge for a gold medal lived up to the hype surrounding Semifinal Saturday, with Sweden and Finland scoring upsets over pre-tournament favorites Canada and the United States, respectively. The Swedes punched their ticket to Sunday’s gold medal game with a 6-5 shootout win over the Canadians, who rallied with two late goals in the third period but had their hopes crushed on a clinching goal by Linus Lindstrom. The Americans and Finns — who met in last year’s title game, a 2-1 overtime win for the U.S. — were tied late in the third until Aapeli Rasanen cashed in on the power play with just 37 seconds left in regulation following a costly Clayton Keller penalty. Jesse Puljujarvi added an empty net goal to secure a 4-2 triumph. Sunday will be the first time since 2001 where neither Canada or the United States will play for under-18 gold, and it’s been 17 years since Sweden and Finland met in the final. You can find box scores, recaps and video here.



Prospect Notes



Finland

Center Aapeli Rasanen (Ranked No. 52): Watching this special talent has been a rewarding experience, and the fact that he scored a shorthanded goal and a power play goal — each giving Finland a lead — tells you what kind of player he is. This isn’t the first U18 tournament where he’s taken advantage of the visibility; he was dominant at the U18 Five Nations Tournament last February. He’s been a critical piece to Finland’s success in Grand Forks, and his efforts on Saturday against an American blitzkrieg brought the Finns to the title game. He made a relatively harmless shorthanded rush up ice turn into an adventure for U.S. defender Chad Krys, as Rasanen was able to gather his own rebound and bury a go-ahead goal with under five to play in the game. The Americans would later tie it on a Kailer Yamamoto tip-in, but Rasanen was Johnny-on-the-spot again, this time sneaking through three U.S. skater to get positioning and bang home the eventual winner with 37 seconds left. He understands the game and his instincts are exceptional. Take it from us — he’s not your run-of-the-mill two-way center. This kid has the speed and skill to match the smarts. He belongs to Tappara in the Finnish League, but expect him to go pretty high in the CHL Import Draft nonetheless.





United States

Defenseman Chad Krys (Ranked No. 45): It’s always difficult to see a preseason favorite slowly (and I mean slowly) drop in our rankings, but Krys has been dealing with a variety of on-ice issues for almost three quarters of the season. Pegged by many to be the first NTDP defenseman picked in the 2016 draft, the Connecticut native is struggling, and the player who was once toeing the line between a first and second round pick now has to accept the fact that he’ll probably end up lower. He did a good job of avoiding trouble throughout the preliminary and quarterfinal rounds, but it’s easy for any Team USA defender to conceal warts when every game is a lopsided win. While he didn’t distinguish himself in any of the games heading into the semis, he certainly didn’t do anything egregiously wrong either. The game against Finland was a different story, as he had trouble with switches, was puck gazing too much and got caught wandering away from his post (he wasn’t alone in that regard). The shorthanded goal by Rasanen was obviously critical, and his failure to adhere to a simple edict — “play the man” — proved costly, as he turned the wrong way after blocking the initial shot, allowing Rasanen slop behind him and bury the loose puck. Maybe a case of bad luck, but Krys has had issues losing men in coverage all season. To make matters worse, he channeled his inner Adam Graves with a two-handed chop on Jesse Puljujarvi’s hand as the latter was skating in to ice the game with an empty netter. The play cost Krys a five and a game and could get him suspended for Sunday’s bronze medal game against Canada.

Defenseman Ryan Lindgren (Ranked No. 78): Lindgren’s game against the Finns was a microcoosm of his entire tournament — above-average in the defensive-zone but excellent at making plays. We like his puck-moving, and he’s been threading the needle on the power play with consistency. It’s not easy being the captain of a team loaded with stars, but Lindgren showed why he’s got legitimate pro potential by displaying a calmness with the puck. He’s listed at 6’0, 198 pounds, but there were a few times when he was moved off the puck by bigger and/or smaller players. That seemed odd to us because we’ve seen him handle bigger NCAA forwards quite often, but he still has a strong lower body and excellent balance nonetheless. Lindgren made a huge mistake on the eventual game-winner, however, as his release from Jesse Puljujarvi’s zone entry was a good three of four seconds too late, leaving Rasanen unchecked to bury the loose puck in the crease.

Sweden

Defenseman Jacob Cederholm (Ranked No. 68): Cederholm is Sweden’s captain and blueline leader, likely because of his age (he was the Swedes’ oldest defender by a good six months). Things got off to a rough start for Cederholm, as he took a slashing minor a couple of minutes after the puck dropped that led to Pascal Laberge power play goal. And though Cederholm can look bland and unimaginative for most of a given game, at the end of the day, he crossed his t’s and dotted his i’s when it came to the variety of requirements for a top-pairing defender. His stick is always in the right position, and rarely did he vacate the slot to chase a player on an already overloaded side — the lone yet key exception coming on Jordan Kyrou’s game-tying goal in the third when he drifted into the near corner. More times than not, the first thing he looks for when the puck’s on his side is the opponent’s best/most-dangerous option, and in a split second he’s got either his long stick or body in position to thwart. Even the goal scored by Canada’s Jakob Chychrun was properly assessed and covered by Cederholm, who in our view distinguished himself and looked more polished in his own end than the tournament’s other big-bodied, draft-eligible rearguards (Logan Stanley, Markus Niemelainen, J.D. Greenway, et. al). He’s not very fast, but his stride is long enough to help him stay competitive during footraces.

Canada

Left wing Pascal Laberge (Ranked No. 18): Laberge can play both center and wing, but he spent the entire tournament as a bottom-six winger for Team Canada. He did get some time on the power play, which is where he was most dangerous. It looked as though Laberge opened the floodgates with his score-opening tally with the man advantage just 2:20 into the contest, as he took a pass from Chychrun and walked into the right circle for a pair of shots, the latter finding the back of the net for his second of the tournament. Laberge is a big-game player, so we think he the Canada’s coaching staff may have misplaced him. This kid’s shot packs a punch, but he didn’t have the pleasure of flanking a high-powered playmaker like Tyson Jost of Mike McLeod. We wouldn’t say the tournament helped his draft stock — he didn’t score a goal at even strength in any of the six games, but he was good enough to maintain it.

Draft Profile: Carl Grundstrom

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2016 NHL Draft

RW Carl Grundstrom

Frolunda/MoDo (SHL)

Steve Kournianos  |  04/28/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of La Presse

Profile

The Draft Analyst Ranking:

DEC JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN
29 29 32 36 40 ** **

Position: Right Wing
Shoots: Left
Height/Weight: 6’0, 194 lbs
Born: December 1st, 1997 Umea, Sweden
Obtained: Signed two-year contract with Frolunda on April 13th, 2016…Transferred to MoDo from Bjorkloven on April 27th, 2013.
Notes: 2015-16: Led all SHL draft-eligible players in scoring with 16 points and was second with 53 penalty minutes in 49 games…Tied for ninth among SHL forwards with 75 hits…His 86 shots on goal were eighth-best for MoDo while ranking 21st on the club in ice time at 13:50 per game…Named to Sweden’s under-20 National Team for the 2016 World Junior Championship, where he scored a goal in seven games…Led Sweden in scoring with a goal and three assists in four games at the U20 Four Nations Tournament in Russia last August…2014-15: Made SHL debut for MoDo, tallying five points in 24 games…Led MoDo’s J20 (Superelit) club with a 1.33 points-per-game average (36 points in 27 games)…Registered a pair of assists for Team Sweden at the 2014 U18 Ivan Hlinka Memorial Tournament…Placed second in team scoring with three goals and two assists in five games for Sweden at the 2015 IIHF U18 World Championship…Combined for eight goals and seven assists in 17 games at the international level…2013-14: Split the season between MoDo’s J18 and J20 squads…Picked up an assist in five games for Team Sweden at the 2014 World U17 Hockey Challenge.

Regular Season

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2014-15 MoDo J20 (Superelit) 27 21 15 36 1.33 +15
2014-15 MoDo (SHL) 24 2 3 5 0.21 -4
2015-16 MoDo (SHL) 49 7 9 16 0.33 -2

Playoffs

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2014-15 MoDo J20 (Superelit) 4 4 2 6 1.50 E
2015-16 MoDo (SHL) 7 1 3 4 0.80 +1

Scouting Report

A spirited and energetic banging winger who off the puck is a nightmare to guard against. Grundstrom is a relentless forechecker who uses his strong build and powerful lower body to frighten defenders into careless mistakes. If there was ever a player to excuse for the constant dump and chase, it’s Grundstrom, whose international resume for Team Sweden is beyond impressive when considering his nation’s lack of elite scoring up front at the junior level. His skill set may resemble that of a grinder, but he’s displayed flash and skill in the limited time he received with MoDo.

He’s a very good skater in terms of mobility and balance, but he lacks breakaway speed. Grundstrom has quick feet and can create separation with his first step, but it takes him a while to reach top speed. Still, this does not impede his ability to press and battle in a timely manner, as his instincts and positioning are excellent. Grundstrom has an above-average shot that he likes to fire from all areas and angles, sometimes to a fault, as you’d like to see him be a little more patient and creative with the disc. But he’s a power forward who likes to use his body, so expect him to use those strengths to generate offense rather than fancy his way onto the scoresheet. He can also be undisciplined at times, but a solid depth option with discernable NHL upside nonetheless.


Draft Profile: Jake Bean

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2016 NHL Draft

LHD Jake Bean

Calgary Hitmen (WHL)

Steve Kournianos  |  05/04/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of Nick Procaylo

Profile

The Draft Analyst Ranking:

DEC JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN
31 38 31 30 31 ** **

Position: Defenseman
Shoots: Left
Height/Weight: 6’1 170 lbs
Born: June 9th, 1998, Calgary, AB
Obtained: Signed as a free agent by the Calgary Hitmen in 2014.
Notes: 2015-16: Led all CHL defensemen with 24 goals — a Calgary Hitmen single-season record — and finished sixth among WHL blueliners in scoring with 64 points…Broke his foot during Team Canada’s camp for the 2016 IIHF under-18 world championship…Played for Team Orr at the 2016 CHL Top Prospects Game…Picked up an assist in two games for Team WHL at the 2015 CHL-Russia Super Series…Had an assist in four games for Team Canada as they won the gold medal at the 2015 U18 Ivan Hlinka Memorial Cup…2014-15: Broke the Hitmen season record for points by a rookie defenseman with 39 points in 51 games…Finished third in scoring among WHL first-year blueliners… Missed a month with a broken wrist suffered in a 2-1 win over Kelowna on 2/28/15…Led Team Canada-Black defensemen in scoring with a goal and three assists in five games at the 2014 World U17 Hockey Challenge.

Regular Season

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2014-15 Calgary (WHL) 51 5 34 39 0.77 +20
2015-16 Calgary (WHL) 68 24 40 64 0.94 +8

Playoffs

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2014-15 Calgary (WHL) 7 2 4 6 0.86 -2
2015-16 Calgary (WHL) 5 0 2 2 0.40 -4

Scouting Report

A nimble puck mover who grasps the intricacies of offensive-zone play, Bean is arguably the draft’s biggest scoring threat from the back end. He loves to dictate the tempo once the puck is on his stick, and when he does, Bean’s able to showcase elite stickhandling skills and pro-level instincts with cerebral shot selection. Simply put, he’s the kind of threat who keeps opposing coaches hard at work during the day, and restlessly sleepless at night. He loves to utilize his teammates — possibly better than any draft-eligible rearguard, and war-gaming this facet can be problematic since he knows all to well how to sneak between the circles and use his hard, accurate shot. Bean is as agile as a cat with good up-ice quickness and solid balance for a kid who looks smaller than his listed 170 pounds. He’s not a roadrunner, but his edge work is exceptional — similar to the great NHL finesse defenders of the past. Bean will effortlessly glide and weave into openings as he covers ground, but he’s just as active and graceful within the confines of the offensive zone, especially on the power play. He’s got great vision and will whip a tape-to-tape pass through traffic either cross-ice or diagonally.

The downside? To be blunt, he’s a liability in his own end. Bean tries to make up for deficiencies in physicality with smart positioning, but he’s far too inconsistent in that regard. He’s prone to lose his man during board battles or in slot coverage, and he will dangerously put the puck where it has no business going. Lastly, the way he defends odd-man-rushes is suspect, but the most fixable of his defensive-zone warts. Still, he’s too good to overlook in the later stages of the first round, and you have to love the fact that this kid managed to get that kind of reputation without the benefit of being drafted into the WHL.

Draft Profile: Vitalii Abramov

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2016 NHL Draft

RW Vitalii Abramov

Gatineau Olympiques (QMJHL)

Steve Kournianos  |  05/06/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of Martin Roy

Profile

The Draft Analyst Ranking:

DEC JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN
33 35 27 26 26 ** **

Position: Right Wing
Shoots: Left
Height/Weight: 5’9, 175 lbs
Born: May 8th, 1998 Chelyabinsk, Russia
Obtained: Selected by the Gatineau Olympiques in the first round (13th overall) in the 2015 CHL Import Draft, June 30th, 2015.
Notes: 2015-16: Named QMJHL Rookie of the Year after leading all first-year players in goals (38), assists (55), points (93) and plus-minus (+36)…His 93 points tied for fifth in overall scoring, and was the second-most by a QMJHL rookie in the last 10 years…Led all rookies with seven goals and 13 points in 10 playoff games… Played for Team Cherry at the 2016 CHL Top Prospects Game…Invited to play for Team Russia at the IIHF Under-18 world championship but did not participate…2014-15: Split the season between Traktor Chelyabink’s U17 team and their MHL squad…Helped Russia win the gold medal at the 2014 World U17 Challenge with three goals and six assists in six games.

Regular Season

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2014-15 Chelyabinsk (MHL) 20 8 6 14 0.70 +6
2015-16 Gatineau (QMJHL) 63 38 55 93 1.48 +36

Playoffs

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2014-15 Chelyabinsk (MHL) 2 0 0 0 0.00 -1
2015-16 Gatineau (QMJHL) 10 7 6 13 1.30 +7

Scouting Report

Everything Vitalii Abramov does is electrifying. The diminutive Russian wing is not a one-trick pony – he can beat you with speed, deception, passing and/or a deadly accurate shot. Each asset is a cog in a wheel, relying on other skills to combine for an explosive on-ice tour-de-force. The style of play in the Quebec League (among others) is conducive to undersized finesse forwards, and Abramov is one of its best at exploiting it.

You can argue that no draft eligible combines escapability and instincts as well as Abramov, who knows how to evade defenses and slip into a scoring area all on the same play. He has an innate feel for plays as they develop, and what we love about him is the way he shows no mercy – Abramov is a quick-strike playmaker with acute decisiveness. More slippery and shifty than blurring and blistering, Abramov is a very good skater with exceptional balance and lower-body strength. He’s an elite stickhandler who can dipsy-doodle the puck through tire spikes without it breaking into a million pieces. This kid may look small and can cherrypick with the best of them, but his enthusiasm, skill and athleticism make him one heck of a workload to defend against.

Draft Profile: Adam Fox

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2016 NHL Draft

RHD Adam Fox

U.S. U18 (NTDP)

Steve Kournianos  |  05/07/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of Minas Panagiotakis

Profile

The Draft Analyst Ranking:

DEC JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN
77 70 68 64 27 ** **

Position: Defenseman
Shoots: Right
Height/Weight: 5’10 179 lbs
Born: February 17th, 1998, Jericho, NY
Obtained: Joined National Team Development Program on April 8th, 2014…Committed to Harvard University (ECAC) on April 11th, 2013.
Notes: 2015-16: Led NTDP defensemen in goals (9), assists (50), points (59) and finished third in team scoring…His 0.97 points-per-game average and 59 points set an NTDP single-season record for blueliners…Named Top Defenseman at the 2016 IIHF under-18 World Championship after he led all rearguards in scoring with a goal and eight assists for nine points in seven games…Did not register a point in four games at the U18 Five Nations Tournament in Rauma, Finland in February…Led defensemen in scoring with seven points (all assists) in four games at the U18 Five Nations Tournament in Monthey, Switzerland in November…Played for Team Roenick at the 2015 All-American Top Prospects Game…2014-15: Placed second among Team USA defenseman with 23 assists and 27 points in 54 games…Did not record a point in four games at 2014 U17 Five Nations Tournament in Russia…Had two assists in six games as Team USA finished second at the 2014 World U17 Hockey Challenge…Had three assists in four games for Team USA at the 2014 U17 Four Nations Tournament in Ann Arbor, MI…Selected by the Kitchener Rangers in the eighth round (142nd overall) in the 2014 OHL Priority Selection…Selected by the Des Moines Buccaneers in the 21st round (303rd overall) in the 2013 USHL Draft.

Regular Season

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2014-15 US U17 (NTDP) 54 4 23 27 0.50
2015-16 US U18 (NTDP) 64 9 50 59 0.97

Scouting Report

A terrific playmaker from the back end with first-class vision and elite puck distributing abilities, Fox was Team USA’s most consistent defender. He is yet another Nassau County native to grace the NTDP’s blue line, using flair, creativity and astonishing puck control to wow onlookers and dizzy opponents all at the same time. He was beyond deserving of his nomination as top defenseman at the U18 worlds, which shows how far this kid has come since the start of the season when he was considered (and assessed) as merely a power play specialist. Nothing could be further from the truth, as Fox usurped fellow NTDP rearguard Chad Krys as Team USA’s best overall defenseman and most reliable at generating offense.

Fox is a good skater who looks far more graceful in confined spaces than he does in open ice. His lateral movement and edge work are excellent — his twirls and pirouettes are strikingly similar to the way Ottawa star defender Erik Karlsson controlled his puck movement while playing for Team Sweden in his pre-draft years. Fox has an accurate shot that does not require velocity to beat a goalie clean in any of the corners, and he can juke and fake his way into prime scoring areas with relative ease. He is far from physical, and falling below the six-foot mark could work against him as his development path takes him through the bigger, thicker forwards. That being said, he ran the gauntlet of NCAA competition with significant success, as even the most mature NCAA opponents could not find an answer to his puck wizardry. 

Draft Profile: Libor Hajek

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2016 NHL Draft

LHD Libor Hajek

Saskatoon Blades (WHL)

Steve Kournianos  |  05/10/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of Nick Procaylo

Profile

The Draft Analyst Ranking:

DEC JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN
27 27 29 31 30 ** **

Position: Defenseman
Shoots: Left
Height/Weight: 6’2, 196 lbs
Born: February 4th, 1998 Smrcek, Czech Republic
Obtained: Selected by the Saskatoon Blades in the first round (2nd overall) in the 2015 CHL Import Draft, June 30th, 2015.
Notes: 2015-16: Finished sixth in scoring among WHL rookie defensemen with 26 points in 69 games…Tied for team lead in defense scoring with Nolan Reid…Represented the Czech Republic at the 2016 IIHF under-18 world championship, picking up two assists in five games…Played for Team Orr at the 2016 CHL Top Prospects Game…Named Saskatoon’s Player of the Month for November…Registered a career-best three points (a goal and two assists) in a 4-3 overtime win at Kootenay on October 23rd…Picked up an assist in for games for the Czech Republic at the 2015 U18 Ivan Hlinka Memorial Cup…2014-15: Split the season between Brno’s U21 team and their Extraliga squad…Recorded an assist in five games at the 2014 U18 Ivan Hlinka…Scored a goal in five games at the 2015 U18 world championship.

Regular Season

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2014-15 Brno U20 (Extraliga Jrs) 44 1 9 10 0.23 E
2014-15 Brno (Czech Extraliga) 17 0 1 1 0.06 E
2015-16 Saskatoon (WHL) 69 3 23 26 0.38 -19

Playoffs

Season Club GP G A PTS PPG Plus/Minus
2014-15 Brno (Czech Extraliga) 7 0 0 0 0.00 -1

Scouting Report

Libor Hajek’s game is simple – find the puck, get the puck, move the puck. Sounds pretty easy, doesn’t it? Well, there aren’t many defenders anywhere, let alone teenage draft-eligibles, who can be counted on to do all three with consistency. Hajek had the misfortune of playing smack in the middle of a Saskatoon rebuild where the ice was routinely tilted towards his own end. To call his nightly efforts valiant would be an understatement – he was a man on an island for long stretches, to include the Czech Republic’s nightmarish performance at the recent U18 world championship.

Hajek converts speed into power in either direction, using athleticism and sound judgment to attack openings or create them himself. He has a decent first step for a big guy, yet only requires a few strides to reach top speed. If you see open ice ahead of you, better make it quick, as Hajek will chase you down and smother the puck with relative ease. His positioning and slot coverage are excellent, and rarely is he guilty of wandering or puck gazing. You can make the argument that Hajek is the draft’s best defender from his own goal line to center ice. Offensively, he’s a good passer with a decent shot, and uses his wheels to make creative plays. He plays a smart and poised two-way game, and should be groomed for the top pairing.

2016-17 OHL Preview

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2017 NHL Entry Draft

2016-17 OHL Preview

New OHL season features strong crop of prospects
Steve Kournianos  |  09/19/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of Terry Wilson / OHL Images

Mississauga winger Owen Tippett is a top prospect for the 2017 NHL Draft

East Division

Kingston Frontenacs
Coach: Paul McFarland (3rd Season)
2015-16 record: 46-17-3 (1st, East Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
Round 1: Oshawa (4-1)
Round 2: Niagara (0-4)

 OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
6th (21.5%) 18th (16.5%) 7th (252) 3rd (189)

Outlook: The Frontenacs may not showcase as prolific an offense as it did a year ago. But that doesn’t mean they won’t be exciting to watch. And while coming close to last season’s franchise-record 46 wins and 95 points likely is a bridge too far, Kingston can still boast a formidable lineup, even with anticipated losses like LW Michael Dal Colle (NYI), C Juho Lammikko (FLA) and RHD Roland McKeown (CAR), while top scorer RW Spencer Watson (LAK) is out until December recovering from wrist surgery. Not all news is bad, however, as mammoth G Jeremy Helvig (CAR) and powerful LW Lawson Crouse (ARI) return to lead a roster chock full of skill players. The Fronts have a slew of quality 2017 NHL Draft prospects, beginning with Finnish import RW Linus Nyman (Ranked No. 93) and LW Jason Robertson (Ranked No. 78). Nyman is an explosive player who can finish as well as he can create opportunities, while Robertson last year finished second in the league among 2017 first-year draft eligibles with 18 goals in 54 games. On defense, Kingston features three draft-eligible defenders with size – LHD Jacob Paquette (Ranked No. 39), RHD Eemeli Rasanen (Ranked No. 121) and LHD Jakob Brahaney (Ranked No. 264). Paquette is a cerebral positional defender who was named to Team Canada’s recent entry for the Ivan Hlinka but bowed out of the tournament because of a right arm injury.

2017 First-year draft eligibles

No. Name POS S HT WT DOB
23 Tyler Burnie RW L 6.04 188 9-Feb-99
77 Eemeli Rasanen D R 6.06 205 6-Mar-99
22 Jakob Brahaney D L 6.01 181 26-Mar-99
6 Jacob Paquette D L 6.03 208 26-May-99
13 Colin Van Den Hurk D R 5.11 185 26-May-99
75 Linus Nyman RW L 5.1 150 11-Jul-99
19 Jason Robertson LW L 6.02 196 22-Jul-99

Ottawa 67’s
Coach: Jeff Brown (3rd Season)
2015-16 record: 36-29-2 (2nd, East Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
Round 1: Niagara (1-4)

OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
8th (19.6%) 12th (79.7%) 11th (234) 9th (219)

Outlook: The good news is that Ottawa made the playoffs for the second straight season. The bad? The 67’s were knocked out of the first round in each of them, with last year’s five-game drubbing to Niagara revealing more mediocrity than promise. The 67’s will rely on young forwards like LW Travis Barron (COL) and 2017 draft prospect C Sasha Chmelevski (Ranked No. 44) to make up for the loss of super-scorers C Dante Salituro (CBJ) and LW Jeremiah Addison (MTL), the latter being traded to Windsor during the summer. LW Austen Keating (Ranked No. 73) is a highly-cerebral forward who was invited to Canada’s Hlinka camp, but you have to wonder if he’ll be the dynamic player he was prior to the concussion he sustained last season. Russian import RHD Andrei Golikov (Ranked No. 314) was the 67’s top pick (32nd overall) in the 2016 CHL Import Draft and will add physicality, but don’t expect him to replace the big minutes of graduate LHD Stepan Falkovsky (CGY). In goal, G Leo Lazarev (2017 draft overager) is the incumbent, and replacing traded G Liam Herbst (Undrafted) with G Olivier Lafreniere likely translates into an increased work load for Lazarev.

2017 First-year draft eligibles

No. Name Pos S HT WT DOB
2 Noel Hoefenmayer D L 6’0 190 6-Jan-99
16 Ben Evans C L 6’0 195 16-Jan-99
9 Austen Keating LW L 6’0 170 7-Mar-99
18 Hudson Wilson D L 6’3 192 3-May-99
5 Andrei Golikov D R 6’3 175 31-May-99
89 Sasha Chmelevski C R 6’0 186 9-Jun-99

Peterborough Petes
Coach: Jody Hull (6th Season)
2015-16 record: 33-28-2-5 (3rd, East Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
Round 1: North Bay (3-4)

 OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
19th (14.8%) 20th (75.3%) T-9th (240) 15th (259)

Outlook: Expect the Petes to make some noise for several reasons, beginning with the expected return of scorers C Jonathan Ang (FLA) and C Stephen Lorentz (CAR), as well as leading defender RHD Matthew Spencer (TB). You have to figure the addition of Finnish RW Jonne Tammela (TB) and draft-eligible Czech RW Matyas Svoboda (Ranked No. 51), plus the maturation of C Zach Gallant (Ranked No. 247) will bolster a power play that let the Petes down a year ago. G Dylan Wells (EDM) heads into the season as Peterborough’s starter following G Matthew Mancina’s trade to Mississauga and should excpect to see anyhwere from 40-50 starts. And keep an eye on Russian puck wizard RW Pavel Gogolev (2018 Draft), who was the eighth overall pick in the 2016 OHL Priority Selection.

2017 First-year draft eligibles

No. Name POS S HT WT DOB
23 Matyas Svoboda  LW L 6’2 213 2-Jan-99
29 Josh Barraclough RW R 6’1 194 4-Feb-99
12 C.J. Clarke RW L 6’0 201 8-Feb-99
11 Zach Gallant C L 6’1 184 6-Mar-99
7 Nick Grima D R 5’11 188 7-Mar-99
15 Nick Isaacson LW L 6’2 180 11-Aug-99
2  Cole Fraser D R 6’2 191 23-Aug-99

Oshawa Generals
Coach: Bob Jones (2nd Season)
2015-16 record: 27-33-4-4 (4th, East Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
Round 1: Kingston (1-4)

 OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
7th (19.6%) 17th (76.6%) T-16th (197) 14th (235)

Outlook: The Generals went from 2015 Memorial Cup champions and Canadian Hockey League darlings to near the bottom in quite a hurry, as no OHL team last season was hit by graduations as hard as they were. It didn’t help that star LW Michael Dal Colle (NYI) got off to a terrible start, prompting a midseason trade to Kingston. This season, Oshawa will rely on C Anthony Cirelli (TB) and C Domenic Commisso (2017 draft overager) to run the offense, with the arrival of Latvian draft prospect C Renars Krastenbergs (Ranked No. 177) and draft-eligible C Jack Studnicka (Ranked No. 87) forcing GM Roger Hunt to trade veteran faceoff specialist C Sam Harding (2017 draft overager) to Kingston. Slick puck mover LHD Mitchell Vander Sompel (NYI) leads a solid back end and will quarterback one of the OHL’s better power plays, and two-way LHD Riley Stillman (FLA) is a candidate for a breakout season. Youngster RW Robbie Burt (2017 draft eligible) likely assumes a depth role, while LW Daniil Antropov (2018 Draft) — a top pick in the 2016 OHL Priority Selection — is the son of former Toronto Maple Leaf Nikolai Antropov. The goaltending situation is quite clear, with returning starter G Jeremy Brodeur (2017 draft overager) looking to post another strong campaign.

2017 First-year draft eligibles

No. Name POS S HW WT DOB
11 Renars Krastenbergs C L 6’0 175 16-Dec-98
23 Jack Studnicka C R 6’1 170 18-Feb-99
30 Kyle Keyser G L 6’2 185 8-Mar-99
35 Barrett Mundell G L 6’2 182 8-Mar-99
4 Matt Stoia D R 6’1 176 24-Mar-99
15 Kyle MacLean  LW L 6’0 180 29-Apr-99
7 Sullivan Sparkes C L 5’11 175 4-May-99
18 Robbie Burt RW R 6’0 210 29-May-99

Hamilton Bulldogs
Coach: John Gruden (1st Season)
2015-16 record: 25-35-8-0 (5th, East Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
DNQ

 OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
15th (17.0%) 10th (80.4%) T-16th (197) 16th (235)

Outlook: It was a rough first year for Hamilton, which not only failed to make the playoffs, but came up short in generating any sort of buzz in a demanding and passionate hockey market. That should change this season under new head coach John Gruden, who inherits essentially the same roster from last year, but one whose top-end talent is undeniable. The Bulldogs have a pair of outstanding two-way defenders in LHD Ben Gleason (2017 draft overager) and LHD Cole Candella (VAN), while hard-shooting and physical RHD Reilly Webb (2017 draft eligible) should expect a bigger role now that he’s recovered from an injury-plagued season. Up front, the top line of LW Matt Strome (Ranked No. 57), C Niki Petti (Undrafted) and RW Matt Luff (Draft eligible overager) should be one of the league’s best. Hamilton is one year better in terms of overall forward depth, with draft-eligible banger C Mackenzie Entwhistle (Ranked No. 89) and Slovakian C Marian Studenic (Ranked No. 36) both candidates for special teams play. Towering C Connor Roberts (2018 draft) — the third overall pick in the 2016 OHL Priority Selection — is still a little raw for an expanded role, but his size and skill makes the Bulldogs’ bottom-six all the more dangerous. Lastly, the club’s goaltending situation looks fine on paper, with G Connor Hicks (2017 draft overager) the starter and prospect G Kayden Flucher (Ranked No. 449) a solid option for backup.

2017 First-year draft eligibles

No. Name POS S HT WT DOB
33 Kaden Fulcher G L 6’3 182 23-Sep-98
28 Marian Studenic C L 6’0 165 28-Oct-98
18 Matthew Strome LW L 6’3 203 6-Jan-99
12 Zachary Jackson LW L 6’3 189 11-Jan-99
15 Fedor Gordeev D L 6’6 209 27-Jan-99
11 Isaac Nurse RW R 5’9 165 16-Mar-99
9 Reilly Webb D R 6’3 201 4-May-99
44 MacKenzie Entwistle RW R 6’3 181 14-Jul-99

Central Division

Barrie Colts
Coach: Dale Hawerchuk (7th Season)
2015-16 record: 43-22-0-3 (1st, Central Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
Round 1: Mississauga (4-3)
Round 2: North Bay (4-0)
Round 3: Niagara (0-4)

 OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
5th (21.7%) 4th (83.4%) 2nd (295) 8th (207)

Outlook: Dale Hawerchuk’s rebuilding Colts were carried last season by 100-point seasons from veterans C Kevin Labanc (SJ) and LW Andrew Mangiapane (CGY), and stellar netminding from G Mackenzie Blackwood (NJD). All three, including offensive-minded RHD Rasmus Andersson (CGY) have moved on to greener pastures, leaving the team in the hands of younger, less experienced prospects. And while replicating another solid wire-to-wire season may seem like too tall of an order, that doesn’t mean they won’t look fun and fast in the process. The Colts’ strength will lie in their heady defense corps, led by draft-eligible overagers LHD Cameron Lizotte (2017 draft overager) and RHD Justin Murray (2017 draft overager), They added two highly-regarded 2017 draft prospects — Swedish LHD Tom Hedberg (Ranked No. 140), Ohio native RHD Joey Keane (Ranked No. 88) — and will look to puck mover LHD Kade Landry (2017 draft eligible) to provide some punch as a depth defender. Offense from the back end will be critical since the forward ranks were depleted, but Hawerchuk unloaded a bunch of picks for Russian sniper LW Kirill Nizhnikov (2018 Draft). And he may be listed at only 5’6, but LW Lucas Chiodo (Ranked No. 481) is one of their top playmakers, while C Kyle Heitzner (2017 draft eligible) is a late-round pick who had a strong preseason.

2017 First-year draft eligibles

No. Name POS S HT WT DOB
31 Ruan Badenhorst  G L 5’10 169 3-Oct-98
8 Lucas Chiodo LW L 5’6 155 31-Oct-98
6 Kyle Auger D R 5’9 170 2-Jan-99
21 Jason Willms  C L 6’0 189 8-Feb-99
33 Christian Propp G L 6’2 182 27-Mar-99
11 Jaden Peca RW L 5’10 160 18-Apr-99
5 Christopher Cameron D R 6’4 231 29-Apr-99
7 Kade Landry D L 5’10 180 3-May-99
15 Kyle Heitzner C L 5’10 165 17-Jul-99
25  Tom Hedberg D L 5’11 161 10-Aug-99
** Joey Keane D R 6’1 190 7/2/99

North Bay Battalion
Coach: Stan Butler (19th Season)
2015-16 record: 35-23-6-4 (2nd, Central Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
Round 1: Oshawa (4-3)
Round 2: Barrie (0-4)

 OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
14th (18.8%) 8th (81.5%) 9th (240) 11th (227)

Outlook: The Battalion was served with a cold plate of revenge by Barrie via a convincing four-game sweep in the second round, leaving head coach Stan Butler with a bitter taste from not only an early-round exit, but the prospect of losing his four best players to graduation. C Mike Amadio (LAK), RW Matthew Santos (undrafted), RHD Kyle Wood (ARI) and G Jake Smith (undrafted) all moved on, leaving a void in terms of production and leadership. LHD Cam Dineen (ARI) — one of the CHL’s top scoring defenders last year — returns with some blue line help in the name of Swede RHD Adam Thilander (Ranked No. 64) and LHD Brady Lyle (Ranked No. 115). Butler has always employed a defense-oriented system, but the lack of quality scorers beyond LW Daniil Vertiy (Ranked No. 202) and RW Zach Poirier (2017 draft overager) will sting. Look for top prospect C Adam McMaster (2018 draft) to inch his way into the top six and provide the Battalion with a consistent effort. Replacing Smith in goal will not be easy, but G Brent Moran (DAL) was a capable backup who earned the starting nod.

2017 First-year draft eligibles

No. Name POS S HT WT DOB
3  Adam Thilander D R 6’1 187 18-Sep-98
23 Daniil Vertiy LW L 5’11 206 12-Nov-98
20 Jacob Ball LW L 6’3 196 16-Jan-99
24 Brad Chenier LW L 5’11 186 20-Jan-99
35 Matt Woroniuk G L 6’2 192 25-Mar-99
11 Daniel Walker LW R 6’4 195 18-May-99
22 Brady Lyle D R 6’1 196 6-Jun-99
2 Eric Allair D L 6’0 208 1-Jul-99
26 Alex Robert RW R 6’0 161 6-Jul-99

Niagara Ice Dogs
Coach: Dave Bell (1st Season)
2015-16 record: 35-26-4-6 (3rd, Central Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
Round 1: Ottawa (4-1)
Round 2: Kingston (4-0)
Semifinals: Barrie (4-0)
Finals: London (0-4)

 OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
14th (18.8%) 2nd (84.2%) 13th (213) 6th (198)

Outlook: The Ice Dogs shocked the major junior circuit with a spirited run into the OHL Finals before bowing out to London’s blitzrieg, losing to the eventual Memorial Cup champions in four games. First-year coach Dave Bell has his work cut out for him, as there are key leaders to replace and new faces to familiarize with. Gone are NHL blue-chippers G Alex Nedeljkovic (CAR), RW Josh Ho-Sang (NYI), LW Brendan Perlini (ARI) and LHD Vince Dunn (STL), leaving G Stephen Dhillon (2017 draft overager) as a key cog in maintaining Niagara’s reputation as a tough team to score against. Two-way LW Graham Knott (CHI) is back and looking to taken advantage of a consistent top-line role, while imports C Pavel Dyomin (Ranked No. 138) and LW Ondrej Machala (Ranked No. 151) are two impressive offensive-minded forwards. C Ben Jones (Ranked No. 146) and C Akil Thomas (2018 Draft) are the Ice Dogs’ last two first round picks in the OHL Priority Selection who should challenge for a regular shift on what looks like an undernourished group of forwards. And RHD Hayden Davis (Ranked No. 242) is a complete prospect who will be groomed to become their top-pairing defender.
2017 First-year draft eligibles

No. Name POS S HT WT DOB
16 Danial Singer RW R 5’7 165 10-Feb-99
29 Liam Ham D L 5’9 192 3-Feb-99
19 Pavel Demin C L 5’9 156 19-Apr-99
26 Andrew Somerville D L 5’10 165 30-Jul-99
15 Oliver Castleman LW L 5’10 180 15-Sep-99
18 Matthew Philip C R 5’11 175 31-May-99
20 Ondrej Machala LW L 6’0 176 11-Jan-99
3 Ben Jones C L 6’0 187 26-Feb-99
11 Ryan Smith C L 6’0 190 4-Jun-99
31 Colton Incze G L 6’1 205 31-Jan-99
27 Cal Davis LW L 6’2 152 21-Mar-99
5 Drew Hunter D R 6’2 186 6-Feb-99
6 Hayden Davis D R 6’2 193 21-Jul-99
21 Cameron Bisson RW R 6’3 178 18-Jan-99

Mississauga Steelheads
Coach: James Richmond (1st Season)
2015-16 record: 33-30-2-3 (4th, Central Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
Round 1: Barrie (3-4)


 OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
12th (19.2%) T-13th (79.4%) 12th (215) 12th (229)

Outlook: No team personified mediocrity better than the Steelheads, who hovered at or near .500 from beginning to end before losing to Barrie in the first round. The results were somewhat shocking when you consider how they boasted a lineup with five 2016 NHL draft picks, including two lottery picks — RW Alex Nylander (BUF) and C Mike McLeod (NJD). In a perfect world, the aforementioned duo will return to join RW Nathan Bastian (NJD), LHD Sean Day (NYR) and LHD Austin Osmanski (BUF) and form not only an OHL title contender, but one for the Memorial Cup as well. Augmenting the 2016 draftees are two potential first rounders for 2017 — RW Owen Tippett (Ranked No. 15) and LHD Nicolas Hague (Ranked No. 24), and two European imports on defense in Finnish RHD Ville Saarijarvi (DET) and LHD Jacob Moverare (LAK). Mississauga addressed a void in goal by trading for G Matthew Mancina (Undrafted), and RW Ryan McLeod (2018 Draft) returns from a strong Ivan Hlinka tournament to add speed and skill to the bottom-six. On paper, the Steeleheads are undoubtedly the favorites to win the Eastern Conference. You have to wonder, however, if the amount of talent simply makes for a kitchen with too many cooks.

2017 First-year draft eligibles

No. Name POS S HT WT DOB
15 Shaw Boomhower C L 5’11 185 31-Oct-98
41  Nicolas Hague D L 6’5 216 5-Dec-98
74  Owen Tippett RW R 6’2 204 16-Feb-99
18 Aidan McFarland LW L 5’11 191 5-Apr-99
17 Scoley Dow LW L 6’1 189 12-May-99
28 Matthew Titus RW R 6’1 174 15-May-99
94 Jeremy Goodwin LW L 6’3 190 4-Sep-99

Sudbury Wolves
Coach: David Matsos (2nd Season)
2015-16 record: 16-46-5-1 (5th, Central Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
DNQ


 OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
17th (16.1%) 16th (78.7%) 19th (183) 20th (328)

Outlook: The good thing about being a bottom feeder in the Ontario Hockey League is that sometimes time and experience are all it takes to gain respectability. Star players come and go with regularity, thus opening the door for struggling teams to attack that void and take a leap up the standings. Coach Dave Matsos has a young team on his hand  — only a third were born in 1997 or sooner — but you have to figure the Wolves are on the way up regardless. C David Levin (2018 Draft) is a dynamic scorer who looks ready to justify his selection as the OHL’s first overall pick in 2015, while RW Dmitri Sokolov (MIN) hopes to rebound from injuries that plagues his conditioning. Polish import LW Alan Lyszczarczyk (2017 draft overager) was their most consistent scorer, and look for physical LW Carson Macauley (2017 draft eligible) and speedy C Ben Garagan (2017 draft eligible) to help form a respectable third line.  The defense has promise, led by LHD Kyle Capobianco (ARI), who should anchor the top pairing and play in all critical situations. Youngster RHD Reagan O’Grady (Ranked No. 153) is a mature two-way defender, but look for a solid rookie season from RHD Owen Lalonde (2018 draft), a cerebral puck mover with an elite understanding of the game. Sudbury has uncertainty in goal following the trade of G Troy Timpano (2017 draft overager) to Erie, and it looks like G Zach Bowman (2017 draft overager) will be given the lion’s share of minutes.

2017 First-year draft eligibles

No. Name POS S HT WT DOB
28 Drake Pilon RW R 5’9 174 2-Oct-98
29 Darian Pilon LW L 5’9 174 2-Oct-98
12 Brady Pataki RW R 6’2 217 3-Oct-98
5 Brandon Bastasin D L 6’3 201 5-Nov-98
7 Reagan O’Grady D R 6’2 197 15-Dec-98
22 Ben Garagan C L 5’11 174 6-Jan-99
30  Jake McGrath G L 6’1 158 7-Jan-99
14 Owen Lane LW L 5’9 183 16-Jan-99
8 Conor Ali D L 6’0 185 9-Mar-99
18 Macauley Carson LW L 6’1 205 12-Mar-99
20 Shane Bulitka LW L 5’11 176 9-Jul-99

Midwest Division

Erie Otters
Coach: Kris Knoblauch (5th Season)
2015-16 record: 52-15-1-0 (1st, Midwest Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
Round 1: Saginaw (4-0)
Round 2: Sault Ste Marie (4-1)
Semifinals: London (0-4)

OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
2nd (25.3%) 5th (82.6%) 3rd (269) 2nd (183)

Outlook: Erie is expected to bring back another powerhouse roster with or without star C Dylan Strome (ARI), so a fourth straight 50-win season is not out of the question. The Otters feature a deep group of forwards, beginning with diminutive RW Alex DeBrincat (CHI), who silenced prognosticators with his second straight 50-goal season while leading his club to the OHL’s regular season crown. Rugged power forward LW Taylor Raddysh (TB) rejoins DeBrincat on the first line, and look for Russian import and 2017 draft prospect C German Poddubyi (Ranked No. 157) to compete for the top center slot. RW/LW Ivan Lodnia (Ranked No. 71) was one of the OHL’s top rookie scorers last season and had a solid Ivan Hlinka tournament for the United States, and RW Kyle Maksimovich (2017 draft overager) and C/W Brett Neumann (Ranked No. 353) are two undersized skill forwards whose versatility likely lands them into the top six. The back line took a hit with the departure of puck mover LHD Travis Dermott (TOR), and there’s a slim chance physical two-way RHD Erik Cernak (LAK) returns. That leaves overagers LHD T.J. Fergus (2017 draft eligible) and RHD Darren Raddysh (undrafted) to steer a lunchpail group that lacks a legitimate difference maker. In goal, newly-acquired G Troy Timpano (2017 draft overager) will need to outplay G Jake Lawr (2017 draft overager) for a starting nod that is still up for grabs.

2017 First-year draft eligibles

No. Name POS S HT WT DOB
40 Anand Oberoi G L 6’4 165 10-Feb-99
13 Brett Neumann C R 5’8 166 15-Feb-99
22 Josh Wainman D L 5’11 168 20-Feb-99
8 Carson Edwardson C L 5’11 161 9-Jun-99
39 Gera Poddubnyi C L 6’1 183 9-Jun-99
3 Ryan Martin D L 6’0 191 14-Jun-99
43 Ivan Lodnia C R 5’10 181 31-Aug-99

London Knights
Coach: Dale Hunter (16th Season)
2015-16 record: 51-14-2-1 (2nd, Midwest Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
Round 1: Owen Sound (4-2)
Round 2: Kitchener (4-0)
Semifinals: Erie (4-0)
Finals: Niagara (4-0)
Memorial Cup: 4-0

OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
1st (29.1%) 6th (82.3%) 1st (319) 1st (182)

Outlook: It was a dream season for London in terms of both team and individual accomplishment, as its Memorial Cup victory was immediately followed by an NHL Draft that saw seven players selected from its roster – including three in the first round. Led by a trio of star forwards – C Christian Dvorak (ARI), LW Matt Tkachuk (CGY) and RW Mitch Marner (TOR) – the Knights scored a league-best 319 goals, which was the most by a London team since 1985-86. And while it’s likely all three begin the season with their respective NHL clubs, London was able to do what it always seems to accomplish – lure top end talent to keep the machine chugging. Expect two forwards – LW Max Jones (ARI) and C Cliff Pu (BUF) – to shine in expanded roles the way they did last year while the Knights’ top players participated in the world junior championship. Adding Finnish playmaker C Janne Kuokkanen (CAR) will soothe the sting of losing an elite set-up man like Dvorak, and 2017 draft-eligibles C Robert Thomas (Ranked No. 178) and LW Alex Formenton are two promising forwards who may have earned their way into the top nine. A defense that allowed a league-low 182 goals-against remains formidable with or without LHD Olli Juolevi (VAN), who was the fifth pick in the NHL Draft and another candidate to begin the campaign elsewhere. LHD Victor Mete (MTL) is capable of leading the rush and running the power play, while rookie LHD Ian Blacker (Ranked No. 69) and LHD Jacob Golden (2017 first-year eligible) are two prospects who could see their roles expand as the season progresses. G Tyler Parsons (CGY) will return following a remarkable season and should be considered the early-season favorite to win the OHL’s top goalie award.

2017 First-year draft eligibles

No. Name POS S HT WT DOB
42 Jacob Golden D L 5’11 161 20-Mar-99
11 Cole Tymkin RW R 6’0 178 5-Apr-99
28 Josh Nelson C L 5’10 168 27-May-99
24 Ian Blacker D L 6’3 178 27-May-99
27 Robert Thomas C R 6’0 184 2-Jul-99
6 Riley Coome D R 6’4 184 7-Jul-99
80 Alex Formenton LW L 6’1 157 13-Sep-99

Kitchener Rangers
Coach: Jay McKee (1st Season)
2015-16 record: 44-17-5-2 (3rd, Midwest Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
Round 1: Windsor (4-1)
Round 1: London (0-4)

OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
4th (22.2%) 11th (80.1%) 4th (256) 5th (197)

Outlook: Kitchener managed to distinguish itself while playing in the OHL’s toughest division, ranking in the top five in both offense and defense, and finishing fourth overall with 95 points. And while they were a notch below Midwest powerhouses London and Erie, the Rangers made a habit of lighting up the scoreboard with an entertaining brand of hockey. Yes, center depth is thin following the graduation of captain C Ryan MacInnis (ARI) and C Gustaf Franzen’s departure for Sweden, leaving LW Adam Mascherin (FLA) as the linchpin on offense. But the Rangers may get slick LW Jeremy Bracco (TOR), plus expanded roles for C Connor Bunnaman (PHI) and LW Mason Kohn (2017 draft overager). The forward ranks will receive an injection of youth, beginning with speedy C Greg Meirless (Ranked No. 116) and German import C Cedric Schiemenz (Ranked No. 334). The flanks feature prospects LW Dylan Seitz (Ranked No. 360) and LW Nick McHugh (Ranked. No. 351), as well as undersized playmaker RW Joseph Garrefa (Ranked No. 308). The defense is an area a strength for rookie head coach Jay McKee – a defenseman himself during a lengthy NHL career. LHD Connor Hall (PIT) is capable of all the tough assignments, and lightning-quick puck mover LHD Elijah Roberts (Ranked No. 61) will be asked to run the power play along with heralded rookie LHD Giovanni Vallati (2018 Draft). Veteran G Dawson Carty (Undrafted) will take over as the Rangers’ top netminder while G Luke Opilka (STL) is out following hip surgery.

2017 First-year draft eligibles

No. Name POS S HT WT DOB
35 Chris McGonigle G L 6’3 200 19-Sep-98
88 Greg Meireles C R 5’10 173 1-Jan-99
81 Dylan Seitz LW L 6’2 185 15-Jan-99
98 Elijah Roberts D L 5’10 158 23-Jan-99
21 Nick McHugh LW L 5’10 162 13-Feb-99
48 Cedric Schiemenz C L 5’11 160 1-Mar-99
25 Alex Peterson D L 6’3 174 26-May-99
34 Luke Richardson G L 6’3 158 28-May-99
4 Joseph Garreffa RW L 5’7 166 9-Aug-99

Owen Sound Attack
Coach: Ryan McGill (2nd Season)
2015-16 record: 32-25-8-3 (4th, Midwest Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
Round 1: London (2-4)

OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
10th (19.4%) 7th (82.0%) T-14th (209) 10th (222)

Outlook: The Attack deserve credit for not only giving the eventual-champion London Knights their toughest series of the playoffs, but for also finishing with a respectable record in what many considered the best division in major junior hockey. And while the Attack is not ready to surpass the Eries, Londons and Kitcheners of the world, they will feature a competitive, balanced lineup that may end up surprising people. In goal, G Michael McNiven (MTL) returns to provide Owen Sound with consistency and the ability to steal games. The blue line is another area of strength for second-year head coach Ryan McGill, who will lean on NHL draftees RHD Thomas Schemitsch (FLA) and LHD Jacob Friend (LAK), while grooming 2017 draft prospects LHD Markus Phillips (Ranked No. 82) and RHD Sean Durzi (Ranked No. 292) to handle the puck-rushing responsibilities when the veterans need support. Up front, C Nick Suzuki (Ranked No. 26) is a dynamic playmaker who last year was one of the CHL’s top 1999-born players, and LW Jonah Gadjovich (Ranked No. 193) will be counted on to take some heat off of top goal scorer RW Petrus Palmu (2017 draft overager).

2017 First-year draft eligibles

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NO. Name POS S HT WT DOB
21 Jonah Gadjovich LW L 6’2 201 12-Oct-98
5 Sean Durzi D R 5’11 185 21-Oct-98
24 Maksim Sushko  RW R 5’11 175 10-Feb-99
18 Markus Phillips D L 6’0 200 21-Mar-99
12 Nick Pryce LW R 5’11 180 23-Mar-99
7 Zachary Roberts LW R 6’0 180 4-Aug-99
37 Nick Suzuki C R 5’11 183 10-Sep-99

Guelph Storm
Coach: Jarrod Skalde (2nd Season)
2015-16 record: 13-49-4-2 (5th, Midwest Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
DNQ

OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
18th (15.4%) 18th (76.4%) 20th (156) 19th (297)

Outlook: The Storm didn’t make the sweeping changes one would expect on the heels of a horrendous campaign in which it finished at or near the bottom of every major statistical category. Guelph is bringing back an almost identical roster to the one that won only one of its first 14 games in 2015-16, and it remains to be seen whether last year’s debacle will count as legitimate development time. Still, the Storm bring in Russian LHD Dmitri Samorukov (Ranked No. 17), one of the 2017 draft’s top defense prospects and a physical blueliner capable of providing stability. He’ll be a nice compliment to puck mover LHD Garrett McFadden (2017 draft overager), whose puck skills get overlooked since he plays for a doormat. They’ve already welcomed RHD Ryan Merkley (2018 Draft) – the top pick in the 2016 OHL Priority Selection and a high-profile prospect to look out for even if he’s still growing into his frame. Guelph’s weakness lies within the forward lines, with rugged RW Givani Smith (DET) its only game changer. C Albert Michnac (Ranked No. 304), a finesse player who was the Storm’s second import pick from last year, should get a long look in the top six, and massive LW Isaac Ratcliffe (Ranked No. 50) is a low-slot option for a power play that has to improve. Guelph’s acquisition of G Liam Herbst (Undrafted) gives them stability in the crease and is capable of stealing a game every now and then.

2017 First-year draft eligibles

No. Name POS S HT WT DOB
20 Albert Michnac C L 5’11 175 18-Oct-98
14 Cedric Ralph C L 5’9 165 21-Jan-99
26 Nick Deakin-Poot C L 6’4 208 28-Jan-99
19 Isaac Ratcliffe LW L 6’6 195 15-Feb-99
16 Nate Schnarr C R 6’3 180 25-Feb-99
13 Quinn Hanna D R 6’3 192 14-Apr-99
22 Liam Stevens LW L 5’9 186 23-Apr-99
5 Dmitri Samorukov D L 6’0 165 16-Jun-99
32 Anthony Popovich G L 6’1 174 1-Aug-99

West Division

Sarnia Sting
Coach: Derian Hatcher (2nd Season)
2015-16 record: 42-19-5-2 (1st, West Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
Round 1: Sault Ste Marie (3-4)

OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
11th (19.3%) 1st (84.3%) 5th (243) 4th (192)

Outlook: It’s tough to call Sarnia’s 91-point season disappointing, but that’s what happens when you lose in the first round to a rebuilding Sault Ste Marie club. Whatever the Sting was during the regular season — structured, disciplined and clutch — disappeared come playoff time. Replacing C Pavel Zacha (NJD) won’t be easy, but the return of stars RW Travis Konecny (PHI) and RW Jordan Kyrou (STL) in addition to two European standouts in C Adam Ruzicka (Ranked No. 15) and LW Filip Helt (STL) should create serious matchup problems for opposing coaches. C Anthony Salinitri (PHI) is poised for a breakout season playing alongside LW Ryan McGregor (Ranked No. 126). And keep an eye on Finnish LW Louis Latta (2017 draft overager), who was Sarnia’s second rounder in the 2015 CHL Import Draft. The defense is led by none other than all-world LHD Jakob Chychrun (ARI), who is looking at his second straight season logging close to 30 minutes a game. The goaltending situation is tenable for now, with G Aiden Hughes (Ranked No. 312) and G Justin Fazio (2017 draft overager) likely sharing the workload.

2017 First-year draft eligibles

No. Name POS S HT WT DOB
19 Ryan McGregor LW L 6’0 157 29-Jan-99
23 Egert Curtis LW L 6’1 196 4-Feb-99
22 Sean Josling RW R 5’11 166 22-Mar-99
30 Aidan Hughes G L 6’4 242 10-Apr-99
6 Kelton Hatcher D L 6’1 176 19-Apr-99
21 Adam Ruzicka C L 6’4 202 11-May-99

Windsor Spitfires
Coach: Rocky Thompson (2nd Season)
2015-16 record: 40-21-6-1 (2nd, West Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
Round 1: Kitchener (1-4)

 OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
3rd (23.6%) T-13th (79.4%) 6th (253) 7th (200)

Outlook: The Spitfires were an interesting team in that they featured some of the OHL’s best talent but silently fizzled out in a short postseason. Three Spits – LHD Mikhail Sergachev (MTL), C Logan Brown (OTT) and LHD Logan Stanley (WPG) – were picked in the top 20 of last June’s NHL Draft, while RW Christian Fischer (ARI) reached the 90-point mark in his first OHL season. And though there’s a fighter’s chance all four return for this coming season, the onus will be on Windsor’s depth players to carry their own weight if they are to challenge for a league title. Remember, the Spits are hosting the 2017 Memorial Cup, which will serve as the perfect opportunity for stud 2017 draft prospect C Gabe Vilardi (Ranked No. 11) to showcase his combination of size and skill. Inconsistent play in between the pipes was s big reason for their first round ouster, but G Michael Dipietro (Ranked No. 67) is one of the better draft-eligible goalies in the Canadian Hockey League. Another youngster who showed maturity and promise is LW Luke Boka (Ranked No. 154), a hard-nosed winger who plays a two-way game but is ready for a look in the top nine.

2017 First-year draft eligibles

No. Name POS S HT WT DOB
24 Maddux Rychel LW R  6’3  222 21-Jan-99
29 Jasper Forgrave RW R 5’10 155 13-Mar-99
64 Michael DiPietro G L 6’0 193 9-Jun-99
61 Luke Boka RW R 5’11 192 12-Jun-99
26 Cole Purboo RW R 6’3 215 18-Jun-99
30 Lucas Patton G L 6’1 181 18-Jul-99
13 Gabriel Vilardi C R 6’2 193 16-Aug-99

Sault Ste Marie Greyhounds
Coach: Drew Bannister (2nd Season)
2015-16 record: 33-27-7-1 (3rd, West Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
Round 1: Sarnia (4-3)
Round 2: Erie (1-4)

OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
9th (19.4%) 15th (79.0%) 8th (243) 13th (233)

Outlook: Expectations in Sault Ste Marie at the beginning of last season were tempered following a mass exodus of talent. But a 36-point drop in the standings was harsher than most predicted. Still, the Greyhounds battled through some early-season chemistry issues to not only sneak into the playoffs, but pull off an opening-round victory over favored Sarnia. Fans will want to see a little more from this year’s club, which returns several key pieces, especially up front. LW Boris Katchouk (TB) and RW Jack Kopacka (ANA) remain critical to the offense now that RW Zach Senyshyn (BOS) is a strong candidate to begin the season in Boston. Look for power forward RW Tim Gettinger (NYR) as a possible top-line replacement, with additional goal-scoring support coming from 2017 draft eligibles C/W Liam Frost (Ranked No. 58) and C Liam Hawel (Ranked No. 257). The Soo also added Finnish playmaker C Otto Makinen (2017 draft overager), who was a mainstay for Finland’s U18 team. The defense has an experienced blueliner in LHD Colton White (NJD) and a possible returnee in RHD Gustav Bouramman (MIN), although the latter is entertaining a return to his native Sweden. A contingency would be to entrust a trio of newbies – LHD Anthony DeMeo (Ranked No. 135), RHD Conor Timmins (Ranked No. 266) and RHD Mac Hollowell (Ranked No. 273) – all of whom are quality rearguards capable of providing offense. Replacing the puck-handling abilities of graduate G Brandon Halverson (NYR) won’t be easy, but G Joseph Raaymakers (2017 draft overager) is ready to assume the starting role.

2017 First-year draft eligibles

No. Name POS S HT WT DOB
21 Conor Timmins D R 6’1 182 18-Sep-98
11 Mac Hollowell D R 5’9 166 26-Sep-98
22 Liam Hawel C R 6’5 179 18-Apr-99
29 Dougie Newhouse G L 6’0 165 24-Apr-99
16 Morgan Frost C L 5’10 170 14-May-99
31 Matthew Villalta G L 6’2 170 3-Jun-99
7 Anthony DeMeo D L 6’0 184 16-Jun-99

Saginaw Spirit
Coach: Spencer Carbery (1st Season)
2015-16 record: 24-36-5-3 (4th, West Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
Round 1: Erie (0-4)


 OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
16th (16.3%) 9th (81.1%) T-14th (209) 18th (282)

Outlook: Saginaw returns an experienced lineup, specifically a defense corps that was bolstered by the addition of Czech RHD Filip Hronek (DET), who was a standout at last year’s world junior championship. He joins fellow 2016 draftees LHD Markus Niemelainen (EDM) and LHD Keaton Middleton (TOR) – two gargantuan one-on-one defenders who can shut down opposing top lines. Another 2016 draftee who will play a critical role is G Evan Cormier (NJD), a 6’3 butterfly netminder who some feel hasn’t shown the OHL what he’s truly capable of. The Spirit will need a consistent season from speedy C Tye Felhaber (2017 draft overager) whose disastrous first half likely prevented him from getting drafted, while C Mitchell Stephens (TB) is their best player who missed a chunk of time last year with an injury. A trio of 2017 draft eligibles – C Brady Gilmour (Ranked No. 91), RW Cole Coskey (Ranked No. 155) and RW Kirill Maksimov (Ranked No. 156) are all candidates for the top six.

2017 First-year draft eligibles

No. Name POS S HT WT DOB
91 Gianluca Fuoco LW L 6’1 185 1-Jan-99
24 Brock Hill D R 6’2 205 27-Jan-99
7 Kyle Bollers LW L 5’11 160 12-Mar-99
6 Robert Proner D L 6’2 210 12-Mar-99
20 Brendan Bonello G L 6’2 215 1-Apr-99
9 Brady Gilmour C L 5’10 170 18-Apr-99
25 Kirill Maksimov RW R 6’2 190 1-Jun-99
49 Cole Coskey RW R 6’0 190 1-Jun-99

Flint Firebirds
Coach: Ryan Oulahen (1st Season)
2015-16 record: 20-42-4-2 (5th, West Division)
2015-16 OHL Playoffs
DNQ


OHL Rank (2015-16)

PP% PK% GF GA
 20th (13.9%) 19th (75.5%) 18th (184) 17th (279)

Outlook: The Firebirds seemed to be in the news for all the wrong reasons, most of which had nothing to do with the product on the ice. With the highly-publicized rift between ownership and the coaching staff seemingly behind them, the Firebirds can focus on improving the dreadful record they finished with in their inaugural OHL season. Yes, rookie head coach Ryan Oulahen is faced with the reality that top player C Will Bitten (MTL) wants to play elsewhere. Yes, top defender RHD Ville Saarijarvi (DET) got his wish and was traded to Mississauga. And no, top OHL prospect LHD Ty Dellandrea (2018 Draft) isn’t quite ready to save the fledgling franchise on his own. As cliché as it sounds, the Firebirds will need a complete team effort in order to see improvement in the standings. The addition of mobile Czech RHD Michal Steinocher (2018 Draft) — the eight pick in this year’s Import Draft – and Detroit-raised puckmover LHD Jalen Smerek (2017 draft overager) gives Oulahen options to improve what was an ineffective power play. And he’ll likely lean on RW Nicholas Caamano (DAL) and a slimmed-down LW Luke Kirwan (2017 draft overager) to make up for the loss of Bitten’s goal scoring. The goaltending situation is untenable, as neither G Matthew Menna (2017 draft overager) nor G Garrett Forrest (2017 draft overager) are capable of carrying a team for an entire season. If Bitten is moved, it would be folly for the Firebirds to not receive a reliable netminder in return.

No. Name POS S HT WT DOB
9 Jack Phibbs LW R 6’0 183 5-Mar-99
12 Jake Durham RW R 5’11 199 7-Apr-99
6 Samuel Duchesne D L 6’2 166 29-May-99
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