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2017 NHL Draft Rankings: The October 600

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2017 NHL Draft

The October 600

Mittelstadt sprints towards draft prominence as race for coveted top spot tightens
Steve Kournianos  |  10/31/2016 |  New York  |  

Center Casey Mittelstadt (Green Bay) is leaving his mark on the USHL before returning to high school in November.

NEW YORK (The Draft Analyst) — With the affair to determine the top prospect for the 2017 NHL draft still months away from settlement, the inability of some to stay healthy allowed others to shorten what was once an insurmountable rankings gap.

Nolan Patrick of the Western Hockey League’s Brandon Wheat Kings remains the top-ranked prospect, but not by much. He leads a notable list of premier youngsters bitten by the injury bug thanks to an upper-body injury that has kept him in street clothes since the beginning of the month. It wasn’t long ago when the center was a practical lock to be the top pick, and getting nicked up should not take away from his franchise-carrying potential.

Also missing a chunk of action were two star defenders — Swedish puck mover Timothy Liljegren (mononucleosis) and Finland’s Urho Vaakanainen (concussion), while Russian power winger Klim Kostin is now in the minor leagues after he barely saw the ice with Dynamo Moscow of the KHL. Lastly, top Ontario Hockey League prospect Gabe Vilardi — a wonderful puck handler and distributor with NHL size — finally recovered from an offseason knee injury that seems to have made him look slower than he already was. Vaakanainen will play for Finland at next weekend’s U20 Four Nations tournament in Gothenburg, Sweden, while both Kostin and Vilardi were invited to play at the CHL-Russia Super Series that begins on November 7th.

Meanwhile, two dynamic scorers — USHL’ers Casey Mittelstadt and Eeli Tolvanen – used the last 30 days to bolster their already impeccable resumes. Mittelstadt, a Minnesotan who combines crafty with clutch, torched the USHL in what was essentially a tune-up for his impending return to Eden Prairie for his senior year of high school. Both he and the explosive Tolvanen are among the top scorers in their circuit and expected to represent their respective country at the world junior championship in December.

Moving Up

Erik Brannstrom is one of the leading point producers among defenseman in Sweden’s under-20 Superelit league and will steer the Tre Kronor when their U20 squad participates in the aforementioned Four Nations competition. Blessed with mobility, a hard shot and exceptional understanding of his position, Brannstrom was recently promoted to HV71’s senior team. In the Czech Republic, exciting center Martin Necas anchors Brno’s top line as an Extraliga rookie, leading all teenagers with nine points (3 goals, 6 assists) in 17 games. In the junior circuit, Liberec’s trio of skilled forwards — Slovaks Patrik Hrehorcak and Jakub Lacka, and Czech Jan Hladonik — followed up admirable showings at the summer Ivan Hlinka tournament with spots among their league’s top scorers.

And our early-season Man-on-an-Island Award has to go out to the QMJHL center Antoine Morand, who night in and out seems like the only player who shows up for Acadie-Bathurst

This year’s goalie crop is better than any of the previous two drafts, and the possibility of multiple netminders taken in the first round is discernible. Maxim Zhukov, a teammate of Mittelstadt’s after leaving his native Russia for the USHL, has been a wall for  the Gamblers, placing in the top-1o in both goals-against average and save percentage. And add Mike Dipietro — an athletic backstop with an exceptional IQ — the list of fast risers destined for the first round. The Ontario native is the biggest reason why the Windsor Spitfires are the OHL’s second-ranked defense, yielding two goals or less in seven of his nine starts.

Heading Down

To call Adam Ruzicka’s rookie season a disappointment would be pretty spot on. The towering Slovak was supposed to bridge the gap in Sarnia’s center depth following the NHL graduation of 2015 lottery pick Pavel Zacha, but Ruzicka is struggling adapting to the speed and physicality of the North American game. Plagued by turnovers, Ruzicka is took good a player to let this continue.

October could not have ended sooner for Team USA’s U18 squad, which crumbled under a gauntlet of NCAA competition and closed out the month with a 1-8-0 record. Defernseman Max Gildon was supposed to anchor a solid group of NTDP defenders, but the smooth skater hasn’t been able to consistently display the size-skill combination many felt would make him a legitimate first-round candidate.

Finally, three rookie defensemen — Swedes Tom Hedberg and Adam Thilander, and American Joey Keane — were supposed to validate our early-season praise by dominating the OHL. Sadly, they’ve been anything but, and it looks as if the Canadian Hockey League has not provided any of them with the greener pastures they probably expected.

Below is a detailed sortable table of The Draft Analyst’s October rankings of first-year, draft-eligible prospects for the 2017 NHL Entry Draft, to be held in Chicago from 23-24 June. Players born between 16 September 1998 and 15 September 1999 were considered in the zone for first-year eligibility.

Rank POS Player Team League S/C DOB HT WT NAT
1 C Nolan Patrick Brandon WHL R 9/19/1998 6’3 195 CAN
2 C/W Casey Mittelstadt Green Bay USHL L 11/22/1998 6’0 192 USA
3 RW Eeli Tolvanen Sioux City USHL L 4/22/1999 5’10 174 FIN
4 RHD Timothy Liljegren Rögle BK Superelit R 4/30/1999 6’0 190 SWE
5 RW Kristian Vesalainen Frölunda HC SHL L 6/1/1999 6’3 203 FIN
6 RW Klim Kostin Dynamo Moscow Jrs VHL L 5/5/1999 6’3 183 RUS
7 C Nico Hischier Halifax QMJHL L 1/4/1999 5’11 170 SUI
8 LHD Jusso Valimaki Tri-City WHL L 10/6/1998 6’2 200 FIN
9 LHD Urho Vaakanainen JyP Liiga L 1/1/1999 6’0 177 FIN
10 C Gabe Vilardi Windsor OHL R 8/16/1999 6’2 193 CAN
11 C Lias Andersson HV71 Superelit L 10/13/1998 5’11 198 SWE
12 RW Owen Tippett Mississauga OHL R 2/16/1999 6’1 181 CAN
13 LW Elias Pettersson Timra IK Allsvenskan L 11/12/1998 6’1 160 SWE
14 LW Maxime Comtois Victoriaville QMJHL L 1/8/1999 6’1 189 CAN
15 C/W Martin Necas Brno Extraliga R 1/15/1999 5’11 165 CZE
16 LHD Miro Heiskanen HIFK Helsinki Liiga L 7/18/1999 5’10 155 FIN
17 C Antoine Morand Acadie-Bathurst QMJHL L 2/18/1999 5’9 169 CAN
18 LHD Erik Brannstrom HV-71 SHL L 9/2/1999 5’10 172 SWE
19 LHD Dmitri Samorukov Guelph OHL L 6/16/1999 6’2 185 RUS
20 RW Samuel Bucek Shawinigan QMJHL R 12/19/1998 6’3 192 SVK
21 RHD Henry Jokiharju Portland WHL R 6/17/1999 5’11 166 FIN
22 RHD Callan Foote Kelowna WHL R 12/13/1998 6’4 200 USA
23 LHD Nicolas Hague Mississauga OHL L 12/5/1998 6’6 208 CAN
24 RW Kailer Yamamoto Spokane WHL R 9/29/1998 5’8 150 USA
25 C Marcus Davidsson Djugardens SHL L 11/18/1998 6’0 185 SWE
26 C Michael Rasmussen Tri-City WHL L 4/17/1999 6’5 200 CAN
27 RHD Ian Mitchell Spruce Grove AJHL R 1/18/1999 5’10 166 CAN
28 C Ryan Poehling St. Cloud State NCHC L 1/3/1999 6’2 183 USA
29 C Sasha Chmelevski Ottawa OHL R 6/9/1999 5’11 190 USA
30 C Scott Reedy Team USA NTDP R 4/4/1999 6’1 202 USA
31 LW Nikita A. Popugaev Moose Jaw WHL R 11/20/1998 6’4 204 RUS
32 C Shane Bowers Waterloo USHL L 7/30/1999 6’0 176 CAN
33 RW Brannon McManus Omaha USHL R 7/5/1999 5’10 180 USA
34 C Stelio Mattheos Brandon WHL R 6/14/1999 6’1 194 CAN
35 C Adam Ruzicka Sarnia OHL L 5/11/1999 6’4 200 SVK
36 LW Ivan Chekhovich Baie-Comeau QMJHL L 1/4/1999 5’10 168 RUS
37 C Nick Suzuki Owen Sound OHL R 9/10/1999 5’10 183 CAN
38 G Mike Dipietro Windsor OHL L 6/9/1999 6’0 191 CAN
39 LHD Robin Salo Vaasan Sport Liiga L 10/13/1998 6’1 187 FIN
40 C MacKenzie Entwistle Hamilton OHL R 7/14/1999 6’2 169 CAN
41 LW/C Marian Studenic Hamilton OHL L 10/28/1998 6’0 158 SVK
42 C Aleksi Heponiemi Swift Current WHL L 1/9/1999 5’9 140 FIN
43 C Cody Glass Portland WHL R 4/1/1999 6’1 168 CAN
44 LW Matthew Strome Hamilton OHL L 1/6/1999 6’3 187 CAN
45 LHD David Farrance Team USA NTDP L 6/23/1999 5’11 195 USA
46 RW Michael Pastujov Team USA NTDP L 8/23/1999 6’1 198 USA
47 LW Yaroslav Alexeev Sherbrooke QMJHL L 1/17/1999 5’11 148 RUS
48 C Mason Shaw Medicine Hat WHL L 11/3/1998 5’9 180 CAN
49 LW Austen Keating Ottawa OHL L 3/7/1999 5’11 162 CAN
50 LW Kirill Slepets Loko Yaroslavl MHL L 4/6/1999 5’10 165 RUS
51 RHD Cale Fleury Kootenay WHL R 11/19/1998 6’1 196 CAN
52 G Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen HPK U20 Liiga Jrs L 3/9/1999 6’4 196 FIN
53 LHD Nate Knoepke Team USA NTDP L 4/8/1999 6’3 187 USA
54 RW Ivan Lodnya Erie OHL R 8/31/1999 5’10 180 USA
55 C Josh Norris Team USA NTDP L 5/5/1999 6’1 192 USA
56 LW Isaac Ratcliffe Guelph OHL L 2/15/1999 6’4 192 CAN
57 RHD Luke Martin Michigan Big-10 R 9/20/1998 6’3 207 USA
58 C/LW Morgan Frost Sault Ste Marie OHL L 5/14/1999 5’11 160 CAN
59 LHD Mark Rubinchik Saskatoon WHL L 3/21/1999 6’1 183 RUS
60 G Maxim Zhukov Green Bay USHL L 7/22/1999 6’3 188 RUS
61 C/RW Jack Studnicka Oshawa OHL R 2/18/1999 6’0 163 CAN
62 C/LW Evan Barratt Team USA NTDP L 2/18/1999 5’11 172 USA
63 G Cayden Primeau Lincoln USHL L 8/11/1999 6’3 185 USA
64 RW Kole Lind Kelowna WHL R 10/16/1998 6’1 175 CAN
65 C/RW Georgi Ivanov Loko Yaroslavl MHL L 9/25/1998 6’0 190 RUS
66 RHD Josh Brook Moose Jaw WHL R 6/17/1999 6’1 177 CAN
67 LHD Jacob Paquette Kingston OHL L 5/26/1999 6’2 203 CAN
68 C Rickard Hugg Leksands SHL L 1/18/1999 5’10 184 SWE
69 LW Emil Oksanen Espoo Liiga Jrs R 9/25/1998 6’0 180 FIN
70 RW Austin Pratt Red Deer WHL R 7/30/1999 6’3 210 USA
71 LHD Elijah Roberts Kitchener OHL L 1/23/1999 5’8 158 CAN
72 C Jaret Anderson-Dolan Spokane WHL L 9/12/1999 5’10 180 CAN
73 LW/C Ostap Safin Sparta Prague Extraliga Jrs. L 2/11/1999 6’4 198 CZE
74 C/LW Jake Leschyshyn Regina WHL L 3/10/1999 5’11 176 CAN
75 LW Jason Robertson Kingston OHL L 7/22/1999 6’1 180 USA
76 C Joel Teasdale Blainville-Boisbriand QMJHL L 3/11/1999 5’11 197 CAN
77 RW Lane Zablocki Regina WHL R 12/27/1998 5’11 184 CAN
78 G Jake Oettinger Team USA NTDP L 12/18/1998 6’4 203 USA
79 C Patrick Khodorenko Michigan State Big-10 L 10/13/1998 6’0 200 USA
80 LHD Markus Phillips Owen Sound OHL L 3/21/1999 5’11 203 CAN
81 C Alexei Lipanov HK MVD MHL L 8/17/1999 6’0 165 RUS
82 RW Matyas Svoboda Peterborough OHL L 1/2/1999 6’3 210 CZE
83 LHD Dalimil Mikyska Brno U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 8/16/1999 6’1 196 CZE
84 LW Mick Messner Madison USHL L 4/20/1999 6’0 195 USA
85 RW Linus Nyman Kingston OHL L 7/11/1999 5’9 152 FIN
86 C Maxim Marushev Irbis Kazan MHL R 1/1/1999 6’0 177 RUS
87 LW Grant Mismash Team USA NTDP L 2/19/1999 6’0 182 USA
88 G Ian Scott Prince Albert WHL L 1/11/1999 6’3 166 CAN
89 C/RW Lukas Elvenes Rogle J20 Superelit L 8/18/1999 6’0 167 SWE
90 RHD Tommy Miller Team USA NTDP R 3/6/1999 6’3 185 USA
91 LHD Max Gildon Team USA NTDP L 5/17/1999 6’3 188 USA
92 RW Shawn Boudrias Charlottetown QMJHL R 9/14/1999 6’3 182 CAN
93 C Greg Meireles Kitchener OHL R 1/1/1999 5’10 163 CAN
94 LHD Mikey Anderson Waterloo USHL L 5/25/1999 5’11 193 USA
95 RHD Adam Thilander North Bay OHL R 9/18/1998 6’0 190 SWE
96 LHD Artyom Minulin Swift Current WHL L 10/1/1998 6’2 220 RUS
97 LW Pavel Koltygin Drummondville QMJHL L 2/17/1999 6’0 191 RUS
98 RW Jonas Rondbjerg Vaxjo J20 Superelit L 3/31/1999 6’0 176 DEN
99 C Kalle Miketinac Frolunda J20 Superelit L 4/2/1999 5’11 185 SWE
100 C/RW Kyle Olson Tri-City WHL R 3/22/1999 5’10 155 CAN
101 C Emil Bemstrom Leksands J20 Superelit R 6/1/1999 5’10 174 SWE
102 RW Sami Moilanen Seattle WHL L 1/22/1999 5’9 174 FIN
103 G Stuart Skinner Lethbridge WHL L 11/1/1998 6’4 209 CAN
104 RHD Eemeli Rasanen Kingston OHL R 3/6/1999 6’5 205 FIN
105 LW/RW Fabian Zetterlund Farjestad SHL R 8/25/1999 5’10 202 SWE
106 G Keith Petruzelli Muskegon USHL L 2/9/1999 6’6 190 USA
107 LW Alex Formenton London OHL L 9/13/1999 6’1 161 CAN
108 RHD Saku Vesterainen Charlottetown QMJHL R 2/28/1999 5’11 165 FIN
109 LHD Jacob Golden London OHL L 3/20/1999 5’11 161 CAN
110 LW Arnaud Durandeau Halifax QMJHL L 1/14/1999 5’11 176 CAN
111 LW/C Joni Ikonen Frölunda J20 Superelit R 4/14/1999 5’10 159 FIN
112 C Jordy Bellerive Lethbridge WHL L 5/2/1999 5’9 180 CAN
113 LW Jakub Lacka Trinec U20 Extraliga Jrs. R 11/20/1998 5’10 179 SVK
114 G Dayton Rasmussen Tri-City USHL L 11/4/1998 6’1 203 USA
115 RHD Reagan O’Grady Sudbury OHL R 12/15/1998 6’2 193 CAN
116 C Ivan Kozlov Val-d’Or QMJHL L 3/26/1999 6’1 210 RUS
117 LW/C Ryan McGregor Sarnia OHL L 1/29/1999 5’11 149 CAN
118 C/W Jan Hladonik Trinec U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 8/18/1999 5’7 155 CZE
119 W/C Patrik Hrehorcak Trinec U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 3/18/1999 5’11 168 SVK
120 LW Noah Cates Stillwater HS-MN L 2/5/1999 6’1 165 USA
121 LW Louis-Philip Cote Quebec QMJHL L 5/2/1999 6’0 174 CAN
122 RHD Joey Keane Barrie OHL R 7/2/1999 6’1 190 USA
123 LW Alexei Toropchenko HC MVD MHL L 6/25/1999 6’2 172 RUS
124 C Josh Paterson Saskatoon WHL R 1/21/1999 6’2 188 CAN
125 LHD Kasper Kotkansalo Sioux Falls USHL L 11/16/1998 6’2 189 FIN
126 C Robert Thomas London OHL R 7/2/1999 5’11 177 CAN
127 G Jiri Patera Budejovice Extraliga Jrs. L 2/24/1999 6’1 200 CZE
128 LHD Lucas Nordsater Vaxjo J20 Superelit L 10/8/1998 6’0 176 SWE
129 G Daniil Tarasov Tolpar MHL L 3/27/1999 6’3 194 RUS
130 LHD Jakub Sirota Cedar Rapids USHL L 12/20/1998 6’2 188 CZE
131 RW Baker Shore Chicago USHL R 8/20/1999 5’11 170 USA
132 LW Macauley Carson Sudbury OHL L 3/12/1999 6’1 205 CAN
133 LW Jan Svoboda Chomutov U20 Extraliga Jrs L 5/25/1999 5’9 143 CZE
134 RHD Jarret Tyszka Seattle WHL R 3/15/1999 6’2 187 CAN
135 LHD David Kvasnicka Plzen Extraliga L 4/14/1999 5’10 174 CZE
136 LHD Jockton Chaney Halifax QMJHL L 9/8/1999 6’0 192 CAN
137 RW Randy Hernandez Team USA NTDP R 1/12/1999 6’0 177 USA
138 G Olle Eriksson Ek Farjestad J20 Superelit L 6/22/1999 6’2 187 SWE
139 C/LW Jan Vaclavek Zlin U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 4/9/1999 6’1 172 CZE
140 RW Ryan Bowen Moose Jaw WHL R 12/10/1998 6’1 180 CAN
141 LHD Matt Anderson Green Bay USHL L 4/11/1999 5’11 199 USA
142 RHD Brady Lyle North Bay OHL R 6/6/1999 6’2 187 CAN
143 RW C.J. Clarke Peterborough OHL L 2/8/1999 6’0 201 CAN
144 LHD Pierre-Olivier Joseph Charlottetown QMJHL L 7/1/1999 6’0 150 CAN
145 LHD Ian Blacker London OHL L 5/27/1999 6’4 175 CAN
146 RW Ondrej Machala Niagara OHL L 1/11/1999 6’0 176 CZE
147 LHD Tyler Inamoto Team USA NTDP L 5/6/1999 6’2 191 USA
148 RHD Nolan Kneen Kamloops WHL R 3/22/1999 6’0 177 CAN
149 LW/RW Razat Timirov Reaktor MHL R 6/6/1999 5’11 163 RUS
150 LHD Jesse Bjugstad Stillwater HS-MN L 4/4/1999 6’2 178 USA
151 C Nikita Anahovsky Loko Yaroslavl MHL L 3/22/1999 6’0 165 RUS
152 C/RW Marek Rubner Plzen U20 Extraliga Jrs R 11/12/1998 6’0 179 SVK
153 C Connor Dewar Everett WHL R 6/26/1999 5’10 165 CAN
154 LW/RW Adam Kalaj Kladno U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 3/28/1999 5’11 180 CZE
155 RW Andrei Grishakov Calgary WHL L 5/16/1999 6’1 190 RUS
156 RHD Filip Westerlund Frolunda SHL R 4/17/1999 5’11 179 SWE
157 C Nate Schnarr Guelph OHL R 6/15/1999 6’3 166 CAN
158 C Pavel Kousal Spokane WHL L 11/14/1998 5’11 158 CZE
159 LHD Venjamin Baranov Dynamo St. Petersburg MHL L 1/8/1999 6’1 187 RUS
160 RW Jakub Pour Plzen U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 1/5/1999 6’1 176 CZE
161 LHD Antoine Crete-Belzile Blainville-Boisbriand QMJHL L 8/19/1999 6’0 176 CAN
162 C Brady Gilmour Saginaw OHL L 4/18/1999 5’10 170 CAN
163 RW Konstantin Kukharev Ladya Togliatti MHL R 9/8/1999 6’1 154 RUS
164 RHD Connor Timmins Sault Ste Marie OHL R 9/18/1998 6’1 180 CAN
165 C Benjamin Jones Niagara OHL L 2/26/1999 6’0 167 CAN
166 RW Logan Hutsko Team USA NTDP R 2/11/1999 5’10 165 USA
167 LW Jesper Boqvist Brynas J20 Superelit L 10/30/1998 5’11 174 SWE
168 LHD Noel Hoefenmayer Ottawa OHL L 1/6/1999 6’0 190 CAN
169 C Skyler Brind’amour Selects Academy USPHL L 7/27/1999 6’2 170 US/CAN
170 C/RW Anton Johansson Orebro J20 Superelit L 4/11/1999 5’9 174 SWE
171 RW Jordan Timmons Muskegon USHL R 10/25/1998 6’0 165 USA
172 G Nikita Maslennikov Dynamo St Petersburg MHL L 1/7/1999 6’1 180 RUS
173 G Kyle Jessiman Cape Breton QMJHL L 1/12/1999 5’10 170 CAN
174 RW Lukas Boka Windsor OHL R 6/12/1999 5’11 192 USA
175 LHD Jonathan Smart Kelowna WHL L 6/1/1999 5’11 170 CAN
176 RW Linus Andersson Skelleftea J20 Superelit R 4/30/1999 5’11 161 SWE
177 RW Denis Mikhnin Rimouski QMJHL L 7/11/1999 5’11 163 RUS
178 LW Matthew Wedman Seattle WHL L 5/25/1999 6’1 189 CAN
179 RW Lauri Pajuniemi TPS U20 Liiga Jrs R 9/12/1999 6’0 183 FIN
180 RHD August Berg Brynas J20 Superelit R 4/21/1999 5’11 176 SWE
181 LW Oliver Castleman Niagara OHL L 9/15/1999 5’10 180 CAN
182 LW Cole Coskey Saginaw OHL R 6/1/1999 6’1 189 USA
183 G Jordan Hollett Regina WHL R 3/31/1999 6’4 188 CAN
184 LHD Valeri Orekhov Barsy Astana MHL L 7/17/1999 6’0 168 KAZ
185 LHD Tom Hedberg Barrie OHL L 8/10/1999 5’11 161 SWE
186 C Renars Krastenbergs Oshawa OHL L 12/16/1998 5’11 160 LAT
187 LHD Scott Walford Victoria WHL L 1/12/1999 6’1 188 CAN
188 LHD Radim Salda Mountfield HK Extraliga Jrs. L 2/18/1999 6’0 163 CZE
189 RHD Conner McDonald Kamloops WHL R 5/31/1999 5’11 180 CAN
190 RHD Nick Grima Peterborough OHL R 3/7/1999 5’11 188 CAN
191 C Oscar Pettersson MoDo J20 Superelit R 5/13/1999 5’11 175 SWE
192 C/RW Mark Kastelic Calgary WHL R 3/11/1999 6’3 205 USA
193 RHD Grant Anderson Wayzata HS-MN R 9/15/1999 6’2 172 USA
194 LW Isaac Johnson Des Moines USHL R 1/24/1999 6’2 170 USA
195 LW Marcus Sylvegard Malmo J20 Superelit R 5/4/1999 6’0 183 SWE
196 RW Peyton Hoyt Cape Breton QMJHL R 2/18/1999 5’10 172 CAN
197 RHD Hayden Davis Niagara OHL R 7/21/1999 6’1 194 CAN
198 RHD John Maniscalco Team USA NTDP R 2/17/1999 6’1 210 USA
199 RHD Vladislav Kazamanov HC MVD MHL R 5/9/1999 6’2 185 RUS
200 LW Sean Richards Everett WHL L 12/15/1998 5’11 180 CAN
201 LHD Clayton Phillips Fargo USHL L 9/9/1999 5’11 175 USA
202 LW/C Marek Skvrne Brno U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 8/6/1999 5’10 175 CZE
203 LHD Sebastian Walfridsson MoDo J20 Superelit L 3/19/1999 6’0 191 SWE
204 LHD Mathieu Charlebois Halifax QMJHL L 2/14/1999 6’2 212 CAN
205 RW Nick Henry Regina WHL R 7/4/1999 6’0 190 CAN
206 LW Charlie Hoffman Djugardens J20 Superelit L 2/13/1999 5’9 150 SWE
207 RHD Reilly Walsh Chicago USHL R 4/21/1999 6’0 175 USA
208 G Kaden Fulcher Hamilton OHL L 9/23/1998 6’3 183 CAN
209 LW Logan Cockerill Team USA NTDP L 3/3/1999 5’8 160 USA
210 G Jeremy Swayman Sioux Falls USHL L 11/24/1998 6’2 187 USA
211 LHD Matteo Pietroniro Baie-Comeau QMJHL L 10/20/1998 6’1 180 US/CAN
212 LHD Ben Mirageas Bloomington USHL L 5/8/1999 6’1 175 USA
213 C James Hamblin Medicine Hat WHL L 4/27/1999 5’9 170 CAN
214 LW Jaroslav Dvorak HC Kralove Extraliga Jrs. L 3/21/1999 6’0 180 CZE
215 RW/C Jacob Tortora Team USA NTDP R 7/25/1999 5’8 168 USA
216 C/RW Dawson Holt Vancouver WHL R 2/16/1999 5’11 185 CAN
217 G Alex D’Orio Saint John QMJHL R 4/28/1999 6’2 200 CAN
218 C Sean Dhooghe Team USA NTDP R 3/9/1999 5’2 140 USA
219 G Gustav Bagenvik Linkoping J20 Superelit L 1/19/1999 6’0 187 SWE
220 C/RW Derek Gentile Quebec QMJHL R 4/9/1999 5’7 147 CAN
221 LHD Matyas Zelingr Kladno U20 Extraliga Jrs L 1/10/1999 6’3 190 CZE
222 C/RW Jan Drozg Leksands J18 Superelit R 4/1/1999 6’0 160 SLO
223 RW Vincent Milot-Oullet Gatineau QMJHL R 11/6/1998 5’9 180 CAN
224 RW/C Brendan Semchuk Vancouver WHL R 2/21/1999 5’11 170 CAN
225 G Chris McGonigle Kitchener OHL L 9/19/1998 6’3 200 CAN
226 G Dimitriy Rayko HC MVD MHL L 3/3/1999 6’0 189 RUS
227 LHD Nikita Radzivilyuk Kootenay WHL L 3/9/1999 6’1 187 RUS
228 RHD Cale Makar Brooks AJHL R 10/30/1998 5’10 174 CAN
229 C/RW Matej Novak Brno U20 Extraliga Jrs. R 4/10/1999 5’10 172 CZE
230 RHD Martin Bodak Tappara U20 Liiga Jrs R 11/28/1998 6’1 176 SVK
231 LW Albert Michnac Guelph OHL L 10/18/1998 5’10 163 CZE
232 LW Kyle MacLean Oshawa OHL L 4/29/1999 6’1 163 USA
233 LHD Tobias Aronsson MoDo J20 Superelit L 2/3/1999 6’1 160 SWE
234 G David Otter Leksands J20 Superelit L 9/25/1998 6’2 181 SWE
235 LW Maxim Sushko Owen Sound OHL L 2/10/1999 6’0 179 BLR
236 G Arvid Soderblom Frolunda J18 Superelit L 8/19/1999 6’2 172 SWE
237 C Paul Washe Tri-City USHL L 11/27/1998 6’1 175 USA
238 LW/C Santeri Virtanen Dubuque USHL L 5/11/1999 6’1 189 FIN
239 RW Lean Bergmann Sioux Falls USHL L 10/4/1998 5’11 185 GER
240 LHD Antii Palojarvi Lukko U20 Liiga Jrs L 1/18/1999 6’1 174 FIN
241 LHD Eero Teravainen Lincoln USHL L 3/8/1999 5’11 165 FIN
242 C Matthew Philip Niagara OHL R 5/31/1999 5’11 175 CAN
243 C Marko Reifenberger Bloomington USHL L 1/19/1999 6’0 177 USA
244 G Sebastian Wiklund Lulea J20 Superelit L 8/15/1999 5’11 165 SWE
245 LHD Roni Allen JYP U20 Liiga Jrs L 10/10/1998 6’0 190 FIN
246 LW Filip Krivosik HPK U20 Liiga Jrs R 3/27/1999 6’3 190 SVK
247 RHD Daniel Bukac Brandon WHL R 4/29/1999 6’5 185 CZE
248 C/W German Poddubniy Erie OHL L 6/9/1999 6’2 180 RUS
249 LHD Simon Benoit Shawinigan QMJHL L 9/19/1998 6’2 176 CAN
250 C Zach Gallant Peterborough OHL L 3/6/1999 6’2 185 CAN
251 C Jakob Ringsby Farjestad J20 Superelit L 6/16/1999 5’10 185 SWE
252 LHD Jake Christiansen Everett WHL L 9/12/1999 6’0 185 CAN
253 LHD Ondrej Trejbal Pardubice U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 4/21/1999 6’2 170 CZE
254 G Dawson Weatherill Spokane WHL L 6/3/1999 6’4 190 CAN
255 C Ryan Hughes Portland WHL L 7/27/1999 5’7 152 CAN
256 C Ryan Peckford Victoria WHL L 3/4/1999 6’0 186 CAN
257 LW Kristian Royka-Marthinsen Altumna J20 Superelit L 8/20/1999 6’0 185 NOR
258 RW Jerkko Hakkinen Saipa U20 Liiga Jrs R 7/27/1999 5’11 183 FIN
259 LHD Anthony DeMeo Sault Ste Marie OHL L 6/16/1999 6’0 183 USA
260 RW Kamil Sadlocha Madison USHL R 4/12/1999 5’10 178 USA
261 LHD Jack Rathbone Dexter HS-MA L 5/20/1999 5’10 177 USA
262 C/RW Alex-Olivier Voyer Rimouski QMJHL R 4/10/1999 6’1 185 CAN
263 C Liam Hawel Sault Ste Marie OHL R 4/18/1999 6’4 170 CAN
264 C Viliam Cacho Södertälje SK J20 Superelit L 10/14/1998 5’11 170 SVK
265 C Albin Nisson Rogle J20 Superelit L 9/18/1998 6’0 190 SWE
266 LHD Brayden Gorda Edmonton WHL L 4/15/1999 6’1 190 CAN
267 RHD Jakub Galvas Olomouc Extraliga R 6/15/1999 5’11 162 CZE
268 RHD Walter Flower Halifax QMJHL R 5/7/1999 6’1 175 CAN
269 C Wyatt Bongiovanni Tri-City USHL L 7/24/1999 5’11 176 USA
270 LHD Dylan Plouffe Vancouver WHL L 4/27/1999 6’0 185 CAN
271 G Liam Hughes Edmonton WHL L 7/22/1999 6’1 190 CAN
272 C Pavel Voronkov Avto Yekaterinburg MHL L 10/13/1999 6’1 180 RUS
273 RW Robbie Burt Oshawa OHL R 5/29/1999 6’0 210 CAN
274 G Artyom Melnikov Loko Yaroslavl MHL L 1/18/1999 5’10 150 RUS
275 LHD Samuel Fereta Slovan Bratislava U20 Slovak Extraliga L 12/29/1998 6’3 192 SVK
276 LHD Max Martin Prince George WHL L 7/25/1999 6’0 188 CAN
277 C Cole Guttman Dubuque USHL R 4/5/1999 5’10 165 USA
278 RW Cole Purboo Windsor OHL R 6/18/1999 6’3 215 CAN
279 LHD Anton Bjorkman Linkoping SHL L 5/13/1999 5’11 170 SWE
280 G Juraj Sklenar Nitra U20 Slovak Extraliga L 7/13/1999 6’2 172 SVK
281 C Filip Engaras Skelleftea J20 Superelit R 5/16/1999 5’11 176 SWE
282 LW Brad Chenier North Bay OHL L 1/20/1999 5’11 186 CAN
283 RHD Victor Berglund MoDo J20 Superelit R 8/2/1999 5’11 159 SWE
284 RHD Scooter Brickey Muskegon USHL R 5/27/1999 6’3 183 USA
285 RHD Dmitri Rodionychev Sarov VHL R 1/12/1999 6’3 229 RUS
286 LW Filip Sveningsson HV-71 J20 Superelit L 7/3/1999 6’0 172 SWE
287 RHD Bernard Isiguzo Blues U20 Liiga Jrs R 8/2/1999 5’10 203 FIN
288 RHD Otto Latvala HPK U20 Liiga Jrs R 7/14/1999 6’5 190 FIN
289 C Pavel D. Dyomin Niagara OHL L 4/19/1999 5’9 165 RUS
290 RHD Gustav Lindstrom Altumna Allvenskan R 10/20/1998 6’2 187 SWE
291 RW/LW Kirill Maksimov Saginaw OHL R 6/1/1999 6’1 190 RUS
292 C Adam Goodsir Tri-City USHL L 9/22/1998 6’2 180 USA
293 LHD Keenan MacIsaac Chicoutimi QMJHL L 4/1/1999 5’11 178 CAN
294 LW Thomas Reichel Rosenheim DNL L 4/21/1999 6’3 196 GER
295 C/RW Jesse Koskenkorva Karpat U20 Liiga Jrs L 7/31/1999 6’0 174 FIN
296 LHD Tomas Vildumentz Karlskrona J20 Superelit L 9/27/1998 5’10 185 CZE
297 LW Justin Almeida Prince George WHL L 2/6/1999 5’9 176 CAN
298 LW Jakub Wojnar Sparta Praha Extraliga Jrs. L 6/25/1999 6’0 165 CZE
299 RHD Marcus Kichton Vancouver WHL R 1/9/1999 5’11 185 CAN
300 C/LW Filip Chytil Zlin U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 9/5/1999 5’11 165 CZE
301 LW/C Max Wennlund HV-71 J20 Superelit L 2/8/1999 5’11 172 SWE
302 C Graham Slaggert Team USA NTDP L 4/6/1999 5’11 183 USA
303 G Anton Malmborg Malmo J20 Superelit L 10/7/1998 6’1 170 SWE
304 RW Nicolas Muller MoDo J20 Superelit R 6/21/1999 6’0 159 SUI
305 RHD Vladislav Yeryomenko Calgary WHL R 4/22/1999 6’1 185 BLR
306 RW Tyler Gratton Chicago USHL L 8/6/1999 6’1 176 USA
307 LW Dylan Seitz Kitchener OHL L 1/15/1999 6’0 168 USA
308 RW Nikita Shashkov Sibir Novosibirsk MHL L 3/26/1999 5’11 165 RUS
309 LW Jonah Gadjovich Owen Sound OHL L 10/18/1998 6’2 201 CAN
310 LHD Christian Huntley Quebec QMJHL L 3/2/1999 5’9 160 CAN
311 LHD Simon Le Coultre Moncton QMJHL L 8/9/1999 5’11 169 SUI
312 C Erkka Seppala HPK U20 Liiga Jrs L 5/19/1999 5’9 160 FIN
313 RW Erik Aterius Leksand J20 Superelit L 5/1/1999 5’10 194 SWE
314 G Dereck Baribeau Val-d’Or QMJHL L 1/22/1999 6’5 176 CAN
315 C Parker Kelly Prince Albert WHL L 5/14/1999 5’10 161 CAN
316 G Jacob Acton Omaha USHL L 10/28/1998 6’1 176 USA
317 LHD Michael Karow Youngstown USHL L 12/18/1998 6’2 206 USA
318 LHD Dom Schmiemann Swift Current WHL L 4/2/1999 6’4 189 CAN
319 LW Owen Hardy Vancouver WHL L 2/13/1999 6’0 185 CAN
320 LW Daniil Vertiy North Bay OHL L 11/12/1998 6’1 198 RUS
321 LW Joey Cassetti Team USA NTDP L 2/28/1999 6’3 187 USA
322 LHD Yan Aucoin Baie-Comeau QMJHL L 8/1/1999 6’1 212 CAN
323 C Dylan Mills MN Wilderness NAHL R 8/18/1999 6’3 200 USA
324 LHD Zach Lauzon Rouyn-Noranda QMJHL L 10/10/1998 6’0 185 CAN
325 LW Petr Chlan Chomutov U20 Extraliga Jrs L 6/2/1999 5’8 168 CZE
326 LW Dominick Mersch Lincoln USHL L 12/16/1998 6’0 172 USA
327 LW Jacob Lapierre Victoriaville QMJHL L 12/5/1998 6’1 223 CAN
328 LHD Connor Mayer Sioux City USHL L 6/13/1999 5’10 175 USA
329 C/RW Aatu Luusuaniemi Karpat U20 Liiga Jrs R 1/6/1999 6’1 196 FIN
330 LHD Mario Ferraro Des Moines USHL L 9/17/1998 5’11 181 CAN
331 LHD Darien Kielb Quebec QMJHL L 3/18/1999 6’2 167 CAN
332 RW Adam Dawe Notre Dame SJHL R 1/18/1999 5’9 165 CAN
333 RW Alexander Pavlenko Avto Yekaterinburg MHL L 4/11/1999 6’2 194 RUS
334 C Ben Evans Ottawa OHL L 1/16/1999 6’0 195 CAN
335 RW/C Jan Kern Slavia Praha Extraliga Jrs. L 7/27/1999 5’11 172 CZE
336 C Maxim Tsyplakov Spartak Moscow MHL L 9/19/1998 6’2 187 RUS
337 LW Erik Smolka Dukla Trenchin U20 Slovak Extraliga L 11/14/1998 6’2 192 SVK
338 LW Vladimir Vybiral Slovakia U18 Slovak Extraliga L 12/29/1998 6’0 174 SVK
339 RHD Leon Gawanke Cape Breton QMJHL R 5/31/1999 6’1 181 GER
340 RHD Mac Hollowell Sault Ste Marie OHL R 9/26/1998 5’9 162 CAN
341 C Tyce Thomspon Salisbury HS-CT R 7/12/1999 6’0 150 USA
342 LW Liam Stevens Guelph OHL L 4/23/1999 5’8 187 CAN
343 LW Teemu Engberg HIFK U20 Liiga Jrs L 6/9/1999 5’11 179 FIN
344 C Kirill Popov Mamonty Yugry MHL L 6/14/1999 6’1 176 RUS
345 LHD Aleksi Anttalainen TPS U20 Liiga Jrs L 3/28/1999 5’9 187 FIN
346 LW Aidan McFarland Mississauga OHL L 4/5/1999 5’11 191 CAN
347 C/LW Barrett Dachyshyn Halifax QMJHL L 10/5/1998 6’4 183 CAN
348 LHD Dylan Samberg Hermantown HS-MN L 1/24/1999 6’3 190 USA
349 RW Patrik Marcinek Zvolen U20 Slovak Extraliga L 10/4/1998 5’11 183 SVK
350 C/LW Luke Manning Stillwater HS-MN L 4/13/1999 5’10 185 USA
351 LW Joseph Garreffa Kitchener OHL L 8/9/1999 5’7 160 CAN
352 LHD Marek Korencik Lulea J20 Superelit L 7/19/1999 6’3 200 SVK
353 RW Trey Fix-Wolansky Edmonton WHL R 5/26/1999 5’6 165 CAN
354 C Ethan Mcindoe Spokane WHL L 7/22/1999 6’0 166 CAN
355 LW Josh Curtis Prince George WHL L 9/24/1998 6’0 170 CAN
356 C/W Zach Solow Dubuque USHL R 11/6/1998 5’9 185 USA
357 LHD Jack Harris Prior Lake HS-MN L 6/13/1999 6’0 165 USA
358 LHD Igor Galygin Victoriaville QMJHL L 6/26/1999 6’0 172 RUS
359 RW Matvei Zaseda Amurskie Tigry MHL R 6/9/1999 5’10 179 RUS
360 LW Josiah Slavin Tri-City USHL L 12/31/1998 6’2 182 USA
361 LHD Samuel Duchesne Flint OHL L 5/25/1999 6’2 170 CAN
362 LW Nick McHugh Kitchener OHL L 2/13/1999 5’10 163 CAN
363 LW Daniil Lobanov Krasnaya Armiya MHL L 1/11/1999 5’9 160 RUS
364 C/LW Logan Christensen Saskatoon WHL L 1/12/1999 5’10 171 CAN
365 LW/C Hugo Leufvenius Linköping J20 Superelit L 3/26/1999 6’3 219 SWE
366 G Matt Welsh Charlottetown QMJHL L 7/13/1999 5’10 179 CAN
367 RHD Ludvig Stenvall Skelleftea J20 Superelit R 1/29/1999 5’10 174 SWE
368 LHD Joshua Ess Lakeville South HS-MN L 4/3/1999 5’11 180 USA
369 G Matthew Villalta Sault Ste Marie OHL L 6/3/1999 6’2 170 CAN
370 LW Akash Bains Red Deer WHL L 2/4/1999 6’0 184 CAN
371 LHD Kynan Berger Acadie-Bathurst QMJHL L 8/27/1999 6’2 182 CAN
372 C Justin Sigrist ZSC NLB L 4/20/1999 5’10 159 SUI
373 LHD Oliver Gatz-Nielsen Herning Denmark L 10/6/1998 6’1 207 DEN
374 C Alexander Yaremchuk Mamonty Yugry MHL L 8/22/1999 5’11 172 RUS
375 LHD Alexander Krief Sherbrooke QMJHL L 3/17/1999 6’3 183 CAN
376 RW Kirill Rudenko Mamonty Yugry MHL L 8/17/1999 5’9 172 RUS
377 G Lassi Lehtinen Luuko U20 Liiga Jrs L 2/25/1999 5’11 161 FIN
378 G Adam Ahman HV71 J20 Superelit L 7/31/1999 5’11 154 SWE
379 LHD Sacha Roy Cape Breton QMJHL L 4/5/1999 6’1 177 CAN
380 LW Lukas Mackenzie Saskatoon WHL L 4/26/1999 6’1 196 CAN
381 RHD Brock Hill Saginaw OHL R 1/27/1999 6’2 205 USA
382 LHD Tomas Hedera Bratislava U20 Slovak Extraliga L 11/7/1998 6’1 185 SVK
383 RW Cole Tymkin London OHL R 4/5/1999 6’0 178 CAN
384 C/RW Brett Neumann Erie OHL R 2/15/1999 5’9 165 CAN
385 G Jacob McGrath Sudbury OHL L 1/7/1999 6’1 158 CAN
386 LW Alex Alemastsev Avto Yekaterinburg MHL L 1/13/1999 6’4 185 RUS
387 LW/RW Axel Simic Blainville-Boisbriand QMJHL R 1/27/1999 5’8 165 SUI
388 RW David Kofron Trinec U20 Extraliga Jrs. R 11/24/1998 5’10 147 CZE
389 C/RW Valtteri Nikkila Tappara U20 Liiga Jrs R 7/23/1999 5’5 132 FIN
390 C Andre Fredriksson Farjestad J20 Superelit L 5/16/1999 6’2 185 SWE
391 C Charles Taillon Shawinigan QMJHL L 11/6/1998 6’2 197 CAN
392 LW Roope Mäkitalo Pelicans U20 Liiga Jrs L 9/22/1998 5’8 163 FIN
393 RW Jan Blasko Vitkovice U20 Extraliga Jrs R 1/8/1999 6’1 176 CZE
394 C R.J. Murphy Dubuque USHL L 10/2/1998 6’2 180 USA
395 LW Dmitri Ovechkin SKA-1946 MHL R 5/19/1999 6’0 172 RUS
396 LHD Carson Sass Red Deer WHL L 5/22/1999 6’0 182 CAN
397 LW/C Oliver Kinnunen Blues U20 Liiga Jrs L 1/15/1999 5’9 165 FIN
398 LW Cooper Haar Bismark NAHL L 4/26/1999 6’3 209 USA
399 C Santeri Hartikainen Groton HS-CT R 1/5/1999 6’1 190 FIN
400 RHD Cole Fraser Peterborough OHL R 8/23/1999 6’2 191 CAN
401 RW Matej Galbavy Mora IK J20 Superelit L 10/27/1998 6’0 170 SVK
402 LHD Renat Dadadzhanov Shawinigan QMJHL L 6/13/1999 6’2 205 RUS
403 C Anton Klint Farjestad J18 Superelit L 3/29/1999 6’4 185 SWE
404 RHD Phil Kemp Team USA NTDP R 2/12/1999 6’3 185 USA
405 RHD Alexander Lyakhov Lada MHL R 4/24/1999 6’4 182 RUS
406 C Cedric Pare Saint John QMJHL L 1/24/1999 6’2 203 CAN
407 G Christian Propp Barrie OHL L 3/27/1999 6’2 182 CAN
408 LW Alexander Belyayev Mamonty Yugry MHL L 3/28/1999 6’1 178 RUS
409 C Simon Lafrance Val-d’Or QMJHL L 10/12/1998 5’9 150 CAN
410 RW Matt Miller Victory Honda T1EHL R 9/4/1999 6’2 181 USA
411 C Charlie Dovorany Fargo USHL L 3/10/1999 5’10 182 USA
412 LHD Juho Korhonen Karpat U20 Liiga Jrs L 5/19/1999 5’9 165 FIN
413 RHD Nuutti Viitasalo TPS U20 Liiga Jrs R 4/4/1999 6’1 174 FIN
414 C Josh Dunne Green Bay USHL L 12/8/1998 6’3 183 USA
415 LHD Kade Landry Barrie OHL L 5/3/1999 5’10 180 CAN
416 RW Jeremy McKenna Moncton QMJHL R 4/20/1999 5’10 182 CAN
417 LW Kirill Kozhevnikov Mamonty Yugry MHL L 1/26/1999 6’1 203 RUS
418 LHD Jan Bednar Liberec U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 1/15/1999 6’2 198 CZE
419 LW Branden Klatt Edmonton WHL L 10/20/1998 6’2 197 CAN
420 C Petr Eret Plzen U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 5/26/1999 6’1 178 CZE
421 LW Nick Isaacson Peterborough OHL L 8/11/1999 6’2 180 CAN
422 LW Ethan Crossman Quebec QMJHL L 3/13/1999 5’10 184 CAN
423 LHD Zach Hayes Prince Albert WHL L 4/29/1999 6’3 212 CAN
424 RW Ben Copeland Waterloo USHL R 4/27/1999 5’11 165 USA
425 C Carson MacKinnon Rimouski QMJHL L 8/2/1999 6’0 162 CAN
426 LW Matthew Quercia Sioux Falls USHL L 2/24/1999 6’2 194 USA
427 RW Steve Agriogianis North Jersey T1EHL R 1/7/1999 5’10 164 USA
428 LHD Corson Green Chicago USHL L 3/4/1999 6’1 206 USA
429 LHD Alec Capstick Langley BCHL L 2/18/1999 6’1 168 CAN
430 C Bryce Misley Oakville OJHL L 9/5/1999 6’1 161 CAN
431 G Daniel Lebedeff Madison USHL L 5/23/1999 6’0 161 FIN
432 C Santeri Aalto Tappara U20 Liiga Jrs L 2/26/1999 6’1 179 FIN
433 LHD William Dageryd Lulea J20 Superelit L 1/27/1999 6’2 165 SWE
434 RHD Sean Durzi Owen Sound OHL R 10/21/1998 5’11 185 CAN
435 LHD Jake Harrison West Kelowna BCHL L 4/13/1999 5’10 174 CAN
436 LW Louis-Philippe Denis Rimouski QMJHL L 12/29/1998 5’11 176 CAN
437 C Jimmy Huntington Victoriaville QMJHL L 11/18/1998 6’0 182 CAN
438 LW/RW Daniil Pyatin Stalnye Lisi MHL L 8/5/1999 5’8 154 RUS
439 LW Martin Stohanzi Hradec Kralove U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 8/16/1999 5’11 175 CZE
440 LHD Fedor Gordeev Flint OHL L 1/27/1999 6’5 197 CAN
441 LW Scoley Dow Mississauga OHL L 5/12/1999 6’1 189 CAN
442 LHD Josh Wainman Erie OHL L 2/20/1999 6’0 164 CAN
443 RHD John Stampohar Grand Rapids HS-MN R 9/24/1998 6’0 176 USA
444 G Tomas Vomacka Corpus Christi NAHL L 5/2/1999 6’3 165 CZE
445 G Dylan Ferguson Kamloops WHL L 9/20/1998 6’1 193 CAN
446 C Felix Meunier Victoriaville QMJHL L 5/27/1999 5’9 182 CAN
447 RW Brady Pataki London OHL R 10/3/1998 6’2 217 CAN
448 RHD Ryan Schoettler Prince George WHL R 7/25/1999 5’10 163 CAN
449 RW Nikita Yefimov SKA-1946 MHL L 4/17/1999 6’3 172 RUS
450 RHD Louis Tardif Baie-Comeau QMJHL R 2/11/1999 6’3 173 CAN
451 C Sammy Walker Edina HS-MN R 6/7/1999 5’10 161 USA
452 RW Evan Dougherty Fargo USHL R 4/17/1999 6’2 185 USA
453 RW Hayden Ostir Spokane WHL R 7/6/1999 5’11 190 CAN
454 C Chase Brand Brookings NAHL L 2/25/1999 5’10 163 USA
455 RHD Alexander Osin HC MVD MHL R 1/12/1999 6’0 194 RUS
456 G Dylan St. Cyr Team USA NTDP L 5/23/1999 5’8 185 USA
457 RHD Jordan Lepage Halifax QMJHL R 7/5/1999 6’0 173 CAN
458 LW Zach Roberts Owen Sound OHL L 8/4/1999 6’0 180 CAN
459 LW James Malm Vancouver WHL L 6/25/1999 5’9 178 CAN
460 C William Lemay-Champagne Acadie-Bathurst QMJHL R 6/23/1999 5’9 162 CAN
461 C Oliver Odman-Hadzinikolic AIK J20 Superelit L 12/7/1998 5’7 165 SWE
462 LHD Mark Pavlikov Loko Yaroslavl MHL L 7/20/1999 5’11 170 RUS
463 RW Artyom Baltruk Edmonton WHL R 5/4/1999 6’3 196 BLR
464 LHD Adam Ziak Slovakia U18 Extraliga Jrs. L 7/22/1999 5’9 168 SVK
465 LHD Griffin Mendel Penticton BCHL L 2/18/1999 6’3 201 CAN
466 RW Tyler Hinam Rouyn-Noranda QMJHL R 5/27/1999 6’1 188 CAN
467 C/W Marc Mclaughlin Cedar Rapids USHL R 7/26/1999 6’0 177 USA
468 G Martin Holik Brno U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 5/28/1999 5’10 165 CZE
469 LW Lucas Chiodo Barrie OHL L 10/31/1998 5’6 164 CAN
470 LW Jacob Ball North Bay OHL L 1/16/1999 6’3 196 CAN
471 LHD Yann-Felix Lapointe Sherbrooke QMJHL L 6/30/1999 6’0 180 CAN
472 C Riley Prattson Selects Academy USPHL R 4/28/1999 5’9 165 USA
473 C Cedric Schiemenz Kitchener OHL L 3/1/1999 5’11 163 GER
474 LW Shaw Boomhower Mississauga OHL L 10/31/1998 5’11 185 CAN
475 LW Severi Lahtinen Pelicans U20 Liiga Jrs L 12/13/1998 6’0 170 FIN
476 RW Brayden Watts Moose Jaw WHL L 2/21/1999 6’0 163 USA
477 RW Anthony Gagnon Gatineau QMJHL R 2/22/1999 5’10 168 CAN
478 LHD Jarrod Gourley Spruce Grove AJHL L 6/29/1999 6’1 200 CAN
479 G Kyle Keyser Oshawa OHL L 3/8/1999 6’2 182 USA
480 RW Reed Lebster Des Moines USHL R 3/4/1999 5’11 165 USA
481 LHD Kelton Hatcher Sarnia OHL L 4/19/99 6’1 176 USA
482 RW Matt Cassidy Springfield Jr. Blues NAHL L 7/31/1999 6’0 170 USA
483 RHD Andrei Golikov Dynamo Moscow Jrs MHL R 5/31/1999 6’1 180 RUS
484 G Adam Scheel Team USA NTDP L 5/1/1999 6’3 186 USA
485 LHD Jakob Brahaney Kingston OHL L 3/26/1999 6’2 180 CAN
486 LHD Ludvik Rutar Olomouc U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 5/18/1999 6’3 189 CZE
487 LHD Olli Kaskinen TPS U20 Liiga Jrs L 1/27/1999 6’0 185 FIN
488 LW Kobe Mohr Edmonton WHL L 5/30/1999 5’11 161 CAN
489 LW Maxim Vyatkin Krasnaya Armiya MHL L 7/26/1999 6’1 182 RUS
490 G Erno Gerlander Jokerit U20 Liiga Jrs L 1/6/1999 6’2 175 FIN
491 RHD Hunter Drew Charlottetown QMJHL R 10/21/1998 6’2 182 CAN
492 G Dylan Myskiw Victoria WHL L 2/20/1999 6’1 170 CAN
493 LW Jesse Ruotsi Lukko U20 Liiga Jrs L 6/21/1999 6’0 168 FIN
494 C/LW Vaclav Burda Liberec U20 Extraliga Jrs L 1/9/1999 5’9 176 CZE
495 LW Connor McMenamin Sioux City USHL L 2/25/1999 5’11 188 USA
496 RW Isaac Nurse Hamilton OHL R 3/16/1999 5’9 165 CAN
497 RW Igor Zenchikov Loko Yaroslavl MHL L 4/7/1999 5’10 140 RUS
498 C Jakub Urbanek Slovakia U18 Slovak Extraliga R 6/22/1999 6’0 154 SVK
499 LHD Mederick Racicot Val-d’Or QMJHL L 3/10/1999 5’10 185 CAN
500 C Christian Wejse Blainville-Boisbriand QMJHL R 12/4/1998 6’1 194 DEN
501 LW Mikael Hedlund Farjestad J18 Superelit L 2/24/1999 5’11 174 SWE
502 C Aarne Talvitie Blues U20 Liiga Jrs L 2/11/1999 5’11 187 FIN
503 C/W Kyler Yeo Hill-Murray HS-MN R 3/11/1999 6’2 170 USA
504 C Max Tjernstrom MoDo J20 Superelit L 4/18/1999 5’10 176 SWE
505 LW Alexander Vdovenko Saint John QMJHL L 3/12/1999 5’7 150 RUS
506 RHD Jack St. Ivany Sioux Falls USHL R 7/22/1999 6’2 195 USA
507 LHD Algot Landin Timra IK J20 Superelit L 8/26/1999 5’10 171 SWE
508 LHD Benjamin Gagne Drummondville QMJHL L 10/22/1998 5’11 170 CAN
509 C Sander Rekstad Vaxjo J20 Superelit L 2/19/1999 5’10 198 NOR
510 RW Ethan O’Rourke Prince George WHL R 2/25/1999 6’5 199 CAN
511 LHD Karl Markstrom Altumna J20 J20 Elit L 5/1/1999 5’9 185 SWE
512 C Adam Cheezo Val-d’Or QMJHL R 11/2/1998 6’3 187 CAN
513 RW/C Batyrlan Muratov Barsy Astana MHL R 2/1/1999 6’1 167 KAZ
514 RW Bryce Kindopp Everett WHL R 6/14/1999 6’1 175 CAN
515 C/W Kyle Heitzner Barrie OHL L 2/17/1999 5’10 165 CAN
516 LW Verners Egle Madison USHL L 6/1/1999 6’1 182 LAT
517 LHD Sandis Smons Geneve U20 NLB L 5/19/1999 5’11 165 LAT
518 RW Samuel Parkkari Tappara U20 Liiga Jrs L 1/5/1999 6’1 183 FIN
519 LW Barrett Sheen Kootenay WHL L 9/20/1998 6’4 218 CAN
520 LHD David Noel Chicoutimi QMJHL L 4/10/1999 6’1 174 CAN
521 C Brian King Everett WHL L 2/12/1999 6’0 180 USA
522 C Cameron Burke Bloomington USHL L 1/8/1999 5’10 176 USA
523 LW Darian Pilon Sudbury OHL L 10/2/1998 5’9 174 CAN
524 C/RW David Madsen Vaxjo J20 Superelit R 1/25/1999 6’0 194 DEN
525 RW Tyler Preziuso Medicine Hat WHL R 1/19/1999 5’11 168 CAN
526 RW/C Joel Kerkkanen HIFK U20 Liiga Jrs L 6/23/1999 5’11 165 FIN
527 LHD Eric Allair North Bay OHL L 7/1/1999 6’1 208 CAN
528 C/RW Ray Christy MN Blades U18 NAPHL R 9/15/1999 5’10 160 USA
529 LHD Liam Ham Niagara OHL L 2/3/1999 5’9 192 CAN
530 RW Pavel Shen Mamonty Yugry MHL L 8/14/1999 5’10 178 RUS
531 G Beck Warm Tri-City WHL L 4/22/1999 5’11 175 CAN
532 C Nick Deakin-Poot Guelph OHL L 1/28/1999 6’4 208 CAN
533 G Aiden Hughes Sarnia OHL L 4/10/1999 6’3 240 CAN
534 C/LW Joel Bishop Halifax QMJHL L 5/7/1999 5’10 178 CAN
535 G Konstantin Kuzmaul Mamonty Yugry MHL L 8/19/1999 6’1 178 RUS
536 C/LW Sullivan Sparkes Oshawa OHL L 5/4/1999 5’11 185 CAN
537 LHD Jesper Kokkila Chicago USHL L 9/21/1998 6’0 183 FIN
538 RW Daniil Dotsenko Tolpar MHL L 7/18/1999 5’10 190 RUS
539 LW Jesper Emanuelsson Frolunda J18 Superelit L 3/30/1999 5’10 172 SWE
540 RW Jussi Tammela Kalpa U20 Liiga Jrs R 6/25/1999 6’0 185 FIN
541 G Gabe Vinal Northeast NAHL L 1/12/1999 6’2 170 USA
542 RHD Jake Kustra Saskatoon WHL R 4/20/1999 5’11 175 CAN
543 G Evan Fear Springfield NAHL L 7/5/1999 6’2 175 USA
544 LHD Carl Ehrnberg Frolunda J18 Superelit L 3/10/1999 5’9 170 SWE
545 RW Sean Josling Sarnia OHL R 3/22/1999 5’11 166 CAN
546 G William Girard Selects Academy USPHL L 1/27/1999 6’0 165 USA
547 LW Rafael Harvey-Pinard Rouyn-Noranda QMJHL L 1/6/1999 5’8 150 CAN
548 LHD Tobias Geisser Zug U20 NLB L 2/13/1999 6’4 195 SUI
549 LW Vladimir Ipatov Sarmaty MHL L 8/3/1998 5’9 169 RUS
550 RW Erik Urbank Buffalo Jr. Sabres OJHL R 3/28/1999 6’1 174 USA
551 RHD Brett Callahan Brookings NAHL R 10/16/1998 5’10 170 USA
552 RW Ethan DeStefani Waterloo USHL R 2/16/1999 6’3 195 USA
553 LHD Martin Kupec Slovakia U18 Slovak Extraliga L 5/25/1999 5’11 181 SVK
554 C Sebastian Smida KooKoo Liiga Jrs R 11/28/1998 5’11 174 SVK
555 RW Nolan Moyle Green Bay USHL R 4/13/1999 6’1 182 USA
556 LHD Sander Ronnild Stjernen Norway L 10/22/1998 5’11 198 NOR
557 G Jakob Walter Kootenay WHL L 5/16/1999 6’2 196 CAN
558 C Cedric Ralph Guelph OHL L 1/21/1999 5’9 165 CAN
559 RHD Jantzen Leslie Saskatoon WHL R 2/11/1999 6’1 175 CAN
560 LHD Filipp Bokin HC MVD MHL L 2/1/1999 6’3 187 RUS
561 LW Zachary Jackson Hamilton OHL L 1/11/1999 6’3 189 CAN
562 G Jacob Stewart Blainville-Boisbriand QMJHL L 6/22/1999 6’1 178 CAN
563 LW/RW Lucas Andersen Rodovre Denmark U20 R 1/30/1999 6’2 176 DEN
564 RW/LW Brett Davis Lethbridge WHL L 6/1/1999 6’0 174 CAN
565 RW Drake Pilon Sudbury OHL L 10/2/1998 5’9 174 CAN
566 LHD Vladislav Naletov Dynamo St. Petersburg MHL L 1/27/1999 5’10 170 RUS
567 LHD Cody Thompson Prince Albert WHL L 4/23/1999 6’4 215 CAN
568 LW Rory Herrman Green Bay USHL L 3/16/1999 5’11 165 USA
569 LW Marco Lehman Kloten NLB L 3/19/1999 5’9 156 SUI
570 RW Simon Lefebvre Victoriaville QMJHL L 2/3/1999 6’2 200 CAN
571 RW Dmitry Salvasser Omskie Yastreby MHL R 5/12/1999 5’10 161 RUS
572 LW Tristin Langan Moose Jaw WHL L 12/15/1998 6’0 194 CAN
573 RHD John Pesek Green Bay USHL R 10/28/1998 6’1 185 USA
574 LW Jeremy Goodwin Mississauga OHL L 9/4/1999 6’3 190 CAN
575 C Alex Mella Shattuck St. Mary’s HS-MN L 2/21/1999 6’0 187 USA
576 RW Marlon Zbinden Bern NLB R 6/22/1999 5’8 150 SUI
577 LW Ramon Tanner Davos U20 NLB L 8/28/1999 5’6 175 SUI
578 RW Daniil Skorikov Tolpar MHL R 4/1/1999 6’3 180 RUS
579 RHD Jeremy Diotte Rouyn-Noranda QMJHL R 6/7/1999 5’8 160 CAN
580 C Zane Franklin Lethbridge WHL R 1/5/1999 5’9 194 CAN
581 LW Erik Gardiner Regina WHL L 3/21/1999 6’1 182 CAN
582 LW Gage Ramsey Vancouver WHL L 10/15/1998 5’9 165 CAN
583 C Artyom Belotsky Avto Yekaterinburg MHL L 5/24/1999 6’1 168 RUS
584 LHD Alexis Binner Green Bay USHL L 12/3/1998 6’3 190 SWE
585 G Anthony Popovich Guelph OHL L 8/1/1999 6’1 174 CAN
586 C Felix Bibeau Rouyn-Noranda QMJHL L 3/31/1999 5’10 176 CAN
587 LHD Ryan Martin Erie OHL L 6/14/1999 6’0 191 CAN
588 RHD Danny Petrick Austin NAHL R 4/6/1999 5’9 180 USA
589 G Jake Begley Hill-Murray HS-MN L 3/18/1999 6’0 154 USA
590 LW Carson Dimoff Aberdeen Wings NAHL L 5/11/1999 5’10 183 USA
591 LHD Cooper Zech Odessa NAHL L 12/18/1998 5’8 150 USA
592 LW/RW Tuomas Ahtonen Kalpa U20 Liiga Jrs L 3/2/1999 5’11 190 FIN
593 LHD Batu Gendunov Atlanty Mytishchi MHL L 1/4/1999 6’4 212 RUS
594 LHD Erik Dahl Shattuck St. Mary’s HS-MN L 1/8/1999 6’4 207 USA
595 RW D’Artagnan Joly Baie-Comeau QMJHL R 4/7/1999 6’2 177 CAN
596 RHD Paul DeNaples Sioux Falls USHL R 9/19/1998 6’1 170 USA
597 LHD Jonathan Widén Färjestads J20 Superelit L 1/26/1999 5’11 187 SWE
598 RHD Vince Martineau Saint John QMJHL R 5/2/1999 6’0 205 CAN
599 RW Tyler Burnie Kingston OHL L 2/9/1999 6’3 182 CAN
600 C Micah Miller Sioux City USHL R 10/29/1998 5’8 193 USA

Recap: U18 Five Nations Tournament (Plymouth, MI)

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2016 U18 Five Nations Tournament

Home Cooking

Host Americans put on a show in Plymouth
Steve Kournianos  |  11/07/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of USA Hockey

Tournament Rosters
Tournament Stats
Tournament Results

DATE/TIME HOME AWAY
RESULTS
01 NOV 16 Finland Sweden Finland W, 3-0
01 NOV 16 USA Switzerland U.S. W, 7-2
02 NOV 16 Switzerland Czech Republic CZE W, 5-3
02 NOV 16 USA Sweden SWE W, 2-1
03 NOV 16 Switzerland Sweden SWE W, 3-2 (OT/SO)
03 NOV 16 Finland Czech Republic CZE W, 5-3
04 NOV 16 Switzerland Finland FIN W, 5-4 (OT)
04 NOV 16 USA Czech Republic U.S. W, 6-2
05NOV 16 Czech Republic Sweden CZE W, 4-3 (OT)
05 NOV 16 USA Finland U.S. W, 3-2

United States

G Dylan St. Cyr (5’8, 158 — Michigan): Every play this undersized goalie faces seems like the Mad Minute — chaos followed by calm. St. Cyr may not cover a lot of net, but he’s ridiculously quick and agile, challenging shooters and going well outside the paint to cut down all angles. He faced more rubber against the Czechs than he did in the tourney finale versus Finland, and he stopped multiple chances off the rush — including two breakaways — by standing his ground and looking like Plastic Man when he flexes the pad on deke attempts. The Michigan-bound prospect is sound at fighting through screens but is susceptible to getting beat upstairs if he’s anywhere the crease. Overall, he had a solid weekend by posting a 3-1-0 record and allowing only two goals in each of his four starts.

C Josh Norris (6’1, 192 – Michigan): Norris has everything you want in a top-six center – size, speed, strength and the ability to make his linemates better. He scored off the rush with a glove-side snipe from the left circle against the Czech Republic and finished the tournament with two points in two games. Norris, like Scott Reedy, plays a heavy, physical game and uses his size and determination to win puck battles. You can’t go wrong with either player, and while both are capable of player wing or the pivot, Norris is more of a natural playmaker.

C Graham Slaggert (5’11, 184 – Notre Dame): Slaggert is starting to remind us of 2016 NTDP’er Trent Frederic, the underappreciated Boston Bruins prospect who played second fiddle to star scorer Clayton Keller despite carrying significant responsibilities. Slaggert is an outstanding penalty killer who from start to finish uses his speed and strength every shift. He has excellent straight-line speed and a powerful stride, and we saw him lend puck support and slot coverage with regularity. Team USA asked Slaggert to take most of the key defensive zone draws, and his winning percentage was above average. He at one point centered a crash-and-bang line alongside Brady Tkachuk and Randy Hernandez that caused multiple matchup problems for the Finns and forced goalie Lassi Lehtinen to make several tough stops.

C/W Scott Reedy (6’1, 202 – Minnesota): Reedy shook off a slow start to the tournament by exploding for four points in the last two games, including the game-winner in the 3rd period against the Finns. He continues to display strong chemistry with linemate Grant Mishmash, as the duo were banging bodies and creating quality chances all over the place. Reedy is at his best when the game has an edge to it, and this was the fourth viewing where we witnessed just how difficult a matchup he can be. Again, this is a legitimate first-round prospect we’re talking about, and the points (eight in his last five games) are beginning to validate the effort.

RW Jacob Tortora (5’7, 162 – Boston College): Tortora is an electrifying keg of dynamite who seems to create or receive quality chances every shift. He played fearless, using his lower-body strength to dislodge the puck from bigger defenders by finishing his checks and preventing any opportunity for an opposing breakout. He was one several Team USA players with a five-point tournament (3 goals, 2 assists) and recorded at least one point in each of the four games. Tortora leads the club in goals with eight in 18 games. This is an offensively-gifted skater who does far more than just put points on the board.

LHD Max Gildon (6’3, 188 – Wisconsin): Gildon had a positive weekend in Plymouth, skating with confidence and using his booming shot at proper times – he led the tournament with 21 shots on goal. He used his long reach and quick feet to maintain a tight gap against onrushing opponents, and forced turnovers that led to counterattacks. Gildon played with fire and emotion – the game against the Czechs was hotly contested. He was physical behind the net and held his ground in slot coverage, especially on team USA’s top PK unit. If there’s area he needs to continue to work on, it’s his stretch passes, which were a hair off target when he tried to catch teams in their line changes. Still, we saw several reasons why Gildon should be high on every NHL team’s draft list come June.

RHD Nate Knoepke (6’3, 201 – Minnesota): Knoepke plays a pro-style thanks to excellent mobility and a hard, accurate shot. He mans the top pairing at even strength, the top PK duo and works with Farrance on the points of the power play. He opened the scoring in the 6-2 win over the Czechs by joining the rush and blistering a shot just under the crossbar. Really not much else to say other than he remains Team USA’s top pro prospect from the blue line.

LHD David Farrance (5’11, 191 – Boston U.): Farrance displayed all the makings of a pro-level defender. Not only does he possess a booming, accurate shot, but his ability create plays off the rush keeps opponents honest. Farrance has an exceptional set of hands and can handle any pass with relative ease, especially from across the ice. He scored a key goal against the Finns via a slap shot from just inside the blueline. And his hard wrister caused a rebound that led to Scott Reedy’s game winner. One night earlier, he split all five Czech skaters with a home run pass on Sean Dhooghe’s tape for a breakaway snipe. Outside of being under six feet tall, there are literally no weaknesses to his game.

RHD Tommy Miller (6’2, 177 – Michigan St.): Miller is a riser in our rankings and is very close to cracking the late first round. He’s impressed us at every viewing and tied with David Farrance for the most points by a defenseman (three in four games). He rifled home a power play goal from the right circle that opened the scoring against the Finns, who had difficulty getting around his tight gap when fixed to the outside. Miller is physical and can outmuscle most of his opponents, and even saved a goal when he batted a trickling puck away from the goal line with Team USA clinging to a 2-1 lead against the Czechs.

SWEDEN

RHD Filip Westerlund (5’11, 165): Poised two-way blueliner with upper-body strength who can be leaned on for top-pairing situations. Westerlund is quick and agile with exceptional edge work, making him one of the better draft eligibles at not only beating pressure, but making a lightning quick transition from defense to offense. He can attack open ice in a variety of ways – with speed, hard stretch passes or methodical puck control. Westerlund can be flashy, at times to a fault, as he is prone to the occasional turnover. But the overall body of work is solid, especially when you factor in his solid one-on-one and positional play for a kid who oozes skill and playmaking. Westerlund, who has an average but accurate shot, is a power play quarterback and penalty killing option.

RW Lukas Elvenes (6’0, 167): Elvenes is one of Sweden’s better junior players and boasts an impressive international resume. He is a fast skater with excellent balance who gains the zone with speed and can stop on a dime to locate trailers or linemates bombing for the net. Elvenes is one player who earns the right to be called a two-way forward – he has a clear understanding of his role and knows the time and place to motor up ice. He wasn’t as productive at the Five Nations as he was for Sweden at the summer Ivan Hlinka tournament, but you got the sense that opposing teams were tightening up their defense every time he was on the ice. Elvenes has a very good shot with a quick release and will not hesitate to fire it through traffic. There are times when he’s used to play the point on the power play.

C Emil Bemstrom (5’10, 174): Bemstrom is a speedy, dual-threat center who can bury the puck as well as he can dish it. He has excellent vision and will utilize hard, accurate cross-ice passes to improve the quality of a scoring chance. His speed allows him to create time and space when the ice seems clogged, but he’s an even bigger threat in open ice – he rarely makes mistakes on odd-man rushes and will not telegraph his next move. Bemstrom controls the puck with speed through the neutral zone and uses accurate lead or drop passes if he senses a defender will vacate a lane. He may not look big, but he is strong enough to come away with pucks during one-on-one battles with bigger opponents. He is a relentless forechecker who finishes his checks and can win key faceoffs.

LW Isac Lundestrom (5’11, 176 – 2018 Draft): Lundestrom is a dynamic offensive player with legitimate top-six potential. He owns a quick release, an incredible set of hands and the ability to finish from in close even if travelling at top speed. The manner in which this youngster enters the zone can best be described as unruffled – a mincing machine of sticks, skates and bodies will not deter Lundestrom from not only gaining entry, but taking a direct path to the front of the net. He’s rough around the edges in terms of his overall game, specifically defensive zone coverage and choosing the hard right over the easy wrong. He scored twice against the Czechs in Sweden’s final game, including a highlight-reel game-winner in overtime in which he split the defense for a clear path to the net.

RW Filip Sveningsson (6’0, 172): Fast and aggressive goal-scoring forward who uses his speed and awareness to receive and finish high-percentage plays. Sveningsson likes to initiate contact and take the puck right to a defenseman and almost challenge him to steal the puck. The success rate of these tactics vary depending on the player, but Sveningsson proved that he can maneuver around some of the world’s top U18 defenders and fire off a heavy wrister from an acceptable range. He may come across as a finesse forward at first, and there are times when he seems one dimensional. Overall, however, we view Svenningson as a prospective two-way winger who will not shy away from the game’s physical requirements.

LHD Anton Bjorkman (5’11, 163): Bjorkman is one of Sweden’s top amateur defenseman who is entrusted with significant in-game situations. He can play on both the power play and on the penalty kill with effectiveness, but it’s the way he maintains a tight gap and wields an active stick while exuding the characteristics of a puck mover that makes us think his top-four upside is legitimate. Bjorkman is summoned for the tough assignments and plays poised under pressure, but he also possesses offensive capabilities such as making accurate home-run passes and skating the puck deep into the opposing zone. He is an above-average skater and owns a very good shot, and on occasion will drop down between the circles to maximize his shot opportunities.

Finland Flag

FINLAND

LW Aarne Talvitie (5’10, 198): A feisty, hard-working winger who skates well and boasts a very good shot, especially off the pass. Talvitie played in Finland’s nominal top line and was used on the power play, where he drew a lot of attention while camped along the half wall. His shot is his bread and butter, but the bulk of the contest against Team USA was played in his own end so he didn’t create nor receive much room to showcase it. Talvitie is a smart player in the defensive zone, using quick feet and formidable upper-body strength to lean on puck possessors and finish them with clean checks. He’s a good passer who made tape-to-tape connections off the rush, but it was an otherwise quiet tournament (one goal and an assist in four games) for someone the Finns were expecting more from.

LW Santeri Hartikainen (6’1, 183): Hartikainen owned the left flank of Finland’s top line and was one of the few Finns who managed to put a dent or two into Team USA’s seemingly impregnable coverage. A big body with average speed who played on his off wing, Hartikainen worked extremely well with finesse linemates Jesse Ylonen and center Joni Ikonen during cycles during even strength, knowing exactly when and where to position himself to receive the puck cleanly. Hartikainen played fearless and was willing to receive punishment for establishing a foothold in the top of the crease, and it paid dividends when he buried a rebound while fading away.

LHD Olli Kaskinen (6’1, 194): Kaskinen had a busy night against the Americans, who owned the territorial edge and had multiple odd-man rushes. He was physical when he needed to be and maintained a pretty tight gap in one-on-one situations against speedsters like Logan Cockerill and Jacob Tortora, culminating each event with a solid rub out into the corner boards. I view him as a sound positional defender with poise who makes the right choices and uses above-average mobility to create time and space – but only as a last resort. He played sparingly on the power play but showed restraint and an active stick while manning the low slot during the penalty kill. Kaskinen has an average shot but snuck in a floater past Team USA goalie Dylan St. Cyr for his only point of the tournament.

G Lassi Lehtinen (5’11, 167): It’s been an up-and-down season for one of Finland’s less-heralded draft prospects, but make no mistake – Lehtinen produced an outstanding effort against the Americans in Plymouth. The ice wasn’t just tilted towards his crease…it was perpendicular, as Team USA poured a tournament-high 50 shots, including a half-dozen breakaways. But Lehtinen stood tall, keeping Finland tied or within a goal from start to finish. He doesn’t blanket the cage with an imposing silhouette, but he demonstrated a clear understanding of where the net was as he challenged shot after shot from well above his crease. Lehtinen’s rebound control and ability to track pucks during chaotic sequences of events was exceptional, and not once did we see him flinch while Team USA skaters tried to fake him out of position. He’s quick with his side-to-side movement, but looked vulnerable to shots towards the upper-half of the net. Game-to-game consistency was an issue prior to the tournament, so we won’t make him out to be Ken Dryden just yet.

RW Lauri Pajuniemi (5’10, 183): Pajuniemi is one of the better skill forwards on what looked like and turned out to be a thin Finnish roster. He didn’t have the greatest tournament stats-wise (one assist in four games), but he was strong on the puck and looked confident controlling it. He owns an excellent shot with a quick release, occasionally manning one of the points on the Finnish power play. Pajuniemi is very quick and does not get intimidated if a wall of opposing jerseys begins to collapse around him, and a strong command of his edges allows him to create room and look for options other than firing it on net. He has top-line upside thanks to an ability to remain dangerous and a threat any time he steps on the ice.

C Joni Ikonen (5’10, 159): Ikonen was excellent in all three zones despite taking a physical beating and spending a lot of time in his own low slot dealing with several bigger, stronger opponents. He is a strong puck carrier who can make high-percentage plays both off the rush and after finding loose pucks during board battles – things he displayed on one of Finland’s power play units. Ikonen is both fast and incredibly shifty, going full bore to hunt down pucks off the forecheck and stopping on a dime with his head up. I really liked his compete level and nonstop motor, but he also displayed a wicked wrist shot. He didn’t look out of place with Frolunda in Sweden’s SHL, and I wouldn’t be surprised if the North American flavor to his game gets him a long look from organizations from across the pond.

RW Jesse Ylonen (6’0, 161 – 2018 Draft): The son of former NHL’er Juha Ylonen, Jesse was all over the puck against the Americans and was Finland’s most dangerous forward. He has outstanding vision and is quick to find and connect with several targets within the offensive zone. Both he and linemate Joni Ikonen consistently took direct routes to the net with little regard for their own safety, and Team USA has a difficult time knocking either of them off the puck. Ylonen displayed superior edge work and balance, and his ability to maintain control of the puck in tight spaces isn’t limited to when the wall is to his back – he is lethal in and around the goal. His shot is good – not great – but he’s an excellent skater with breakaway speed who negated several icings.

C Erkka Seppala (5’9. 158): One of Finland’s better two-way forwards who showed quickness and physicality without ever taking a shift off. Seppala is a waterbug who loves to hit and apply panic-inducing pressure on the forecheck, but there isn’t a spot on the ice where he won’t look for the opportunity to finish a check. He showed above-average puck control on the rush, using his quickness and lateral movement to draw multiple defenders before slipping a neat lead pass to an onrushing linemate. He played on the penalty kill and won several key defensive-zone faceoffs, but I though he was miscast as a bottom-six player – Seppala was consistently accurate with his passes and didn’t make irrational decisions.

RHD Bernard Isiguzo (6’0, 209): Isiguzo was Finland’s most involved blueliner, firing four shots on goal and using his size and reach to keep American forwards to the outside. He is a calm, poised puck rusher with the entire sheet of ice in front of him, and will use subtle curls or sharp cuts to evade even the quickest of forecheckers. Isiguzo has above-average speed for a defenseman and will join the rush if necessary, and looked comfortable at the point on the power play. He ability to effectively read the play is hit or miss, and several of his pinches and/or step-ups were ill timed. Still, his size, mobility and offensive upside make him a solid late-round candidate.

czech_republic_640

CZECH REPUBLIC

LW Ondrej Machala (5’10, 185): Machala is a two-way speed-burner with endless skill who plays as close to a complete game as you can find in a teenager. He is extremely strong on the puck and is capable of making controlled, high-percentage plays while travelling at a high rate of speed. Machala uses his agility and understanding of play development to create time and space, but neither is a requirement to design scoring chances – he is poised under pressure and has first-step quickness to catch opponents flat-footed. Machala doesn’t have an elite shot, but he can fire it with accuracy, especially off the pass. He fights through checks but also likes to play assertive, at times with a chip on his shoulder. The more physical the game becomes, the more determined Machala seems to become. A staple on both the power play and penalty kill, he was the Czechs’ top player in each of my viewings.

RW Ostap Safin (6’4, 191): Safin is an excellent power forward prospect who plays with tenacity and confidence. His ability to control the puck on the move makes him seem unstoppable, especially when you consider how fast he covers ground for a big man. Safin is a powerful skater who uses his wingspan and lower body to shield the puck as he rumbles towards the net, but he’s skilled enough to make plays if a direct route to the net is sealed off. He has a very good shot, and his hand/eye coordination allows him to fire bouncing pucks on net. Naturally, Safin likes to play physical and camp in front of the net. However, he’s a smart goal scorer who understands when it’s time to slip away from the trenches and lend puck support or try to sneak into prime shooting areas.

LHD Dalimil Mikyska (6’2, 200): Mikyska is a skilled two-way defenseman with a strong grasp of what his responsibilities are in all three zones. He is a physical blueliner who finishes his checks and can assume a top-pairing role with aplomb for the way he reads plays and quickly covers up for the few mistakes he makes. Mikyska has very good first-step quickness and uses it to avoid forecheckers, firing off hard, accurate breakout passes without hesitation while gaining a foot or more of separation. You get the sense that he has eyes on both the side and back of his head, especially on the power play where his actions are timed and seemingly well-prepared. Mikyska has a powerful shot and plays the point on the power play, but he likes to dart into openings from the circles on down in order to increase the likelihood of success.

C Krystof Hrabik (6’3, 209 — 2018 Draft): A big-bodied shutdown center with developing skills to contribute among the top-six, Hrabik took and won most of the critical defensive-zone draws. He has good speed and controls the puck with his head up at all times, but creativity once he’s inside the zone is not something to expect. Hrabik has a hard, accurate shot and fire it off the rush, and he seems to favor shooting the puck far more than stopping and creating. His puck skills and skating are slightly above-average for someone considered to be a defensive-minded power forward, and the fact that he consistently uses his size to his advantage makes us think he can develop into something more.

LHD Radim Salda (6’1, 176): Salda is a hard-shooting puck mover who is always a threat to make and connect on a home run pass. He can play in any situation at even strength or on special teams thanks to the ability to maintain composure under pressure and anticipate where the puck will end up. He is very accurate with his shot, and will use it when it’s the obvious decision. Salda is a very good penalty killer, using physicality, an active stick and shot blocking to cut down on quality chances. He is tough to knock off the puck and can maintain control despite a feverish hounding from a trailing checker.

G Jiri Patera (6’2, 209): Patera possesses an NHL frame and displays a generally solid position. He is an excellent puck handler who can act as a third defensemen and will look up ice to catch opponents in a line change. While an average glove hand makes Patera susceptible to shots from the circles out than, his overall technique and positioning show promise, as he will challenge shooters well above the blue paint and retreat deliberately without giving away much, if anything. Patera tracks pucks extremely well and is quick enough to make initial saves from chances with a high degree of difficulty, but his post-save recovery is the area he needs to work on most.

C Jan Hladonik (5’8, 161): One of the top scorers in the Czech junior leagues, Hladonik is a top-line center capable of shouldering big minutes, especially late in games. An excellent straight-line skater with playmaking abilities, he is a constant threat on the ice and requires opponents to pay more attention to him than. Hladonik has quick feet and a solid understanding of play development, and controlling the puck in and around traffic helps him break through zone defenses. The power of his shot is above average but accurate, and he finds a way to score “dirty goals” from the tough areas around the net. Hladonik is average on faceoffs, but he kills penalties with an aggressive mindset and always looks for the chance to pick off a cross-ice pass and jet up ice.

RW Martin Kaut (6’1, 176 – 2018 Draft): Offensively-gifted two-way forward with very good speed and a knack for finding the open man. Kaut is one of Pardubice’s three prized prospects, with forward Filip Zadina (2018 Draft) and Ondrej Machala being the other. He is dominant at times, and uses exceptional footwork and lateral quickness to keep defenders off balance. Kaut is a gear-changer who does not telegraph his intentions, and he will attack open ice with decisiveness and skill. He owns a very hard shot that forces goalies to make tough saves and leave rebounds inside the low slot. Kaut is a very competitive player who anticipates well and will pay a high price for ensuring the puck goes where he wants. He is a reliable option on both the power play and on the penalty kill.

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2017 WJC: Team USA Preliminary Roster

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2017 World Junior Championship

Battle Plan

U.S. announces preliminary roster for 2016 world juniors
Steve Kournianos  |  12/05/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of the IIHF

New York (The Draft Analyst) — USA Hockey’s attempt to build its third world junior champion in eight years took an anticipated turn yesterday with the announcement of its preliminary roster for the upcoming under-20 tournament. The group responsible for selecting the roster isn’t looking for a Dream Team — most of the top Americans eligible to participate are in the NHL and won’t be released by their respective teams. But the 27 players invited to the final evaluation camp in Buffalo  — 15 forwards, eight defensemen and three goalies — form yet another deep collection of talent strong enough to contend for gold.

The obvious strength is within the forward ranks, where you will find eight of Team USA’s nine first-round draft picks. Colin White, a powerful two-way center for Boston College selected 15th overall by the Ottawa Senators in 2015, had four goals and an assist in his last two international games against the host Canadians, who traditionally present the Americans with their toughest competition. The health of Arizona Coyotes prospect Clayton Keller remains a question mark, but massive pivot Logan Brown — also a Senators draft pick — is more than talented to center any of the top two lines. Both were first round selections in 2016 and each won a bronze medal for Team USA at last April’s under-18 world championship.

The flanks feature a mix of lethal, goal-scoring bangers and sublime playmaking magicians. Brock Boeser — a top pick of the Vancouver Canucks in 2015 — and Chicago Blackhawks draftee Alex DeBrincat were both disappointing in last year’s competition but each possess world-class shots and will log significant minutes, especially on the power play. Jack Roslovic, Jeremy Bracco, Jordan Greenway and Luke Kunin are alumni from the National Team Development Program that trounced the Canadians en route to the 2015 U18 title, and Kiefer Bellows and Joey Anderson teamed with Keller last season to form one of the most productive lines in NTDP history.

The defense is relatively young by WJC standards, as only two of the eight blueliners invited to camp — 2016 draft picks Charlie McAvoy (Boston) and Chad Krys (Florida) — perviously played in a U20 tournament. Sublime playmakers Adam Fox and Jack Ahcan should take advantage of the larger international ice surface, but it’s the hard-hitting, disciplined styles of McAvoy and fellow Bruins prospect Ryan Lindgren that Team USA will call on during critical late-game situations.

A hot goaltender can be all that separates a team from contender to champion, and London Knights netminder Tyler Parsons (Calgary) has experience handling the pressure cooker of nationally televised championship hockey in Canada. The Michigan native backstopped the Knights to a Memorial Cup last May and should be an easy choice to start. Backing him up will become the responsibility of one of two Hockey East goalies — Joseph Woll (Boston College) and Jake Oettinger (Boston University).

The final evaluation camp will take place in Buffalo beginning on December 16, with the final roster expected to be announced on or around the 24th of the month.

NO. POS NAME S TEAM LEAGUE HT WT DOB FROM DRAFT
1 G Tyler Parsons L London OHL 6’0 186 9/18/97 Chesterfield, MI CGY 2ND/2016
30 G Jake Oettinger L Boston U. HE 6’4 210 12/18/98 Lakeville, MN 2017 Draft
31 G Joseph Woll L Boston Coll. HE 6’3 202 7/12/98 St. Louis, MO TOR 3rd/2016
2 LHD Ryan Lindgren L Minnesota Big-10 6’0 208 2/11/98 Minneapolis, MN BOS 2nd/2016
3 LHD Jack Ahcan L St. Cloud St. NCHC 5’7 184 5/18/97 Savage, MN 2017 Draft
4 LHD Caleb Jones L Portland WHL 6’1 194 6/6/97 Frisco, TX EDM 4th/2015
5 LHD Chad Krys L Boston U. HE 5’11 183 4/10/98 Ridgefield, CT FLA 2nd/2016
6 RHD Casey Fitzgerald R Boston Coll. HE 5’11 187 2/25/97 North Reading, MA BUF 3rd/2016
8 RHD Adam Fox R Harvard ECAC 5’10 187 2/17/98 Jericho, NY CGY 3rd/2016
25 RHD Charlie McAvoy R Boston U. HE 6’0 206 12/21/97 Long Beach, NY BOS 1st/2016
33 RHD Joe Cecconi R Michigan Big-10 6’2 222 5/23/97 Youngstown, NY DAL 5th/2015
9 RW/C Luke Kunin R Wisconsin Big-10 5’11 196 12/4/97 Chesterfield, MO MIN 1st/2016
10 C/RW Tanner Laczynski R Ohio State Big-10 6’0 191 6/1/97 Shorewood, IL PHI 6th/2016
11 C Patrick Harper L Boston U. HE 5’9 160 7/29/98 New Canaan, CT NSH 5th/2016
12 LW Jordan Greenway L Boston U. HE 6’5 230 2/16/97 Canton, NY MIN 2nd/2015
13 RW Joey Anderson R Minn-Duluth NCHC 5’11 200 6/19/98 Roseville, MN NJD 3rd/2016
14 LW Erik Foley L Providence HE 6’0 197 6/30/97 Mansfield, MA WPG 3rd/2015
16 RW Brock Boeser R North Dakota NCHC 6’0 203 2/25/97 Burnsville, MN VAN 1st/2015
17 RW Jeremy Bracco R Kitchener OHL 5’10 180 3/17/97 Freeport, NY TOR 2nd/2015
18 C Colin White R Boston Coll. HE 6’0 183 1/30/97 Hanover, MA OTT 1st/2015
19 C Clayton Keller L Boston U. HE 5’10 172 7/29/98 St. Louis, MO ARI 1st/2016
20 C Troy Terry R Denver NCHC 6’0 166 9/10/97 Highland Ranch, CO ANA 5th/2015
22 C Logan Brown L Windsor OHL 6’6 216 3/5/98 St. Louis, MO OTT 1st/2016
23 LW Kieffer Bellows L Boston U. HE 6’0 201 6/10/98 Edina, MN NYI 1st/2016
27 RW Alex DeBrincat R Erie OHL 5’7 171 12/18/97 Farmington Hills, MI CHI 2nd/2016
28 C/RW Jack Roslovic R Manitoba AHL 6’1 191 1/29/97 Columbus, OH WPG 1st/2015
29 RW Tage Thompson R Connecticut HE 6’5 200 10/30/97 Orange, CT STL 1st/2016

2016 WJAC Team Rosters

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2016 WJAC Team Rosters

No. Team Name Pos S HT WT DOB Draft Club LG
11 CAN-E Owen Guy C R 5’9 177 1/5/1998 2016 Kemptville CCHL
12 CAN-E Connor Hill RW L 6’0 191 2/3/1998 2016 Carleton Place CCHL
14 CAN-E Charles Levesque C R 5’10 167 5/28/1998 2016 Hawkesbury CCHL
16 CAN-E Nick Lalonde RW R 5’9 175 1/30/1998 2016 Cornwall CCHL
18 CAN-E Vincent Chapleau C L 5’10 175 10/12/1997 2016 Longueuil LHJQ
19 CAN-E Luke Keenan C L 6’1 193 7/22/1998 2016 Whitby OJHL
20 CAN-E Bryce Misley C L 6’2 187 9/5/1999 2017 Oakville OJHL
21 CAN-E Bobby Dow RW R 6’1 175 11/5/1998 2017 Kemptville CCHL
23 CAN-E Finn Evans RW R 6’2 177 8/21/1999 2017 St. Michael’s OJHL
24 CAN-E Lucas Thierus RW R 5’10 170 1/18/1998 2016 Saint-Jérôme LHJQ
26 CAN-E Jack McBain C L 6’3 188 1/6/2000 2018 Toronto Jr. Canadiens OJHL
29 CAN-E Logan Johnston LW L 6’2 198 11/21/1998 2017 Dieppe MHL
7 CAN-E Nic Mucci RW R 5’11 185 2/8/1997 2015 Wellington OJHL
10 CAN-E Cameron Crotty RHD R 6’2 188 5/5/1999 2017 Brockville CCHL
17 CAN-E Aidan Girduckis RHD R 6’4 190 10/8/1998 2017 Carleton Place CCHL
27 CAN-E Quinn Wichers LHD L 6’4 215 8/19/1997 2015 Kemptville CCHL
3 CAN-E Samuel Hould LHD L 5’9 170 3/27/1997 2015 Terrebonne LHJQ
4 CAN-E Owen Grant RHD R 6’0 186 1/22/1998 2016 Carleton Place CCHL
5 CAN-E Sebastian Dirven LHD L 6’3 186 6/22/1998 2016 Cornwall CCHL
6 CAN-E Tim Theocharidis LHD L 6’1 177 6/28/1998 2016 Carleton Place CCHL
1 CAN-E Stefano Cantali G R 5’11 185 6/13/1997 2015 Longueuil LHJQ
31 CAN-E Hunter Jones G L 6’3 192 9/21/2000 2019 Stouffville OJHL
10 CAN-W Jeff Stewart LW L 6’3 175 02-23-1998 2016 Surrey BCHL
12 CAN-W Ryan Cox LW L 5’10 185 07-23-1998 2016 Fort McMurray AJHL
14 CAN-W Riese Gaber C/RW L 5’7 138 10-10-1999 2018 Dauphin MJHL
15 CAN-W Blake Hayward LW L 6’1 195 02-11-1998 2016 Coquitlam BCHL
18 CAN-W Carter Turnbull RW R 5’8 169 09-08-1998 2016 Powell River BCHL
19 CAN-W Michael Regush C R 6’1 202 09-12-1998 2016 Merritt BCHL
21 CAN-W Joseph Nardi LW L 5’11 175 06-01-1997 2015 Whitecourt AJHL
22 CAN-W Will Koop C/RW R 5’9 184 02-10-1998 2016 Steinbach MJHL
23 CAN-W Desi Burgart LW L 6’1 180 09-28-1998 2017 Surrey BCHL
25 CAN-W Kyle Johnson C/W R 5’11 180 06-03-1998 2016 Prince George BCHL
26 CAN-W Brandon Lesko LW L 6’0 196 02-20-1998 2016 Flin Flon SJHL
28 CAN-W Jordan Kawaguchi C L 5’9 181 05-04-1997 2015 Chilliwack BCHL
29 CAN-W Kyle Betts C L 6’1 176 09-17-1997 2016 Powell River BCHL
11 CAN-W Darby Gula LHD L 5’10 172 01-08-1998 2016 Steinbach MJHL
27 CAN-W Griffin Mendel LHD L 6.3 204 02-18-1999 2017 Penticton BCHL
3 CAN-W Ian Mitchell RHD R 5.1 165 01-18-1999 2017 Spruce Grove AJHL
4 CAN-W Regan Seiferling RHD R 6’2 173 03-09-1997 2015 Yorkton SJHL
5 CAN-W Jonny Tychonick LHD L 5’11 168 03-03-2000 2018 Penticton BCHL
7 CAN-W Cale Makar RHD R 5’10 175 10-30-1998 2017 Brooks AJHL
9 CAN-W Cory Thomas LHD L 6’5 210 03-19-1998 2016 Flin Flon SJHL
10 USA Mick Messner C L 6’0 195 04-20-1999 2017 Madison USHL
11 USA Brannon McManus RW R 5’9 181 07-05-1999 2017 Omaha USHL
12 USA Nick Swaney LW R 5’10 175 09-09-1997 2015 Waterloo USHL
14 USA Collin Adams LW L 5’9 175 04-24-1998 2016 Muskegon USHL
15 USA Paul Washe C L 6’1 191 11-27-1998 2017 Tri-City USHL
17 USA Tarek Baker LW L 5’10 184 02-22-1997 2015 Bloomington USHL
19 USA Blake Lizotte C L 5’7 155 12-13-1997 2016 Fargo USHL
20 USA Chris Berger LW L 5’8 176 04-14-1998 2016 Des Moines USHL
21 USA Alex Limoges C L 6’1 201 09-16-1997 2016 Tri-City USHL
23 USA Isaac Johnson C R 6’2 177 01-24-1999 2017 Des Moines USHL
24 USA Zach Solow RW R 5’9 180 11-06-1998 2017 Dubuque USHL
8 USA Hank Crone C L 5’8 154 02-19-1998 2016 Fargo USHL
9 USA Ethen Frank C R 5’10 178 02-05-1998 2016 Lincoln USHL
16 USA Jake Ryczek RHD R 5’10 179 03-19-1998 2016 Waterloo USHL
18 USA Clayton Phillips LHD L 5’11 170 09-09-1999 2017 Fargo USHL
2 USA Matt Kierstad LHD L 5’11 184 04-14-1998 2016 Chicago USHL
22 USA Wyatt Aamodt LHD L 5’11 206 11-22-1997 2016 Chicago USHL
4 USA Mikey Anderson LHD L 6’0 196 05-25-1999 2017 Waterloo USHL
5 USA Alex Green RHD R 6’2 177 06-18-1998 2016 Lincoln USHL
7 USA Matt Hellickson LHD L 6’0 187 03-21-1998 2016 Sioux City USHL
1 USA Cayden Primeau G R 6’3 179 08-11-1999 2017 Lincoln USHL
30 USA Dayton Rasmussen G L 6’2 200 11-04-1998 2017 Tri-City USHL
10 CZE Tomas Vildumetz RW L 5’10 179 09-27-1998 2017 Karlskrona J20 Superelit
11 CZE Filip Dvorak RW R 6’0 172 01-08-1997 2015 HC Kometa Brno ELJ
12 CZE Petr Kodytek C L 5’6 144 08-17-1998 2016 HC Plzen 1929 ELJ
13 CZE Tomas Havranek LW L 5’10 166 05-04-1998 2016 HC Kometa Brno ELJ
14 CZE Radovan Pavlik LW L 5’10 166 02-18-1998 2016 HC Mountfield HK ELJ
15 CZE Ondrej Prochazka LW L 6’2 166 08-31-1997 2015 HC Sparta Praha ELJ
16 CZE Nicolas Werbik C R 6’3 194 10-09-1997 2016 Youngstown USHL
17 CZE Pavel Kousal RW L 5’11 174 11-14-1998 2017 Spokane WHL
18 CZE Marek Zachar RW R 5’10 166 06-11-1998 2016 Sherbrooke QMJHL
19 CZE Tomas Vracovsky RW R 6’0 174 12-01-1997 2016 HC Plzen 1929 ELJ
20 CZE Adam Kubik C L 5’10 146 10-21-1998 2017 Rytiri Kladno ELJ
21 CZE Daniel Kurovsky LW L 6’4 199 03-04-1998 2016 HC Vítkovice ELJ
22 CZE Kristian Reichel C R 6’0 168 06-11-1998 2016 HC Litvínov ELJ
3 CZE Marian Adamek RHD R 6’0 174 10-02-1997 2016 HC Ocelari Trinec ELJ
4 CZE Tomas Hanousek RHD R 6’0 185 06-03-1998 2016 Södertälje J20 Superelit
5 CZE Lukas Doudera LHD L 5’11 166 01-03-1998 2016 HC Ocelari Trinec ELJ
6 CZE David Kvasnicka LHD L 5’10 174 04-14-1999 2017 HC Plzen 1929 ELJ
7 CZE Ondrej Kachyna LHD L 6’3 201 04-30-1998 2016 Hamilton OHL
8 CZE Jakub Sirota LHD L 6’2 179 12-20-1998 2017 Cedar Rapids USHL
9 CZE Daniel Novak LHD L 5’11 166 07-01-1998 2016 KLH Chomutov ELJ
1 CZE Jan Ruzicka G L 6’1 177 02-23-1997 2015 Des Moines USHL
2 CZE Petr Kvaca G L 6’1 172 09-12-1997 2015 HC Ceske Budejovice ELJ
10 RUS Alexey Lipanov C L 6’0 165 08-17-1999 2017 HC MVD MHL
11 RUS Daniil Lobanov LW L 5’9 161 01-11-1999 2017 Krasnaya Armiya MHL
12 RUS Yaroslav Alexeyev LW L 5’9 145 01-17-1999 2017 Sherbrooke QMJHL
14 RUS Andrei Svechnikov RW L 6’2 185 03-26-2000 2018 Muskegon USHL
16 RUS Nikita Anokhovskiy C L 6’0 176 03-22-1999 2017 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl KHL
17 RUS Ivan Klepko C L 5’8 167 02-08-1999 2017 MHC Spartak MHL
19 RUS Ivan Chekhovich LW L 5’8 176 01-04-1999 2017 Baie-Comeau QMJHL
23 RUS Ivan Muranov RW L 6’2 174 10-06-1999 2018 HC MVD MHL
24 RUS Klim Kostin RW L 6’3 196 05-05-1999 2017 HC MVD MHL
26 RUS Denis Mikhnin RW L 5’8 167 07-11-1999 2017 Rimouski QMJHL
27 RUS Maksim Marushev RW R 6’0 165 01-01-1999 2017 Irbis Kazan MHL
28 RUS Kirill Slepets LW L 5’9 145 04-06-1999 2017 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl KHL
9 RUS Mikhail Bitsadze C L 5’9 165 11-18-1999 2018 HC MVD MHL
13 RUS Semen Pereliaev RHD R 6’1 170 08-24-1999 2017 Ladya Tolyatti MHL
15 RUS Evgeny Kalabushkin LHD L 6’0 183 11-25-1999 2018 SKA-1946 MHL
18 RUS Daniil Egorov LHD L 5’7 154 02-04-1999 2017 HC MVD MHL
20 RUS Nikita Okhotiuk LHD L 6’1 181 12-04-2000 2019 Belye Medvedi MHL
21 RUS Georgii Dedov LHD L 6’2 196 10-01-1999 2018 Russkie Vityazi MHL
3 RUS Danila Galeniuk LHD L 6’1 189 02-11-2000 2018 Mamonty Yugry MHL
7 RUS Veniamin Baranov LHD L 6’1 198 01-08-1999 2017 Dinamo St. Petersburg MHL
1 RUS Kirill Ustimenko G L 6’2 178 01-29-1999 2017 Dinamo St. Petersburg MHL
29 RUS Dimitrii Raiko G L 5’9 196 03-03-1999 2017 HC MVD MHL
30 RUS Daniil Iakovlev G L 6’0 161 01-02-1999 2017 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl KHL
11 SUI Sven Leuenberger RW R 5’10 188 2/18/1999 2017 EV Zug NLB
13 SUI Luca Silvan Wyss LW L 6’0 155 2/17/1999 2017 SCL Tigers NLB
15 SUI Justin Sigrist C L 5’9 146 4/20/1999 2017 GCK Lions NLB
16 SUI Robin Nyffeler RW L 5’10 157 7/15/1999 2017 SCL Tigers NLB
17 SUI Marco Lehmann C L 5’7 133 3/19/1999 2017 EHC Kloten NLB
19 SUI Dylan Pena Triana LW L 5’7 146 5/1/2000 2018 Selects Hockey Academy USPHL
22 SUI Mischa Bleiker LW L 6’0 159 9/11/1999 2017 HC Davos NLB
24 SUI Arnaud Riat RW R 6’0 155 4/18/1999 2017 Genève-Servette HC NLB
25 SUI Jan Petrig LW L 5’7 133 1/9/1999 2017 EHC Biel NLB
27 SUI Nils Seiler RW L 5’9 187 1/14/1999 2017 EV Zug NLB
7 SUI Ramon Tanner C L 5’7 168 8/28/1999 2017 HC Davos NLB
9 SUI Nicolas Muller C R 6’0 159 6/21/1999 2017 MODO J20 Superelit
10 SUI Mick Schüpbach LHD L 5’11 163 4/9/1999 2017 SC Bern NLB
14 SUI Lucas Matewa RHD R 5’10 168 11/7/1999 2018 HC Lugano NLB
18 SUI Dario Wüthrich RHD R 6’1 190 9/26/1999 2018 EV Zug NLB
2 SUI David Zeiter LHD L 6’0 168 4/23/1999 2017 Genève-Servette HC NLB
3 SUI Gabriel Widmer LHD L 5’8 172 12/19/1999 2018 GCK Lions NLB
4 SUI Claude Schnetzer RHD R 5’11 161 10/12/1999 2018 EHC Kloten NLB
5 SUI Yannick Brunner LHD L 5’9 156 11/23/1999 2018 EHC Kloten NLB
6 SUI Gianluca Burger RHD R 5’11 166 4/27/1999 2017 GCK Lions NLB
1 SUI Aleksander Jaks G L 5’11 177 5/29/1999 2017 HC Ambri-Piotta NLB
30 SUI Beat Trudel G L 6’1 185 11/16/1999 2018 Rapperswil-Jona Lakers NLB

Recap: 2016 World Junior “A” Challenge

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2016 U20 World Junior “A” Challenge

Seventh Heaven

Americans cruise to seventh WJAC title
Steve Kournianos  |  012/19/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of Hockey Canada

DATE/TIME HOME AWAY RESULT
11 DEC 16-Prelim Canada-East Czech Republic Can-East W, 4-1
11 DEC 16-Prelim Canada-West Switzerland Can-West W, 6-2
12 DEC 16-Prelim Czech Republic USA CZE W, 1-0
12 DEC 16-Prelim Russia Canada-West Russia W, 5-3
13 DEC 16-Prelim Switzerland Russia Russia W, 6-5 (OT)
13 DEC 16-Prelim USA Canada-East USA W, 3-1
14 DEC 16-QF USA Switzerland USA W, 9-0
14 DEC 16-QF Canada-West Czech Republic CZE W, 4-3 (SO)
15 DEC 16-SF Russia USA USA W, 4-2
15 DEC 16-SF Canada-East Czech Republic Can-East W, 2-1 (OT)
16 DEC 16-5th Canada-West Switzerland Can-West W, 5-3
16 DEC 16-3rd Russia Czech Republic Russia W , 7-4
17 DEC 16-F Canada-East USA USA W , 4-0

United States

RW Hank Crone (2017 Draft): Quick overage forward headed to Boston University who has soft hands and an offense-first mindset. Crone uses his speed and lateral maneuverability to create time and space in the face of a stacked zone defense. He can play on the power play and seems quite comfortable handling the puck for long periods of time. You can consider him a puck hound who likes to draw defenders towards him simply to feather a neat pass into open ice of an onrushing teammate to collect. Crone is a confident player who won’t back down in the face of bigger opponents and plays bigger than his listed 5’8 frame.

C Ethan Frank (2017 Draft): Western Michigan-bound battler with speed who is very shifty and possesses impressive puck skills. Frank is an overager with strong balance and a solid stick that allows him to fight through checks with the puck. He’s an excellent penalty killer who pressures the points and is extremely fearless as he closes on bigger players. Frank might be listed at 5’10, but he has strong lower-body strength and leg drive to take men out with a clean hit. Frank takes the puck directly to the net and can change gears to catch defenders flat footed. He’s a strong competitor who thrives in tight-checking affairs.

LHD Mikey Anderson (2017 Draft): Quick, confident first-year eligible defender who can initiate a successful breakout in a variety of ways. Anderson is a strong skater with excellent lateral mobility who uses his speed to escape opponents. He can feather accurate passes into open ice while drawing multiple opponents. Anderson is a solid body checker who can excel in either the finesse game or the slogging match, and is entrusted with critical roles on both the penalty kill and on the power play.

RW Zach Solow (2017 Draft):  An absolute beast with a commitment to Northeastern, Solow was one of Team USA’s top scorers. He plays a fast-paced game and loves to involve himself wherever the puck is or will end up. Solow is classically diminutive (5’9, 180), but he plays without fear and will take a beating as he traverses direct routes to the net. He is a two-way winger who does all the necessary things to ensure his man is both covered and limited in options. Solow can also play center and looks for his teammates rather than take low-percentage shots. His versatility and durability speak volumes about his effectiveness as an offensive force who does not shy away from the physical aspects of the game.

East

Canada-East

RW/C Bobby Dow (2017 Draft): Big-bodied power forward with a commitment to Mercyhurst who plays a tenacious game yet has the skills to make a significant contribution offensively. Dow is a very good skater with strong lateral mobility and enough breakaway speed to avoid the pursuit of defenders. He’s strong on the puck and doesn’t like to give it up, and at times can hang on to the disc for what seems like an entire shift. Dow is uber-confident once a lane opens and will take direct routes to the net with strength and determination. He protects the puck quite well, keeping his head up and looking for multiple options but confident enough to make high-percentage plays on his own. Dow is a physical player who likes to throw his body around and make sound, clean open-ice hits. He uses his upper-body strength to separate opponents from the puck, something that serves him well on the penalty kill. Dow uses his physicality to change momentum and make statements, and at worst he will top out as a skilled two-way energy player who can moonlight as a top-six power forward.

LHD Samuel Hould (2017 Draft): Smart two-way defender who can play on the top pairing as the go-to guy to keep the puck out of harm’s way. A double-overager who played previously in the QMJHL, Hould uses his body to protect the puck extremely well, and his ability to make proper reads and see the ice as a whole compliment his quick first step and confidence. He has no problem taking the puck from goal line to red line with speed, yet inconsistent accuracy with passes to the flanks provides opponents with the opportunity for a swift odd-man counterattack. Hould can quarterback a power play due to a very hard shot and a knack to fake his way into open shooting lanes, and his slap-passing into the slot can catch a goalie leaning the wrong way.

RHD Cameron Crotty (2017 Draft): Boston University-bound mobile defender who plays a smart positional game and is blessed with good size (6’2, 188) but provides next to nothing offensively outside of sharp, crisp breakout passes and creating turnovers. Crotty is quite mature and has top-pairing potential in the NCAA regardless of his age. He can play physical and seal off puck carriers into an untenable situation, using his long reach and active stick to strip pucks away and reverse them to safety or head-man up the ice. Crotty owns a hard, accurate shot and doesn’t wait for the perfect shooting lane to open in order to fire one on net. His limitations in the offensive zone, however, begin with a general lack of interest towards jumping into gaps or setting himself up below the top of the circles. Crotty isn’t creative and will acquiesce to the dump in at the first site of any pressure.

Russia

RW Andrei Svechnikov (2018 Draft): Elite player who combines power and finesse with an exceptional understanding of his role as a top line talent. Svechnikov has an uncanny ability to not only stickhandle in and around traffic, but also position himself away from the puck while defenders are fixated on his equally skilled linemates. You have to keep tabs on Svechnikov at all times, and it seems as if opponents play tentative every time he’s on the ice. Svechnikov is a very good skater with a powerful stride and exceptional balance, and he uses his speed to create separation even although he shouldn’t be defined as a road runner. He possesses a blistering shot with one of the quicker releases you’ll find — Svechnikov can score on set plays off a faceoff or rifle one from the circles. The accuracy and rapidity of his release were on display in Bonneyville

LW Ivan Chekhovich (2017 Draft): A sniper blessed with incredibly soft hands and exceptional speed who simply knows what to do with the puck. Chekhovich is an opportunist with a strong grasp of play development who at times will toe the line between cherrypicking and taking acceptable risks. Still, he’s a finisher who can beat a goaltender in a variety of ways, specifically in and around the low slot, and there are times when he’ll chip in down low and provide defensive coverage, albeit with less frequency than you’d like. It’s his ability to jump into gaps up ice and create numerical superiority that stands out — he doesn’t leach onto his puck carrier but doesn’t wander into an impossible passing option. Chekhovich, who can kill penalties and play the wall on the power play, can furnish a hard, accurate shot, especially off the pass with the man advantage.

C Alexei Lipanov (2017 Draft): Lipanov is an excellent skater who uses his speed to create a significant amount of separation between the defender and him. He consistently drives defenders backwards and forces them to play a sizeable gap, thus allowing his to use his deadly shot with impunity. Lipanov is difficult to waragme because he is as good a passer as he is a shooter, and his ability to create or finish plays while speeding up ice makes him a legitimate top-line threat with star potential. Lipanov is strong on the puck and uses solid lateral movement to maintain possession while maneuvering in any direction. He’s a finisher who takes direct routes to the net and is just as smart away from the puck as he is with it on his stick. Lipanov can be classified as a two-way forward because he plays on the penalty kill and can be entrusted with defensive-zone responsibilities, and although he should not be counted on to shadow or check a specific line or player, he has shown to be opportunistic and turn turnovers into scoring chances.

czech_republic_640

Czech Republic

LHD David Kvasnicka (2017 Draft): Mobile two-way defender who plays on the Czech top pairing and runs the power play but can be counted on for shutdown operations and penalty killing. Kvasnicka is a controlled puck mover who mskes the right play at the right time. He clearly was one if the top defenders in the tournament, not only for finishing among the scoring leaders but also for his consistency in successfulky transitioning from defense to offense. Kvasnicka can play physical and win one-on-one battles, but his ability to steal the puck and head up ice in a controlled yet aggressive manner is what makes him the top draft-eligible rearguard from the Czech Republic.

C Kristian Reichel (2017 Draft): Overage two-way pivot who was the Czech Republic’s most consistent forward. Reichel can be used and succeed in a variety of situations — special teams, checking assigments, shootouts, etc. The isn’t any recognizable pizzazz to his game, but he has a very good shot and can make plays off the ensuing cycle. Reichel is a solid 200-foot player with good speed and proper positioning, using his stick and footwork to cause havoc on the forecheck without the risk of losing his man up ice. He consistently shows good insticnts, and his offensive and defensive contributions while performing in the Czech senior league makes us think he will get a longer look on Draft Day than a year ago.

LW Tomas Vildumetz (2017 Draft): Lightning-quick waterbug who is always looking to create plays no matter where the puck is. Vildumetz is fast enough to quicken the pace of a game, sometimes all by himself. He’s pesky and can get under your skin, thus creating a problem for slower defenders who opt for the chance to take him out with a big hit, only to see him slither away and quickly return to full flight. He has trouble finishing plays and his shot is average at best, but his quickness and intensity make him a good depth option and possible penalty killer.

West

Canada West

RHD Cale Makar (2017 Draft): Explosive and dynamic offensive defenseman who can beat you with a variety of elite skills. Makar’s understanding of the game and his ability to read plays keeps him two and three steps ahead of opponents, who treat his puck handling as the most dangerous course of action. He is extremely fast — probably the fastest among his draft-eligible peers — and whips the puck from tape to tape with authority. Slight of frame, Makar is far from a defensive liability in one-on-one situations, as he uses a quick stick and phenominal footwork to maintain a tight gap. He is prone to underestimate the speed of an onrushing forward, but he’s fast enough to make a quick recovery if beaten to the outside. Makar own’;s an absolute howitzer for a shot and does not hesitate to use it. His wrist shot can beat golaies from as far out as the blue line and requires little backswing to get enough velocity to zip through collapsing shooting lanes. He has a feather-soft touch while running the point on the power play and will slip passes under sticks and through skates, albeit dangerously close to the opposing blue line. Makar has goal line-to-goal line range and there isn’t a spot on the ice he won’t assault with confidence. Naturally, it will require a heady partner and backchecking forwards to cover up the gaps his hyper-aggressiveness creates. But he’s capable of being a focal point on any offense, which is hard to find in a teenage defenseman.

C Jordan Kawaguchi (2017 Draft): This double-overage pivot with a commitment to North Dakota was Canada-West’s top scorer, accumulating nine points in four games (although seven in two matches against a porous Swiss defense). He’s a shifty playmaker and a very good skater who can change direction without leaking speed or puck control as he dances around traffic. He’s a finisher who can complete a play in a variety of ways, and his smallish stature (5’9, 181) doesn’t stop him from gaining a foothold in front of the net to bang away at rebounds or tip shots from the point. Kawaguchi has a very good wrist shot and his puck handling abilities allow him to maneuver into open shooting lanes between the circles. While we would classify him as a pass-first playmaker as a top-six center, his hands, shot and smarts help even out his goal to assist ratio. His faceoff skills are about average and he can kill penalties, but his specialty is manning the wall on the power play to either set up or fire away a cross-ice one-timer.

RHD Ian Mitchell (2017 Draft): Mature two-way blueliner who bolstered his reputation as one of Canada’s top U18 defenseman. Mitchell owns a hard shot and has very speed both front and back. He sees the ice like a veteran and keeps his mistakes limited to minor board battles and plays deep within the opposing zone. Mitchell is strong enough to pin and hold the bigger power forwards, a testament to his lower-body strength and leg drive. It wasn’t easy for a player like him to pair with a equally-adept defender like Cale Makar, but he played the role of safety net with aplomb and formed chemistry quickly with his dynamic partner. That doesn’t mean Mitchell is timid or risk averse — he’s more than capable of handling top-pair responsibilities, darting into open ice and running a power play just like he did for Team Canada at the Ivan Hlinka tournament.

Switzerland Flag

Switzerland

C Justin Sigrist (2017 Draft): Heady pivot with an excellent shot and release who makes a habit of getting open and finishing but can also set-up plays with quick, accurate passes. Sigrist isn’t big (5’9/146), but he has a firm grasp of play development and is an absolute shark on the forecheck. He has soft hands and quick feet, enabling him to not only pick off passes, but keep the puck on his stick almost immediately. Sigrist is effective at creating high-quality scoring opportunities for both himself and his linemates, and his aggressive pursuit of the puck draws opposing puck support away their posts. Sigrist is a top-end skater with above-average balance who plays with intensity and works hard from whistle to whistle. He likes to hold on to the puck, and his first-step quickness allows him to stop and start into open space inside the confines of a cramped offensive zone.

2017 U20 WJC Rosters

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2017 IIHF World Junior Championship Rosters

The 2017 IIHF World Junior Championship begins on 26 DEC 2016 from Toronto and Montreal. Ten countries split into two groups will compete in an inter-group round robin, with the top four from each group advancing to a single-game playoff round. The title game will be held on 05 JAN 2017. Below you will find final rosters for all 10 countries.

Finland Flag
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
30 Karolus Kaarlehto G L 9/1/97 6.1 165 TPS Turku Liiga 2015 FIN
1 Markus Ruusu G L 8/23/97 6’2 176 JYP Jyvaskyla Liiga DAL 6th/2015 FIN
31 Veini Vehvilainen G L 2/13/97 6’0 174 JYP Jyvaskyla Liiga 2015 FIN
2 Miro Heiskanen LHD L 7/18/99 6’0 174 IFK Helsinki Liiga 2017 FIN
7 Olli Juolevi LHD L 5/5/98 6’3 183 London OHL VAN 1st/2016 FIN
28 Jesper Mattila LHD L 10/9/97 5’9 183 Boston College HE 2016 FIN
6 Juho Rautanen LHD L 5/25/97 5’9 168 Jokerit Liiga 2015 FIN
18 Vili Saarijarvi RHD R 5/15/97 5’8 165 Mississauga OHL DET 3rd/2015 FIN
3 Urho Vaakanainen LHD L 1/1/99 6’1 188 JYP Jyvaskyla Liiga 2017 FIN
12 Juuso Valimaki LHD L 10/6/98 6’2 201 Tri-City WHL 2017 FIN
10 Kasper Bjorkqvist RW/LW L 7/10/97 6’1 198 Providence HE PIT 2nd/2016 FIN
13 Henrik Borgstrom C L 8/6/97 6’3 185 Denver NCHC FLA 1st/2016 FIN
35 Otto Koivula LW L 9/1/98 6’2 220 Ilves Tampere Liiga NYI 4th/2016 FIN
9 Janne Kuokkanen C/W L 5/25/98 6’1 187 London OHL CAR FIN
21 Joona Luoto LW L 9/26/97 6’1 185 Tappara Tampere Liiga 2016 FIN
20 Julius Mattila C L 10/9/97 5’9 170 Boston College HE 2016 FIN
25 Julius Nattinen C L 1/14/97 6’2 192 Windsor OHL ANA 2nd/2015 FIN
15 Petrus Palmu LW L 7/16/97 5’6 178 Owen Sound OHL 2015 FIN
22 Arttu Ruotsalainen C/W L 10/29/97 5’7 181 Assat Liiga 2016 FIN
32 Aapeli Rasanen C R 6/1/98 6’0 196 Sioux City USHL EDM 6th/2016 FIN
33 Eeli Tolvanen LW L 4/22/99 5’8 179 Sioux City USHL 2017 FIN
34 Kristian Vesalainen RW L 6/1/99 6’2 203 HPK Liiga 2017 FIN
27 Teemu Vayrynen LW L 4/28/97 5’9 172 TPS Turku Liiga 2015 FIN
russia_640
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
1 Anton Krasotkin G L 5/20/1997 5’10 179 Lokomotiv KHL 2015 RUS
30 Ilya Samsonov G L 2/22/1997 6’3 205 Magnitogorsk KHL WSH 1st/2015 RUS
20 Vlad. Sukhachyov G L 5/14/1998 5’9 181 Chelyabinsk MHL 2016 RUS
23 Grigori Dronov LHD L 1/10/1998 6’2 207 Magnitogorsk KHL 2016 RUS
2 Vadim Kudako LHD L 2/24/1997 6’1 179 Cherepovets KHL 2015 RUS
28 Yegor Rykov LHD L 4/14/1997 6’2 217 SKA KHL NJD 5th/2016 RUS
26 Mikhail Sergachyov LHD L 6/25/1998 6’2 216 Windsor OHL MTL 1st/2016 RUS
3 Mikhail Sidorov RHD R 6/25/1997 5’10 214 Kazan KHL 2015 RUS
29 Artyom Volkov LHD L 4/25/1997 6’1 183 Dynamo Moscow VHL 2015 RUS
15 Yegor Voronkov LHD L 1/23/1997 6’0 183 Vityaz KHL 2015 RUS
6 Sergei Zborovsky RHD R 2/21/1997 6’3 194 Regina WHL NYR 3rd/2015 RUS
21 Denis Alexeyev C R 10/1/1997 6’0 183 Lokomotiv KHL 2016 RUS
14 Kirill Belyayev RW L 7/18/1997 6’2 219 Yugra KHL 2015 RUS
27 Denis Guryanov RW L 6/7/1997 6’3 201 Texas AHL DAL 1st/2015 RUS
7 Kirill Kaprizov LW L 4/26/1997 5’9 192 Ufa KHL MIN 5th/2015 RUS
19 Pavel Karnaukhov W/C L 3/15/1997 6’3 205 CSKA Moscow KHL CGY 5th/2015 RUS
9 Danila Kvartalnov W/C L 7/7/1997 6’1 183 CSKA Moscow KHL 2015 RUS
10 Alexander Polunin LW R 5/25/1997 5’7 172 Lokomotiv KHL 2015 RUS
17 German Rubtsov C L 6/27/1998 6’0 190 Vityaz MHL PHI 1st/2016 RUS
25 Yakov Trenin C/LW L 1/13/1997 6’2 205 Gatineau QMJHL NSH 2nd/2015 RUS
8 Kirill Urakov F L 12/21/1997 5’11 164 Torpedo KHL 2016 RUS
24 Mikhail Vorobyov C L 1/5/1997 6’2 208 Ufa KHL PHI 4th/2015 RUS
22 Danil Yurtaikin LW R 7/1/1997 5’9 170 Loko Yaroslavl MHL 2015 RUS
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
1 Tyler Parsons G L 9/18/97 6’0 186 London OHL CGY 2ND/2016 USA
30 Jake Oettinger G L 12/18/98 6’4 210 Boston U. Hockey East 2017 USA
31 Joseph Woll G L 7/12/98 6’3 202 Boston Coll. Hockey East TOR 3rd/2016 USA
2 Ryan Lindgren LHD L 2/11/98 6’0 208 Minnesota Big-10 BOS 2nd/2016 USA
3 Jack Ahcan LHD L 5/18/97 5’7 184 St. Cloud St. NCHC 2015 USA
4 Caleb Jones LHD L 6/6/97 6’1 194 Portland WHL EDM 4th/2015 USA
6 Casey Fitzgerald RHD R 2/25/97 5’11 187 Boston Coll. Hockey East BUF 3rd/2016 USA
8 Adam Fox RHD R 2/17/98 5’10 187 Harvard ECAC CGY 3rd/2016 USA
25 Charlie McAvoy RHD R 12/21/97 6’0 206 Boston U. Hockey East BOS 1st/2016 USA
33 Joe Cecconi RHD R 5/23/97 6’2 222 Michigan Big-10 DAL 5th/2015 USA
9 Luke Kunin RW/C R 12/4/97 5’11 196 Wisconsin Big-10 MIN 1st/2016 USA
10 Tanner Laczynski C/RW R 6/1/97 6’0 191 Ohio State Big-10 PHI 6th/2016 USA
11 Patrick Harper C L 7/29/98 5’9 160 Boston U. Hockey East NSH 5th/2016 USA
12 Jordan Greenway LW L 2/16/97 6’5 230 Boston U. Hockey East MIN 2nd/2015 USA
13 Joey Anderson RW R 6/19/98 5’11 200 Minn-Duluth NCHC NJD 3rd/2016 USA
14 Erik Foley LW L 6/30/97 6’0 197 Providence Hockey East WPG 3rd/2015 USA
17 Jeremy Bracco RW R 3/17/97 5’10 180 Kitchener OHL TOR 2nd/2015 USA
18 Colin White C R 1/30/97 6’0 183 Boston Coll. Hockey East OTT 1st/2015 USA
19 Clayton Keller C L 7/29/98 5’10 172 Boston U. Hockey East ARI 1st/2016 USA
20 Troy Terry C R 9/10/97 6’0 166 Denver NCHC ANA 5th/2015 USA
23 Kieffer Bellows LW L 6/10/98 6’0 201 Boston U. Hockey East NYI 1st/2016 USA
28 Jack Roslovic C/RW R 1/29/97 6’1 191 Manitoba AHL WPG 1st/2015 USA
29 Tage Thompson RW R 10/30/97 6’5 200 Connecticut Hockey East STL 1st/2016 USA
Canada
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
9 Dillon Dubé C/LW L 7/20/1998 5’10 180 Kelowna WHL CGY 2nd/2016 CAN
11 Mathieu Joseph LW L 2/9/1997 6’1 171 Saint John QMJHL TB 4th/2015 CAN
12 Julien Gauthier RW R 10/15/1997 6’4 224 Val-d’Or QMJHL CAR 1st/2016 CAN
14 Mathew Barzal C R 5/26/1997 6’0 187 Seattle WHL NYI 1st/2015 CAN
15 Nicolas Roy C R 2/5/1997 6’4 202 Chicoutimi QMJHL CAR 4th/2015 CAN
16 Taylor Raddysh RW R 2/18/1998 6’2 209 Erie OHL TB 2nd/2016 CAN
17 Tyson Jost C L 3/17/1998 6’0 190 North Dakota NCHC COL 1st/2016 CAN
18 Pierre-Luc Dubois C/W L 6/24/1998 6’3 202 Cape Breton QMJHL CBJ 1st/2016 CAN
19 Dylan Strome C L 3/7/1997 6’3 194 Erie OHL ARI 1st/2015 CAN
20 Michael McLeod C R 2/3/1998 6’2 187 Mississauga OHL NJD 1st/2016 CAN
21 Blake Speers RW R 1/2/1997 6’0 184 Sault Ste. Marie OHL NJD 3rd/2015 CAN
22 Anthony Cirelli C L 7/15/1997 6’0 165 Oshawa OHL TB 3rd/2015 CAN
27 Mitchell Stephens RW R 2/5/1997 6’0 195 Saginaw OHL TB 2nd/2015 CAN
2 Jake Bean LHD L 6/9/1998 6’1 170 Calgary WHL CAR 1st/2016 CAN
3 Noah Juulsen RHD R 4/2/1997 6’2 185 Everett WHL MTL 1st/2015 CAN
5 Thomas Chabot LHD L 1/30/1997 6’2 188 Saint John QMJHL OTT 1st/2015 CAN
6 Philippe Myers RHD R 1/25/1997 6’4 206 Rouyn-Noranda QMJHL PHI (UDFA) CAN
8 Dante Fabbro RHD R 6/20/1998 6’1 190 Boston Univ. HE NSH 1st/2016 CAN
10 Kale Clague LHD L 6/5/1998 6’0 177 Brandon WHL LAK 2nd/2016 CAN
15 Jérémy Lauzon LHD L 4/28/1997 6’2 207 Rouyn-Noranda QMJHL BOS 2nd/2015 CAN
1 Connor Ingram G R 3/31/1997 6’1 195 Kamloops WHL TB 3rd/2016 CAN
31 Carter Hart G L 8/13/1998 6’1 170 Everett WHL PHI 2nd/2016 CAN
Sweden
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
30 Filip Gustavsson G L 6/7/1998 6’2 186 Lulea SHL PIT 2nd/2016 SWE
1 Felix Sandström G L 1/12/1997 6’2 195 Brynas SHL PHI 3rd/2015 SWE
35 Adam Werner G L 5/2/1997 6’4 199 Bjrokloven Allsvenskan COL 5th/2016 SWE
5 David Bernhardt LHD L 12/1/1997 6’3 203 Djugardens SHL PHI 7th/2016 SWE
9 Gabriel Carlsson LHD L 1/2/1997 6’3 183 Linkoping SHL CBJ 1st/2015 SWE
23 Lucas Carlsson LHD L 7/5/1997 6’0 190 Brynas SHL CHI 4th/2016 SWE
8 Rasmus Dahlin LHD L 4/13/2000 6’1 165 Frolunda J20 SuperElit 2018 SWE
6 Kristoffer Gunnarsson LHD L 2/26/1997 6’1 198 Oskarshamn Allsvenskan 2015 SWE
7 Oliver Kylington LHD L 5/19/1997 6’0 183 Stockton AHL CGY 2nd/2015 SWE
4 Jacob Larsson LHD L 4/29/1997 6’2 192 Frolunda SHL ANA 1st/2015 SWE
11 Filip Ahl LW/RW L 6/12/1997 6’3 211 Regina WHL OTT 4th/2015 SWE
15 Lias Andersson C/LW L 10/13/1998 5’10 198 HV71 SHL 2017 SWE
18 Rasmus Asplund C/LW L 12/3/1997 5’10 177 Farjestad SHL BUF 2nd/2016 SWE
27 Jonathan Dahlén LW L 12/20/1997 5’10 177 Timra Allsvenskan OTT 2nd/2016 SWE
20 Joel Eriksson Ek C/LW L 1/29/1997 6’2 198 Minnesota NHL MIN 1st/2015 SWE
16 Carl Grundström LW L 12/1/1997 6’0 194 Frolunda SHL TOR 2nd/2016 SWE
17 Fredrik Karlström C L 1/12/1998 6’2 185 AIK Allsvenskan DAL 3rd/2016 SWE
24 Jens Lööke RW/LW R 4/11/1997 6’0 181 Timra Allsvenskan ARI 2nd/2015 SWE
19 Alexander Nylander RW/LW R 3/2/1998 6’1 181 Rochester AHL BUF 1st/2016 CAN
25 Sebastian Olsson LW/RW L 3/4/1997 5’8 177 Skelleftea SHL 2015 SWE
14 Elias Pettersson C/LW L 11/12/1998 6’2 161 Timra Allsvenskan 2017 SWE
29 Tim Söderlund C/LW L 1/23/1998 5’8 163 Skelleftea SHL 2016 SWE
8 Andreas Wingerli W/C L 9/11/1997 5’7 163 Skelleftea SHL 2015 SWE
czech_republic_640
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
2 Jakub Skarek G L 11/10/99 6’1 165 Sparta Praha Extraliga 2018 CZE
30 Daniel Vladar G L 8/20/97 6’4 185 Providence AHL BOS 3rd/2015 CZE
12 Frantisek Hrdinka LHD L 3/2/98 6’0 187 Linkoping J20 SuperElit 2016 CZE
29 Filip Hronek RHD R 11/2/97 6’0 170 Saginaw OHL DET 2nd/2016 CZE
28 Petr Kalina LHD L 7/9/97 5’10 159 Sparta Praha Extraliga 2015 CZE
3 Daniel Krenzelok LHD L 7/29/97 6’3 183 Vitkovice Extraliga 2015 CZE
6 Ondrej Vala LHD L 4/13/98 6’4 210 Kamloops WHL 2016 (DAL-FA) CZE
20 Jakub Zboril LHD L 2/21/97 6’0 201 Saint John QMJHL BOS 1st/2015 CZE
14 Filip Chlapík C L 6/3/97 6’1 196 Charlottetown QMJHL OTT 2nd/2015 CZE
27 Jan Dufek RW L 2/20/97 5’9 183 Litvinov ELJ U20 2015 CZE
17 Lukas Jasek RW R 8/28/97 5’9 165 Trinec Extraliga VAN 6th/2015 CZE
21 Radek Koblizek RW/LW R 10/20/97 5’7 161 Karpat U20 Liiga Jrs 2016 CZE
9 *Dominik Lakatos C/LW L 4/8/97 5’9 179 Liberec Extraliga 2015 CZE
26 Adam Musil C R 3/26/97 6’3 203 Red Deer WHL STL 4th/2015 CAN
8 Martin Necas C R 1/15/99 5’9 148 Brno Extraliga 2017 CZE
15 Tomas Soustal C R 2/15/97 6’2 199 Kelowna WHL 2015 CZE
18 Michael Spacek C/RW R 4/9/97 5’9 187 Red Deer WHL WPG 4th/2015 CZE
23 Simon Stransky LW L 12/21/97 6’0 181 Prince Albert WHL 2016 CZE
24 Filip Suchý C L 12/16/97 5’7 168 Omaha USHL 2016 CZE
7 David Kvasnicka LHD L 4/14/99 5’10 174 HC Plzen 1929 ELJ 2017 CZE
Slovakia
NO NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
1 Roman Durny G R 28-May-98 6’2 205 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2016 SVK
2 Matej Tomek G L 24-May-97 6’3 161 North Dakota NCHC PHI 3rd/2015 SVK
3 Martin Bodak RHD R 28-Nov-98 5’11 194 Tappara U20 Liiga Jrs 2017 SVK
4 Oliver Kosecky RHD R 25-Feb-97 6’0 181 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2015 SVK
5 Michal Roman LHD L 15-Dec-97 6’1 170 Trinec Extraliga 2016 SVK
6 Martin Fehervary LHD L 6-Oct-99 5’11 168 Malmo J20 Superelit 2018 SVK
7 Samuel Hain RHD R 3-Apr-97 6’0 187 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2015 SVK
8 Marek Hecl RW L 30-Dec-97 5’9 163 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2016 SVK
11 Radovan Bondra RW L 27-Jan-97 6’5 207 Vancouver WHL CHI 5th/2015 SVK
12 Marian Studenic RW R 28-Oct-98 6’0 165 Hamilton OHL 2017 SVK
14 Erik Cernak RHD R 28-May-97 6’4 203 Erie OHL LA 2nd/2015 SVK
15 Marek Sloboda LW L 1-Nov-97 6’0 181 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2016 SVK
16 Andrej Hatala RHD R 26-Feb-97 5’11 187 Dukla Trencin SVK Extraliga 2015 SVK
17 Mario Grman RHD R 11-Apr-97 6’1 198 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2015 SVK
18 Boris Sadecky C L 20-Apr-97 6’0 185 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2015 SVK
20 Adam Ruzicka C L 11-May-99 6’4 209 Sarnia OHL 2017 SVK
22 Oliver Pataky RW L 26-Apr-97 5’9 165 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2015 SVK
23 Martin Andrisik LW L 24-Jan-97 6’2 205 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2015 SVK
25 Miroslav Struska LW L 4-Jan-97 6’1 176 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2015 SVK
26 Milos Roman C L 6-Nov-99 5’11 194 Trinec U20 ELJ 2018 SVK
27 Filip Lestan LW L 26-Nov-97 6’4 187 HV71 J20 Superelit 2016 SVK
29 Patrik Osko C L 9-Jan-97 6’3 187 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2015 SVK
30 Adam Huska G L 12-May-97 6’3 190 UConn HE NYR 7th/2015 SVK
Switzerland Flag
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
1 Matteo Ritz G L 3/24/98 6’3 198 Lausanne NLA 2016 SUI
2 Yanik Burren RHD R 1/28/97 5’11 176 Visp NLB 2015 SUI
3 Tobias Geisser LHD L 2/13/99 6’4 201 Zug NLA 2017 SUI
4 Roger Karrer RHD R 1/21/97 5’11 181 ZSC NLA 2015 SUI
5 Livio Stadler LHD L 3/26/98 6’0 176 Lulea SHL 2016 SUI
7 Nico Gross LHD L 1/26/00 6’0 181 Zug SUI U20 2018 SUI
8 Jerome Portmann LW L 1/24/97 6’0 181 Davos NLA 2015 SUI
9 Damien Riat C R 2/26/97 6’0 172 Geneve NLA WSH 4th/2016 SUI
10 Serge Weber LHD L 5/29/97 5’9 143 Kloten NLA 2015 SUI
12 Calvin Thürkauf C L 6/27/97 6’2 203 Kelowna WHL CBJ 7th/2016 SUI
16 Loic In-Albon C L 8/6/97 6’0 165 Lausanne SUI U20 2015 SUI
21 Fabian Haberstich LW L 1/7/97 6’0 216 EVZ NLB 2015 SUI
22 Nando Eggenberger LW L 10/7/99 6’2 185 Davos NLA 2018 SUI
23 Dominik Diem C L 1/25/97 5’11 165 ZSC NLA 2016 SUI
24 Colin Gerber LHD L 3/14/98 6’3 187 Lagenthal NLB 2016 SUI
25 Jonas Siegenthaler LHD L 5/6/97 6’2 218 ZSC NLA WSH 2nd/2015 SUI
29 Philip Wüthrich G L 1/17/98 6’0 168 Bern SUI U20 2016 SUI
30 Joren van Pottelberghe G L 6/5/97 6’2 181 Davos NLA DET 4th/2015 SUI
11 Marco Miranda C/W L 6/2/98 6’2 196 Küsnacht NLB 2016 SUI
15 Nathan Marchon C/W L 2/17/97 5’9 168 Gottéron SUI U20 2015 SUI
17 Raphael Prassl C/RW L 11/23/97 6’0 176 Küsnacht NLB 2016 SUI
18 Nico Hischier C L 1/4/99 6’0 172 Halifax QMJHL 2017 SUI
19 Yannick Zehnder C L 12/29/97 5’11 181 EVZ NLB 2016 SUI
20 Philipp Kurashev LW/C L 10/12/99 6’0 183 Quebec QMJHL 2018 SUI
26 Timo Haussener C/RW L 4/9/97 6’4 183 EVZ NLB 2015 SUI
denmark
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
1 Emil Gransoe G L 9/27/98 6’0 172 Topeka NAHL 2017 DEN
2 Oilver Larsen RHD R 12/25/98 6’3 207 Odense Metal Ligaen 2017 DEN
3 Anders Koch LHD L 10/2/97 6’2 183 Esbjerg Metal Ligaen 2016 DEN
5 Oliver Gatz LHD L 10/6/98 6’1 203 Herning Metal Ligaen 2017 DEN
7 Mathias Røndbjerg LHD L 1/21/97 6’1 194 Rungsted Metal Ligaen 2015 DEN
8 Nicolai Weichel LHD L 11/6/97 6’1 198 Rungsted Metal Ligaen 2016 DEN
9 Jeppe Jul Korsgaard LW L 10/6/97 5’11 188 Aalborg Metal Ligaen 2016 DEN
10 Rasmus Andersson C/W R 6/1/97 5’11 176 HV71 SHL 2015 DEN
11 Joachin Blichfeld RW R 7/17/98 6’2 181 Portland WHL STL 7th/2016 DEN
12 Christian Mieritz LHD L 9/30/97 6’1 204 Leksands J20 Superelit 2016 DEN
13 C. Mathiasen-Wejse C L 12/4/98 6’1 198 BBA QMJHL 2017 DEN
14 Niklas Andersen LW L 11/20/97 5’11 185 Esbjerg Metal Ligaen STL 7th/2016 DEN
15 Morten Jensen LHD L 3/1/97 6’0 181 Rogle SHL 2015 DEN
16 Jonas Røndbjerg RW L 3/31/99 6’0 176 Vaxjo J20 Superelit 2017 DEN
18 William Boysen LW R 5/25/97 6’1 173 Rungsted Metal Ligaen 2015 DEN
19 Nikolaj Krag C L 8/12/98 6’2 194 Rogle SHL 2016 DEN
21 Tobias Ladehoff C/LW L 9/30/97 5’10 163 Aalborg Metal Ligaen 2016 DEN
22 Frederik Høeg C R 7/24/97 5’10 176 Odense Metal Ligaen 2015 DEN
23 David Madsen RW R 1/25/99 6’0 194 Vaxjo J20 Superelit 2017 DEN
27 Alexander True C L 7/17/97 6’5 198 Seattle WHL 2015 DEN
30 Lasse Munk Petersen G L 7/5/97 6’2 176 Red Deer WHL 2015 DEN
31 Kasper Krog G L 6/26/98 5’9 176 SønderjyskE Metal Ligaen 2016 DEN
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
1 Denijs Romanovskis G L 2/24/97 5’10 165 SK Riga LAT U18 2015 LAT
3 Eduards Jansons LHD L 9/7/97 6’3 187 Zemgale Latvia 2015 LAT
4 Gvido Jansons LHD L 1/9/97 6’4 209 Aston NAHL 2015 LAT
5 Kristians Rubins LHD L 12/11/97 6’4 216 Medicine Hat WHL 2016 LAT
6 Eduards Tralmaks C/LW L 2/17/97 6’3 187 Chicago USHL 2015 LAT
7 Maksims Ponomarenko LHD L 4/23/97 6’2 205 Lorenskog Metal Laegen 2015 LAT
8 Kristaps Zile LHD L 12/24/97 6’1 174 Dynamo Riga KHL 2016 LAT
9 Rihards Puide LW L 1/10/97 5’11 172 Küsnacht SUI U20 2015 LAT
10 Martins Dzierkals LW/RW L 4/4/97 6’0 170 Rouyn-Noranda QMJHL TOR 3rd/2015 LAT
11 Renars Krastenbergs W L 12/16/98 6’0 176 Oshawa OHL 2017 LAT
12 Erlends Klavins C L 2/8/98 6’2 181 Omaha USHL 2016 LAT
14 Roberts Baranovskis RW L 8/27/97 5’11 170 HK Riga MHL 2015 LAT
15 Tomass Zeile LHD L 1/26/98 5’11 176 Shreveport NAHL 2016 LAT
16 Valters Apfelbaums W L 12/26/98 6’0 159 Prizma Riga LAT U20 2017 LAT
17 Roberts Blugers LW/RW L 8/3/98 6’3 186 Fairbanks NAHL 2016 LAT
18 Ricards Bernhards RW R 4/18/97 6’4 176 Springfield NAHL 2015 LAT
21 Rudolfs Balcers LW R 4/8/97 5’11 165 Kamloops WHL SJS 5th/2015 LAT
22 Filips Buncis C L 6/12/97 6’3 205 Johnstown NAHL 2015 LAT
23 Karlis Cukste LHD L 6/17/97 6’2 216 Quinnipiac ECAC SJS 5th/2015 LAT
24 Deniss Smirnovs C L 3/7/99 5’9 146 Geneva SUI U20 2017 LAT
29 Gustavs Grigals G L 7/22/98 6’0 183 HK Riga MHL 2016 LAT
30 Mareks Mitens G L 1-29-98 6’1 176 Aston NAHL 2016 LAT
34 Rimants Zeilis LHD L 7/30/97 6’4 190 HK Riga MHL 2015 LAT

2017 U20 WJC Rosters

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2017 IIHF World Junior Championship Rosters

The 2017 IIHF World Junior Championship begins on 26 DEC 2016 from Toronto and Montreal. Ten countries split into two groups will compete in an inter-group round robin, with the top four from each group advancing to a single-game playoff round. The title game will be held on 05 JAN 2017. Below you will find final rosters for all 10 countries.

Finland Flag
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
30 Karolus Kaarlehto G L 9/1/97 6.1 165 TPS Turku Liiga 2015 FIN
1 Markus Ruusu G L 8/23/97 6’2 176 JYP Jyvaskyla Liiga DAL 6th/2015 FIN
31 Veini Vehvilainen G L 2/13/97 6’0 174 JYP Jyvaskyla Liiga 2015 FIN
2 Miro Heiskanen LHD L 7/18/99 6’0 174 IFK Helsinki Liiga 2017 FIN
7 Olli Juolevi LHD L 5/5/98 6’3 183 London OHL VAN 1st/2016 FIN
28 Jesper Mattila LHD L 10/9/97 5’9 183 Boston College HE 2016 FIN
6 Juho Rautanen LHD L 5/25/97 5’9 168 Jokerit Liiga 2015 FIN
18 Vili Saarijarvi RHD R 5/15/97 5’8 165 Mississauga OHL DET 3rd/2015 FIN
3 Urho Vaakanainen LHD L 1/1/99 6’1 188 JYP Jyvaskyla Liiga 2017 FIN
12 Juuso Valimaki LHD L 10/6/98 6’2 201 Tri-City WHL 2017 FIN
10 Kasper Bjorkqvist RW/LW L 7/10/97 6’1 198 Providence HE PIT 2nd/2016 FIN
13 Henrik Borgstrom C L 8/6/97 6’3 185 Denver NCHC FLA 1st/2016 FIN
35 Otto Koivula LW L 9/1/98 6’2 220 Ilves Tampere Liiga NYI 4th/2016 FIN
9 Janne Kuokkanen C/W L 5/25/98 6’1 187 London OHL CAR FIN
21 Joona Luoto LW L 9/26/97 6’1 185 Tappara Tampere Liiga 2016 FIN
20 Julius Mattila C L 10/9/97 5’9 170 Boston College HE 2016 FIN
25 Julius Nattinen C L 1/14/97 6’2 192 Windsor OHL ANA 2nd/2015 FIN
15 Petrus Palmu LW L 7/16/97 5’6 178 Owen Sound OHL 2015 FIN
22 Arttu Ruotsalainen C/W L 10/29/97 5’7 181 Assat Liiga 2016 FIN
32 Aapeli Rasanen C R 6/1/98 6’0 196 Sioux City USHL EDM 6th/2016 FIN
33 Eeli Tolvanen LW L 4/22/99 5’8 179 Sioux City USHL 2017 FIN
34 Kristian Vesalainen RW L 6/1/99 6’2 203 HPK Liiga 2017 FIN
27 Teemu Vayrynen LW L 4/28/97 5’9 172 TPS Turku Liiga 2015 FIN
russia_640
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
1 Anton Krasotkin G L 5/20/1997 5’10 179 Lokomotiv KHL 2015 RUS
30 Ilya Samsonov G L 2/22/1997 6’3 205 Magnitogorsk KHL WSH 1st/2015 RUS
20 Vlad. Sukhachyov G L 5/14/1998 5’9 181 Chelyabinsk MHL 2016 RUS
23 Grigori Dronov LHD L 1/10/1998 6’2 207 Magnitogorsk KHL 2016 RUS
2 Vadim Kudako LHD L 2/24/1997 6’1 179 Cherepovets KHL 2015 RUS
28 Yegor Rykov LHD L 4/14/1997 6’2 217 SKA KHL NJD 5th/2016 RUS
26 Mikhail Sergachyov LHD L 6/25/1998 6’2 216 Windsor OHL MTL 1st/2016 RUS
3 Mikhail Sidorov RHD R 6/25/1997 5’10 214 Kazan KHL 2015 RUS
29 Artyom Volkov LHD L 4/25/1997 6’1 183 Dynamo Moscow VHL 2015 RUS
15 Yegor Voronkov LHD L 1/23/1997 6’0 183 Vityaz KHL 2015 RUS
6 Sergei Zborovsky RHD R 2/21/1997 6’3 194 Regina WHL NYR 3rd/2015 RUS
21 Denis Alexeyev C R 10/1/1997 6’0 183 Lokomotiv KHL 2016 RUS
14 Kirill Belyayev RW L 7/18/1997 6’2 219 Yugra KHL 2015 RUS
27 Denis Guryanov RW L 6/7/1997 6’3 201 Texas AHL DAL 1st/2015 RUS
7 Kirill Kaprizov LW L 4/26/1997 5’9 192 Ufa KHL MIN 5th/2015 RUS
19 Pavel Karnaukhov W/C L 3/15/1997 6’3 205 CSKA Moscow KHL CGY 5th/2015 RUS
9 Danila Kvartalnov W/C L 7/7/1997 6’1 183 CSKA Moscow KHL 2015 RUS
10 Alexander Polunin LW R 5/25/1997 5’7 172 Lokomotiv KHL 2015 RUS
17 German Rubtsov C L 6/27/1998 6’0 190 Vityaz MHL PHI 1st/2016 RUS
25 Yakov Trenin C/LW L 1/13/1997 6’2 205 Gatineau QMJHL NSH 2nd/2015 RUS
8 Kirill Urakov F L 12/21/1997 5’11 164 Torpedo KHL 2016 RUS
24 Mikhail Vorobyov C L 1/5/1997 6’2 208 Ufa KHL PHI 4th/2015 RUS
22 Danil Yurtaikin LW R 7/1/1997 5’9 170 Loko Yaroslavl MHL 2015 RUS
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
1 Tyler Parsons G L 9/18/97 6’0 186 London OHL CGY 2ND/2016 USA
30 Jake Oettinger G L 12/18/98 6’4 210 Boston U. Hockey East 2017 USA
31 Joseph Woll G L 7/12/98 6’3 202 Boston Coll. Hockey East TOR 3rd/2016 USA
2 Ryan Lindgren LHD L 2/11/98 6’0 208 Minnesota Big-10 BOS 2nd/2016 USA
3 Jack Ahcan LHD L 5/18/97 5’7 184 St. Cloud St. NCHC 2015 USA
4 Caleb Jones LHD L 6/6/97 6’1 194 Portland WHL EDM 4th/2015 USA
6 Casey Fitzgerald RHD R 2/25/97 5’11 187 Boston Coll. Hockey East BUF 3rd/2016 USA
8 Adam Fox RHD R 2/17/98 5’10 187 Harvard ECAC CGY 3rd/2016 USA
25 Charlie McAvoy RHD R 12/21/97 6’0 206 Boston U. Hockey East BOS 1st/2016 USA
33 Joe Cecconi RHD R 5/23/97 6’2 222 Michigan Big-10 DAL 5th/2015 USA
9 Luke Kunin RW/C R 12/4/97 5’11 196 Wisconsin Big-10 MIN 1st/2016 USA
10 Tanner Laczynski C/RW R 6/1/97 6’0 191 Ohio State Big-10 PHI 6th/2016 USA
11 Patrick Harper C L 7/29/98 5’9 160 Boston U. Hockey East NSH 5th/2016 USA
12 Jordan Greenway LW L 2/16/97 6’5 230 Boston U. Hockey East MIN 2nd/2015 USA
13 Joey Anderson RW R 6/19/98 5’11 200 Minn-Duluth NCHC NJD 3rd/2016 USA
14 Erik Foley LW L 6/30/97 6’0 197 Providence Hockey East WPG 3rd/2015 USA
17 Jeremy Bracco RW R 3/17/97 5’10 180 Kitchener OHL TOR 2nd/2015 USA
18 Colin White C R 1/30/97 6’0 183 Boston Coll. Hockey East OTT 1st/2015 USA
19 Clayton Keller C L 7/29/98 5’10 172 Boston U. Hockey East ARI 1st/2016 USA
20 Troy Terry C R 9/10/97 6’0 166 Denver NCHC ANA 5th/2015 USA
23 Kieffer Bellows LW L 6/10/98 6’0 201 Boston U. Hockey East NYI 1st/2016 USA
28 Jack Roslovic C/RW R 1/29/97 6’1 191 Manitoba AHL WPG 1st/2015 USA
29 Tage Thompson RW R 10/30/97 6’5 200 Connecticut Hockey East STL 1st/2016 USA
Canada
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
9 Dillon Dubé C/LW L 7/20/1998 5’10 180 Kelowna WHL CGY 2nd/2016 CAN
11 Mathieu Joseph LW L 2/9/1997 6’1 171 Saint John QMJHL TB 4th/2015 CAN
12 Julien Gauthier RW R 10/15/1997 6’4 224 Val-d’Or QMJHL CAR 1st/2016 CAN
14 Mathew Barzal C R 5/26/1997 6’0 187 Seattle WHL NYI 1st/2015 CAN
15 Nicolas Roy C R 2/5/1997 6’4 202 Chicoutimi QMJHL CAR 4th/2015 CAN
16 Taylor Raddysh RW R 2/18/1998 6’2 209 Erie OHL TB 2nd/2016 CAN
17 Tyson Jost C L 3/17/1998 6’0 190 North Dakota NCHC COL 1st/2016 CAN
18 Pierre-Luc Dubois C/W L 6/24/1998 6’3 202 Cape Breton QMJHL CBJ 1st/2016 CAN
19 Dylan Strome C L 3/7/1997 6’3 194 Erie OHL ARI 1st/2015 CAN
20 Michael McLeod C R 2/3/1998 6’2 187 Mississauga OHL NJD 1st/2016 CAN
21 Blake Speers RW R 1/2/1997 6’0 184 Sault Ste. Marie OHL NJD 3rd/2015 CAN
22 Anthony Cirelli C L 7/15/1997 6’0 165 Oshawa OHL TB 3rd/2015 CAN
27 Mitchell Stephens RW R 2/5/1997 6’0 195 Saginaw OHL TB 2nd/2015 CAN
2 Jake Bean LHD L 6/9/1998 6’1 170 Calgary WHL CAR 1st/2016 CAN
3 Noah Juulsen RHD R 4/2/1997 6’2 185 Everett WHL MTL 1st/2015 CAN
5 Thomas Chabot LHD L 1/30/1997 6’2 188 Saint John QMJHL OTT 1st/2015 CAN
6 Philippe Myers RHD R 1/25/1997 6’4 206 Rouyn-Noranda QMJHL PHI (UDFA) CAN
8 Dante Fabbro RHD R 6/20/1998 6’1 190 Boston Univ. HE NSH 1st/2016 CAN
10 Kale Clague LHD L 6/5/1998 6’0 177 Brandon WHL LAK 2nd/2016 CAN
15 Jérémy Lauzon LHD L 4/28/1997 6’2 207 Rouyn-Noranda QMJHL BOS 2nd/2015 CAN
1 Connor Ingram G R 3/31/1997 6’1 195 Kamloops WHL TB 3rd/2016 CAN
31 Carter Hart G L 8/13/1998 6’1 170 Everett WHL PHI 2nd/2016 CAN
Sweden
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
30 Filip Gustavsson G L 6/7/1998 6’2 186 Lulea SHL PIT 2nd/2016 SWE
1 Felix Sandström G L 1/12/1997 6’2 195 Brynas SHL PHI 3rd/2015 SWE
35 Adam Werner G L 5/2/1997 6’4 199 Bjrokloven Allsvenskan COL 5th/2016 SWE
5 David Bernhardt LHD L 12/1/1997 6’3 203 Djugardens SHL PHI 7th/2016 SWE
9 Gabriel Carlsson LHD L 1/2/1997 6’3 183 Linkoping SHL CBJ 1st/2015 SWE
23 Lucas Carlsson LHD L 7/5/1997 6’0 190 Brynas SHL CHI 4th/2016 SWE
8 Rasmus Dahlin LHD L 4/13/2000 6’1 165 Frolunda J20 SuperElit 2018 SWE
6 Kristoffer Gunnarsson LHD L 2/26/1997 6’1 198 Oskarshamn Allsvenskan 2015 SWE
7 Oliver Kylington LHD L 5/19/1997 6’0 183 Stockton AHL CGY 2nd/2015 SWE
4 Jacob Larsson LHD L 4/29/1997 6’2 192 Frolunda SHL ANA 1st/2015 SWE
11 Filip Ahl LW/RW L 6/12/1997 6’3 211 Regina WHL OTT 4th/2015 SWE
15 Lias Andersson C/LW L 10/13/1998 5’10 198 HV71 SHL 2017 SWE
18 Rasmus Asplund C/LW L 12/3/1997 5’10 177 Farjestad SHL BUF 2nd/2016 SWE
27 Jonathan Dahlén LW L 12/20/1997 5’10 177 Timra Allsvenskan OTT 2nd/2016 SWE
20 Joel Eriksson Ek C/LW L 1/29/1997 6’2 198 Minnesota NHL MIN 1st/2015 SWE
16 Carl Grundström LW L 12/1/1997 6’0 194 Frolunda SHL TOR 2nd/2016 SWE
17 Fredrik Karlström C L 1/12/1998 6’2 185 AIK Allsvenskan DAL 3rd/2016 SWE
24 Jens Lööke RW/LW R 4/11/1997 6’0 181 Timra Allsvenskan ARI 2nd/2015 SWE
19 Alexander Nylander RW/LW R 3/2/1998 6’1 181 Rochester AHL BUF 1st/2016 CAN
25 Sebastian Olsson LW/RW L 3/4/1997 5’8 177 Skelleftea SHL 2015 SWE
14 Elias Pettersson C/LW L 11/12/1998 6’2 161 Timra Allsvenskan 2017 SWE
29 Tim Söderlund C/LW L 1/23/1998 5’8 163 Skelleftea SHL 2016 SWE
8 Andreas Wingerli W/C L 9/11/1997 5’7 163 Skelleftea SHL 2015 SWE
czech_republic_640
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
2 Jakub Skarek G L 11/10/99 6’1 165 Sparta Praha Extraliga 2018 CZE
30 Daniel Vladar G L 8/20/97 6’4 185 Providence AHL BOS 3rd/2015 CZE
19 Vojtech Budik LHD L 1/29/98 6’2 195 Prince Albert WHL BUF 5th/2015 CZE
12 Frantisek Hrdinka LHD L 3/2/98 6’0 187 Linkoping J20 SuperElit 2016 CZE
29 Filip Hronek RHD R 11/2/97 6’0 170 Saginaw OHL DET 2nd/2016 CZE
28 Petr Kalina LHD L 7/9/97 5’10 159 Sparta Praha Extraliga 2015 CZE
3 Daniel Krenzelok LHD L 7/29/97 6’3 183 Vitkovice Extraliga 2015 CZE
6 Ondrej Vala LHD L 4/13/98 6’4 210 Kamloops WHL 2016 (DAL-FA) CZE
20 Jakub Zboril LHD L 2/21/97 6’0 201 Saint John QMJHL BOS 1st/2015 CZE
14 Filip Chlapík C L 6/3/97 6’1 196 Charlottetown QMJHL OTT 2nd/2015 CZE
27 Jan Dufek RW L 2/20/97 5’9 183 Litvinov ELJ U20 2015 CZE
17 Lukas Jasek RW R 8/28/97 5’9 165 Trinec Extraliga VAN 6th/2015 CZE
21 Radek Koblizek RW/LW R 10/20/97 5’7 161 Karpat U20 Liiga Jrs 2016 CZE
9 Dominik Lakatos C/LW L 4/8/97 5’9 179 Liberec Extraliga 2015 CZE
26 Adam Musil C R 3/26/97 6’3 203 Red Deer WHL STL 4th/2015 CAN
8 Martin Necas C R 1/15/99 5’9 148 Brno Extraliga 2017 CZE
15 Tomas Soustal C R 2/15/97 6’2 199 Kelowna WHL 2015 CZE
18 Michael Spacek C/RW R 4/9/97 5’9 187 Red Deer WHL WPG 4th/2015 CZE
23 Simon Stransky LW L 12/21/97 6’0 181 Prince Albert WHL 2016 CZE
24 Filip Suchý C L 12/16/97 5’7 168 Omaha USHL 2016 CZE
Slovakia
NO NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
1 Roman Durny G R 28-May-98 6’2 205 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2016 SVK
2 Matej Tomek G L 24-May-97 6’3 161 North Dakota NCHC PHI 3rd/2015 SVK
3 Martin Bodak RHD R 28-Nov-98 5’11 194 Tappara U20 Liiga Jrs 2017 SVK
4 Oliver Kosecky RHD R 25-Feb-97 6’0 181 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2015 SVK
5 Michal Roman LHD L 15-Dec-97 6’1 170 Trinec Extraliga 2016 SVK
6 Martin Fehervary LHD L 6-Oct-99 5’11 168 Malmo J20 Superelit 2018 SVK
7 Samuel Hain RHD R 3-Apr-97 6’0 187 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2015 SVK
8 Marek Hecl RW L 30-Dec-97 5’9 163 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2016 SVK
11 Radovan Bondra RW L 27-Jan-97 6’5 207 Vancouver WHL CHI 5th/2015 SVK
12 Marian Studenic RW R 28-Oct-98 6’0 165 Hamilton OHL 2017 SVK
14 Erik Cernak RHD R 28-May-97 6’4 203 Erie OHL LA 2nd/2015 SVK
15 Marek Sloboda LW L 1-Nov-97 6’0 181 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2016 SVK
16 Andrej Hatala RHD R 26-Feb-97 5’11 187 Dukla Trencin SVK Extraliga 2015 SVK
17 Mario Grman RHD R 11-Apr-97 6’1 198 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2015 SVK
18 Boris Sadecky C L 20-Apr-97 6’0 185 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2015 SVK
20 Adam Ruzicka C L 11-May-99 6’4 209 Sarnia OHL 2017 SVK
22 Oliver Pataky RW L 26-Apr-97 5’9 165 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2015 SVK
23 Martin Andrisik LW L 24-Jan-97 6’2 205 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2015 SVK
25 Miroslav Struska LW L 4-Jan-97 6’1 176 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2015 SVK
26 Milos Roman C L 6-Nov-99 5’11 194 Trinec U20 ELJ 2018 SVK
27 Filip Lestan LW L 26-Nov-97 6’4 187 HV71 J20 Superelit 2016 SVK
29 Patrik Osko C L 9-Jan-97 6’3 187 Orange 20 Bratislava SVK Extraliga 2015 SVK
30 Adam Huska G L 12-May-97 6’3 190 UConn HE NYR 7th/2015 SVK
Switzerland Flag
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
1 Matteo Ritz G L 3/24/98 6’3 198 Lausanne NLA 2016 SUI
2 Yanik Burren RHD R 1/28/97 5’11 176 Visp NLB 2015 SUI
3 Tobias Geisser LHD L 2/13/99 6’4 201 Zug NLA 2017 SUI
4 Roger Karrer RHD R 1/21/97 5’11 181 ZSC NLA 2015 SUI
5 Livio Stadler LHD L 3/26/98 6’0 176 Lulea SHL 2016 SUI
7 Nico Gross LHD L 1/26/00 6’0 181 Zug SUI U20 2018 SUI
8 Jerome Portmann LW L 1/24/97 6’0 181 Davos NLA 2015 SUI
9 Damien Riat C R 2/26/97 6’0 172 Geneve NLA WSH 4th/2016 SUI
10 Serge Weber LHD L 5/29/97 5’9 143 Kloten NLA 2015 SUI
12 Calvin Thürkauf C L 6/27/97 6’2 203 Kelowna WHL CBJ 7th/2016 SUI
16 Loic In-Albon C L 8/6/97 6’0 165 Lausanne SUI U20 2015 SUI
21 Fabian Haberstich LW L 1/7/97 6’0 216 EVZ NLB 2015 SUI
22 Nando Eggenberger LW L 10/7/99 6’2 185 Davos NLA 2018 SUI
23 Dominik Diem C L 1/25/97 5’11 165 ZSC NLA 2016 SUI
24 Colin Gerber LHD L 3/14/98 6’3 187 Lagenthal NLB 2016 SUI
25 Jonas Siegenthaler LHD L 5/6/97 6’2 218 ZSC NLA WSH 2nd/2015 SUI
29 Philip Wüthrich G L 1/17/98 6’0 168 Bern SUI U20 2016 SUI
30 Joren van Pottelberghe G L 6/5/97 6’2 181 Davos NLA DET 4th/2015 SUI
11 Marco Miranda C/W L 6/2/98 6’2 196 Küsnacht NLB 2016 SUI
15 Nathan Marchon C/W L 2/17/97 5’9 168 Gottéron SUI U20 2015 SUI
17 Raphael Prassl C/RW L 11/23/97 6’0 176 Küsnacht NLB 2016 SUI
18 Nico Hischier C L 1/4/99 6’0 172 Halifax QMJHL 2017 SUI
19 Yannick Zehnder C L 12/29/97 5’11 181 EVZ NLB 2016 SUI
20 Philipp Kurashev LW/C L 10/12/99 6’0 183 Quebec QMJHL 2018 SUI
26 Timo Haussener C/RW L 4/9/97 6’4 183 EVZ NLB 2015 SUI
denmark
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
1 Emil Gransoe G L 9/27/98 6’0 172 Topeka NAHL 2017 DEN
2 Oilver Larsen RHD R 12/25/98 6’3 207 Odense Metal Ligaen 2017 DEN
3 Anders Koch LHD L 10/2/97 6’2 183 Esbjerg Metal Ligaen 2016 DEN
5 Oliver Gatz LHD L 10/6/98 6’1 203 Herning Metal Ligaen 2017 DEN
7 Mathias Røndbjerg LHD L 1/21/97 6’1 194 Rungsted Metal Ligaen 2015 DEN
8 Nicolai Weichel LHD L 11/6/97 6’1 198 Rungsted Metal Ligaen 2016 DEN
9 Jeppe Jul Korsgaard LW L 10/6/97 5’11 188 Aalborg Metal Ligaen 2016 DEN
10 Rasmus Andersson C/W R 6/1/97 5’11 176 HV71 SHL 2015 DEN
11 Joachin Blichfeld RW R 7/17/98 6’2 181 Portland WHL STL 7th/2016 DEN
12 Christian Mieritz LHD L 9/30/97 6’1 204 Leksands J20 Superelit 2016 DEN
13 C. Mathiasen-Wejse C L 12/4/98 6’1 198 BBA QMJHL 2017 DEN
14 Niklas Andersen LW L 11/20/97 5’11 185 Esbjerg Metal Ligaen STL 7th/2016 DEN
15 Morten Jensen LHD L 3/1/97 6’0 181 Rogle SHL 2015 DEN
16 Jonas Røndbjerg RW L 3/31/99 6’0 176 Vaxjo J20 Superelit 2017 DEN
18 William Boysen LW R 5/25/97 6’1 173 Rungsted Metal Ligaen 2015 DEN
19 Nikolaj Krag C L 8/12/98 6’2 194 Rogle SHL 2016 DEN
21 Tobias Ladehoff C/LW L 9/30/97 5’10 163 Aalborg Metal Ligaen 2016 DEN
22 Frederik Høeg C R 7/24/97 5’10 176 Odense Metal Ligaen 2015 DEN
23 David Madsen RW R 1/25/99 6’0 194 Vaxjo J20 Superelit 2017 DEN
27 Alexander True C L 7/17/97 6’5 198 Seattle WHL 2015 DEN
30 Lasse Munk Petersen G L 7/5/97 6’2 176 Red Deer WHL 2015 DEN
31 Kasper Krog G L 6/26/98 5’9 176 SønderjyskE Metal Ligaen 2016 DEN
denmark
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
1 Denijs Romanovskis G L 2/24/97 5’10 165 SK Riga LAT U18 2015 LAT
3 Eduards Jansons LHD L 9/7/97 6’3 187 Zemgale Latvia 2015 LAT
4 Gvido Jansons LHD L 1/9/97 6’4 209 Aston NAHL 2015 LAT
5 Kristians Rubins LHD L 12/11/97 6’4 216 Medicine Hat WHL 2016 LAT
6 Eduards Tralmaks C/LW L 2/17/97 6’3 187 Chicago USHL 2015 LAT
7 Maksims Ponomarenko LHD L 4/23/97 6’2 205 Lorenskog Metal Laegen 2015 LAT
8 Kristaps Zile LHD L 12/24/97 6’1 174 Dynamo Riga KHL 2016 LAT
9 Rihards Puide LW L 1/10/97 5’11 172 Küsnacht SUI U20 2015 LAT
10 Martins Dzierkals LW/RW L 4/4/97 6’0 170 Rouyn-Noranda QMJHL TOR 3rd/2015 LAT
11 Renars Krastenbergs W L 12/16/98 6’0 176 Oshawa OHL 2017 LAT
12 Erlends Klavins C L 2/8/98 6’2 181 Omaha USHL 2016 LAT
14 Roberts Baranovskis RW L 8/27/97 5’11 170 HK Riga MHL 2015 LAT
15 Tomass Zeile LHD L 1/26/98 5’11 176 Shreveport NAHL 2016 LAT
16 Valters Apfelbaums W L 12/26/98 6’0 159 Prizma Riga LAT U20 2017 LAT
17 Roberts Blugers LW/RW L 8/3/98 6’3 186 Fairbanks NAHL 2016 LAT
18 Ricards Bernhards RW R 4/18/97 6’4 176 Springfield NAHL 2015 LAT
21 Rudolfs Balcers LW R 4/8/97 5’11 165 Kamloops WHL SJS 5th/2015 LAT
22 Filips Buncis C L 6/12/97 6’3 205 Johnstown NAHL 2015 LAT
23 Karlis Cukste LHD L 6/17/97 6’2 216 Quinnipiac ECAC SJS 5th/2015 LAT
24 Deniss Smirnovs C L 3/7/99 5’9 146 Geneva SUI U20 2017 LAT
29 Gustavs Grigals G L 7/22/98 6’0 183 HK Riga MHL 2016 LAT
30 Mareks Mitens G L 1-29-98 6’1 176 Aston NAHL 2016 LAT
34 Rimants Zeilis LHD L 7/30/97 6’4 190 HK Riga MHL 2015 LAT
NO. NAME POS S DOB HT WT TM LG DRAFT NAT
1 Denijs Romanovskis G L 2/24/97 5’10 165 SK Riga LAT U18 2015 LAT
3 Eduards Jansons LHD L 9/7/97 6’3 187 Zemgale Latvia 2015 LAT
4 Gvido Jansons LHD L 1/9/97 6’4 209 Aston NAHL 2015 LAT
5 Kristians Rubins LHD L 12/11/97 6’4 216 Medicine Hat WHL 2016 LAT
6 Eduards Tralmaks C/LW L 2/17/97 6’3 187 Chicago USHL 2015 LAT
7 Maksims Ponomarenko LHD L 4/23/97 6’2 205 Lorenskog Metal Laegen 2015 LAT
8 Kristaps Zile LHD L 12/24/97 6’1 174 Dynamo Riga KHL 2016 LAT
9 Rihards Puide LW L 1/10/97 5’11 172 Küsnacht SUI U20 2015 LAT
10 Martins Dzierkals LW/RW L 4/4/97 6’0 170 Rouyn-Noranda QMJHL TOR 3rd/2015 LAT
11 Renars Krastenbergs W L 12/16/98 6’0 176 Oshawa OHL 2017 LAT
12 Erlends Klavins C L 2/8/98 6’2 181 Omaha USHL 2016 LAT
14 Roberts Baranovskis RW L 8/27/97 5’11 170 HK Riga MHL 2015 LAT
15 Tomass Zeile LHD L 1/26/98 5’11 176 Shreveport NAHL 2016 LAT
16 Valters Apfelbaums W L 12/26/98 6’0 159 Prizma Riga LAT U20 2017 LAT
17 Roberts Blugers LW/RW L 8/3/98 6’3 186 Fairbanks NAHL 2016 LAT
18 Ricards Bernhards RW R 4/18/97 6’4 176 Springfield NAHL 2015 LAT
21 Rudolfs Balcers LW R 4/8/97 5’11 165 Kamloops WHL SJS 5th/2015 LAT
22 Filips Buncis C L 6/12/97 6’3 205 Johnstown NAHL 2015 LAT
23 Karlis Cukste LHD L 6/17/97 6’2 216 Quinnipiac ECAC SJS 5th/2015 LAT
24 Deniss Smirnovs C L 3/7/99 5’9 146 Geneva SUI U20 2017 LAT
29 Gustavs Grigals G L 7/22/98 6’0 183 HK Riga MHL 2016 LAT
30 Mareks Mitens G L 1-29-98 6’1 176 Aston NAHL 2016 LAT
34 Rimants Zeilis LHD L 7/30/97 6’4 190 HK Riga MHL 2015 LAT

WJC Prospect Notes: Latvia vs USA

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2017 U20 World Junior Championship

Prospect Notes: Latvia

Solid effort not enough against deep Americans
Steve Kournianos  |  12/26/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of Matt Zambonin

Recap | Lineups | Box Score

New York (The Draft Analyst) — The Latvians dropped a 6-1 decision to a heavily-favored U.S. squad, but the game was relatively close until the midway point of the third period. Latvia played a sound, disciplined game and for two periods kept the speedy Americans to the outside. In the end, however, the depth they faced was too much to overcome as the U.S. used five different goal scorers to record an expected opening-round victory. Nevertheless, several draft-eligible prospects performed admirably in the face of what initially was considered insurmountable odds.

LW Renars Krastenbergs (Oshawa, OHL | 12/16/98, 6’0/176): Krastenbergs is a wiry goal scorer with very good speed who slowed down in Oshawa after a hot start. He plays with bite and is very competitive but seems to have an aversion to anything involving puck battles and supporting below his own circles. Krastenbergs likes to wait for the puck to come to him rather than battle to get it himself and shows a general lack of understanding towards the defensive side of the game. He also was the last member of his on-ice unit to appear in the defensive zone when opponents countered. But he showcased his speed, hands and finishing abilities with a nifty breakaway goal in which he deked goalie Tyler Parsons before roofing a backhander over an outstretched glove. The kid has no desire to play defense, but he understands his role as a sniper and mustered two of the Latvians’ 12 shots on goal.

LHD Kristaps Zile (Dynamo Riga, KHL | 12/24/97, 6’1/174): Zile is a heavy hitter with a hard shot who captained Latvia’s entry at the WJC. We view him more as a top-four shutdown type than the power play quarterback his coach asked him to be against the Americans. Latvia in the second period had multiple opportunities to score with the man advantage during almost five minutes of power play time, including a lengthy 5-on-3 with the score tied at one. It was during these power plays where Zile’s limited creativity was exposed. On defense, he was positionally sound sans a goal against in the 2nd when he overcommitted high to allow a 3-on-2 to turn into a partial breakaway goal for Colin White.

LHD Kristians Rubins (Medicine Hat, WHL | 12/11/97, 6’4/216): Rubins had a strong game, using his size and reach to keep the Americans away from the front of the net. He was paired with San Jose Sharks draftee Carlis Cutske, and the duo did all the little things to prevent quality chances or gaps in coverage. He is a hard, accurate passer who keeps his head up and doesn’t set his teammates up for failure by forcing passes into areas of tight coverage. Rubins has excellent upper-body strength and is quick enough to pin forwards along the boards and retreat back to slot coverage.

C Deniss Smirnovs (Geneva U20, Swiss Jrs | 3/7/99, 5’9/146): Smirnovs is a swift two-way center who held his own against the bigger American forwards. Defensively responsible and smart with the puck, Smirnovs was relegated to depth duty and didn’t see much of the ice until the game got out of hand. He won four of his nine draws and took up proper positioning once the faceoffs were complete. He dropped well below the circles to cover gaps left by aggressive teammates, and on one occasion went deep into the goal mouth to successfully tie up 6’5 Jordan Greenway. He’s one of the top players on his Swiss junior league club and is known as more of a playmaker than a finisher.

C Valters Apfelbaums (Prizma Riga, Latvian U20 | 12/26/98, 6’0/159): High-intesity two-way center who logged big minutes and played in all situations. Apfelbaums is a hard worker and puck hound who takes the disc strong to the net. He displayed agility and quality edge work, using twirls and sharp cuts to spin his way from a checker, He’s quite quick despite having an upright skating style and covered ground in a hurry when he had to bust it for a backcheck. He went 5-for-15 on faceoffs and played on both the power play and on the penalty kill.


WJC Prospect Notes: Denmark

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2017 U20 World Junior Championship

Prospect Notes: Denmark

Danes thwart late rally to edge Finland
Steve Kournianos  |  12/28/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of Andre Ringuette

Denmark 3, Sweden 2

Recap | Lineups | Box Score

New York (The Draft Analyst) — Denmark pulled off the first upset of the 2017 world junior hockey championship Tuesday, edging defending-champion Finland 3-2. The Danes raced to a 2-0 lead to chase Finnish starter Veini Vehvilainen after 20 minutes and added Joachim Blichfeld’s decisive tally in the second for a 3-0 advantage. Goalie Kasper Krog stopped 34 shots for Denmark (1-1-0), which was pinned in its own end for the majority of the match. Finland (0-2-0) received goals in the third period from Urho Vaakanainen and Kasper Bjorkqvist, and Karolus Kaarlehto stopped six of seven shots in defeat.

RW Jonas Røndbjerg (Vaxjo J20, Superelit | 3/31/99, 6’0/176): Top Danish prospect who has a high hockey IQ and excellent instincts. Rondbjerg has few weaknesses, and he skates with a powerful stride, excellent balance and strong lateral maneuverability. His body and stick are always positioned properly within the defensive zone, and he keeps his head on a swivel to steal pucks for quick transitions up ice. Make no mistake — Ronbjerg is an offensive force with soft hands and excellent vision. He can handle the toughest of passes while operating at fast speeds, and can make sharp directional changes immediately after puck receipt. Ronbjerg is a versatile late-game option whether trailing or clinging to a lead.

RHD Oliver Larsen (Odense, Metal Ligaen |  12/25/98, 6’3/207): Mobile two-way defenseman capable of quarterbacking a power play and effectively breaking out of his own end. Larsen has excellent mobility for a defender his size and is poised with the puck, using his size, balance and reach to fend off the most aggressive of forecheckers. He uses the boards and the back of his own net to his advantage, reversing and changing direction to gain valuable seconds. Nielsen is most certainly a risk taker, however, and he needs to improve the timing of both his pinches and releases. He can be guilty of forcing passes into traffic without being pressed, and he looks more comfortable with a man in his face than he does with boat loads of time. He can be depended on to seal off or tie up his man as they move from a board battle to the slot.

LHD Oliver Nielsen (Herning, Metal Ligaen) | 10/6/98, 6’1/203) Nilelsen is a versatile, minute-munching shutdown defender with top-four potential. He consistently takes hits to move the puck to safety and opts for the quickest route to the puck rather than worry about the price he’s going to pay for having his back turned. Nielsen is a smart, poised puck distributor who stays within himself and doesn’t try to be flashy. He can be used as a top option on the penalty kill for shot blocking and quick reaction time to pucks within his immediate area, and he wins most of his 50/50 battles thanks to a long stick that he utilizes in a quick but legal manner.

C Christian Wejse (Blainville-Boisbriand, QMJHL | 12/4/98, 6’1/198) Two-way center with size and a solid understanding of the game who can kill penalties and play on the power play. Wejse protects the puck extremely well and will take a hit to protect the puck as puck support arrives. He uses the boards effectively rather than fling the puck into the middle of the ice, and while his offensive instincts are average, he can be counted on to win late-game faceoffs regardless of the situation. Wejse is an excellent penalty killer who is quick and relentless to the puck, and will sacrifice his body to block a shot.

10 Draft Prospects You Should Know About for 2017

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2017 NHL Draft

10 Draft Prospects You

Should Know About

Steve Kournianos  |  1/3/2017 |  New York  |  

  • Jonah Gadjovich

  • Emil Bemstrom

  • Patrik Hrehorcak

  • Jesse Bjugstad

  • Maxim Zhukov

  • Mason Shaw

  • Jesse Koskenkorva

  • Pavel Koltygin

  • Alexandre Texier

  • Connor Gutenberg

New York (The Draft Analyst) — They say you don’t get a second chance to make a first impression, but that axiom doesn’t necessarily apply to scouting teenage hockey players. One of the more enjoyable things about critiquing prospects for any kind of draft is creating a list of players who caught your eye at one point or another, then doubling back at a later point to see if they confirmed or denied the original assessment. Some of the notable players will hover around the top of pre-draft rankings regardless of production and/or upside, while others simply never get as much as a mention. Nevertheless, below is a list of 10 players who really stood out over the last two months who in out view are deserving of a long look heading right up to Draft Day.

LW Jonah Gadjovich (Owen Sound, OHL | 10/12/98, 6’2/201): Sturdy power winger with average speed but a willingness to take a beating while traversing direct routes to the net. Gadjovich’s stick is always in the right position and he makes a habit out of getting to the spot he wants and looking to tip shots home. His hands are quick enough to corral shots off the end boards and bring the puck on his stick for stuff-in attempts, and he’s quite difficult to move off the puck in one-on-one situations. His lack of speed makes him an easy target for a double team effort, but most of these attempts are futile. Gadjovich has been red hot of late, racking up points in 15 of his last 18 games, including three straight with two goals or more.

C/W Emil Bemstrom (Leksands J20, Superelit | 6/1/99, 5’10/174): Hard-nosed speedster who leads the J20 Superelit Norra with 20 goals in just 24 games. Bemstrom is a quick, dual-threat forward who can bury the puck as well as he can dish it. He has excellent vision and will utilize hard, accurate cross-ice passes to improve the quality of a scoring chance. His speed allows him to create time and space when the ice seems clogged, but he’s an even bigger threat in open ice – he rarely makes mistakes on odd-man rushes and will not telegraph his next move. Bemstrom controls the puck with speed through the neutral zone and uses accurate lead or drop passes if he senses a defender will vacate a lane. He may not look big, but he is strong enough to come away with pucks during one-on-one battles with bigger opponents. Bemstrom is a relentless forechecker who finishes his checks and can win key faceoffs.

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LW Patrik Hrehorcak (Trinec U20, Extraliga Juniors | 3/18/99, 6’0/170): Slippery sniper with a a soft set of hands and excellent instincs in the offensive zone. Hrehorcak never received an invite to Slovakia’s WJC camp but should be a serious candidate next year. Too bad for the goal-starved Slovaks, who could have used his finishing abilities in Canada. He has an excellent shot and release and doesn’t hesitate to display them. Hrehorcak is one of the top scorers in the Czech junior circuit despite playing in his first year of draft eligibility. He’s far from a power forward but he gets involved in physical play and doesn’t back down from a challenge.

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LHD Jesse Bjugstad  (Stillwater HS, Minnesota | 4/4/99, 6’2/178): Hard-nosed defender with NHL bloodlines who is a critical piece to Stillwater’s Minnesota high school steamroller. Bjugstad is a two-way blueliner with a rocket of a shot who plays on the top pair and is used for all key matchups. The Ponies are a perfect 11-0-0 on the season,  outscoring opponents by four goals a game, and while forwards Noah Cates and Luke Manning (both 2017 eligible) lead the way in scoring, it’s Bjugstad’s No. 1 presence on the back end that in our view makes them a legitimate favorite to win the coveted state title. You can make a strong argument that Bjugstad is Minnesota’s top high school defender and could be a finalist for the Mr. Hockey award, which his cousin Nick (and current Florida Panther) won in 2010.

C Mason Shaw (Medicine Hat, WHL | 11/3/98, 5’9/180): Playmaking two-way center with a strong feel for the game who simply knows what to do with the puck on his stick. Frost is undersized from a physical standpoint, but his heart and effort quickly make you forget he’s under six feet tall. Shaw is an elite passer and phenomenal stickhandler who uses quick movements within tight spaces to earn enough time to carve up a congested zone. He plays with bite and is one of the draft’s better options to bolster a power play.

G Maksim Zhukov (Green Bay, USHL | 7/22/99, 6’3/180): You’d be hard pressed to find the last Russian-trained goalie who ditched both his native land and the pro leagues of Europe to bolster his pre-draft resume in the USHL. But here is Zhukohov, a Kaliningrad native whose rights belong to Severstal of the KHL, dominating America’s top junior league as a rookie with a stingy 2.15 goals against and .912 save percentage. He’s got a pro build and excellent mechanics, using quickness and agility to reveal solid post-save recovery techniques. Zhukov plays an upright butterfly and is far from a flopper — he offers shooters very little very due to cat-like reflexes and strong net awareness. Both he and fellow USHLer (and Winnipeg Jets 2016 draftee) Mikhail Berdin are legitimate candidates to share Team Russia’s netminding duties at next year’s WJC in Buffalo.

C/RW Jesse Koskenkorva (Karpat, Liiga | 7/31/99, 6’1/170) Koskenkorva is a goal-scoring winger/center who’s quietly established himself as a contributor for a Karpat squad that lost current NHL’ers Jesse Puljujarvi and Sebastian Aho — the duo who carried them during last year’s Liiga playoffs. By no means is Koskenkorva in the upper tier of pre-draft prospects like the aforemntioned duo were among their respective classes, but he has good size and an excellent shot with a quick release. He led Karpat’s U20 team in scoring and ranked among the league leaders, and should be a top-six mainstay when Finland heads to Slovakia in the spring to defend their U18 world championship.

C Pavel Koltygin (Drummondville, QMJHL | 2/17/99, 6’0/192) Powerful goal scorer from the center ice position who makes the most of his opportunities. A native of Moscow, Kolytgin doesn’t possess blinding speed, but his hands are soft enough to corral any kind of pass while he’s in full flight, giving off the appearance that he’s traveling faster than he is. He is strong on his skates and his edgework is fantastic, and he can fire off a quick, accurate shot while extended or fading away. Koltygin is a responsible player who understands the ins and outs of all three zones and is very good on faceoffs. Among the QMJHL leaders in rookie scoring, he has a wide frame and significant lower-body strength that gives him an advantage during board battles.

C/W Alexandre Texier (Grenoble, France | 9/13/99, 6’0/187): A lightning quick French teen who plays significant minutes in the French senior league, Texier is a dynamic offensive talent who is mature and can handle playing against older competition. You have to go back to the late 1980’s and former St. Louis Blues prospect Philippe Bozon to find a teenager from the French league with this kind of NHL potential. Texier is an excellent skater who can handle the puck and make plays off the rush. Rarely does he look overmatched despite being the youngest player in the circuit, and he recently finished as one of the top scorers (1g, 7a) at the recent Division IA under-20 WJC.

C Connor Gutenberg (Brandon, WHL | 9/4/99, 5’9/160): It’s been a down year for the normally dominant Wheat Kings, who have yet to recover from the injuries plaguing star center and top draft prospect Nolan Patrick. Gutenberg is by no means a replacement for a player of Patrick’s ilk, but the latter has been conspicuous to say the least. Fast and smart, Gutenberg is a two-way center who can play on the top unit of either the penalty kill or the power play. His zone entries are calculated and if necessary, deliberate, and he can stop on a dime with his head up to give himself some breathing room. He’s a very good passer with keen vision and will accurately saucer the puck over a maze of sticks and legs. Gutenberg is a playmaker adept at making slap passes and no-look feeds. He’s quite dependable in the faceoff circle and he’ll win tough draws in late game scenarios.

Recap: 2017 USHL/NHL Top Prospects Game

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2017 NHL Draft

USHL Top Prospects Game

Goalie prospects shine in Sioux Falls
Steve Kournianos  |  1/12/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of Joe Ahlquist / Argus Leader

Team East RosterTeam West Roster

Team West Lineup | Team East Lineup

Box Score

New York (The Draft Analyst) — Something has to give when you pit top-end offensive players against some of the best defense and goalie prospects in amateur hockey. So it should not have come as a surprise when the puck-stopping trio of Dayton Rasmussen, Cayden Primeau and Keith Petruzelli collectively stymied shooters in Team West’s 4-0 blanking of Team East in the USHL Top Prospects Game Tuesday.

Each goalie was perfect during his respective stint, with Muskegon’s Petruzelli stopping all 21 shots he faced to win the Team East MVP award after relieving Green Bay’s Maksim Zhukov midway through the second period. Primeau started for Team West and made 11 saves to pick up the win, and Rasmussen stopped all 14 shots he faced in relief.

Nick Swaney’s wrist shot off a turnover opened the scoring at 4:06 of the first and Paul Washe tallied less than two minutes later with the first of his two goals. Matthew Quercia’s empty netter sealed the victory for Team West, which outshot their opponent 36-25. Zhukov gave up three goals on 14 shots to take the loss.

Team East now leads the all-time series three games to two since the event began in 2012. A total of 54 participants were drafted by NHL teams, including 2015 first-round picks Kyle Connor (Winnipeg) and Brock Boeser (Vancouver).

Scouting Notes

The Goalies

G Maksim Zhukov (Green Bay Gamblers | 7/22/99, 6’3/187): The stats (three goals on 14 shots) indicate a below-average performance by one of the 2017 Draft’s top netminding prospects. Zhukov may have displayed quickness and flexibility, but two of the three goals allowed revealed the hazards inherent in using a butterfly technique, especially with a teenager still learning the nuances of the position. Make no mistake — Swaney’s goal was a labeled short-side laser beam that fit right under the crossbar. But Zhukov was already on his knees before the shot whistled over his right shoulder, and at 6’3, there’s always the likelihood he lost the net. He wasn’t challenged throughout much of his period and a half of play, and the third goal off a mad scramble in front was a result of too many bodies to his 12 o’clock.

G Keith Petruzelli (Muskegon Lumberjacks – Quinnipiac | 2/9/99, 6’5/180): Petruzelli’s approach to the competition was far more aggressive than Zhukov’s, who did not attack the puck with poke or stick checks when the situation warranted one. Petruzelli’s timing was excellent, and he was jumping on dump-ins well before any sort of pressure was either near him or up the wall. His stick activity and placement were sound, and he ensured post-to-post coverage as he followed shooters moving horizontally. All other key areas — rebound control, puck tracking, etc. — were outstanding, and the MVP honors he earned were most certainly well deserved.

Skaters

LHD Mario Ferraro (Des Moines Buccaneers – UMass-Amherst | 9/17/98, 5’11/184): Fast puck-moving defensemen with excellent first-step quickness and footwork…keeps a tight gap and takes the right routes to seal off his man…stays glued to his man and will finish checks with authority…not very tall but strong as an ox…Pins his man with little to no chance of escape…aggressive mindset with the puck and explodes up the ice to create a numbers advantage without it…A good bodychecker who likes to drive into people…An offensive-minded defender who looks to transition into an attack no matter where he is or how much traffic is in front of him…owns a booming, accurate shot

RW Paul Washe (Tri-City Storm – Western Michigan | 11/27/98, 6’1/190): Power forward with quickness and a powerful wide stride that makes him difficult to knock off the puck…difficult to dislodge once he’s established a foothold in the crease area…likes to play in the low slot and goal mouth area…has soft hands to settle bouncing pucks or tip hard shots…pounces on pucks with a quick shot and release…very good hand-eye coordination…can whip a hard, accurate shot off the rush or from a static position…a physical player who can wear down opponents.

LHD Jack St. Ivany (Sioux Falls Stampede — Yale | 12/24/97, 6’2/197): Solid two-way defender with size who moves very well and keeps himself engaged at all times..keeps a tight gap and possesses very good backwards mobility…is quick to the puck and makes crisp, accurate breakout passes…owns a very hard slap shot but gets his wrister off in a hurry…aggressive mindset and looks to line up a shot below the circles…Turned the puck over in the middle of the ice twice on one shift…can fumble around with the puck at times but has a general understanding of where pressure is coming from…makes proper reads and times his pinches well.

LHD Michael Karrow (Youngstown Phantoms – Boston College | 12/18/98, 6’2/200): Wide-body two-way blueliner with top-four potential…owns a hard slapper with a big wind up and isn’t afraid to use it…Above-average speed for a big man and very clean with the puck…will take the puck as far as he’s allowed to, even if it’s down to the opposing goal…far more aggressive once the puck is being cycled in the offensive zone…makes solid reads and will fire loose pucks on net without hesitation…strong positional defender who sticks with his man and pins to the boards…can play the point on the PP with effectiveness but more of a shooter than a playmaker…has a pro-build as a teenager but nimble enough to keep pace with quicker finesse players and play the man…plays a game reminiscent of Alex Pietrangelo without that kind of ceiling.

LW Matthew Quercia (Sioux Falls Stampede, Boston Univ. | 12/24/97, 6’2/198): Versatile power forward who uses a combination of size and skill with effectiveness..takes a hit to complete a play…likes to hunt down opponents and finish checks…decent speed but extremely strong on the puck and reliable in the cycle game…difficult to contain once he hits top speed and is able to make plays off the rush…soft hands to handle tough passes or shoot a bouncing puck on net…a Milan Lucic/David Backes type…puck hound who plays aggressive on the forecheck and does not give up on plays…can kill penalties or be used in the slot on the PP…plays with an edge and likes to agitate.

RW Zach Solow (Dubuque Fighting Saints, Northeastern | 11/6/98, 5’9/184): Skilled offensive player who makes his linemates better…excellent passer who keeps his head up at all times at looks for multiple options…serves the puck to his teammates on a silver platter…extremely patient with the puck and will enter the zone under complete control…adept at one-touch and slap passes…always looks for trailers and cutters…strong for his size and will finish checks…very difficult to contain along the wall or in the corner and will win puck battles despite being outnumbered…short stride but is a very good skater and can outpace most defenders…owns a hard, accurate shot and can label it for top corners.

C Shane Bowers (Waterloo Blackhawks, Boston Univ. | 7/30/99, 6’1/183): Dynamic two-way player with a high IQ to compliment his many puck skills…can create or finish plays on the rush…very crafty and creative…makes difficult plays look easy, especially in traffic…strong on the puck and can handle harassment as he’s controlling in tight spaces…looks to slip away into an open area with the hammer cocked…owns a lethal shot and can fire it with accuracy even if the puck is behind, in front of or in his skates…deceptive on zone entries as he can use a speed burst for a cage rush or slow it down and dump it off to a cutter or trailer.

LHD Kaspar Kotkansalo (Sioux Falls Stampede, Boston Univ. | 12/24/97, 6’2/198): Poised defender with size and mobility who isn’t flashy but makes subtle plays to beat a forecheck….will step up in the neutral zone and take the puck beyond the opposing blue line…drops down on occasion but more to keep a play alive than create or execute a scoring chance…limited creativity and owns an average shot..is strong below the faceoff dots and doesn’t wander far from the slot..strength along the wall is good but can get outmuscled by hungrier players regardless of size.

2017 Mock Draft: Round 1

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2017 NHL Draft

Mock Draft: Picks 1-31

Injured stars leave door open for challengers
Steve Kournianos  |  1/20/2017 |  New York  |  

Timra center Elias Pettersson is one of Sweden’s top draft prospects (Photo: Expressen.se)

*1. C Nolan Patrick (Brandon, WHL): A dominant, multi-tool game changer who has all the makings of a franchise center. Blessed with a lethal combination of strength and skill, Patrick looks to have bounced back from injury woes to solidify a top ranking he hasn’t relinquished since popping up on the draft radar a few years ago. He has an NHL frame and is deceptively quick, but it’s his ability to both create and finish plays that makes him difficult to plan for. No draft-eligible center provides his coach with a seemingly limitless tool box than Patrick, will play in next week’s CHL Top Prospects Game..
*2. C Nico Hischier (Halifax, QMJHL)Swiss pivot with electrifying skill and elite vision whose 64 points in 38 game leads all CHL rookies. Hischier is a fast, wiry playmaker who hustles and fiercely competes. Desire is his watchword, and you get the sense that opponents truly hate playing against him. Hischier can beat you in so many ways, and if we learned anything from his wonderful performance at the recent world juniors is that teams continue to struggle tracking his location in the offensive zone.
*3. C/W Casey Mittelstadt (Eden Prairie, HS-MN): Left with nothing to prove, Mittelstadt bolted the USHL as its top scorer for an emotional return to Eden Prairie, Minnesota, where he is the undisputed top high school hockey prospect in America. His squad is vying to return to the state championships after last year’s crushing exit, and he’s becoming a rounded player as each game passes. Mittelstadt is a goal scorer with an excellent shot/release who can set up line mates, kill penalties and control the tempo of a power play. He’s by no means menacing, but his size, skill and compete level present him as an intimidating player who can be impossible to stop.
*4. RHD Tim Liljegren (Rogle, SHL): Smooth-skating blueliner with a world-class shot who is at the top of a talented group of European-trained defensemen. Liljegren loves to shoot the puck and is an excellent power play quarterback. He has excellent acceleration and strong on the pivot, but he can also defer to accurate stretch passes that leave forecheckers well behind the play. His one-on-one play is better than you’d think.
*5. RW Eeli Tolvanen (Sioux City, USHL): Finnish-born sniper with a lethal shot who’ll move on to Boston College after what should be a memorable USHL career. Tolvanen is an expert sharpshooter with a quick release, and his ability to pick corners off the pass is reminiscent of countryman Patrik Laine. Tolvanen doesn’t have Laine’s size, but he’s strong on the puck and escapes from the tough battles right into shooting position. He’s a strong skater who likes to speed down the wing before unloading a labeled shot.
*6. RW Owen Tippett (Mississauga, OHL): Tenacious goal scorer with a strong desire to succeed. Tippett has an excellent shot and bullies his way into any scoring area to get his stick on the puck. He’s an above average skater and he’s certainly benefitted from flanking a high-end playmaker like Mike McLeod, but he takes a never-say-die approach to every shift, and that shot…
*7. C/W Elias Pettersson (Timra, Allsvenskan)Saying Pettersson is out typical Swedish two-way pivot is too easy a way out. There’s a uniqueness about him, and his puck handling abilities are buttery smooth. As lanky as he looks, Peterson is a bonafide assassin who absorbs hits while controlling the puck with his head up. His hands are soft and quick, and you can make the case that no draft-eligible peer can handle a tough pass better than he does. Pettersson isn’t an explosive skater with first-step quickness but can gain separation after a few strides.
*8. C Martin Necas (Brno, Extraliga): Gifted and mature two-way center with an off-the-charts IQ who continues to put up points as a top rookie in the Czech Extraliga. Necas is an excellent skater with superior puck skills and can be used in any situation at any time. Need a late-game face-off win in the defensive zone? Call Necas. Power play on the fritz? Call Necas. It’s no cliche to say he’s a threat to score every time he hits the ice, and his recent slump (two points in last 13 games) shouldn’t be a concern since he’s the youngest player in the circuit who gets a regular shift.
*9. LHD Urho Vaakanainen (Jyvaskyla, Liiga): Vaakanainen is one of a handful of heralded 2017-eligible Finnish defenders who were the only thing right about his country’s abysmal showing at the recent WJC. He’s a heady, non-nonsense puck mover who is held in own in the Finnish Liiga before going to the junior level. Vaakanainen his an very good skater who can attack openings and make plays under pressure. He also has a plus shot and likes to hammer it off the pass. Don’t expect him to step right in and punish opponents with physicality — that’s not his style. But he has the kind of upper-body strength, footwork and active stick to win his one-on-one battles and slip the puck onto the blade of a counterattacking teammate. Easily the safest pick of any of the European-trained defensemen as he will be no worse than a five or six at the NHL level.
*10. LHD Jusso Valimaki (Tri-City, WHL): If there is one defenseman capable of dethroning Liljegren from the perch of top draft-eligible defenseman, it’s this hulking Finnish blue liner with an array of elite skills. Valimaki distinguishes himself as a thinking-man’s defender who uses quick reaction time to pounce on loose puck in his own end and make the immediate transition to offense. He quarterbacks the power play with success via patience on the zone entry and leading teammates with passes behind the wall of defenders.
*11. C Lias Andersson (HV71, SHL): The 2017 WJC differed from previous editions in that it lacked a significant amount of upper-tier draft eligible players, But add Andersson to the short list of prospect who took advantage of the talent void and make due with the spotlight, scoring three times in seven games. You’d be hard pressed to find a forward who protects the puck as well as this Swede, who is an excellent two-way center with a complete skill set. He leads all SHL first-year draft eligibles in scoring with nine points in 25 games for HV71.
*12. RW Klim Kostin (Dynamo Moscow, KHL): Punishing power forward with very good speed whose low point totals in league play are offset by a collection of strong international showings. Kostin is a fierce competitor who plays a heavy game, but he isn’t just a brute on skates. He has an excellent shot and a soft touch, plus a creative side that keeps opponents off balance. He’s dealing with a lengthy shoulder but expect him to erase some doubt in April when he plays for Russia at the under-18 world championship.
*13. C Gabe Vilardi (Windsor, OHL): Big-bodied playmaker with a phenomenal understanding of the game who shook off some early-season injuries and went on a scoring binge, tallying eight goals in the first eight games back. He’s strengths are puck control and vision, but his hands are incredibly soft for someone who doesn’t look all that graceful on the move. If you can live with his average mobility, he’ll be sure to reward you with a blistering shot, eye-popping passes and treat every shift as an opportunity to create.
*14. LHD Miro Heiskanen (HIFK, Liiga): You can make a strong case for Heiskanen being the draft-eligible defenseman with the shortest path to the NHL, especially when you consider the big minutes he’s logging for IFK in the Finnish Liiga. He’s a cerebral puck mover with above-average speed who is rarely caught out of position, and he accumulates shots and chances by aggressively dropping down well below the dots. Heiskanen may not have cornerstone potential, but he would be an excellent top-pairing option or No. 3 to anchor a key minute-eating duo.
*15. LW Kristian Vesalainen (Frolunda J20, Superelit): Tough power forward who is a dual shot/pass threat and uses his size and strength to overpower opponents. Vesalainen began the year in the SHL with Frolunda and was loaned to a Finnish junior team before returning last week to the J20 Superelit in Sweden. It’s never easy to bounce around while struggling to put up points, and a putrid WJC only exacerbated an already tough situation, and in a draft year no less. Still, you can’t write off a kid for a poor first half, and the fact that he’s a 1999 birth year means he can boost his stock at the U18’s in April.
*16. LHD Nicholas Hague (Mississauga, OHL): Hague is a dreamy pro prospect because he has freakish size (6’6) that helps him on the defensive side while possessing a booming shot and sound instincts once the puck crosses the red line. He is a risk taker who has benefitted from being surrounded by immense talent, but remember that it was Hague’s emergence that made Sean Day expendable enough to trade. He’s a good skater in open ice but gets beat far too often when trying to tighten his gap on quicker forwards. As inexcusable as that sounds for a kid with a gargantuan wingspan, Hague has top pairing potential written all over him.
17. C Michael Rasmussen (Tri-City, WHL): Rasmussen is an all-around top center who can do anything that is asked of him. He was one of Canada’s few bright spots during a disappointing finish at the Ivan Hlinka tournament, centering the first line and anchoring an effective penalty kill. Thus far, he leads all WHL first-year eligibles with 30 goals in 48 games while playing an aggressive style bolstered by an NHL-ready frame. Rasmussen covers ground in a hurry thanks to a long, powerful stride.
18. C Maxime Comtois (Victoriaville, QMJHL): Polished power forward with a big-game resume who saw his stock fall after bad puck luck caused a dip in production, thus screeching to a halt his early-season hype train. Comtois is still a very good two-way center who is excellent on faceoffs and should be considered a potential lottery pick, especially now that he stabilized his season with 14 points in his last 13 games. But a disappointing post-draft season by fellow QMJHL strongman Pierre-Luc Dubois may keep Comtois low on more draft boards than expected.
19. RW Kailer Yamamoto (Spokane, WHL): Yamamoto has been a notable 2017 draft prospect for a few years, doing nothing but pile up points in what is his third WHL season. Small in stature but a giant when it comes to creating plays, he has an extremely high IQ with vision already at an elite level. Yamamoto silenced critics before, so don’t be surprised if he continues to do so after he’s drafted in or close to the first round.
20. C Ryan Poehling (St. Cloud State, NCHC): Poehling is a big-bodied center who is the only 1999-born player participating in Division I hockey. Being a freshman on a strong St. Cloud State squad pushes him into a depth role, but his upside is well within a top line position. He can provide superior play in every situation and displays enough flash to make the thought of becoming a star discernible. Poehling was a big reason why Team USA can within a whisker of winning gold at the Ivan Hlinka, playing close to 20 minutes a game and producing highlight-reel plays.
21. LW/C Marcus Davidsson (Djugardens, SHL): Speedy offensive force who can play center or wing, but probably ends up on the flank thanks do a deadly shot that he can release in a hurry. Davidsson has hit a bit of a wall in the SHL after producing with regular minutes earlier in the season, but he’s still regarded as one of Sweden’s top teenage forwards. He is a tenacious forechecker who finishes his checks and can kill penalties.
22. RHD Cale Makar (Brooks, AJHL): Explosive, dynamic offensive defenseman who can beat you with a variety of elite skills. Makar’s understanding of the game and his ability to read plays keeps him two and three steps ahead of opponents, who treat his puck handling as the most dangerous course of action. He is extremely fast — probably the fastest among draft-eligible defensemen — and whips the puck from tape to tape with authority. Makar, who is headed to UMass-Amherst, isn’t very big, but his footwork and quick stick allow him to harass bigger forwards into turning the puck over.
23. RHD Henri Jokiharju (Portland, WHL):Jokiharju is an outstanding puck distributor with quick feet that can quarterback a power play with the best of them. He was buried on Portland’s bottom pairing because of a numbers crunch, but the departure of Oilers prospect Caleb Jones to the WJC saw a huge spike in minutes and level of responsibility. Jokiharju can log a lot of ice time and play extended shifts without skipping a beat, and it didn’t take him long to adjust to the rough-and-tumble WHL style.
24. LHD Erik Brannstrom (HV71, SHL): Heady defender with excellent offensive skills who would have challenged for first overall had been two inches taller. Brannstrom is a high-end puck distributor with a booming shot who uses powerful leg drive and upper-body strength to make up for his lack of length. He was the top scorer among defensemen in goals and assists for HV71’s junior squad before getting a bump to the pros, where he’s had a tough time adjusting.
25. RHD Ian Mitchell (Spruce Grove, AJHL): Versatile two-way defender who has a complete understanding of either where he’s supposed to be and where he’s needed most. Mitchell isn’t flashy but he’s extremely smooth with the puck and makes fantastic reads. His mobility and quick-strike approach makes him more than capable of running a power play, where he can also display a very good shot and calmness under duress. Mitchell will play for the University of Denver in the fall.
26. C Antoine Morand (Acadie-Bathhurst, QMJHL): Feisty agitator with excellent speed and a nice scoring touch who tends to get overlooked because of his size (5’10, 178). Morand is constantly around the puck no matter where it is, and watching him play one shift reveals just how much of a pest he is to play against. He hits, fights through checks and is consistently looting the most protective puck carriers. Morand’s speed and effort all but guarantee he’ll have an NHL job one day. His stats are improving and he’s winning close to 53 percent of his faceoffs.
27. RHD Callan Foote (Kelowna, WHL):Reliable two-way defender with NHL bloodlines whose simple game can cloud just how smart and talented a rearguard he is. That should come as no surprise to those who 20 years ago saw his father Adam serve as a blueline mainstay for multiple Stanley Cup championships in Colorado. Callan plays a similar style — smart positioning, excellent instincts, quick outlet passes and occasional offense in the form of a hard shot from the point or stretch passes that split the zone.
28. LW/C Scott Reedy (US U18, NTDP):Thick and aggressive bulldozer that plays an in-your-face style but fools into into forgetting just how gifted a playmaker he is. Reedy is a natural center, but his place on the NTDP’s top-line flanks reveals a strong net presence and finishing abilities from the hash marks down. Reedy is a good skater who uses both partaken and precision to enter a zone. He’s headed to the University of Minnesota, but his size/smarts combo will put him in the NHL sooner than one would think.
29. LW Nikita Popugaev (Prince George, WHL): If he could find some consistency, it would be extremely difficult to keep Popugaev out of the conversation for the top pick in 2017. But power forwards have a tendency to vanish if they’re not playing the way they want, especially when you’re close to 6’6 and don’t offer much besides scoring. Popugaev checks so many blocks — size, skill, a deadly shot, plus he’s dealt with the rigors of being an import in the WHL. The stats are good (57 points in 48 games), but a recent trade from Moose Jaw to Prince George has slowed down his production. But let’s be fair — this a power forward with 25 primary assists out of 33.
30. LW Ivan Chekhovich (Baie-Comeau, QMJHL): A sniper blessed with incredibly soft hands and exceptional speed who simply knows what to do with the puck. Chekhovich is an opportunist with a strong grasp of play development who at times will toe the line between cherrypicking and taking acceptable risks. Still, he’s a finisher who can beat a goaltender in a variety of ways, specifically in and around the low slot, and there are times when he’ll chip in down low and provide defensive coverage, albeit with less frequency than you’d like. It’s his ability to jump into gaps up ice and create numerical superiority that stands out — he doesn’t leach onto his puck carrier but doesn’t wander into an impossible passing option. Chekhovich, who can kill penalties and play the wall on the power play, can furnish a hard, accurate shot, especially off the pass with the man advantage.
31. C Shane Bowers (Sioux City, USHL): Dynamic two-way player with a high IQ to compliment his many puck skills. Bowers can create or finish plays on the rush, and is very crafty and creative. He makes difficult plays look easy, especially in traffic while acting strong on the puck to handle harassment as he’s controlling in tight spaces. Committed to Boston University, Bowers looks to slip away into an open area with the hammer cocked, as he owns a lethal shot and can fire it with accuracy even if the puck is behind, in front of or in his skates. He’s deceptive on zone entries as he can use a speed burst for a cage rush, or slow it down and dump it off to a cutter or trailer.

 

 

 

Preview: 2017 CHL Top Prospects Game

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2017 CHL Top Prospects Game

Prospect Preview

International flavor spices up the 2017 TPG
Steve Kournianos  |  1/29/2016 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of Doug Love

New York (The Draft Analyst) — Quebec City will play host to one of hockey’s prestigious pre-draft events Monday when 40 of North America’s elite major junior players participate in the CHL Top Prospects Game. Last year’s event, held in Vancouver, featured 27 of the eventual first 60 picks in the 2016 NHL Draft, including 15 from the first round. And although the current crop of prospective draftees lacks a surefire star like Top Prospects Game alumni Sidney Crosby or Connor McDavid, the event’s popularity within the scouting community has never changed. It is one of the few competitions where scouts can see a deep collection of talent in a single game, and often a player’s performance can impact where he’s selected in late June.

Teams used to consider the NHL draft as the initial point of a lengthy development arc that culminates with a regular job at the pro level. Now, players are expected to contribute sooner than later, primarily because they come with a cheap entry-level price tag against the salary cap. For example, 30 players from the 2015 draft already made their NHL debut, with 13 perviously participating in the 2015 CHL Top Prospects Game.

Headlining this year’s game will be Brandon Wheat Kings center Nolan Patrick, a multi-purpose center with size from Western Canada who is the favorite for first overall in the draft.  Recent injuries kept him from participating at previous pre-draft exhibitions like November’s CHL-Russia Series and the recent world junior hockey championship. Patrick, however, seems to have recovered from sports hernia surgery and an unrelated abdominal injury, picking up eight points in five games and showing no illeffect from what kept him sidelined for nearly three quarters of his season.

A player who took advantage of Patrick’s absence is Swiss import Nico Hischier, a speedy and electrifying center who is one of the CHL’s top scorers. Hischier, who plays for Halifax in the QMJHL, has been considered a top prospect for the 2017 draft for several years. But a notable performance at the WJC, combined with his dominant league play vaulted him into an upper tier where some believe he will finish, possibly immediately after Patrick for second overall.

But Hischier is not the only European-born player participating. Six additional players from Europe will be on display, including three defenseman from Finland — Henri Jokiharju of the WHL’s Portland Winterhawks, Tri-City American Juuso Valimaki and Kingston Frontenac Eemeli Rasanen. Hulking Slovakian center Adam Ruzicka will represent the Sarnia Sting, and a pair of Russians from the WHL — Prince George sniper Nikita Popugaev and Swift Current rearguard Artyom Minulin — round out the participants from Europe, most of whom are expected to be drafted in the first or second round.

In goal, Michael DiPietro of the OHL’s Windsor Spitfires is expected to be one of the first goalies taken at the draft. He’s had a stellar campaign, posting a 22-7-5 record with a league-best 2.15 goals against average and tied for first in both save percentage (.921) and shutouts (five).

NHL legends Don Cherry (16th appearance) and Bobby Orr (15th appearance) will be coaching their respective teams, with Team Orr winning three of the last four events.

Keep an eye on…

Cherry

Team Cherry

LW/C Maxime Comtois (Victoriaville Tigres, QMJHL ): Big-bodied power forward who has all the intangibles and is a leader on the ice. Starting to produce after a horrid start. Loves to play physical and is a bull along the boards, but has soft hands and can make plays from in close. Was considered a top-10 pick before the season so a strong showing is somewhat necessary.

RW MacKenzie Entwistle (Hamilton Bulldogs, OHL): Crash-and-bang power forward who makes up for average footspeed with a team-first attitude and using his physicality to change the momentum of a game. Excellent positionally and difficult to remove from the puck.

LHD Pierre-Olivier Joseph (Charlottetown Islanders, QMJHL): Point-producing defender who skates well and can run a power play. Not very big or strong but doesn’t get outmuscled as often as you’d think. Joseph skates well and is a tape-to-tape passer, but his upside is in a support role rather than anchoring a defense corps.

LW Isaac Ratcliffe (Guelph Storm, OHL): Goal-scoring power winger with average speed who can make plays, especially when surrounded or with limited time and space. Does all the little things and likes to use his strength to gain positioning. Has a strong, accurate shot with a quick release.

G Ian Scott (Prince Albert, WHL): Having a nightmare of a season from a statistical standpoint, but keep in mind the kind of bombardments he faces on a nightly basis. Faced 34 shots or more in 21 of his 37 appearances but has a sparkling .920 save percentage when facing 40 or more shots. He’s got pro size (6’4) and plays the butterfly well — no issues with net presence and his post-save quickness and positioning are strong for a teenager.

ORR

Team Orr

LW Alex Formenton (London Knights, OHL): Relentless speed demon who plays with tenacity but can make elite plays while moving at a high rate of speed. He quickly assumed a top-six role on a team that was supposed to be loaded, but it’s almost impossible to see him losing a foothold as one of London’s key cogs. Has decent size but needs to fill out more so he could win the inside battles with consistency.

RW Kole Lind (Kelowna Rockets, WHL): Dual-threat winger with very good speed who is creative with the puck and sees the ice extremely well. Lind is a go-to guy for Kelowna and is used in all situations, specifically with the man advantage where he leads the Rockets in points (18) and assists (13). He can slice up a tight box with precision passes and doesn’t telegraph his intentions.

LHD Jacob Paquette (Kingston Frontenacs, OHL): Strong one-on-one defender who serves as a critical safety net for attacking forwards or an aggressive partner. Paquette is somewhat limited in what he can do with the puck, but he is a very good breakout passer and doesn’t fold in the face of an aggressive forecheck. His mobility is average, and taking risks are rarities. Still, he’s got a hard shot and is excellent from his blueline inward. The perfect compliment to a puck rusher or gambler.

C Nate Schnarr (Guelph Storm, OHL): Big-bodied offensive center with tremendous upside who does a handful of things at a high level. The first thing that stands out is his size — Schnarr is 6’3 and uses every inch of it to his advantage. He can also provide a deadly shot with a quick release, and he’s smart enough to slip into shooting areas with the hammer cocked. He seems more like a winger than a center, and while his positioning in his half of the ice is solid, he could improve on his creativity and patience in the offensive zone. Missed a month with a shoulder injury but looks as though he’s recovered.

C Cody Glass (Portland Winterhawks, WHL): One of the best CHL draft-eligibles from a production standpoint who has a tremendous hockey IQ and vision. Glass is an invaluable asset to the Winterhawks, who rely on him to come through in all game situations. He’s a team-first kid who is highly creative with the puck and knows exactly when it’s time to be selfish and when he should distribute. Far from a one-dimensional forward, Glass lends support down low and will battle against anyone.

Recap: 2017 CHL Top Prospects Game

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2017 CHL Top Prospects Game

The Defense Rests

Stars showcase skill in rare Top Prospects Game shootout
Steve Kournianos  |  01/31/2017 |  New York    

New York (The Draft Analyst)There was plenty of scoring and fancy moves last night in Quebec City, where the goalies and defensemen were repeatedly victimized in what turned out to be the highest scoring CHL Top Prospects Game in nine years.

Windsor center Gabe Vilardi scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period and Lethbridge’s Stuart Skinner stopped 17 of 18 shots as Team Cherry held off Team Orr 7-5. The 12 combined goals equalled a Top Prospects Game record previously set in 1996 and equalled again in 2005 and 2008. 

It was the best case scenario for talented prospects Nolan Patrick and Nico Hischier, who some feel are all but guaranteed to be the first two picks in the 2017 NHL Draft. Each player centered their respective squad’s top line, with Hischier leading Team Orr with a goal and two assists and Patrick pacing Team Cherry by setting up two goals of his own. The centers were consistently matched up against each other and performed as expected. It was the play of a handful of less notable prospects, however, who not only bolstered their pre-draft resumes, but did so with a collection of NHL executives and scouts in attendance.

Portland Winterhawks defenseman Henri Jokiharju (three assists) was named player of the game for Team Cherry, while Hischier took the award for Team Orr.

Standouts

RHD Henri Jokiharju (Portland Winterhawks, WHL): Right-handed defenseman are a commodity around NHL circles, and it seems like they’ve become hockey’s version of baseball’s lefty set-up men — every team has to have one. There is, however, nothing typical about Jokiharju, who quarteredbacked Team Cherry’s top power play unit and finished with a game-high three assists — a TPG record for defensemen. He held his own on the defensive side and didn’t make any egregious mistakes with the puck, and his ability to settle or corral any sort of pass is practically unique among his CHL peers. Mobile and smart, Jokiharju took his WJC snub and ran with it, piling up points in the WHL and winning best player honors at the TPG.

LHD Pierre-Olivier Joseph (Charlottetown Islanders, QMJHL): The measurements (6’0, 160 pounds) are deceiving, as Joseph has been very good in the QMJHL all season. True, it’s the least physical of the three major circuits, but that doesn’t mean he’s incapable of handling himself (and the puck) responsibly. Joseph is a quick decision maker and executes with timeliness and precision. He doesn’t try cute moves or take on an assignment above his pay grade, and the kid we saw Monday in Quebec City was one who played mature, maintained a tight gap and used his stick and lower body to separate his man from the puck. 

RW Kailer Yamamoto (Spokane Chiefs, WHL): Yamamoto is far from obscure — we peg all 5’7 of him as a likely first round pick, and for good reason. He’s a buttery-smooth playmaker who has one of the top IQ’s among his peers. On Monday, Yamamoto played on Team Orr’s top line with center Nico Hischier and hulking sniper Nikita Popugaev on his opposite flank. The trio created chances at will, including a 2-on-1 in which Yamamoto lulled the defender and an eventual backchecker to sleep before connecting with Hischier for a tap-in that was thwarted. Slowing the pace down without eliminating his top options is what he does best, and in the second period he took Hischier’s banked drop pass and rifled one home from the right circle.

C Robert Thomas (London Knights, OHL): Thomas was a seemingly undervalued piece on a London team that maintined it’s dominance over the OHL despite a roster thinning from either promotions or injuries. It was Thomas who played top-six minutes and was utilized in just about any situation you could think of, and his numbers (42 points in 45 games) are worth almost double than face value. On Monday, his advanced decision making was on display for a scouting community that has done their homework on him. Thomas literally created a goal on his own in the first, gaining entry into the zone then winning a loose puck battle to rip a shot hard enough to a create a rebound for Antoine Morand to bury.

G Stuart Skinner (Lethbridge Hurricanes, WHL): Goalies rarely hurt their reputations from a TPG since the event is normally low scoring. Skinner, who had a tough start to his season, entered the TPG with a chance to confirm how solid his play of late has been (he’s faced 30 or more shots in 29 of 44 appearances, including 13 with over 39 shots against). What stood out most was Skinner’s rebound control in a game featuring great scoring chances with traffic milling around the low slot. His ability to track shots from the release point helped, but his quickness and butterfly timing allowed him to absorb several high quality chances. 

RW Mackenzie Entwistle (Hamilton Bulldogs, OHL): The up-and-down action of Monday’s contest would appeal to any player, even if he’s a 6’3 power forward who plays a hard-nosed game. Entwistle displyed his versatility by chipping in a goal off a rush and showcaed his above-average speed in racing to a loose puck to set up the clinching empty netter. He’s big, strong and loves to mash people, and he’s got plenty of time left in the regular season and subsequent playoffs to up the ante when it comes to physicality. Kids who combine size and speed are rarities, and Entwistle gave us a glimpse of how he can tailor his play towards the nature of a specific game.

Scouting Notes: Windsor @ Erie (OHL)

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2017 NHL Draft

Prospect Notes: Windsor vs Erie

Erie’s Lodnia and Windsor’s Vilardi post impressive performances
Steve Kournianos  |  2/12/2017 |  Erie  |  

Photo courtesy of Terry Wilson

Video | Box Score

ERIE, Pa. (The Draft Analyst) — Ivan Lodnia scored the deciding shootout goal as the host Erie Otters extended their winning streak to 10 games with a 5-4 victory over the Windsor Spitfires.

Lodnia, one of the top prospects for the 2017 NHL Draft,  also assisted on Warren Foegele’s power play goal in the first that gave Erie a 2-1 lead. His breakaway goal through Windsor goalie Michael DiPietro’s legs made it 3-1 in the second.

Gabe Vilardi and Jeremy Bracco each scored twice for Windsor, which trailed 4-2 in the third before Bracco forced overtime with 2:36 left.

Erie is one win away from equalling the frnachise mark of 11 straight wins set in 2012-13. The Otters improved to an 25-0-1 at home and have the best overall record in the Ontario Hockey League.

2017 Draft Prospects

Erie Otters

LW Ivan Lodnia (8/31/99, 5’10/182): Exceptional performance by the game’s best player whose elite hockey IQ was certainly on display. Lodnia may have a reputation as an offensive player, but tonight I saw a relentless puck pursuer capable of making the right decision nearly every time he’s near it. It might have been one of those nights, but he could do no wrong in this one. Lodnia is a quick, accurate passer who plays on the power play but used smarts to beat a top goalie in Michael DiPietro through the legs not once, but twice. He never stops moving and has a hidden gear, but it was odd to see Jeremy Bracco beat him in a footrace for a goal in the second. Remember, this kid is just days from being eligible for the 2018 NHL Draft, meaning he has close to a full extra year of development over some of the top 2017 prospects.

C Gera Poddubnyi (6/9/99, 6’1/183): Poddubnyi is the kind of player who would flourish with more responsibility. He showed precision with his cross-ice passing and is a strong skater with a long stride who likes to get in on the forecheck. His later mobility and directional changes are solid, thus helping him react quickly to a defender’s breakout or escape pass. I didn’t see much in terms of creativity or finesse but the potential is certainly there.

Windsor Spitfires

C Gabe Vilardi (8/16/99, 6’3/201): Vilardi had a strong overall game, showing off soft hands and a deadly shot. He didn’t get off to the best start as his over-stickhanding led to a turnover and a 2-on-1 goal by Alex DeBrincat, but a mistake like that is nothing more than an anomaly. Yes, his skating still looks awkward and he couldn’t shine on a power play loaded with playmakers. He did, however, show aggressiveness and dedication to the forecheck and penalty kill. I really like this kid, whose superior IQ will serve him well at the highest level. He too was less than a month from 2018 draft eligibility.

RW Luke Boka (6/12/99, 6’0/191): Boka is an aggressive power winger with size and a good understanding of the game. He’s the type of player who makes the most of his opportunities and would put up better numbers had he not been blocked by so much firepower. Boka anchored Windsor’s top penalty killing unit and doesn’t stop moving while feverishly waving his stick like a scythe. Once he gets control of the puck, he’s strong enough to not only stay blanced and ward off defenders, but also get a shot on net as he’s hounded.

G Michael DiPietro  (6/9/99, 6’0/200): This was a game that DiPietro probably wants back, especially since it came down to a shootout. The ice was tilted upright for two full periods, and three of the four goals against were from precision plays on odd-man rushes. DiPietro is incredibly quick on his feet and even quicker with the glove, but his timing seemed a hair off tonight as he was late reacting to several shots that whizzed past him. Granted, Erie is loaded with snipers and is the best team in the OHL. But DiPietro getting beat five-hole twice by Lodnia makes me wonder if the former allowed the latter to get into his head. Still, the kid has excellent rebound control and effortlessly guided pucks to safety the entire game.

RW Cole Purboo (6/18/99, 6’3/215): Purboo didn’t see the ice much and was relagted to a checking role when he did. Big and strong with an aggressive mentality, he’s at his best during cycles and board battles. Most of the first two periods however were played in Windsor’s end. Purboo is not a good skater, but he makes up for it by being positioned properly and taking the right routes to the puck.

NHL Prospects

Erie Otters

LW Alex DeBrincat (Chicago Black Hawks 2nd/2016): DeBrincat was noticeable every time he was on the ice, and that includes plays after the whistle. His goal in the first period — an absolute laser to finish off a 2-on-1 — increased his OHL lead to 46 and his point total to a league-best 96 points. Physical, feisty and obviously skilled, I get the sense that he’s playing with more to prove this year than his two previous campaigns.

C Dylan Strome (Arizona Coyotes 1st/2015): Strome was invisible for most of the night until a breakaway in the second period that DiPietro stopped. He didn’t register a point and wasn’t very creative, leaving DeBrincat to handle the puck as he drifted into open shooting lanes. I was expecting a productive night considering the magnitude of the game, but a goal in the shootout turned out to be his lone contribution to the win. Strome has an elite shot, and a conversion to wing could be an option.

RW Taylor Raddysh (Tampa Bay Lightning 2nd/2016): Raddysh played on Erie’s top line with Dylan Strome, picking up an assist via a gorgeous saucer pass to Alex DeBrincat for the game’s opening tally. Erie’s top line was buzzing a lot but it didn’t translate into many quality scoring chances. Raddysh was physical on occasion and used his size to protect the puck and maintain possession.

RW Warren Foegele (Carolina Hurricanes 3rd/2014): Foegele was easily the most active player on either roster, finishing with a power play goal and a game-high six shots. He was positioned on Anthony Cirelli’s wing, hustling and flying all over the place to gain control of the puck and initiate the cycle. Foegele’s been a Godsend since being acquired from Kingston with 18 points in 17 games. He’s quick, strong and provides all the intangibles necessary to make it at higher levels.

C Anthony Cirelli (Tampa Bay Lightning 3rd/2015): Cirelli centered Erie’s second line and had good chemistry with Lodnia and Warren Foegele. He is an aggressive forechecker and plays feisty. He was 9-7 on draws but had a relatively quiet night on offense.

RHD Erik Cernak (Los Angeles Kings 2nd/2015): Cernak was Erie’s best defender against Windsor, playing physical and making timely step-ups. He’s extremely smooth and heady with the puck and never panicked in the face of a forecheck. Once the puck is on his stick, it’s gone, usually near the red line with accuracy. His footwork looked solid as well, as onrushing Spitfires could not get around him as he maintained a tight gap.

RHD Jordan Sambrook (Detroit Red Wings 5th/2016): Sambrook was impressive with the puck and showed confidence and mobility. He played on the power play and logged big minutes, but it was his breakout pass to kickstart Kyle Maksimovich’s goal that stood out. His combination of physicality and mobility is a legitimate concern for opponents and he’s become the kind of player you have to plan for.

Windsor Spitfires

C Logan Brown (Ottawa Senators 1st/2016): Brown centered Windsor’s top line and made a handful of skilled zone entries despite dangerously handling the puck near his own line with no support behind him. He was a bit indecisive on the power play but it’s hard to fault him considering the Spitfires’ five-man unit consisted of four playmakers and Sergachev’s howitzer. He left the game after two period with an apparent hand injury.

LHD Mikhail Sergachev (Montreal Canadiens 1st/2016): Sergachev had a commanding, assertive game that featured power rushes to the cage, the latter opening him up to a massive (and clean) check from Darren Raddysh that knocked him out for the remainder of the second period. In the first, Sergachev took the puck with confidence and powered down the right wing before threading a pass to Vilardi for Windsor’s first goal. His booming shot was suppressed the entire night but he was the easily the most noticeable defender on the ice.

RW Jeremy Bracco (Toronto Maple Leafs 2nd/2015): Bracco handled the puck a lot and showcased his elite puck skills and patience. It’s amazing how teams continue to struggle defending him when he’s on the forehand and headed towards (surprise, surprise) the back of the net. Credit to Bracco for having that ridiculous lateral agility to continuously evade opponents. He scored twice, the first coming on a partial breakaway where he beat Lodnia in a footrace before wiring a shot past DiPietro.

LHD Sean Day (New York Rangers 3rd/2016): Day played a critical role in Windsor’s comeback by moving the puck through all three zones while leaving opponents in the dust with dekes and head fakes. His coast-to-coast effort on Jeremy Bracco’s tying goal was a thing of beauty, and confidence with the puck can never be questioned. It was, however, a struggle defensively, beginning with an overcommitted slide that allowed Alex DeBrincat all the time and space needed to finish off a 2-on-1. Day played the shooter, but in this case it would have been wiser to commit to DeBrincat on the weak side (especially considering it’s Debrincat). His slot coverage remains poor and he continues to wander and look disengaged.


2017 NHL Draft Rankings: February-500 Edition

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2017 NHL Draft

February Draft Rankings

European talent primed to own the stage in Chicago
Steve Kournianos  |  02/14/2017 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of Hokej.cz

Center Martin Necas of the Czech Republic is one of the top European prospects for the 2017 NHL Entry Draft.

The Battle for No. 1

A pair of players, one of them with the strength of an ox and shoulders broad enough to carry a franchise, the other can attack with stealth and lethality, arrived to this point as two of the best players the 2017 NHL Draft will offer. Nolan Patrick (Ranked No. 1), the heart-and-soul leader of the WHL’s Brandon Wheat Kings, and Swiss phenom Nico Hischier (Ranked No. 3) of the Halifax Mooseheads in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League, could very easily be the first two players chosen when the draft takes place next June in Chicago. At least that seems to be the popular opinion. But with all due respect to Mssr. Hischier, his impressive resume is still not enough to bump Minnesota high school phenom Casey Mittelstadt (Ranked No. 2) from the second spot he held in our early-season rankings.

The injuries that shelved Patrick — the preseason consensus top pick — can be looked at as a sort of blessing, as he was forced to bypass the gauntlet of pre-draft exhibitions and tournaments that can attrit a high-ranking prospect into a lower echelon. Playing under a round-the-clock microscope is a byproduct of being both good and popular, but it can also give bored talent evaluators reasons to nitpick an area of the game that most would otherwise consider unimportant. In other words, the fully-healed Patrick has done nothing to hurt his draft stock and remains our favorite to go first overall, even after Hischier took advantage of the spotlight with a fantastic performance at the under-20 world junior championship over Christmas break.

From the statistics made available to us, a strong case can be made that either player is worthy of the historic privilege of being the top pick of a draft. Patrick, whose combination of skill and power makes him the prototypical North American player, is producing at a 1.65 points per game clip, while Hischier has a slight edge at 1.69 PPG. Their production since Patrick’s return on January 13th has been close to equal as well, with Patrick notching eight goals and 21 points in 13 games, Hischier eight and 18 in 11. Hischier, however, has collected an impressive 21 primary assists in 45 games (0.56), while Patrick (seven in 17 games) averages only 0.41 primary assists per contest.

The question is whether Hischier’s dominance as a rookie European in North America is enough to overtake Patrick’s seamless post-injury transition. We don’t think it is, and feel a healthy Patrick remains the draft prospect with the highest upside and shortest path to NHL stardom.

Mittelstadt has not been given the widespread attention he deserves, so we’ll add to his case. He was the United States Hockey League’s leading scorer when he chose to return to Eden Prairie High School for his senior year, so we won’t punish him for possessing the burning desire to win the state championhip that narrowly escaped him a year ago. Make no mistake — Mittelstadt is a winner and a clutch player with leadership qualities to support a lethal skill set centered on creativity and timeliness.

So why rank Mittelstadt a head of Hischier rather than the other way around? For starters, he was just as good, if not better, than Hischier when they competed as 16-year-olds at the 2015 U18 Ivan Hlinka Tournament, where he finished tied for second in overall scoring. Additionally, it was Mittelstadt who had the stronger 2016 U18 world championship in Grand Forks, albeit on a better team. Hischier leading CHL rookies in scoring as a European import is not rare (Vitalii Abramov did it last year while playing for Gatineau), but Mittelstadt topping the USHL in points in a pre-draft season is in our minds the bigger accomplishment.

Remember, it goes beyond stats. When the number are equal or close to it, relying on the intangibles and assessing how skills translate at higher levels of play is equally as important. Mittelstadt’s advantages in versatility and size, plus a penchant for big game production are what solidifies him as the second best prospect for the 2017 draft.

Grab a Building Block

NHL success likely for this group of unheralded stars

The affair between the NHL and almost a half dozen of its 2016 draftees has been nothing short of a spring fling; Auston Matthews, Patrik Laine, Matthew Tkachuk, Jesse Puljujarvi and Jakob Chychrun were all first rounders who made their NHL debuts while the ink was drying on their contracts. The crop of 2017 draft-eligibles, however, should not be expected to do the same. And while the idea of a teenager on a manageable entry-level contract bringing hope and enthusiasm to a club that just missed the playoffs is undeniably alluring, we recommend fans and general managers temper their expectations for the 2017-18 season.

Still, there are several high-end prospects representing several positions who have cornerstone upside, specifically those playing in European leagues against older, tougher competition. A bout with mononucleosis notwithstanding, Swedish defenseman Timothy Liljegren (Ranked No. 5) has not had as rough a reason as some want you to think — He is a dynamic puck mover with a blistering shot and excellent offensive instincts in the mold of Ottawa Senators Norris Trophy winner Erik Karlsson. Yes, he looked sluggish upon returning from his ilness and needed a (brief) rehab stint in a junior league to get his strength and timing back. He’s back with Rogle in the Swedish Hockey League, running their power play and showing glimpses of greatness.

Liljegren is not the only European-trained blueliner with top-pairing potential. Three Finns — Miro Heiskanen (Ranked No. 9), Juuso Valimaki (Ranked No. 11) and Urho Vaakanainen (Ranked No. 14) are all fantastic two-way defensemen with mobility who can quarterback a power play, beat pressure with poise and accuracy, and provide excellent slot coverage. Neither has the game-breaking abilities of the aforementioned Liljegren, but both Heiskanen (IFK) and Vaakanainen (JyP) play in Finland’s premier Liiga and owned critical roles at varying points of the season.

Up front, the two best finishers are Sioux City sniper Eeli Tolvanen (Ranked No. 4) and Mississauga’s power forward Owen Tippett (Ranked No. 6). Tolvanen was one of several Finns who struggled to find offense at a collectively disappointing WJC, but he leads the USHL with 176 shots in 35 games. He has a strong upper body and quick release off his back foot reminiscent of a young Brett Hull, and he still pumped 50 shots in 12 games despite scoring only one goal in that span. Like Tolvanen, Tippett loves to shoot and scores in bunches. His 246 shots lead the OHL and no CHL first-year eligible has more goals (39).

The most exciting player of the lottery-bound group is Czech center Martin Necas (Pictured – Ranked No. 8), who is fresh off a dominant performance at last weekend’s U18 Five Nations Tournament. Necas is an outstanding playmaker with two-way capabilities who develops instant chemistry with any linemate. He handles a tremendous amount of responsibility playing on one of Brno’s top lines in the Czech Extraliga and seems like he is close to ready for the rigors of the NHL.

Two Swedish forwards — center Elias Pettersson (Ranked No. 7) and center/winger Lias Andersson (Ranked No. 10) are smart, fast and skilled enough to one day become NHL regulars. Both excel in the 200-foot game and possess ridiculously soft hands good enough to succeed on either the power play or penalty kill. Windsor’s Gabe Vilardi (Ranked No. 12), a converted center with exceptional hand-eye coordination and a blistering shot, shook off early-season injury woes but has a ton of work to do in the skating department. He’s beyond gifted with the puck and can stickhandle with the best of them, but lacking that extra gear is something his opponents will work feverishly to exploit. Had he been a step or two quicker, we’re mentioning his name as a legitimate candidate for first overall.

Time to Get Creative

Expect the unexpected once the lottery is complete

One would think that the lack of trades involving 2017 first round picks has more to do with either the salary cap or the standings than anything else. And while that may be true, add the the impending expansion draft(s) as yet another reason NHL GM’s are choosing to turn down offers for rentals or quick fixes in favor of picks.

The 2017 pool of draftees is not deep, meaning post-draft player development is far more critical than in previous years. It remains to be seen how a GM and his scouts attack this draft, as the best player available in the second or third round in 2017 is likely to have a lower ceiling than a fifth or sicth round pick from a stronger pool. Fans tend to hate it when their team drafts for need because you run the risk of missing out on a game breaking star (See Dylan McIlrath over Vladimir Tarasenko in 2010). This draft, however, has to be strategized with looming expansion drafts in mind — if your organization is full of hit-or-miss scoring forwards but has only one or two quality defense prospects, the drafting expansion team will likely target the quality rather than the quantity.

In other words, you might hate the immediate result, but your team will be better off long-term.

There are, however, a select few from the 2017 crop that have legitimate star potential. Defenseman Cale Makar (Ranked No. 24) is the best North American blueliner in terms of pure puck skills. A dizzying combination of speed and skill, Makar has that “Wow” factor that people pay to see at any level. Yes, he plays in the Alberta Junior Hockey League and yes, he was not heavily recruited by the big NCAA powerhouses (he’s committed to UMass-Amherst). But put this kid in the right system that allows him to be unbridled and autonomous, and you may be looking at the next Phil Housely.

Across a pond, another high-IQ rearguard displays ridiculous puck skills while running his team’s offense. Erik Brannstrom (Ranked No. 16) may lack the height you would want in a top-end puck mover, but every other area is drool worthy. He owns a cannon of a shot, carries the puck with anger and confidence, and can hold his own in one-on-one situations. Like Makar, Brannstrom does everything quick and hard — passes, shots, checks — and his international resume is stellar.

It wasn’t too long ago when a pair of power forwards — Russian Klim Kostin (Ranked No. 13) and Finland’s Kristian Vesalainen (Ranked No. 15) — were all but guaranteed to be Top-5 picks. But Kostin has been knocked out with a shoulder injury, while Vesalainen has been up and down between leagues with a poor WJC performance to boot. They both play a menacing, physical style combined with a dual pass/shot threat. Like most power forwards, however, their consistency is limited to effort and board battles when they pucks struggle to find the back of the net.

Building From The Net Out

One thing this draft offers more than in previous years in a deep collection of goaltenders. Close to a dozen should be expected to go within the top three rounds, with Finnish backstop Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen (Ranked No. 37) and Windsor’s Michael DiPietro (Ranked No. 39) our two best available. The quality does not stop there, however, as a duo of USHL-trained backstops — Cayden Primeau (Ranked No. 42) and Maksim Zhukov (Ranked No. 48) — could challenge for not only first goalie taken, but in the first round as well.

Below is a detailed sortable table of The Draft Analyst’s midseason rankings of the top 500 first-year, draft-eligible prospects for the 2017 NHL Entry Draft, to be held in Chicago from 23-24 June. Players born between 16 September 1998 and 15 September 1999 were considered in the zone for first-year eligibility.

RANK POS NAME TEAM LEAGUE S/C DOB HT WT NAT
1 C Nolan Patrick Brandon WHL R 9/19/98 6’3 198 CAN
2 C/W Casey Mittelstadt Eden Prairie HS-MN L 11/22/98 6’1 201 USA
3 C Nico Hischier Halifax QMJHL L 1/4/99 6’1 176 SUI
4 RW Eeli Tolvanen Sioux City USHL L 4/22/99 5’10 174 FIN
5 RHD Timothy Liljegren Rögle BK Superelit R 4/30/99 6’0 191 SWE
6 RW Owen Tippett Mississauga OHL R 2/16/99 6’1 202 CAN
7 LW Elias Pettersson Timra IK Allsvenskan L 11/12/98 6’1 160 SWE
8 C/W Martin Necas Brno Extraliga R 1/15/99 6’1 167 CZE
9 LHD Miro Heiskanen HIFK Helsinki Liiga L 7/18/99 6’0 170 FIN
10 C Lias Andersson HV71 Superelit L 10/13/98 5’11 198 SWE
11 LHD Jusso Valimaki Tri-City WHL L 10/6/98 6’2 204 FIN
12 C Gabe Vilardi Windsor OHL R 8/16/99 6’2 193 CAN
13 RW Klim Kostin Dynamo Moscow KHL L 5/5/99 6’3 196 RUS
14 LHD Urho Vaakanainen JyP Liiga L 1/1/99 6’0 177 FIN
15 RW Kristian Vesalainen Frölunda SHL L 6/1/99 6’3 207 FIN
16 LHD Erik Brannstrom HV-71 SHL L 9/2/99 5’10 173 SWE
17 C Michael Rasmussen Tri-City WHL L 4/17/99 6’6 215 CAN
18 LHD Nicolas Hague Mississauga OHL L 12/5/98 6’6 208 CAN
19 RW Kailer Yamamoto Spokane WHL R 9/29/98 5’8 153 USA
20 LW Maxime Comtois Victoriaville QMJHL L 1/8/99 6’2 199 CAN
21 RHD Henry Jokiharju Portland WHL R 6/17/99 6’0 176 FIN
22 C Antoine Morand Acadie-Bathurst QMJHL L 2/18/99 5’10 178 CAN
23 C Marcus Davidsson Djugardens SHL L 11/18/98 6’0 191 SWE
24 RHD Cale Makar Brooks AJHL R 10/30/98 5’11 179 CAN
25 RHD Ian Mitchell Spruce Grove AJHL R 1/18/99 5’10 166 CAN
26 C Ryan Poehling St. Cloud State NCHC L 1/3/99 6’2 183 USA
27 LW Nikita A. Popugaev Prince George WHL R 11/20/98 6’6 204 RUS
28 RHD Callan Foote Kelowna WHL R 12/13/98 6’4 213 USA
29 C Scott Reedy Team USA NTDP R 4/4/99 6’1 202 USA
30 LW Ivan Chekhovich Baie-Comeau QMJHL L 1/4/99 5’10 168 RUS
31 C Shane Bowers Waterloo USHL L 7/30/99 6’1 183 CAN
32 C Cody Glass Portland WHL R 4/1/99 6’2 180 CAN
33 C Sasha Chmelevski Ottawa OHL R 6/9/99 5’11 190 USA
34 C Adam Ruzicka Sarnia OHL L 5/11/99 6’4 200 SVK
35 RW Kole Lind Kelowna WHL R 10/16/98 6’1 175 CAN
36 C Nick Suzuki Owen Sound OHL R 9/10/99 5’11 187 CAN
37 G Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen HPK U20 Liiga Jrs L 3/9/99 6’4 196 FIN
38 LHD Robin Salo Vaasan Sport Liiga L 10/13/98 6’1 187 FIN
39 G Mike Dipietro Windsor OHL L 6/9/99 6’0 191 CAN
40 LHD David Farrance Team USA NTDP L 6/23/99 5’11 195 USA
41 C Aleksi Heponiemi Swift Current WHL L 1/9/99 5’9 140 FIN
42 G Cayden Primeau Lincoln USHL L 8/11/99 6’3 185 USA
43 C Josh Norris Team USA NTDP L 5/5/99 6’1 192 USA
44 C Robert Thomas London OHL R 7/2/99 5’11 177 CAN
45 LW Alex Formenton London OHL L 9/13/99 6’1 161 CAN
46 C/LW Morgan Frost Sault Ste Marie OHL L 5/14/99 6’0 170 CAN
47 LHD Nate Knoepke Team USA NTDP L 4/8/99 6’3 201 USA
48 G Maksim Zhukov Green Bay USHL L 7/22/99 6’3 188 RUS
49 C Mason Shaw Medicine Hat WHL L 11/3/98 5’9 180 CAN
50 RW Ivan Lodnya Erie OHL R 8/31/99 5’10 180 USA
51 C/LW Evan Barratt Team USA NTDP L 2/18/99 5’11 188 USA
52 LW Yaroslav Alexeev Sherbrooke QMJHL L 1/17/99 5’11 148 RUS
53 C Stelio Mattheos Brandon WHL R 6/14/99 6’1 194 CAN
54 LW/C Ostap Safin Sparta Prague Extraliga Jrs. L 2/11/99 6’5 191 CZE
55 RHD Cale Fleury Kootenay WHL R 11/19/98 6’1 196 CAN
56 C MacKenzie Entwistle Hamilton OHL R 7/14/99 6’3 185 CAN
57 LHD Pierre-Olivier Joseph Charlottetown QMJHL L 7/1/99 6’0 150 CAN
58 LW Matthew Strome Hamilton OHL L 1/6/99 6’4 206 CAN
59 LHD Dmitri Samorukov Guelph OHL L 6/16/99 6’2 185 RUS
60 LW Austen Keating Ottawa OHL L 3/7/99 5’11 162 CAN
61 RHD Luke Martin Michigan Big-10 R 9/20/98 6’3 207 USA
62 RW Austin Pratt Red Deer WHL R 7/30/99 6’3 210 USA
63 LW Isaac Ratcliffe Guelph OHL L 2/15/99 6’6 196 CAN
64 C Alexei Lipanov HK MVD MHL L 8/17/99 6’0 165 RUS
65 RW Jonas Rondbjerg Vaxjo J20 Superelit L 3/31/99 6’0 176 DEN
66 LW Grant Mismash Team USA NTDP L 2/19/99 6’0 184 USA
67 LHD Artyom Minulin Swift Current WHL L 10/1/98 6’2 220 RUS
68 RW Samuel Bucek Shawinigan QMJHL R 12/19/98 6’3 192 SVK
69 RHD Tommy Miller Team USA NTDP R 3/6/99 6’2 185 USA
70 RW Brannon McManus Omaha USHL R 7/5/99 5’10 180 USA
71 C/RW Jack Studnicka Oshawa OHL R 2/18/99 6’1 170 CAN
72 C Nikita Anakhovsky Loko Yaroslavl MHL L 3/22/99 6’0 187 RUS
73 C Maxim Marushev Irbis Kazan MHL R 1/1/99 6’0 177 RUS
74 LW Pavel Koltygin Drummondville QMJHL L 2/17/99 6’0 191 RUS
75 C Joel Teasdale Blainville-Boisbriand QMJHL L 3/11/99 5’11 197 CAN
76 G Jake Oettinger Team USA NTDP L 12/18/98 6’4 203 USA
77 LHD Jacob Paquette Kingston OHL L 5/26/99 6’2 203 CAN
78 C/LW Jake Leschyshyn Regina WHL L 3/10/99 5’11 176 CAN
79 C Jaret Anderson-Dolan Spokane WHL L 9/12/99 5’10 180 CAN
80 C/RW Georgi Ivanov Loko Yaroslavl MHL L 9/25/98 6’1 189 RUS
81 C Rickard Hugg Leksands J20 Superelit L 1/18/99 5’11 179 SWE
82 LW Jason Robertson Kingston OHL L 7/22/99 6’1 180 USA
83 C/RW Lukas Elvenes Rogle J20 Superelit L 8/18/99 6’0 173 SWE
84 LHD Markus Phillips Owen Sound OHL L 3/21/99 6’0 203 CAN
85 LW/C Joni Ikonen Frölunda J20 Superelit R 4/14/99 5’10 169 FIN
86 C Patrick Khodorenko Michigan State Big-10 L 10/13/98 6’0 200 USA
87 LHD Mikey Anderson Waterloo USHL L 5/25/99 6’0 197 USA
88 LW/C Marian Studenic Hamilton OHL L 10/28/98 6’0 165 SVK
89 LW Alexei Toropchenko HK MVD MHL L 6/25/99 6’3 187 RUS
90 RW Shawn Boudrias Charlottetown QMJHL R 9/14/99 6’3 182 CAN
91 RHD Filip Westerlund Frolunda SHL R 4/17/99 5’11 179 SWE
92 G Ian Scott Prince Albert WHL L 1/11/99 6’3 166 CAN
93 LHD Max Gildon Team USA NTDP L 5/17/99 6’3 188 USA
94 LHD Mark Rubinchik Saskatoon WHL L 3/21/99 6’1 183 RUS
95 LHD Jesse Bjugstad Stillwater HS-MN L 4/4/99 6’2 178 USA
96 LW Emil Oksanen Espoo Liiga Jrs R 9/25/98 6’1 180 FIN
97 RHD Josh Brook Moose Jaw WHL R 6/17/99 6’1 177 CAN
98 RHD Jarret Tyszka Seattle WHL R 3/15/99 6’2 187 CAN
99 C Nate Schnarr Guelph OHL R 6/15/99 6’3 166 CAN
100 RW Linus Nyman Kingston OHL L 7/11/99 5’9 152 FIN
101 C Emil Bemstrom Leksands J20 Superelit R 6/1/99 5’11 177 SWE
102 C Ivan Kozlov Val-d’Or QMJHL L 3/26/99 6’1 210 RUS
103 LHD David Kvasnicka Plzen Extraliga L 4/14/99 5’9 174 CZE
104 C Jordy Bellerive Lethbridge WHL L 5/2/99 5’9 180 CAN
105 RW Nick Henry Regina WHL R 7/4/99 6’0 190 CAN
106 C/RW Kyle Olson Tri-City WHL R 3/22/99 5’11 161 CAN
107 LHD Noel Hoefenmayer Ottawa OHL L 1/6/99 6’0 190 CAN
108 LW Mick Messner Madison USHL L 4/20/99 6’0 195 USA
109 LW Kirill Slepets Loko Yaroslavl MHL L 4/6/99 5’10 165 RUS
110 RW Lane Zablocki Red Deer WHL R 12/27/98 5’11 184 CAN
111 RW Michael Pastujov Team USA NTDP L 8/23/99 6’0 192 USA
112 LW/C Ryan McGregor Sarnia OHL L 1/29/99 5’11 149 CAN
113 W/C Patrik Hrehorcak Trinec U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 3/18/99 5’11 168 SVK
114 LHD Dalimil Mikyska Brno U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 8/16/99 6’1 196 CZE
115 C Greg Meireles Kitchener OHL R 1/1/99 5’10 163 CAN
116 C Kalle Miketinac Frolunda J20 Superelit L 4/2/99 5’11 185 SWE
117 LW Arnaud Durandeau Halifax QMJHL L 1/14/99 5’11 176 CAN
118 LW Jakub Lacka Trinec U20 Extraliga Jrs. R 11/20/98 5’11 179 SVK
119 LW Noah Cates Stillwater HS-MN L 2/5/99 6’1 165 USA
120 C/RW Bobby Dow Kemptville CCHL R 11/5/98 6’1 171 CAN
121 LHD Matt Anderson Green Bay USHL L 4/11/99 5’11 199 USA
122 LHD Radim Salda Mountfield HK Extraliga Jrs. L 2/18/99 6’1 176 CZE
123 LW Jonah Gadjovich Owen Sound OHL L 10/18/98 6’2 209 CAN
124 RW/C Jacob Tortora Team USA NTDP R 7/25/99 5’8 168 USA
125 G Keith Petruzelli Muskegon USHL L 2/9/99 6’6 190 USA
126 C/W Jan Hladonik Trinec U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 8/18/99 5’9 161 CZE
127 G Shamil Shmakov Sibirskie Snaipery MHL L 7/27/99 6’4 180 RUS
128 G Dayton Rasmussen Tri-City USHL L 11/4/98 6’1 203 USA
129 LHD Dylan Samberg Hermantown HS-MN L 1/24/99 6’3 190 USA
130 LW/C Jesper Boqvist Timra Allsvenskan L 10/30/98 6’0 179 SWE
131 G Stuart Skinner Lethbridge WHL L 11/1/98 6’4 209 CAN
132 RHD Eemeli Rasanen Kingston OHL R 3/6/99 6’6 215 FIN
133 G Kyle Jessiman Cape Breton QMJHL L 1/12/99 5’10 170 CAN
134 RW Sami Moilanen Seattle WHL L 1/22/99 5’9 174 FIN
135 RHD Reagan O’Grady Sudbury OHL R 12/15/98 6’2 193 CAN
136 C Josh Paterson Saskatoon WHL R 1/21/99 6’2 188 CAN
137 G Olle Eriksson Ek Farjestad J20 Superelit L 6/22/99 6’2 187 SWE
138 RHD Saku Vesterainen Charlottetown QMJHL R 2/28/99 5’11 165 FIN
139 LHD Jockton Chainey Halifax QMJHL L 9/8/99 6’0 192 CAN
140 RW Fabian Zetterlund Farjestad SHL R 8/25/99 5’11 195 SWE
141 LHD Kasper Kotkansalo Sioux Falls USHL L 11/16/98 6’2 189 FIN
142 G Daniil Tarasov Tolpar MHL L 3/27/99 6’3 194 RUS
143 G Jiri Patera Budejovice Extraliga Jrs. L 2/24/99 6’1 200 CZE
144 C/LW Jan Vaclavek Zlin U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 4/9/99 6’1 172 CZE
145 C/LW Filip Chytil Zlin Extraliga L 9/5/99 6’1 178 CZE
146 LHD Oliver Gatz-Nielsen Herning Denmark L 10/6/98 6’1 207 DEN
147 RHD Jack St. Ivany Sioux Falls USHL R 7/22/99 6’2 195 USA
148 LW Louis-Philip Cote Quebec QMJHL L 5/2/99 6’0 174 CAN
149 RHD Martin Bodak Tappara U20 Liiga Jrs R 11/28/98 6’1 194 SVK
150 RHD Leon Gawanke Cape Breton QMJHL R 5/31/99 6’1 181 GER
151 LHD Tyler Inamoto Team USA NTDP L 5/6/99 6’2 196 USA
152 RHD Brady Lyle North Bay OHL R 6/6/99 6’2 203 CAN
153 G Oscar Wallden Djugardens SHL L 1/26/99 6’1 201 SWE
154 RW Randy Hernandez Team USA NTDP R 1/12/99 6’0 177 USA
155 LW/RW Adam Kalaj Kladno U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 3/28/99 5’11 180 CZE
156 C Alexandre Texier Grenoble France L 9/13/99 6’0 187 FRA
157 RHD Connor Timmins Sault Ste Marie OHL R 9/18/98 6’1 180 CAN
158 G Ivan Prosvetov Minnesota Magicians NAHL L 3/5/99 6’5 185 RUS
159 LW/RW Razat Timirov Reaktor MHL R 6/6/99 5’9 163 RUS
160 LHD Jonathan Smart Regina WHL L 6/1/99 6’0 170 CAN
161 C Renars Krastenbergs Oshawa OHL L 12/16/98 6’0 175 LAT
162 LHD Jacob Golden London OHL L 3/20/99 5’11 161 CAN
163 LHD Venjamin Baranov Dynamo St. Petersburg MHL L 1/8/99 6’1 194 RUS
164 C Skyler Brind’amour Selects Academy USPHL L 7/27/99 6’2 170 US/CAN
165 RW Filip Sveningsson HV-71 J20 Superelit L 7/3/99 6’0 172 SWE
166 C Paul Washe Tri-City USHL L 11/27/98 6’1 191 USA
167 G Daniil Yakovlev Loko Yaroslavl MHL L 1/2/99 6’0 160 RUS
168 RW Jakub Pour Plzen U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 1/5/99 6’3 183 CZE
169 C Pavel Voronkov Avto Yekaterinburg MHL L 10/13/98 6’1 180 RUS
170 C Brady Gilmour Saginaw OHL L 4/18/99 5’10 170 CAN
171 RW Lauri Pajuniemi TPS U20 Liiga Jrs R 9/12/99 5’11 183 FIN
172 RHD Conner McDonald Edmonton WHL R 5/31/99 5’11 180 CAN
173 LHD Jakub Galvas Olomouc Extraliga L 6/15/99 5’11 162 CZE
174 LHD Jake Christiansen Everett WHL L 9/12/99 6’1 185 CAN
175 C/W Zach Solow Dubuque USHL R 11/6/98 5’9 185 USA
176 LW Isaac Johnson Des Moines USHL R 1/24/99 6’2 170 USA
177 G Alex D’Orio Saint John QMJHL R 4/28/99 6’2 200 CAN
178 RHD Simon Johansson Djugardens J20 Superelit R 6/14/99 6’2 170 SWE
179 RW Ryan Bowen Lethbridge WHL R 12/10/98 6’1 180 CAN
180 LW Marcus Sylvegard Malmo J20 Superelit R 5/4/99 6’0 183 SWE
181 C/RW Jesse Koskenkorva Karpat Liiga L 7/31/99 6’1 177 FIN
182 LHD Jakub Sirota Cedar Rapids USHL L 12/20/98 6’2 188 CZE
183 LW Jan Svoboda Chomutov U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 5/25/99 5’9 143 CZE
184 LHD Elijah Roberts Kitchener OHL L 1/23/99 5’10 161 CAN
185 C Connor Dewar Everett WHL R 6/26/99 5’10 165 CAN
186 LW Oliver Castleman Niagara OHL L 9/15/99 5’10 180 CAN
187 RHD Reilly Walsh Chicago USHL R 4/21/99 5’11 181 USA
188 LHD Anton Bjorkman Linkoping SHL L 5/13/99 5’11 170 SWE
189 C Benjamin Jones Niagara OHL L 2/26/99 6’0 187 CAN
190 C/RW Linus Andersson Skelleftea J20 Superelit R 4/30/99 5’11 174 SWE
191 RHD Adam Thilander North Bay OHL R 9/18/98 6’0 190 SWE
192 LW Kirill Kozhevnikov Mamonty Yugry MHL L 1/26/99 6’2 203 RUS
193 LHD Darien Kielb Quebec QMJHL L 3/18/99 6’2 167 CAN
194 C Ondrej Chrtek Liberec U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 1/25/99 6’0 165 CZE
195 C/LW Luke Manning Stillwater HS-MN L 4/13/99 5’10 185 USA
196 LW Matthew Wedman Seattle WHL L 5/25/99 6’1 189 CAN
197 RHD William Warm Edmonton WHL R 4/22/99 6’0 180 CAN
198 LW Maxim Sushko Owen Sound OHL L 2/10/99 6’0 179 BLR
199 C Cole Guttman Dubuque USHL R 4/5/99 5’10 165 USA
200 LW Dylan Seitz Kitchener OHL L 1/15/99 6’0 168 USA
201 RW Kirill Rudenko Mamonty Yugry MHL L 8/17/99 5’9 172 RUS
202 RW Baker Shore Chicago USHL R 8/20/99 5’11 170 USA
203 LHD Antoine Crete-Belzile Blainville-Boisbriand QMJHL L 8/19/99 6’0 176 CAN
204 LHD Lucas Nordsater Vaxjo J20 Superelit L 10/8/98 6’0 176 SWE
205 C/RW Marek Rubner Plzen U20 Extraliga Jrs. R 11/12/98 6’2 194 SVK
206 RW Denis Mikhnin Rimouski QMJHL L 7/11/99 5’11 163 RUS
207 RHD Nick Grima Sarnia OHL R 3/7/99 5’11 188 CAN
208 LHD Valeri Orekhov Barsy Astana MHL L 7/17/99 6’1 168 KAZ
209 RHD Grant Anderson Wayzata HS-MN R 9/15/99 6’2 172 USA
210 LHD Roni Allen JYP U20 Liiga Jrs L 10/10/98 6’0 190 FIN
211 RHD Nolan Kneen Kamloops WHL R 3/22/99 6’0 177 CAN
212 G Gustav Bagenvik Linkoping J20 Superelit L 1/19/99 6’0 187 SWE
213 C/RW Anton Johansson Orebro J20 Superelit L 4/11/99 5’9 174 SWE
214 LHD Dylan Plouffe Vancouver WHL L 4/27/99 6’0 185 CAN
215 RW Jordan Timmons Muskegon USHL R 10/25/98 6’0 165 USA
216 LHD Jonatan Asplund Djugardens J20 Superelit L 2/4/99 6’3 181 SWE
217 G Jeremy Swayman Sioux Falls USHL L 11/24/98 6’2 187 USA
218 G Eetu Makiniemi Jokerit U20 Liiga Jrs L 4/19/99 6’2 176 FIN
219 C/RW Alex-Olivier Voyer Rimouski QMJHL R 4/10/99 6’1 185 CAN
220 LHD Ondrej Trejbal Pardubice U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 4/21/99 6’2 170 CZE
221 RHD Daniel Bukac Brandon WHL R 4/29/99 6’5 185 CZE
222 C Josh Dunne Green Bay USHL L 12/8/98 6’3 183 USA
223 LHD Max Martin Prince Albert WHL L 7/25/99 6’0 188 CAN
224 RW Peyton Hoyt Cape Breton QMJHL R 2/18/99 5’10 172 CAN
225 C Aarne Talvitie Blues U20 Liiga Jrs L 2/11/99 5’10 198 FIN
226 C/RW Mark Kastelic Calgary WHL R 3/11/99 6’3 205 USA
227 C Connor Gutenberg Brandon WHL R 9/4/99 5’9 160 CAN
228 LHD Matteo Pietroniro Baie-Comeau QMJHL L 10/20/98 6’1 180 US/CAN
229 LW Markus Hermanstadt MoDo J20 Superelit L 3/30/99 6’1 185 NOR
230 C Zach Gallant Peterborough OHL L 3/6/99 6’2 185 CAN
231 LHD Michael Karrow Youngstown USHL L 12/18/98 6’2 206 USA
232 LHD Nikita Alexandrov HK MVD MHL L 5/18/99 6’6 185 RUS
233 RW Andrei Grishakov Calgary WHL L 5/16/99 6’1 190 RUS
234 C Kirill Popov Mamonty Yugry MHL L 6/14/99 6’1 176 RUS
235 C Bryce Misley Oakville OJHL L 9/5/99 6’1 161 CAN
236 RW Matyas Svoboda Peterborough OHL L 1/2/99 6’3 210 CZE
237 RHD Joey Keane Barrie OHL R 7/2/99 6’1 190 USA
238 LW Cole Coskey Saginaw OHL R 6/1/99 6’1 189 USA
239 LW Macauley Carson Sudbury OHL L 3/12/99 6’1 205 CAN
240 RW Daniil Skorikov Tolpar MHL R 4/1/99 6’4 188 RUS
241 RW Logan Hutsko Team USA NTDP R 2/11/99 5’10 165 USA
242 C Oskar Pettersson MoDo J20 Superelit R 5/13/99 5’11 175 SWE
243 LHD Ben Mirageas Bloomington USHL L 5/8/99 6’1 175 USA
244 LW Jakub Wojnar Sparta Praha Extraliga Jrs. L 6/25/99 6’1 185 CZE
245 LHD Sebastian Walfridsson MoDo J20 Superelit L 3/19/99 6’1 194 SWE
246 LHD Semyon Perelyaev Lada Togliatti MHL L 8/24/99 6’2 170 RUS
247 LW Jaroslav Dvorak HC Kralove Extraliga Jrs. L 3/21/99 6’0 180 CZE
248 C/RW Jan Drozg Leksands J18 Superelit R 4/1/99 6’1 160 SLO
249 C Ryan Hughes Portland WHL L 7/27/99 5’7 152 CAN
250 LW Maxim Melnykov Omskie Yastreby MHL LW 4/15/99 6’3 201 RUS
251 C Wyatt Bongiovanni Tri-City USHL L 7/24/99 6’0 176 USA
252 LW Joseph Garreffa Kitchener OHL L 8/9/99 5’7 160 CAN
253 LHD Malte Setkov Malmo J20 Superelit L 1/14/99 6’3 185 DEN
254 LHD Tom Hedberg Barrie OHL L 8/10/99 5’11 161 SWE
255 RW Jerkko Hakkinen Saipa U20 Liiga Jrs R 7/27/99 5’11 183 FIN
256 C/RW Matej Novak Brno U20 Extraliga Jrs. R 4/10/99 6’0 172 CZE
257 LHD Clayton Phillips Fargo USHL L 9/9/99 5’11 175 USA
258 C Jacob Peterson Frolunda J20 Superelit L 7/19/99 6’0 165 SWE
259 C/RW Derek Gentile Quebec QMJHL R 4/9/99 5’7 147 CAN
260 LW Dominick Mersch Lincoln USHL L 12/16/98 6’0 190 USA
261 RW Ondrej Machala Niagara OHL L 1/11/99 6’0 176 CZE
262 RHD Otto Latvala HPK U20 Liiga Jrs R 7/14/99 6’5 190 FIN
263 C Justin Sigrist GCK Lions NLB L 4/20/99 5’10 159 SUI
264 G Kaden Fulcher Hamilton OHL L 9/23/98 6’3 178 CAN
265 C/RW Dawson Holt Vancouver WHL R 2/16/99 5’11 185 CAN
266 LHD Christian Huntley Quebec QMJHL L 3/2/99 5’9 160 CAN
267 C Pavel Kousal Spokane WHL L 11/14/98 5’11 158 CZE
268 C Adam Kubik Kladno U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 10/21/98 6’0 165 CZE
269 LHD Marek Korencik Lulea J20 Superelit L 7/19/99 6’3 194 SVK
270 LW Matthew Quercia Sioux Falls USHL L 2/24/99 6’2 194 USA
271 RW Konstantin Kukharev Ladya Togliatti MHL R 9/8/99 6’1 154 RUS
272 G Arvid Soderblom Frolunda J18 Superelit L 8/19/99 6’2 172 SWE
273 LW Dmitri Ovechkin SKA-1946 MHL R 5/19/99 6’0 172 RUS
274 C/LW Alexander Alemastsev Avto Yekaterinburg MHL L 1/13/99 6’4 185 RUS
275 LHD Scott Walford Victoria WHL L 1/12/99 6’1 188 CAN
276 C Santeri Aalto Tappara U20 Liiga Jrs L 2/26/99 6’2 179 FIN
277 C Albin Nisson Rogle J20 Superelit L 9/18/98 6’0 190 SWE
278 C Adam Goodsir Tri-City USHL L 9/22/98 6’2 180 USA
279 G Jordan Hollett Regina WHL R 3/31/99 6’4 188 CAN
280 G Yuri Grosev Taifun MHL L 7/16/99 6’2 165 RUS
281 RHD Oliver Larssen Odense Denmark R 12/25/98 6’3 207 DEN
282 RHD Vladislav Kazamanov HK MVD MHL R 5/9/99 6’2 185 RUS
283 LW Tomas Vildumentz Karlskrona J20 Superelit L 9/27/98 5’10 185 CZE
284 LHD Mario Ferraro Des Moines USHL L 9/17/98 5’11 181 CAN
285 RW C.J. Clarke Flint OHL L 2/8/99 6’0 201 CAN
286 RHD Vladislav Yeryomenko Calgary WHL R 4/22/99 6’1 185 BLR
287 LW Jan Becvar Litvinov U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 12/11/98 6’3 200 CZE
288 RHD Bernard Isiguzo Blues U20 Liiga Jrs R 8/2/99 5’10 203 FIN
289 LHD Samuel Fereta Slovan Bratislava U20 Slovak Extraliga L 12/29/98 6’3 192 SVK
290 RHD Cameron Crotty Brockville CCHL R 5/1/99 6’3 182 CAN
291 RW Matvei Zaseda Amurskie Tigry MHL R 6/9/99 5’10 179 RUS
292 G Luke Richardson Kitchener OHL L 5/28/99 6’3 158 CAN
293 C James Hamblin Medicine Hat WHL L 4/27/99 5’9 170 CAN
294 LHD Matyas Zelingr Kladno U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 1/10/99 6’3 190 CZE
295 C Ryan Peckford Victoria WHL L 3/4/99 6’0 186 CAN
296 LW Kristian Royka-Marthinsen Altumna J20 J20 Elit L 8/20/99 6’0 185 NOR
297 C Graham Slaggert Team USA NTDP L 4/6/99 5’11 183 USA
298 RW Jan Blasko Vitkovice U20 Extraliga Jrs. R 1/8/99 6’1 176 CZE
299 LHD Yan Aucoin Baie-Comeau QMJHL L 8/1/99 6’1 212 CAN
300 LW/C Jan Kern Slavia Praha Extraliga Jrs. L 7/27/99 5’11 178 CZE
301 LW Thomas Reichel Rosenheim DNL L 4/21/99 6’3 196 GER
302 RHD Phil Kemp Team USA NTDP R 2/12/99 6’3 201 USA
303 RW Alexander Oskin Tolpar MHL R 9/8/99 6’3 185 RUS
304 LW Josh Curtis Prince George WHL L 9/24/98 6’0 170 CAN
305 C/LW Igor Martynov Belarus U20 Belarus L 1/19/99 6’0 181 BLR
306 LW/C Marek Skvrne Brno U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 8/6/99 6’0 175 CZE
307 C Matthew Philip Niagara OHL R 5/31/99 5’11 175 CAN
308 G Anton Malmborg Malmo J20 Superelit L 10/7/98 6’1 170 SWE
309 LW Owen Hardy Vancouver WHL L 2/13/99 6’1 200 CAN
310 LW Erik Gardiner Kelowna WHL L 3/21/99 6’1 182 CAN
311 LHD Daniel Andersen Linkopings J20 Superelit L 7/23/93 5’9 174 DEN
312 G Petr Kochetkov Penza VHL L 6/25/99 6’1 176 RUS
313 RW Ben Copeland Waterloo USHL R 4/27/99 5’11 165 USA
314 RW Danila Marushev Irbis Kazan MHL L 1/1/99 5’9 170 RUS
315 RW Emil Lind Leksands J20 Superelit R 3/3/99 5’10 163 SWE
316 G Kyle Keyser Oshawa OHL L 3/8/99 6’2 182 USA
317 RHD John Maniscalco Team USA NTDP R 2/17/99 6’1 200 USA
318 LHD Gleb Shutov Omskie Yastreby MHL L 2/12/99 6’2 176 RUS
319 C Sammy Walker Edina HS-MN R 6/7/99 5’10 161 USA
320 LW Akash Bains Red Deer WHL L 2/4/99 6’0 184 CAN
321 C Sean Dhooghe Team USA NTDP R 3/9/99 5’2 140 USA
322 G Nikita Maslennikov Dynamo St Petersburg MHL L 1/7/99 6’1 180 RUS
323 LHD Mathieu Charlebois Halifax QMJHL L 2/14/99 6’2 212 CAN
324 G Matt Welsh Charlottetown QMJHL L 7/13/99 5’10 179 CAN
325 G Kirill Ustemenko Dynamo St. Petersburg MHL L 1/29/99 6’3 178 BLR
326 RW Lukas Boka Windsor OHL R 6/12/99 5’11 192 USA
327 C/RW Artyom Belotsky Avto Yekaterinburg MHL L 5/24/99 6’1 168 RUS
328 LW Filip Krivosik HPK U20 Liiga Jrs R 3/27/99 6’3 213 SVK
329 LW Teemu Engberg HIFK U20 Liiga Jrs L 6/9/99 5’11 179 FIN
330 LHD Makar Khabarov Almaz MHL L 9/10/99 5’11 175 RUS
331 RW Kamil Sadlocha Madison USHL R 4/12/99 5’10 178 USA
332 G Juraj Sklenar Nitra U20 Slovak Extraliga L 7/13/99 6’2 172 SVK
333 C Parker Kelly Prince Albert WHL L 5/14/99 5’11 169 CAN
334 RW Lukas Henze Vasteras J20 Superelit R 7/1/99 6’2 201 SWE
335 RHD Hayden Davis Saginaw OHL R 7/21/99 6’2 190 CAN
336 LHD Tobias Aronsson MoDo J20 Superelit L 2/3/99 6’1 160 SWE
337 LW Connor McMenamin Sioux City USHL L 2/25/99 5’11 188 USA
338 LW Sean Richards Everett WHL L 12/15/98 5’11 180 CAN
339 RW Artur Rayn Taifun MHL L 1/12/99 6’0 165 RUS
340 G Matthew Villalta Sault Ste Marie OHL L 6/3/99 6’2 170 CAN
341 LW Vladimir Vybiral Slovakia U18 Slovak Extraliga L 12/29/98 6’0 174 SVK
342 LHD Aleksi Anttalainen TPS U20 Liiga Jrs L 3/28/99 5’9 187 FIN
343 G David Otter Leksands J20 Superelit L 9/25/98 6’2 181 SWE
344 G Ty Taylor Vernon BCHL L 7/5/99 6’2 192 CAN
345 LHD Joshua Ess Lakeville South HS-MN L 4/3/99 5’11 180 USA
346 RHD Victor Berglund MoDo J20 Superelit R 8/2/99 6’0 161 SWE
347 LW Severi Lahtinen Pelicans U20 Liiga Jrs L 12/13/98 6’0 176 FIN
348 LHD David Noel Chicoutimi QMJHL L 4/10/99 6’1 174 CAN
349 RW Tyler Gratton Chicago USHL L 8/6/99 6’1 176 USA
350 G Adam Ahman HV71 J20 Superelit L 7/31/99 5’11 154 SWE
351 RHD Paul DeNaples Sioux Falls USHL R 9/19/98 6’1 170 USA
352 LW Logan Cockerill Team USA NTDP L 3/3/99 5’9 164 USA
353 C Nikita Zhukov Loko Yaroslavl MHL L 4/8/99 5’7 143 RUS
354 LHD Jack Rathbone Dexter HS-MA L 5/20/99 5’10 177 USA
355 C Andre Fredriksson Farjestad J20 Superelit L 5/16/99 6’2 185 SWE
356 C/LW Maxim Tsyplakov Spartak Moscow MHL L 9/19/98 6’3 187 RUS
357 LHD Benjamin Gagne Drummondville QMJHL L 10/22/98 5’11 170 CAN
358 RW Vincent Milot-Oullet Gatineau QMJHL R 11/6/98 5’9 180 CAN
359 LHD Tomas Hedera Bratislava U20 Slovak Extraliga L 11/7/98 6’1 185 SVK
360 C Liam Hawel Guelph OHL R 4/18/99 6’5 179 CAN
361 RHD Dmitri Rodionychev Nizhny Novgorod MHL R 1/12/99 6’3 229 RUS
362 LHD Martin Kupec Slovakia U18 Slovak Extraliga L 5/25/99 5’11 181 SVK
363 LW Milos Fafrak Slovakia U18 Slovak U20 L 7/8/99 6’2 172 SVK
364 LHD Jan Bednar Liberec U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 1/15/99 6’1 200 CZE
365 LHD Grigory Afonkin Magnitigorsk MHL L 3/5/99 6’3 185 RUS
366 LHD Anthony DeMeo Sault Ste Marie OHL L 6/16/99 6’0 183 USA
367 G Tomas Vomacka Corpus Christi NAHL L 5/2/99 6’3 172 CZE
368 RW Hayden Ostir Spokane WHL R 7/6/99 5’11 190 CAN
369 C Christian Wejse Blainville-Boisbriand QMJHL R 12/4/98 6’1 194 DEN
370 C/RW Aatu Luusuaniemi Karpat U20 Liiga Jrs R 1/6/99 6’1 196 FIN
371 RW Finn Evans St. Michael’s OJHL R 8/21/99 6’2 177 CAN
372 LW Erik Smolka Dukla Trencin U20 Slovak Extraliga L 11/14/98 6’2 192 SVK
373 LHD Adam Ziak Slovakia U18 Slovak U20 L 7/22/99 5’9 168 SVK
374 RW/C Brendan Semchuk Vancouver WHL R 2/21/99 5’11 170 CAN
375 LHD Antii Palojarvi Lukko U20 Liiga Jrs L 1/18/99 6’1 174 FIN
376 RHD Nikita Azarov Avto Yekaterinburg MHL R 6/2/99 6’0 192 RUS
377 LHD Alec Capstick Langley BCHL L 2/18/99 6’1 168 CAN
378 RW/LW Kirill Maksimov Niagara OHL R 6/1/99 6’1 190 RUS
379 LW Darian Pilon Sudbury OHL L 10/2/98 5’9 174 CAN
380 LHD Zach Lauzon Rouyn-Noranda QMJHL L 10/10/98 6’0 185 CAN
381 RW Nikita Shashkov Sibir Novosibirsk MHL L 3/26/99 5’11 165 RUS
382 C Alexander Klisunov Vityaz MHL L 4/2/99 6’1 180 RUS
383 LW/C Hugo Leufvenius Linköping J20 Superelit L 3/26/99 6’3 219 SWE
384 LHD Jakob Brahaney Kingston OHL L 3/26/99 6’2 180 CAN
385 C Carson MacKinnon Rimouski QMJHL L 8/2/99 6’0 162 CAN
386 RHD Scooter Brickey Muskegon USHL R 5/27/99 6’3 192 USA
387 RW Jeremy McKenna Moncton QMJHL R 4/20/99 5’10 182 CAN
388 LHD Calle Sjalin Ostersunds J20 J20 Elit L 9/2/99 6’1 179 SWE
389 G Erno Gerlander Jokerit U20 Liiga Jrs L 1/6/99 6’2 175 FIN
390 RW Tobias Ahstrom MoDo J20 Superelit L 2/20/99 5’11 172 SWE
391 RW/C Corey Andonovski St. Andrew’s HS-CAN R 3/24/99 6’0 187 CAN
392 LHD Matous Horsky Mlada Boleslav Extraliga Jrs. L 7/13/99 6’2 194 CZE
393 RW Matt Miller Sioux City USHL R 9/4/99 6’3 187 USA
394 C Cedric Pare Saint John QMJHL L 1/24/99 6’2 203 CAN
395 LW Charlie Hoffman Djugardens J20 Superelit L 2/13/99 5’9 150 SWE
396 LHD Jack Harris Prior Lake HS-MN L 6/13/99 6’0 165 USA
397 LHD Simon Benoit Shawinigan QMJHL L 9/19/98 6’2 176 CAN
398 RHD Alexander Lyakhov Lada MHL R 4/24/99 6’4 182 RUS
399 G Artyom Melnikov Loko Yaroslavl MHL L 1/18/99 5’10 150 RUS
400 LW Albert Michnac Guelph OHL L 10/18/98 5’10 163 CZE
401 RW Arnauld Riat Geneve U20 NLB R 4/18/99 6’0 154 SUI
402 LHD Eero Teravainen Lincoln USHL L 3/8/99 5’11 165 FIN
403 RW Cole Purboo Windsor OHL R 6/18/99 6’3 215 CAN
404 C Filip Engaras Skelleftea J20 Superelit R 5/16/99 5’11 176 SWE
405 LW Barrett Sheen Kootenay WHL L 9/20/98 6’4 218 CAN
406 C Jakob Ringsby Farjestad J20 Superelit L 6/16/99 5’10 185 SWE
407 C Simon Lafrance Val-d’Or QMJHL L 10/12/98 5’9 150 CAN
408 RW Ilya Drozdetskikh Mamonty Yugry MHL L 2/8/99 6’1 170 RUS
409 RHD Marcus Kichton Vancouver WHL R 1/9/99 5’11 185 CAN
410 RW Patrik Marcinek Zvolen U20 Slovak Extraliga L 10/4/98 5’11 183 SVK
411 LW Joey Cassetti Team USA NTDP L 2/28/99 6’3 187 USA
412 LHD Nikita Radzivilyuk Kootenay WHL L 3/9/99 6’1 187 RUS
413 C Erkka Seppala HPK U20 Liiga Jrs L 5/19/99 5’9 160 FIN
414 RHD Jeppe Mogensen AIK J18 J18 Elit R 3/14/99 6’1 176 DEN
415 LW/C Max Wennlund HV-71 J20 Superelit L 2/8/99 5’11 172 SWE
416 LW Desi Burgart Surrey BCHL L 9/28/98 6’1 180 CAN
417 G Linus Marcko Timra IK J20 Superelit L 5/26/99 6’4 190 SWE
418 LHD Juho Korhonen Karpat U20 Liiga Jrs L 5/19/99 5’9 165 FIN
419 C Marko Reifenberger Bloomington USHL L 1/19/99 6’0 177 USA
420 LHD Kelton Hatcher Sarnia OHL L 4/19/99 6’1 176 USA
421 RW Matej Galbavy Mora IK J20 Superelit L 10/27/98 6’0 170 SVK
422 RW David Kofron Trinec U20 Extraliga Jrs. R 11/24/98 5’10 147 CZE
423 RHD Jordan Lepage Halifax QMJHL R 7/5/99 6’0 173 CAN
424 LW Shaw Boomhower Mississauga OHL L 10/31/98 5’11 185 CAN
425 RW Alexander Pavlenko Avto Yekaterinburg MHL L 4/11/99 6’2 194 RUS
426 C Jordan Seyfert Chicago USHL R 4/3/99 5’10 165 USA
427 LW Justin Almeida Moose Jaw WHL L 2/6/99 5’9 176 CAN
428 LHD Dom Schmiemann Swift Current WHL L 4/2/99 6’4 189 CAN
429 RW Adam Dawe Notre Dame SJHL R 1/18/99 5’9 165 CAN
430 G Dawson Weatherill Spokane WHL L 6/3/99 6’4 190 CAN
431 RHD Gustav Lindstrom Altumna Allsvenskan R 10/20/98 6’2 187 SWE
432 LW Vladislav Rybakov Loko Yaroslavl MHL L 7/9/99 5’9 148 RUS
433 LW Matt Thompson Islanders USPHL L 11/7/98 6’1 194 USA
434 RHD Walter Flower Halifax QMJHL R 5/7/99 6’1 175 CAN
435 C/LW Emils Gergeris HK Riga MHL L 7/23/99 6’0 160 LAT
436 RHD August Berg Brynas J20 Superelit R 4/21/99 5’11 167 SWE
437 LW/C Oliver Kinnunen Blues U20 Liiga Jrs L 1/15/99 5’9 165 FIN
438 C Dylan Mills MN Wilderness NAHL R 8/18/99 6’3 200 USA
439 LW/C Santeri Virtanen Dubuque USHL L 5/11/99 6’1 189 FIN
440 LHD Brayden Gorda Edmonton WHL L 4/15/99 6’1 190 CAN
441 C/RW David Madsen Vaxjo J20 Superelit R 1/25/99 6’0 194 DEN
442 C/W German Poddubniy Erie OHL L 6/9/99 6’2 180 RUS
443 RW Steve Agriogianis Cedar Rapids USHL R 1/7/99 5’10 164 USA
444 RHD Mac Hollowell Sault Ste Marie OHL R 9/26/98 5’9 162 CAN
445 C Sven Leuenberger Zug U20 NLB R 2/18/99 5’10 187 SUI
446 LHD Olli Kaskinen TPS U20 Liiga Jrs L 1/27/99 6’0 185 FIN
447 RW Jussi Tammela Kalpa U20 Liiga Jrs R 6/25/99 6’0 185 FIN
448 LHD Ian Blacker Oshawa OHL L 5/27/99 6’4 175 CAN
449 G Chris McGonigle (LTIR) Kitchener OHL L 9/19/98 6’3 200 CAN
450 RHD Ryan Schoettler Prince George WHL R 7/25/99 5’10 163 CAN
451 LHD Karl Markstrom Altumna J20 J20 Elit L 5/1/99 5’9 185 SWE
452 C Alex Mella Shattuck St. Mary’s HS-MN L 2/21/99 6’0 187 USA
453 LHD Regnars Udris Junior Blues NAHL L 1/6/99 6’2 185 LAT
454 RHD William Cyr Rouyn-Noranda QMJHL R 5/6/99 5’9 142 CAN
455 LHD Keenan MacIsaac Chicoutimi QMJHL L 4/1/99 5’11 178 CAN
456 LHD Carson Sass Red Deer WHL L 5/22/99 6’0 182 CAN
457 LHD Corson Green Chicago USHL L 3/4/99 6’1 206 USA
458 RW Matt Cassidy Springfield Jr. Blues NAHL L 7/31/99 6’0 185 USA
459 RW Erik Aterius Leksand J20 Superelit L 5/1/99 5’10 194 SWE
460 RHD Nuutti Viitasalo TPS U20 Liiga Jrs R 4/4/99 6’1 174 FIN
461 C/RW Freddy Roslund Malmo J20 Superelit L 5/18/99 6’0 174 SWE
462 C Viliam Cacho Södertälje SK J20 Superelit L 10/14/98 5’11 170 SVK
463 G Daniel Lebedeff Madison USHL L 5/23/99 6’2 190 FIN
464 C Alexander Yaremchuk Mamonty Yugry MHL L 8/22/99 5’11 172 RUS
465 RHD Aidan Girduckis Carleton Place CCHL R 10/8/98 6’1 168 CAN
466 C Ethan Mcindoe Spokane WHL L 7/22/99 6’1 175 CAN
467 RW/C Jack Jacome Georgetown OJHL R 12/7/98 5’8 160 CAN
468 G Dimitriy Rayko HK MVD MHL L 3/3/99 6’0 189 RUS
469 RHD Cole Fraser Peterborough OHL R 8/23/99 6’2 191 CAN
470 LW James Malm Vancouver WHL L 6/25/99 5’9 178 CAN
471 LHD Jarrod Gourley Spruce Grove AJHL L 6/29/99 6’1 200 CAN
472 LHD Conor Ali Sudbury OHL L 3/9/99 6’0 185 CAN
473 RW/LW Brett Davis Kootenay WHL L 6/1/99 6’0 174 CAN
474 RHD Jeremy Diotte Rouyn-Noranda QMJHL R 6/7/99 5’8 160 CAN
475 LHD Kiril Zotov Magnitigorsk MHL L 2/5/99 6’1 187 RUS
476 C Matous Havrila Slovakia U18 Slovak U20 L 7/25/99 5’11 190 SVK
477 RW Trey Fix-Wolansky Edmonton WHL R 5/26/99 5’6 165 CAN
478 LHD Jake Harrison West Kelowna BCHL L 4/13/99 5’10 174 CAN
479 RHD John Stampohar Grand Rapids HS-MN R 9/24/98 6’2 205 USA
480 LHD Patrick Cotton Junior Bruins USPHL U18 L 5/25/99 6’3 210 SWE
481 C Santeri Hartikainen Groton HS-CT R 1/5/99 6’1 190 FIN
482 LW Alexander Belyayev Mamonty Yugry MHL L 3/28/99 6’1 178 RUS
483 C Adam Cheezo Val-d’Or QMJHL R 11/2/98 6’3 187 CAN
484 LW Roope Mäkitalo Pelicans U20 Liiga Jrs L 9/22/98 5’8 163 FIN
485 RHD Jantzen Leslie Saskatoon WHL R 2/11/99 6’1 175 CAN
486 C Ben Evans Ottawa OHL L 1/16/99 6’0 195 CAN
487 C/RW Brett Neumann Kingston OHL R 2/15/99 5’9 165 CAN
488 RHD Alexander Osin HK MVD MHL R 1/12/99 6’0 194 RUS
489 LW Carson Dimoff Aberdeen NAHL L 5/11/99 5’10 183 USA
490 RHD Cameron Hausinger Red Deer WHL R 1/12/99 5’10 188 USA
491 LW Lucas Chiodo Barrie OHL L 10/31/98 5’6 164 CAN
492 RW Lean Bergmann Sioux Falls USHL L 10/4/98 6’1 201 SUI
493 LW Petr Chlan Chomutov U20 Extraliga Jrs. L 6/2/99 5’8 168 CZE
494 LW Brad Chenier North Bay OHL L 1/20/99 5’11 186 CAN
495 C Jakub Urbanek Slovakia U18 Slovak Extraliga R 6/22/99 6’0 154 SVK
496 LW Nick McHugh Kitchener OHL L 2/13/99 5’10 163 CAN
497 LHD Griffin Mendel Penticton BCHL L 2/18/99 6’3 201 CAN
498 C Nick Campoli North York OJHL L 2/16/99 5’11 174 CAN
499 RW Nicolas Muller MoDo J20 Superelit R 6/21/99 6’0 159 SUI
500 RW Robbie Burt Oshawa OHL R 5/29/99 6’0 210 CAN

2005 NHL Draft Results

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Round OA NHL Team Player POS Team League
1 1 Pittsburgh Sidney Crosby C Rimouski Oceanic QMJHL
1 2 Anaheim Bobby Ryan R Owen Sound Attack OHL
1 3 Carolina Jack Johnson D US U18 NTDP
1 4 Minnesota Benoit Pouliot L Sudbury Wolves OHL
1 5 Montreal Carey Price G Tri-City Americans WHL
1 6 Columbus Gilbert Brule C Vancouver Giants WHL
1 7 Chicago Jack Skille R US U18 NTDP
1 8 San Jose Devin Setoguchi R Saskatoon Blades WHL
1 9 Ottawa Brian Lee D Lincoln Stars USHL
1 10 Vancouver Luc Bourdon D Val d’Or Foreurs QMJHL
1 11 Los Angeles Anze Kopitar C Sodertalje Jrs Sweden
1 12 NY Rangers Marc Staal D Sudbury Wolves OHL
1 13 Buffalo Marek Zagrapan C Chicoutimi Sagueneens QMJHL
1 14 Washington Sasha Pokulok D Cornell University ECAC
1 15 NY Islanders Ryan O’Marra C Erie Otters OHL
1 16 Atlanta Alex Bourret R Lewiston MAINEiacs QMJHL
1 17 Phoenix Martin Hanzal C Budejovice Extraliga U20
1 18 Nashville Ryan Parent D Guelph Storm OHL
1 19 Detroit Jakub Kindl D Kitchener Rangers OHL
1 20 Florida Kenndal McArdle L Moose Jaw Warriors WHL
1 21 Toronto Tuukka Rask G Ilves Tampere SM-liiga
1 22 Boston Matt Lashoff D Kitchener Rangers OHL
1 23 New Jersey Nicklas Bergfors R Sodertalje SK SEL
1 24 St. Louis T.J. Oshie R Warroad H.S. HS-MN
1 25 Edmonton Andrew Cogliano C St. Michael’s Buzzers OPJHL
1 26 Calgary Matt Pelech R Sarnia Sting OHL
1 27 Washington Joe Finley D Sioux Falls Stampede USHL
1 28 Dallas Matt Niskanen D Virginia H.S. HS-MN
1 29 Philadelphia Steve Downie R Windsor Spitfires OHL
1 30 Tampa Bay Vladimir Mihalik D Presov Slovakia Jrs
2 31 Anaheim Brendan Mikkelson D Portland Winter Hawks WHL
2 32 Florida Tyler Plante G Brandon Wheat Kings WHL
2 33 Dallas James Neal L Plymouth Whalers OHL
2 34 Colorado Ryan Stoa C US U18 NTDP
2 35 San Jose Marc-Edouard Vlasic D Quebec Remparts QMJHL
2 36 Edmonton Taylor Chorney D Shattuck St. Mary’s HS-MN
2 37 St. Louis Scott Jackson D Seattle Thunderbirds WHL
2 38 New Jersey Jeff Frazee G US U18 NTDP
2 39 Boston Petr Kalus R Vitkovice Jr. Extraliga U20
2 40 NY Rangers Mike Sauer D Portland Winter Hawks WHL
2 41 Atlanta Ondrej Pavelec G Kladno Jrs Extraliga U20
2 42 Detroit Justin Abdelkader L Cedar Rapids RoughRiders USHL
2 43 Chicago Mike Blunden R Erie Otters OHL
2 44 Colorado Paul Stastny C U. of Denver WCHA
2 45 Montreal Guillaume Latendresse R Drummondville Voltigeurs QMJHL
2 46 NY Islanders Dustin Kohn D Calgary Hitmen WHL
2 47 Colorado Tom Fritsche L Ohio State University CCHA
2 48 Buffalo Philipp Gogulla L Cologne Sharks DEL
2 49 Atlanta Chad Denny D Lewiston MAINEiacs QMJHL
2 50 Los Angeles Dany Roussin L Rimouski Oceanic QMJHL
2 51 Vancouver Mason Raymond L Camrose Kodiaks AJHL
2 52 Colorado Chris Durand C Seattle Thunderbirds WHL
2 53 Atlanta Andrew Kozek W Surrey Eagles BCHL
2 54 Chicago Dan Bertram R Boston College H-East
2 55 Columbus Adam McQuaid D Sudbury Wolves OHL
2 56 NY Rangers Marc-Andre Cliche C Lewiston MAINEiacs QMJHL
2 57 Minnesota Matt Kassian L Kamloops Blazers WHL
2 58 Carolina Nate Hagemo D U. of Minnesota WCHA
2 59 Phoenix Pier-Olivier Pelletier G Drummondville Voltigeurs QMJHL
2 60 Los Angeles T.J. Fast D Camrose Kodiaks AJHL
2 61 Pittsburgh Michael Gergen D Shattuck St. Mary’s HS-MN
3 62 Pittsburgh Kristopher Letang D Val d’Or Foreurs QMJHL
3 63 Anaheim Jason Bailey R US U18 NTDP
3 64 Carolina Joe Barnes C Saskatoon Blades WHL
3 65 Minnesota Kristofer Westblom G Kelowna Rockets WHL
3 66 NY Rangers Brodie Dupont L Calgary Hitmen WHL
3 67 Columbus Kris Russell D Medicine Hat Tigers WHL
3 68 Chicago Evan Brophey C Belleville Bulls OHL
3 69 Calgary Gord Baldwin D Medicine Hat Tigers WHL
3 70 Ottawa Vitali Anikeyenko D Yaroslavl-2 MHL
3 71 Dallas Richard Clune L Sarnia Sting OHL
3 72 Los Angeles Jonathan Quick G Avon Old Farms H.S. HS-CT
3 73 Tampa Bay Radek Smolenak L Kingston Frontenacs OHL
3 74 Calgary Dan Ryder C Peterborough Petes OHL
3 75 Dallas Perttu Lindgren C Ilves Jrs Liiga Jrs
3 76 NY Islanders Shea Guthrie C St. George’s School
3 77 NY Rangers Dalyn Flatt D Saskatoon Blades WHL
3 78 Nashville Teemu Laakso D HIFK Helsinki SM-liiga
3 79 Nashville Cody Franson D Vancouver Giants WHL
3 80 Detroit Christofer Lofberg C Djurgarden Jrs. Superelit
3 81 Edmonton Danny Syvret D London Knights OHL
3 82 Toronto Phil Oreskovic D Brampton Battalion OHL
3 83 Boston Mikko Lehtonen R Blues Jrs Liiga Jrs
3 84 New Jersey Mark Fraser D Kitchener Rangers OHL
3 85 St. Louis Ben Bishop G Texas Tornado NAHL
3 86 Edmonton Robby Dee C Breck School HS-MN
3 87 Buffalo Marc-Andre Gragnani D Prince Edward Island Rocket QMJHL
3 88 Colorado T.J. Hensick R U. of Michigan CCHA
3 89 Tampa Bay Chris Lawrence R Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds OHL
3 90 Florida Dan Collins R Plymouth Whalers OHL
3 91 Philadelphia Oskars Bartulis D Moncton Wildcats QMJHL
4 92 Tampa Bay Marek Bartanus R Kosice HC Slovak
4 93 Florida Olivier Legault L Lewiston MAINEiacs QMJHL
4 94 Carolina Jakub Vojta D Sparta Jrs. Extraliga U20
4 95 Ottawa Cody Bass C Mississauga IceDogs OHL
4 96 Buffalo Chris Butler D Sioux City Musketeers USHL
4 97 Edmonton Chris VandeVelde C Moorhead H.S. HS-MN
4 98 Ottawa Ilya Zubov C Cherepovets Jr. MHL
4 99 New Jersey Patrick Davis L Kitchener Rangers OHL
4 100 Boston Jonathan Sigalet D Bowling Green State University CCHA
4 101 Columbus Jared Boll R Lincoln Stars USHL
4 102 Tampa Bay Blair Jones C Moose Jaw Warriors WHL
4 103 Detroit Mattias Ritola R Leksand Jrs Superelit
4 104 Florida Matt Duffy D New England Jr Monarchs NEJHL
4 105 Phoenix Keith Yandle D Cushing Academy HS-MA
4 106 Boston Vladimir Sobotka C Slavia Praha HC Czech
4 107 NY Rangers Tom Pyatt C Saginaw Spirit OHL
4 108 Chicago Niklas Hjalmarsson D HV71 Jonkoping SEL
4 109 Washington Andrew Thomas D U. of Denver WCHA
4 110 Minnesota Kyle Bailey C Portland Winter Hawks WHL
4 111 Calgary J.D. Watt C Vancouver Giants WHL
4 112 San Jose Alex Stalock G Cedar Rapids RoughRiders USHL
4 113 Chicago Nathan Davis C Miami University NCAA
4 114 Vancouver Alexandre Vincent G Chicoutimi Sagueneens QMJHL
4 115 Ottawa Janne Kolehmainen L SaiPa Lappeenranta Liiga
4 116 Atlanta Jordan Smotherman L Quebec Remparts QMJHL
4 117 Chicago Denis Istomin R Cherepovets Jr. MHL
4 118 Washington Patrick McNeill D Saginaw Spirit OHL
4 119 Philadelphia Jeremy Duchesne G Halifax Mooseheads QMJHL
4 120 Edmonton Vyacheslav Trukhno C Prince Edward Island Rocket QMJHL
4 121 Montreal Juraj Mikus C Skalica HK 36 Slovak
4 122 Minnesota Morten Madsen L Frolunda Jrs Superelit
4 123 Carolina Ondrej Otcenas L Trencin Jrs Extraliga U20
4 124 Colorado Raymond Macias D Kamloops Blazers WHL
4 125 Pittsburgh Tommi Leinonen D Karpat Jrs. Liiga Jrs
5 126 Pittsburgh Tim Crowder R Surrey Eagles BCHL
5 127 Anaheim Bobby Bolt L Kingston Frontenacs OHL
5 128 Calgary Kevin Lalande G Belleville Bulls OHL
5 129 Minnesota Anthony Aiello D Thayer Academy HS-MA
5 130 Montreal Mathieu Aubin C Lewiston MAINEiacs QMJHL
5 131 Columbus Tomas Popperle G Sparta Praha Czech
5 132 Detroit Darren Helm C Medicine Hat Tigers WHL
5 133 Tampa Bay Stanislav Lascek R Chicoutimi Sagueneens QMJHL
5 134 Chicago Brennan Turner D Notre Dame Hounds SJHL
5 135 Atlanta Tomas Pospisil L Trinec Ocelari HC Czech
5 136 Ottawa Tomas Kudelka D ZPS Zlin Jrs. Extraliga U20
5 137 Detroit Johan Ryno C Kumla Jrs
5 138 Vancouver Matt Butcher C Chilliwack Chiefs BCHL
5 139 Los Angeles Patrik Hersley D Malmo Jrs Sweden
5 140 San Jose Taylor Dakers G Kootenay Ice WHL
5 141 Anaheim Brian Salcido D Colorado College WCHA
5 142 Buffalo Nathan Gerbe C US U18 NTDP
5 143 Washington Daren Machesney G Brampton Battalion OHL
5 144 NY Islanders Masi Marjamaki L Moose Jaw Warriors WHL
5 145 Carolina Timothy Kunes D New England Jr. Falcons
5 146 Dallas Tom Wandell C Sodertalje Jrs Sweden
5 147 NY Rangers Trevor Koverko D Owen Sound Attack OHL
5 148 Phoenix Anton Krysanov C Tolyatti Lada Russia
5 149 San Jose Derek Joslin D Ottawa 67’s OHL
5 150 Nashville Cal O’Reilly C Windsor Spitfires OHL
5 151 Detroit Jeff May D Prince Albert Raiders WHL
5 152 Philadelphia Josh Beaulieu L London Knights OHL
5 153 Toronto Alex Berry R Boston Jr. Bruins
5 154 Boston Wacey Rabbit C Saskatoon Blades WHL
5 155 New Jersey Mark Fayne D Noble and Greenough H.S. HS-MA
5 156 St. Louis Ryan Reaves R Brandon Wheat Kings WHL
5 157 Edmonton Fredrik Pettersson L Frolunda Jrs Superelit
5 158 Calgary Matt Keetley G Medicine Hat Tigers WHL
5 159 Carolina Risto Korhonen D Karpat Jrs. Liiga Jrs
5 160 Dallas Matt Watkins R Vernon Vipers BCHL
5 161 Florida Brian Foster G New England Jr Monarchs
5 162 San Jose P.J. Fenton L UMass-Amherst H-East
6 163 Tampa Bay Marek Kvapil L Saginaw Spirit OHL
6 164 Florida Roman Derlyuk D St. Petersburg Jrs. MHL
6 165 Tampa Bay Kevin Beech G Sudbury Wolves OHL
6 166 Colorado Jason Lynch D Spokane Chiefs WHL
6 167 Chicago Joe Fallon G U. of Vermont ECAC
6 168 Colorado Justin Mercier L US U18 NTDP
6 169 St. Louis Mike Gauthier D Prince Albert Raiders WHL
6 170 New Jersey Sean Zimmerman D Spokane Chiefs WHL
6 171 St. Louis Nick Drazenovic C Prince George Cougars WHL
6 172 Boston Lukas Vantuch C Liberec Jrs Extraliga U20
6 173 Toronto Johan Dahlberg L MoDo Jr.
6 174 Philadelphia John Flatters D Red Deer Rebels WHL
6 175 Detroit Juho Mielonen D Ilves Jrs Liiga Jrs
6 176 Nashville Ryan Maki R Harvard University ECAC
6 177 Columbus Derek Reinhart D Regina Pats WHL
6 178 NY Rangers Greg Beller W Lake of the Woods
6 179 Calgary Brett Sutter C Kootenay Ice WHL
6 180 NY Islanders Tyrell Mason D Salmon Arm Silverbacks BCHL
6 181 Washington Tim Kennedy L Sioux City Musketeers USHL
6 182 Buffalo Adam Dennis G London Knights OHL
6 183 San Jose Will Colbert D Ottawa 67’s OHL
6 184 Los Angeles Ryan McGinnis D Plymouth Whalers OHL
6 185 Vancouver Kris Fredheim D Notre Dame Hounds SJHL
6 186 Ottawa Dmitry Megalinsky D Yaroslavl Lokomotiv Russia
6 187 Atlanta Andrey Zubarev D Ufa Salavat Yulayev Russia
6 188 Chicago Joe Charlebois D Sioux City Musketeers USHL
6 189 Columbus Kirill Starkov L Frolunda Jrs Superelit
6 190 Montreal Matt D’Agostini R Guelph Storm OHL
6 191 Buffalo Vyacheslav Buravchikov D Krylia-2
6 192 Carolina Nicolas Blanchard L Chicoutimi Sagueneens QMJHL
6 193 San Jose Tony Lucia L Wayzata H.S. HS-MN
6 194 Pittsburgh Jean-Philipp Paquet D Shawinigan Cataractes QMJHL
7 195 Pittsburgh Joe Vitale C Sioux Falls Stampede USHL
7 196 NY Islanders Nick Tuzzolino D Sarnia Sting OHL
7 197 Anaheim Jean-Philippe Levasseur G Rouyn-Noranda Huskies QMJHL
7 198 Carolina Kyle Lawson D US U18 NTDP
7 199 Minnesota Riley Emmerson L Tri-City Americans WHL
7 200 Montreal Sergei Kostitsyn R Gomel KHL
7 201 Columbus Trevor Hendrikx D Peterborough Petes OHL
7 202 Chicago David Kuchejda R Budejovice Jrs Extraliga U20
7 203 Chicago Adam Hobson C Spokane Chiefs WHL
7 204 Ottawa Colin Greening L Upper Canada College
7 205 Vancouver Mario Bliznak C Dubnica Spartak HC Slovak
7 206 Los Angeles Josh Meyers D Sioux City Musketeers USHL
7 207 Atlanta Myles Stoesz L Spokane Chiefs WHL
7 208 Buffalo Matt Generous D New England Jr. Falcons
7 209 Washington Viktor Dovgan D CSKA Jr. MHL
7 210 NY Islanders Luciano Aquino R Brampton Battalion OHL
7 211 NY Rangers Ryan Russell C Kootenay Ice WHL
7 212 Phoenix Patrick Brosnihan R Worcester Academy HS-MA
7 213 Nashville Scott Todd D Windsor Spitfires OHL
7 214 Detroit Bretton Stamler D Seattle Thunderbirds WHL
7 215 Philadelphia Matt Clackson L Chicago Steel USHL
7 216 Toronto Anton Stralman D Skovde IK Swe-1
7 217 Boston Brock Bradford C Omaha Lancers USHL
7 218 New Jersey Alexander Sundstrom C Bjorkloven IF Swe-1
7 219 St. Louis Nikolai Lemtyugov W CSKA Moscow Russia
7 220 Edmonton Matthew Glasser L Fort McMurray Oil Barons AJHL
7 221 Calgary Myles Rumsey D Swift Current Broncos WHL
7 222 Colorado Kyle Cumiskey D Kelowna Rockets WHL
7 223 Dallas Pat McGann G Illinois Midgets
7 224 Florida Zach Bearson R Waterloo Black Hawks USHL
7 225 Tampa Bay John Wessbecker D Blake School
7 226 Los Angeles John Seymour L Brampton Battalion OHL
7 227 Buffalo Andrew Orpik D Thayer Academy HS-MA
7 228 Toronto Chad Rau C Des Moines Buccaneers USHL
7 229 Montreal Philippe Paquet D Salisbury School
7 230 Nashville Patric Hornqvist R Vasby

Scouting Notes: Chicoutimi @ Baie-Comeau (QMJHL)

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2017 NHL Draft

Prospect Notes: Chicoutimi vs Baie-Comeau

Lots of flash and dash from Baie-Comeau’s Ivan Chekhovich
Steve Kournianos  |  2/21/2017 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of the Baie-Comeau Drakkar

2017 Draft Prospects

Baie-Comeau Drakkar

LW Ivan Chekhovich (1/4/99, 5’10/176): Chekhovich is a dynamic player with an array of puck skills who plays on the Drakkar’s top line and top power play unit. He’s very quick and accelerates to top speed faster than most of his draft peers. Chekhovich is a finesse player through and through, and he’s as dangerous around the net as he is on the rush. He doesn’t possess a blistering shot, but his release is quick and is confident to defer to the backhand. Chekhovich seems partial to the wraparound whiuch comes in handy when he’s consistently kept to the outside. He’ll make subtle plays in traffic to draw opponents away from the weak side, and his shiftiness is sharp enough to create wide open lanes to the net. His battle level is moderate and he likes the puck to come to him rather than win the battle on his own. His game breaking ability, however, is most certainly legitimate.

C/RW D’Artagnan Joly (4/7/99, 6’3/180): Joly has a pro build and an array of skills that make you think he could easily be one of the top draft-eligible teenagers in the QMJHL. An upright skater with a long stride and above-average quickness, Joly uses his reach and stickhandling skills to manuever in and around traffic. He’s capable of creating his own shot and is more creative than your average power forward. Joly can wire a hard, accurate shot off the pass or his back foot, and he’s adept at shooting through defenders in one-on-one situations. The puck always seems to find him, and he considers using all of his teammates as he carries the ouck up the ice with confidence. His hands are incredibly soft and the power play is where they come into play — he receives and controls hard passes rather effortlessly. The lone blemish is his seemingly nonchalant compete level, as Joly has a habit of looking totally disinterested and can be careless with the puck with the occasional loaf on the backcheck. He can play center or wing, but his poor production in the dot and struggles with defensive-zone coverage makes us think he’s better off on the flank.

C Christopher Benoit (5/31/99, 5’9/170): Benoit is a scrappy, defensive-minded center who kills penalties and does fairly well on faceoffs. A strong skater with good balance and above-average speed, Benoit is an asset when down a man because he understands when and when not to commit himself to a puck battle. Rarely is he given opportunities to showcase what he can do on offense, but he is a low maintenance player with a good, accurate shot who makes his money grinding it out along the boards or out-muscling opponents on his way to the net. A team-first player who does whatever is asked of him.

RW Kevin Lamontagne (7/9/99, 5’8/169): A hard-nosed speedster with quick hands who approaches every shift as if it were his last, Lamontagne is a gritty role player with strong puck skills who is versatile enough to play on any line. His quickness and sound instincts creates turnovers in any zone, and he’s strong enough on his feet to power through opponents who try to seal off his avenue of approach. Lamontagne plays with his head up and surveys the ice no matter how fast he’s moving, and his non-stop motor makes him ideal on the penalty kill. He can play physical, finishes his checks and is rather fearless considering his diminutive build, and he does so in a clean manner. Lamontagne was an 11th round pick in the 2015 QMJHL Draft, so he’s got a lot to prove.

LHD Jan Aucoin (8/1/99, 6’2/205): Aucoin is a mobile two-way defenseman with size, a booming shot and an evolving physical aspect to his game. His thick frame, hunched-over skating style and long stick is reminiscent of 2015 first rounder Ivan Provorov, but the comparisons end there, as Aucoin is a long way’s from truly grasping the intricacies of being a reliable three-zone defender and beating back pressure with consistency. Aucoin is aggressive and likes to take risks, especially with the puck heading the other way. His footwork and quickness is solid considering how big he is, and he is capable of playing on the power play or penalty kill. His one-on-one play is hit or miss — one shift he’ll be a matador, the next a smothering wall of muscle. Aucoin’s skill set is tantalizing and the right environment could untap his top-four potential, but we’d like to see him simplify his defensive game and manage the puck better.

LHD Matteo Pietroniro (10/20/98, 6’0/178): Pietroniro is a slick offensive-minded defenseman with superior puck skills who uses quickness and sound vision to eat away at opposing schemes. He quarterbacks the top power play unit with confidence, as all plays usually run through him before completion. Pietroniro is incredibly accurate with his passes and can split the zones with tape-to-tape stretch passes from as far back as his own goal line. He can either initiate a rush with puck carrying or join one to create an advantage — both revealing a smart, instinctive player who understands how critical a role he plays. Pietroniro has good chemistry with his partners and makes timely and decisive pinches. Rarely will you see him drop down below the circles without ensuring the void will be covered, and when he does, he’ll put his head down and bolt back to thwart an opposing counterattack. He has a decent shot from the point, but it’s accurate and fired without hesitation. Pietroniro is reliable in one-on-one coverage and slot positioning but can be moved off the puck by bigger forwards, especially on the penalty kill or in close-quarter battles. That doesn’t mean he can’t play physical — Pietroniro likes to mix it up and stands up to any challenge.

LW Antoine Girard (9/22/98, 5’10/178): Physical two-way winger with a developing offensive game that showcases speed and relentless forechecking. Girard makes plays out of nothing, and having the kind of balance he possesses allows him to hang on to the puck longer than you’d expect from a depth player. He has no problem digging in and getting his hands dirty, specifically in front of the net and in the corners. Girard is quite accurate with his shot and manages to slip undetected into clear shooting lanes, and this kind of versatilty makes him an option on both the power play and the penalty kill.

Chicoutimi Saguenéens

LHD Keenan MacIsaac (4/1/99, 5’11/182): MacIsaac, the 19th overall pick in the 2015 QMJHL Draft, is a key cog in Chicoutimi’s offense. He’s a slick skater and hard, accurate passer with decent instincts when it comes to play development, especially when manning the point on one of the Saugueneens’ power play units. MacIsaac will join the rush and use his quick feet to fill in a vacant spot , usually inside the left circle, and his above-average shot is kept low, hard and accurate. His defensive zone play is sound, and he tries to make up for marginal physical play with a quick stick and good positioning.

Scouting Notes: Spokane @ Kelowna (WHL)

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2017 NHL Draft

Prospect Notes: Spokane vs Kelowna

Blue chipper Yamamoto comes to Chiefs’ rescue with OT winner
Steve Kournianos  |  2/23/2017 |  New York  |  

Photo courtesy of the Spokane Chiefs

2017 Draft Prospects

Spokane Chiefs

RW Kailer Yamamoto (9/29/98, 5’8/153): Yamamoto is clearly one of the most gifted offensive talents eligible for the 2017 draft, possibly its most creative. There is no set strategy that can slow him down, let alone stopping him entirely. His chemistry with fellow 2017 draft prospect Jaret Anderson-Dolan is evident from the initial puck drop. He has a devastating change of pace, and he uses sick hand/eye coordination to settle pucks and fire a hard shot with little backswing. Yamamoto’s vision when combined with escapability makes it next to impossible determine his next move, and he can create quality chances off the rush or finish odd-man advantages with soft hands that deaden cross-ice passes. His size hurts him along the boards, and it’s rather effortless for bigger opponents to pin and hold him to the boards.

C Jaret Anderson-Dolan (9/12/99, 5’11/188): Anderson-Dolan is a two-way center with an excellent shot who works well with a pass-first playmaker from the wing like Yamamoto. His defensive game seems to have improved from a year ago, specifically with positioning and covering the most dangerous oppoenent when a defender vacates the slot. He is a very good skater who can cover ground and requires only two or three steps to gain separation from a backchecker. He isn’t flashy and his playmaking abilities may be stifled by lining up alongside an elite talent like Yamamoto. Neverthessl, Anderson-Dolan is a developing center with a strong IQ and heavy shot who can be used on special teams and in late-game situations.

LW Ethan McIndoe (7/22/99, 6’1/175): Positionally-sound physical winger who understands his role and will do what’s necessary to establish positioning in front of the net. McIndoe finishes his checks and is quick enough to force defenders into turnovers, and his choppy stride helps him move quickly and win 50/50 puck battles. He can burst up the ice and create a numbers advantage, and uses his physicality to change the momentum, either with a hit or a fight.

Kelowna Rockets

RHD Cal Foote (12/13/98, 6’4/212): Foote is a no-nonsense shutdown defender with NHL bloodlines, similar in size to his father Adam who patrolled the blueline for the Colorado Avalanche franchise for 17 seasons. He isn’t quick and will not accelerate past forecheckers, but his ability to read plays and dissect the coverage before him puts him in the upper tier of big-bodied defenders available for the 2017 draft. Foote has a very good shot that he hammers with accuracy, and his wrist shot is both deceptive and heavy enough to force a goalie to make a tough save. One trend we noticed is how his shot gives most goalies trouble in terms of rebound placement. By no means does Foote furnish a howitzer, but his shot is perfect for deflections and creating second chances around the net. His bread and butter is defending, especially in one-on-one situations, and his instincts and timing are excellent. Foote is tough to skate around and maintains a tight gap, which when combined with his long stick and reach makes most forwards stay to the outside before skating themselves into no man’s land. He likes to drift away from slot coverage but is quick to release and communicates well with his partner and supporting forwards. Potential is a support defender on a top pair who can anchor a top penalty-killing unit and fill-in on the power play when necessary.

RW Kole Lind (10/16/98, 6’1/181): Lind is a dynamic offense-first forward who is one of Kelowna’s go-to guys on the power play. He’s a very good skater who can cover a lot of ground on the forecheck or rush the puck while pulling away from opponents. Lind’s balance, edges and agility make him difficult to contain with a static defense, as he’s quick with directional changes that often catch defenders flat footed. This kind of footwork gives him enough time and space to wire a hard, accurate shot while going wide or whistling one against the grain. His 200-foot game is evolving but positioning, coverage and picking up assignments are still works in progress. Lind can make plays off the cycle and release via a direct route to a shooting position, and though he likes to hit, getting stronger and holding ground around the net and along the boards are two areas he should work on.

2004 NHL Draft Results

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PICK OA TM NAME POS NAT HT WT LGE TM
1 1 WSH Alex Ovechkin LW RUS 6′ 2 233 RUS Dynamo
1 2 PIT Evgeni Malkin C RUS 6′ 3 195 RUS Magnitogorsk
1 3 CHI Cam Barker D CAN 6′ 3 215 WHL Medicine Hat
1 4 CAR Andrew Ladd LW CAN 6′ 3 205 WHL Calgary
1 5 PHX Blake Wheeler C USA 6′ 5 205 USHSW Breck
1 6 NYR Al Montoya G USA 6′ 2 195 CCHA U. of Michigan
1 7 FLA Rostislav Olesz C CZE 6′ 1 214 CZE Vitkovice
1 8 CBJ Alexandre Picard LW CAN 6′ 2 206 QMJHL Lewiston
1 9 ANA Ladislav Smid D CZE 6′ 3 226 CZE Liberec
1 10 ATL Boris Valabik D SVK 6′ 7 255 OHL Kitchener
1 11 LAK Lauri Tukonen RW FIN 6′ 2 187 FIN Blues
1 12 MIN A.J. Thelen D USA 6′ 3 205 CCHA Michigan State
1 13 BUF Drew Stafford RW USA 6′ 2 214 WCHA U. of North Dakota
1 14 EDM Devan Dubnyk G CAN 6′ 6 202 WHL Kamloops
1 15 NSH Alexander Radulov RW RUS 6′ 1 188 RUS Tver
1 16 NYI Petteri Nokelainen F FIN 6′ 1 194 FIN Saipa
1 17 STL Marek Schwarz G CZE 6′ 0 180 CZE Sparta
1 18 MTL Kyle Chipchura C CAN 6′ 2 206 WHL Prince Albert
1 19 NYR Lauri Korpikoski RW FIN 6′ 1 200 FIN JR. TPS Jr.
1 20 NJD Travis Zajac C CAN 6′ 3 200 BCHL Salmon Arm
1 21 COL Wojtek Wolski LW POL 6′ 3 215 OHL Brampton
1 22 SJS Lukas Kaspar RW CZE 6′ 2 225 CZE Litvinov
1 23 OTT Andrej Meszaros D SVK 6′ 2 223 SVK Trencin
1 24 CGY Kris Chucko LW CAN 6′ 2 190 BCHL Salmon Arm
1 25 EDM Rob Schremp C USA 5′ 10 184 OHL London
1 26 VAN Cory Schneider G USA 6′ 2 195 HS-MA Phillips-Andover
1 27 WSH Jeff Schultz D CAN 6′ 6 230 WHL Calgary
1 28 DAL Mark Fistric D CAN 6′ 3 231 WHL Vancouver
1 29 WSH Mike Green D CAN 6′ 1 204 WHL Saskatoon
1 30 TBL Andy Rogers D CAN 6′ 5 206 WHL Calgary
2 31 PIT Johannes Salmonsson F SWE 6′ 2 183 SWE Djurgarden
2 32 CHI Dave Bolland F CAN 6′ 0 181 OHL London
2 33 WSH Chris Bourque C USA 5′ 8 178 HS-MA Cushing Academy
2 34 DAL Johan Fransson D SWE 6′ 1 192 SWE Lulea
2 35 PHX Logan Stephenson D CAN 6′ 3 185 WHL Tri-City
2 36 NYR Darin Olver C CAN 6′ 0 165 CCHA Northern Michigan
2 37 FLA David Shantz G CAN 6′ 1 204 OHL Mississauga
2 38 CAR Justin Peters G CAN 6′ 1 205 OHL Toronto St. Michael’s
2 39 ANA Jordan Smith D CAN 6′ 1 207 OHL Sault Ste. Marie
2 40 ATL Grant Lewis D USA 6′ 3 190 ECAC Dartmouth College
2 41 CHI Bryan Bickell LW CAN 6′ 4 223 OHL Ottawa
2 42 MIN Roman Voloshenko LW BLR 6′ 1 189 RUS Krylja
2 43 BUF Michael Funk D CAN 6′ 4 199 WHL Portland
2 44 EDM Roman Teslyuk D RUS 6′ 1 195 WHL Kamloops
2 45 CHI Ryan Garlock C CAN 6′ 1 202 OHL Windsor
2 46 CBJ Adam Pineault RW USA 6′ 1 201 NCAA Boston College
2 47 NYI Blake Comeau RW CAN 6′ 0 198 WHL Kelowna
2 48 NYR Dane Byers LW CAN 6′ 3 204 WHL Prince Albert
2 49 STL Carl Soderberg F SWE 6′ 3 198 SWE Malmo
2 50 PHX Enver Lisin RW RUS 6′ 2 200 RUS Saratov
2 51 NYR Bruce Graham C CAN 6′ 6 220 QMJHL Moncton
2 52 DAL Raymond Sawada RW CAN 6′ 2 207 BCHL Nanaimo
2 53 FLA David Booth LW USA 6′ 0 212 CCHA Michigan State
2 54 CHI Jakub Sindel C CZE 6′ 0 172 CZE Sparta
2 55 COL Victor Oreskovich RW CAN 6′ 3 215 USHL Green Bay
2 56 DAL Nicklas Grossmann D SWE 6′ 3 227 SJL Sodertalje Jr.
2 57 EDM Geoff Paukovich LW USA 6′ 4 208 USA US Nat’l U-18
2 58 OTT Kirill Lyamin D RUS 6′ 3 198 RUS HC CSKA
2 59 CBJ Kyle Wharton D CAN 6′ 3 185 OHL Ottawa
2 60 NYR Brandon Dubinsky C USA 6′ 1 210 WHL Portland
2 61 PIT Alex Goligoski D USA 5′ 11 180 USHL Sioux Falls
2 62 WSH Michail Yunkov F RUS 6′ 0 180 RUS Krylja
2 63 BOS David Krejci C CZE 6′ 0 177 CZE JR. Kladno Jr.
2 64 BOS Martins Karsums RW LVA 5′ 10 198 QMJHL Moncton
2 65 TBL Mark Tobin LW CAN 6′ 3 204 QMJHL Rimouski
3 66 WSH Sami Lepisto D FIN 6′ 0 195 FIN Jokerit
3 67 PIT Nick Johnson RW CAN 6′ 1 183 AJHL St. Albert
3 68 CHI Adam Berti LW CAN 6′ 3 205 OHL Oshawa
3 69 CAR Casey Borer D USA 6′ 2 205 WCHA St. Cloud State
3 70 CGY Brandon Prust F CAN 6′ 2 192 OHL London
3 71 BUF Andrej Sekera D SVK 6′ 0 201 SVK JR. Trencin Jr.
3 72 COL Denis Parshin LW RUS 5′ 10 165 RPL CSKA 2
3 73 NYR Zdenek Bahensky RW CZE 6′ 2 190 CZE Litvinov
3 74 ANA Kyle Klubertanz D USA 6′ 1 178 USHL Green Bay
3 75 ANA Tim Brent C CAN 6′ 0 188 OHL Toronto St. Michael’s
3 76 ATL Scott Lehman D CAN 6′ 1 194 OHL Toronto St. Michael’s
3 77 OTT Shawn Weller LW USA 6′ 2 205 EJHL Capital District
3 78 MIN Peter Olvecky F SVK 6′ 2 220 SVK JR. Trencin Jr.
3 79 MIN Clayton Stoner D CAN 6′ 3 225 WHL Tri-City
3 80 NYR Billy Ryan C USA 6′ 1 175 HS-MA Cushing Academy
3 81 NSH Vaclav Meidl C CZE 6′ 5 198 OHL Plymouth
3 82 NYI Sergei Ogorodnikov C RUS 6′ 1 185 RUS Tver
3 83 STL Victor Alexandrov RW KAZ 5′ 11 183 RUS Novokuznetsk
3 84 MTL Alexei Emelin D RUS 6′ 0 187 RUS Samara
3 85 PIT Brian Gifford C USA 6′ 1 173 HS-MN Moorhead
3 86 DAL John Lammers LW CAN 5′ 11 184 WHL Lethbridge
3 87 OTT Peter Regin F DNK 6′ 2 205 DEN JR. Herning
3 88 WSH Clayton Barthel D DEU 6′ 3 205 WHL Seattle
3 89 OTT Jeff Glass G CAN 6′ 3 206 WHL Kootenay
3 90 TOR Justin Pogge G CAN 6′ 3 204 WHL Prince George
3 91 VAN Alexander Edler D SWE 6′ 3 215 SWE II Jamtland
3 92 PHI Rob Bellamy RW USA 6′ 1 190 EJHL New England
3 93 CBJ Daniel Lacosta G CAN 6′ 1 186 OHL Owen Sound
3 94 SJS Thomas Greiss G DEU 6′ 1 210 GER Koln
3 95 LAK Paul Baier D USA 6′ 3 212 USHSE Deerfield Academy
3 96 CBJ Andrey Plekhanov D RUS 6′ 2 206 RPL Nizhnekamsk 2
3 97 DET Johan Franzen C SWE 6′ 3 222 SWE Linkoping
3 98 CGY Dustin Boyd C CAN 6′ 0 187 WHL Moose Jaw
4 99 PIT Tyler Kennedy C CAN 5′ 11 183 OHL Sault Ste. Marie
4 100 MTL JT Wyman RW USA 6′ 2 199 HS-MN Blake
4 101 PHI R.J. Anderson D USA 6′ 0 180 HS-MN Centennial
4 102 TBL Mike Lundin D USA 6′ 2 191 NCAA U. of Maine
4 103 PHX Roman Tomanek RW SVN 6′ 1 176 SVK SR. Povazka Bystrica
4 104 DAL Fredrik Naslund RW SWE 6′ 4 207 SWE Vasteras
4 105 FLA Evan Schafer D CAN 6′ 2 221 WHL Prince Albert
4 106 ATL Chad Painchaud LW CAN 5′ 11 190 OHL Mississauga
4 107 NSH Nick Fugere LW CAN 6′ 2 230 QMJHL Gatineau
4 108 BOS Ashton Rome RW CAN 6′ 1 205 WHL Moose Jaw
4 109 CAR Brett Carson D CAN 6′ 4 210 WHL Calgary
4 110 LAK Ned Lukacevic LW MNE 6′ 0 185 WHL Spokane
4 111 MIN Ryan Jones F CAN 6′ 0 205 WJRB Chatham
4 112 EDM Liam Reddox LW CAN 5′ 11 178 OHL Peterborough
4 113 TOR Roman Kukumberg F SVK 6′ 1 198 SVK Trencin
4 114 MIN Patrick Bordeleau LW CAN 6′ 5 195 QMJHL Val d’Or
4 115 NYI Wes O’Neill D CAN 6′ 4 215 CCHA U. of Notre Dame
4 116 STL Michal Birner LW CZE 6′ 0 183 CZE JR. Slavia Jr.
4 117 MIN Julien Sprunger RW CHE 6′ 4 194 SUI Freibourg
4 118 CGY Aki Seitsonen C FIN 6′ 3 206 WHL Prince Albert
4 119 PHX Kevin Porter F USA 6′ 0 190 NTDP US U-18
4 120 CHI Mitch Maunu D CAN 6′ 2 205 OHL Windsor
4 121 CGY Kristopher Hogg LW CAN 5′ 11 174 WHL Kamloops
4 122 OTT Alexander Nikulin C RUS 6′ 1 198 RPL CSKA 2
4 123 CHI Karel Hromas LW CZE 6′ 2 189 CZE JR. Sparta Jr.
4 124 PHI David Laliberte RW CAN 6′ 1 194 QMJHL Prince Edward Island
4 125 VAN Andrew Sarauer LW CAN 6′ 4 190 BCHL Langley
4 126 SJS Torrey Mitchell C CAN 5′ 11 190 HS-CT Hotchkiss School
4 127 NYR Ryan Callahan RW USA 5′ 10 190 OHL Guelph
4 128 DET Evan McGrath C CAN 6′ 0 190 OHL Kitchener
4 129 SJS Jason Churchill G CAN 6′ 4 184 QMJHL Halifax
5 130 PIT Michal Sersen D SVN 6′ 0 176 QMJHL Rimouski
5 131 CHI Trevor Kell RW CAN 5′ 11 170 OHL London
5 132 WSH Oscar Hedman D SWE 6′ 0 207 SWE Modo
5 133 CBJ Petr Pohl RW CZE 5′ 11 185 QMJHL Gatineau
5 134 BOS Kris Versteeg RW CAN 5′ 10 182 WHL Lethbridge
5 135 NYR Roman Psurny LW CZE 6′ 1 176 CZE JR. Zlin Jr.
5 136 STL Nikita Nikitin D RUS 6′ 3 217 RPL Omsk 2
5 137 CAR Magnus Akerlund G SWE 6′ 1 183 SJL HV 71 Jr.
5 138 WSH Pasi Salonen F FIN 5′ 11 187 FIN JR. IFK Jr.
5 139 NSH Kyle Moir G CAN 6′ 2 190 WHL Swift Current
5 140 CHI Jake Dowell C USA 6′ 0 199 WCHA U. of Wisconsin
5 141 OTT Jim McKenzie RW USA 6′ 2 204 USHL Sioux Falls
5 142 ATL Juraj Gracik RW SVK 6′ 3 187 SVK SR. Topolcany
5 143 LAK Eric Neilson RW CAN 6′ 2 205 QMJHL Rimouski
5 144 PHI Chris Zarb D USA 6′ 4 176 USHL Tri-City
5 145 BUF Michal Valent G SVN 6′ 2 176 SVK JR. Martin Jr.
5 146 EDM Bryan Young D CAN 6′ 1 191 OHL Peterborough
5 147 NSH Janne Niskala D SWE 6′ 0 187 FIN Lukko
5 148 NYI Steve Regier LW CAN 6′ 4 194 WHL Medicine Hat
5 149 PHI Gino Pisellini RW USA 6′ 0 210 OHL Plymouth
5 150 MTL Mikhail Grabovski F DEU 5′ 11 183 RUS Nizhnekamsk
5 151 DET Sergei Kolosov D BLR 6′ 4 187 BEL Minsk
5 152 FLA Bret Nasby D CAN 6′ 3 188 OHL Oshawa
5 153 SJS Steven Zalewski C USA 6′ 0 195 HS-NY Northwood Prep
5 154 COL Richard Demen-Willaume D SWE 6′ 3 210 SJL Frolunda Jr.
5 155 NJD Alexander Mikhailishin D RUS 6′ 4 207 RPL Spartak 2
5 156 OTT Roman Wick RW CHE 6′ 2 208 SUI Kloten
5 157 TOR Dmitri Vorobiev D RUS 6′ 1 211 RUS Togliatti
5 158 TBL Brandon Elliott D CAN 6′ 4 225 OHL Mississauga
5 159 VAN Mike Brown RW USA 5′ 11 205 CCHA U. of Michigan
5 160 BOS Ben Walter C CAN 6′ 1 195 FINLAND Jokerit
5 161 MIN Jean-Claude Sawyer D CAN 6′ 3 204 QMJHL Cape Breton
5 162 DET Tyler Haskins C USA 6′ 1 177 OHL Toronto St. Michael’s
5 163 TBL Dustin Collins F USA 6′ 3 196 CCHA Northern Michigan
6 164 PIT Moises Gutierrez RW USA 6′ 4 225 WHL Kamloops
6 165 CHI Scott McCulloch LW CAN 6′ 1 198 AJHL Grande Prairie
6 166 WSH Peter Guggisberg F CHE 5′ 11 183 SUI Davos
6 167 CBJ Rob Page D USA 6′ 2 188 HS-MN Blake
6 168 PHX Kevin Cormier F CAN 6′ 3 236 MJAHL Moncton Jr. A
6 169 NYR Jordan Foote LW CAN 6′ 4 195 BCHL Nanaimo
6 170 PHI Ladislav Scurko C SVN 6′ 0 187 SVK JR. Spisska Nova Ves Jr.
6 171 PHI Federik Cabana F CAN 6′ 1 182 QMJHL Halifax
6 172 ANA Matt Auffrey RW USA 6′ 2 203 USA US Nat’l U-18
6 173 CGY Adam Pardy D CAN 6′ 2 220 QMJHL Cape Breton
6 174 LAK Scott Parse F USA 5′ 11 188 CCHA U. of Nebraska-Omaha
6 175 MIN Aaron Boogaard RW CAN 6′ 3 220 WHL Tri-City
6 176 BUF Patrick Kaleta RW USA 6′ 1 206 OHL Peterborough
6 177 EDM Max Gordichuk D CAN 6′ 5 228 WHL Kamloops
6 178 NSH Mike Santorelli C CAN 6′ 0 189 BCHL Vernon
6 179 NYI Jaroslav Mrazek D CZE 6′ 3 198 CZE JR. Sparta Jr.
6 180 STL Roman Polak D CZE 6′ 1 227 CZE JR. Vitkovice Jr.
6 181 MTL Loic Lacasse G CAN 6′ 2 175 QMJHL Baie Comeau
6 182 CGY Fred Wikner F SWE 6′ 1 187 SJL Frolunda Jr.
6 183 DAL Trevor Ludwig D USA 6′ 0 205 NAHL Texas
6 184 COL Derek Peltier D USA 5′ 11 190 USHL Cedar Rapids
6 185 NJD Josh Disher G CAN 6′ 1 164 OHL Erie
6 186 ATL Dan Turple G CAN 6′ 5 215 OHL Oshawa
6 187 TOR Robbie Earl LW USA 6′ 1 195 WCHA U. of Wisconsin
6 188 TBL Jan Zapletal D CZE 6′ 3 190 CZE JR. Vsetin Jr.
6 189 VAN Julien Ellis G CAN 6′ 1 188 QMJHL Shawinigan
6 190 CBJ Lennart Petrell F FIN 6′ 3 198 FIN JR. IFK Jr.
6 191 TBL Karri Ramo G FIN 6′ 0 215 FIN JR. Pelicans Jr.
6 192 DET Anton Axelsson LW SWE 6′ 0 183 SJL Frolunda Jr.
6 193 NSH Kevin Schaeffer D USA 6′ 1 195 NCAA Boston University
7 194 PIT Chris Peluso D USA 5′ 11 180 HS-MN Brainerd
7 195 MIN Jean-Michel Rizk RW CAN 6′ 1 195 OHL Saginaw
7 196 CHI Petri Kontiola F FIN 6′ 0 204 FIN Tappara
7 197 WSH Andrew Gordon RW CAN 6′ 0 194 SJHL Notre Dame
7 198 CBJ Justin Vienneau D CAN 6′ 4 205 QMJHL Shawinigan
7 199 PHX Chad Kolarik C USA 5′ 11 185 NTDP US U-18
7 200 CGY Matt Schneider C CAN 6′ 7 185 WHL Tri-City
7 201 SJS Mike Vernace D CAN 6′ 0 216 OHL Brampton
7 202 CAR Ryan Pottruff D CAN 6′ 2 198 OHL London
7 203 ANA Gabriel Bouthillette G CAN 6′ 3 205 QMJHL Gatineau
7 204 ATL Miikka Tuomainen LW FIN 6′ 3 207 FIN Tuto
7 205 LAK Mike Curry RW USA 6′ 4 190 USHL Sioux City
7 206 MIN Anton Khudobin G KAZ 5′ 11 203 RPL Magnitogorsk 2
7 207 BUF Mark Mancari RW CAN 6′ 3 225 OHL Ottawa
7 208 EDM Stephane Goulet RW CAN 6′ 3 185 QMJHL Quebec
7 209 NSH Stanislav Balan C CZE 6′ 2 161 CZE JR. Zlin Jr.
7 210 NYI Emil Axelsson D SWE 6′ 3 198 SWE Orebro
7 211 STL David Fredriksson F SWE 6′ 2 214 SJL HV 71 Jr.
7 212 MTL Jon Gleed D CAN 6′ 2 200 ECAC Cornell U.
7 213 CGY James Spratt G USA 6′ 0 180 USHL Sioux City
7 214 CHI Troy Brouwer RW CAN 6′ 2 214 WHL Moose Jaw
7 215 COL Ian Keserich G USA 6′ 2 190 NAHL Cleveland
7 216 NJD Pierre-Luc Letourneau-Leblond LW CAN 6′ 2 215 QMJHL Baie Comeau
7 217 NJD Tyler Eckford D CAN 6′ 1 205 BCHL South Surrey
7 218 DAL Sergei Kukushin F BLR 6′ 2 187 BEL Junost Minsk
7 219 OTT Joe Cooper RW CAN 6′ 0 200 NCAA Miami University
7 220 TOR Maxim Semenov D KAZ 6′ 0 183 RUS Togliatti
7 221 LAK Daniel Taylor G GBR 6′ 0 198 OHL Guelph
7 222 PIT Jordan Morrison C CAN 5′ 11 180 OHL Peterborough
7 223 CHI Jared Walker C CAN 6′ 3 183 WHL Red Deer
7 224 BOS Matt Hunwick D USA 5′ 11 190 NCAA U. of Michigan
7 225 SJS David MacDonald D CAN 6′ 3 200 EJHL New England
7 226 DET Steven Covington RW CAN 5′ 11 167 WHL Calgary
7 227 NYI Chris Campoli D CAN 6′ 0 200 OHL Erie
8 228 PIT David Brown G CAN 6′ 0 185 NCAA U. of Notre Dame
8 229 CHI Eric Hunter C CAN 6′ 2 205 WHL Prince George
8 230 WSH Justin Mrazek G CAN 6′ 3 185 SJHL Estevan
8 231 CBJ Brian McGuirk LW USA 6′ 0 191 HS-MA Governor Dummer
8 232 PHI Martin Houle G CAN 5′ 11 180 QMJHL Cape Breton
8 233 CBJ Matt Greer F USA 6′ 1 183 HS-MN White Bear Lake
8 234 SJS Derek MacIntyre G USA 6′ 2 220 NAHL Soo
8 235 CAR Jonas Fiedler RW CZE 6′ 2 177 OHL Plymouth
8 236 ANA Matt Christie C CAN 5′ 10 185 CCHA Miami University
8 237 ATL Mitch Carefoot C CAN 6′ 1 209 ECAC Cornell U.
8 238 LAK Yutaka Fukufuji G JPN 6′ 1 160 JHL Japan National Team
8 239 COL Brandon Yip RW CAN 6′ 1 195 BCHL Coquitlam
8 240 PHX Aaron Gagnon C CAN 5′ 11 186 WHL Seattle
8 241 BUF Mike Card D CAN 6′ 1 201 WHL Kelowna
8 242 EDM Tyler Spurgeon C CAN 5′ 10 188 WHL Kelowna
8 243 NSH Denis Kulyash D RUS 6′ 3 199 RUS HC CSKA
8 244 NYI Jason Pitton LW CAN 6′ 3 216 OHL Sault Ste. Marie
8 245 TBL Justin Keller LW CAN 5′ 11 183 WHL Kelowna
8 246 MTL Gregory Stewart LW CAN 6′ 2 202 OHL Peterborough
8 247 NYR Jonathan Paiement D CAN 6′ 1 201 QMJHL Lewiston
8 248 DAL Lukas Vomela D CZE 6′ 3 189 CZE Budejovice
8 249 COL J.D. Corbin LW USA 5′ 10 185 NCAA U. of Denver
8 250 NJD Nathan Perkovich RW USA 6′ 5 215 USHL Cedar Rapids
8 251 OTT Matthew McIlvane C USA 6′ 0 202 USHL Chicago
8 252 TOR Jan Steber F CZE 6′ 3 202 QMJHL Halifax
8 253 PHI Travis Gawryletz D CAN 6′ 2 190 BCHL Trail
8 254 VAN David Schulz D CAN 6′ 4 201 WHL Swift Current
8 255 BOS Anton Hedman F SWE 6′ 0 180 SWE II Stocksund
8 256 CHI Matthew Ford RW USA 6′ 0 200 USHL Sioux Falls
8 257 DET Gennady Stolyarov RW RUS 6′ 4 187 RUS Tver
8 258 NSH Pekka Rinne G FIN 6′ 5 207 FIN Karpat
9 259 PIT Brian Ihnacak C CAN 6′ 0 178 NCAA Brown U.
9 260 CHI Marko Anttila RW FIN 6′ 7 200 FIN Lempaala
9 261 PHX William Engasser LW USA 6′ 2 228 USHSW Blake
9 262 MTL Mark Streit D CHE 5′ 11 202 SUI Zurich
9 263 WSH Travis Morin C USA 6′ 2 195 WCHA Minnesota State
9 264 LAK Valtteri Tenkanen F FIN 5′ 11 182 FIN Jyvaskyla
9 265 PHX Daniel Winnik F CAN 6′ 2 210 NCAA U. of New Hampshire
9 266 NYR Jakub Petruzalek RW CZE 5′ 10 176 CZE Litvinov
9 267 FLA Spencer Dillon D USA 6′ 4 190 BCHL Salmon Arm
9 268 CAR Martin Vagner D CZE 6′ 1 214 QMJHL Gatineau
9 269 ANA Janne Pesonen F FIN 5′ 11 180 FIN Karpat
9 270 ATL Matthew Siddall RW CAN 6′ 1 205 BCHL Powell River
9 271 CBJ Grant Clitsome D CAN 5′ 11 208 CJHL Nepean
9 272 MIN Kyle Wilson C CAN 6′ 2 205 NCAA Colgate U.
9 273 BUF Dylan Hunter LW CAN 5′ 11 198 OHL London
9 274 EDM Bjorn Bjurling G SWE 6′ 0 205 SWE Djurgarden
9 275 NSH Craig Switzer D CAN 6′ 2 195 BCHL Salmon Arm
9 276 NYI Sylvain Michaud G CAN 5′ 11 180 QMJHL Drummondville
9 277 STL Jonathan Michel Boutin RW CAN 6′ 3 187 QMJHL Shawinigan
9 278 MTL Alex Dulac-Lemelin D CAN 6′ 4 190 QMJHL Baie Comeau
9 279 CGY Adam Cracknell RW CAN 6′ 1 216 WHL Kootenay
9 280 DAL Matt McKnight F CAN 6′ 2 190 AJHL Camrose
9 281 COL Stephen McClellan D USA 6′ 1 180 HS-MA Catholic Memorial
9 282 NJD Valeri Klimov D RUS 6′ 3 202 RPL Spartak 2
9 283 FLA Luke Beaverson D USA 6′ 4 208 USHL Green Bay
9 284 OTT John Wikner LW SWE 6′ 1 184 SJL Frolunda Jr.
9 285 TOR Pierce Norton RW USA 6′ 2 195 HS-MA Thayer Academy
9 286 PHI Triston Grant LW CAN 6′ 1 211 WHL Vancouver
9 287 VAN Jannik Hansen F DNK 6′ 1 195 SJL Malmo Jr.
9 288 SJS Brian Mahoney-Wilson G USA 5′ 10 150 HA-MA Catholic Memorial
9 289 SJS Christian Jensen D USA 6′ 3 190 INDEP. JR New Jersey Jr. Titans
9 290 DET Nils Backstrom D SWE 6′ 0 183 SWE II Stocksund
9 291 PHI John Carter C USA 6′ 4 193 INDEP. JR Brewster Bulldogs
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