It’s one of the busiest weeks in the NHL’s history.
The Seattle Kraken are now a team, after an expansion draft that was largely leaked out the morning of by media insiders. There was hoopla around who got protected, who was selected, and if the Kraken truly maximized what they could achieve.
It’s over and done with. The NHL isn’t letting anyone sleep just yet.
Teams are on a quick turn-around. The 2021 NHL Entry Draft suddenly appears in front of us in what could be one of the most puzzling to predict of all time. A lot of these prospects barely played. Some didn’t play at all. Scouts didn’t have the ability to go overseas and watch players live. There’ll be surprises at every turn thanks to the pandemic.
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The Top 100 NHL Draft Prospects Lists
I’ve co-created a personal top 100 for the NHL Draft. A friend of mine, Matt Mosewich (who can be found at @EDMFutureWatch on Twitter) is a hardcore prospect researcher. He has a passion for watching the video and evaluating young talent. I am a numbers guy. I look at statistics, birth dates, league production history, comparables, and multiple other factors to try to match it up to the video I see on Youtube.
We each make a list of our favorite top 100 draft eligibles and then put them together for a super list. It’s a blend of “eye test” vs “numbers” to get that proper balance. You can see my list, Matt’s list, and our combined list below. I’ll reflect on a few prospects you should keep an eye on for fantasy purposes below.
Rnk | KLAK | MATT | COMBINED |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Dylan Guenther | Matty Beniers | Luke Hughes |
2 | Owen Power | Luke Hughes | Matty Beniers |
3 | Luke Hughes | William Eklund | Owen Power |
4 | Sebastian Cossa | Mason McTavish | Dylan Guenther |
5 | Brandt Clarke | Owen Power | Sebastian Cossa |
6 | Matthew Beniers | Brandt Clarke | Brandt Clarke |
7 | Kent Johnson | Sebastian Cossa | William Eklund |
8 | Chaz Lucius | Jesper Wallstedt | Kent Johnson |
9 | William Eklund | Dylan Guenther | Jesper Wallstedt |
10 | Corson Cuelemans | Matthew Coronato | Chaz Lucius |
11 | Jesper Wallstedt | Isak Rosen | Matthew Coronato |
12 | Cole Sillinger | Kent Johnson | Logan Stankoven |
13 | Olen Zellweger | Logan Stankoven | Mason McTavish |
14 | Sasha Pastujov | Chaz Lucius | Cole Sillinger |
15 | Matthew Coronato | Matthew Knies | Isak Rosen |
16 | Danill Chayka | Mackie Samoskevich | Nikita Chibrikov |
17 | Logan Stankoven | Stanislav Svozil | Danill Chayka |
18 | Kirill Kirsanov | Fedor Svechkov | Fedor Svechkov |
19 | Oskar Olausson | Cole Sillinger | Olen Zellweger |
20 | Samu Salminen | Zachary Bolduc | Zachary Bolduc |
21 | Cameron Whynot | Simon Edvinsson | Simon Robertsson |
22 | Shai Buium | Scott Morrow | Sasha Pastujov |
23 | Danila Klimovich | Carson Lambos | Oskar Olausson |
24 | Sean Behrens | Nikita Chibrikov | Evan Nause |
25 | Nikita Chibrikov | Francesco Pinelli | Francesco Pinelli |
26 | Xavier Bourgault | Ayrton Martino | Simon Edvinsson |
27 | Mason McTavish | Brennan Othmann | Zachary LHeureux |
28 | Simon Robertsson | Samu Tuomaala | Carson Lambos |
29 | Zachary LHeureux | Colton Dach | Matthew Knies |
30 | Aidan Hreschuk | Simon Robertsson | Corson Cuelemans |
31 | Evan Nause | Evan Nause | Kirill Kirsanov |
32 | Fedor Svechkov | Ville Koivunen | Brennan Othmann |
33 | Anton Olsson | Aatu Raty | Aatu Raty |
34 | Isak Rosen | Daniil Chayka | Fabian Lysell |
35 | Fabian Lysell | Ethan Del Mastro | Xavier Bourgault |
36 | Ryan Ufko | Alexander Kisakov | Anton Olsson |
37 | Riley Kidney | William Stromgren | Samu Salminen |
38 | Zachary Bolduc | Zach LHeureaux | Samu Tuomaala |
39 | Francesco Pinelli | Fabian Lysell | Ryan Ufko |
40 | Wyatt Johnston | Olen Zellweger | Sean Behrens |
41 | Aatu Raty | Oskar Olausson | Colton Dach |
42 | Oliver Nadeau | Anton Olsson | Aidan Hreschuk |
43 | Conner Roulette | Ryan Ufko | Stanislav Svozil |
44 | Simon Edvinsson | Dylan Duke | Danila Klimovich |
45 | Carson Lambos | Sasha Pastujov | Mackie Samoskevich |
46 | Brennan Othmann | Prokhor Poltapov | Shai Buium |
47 | Brent Johnson | Zach Dean | Cameron Whynot |
48 | Jack Peart | Samuel Helenius | Ville Koivunen |
49 | Topias Vilen | Xavier Bourgault | Jack Peart |
50 | Vincent Iorio | Guillaume Richard | Zach Dean |
51 | Samu Tuomaala | Red Savage | Brent Johnson |
52 | Ethan Samson | Kirill Kirisanov | Prokhor Poltapov |
53 | William Trudeau | Roman Schmidt | Samuel Helenius |
54 | Matthew Knies | Sean Tschigerl | Sean Tschigerl |
55 | Semyon Vyazovoy | Tristan Broz | William Stromgren |
56 | Colton Dach | Jack Peart | Alexander Kisakov |
57 | Jacob Guevin | Sean Behrens | Scott Morrow |
58 | Cameron Rowe | Aidan Hreschuk | Wyatt Johnston |
59 | Sean Tschigerl | Samu Salminen | Connor Roulette |
60 | Tyler Boucher | Corson Cuelmans | Ayrton Martino |
61 | Zach Dean | Liam Dower Nilsson | Vincent Iorio |
62 | Samuel Helenius | Brent Johnson | Tyler Boucher |
63 | Kyle Masters | Brett Harrison | Brett Harrison |
64 | Prokhor Poltapov | Jakub Brabenec | Ethan Del Mastro |
65 | Tyson Galloway | Aleksi Heimosalmi | Dylan Duke |
66 | Justin Robidas | Bryce Montgomery | Riley Kidney |
67 | Eric Alarie | Chase Stillman | Oliver Nadeau |
68 | Ville Koivunen | Danila Klimovich | Topias Vilen |
69 | Brett Harrison | Dmitri Kostenko | Oliver Kapanen |
70 | Eetu Liukas | Oliver Kapanen | Justin Robidas |
71 | Caedan Bankier | Tyler Boucher | Guillaume Richard |
72 | Stanislav Szovil | Nolan Allan | Red Savage |
73 | Brody Lamb | Shai Buium | Ethan Samson |
74 | Joshua Roy | Justin Janicke | Roman Schmidt |
75 | Artyom Grushnikov | Josh Doan | William Trudeau |
76 | Ryker Evans | Martin Rysavy | Tristan Broz |
77 | William Stromgren | Ryan Winterton | Semyon Vyazovoy |
78 | Matthew Samoskevich | Cameron Whynot | Eric Alarie |
79 | Oliver Kapanen | Vinny Iorio | Chase Stillman |
80 | Vladislav Lukashevich | Connor Roulette | Jacob Guevin |
81 | Alexander Kisakov | Jack Bar | Cameron Rowe |
82 | Henry Nelson | Liam Gilmartin | Liam Dower Nilsson |
83 | Aleksi Malinen | Wyatt Johnson | Aleksi Heimosalmi |
84 | Victor Stjernborg | Justin Robidas | Nolan Allan |
85 | Ty Gallagher | Lorenzo Canonica | Kyle Masters |
86 | Theo Angesved | Jayden Grubbe | Jakub Brabenec |
87 | Noah Meier | Tyson Kozak | Tyson Galloway |
88 | Jake Chiasson | Cole Huckins | Dmitri Kostenko |
89 | Nolan Allan | Eric Alarie | Eetu Liukas |
90 | Chase Stillman | Cole Jordan | Caedan Bankier |
91 | David Gucciardi | Joe Vrbetic | Brody Lamb |
92 | Lorenzo Canonica | Aleksi Malinen | Justin Janicke |
93 | Dylan Duke | Hunter Strand | Joshua Roy |
94 | Ryan McCleary | Matvei Petrov | Aleksi Malinen |
95 | Jackson Blake | Zach Ostapchuk | Josh Doan |
96 | Aleksi Heimosalmi | Sasha Teleguine | Artyom Grushnikov |
97 | Valtteri Koskala | Oscar Plandowski | Ryker Evans |
98 | Kalle Ervasti | Jake Martin | Martin Rysavy |
99 | Liam Dower Nilsson | Ryan St. Louis | Lorenzo Canonica |
100 | Ayrton Martino | Ryder Korczak | Ryan Winterton |
10 Draft Prospects to Watch for Fantasy Purposes
Owen Power – D – Michigan (NCAA) – Owen Power is expected to be the top pick at the NHL Draft by the Buffalo Sabres. This doesn’t mean he should be your top pick in fantasy drafts. He’s expected to return to Michigan for another season. He’s also more of an all-around player rather than a straight-up dynamic offensive one. There are other players at the top end of the draft who will land in better situations than Buffalo to produce faster and more. Both Matt and I believe he’s a safe pick to make the league, but we’re higher on other players for fantasy. He’s a very safe pick to at least be in a team’s top four D and score 35-40 points a season at his peak.
Matthew Beniers – F – Michigan (NCAA) – A teammate of Power, Beniers showed his silky mitts for a big freshman season. He scored a point-per-game and added a few extra points at an impressive World Juniors. He works hard, skates fast, and can do a little bit of everything. Matt and I both believe he’ll be at least a second-line centre at the NHL level. It could happen fast. His ideal landing spot would be Seattle. He could be their no.1 or no.2 centre as soon as the 2022-23 season. That would give him loads of fantasy upside due to opportunity on an expansion franchise. Feel free to pick him without remorse.
Dylan Guenther – F – Edmonton (WHL) – Guenther is a very safe pick for fantasy. He scores goals in a lot of different ways and projects safely to be in a team’s top-six forward group in a few years. Guenther can land anywhere in the top 10 and it won’t change our outlook for him. He’s very similar to if Tyler Seguin played wing, or T.J. Oshie, and should be a top-five fantasy prospect from this draft.
Luke Hughes – D – Michigan (NCAA) – Matt and I are putting our necks on the line for this one. We believe Hughes has the most potential among defense in this draft. He is the brother of Jack and Quinn Hughes and it shows in his skill level. He plays a dynamic style on defense with soft hands, quick feet, and a strong release for a shot. What separates him from his brothers is his size. He’s noticeably bigger at 6 foot 2. If he lands on New Jersey, it could be the start of a potent powerplay combination of the Hughes brothers, Nico Hischier and Alex Holtz for a long time. For both fantasy purposes and real life, you should consider drafting Luke Hughes over college teammate Owen Power.
William Eklund – F – Sweden – If you’re not a fantasy drafter who is okay being patient with prospects, this may be a tough draft for you. There is no surefire top bet and these guys will need more development than other draft prospects due to the time missed in the pandemic. That being said, Eklund may be the most NHL-ready forward available. He already produced in a men’s league. His points-per-game clip was much higher until he got Covid-19. He’s a very good all-around talent who should produce in the NHL at a high floor. In a year with question marks, we wouldn’t blame you to pick him first in a fantasy prospect draft.
Brandt Clarke – D – Slovakia – Clarke is another dynamic offensive defenseman who lit up a men’s league in Slovakia this season. He has a bit of an awkward skating style but it works for him. He doesn’t have a howitzer of a shot. He’s incredibly smart though with his passing, playmaking, and vision on the ice. Matt and I wouldn’t take him over Luke Hughes in fantasy, but we would have a real debate versus Owen Power depending on the team. I’d most be intrigued to take him over Power if he lands on Columbus, Anaheim, or LA. Those are three teams who could really give him a chance to be a top powerplay quarterback in a shorter time than you’d expect.
Kent Johnson – F – Michigan (NCAA) – Do you like to gamble? Kent Johnson is a boom or bust kind of prospect. His skill is through the roof. His top-end speed is marvelous. He isn’t afraid to try out crazy moves. Johnson does tend to get enigmatic. He reminds me a lot of a young Jonathan Drouin. Drouin’s skill is unquestioned but it is incredibly inconsistent. Can Johnson find a higher ceiling? It’s possible. He’s a better defensive forward than Drouin was as a young junior. I wouldn’t take him top four in fantasy because of how safe Beniers, Guenther, Eklund, or Hughes seem to me. I do think he has more upside than maybe any forward in this draft. Watch and see if Vancouver takes him. He’d be a solid fit for their top six in a year or two.
Mason McTavish – F – Erie (OHL) – McTavish is hard to quantify in numbers because the OHL didn’t play a game this year. If you watch him play, he’s a real two-way center who gets in dirty areas and plays a 200-foot game. He lives in front of the net. You’ll see there is a high discrepancy between Matt’s ranking and mine. He has a safe floor for both of us, but I see him more as a number two or even number three centre. Matt thinks he has number one potential, similar to Ryan O’Reilly. He did produce a ton at the U18s, a very good sign. He’s a bull, and hard to knock off the puck. I feel the players listed above have more offensive potential today, but McTavish may find it down the road. Watch to see if he lands on a team with a no.1 franchise centre blocking him or not. That may determine what his ultimate ceiling is.
Simon Edvinsson – D – Sweden – You’re very likely to hear Edvinsson’s name called in the top ten of the draft on Friday. Despite this, Matt and I are highly skeptical of his potential. He’s a bit of an awkward-looking player – like Bambi on skates. He’ll have time to grow into his six-foot-three frame. He can definitely skate. We believe his offensive ability and hockey sense produce many questions. He’s not a naturally gifted passer or shooter. His production in Sweden wasn’t eye-popping or anything. It’s possible Edvinsson ends up making a top-four and exceeds our expectations but even then, the offense may not be there. Buyer beware of taking him high in a fantasy prospect draft. I think he’s a candidate to bust.
Sebastian Cossa – G – Edmonton (WHL) & Jesper Wallstedt – G – Sweden – These are both exceptional goalie prospects that teams are looking to take high in the entry draft. We personally like Cossa more due to his size and athleticism. However, you really can’t go wrong. Wallstedt looked poised at the World Juniors. He also played solid in a men’s league at such a young age. When it comes to fantasy, goalies totally depend on the landing spot. Chicago may be looking for a goalie. Calgary could gamble on one. I wouldn’t say either of those teams inspire my mouth to water. The two real juicy places for these goalies? The LA Kings and the Edmonton Oilers. LA has a bright future ahead. They are picking up pieces to try to turn the corner. Edmonton has Connor McDavid. If one of these goalies can snag a spot to develop on Edmonton or LA, they’ll have sky-high potential.
Draft Sleepers for Fantasy
These players may go later in the draft, but keep an eye on them. Remember their names:
F Chaz Lucius – All he does is scores goals. Battled injury but tons of potential here. Scored 26 goals in 25 games after returning for the US development program.
F Matthew Coronato – 48 goals in 51 games for the Chicago Steel. Going to Harvard. Can fit anywhere in a lineup. If he is drafted by Edmonton, run to select him top 10 in your fantasy prospect draft. Perfect fit for Connor McDavid.
F Cole Sillinger – Son of former NHLer Mike Sillinger. Possibly carries the best wrist shot in the draft. Produces everywhere he goes.
F Logan Stankoven – He’s tiny, but scores goals at a rapid pace. High motor. 36 goals in 65 games in the WHL since 2019.
F Sasha Pastujov – Scouts are worried about his speed, but he led the US in points at the U-18s. He racks up points. Remember when people said Jason Robertson wasn’t fast enough? This reminds me of that.
F Fedor Svechkov – Fairly solid two-way Russian. Could be a safer bet to play in the league, but is his upside fantasy-worthy? Not sure. His defensive game is good, produced at the U18s. May top out as a solid third-line centre with upside.
F Isak Rosen – Inconsistent, with 0 goals in the SHL in Sweden. However, showed his sniping ability with 7 goals in 7 games at the U18s.
F Fabian Lysell – There’s a lot of speed in his game, combined with playmaking. Matt and I think there’s more flash than substance here. Wildcard for if he goes top 15 or drops to the bottom of the 1st round.
F Aatu Raty – He was the projected first overall pick a year ago. His play fell off a cliff. Buyer beware despite the name value. If Carolina takes him, he’ll be fine.
F Brennan Othmann – We share a name! The type of annoying hard-nosed guy that usually makes the league who can shoot. I’m worried about his skating and hockey sense.
D Carson Lambos – Massive wildcard on D due to poor play and injury. If the draft was last year, he would have gone top 5. Swing for the fences?
D Olen Zellweger – Did you enjoy watching Samuel Girard this year? He gives me those vibes, but to a lesser degree.
D Corson Cuelemans – I think he has big-time fantasy potential as an offensive D-man. Matt thinks he may bust. Needs to improve his defensive game, specifically gap control.
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