Top Prospects

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Random Quote From The Archive

Igor ChernyshovSKA-1946 St Petersburg vs Dynamo Moscow (MHL2/2/2024Times the drive-by perfectly, and the point shot from Maximov beats the screened goalie high glove.

 

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1,460 9,458 325

Top Prospects: The NHL System Rankings

#19: New Jersey Devils

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Number of Ranked Prospects: 20

Number of Forwards in the Top 50: 0

Number of Defensemen in the Top 50: 2

Average Rank of Top 10 Prospects in Pool: 142nd

Top Forward Prospect in The System: Arseni Gritsyuk (68th)

Top Defenseman Prospect in The System: Anton Silyayev (7th)

System Score: 3

 


The New Jersey Devils' prospect system--much like that of the Buffalo Sabres--would be one of the best in the world were in not for the fact that so many of their recent top prospects are already full-time NHL players (some of them superstar players). The Hughes brothers Jack (1st overall in 2019) and Luke (4th overall in 2021) are true All-Star talents, and close behind them are players like Dawson Mercer (18th overall in 2020) and Simon Nemec (2nd overall in 2022). The Devils are on the cusp of challenging for a Stanley Cup title due to their rebuilding program and drafting quality players over the past several years, including more recent selections that lead the current pool of prospects and could soon to make their own impacts at the NHL level.

 

Top Prospects: The NHL System Rankings

#20: Colorado Avalanche

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Number of Ranked Prospects: 20

Number of Forwards in the Top 50: 1

Number of Defensemen in the Top 50: 1

Average Rank of Top 10 Prospects in Pool: 223rd

Top Forward Prospect in The System: Calum Ritchie (45th)

Top Defenseman Prospect in The System: Mikhail Gulyayev (20th)

System Score: 3

 


The early 2010s drafts were good to the Avalanche franchise. The core players of the Stanley Cup champions--Gabriel Landeskog, Nathan McKinnon, Mikko Rantanen and Cale Makar--were all Colorado draft picks. Of course, as those players matured and the Cup team was built around them, the Avalanche more recently have not had the top-of-the-draft picks like they did in the previous decade. However, they did get the since-traded Bowen Byram fourth overall in 2019, and Justin Barron 25th overall in 2020. More recently however, the Avalanche have been able to restock the pool with two first-round picks in the 2023 draft, and they have some talent left over from the 2021 draft, as well.

 

Top Prospects: The NHL System Rankings

#21: Buffalo Sabres

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Number of Ranked Prospects: 36

Number of Forwards in the Top 50: 1

Number of Defensemen in the Top 50: 1

Average Rank of Top 10 Prospects in Pool: 108th

Top Forward Prospect in The System: Konsta Helenius (9th)

Top Defenseman Prospect in The System: Adam Kleber (49th)

System Score: 3

 


The Buffalo Sabres' prospect system can be a complicated tangle to unwind. On one hand, the prospects in the group take a step up in the rankings in quality and quantity. On the other hand, the Sabres as an NHL team have leaned heavily on their recent draft picks and, as such, most of the true top talent has already graduated from the prospect ranks. Last year's first-round select, Zachary Benson, played nearly the entirety of the 2023-2024 season. Buffalo's first-overall selection in 2021--Owen Power--has played in 163 NHL games and is one of the best young defensemen in the game. The 2020 draft saw the Sabres bring in Jack Quinn at eighth overall (104 games, 24 goals, 34 assists) and JJ Peterka at 34th overall (161 games, 40 goals, 42 assists). Dylan Cousins (2019 draft pick, 280 games) and another first-overall pick Rasmus Dahlin (2018 draft, 436 games, 66 goals, 226 assists, NHL All-Rookie team and 3-time All Star) round out an admirable list of draft pick contributors over recent years. 

So the main question when looking at the Sabres' prospects becomes one of reviewing who is left in the pool. Despite the unqualified success of Buffalo's draft picks, the prospect pool still has some top-notch pieces that should be soon helping their draft mates on NHL ice.

 

Top Prospects: The NHL System Rankings

#22: Pittsburgh Penguins

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Number of Ranked Prospects: 30

Number of Forwards in the Top 50: 1

Number of Defensemen in the Top 50: 1

Average Rank of Top 10 Prospects in Pool: 161st

Top Forward Prospect in The System: Rutger McGroarty (26th)

Top Defenseman Prospect in The System: Owen Pickering (23rd)

System Score: 2.5

 


At the beginning of the 21st century, the Penguins had a five-year run during which they held top-five draft picks, including two first-overall picks and two second-overall picks. Pittsburgh used the bounty of those draft picks to build a multiple-Stanley Cup championship team full of future Hall of Fame players (in order from 2002-2006: Ryan Whitney, Marc-Andre Fleury, Evgeni Malkin, Sidney Crosby and Jordan Staal). Since the 2018 draft, the Penguins have held a total of only three first-round draft picks, and until last year only three second-round picks, so their recent success in the draft is understandably limited.  Their 53rd-overall pick in 2018 was Calen Addison, a defenseman who has played 152 NHL games over four professional seasons, but none with the Penguins. Beyond Addison, no other player drafted by the Penguins in the last several years has seen any serious NHL ice time. 

However, over the past three drafts, Pittsburgh has been able to restock the system somewhat, and the quality of their top prospects has improved dramatically.

 

Top Prospects: The NHL System Rankings

#23: Edmonton Oilers


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Number of Ranked Prospects: 25

Number of Forwards in the Top 50: 1

Number of Defensemen in the Top 50: 1

Average Rank of Top 10 Prospects in Pool: 197th

Top Forward Prospect in The System: Matthew Savoie (33rd)

Top Defenseman Prospect in The System: Beau Akey (31st)

System Score: 2.5

 


In the early 2010s, the Edmonton Oilers had such a remarkable run of first overall picks that the NHL actually changed their draft lottery rules. The team has not picked first overall since winning the Conor McDavid tank battle in 2015, but they have done a remarkable job of having first round picks in their pockets while building a Stanley Cup challenger. With their six first-round picks since 2018, the Oilers have brought in Evan Bouchard (265 NHL games, 171 points from the blue line), Philip Broberg (81 NHL games, lost to a St. Louis offer sheet) and Dylan Hollaway (also lost to a St. Louis offer sheet). Other first round picks Xavier Bourgault (22nd overall 2021) and Reid Schaefer (32nd overall 2022) were traded to Ottawa and Nashville, respectively.

The Oilers have not seen a lot of NHL success from their picks after the first round since the 2018 draft, and in fact only Ryan McLeod (taken 40th overall in 2018) has contributed to the NHL squad. The more recent first rounders from  2022-2024 have not yet made their way up to the NHL level, but the team has some talented prospects at the top end of the system developing and waiting for their chance.