Will Scouch Will Scouch

Will Mocks the NHL’s 1st Round Picks

Welcome to Scouching’s Mock Draft of the 1st round of the 2024 NHL Draft! I’m going to be absolutely fascinated with how the chips fall in Vegas, with plenty of teams with interesting strategies and preferences across the spectrum of hockey. We all know who is going first, but beyond that pick things get wide open right away. If Chicago skips over an Ivan Demidov, who knows who actually pulls the trigger on him? The 3-12 range could be absolutely out of control, and as the draft goes on, pre-draft rankings begin to look sillier and sillier. It’s going to be a fun ride and I’m so excited to see it unfold in person. If you’re new here, my mock drafts are a little bit different and I essentially draft for two. One, if I’m in the driver’s seat and doing what I would do, taking into consideration my understanding of what the given team might be looking for. The other takes my own bias a little bit more out of it, factoring in what’s out there and how teams have drafted recently to zero in on names that logically may have their names called in a given slot. There are always surprises on draft day, and I love to try to anticipate who those surprises may be, but I also want to mention that if I have any knowledge of the actual direction a team is going, it’s not part of the logical explanation. If I can connect threads between players and teams, it’s all public information, but nothing in here should lead you to believe I know something you don’t about your team.

With that out of the way, let’s have some fun! I hope you enjoy, and if you’re around in Vegas next week, say hi!

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Scouching’s Final 2024 NHL Draft Rankings

Welcome one and all! We’ve finally made it to the end of the 2024 NHL Draft season, and what an interesting ride it’s been. All kinds of things have been said about this draft class from top to bottom. Some names are the next top pair defensemen out there, or the class as a whole is underwhelming, every thought under the sun is out there about this crop of players. For me, this is one of the more fascinating groups I’ve seen in great detail. There are a ton of directions a bunch of these players could go, but my impression is that there are a lot of very, very intelligent play drivers out there who seem to lack the skill and pace to clearly project to strong NHL roles. That’s not a knock on these guys, because a ton of them have been more and more impressive the more I’ve seen them this season, and I think NHL teams could land a number of strong role players at a variety of selections in this year’s draft. For me, I like to think about where the barrier is where I am truly really, really excited about this year’s crop, and the barrier of where I stop becoming really curious about what players could be, and for me the first barrier comes a bit earlier than usual, but the second barrier comes quite a bit later. I’d say the first 18-20 names are potentially very exciting players that could play important NHL roles, but I’m really, really interested in the next 30 or so players on the list. Beyond that, there are some solid players who bring more than enough to the game to end up on the list, but carry some question marks about their actual NHL upside. Talented players nonetheless and there is absolutely plenty to like about this group.

Before we get to the list I find it would be helpful to outline a quick background to how I think, what I look for and how I come to the conclusions I do. To put it simply, I am always looking for play drivers. Production is often a reward for good procedural play, and I always am thinking about how players perform in what I call the cycle of possession. Most of the time, players don’t have the puck, so how are they when they don’t have it? Are they reading play well, supporting teammates, getting their hands dirty when the time comes, and creating turnovers in some area of the ice in some way? Once they get the puck back, what’s happening? Are they flipping pucks into the neutral zone, turning pucks over and making life more difficult for the team? Are they taking a second to scan the ice before possession, making smart reads, and finding creative ways to march the puck up the ice in some fashion? How often are they even involved in plays like this? Only then do I start to really think about offensive zone play, but it’s an important factor. Are they a distributor, individual chance generator, dual threat offensive player, or not really doing much in the offensive zone at all? This part does affect my read on a player, but it isn’t the be-all-end-all. Motivating a confident and hard-working player who can get pucks into the offensive zone to be more assertive and creative offensively is a good baseline if I’m a coach. I watch the Stanley Cup Playoffs and so many times, skill and pure shot quality is a factor, but these games are largely won by off-puck play, raw intensity, competitiveness and ability to drive play to the net in some fashion so that is often my focus in the context of the draft. Backing up my views this season are almost documented 700 performances of data across around 150 players with plenty more video going untracked when I can’t stand to stare at a spreadsheet anymore. I track their defensive involvement, forechecking ability, puck transportation ability, rush defense, and of course their offensive zone data. How the player gets the puck up the ice or stop rushes defensively, how effective they are in that discipline, and how they generate offense are key areas that form the backbone of my analysis. Are they getting pucks to the slot? How? Are they completing passes in that area? Are they driving a strong percentage of their team’s offense? If not, why not? There’s so much nuance to this, and in my view, the tracked data is a reference manual for what I’ve gathered from a player that I can look back on to cut through my own biases and frame my analysis around. Not every poor transition player is super low on my list, not every great one is super high on my list. The video factors in, as well as games and video I’ve seen that didn’t get tracked to get a more bird’s-eye view of a player.

At the end of all of this, my rankings thus end up split into tiers, ordered where I would argue certain players over others for various reasons, but am completely open to players at the end of the tier being options above the ones at the top, despite my reservations. At the tail end, there’s a watchlist of players who I’m not clamoring to draft at a certain point, but who I’ve enjoyed watching and may not have been able to get around to tracking. Guys who I think would be good to keep track of assuming they go undrafted, or ones to get behind should they have a flyer taken on them. I hope all of this helps you understand where I’m coming from and how I get there.

Quick note: LSD/RSD indicates a defender playing on the wrong side relative to their shooting that I’ve gathered in my tracked data. For players I’ve tracked I gather their positions from the performances I see, so some may not line up perfectly with what’s out there, and I think it’s important to note defenders who have been played on the opposite side of their natural shooting direction.

With that out of the way, the list is below with writeups for everyone, so enjoy!


Tier 1 - Two Key Franchise Pieces

Tier 2 - Where Everything Opens Up

Tier 3 - A Small Drop, but Plenty of Fun

Tier 4 - Solid Roleplayers and Curiousities

Tier 5 - Everyone Else

The Watchlist

Goaltenders

  1. Eemil Vinni - Mid 2nd

  2. Evan Gardner - Late 2nd

  3. Mikhail Yegorov - 2nd-3rd

  4. Carter George - Mid-Late

  5. Ryerson Leenders - Mid-Late

  6. Ivan Yunin - Mid-Late

  7. Vladislav Bryzgalov - Mid-Late

  8. Kim Saarinen - Mid-Late

  9. Teodor Munther - Late Flyer

  10. Martin Neckar - Late Flyer

  11. Kirill Zarubin - Late Flyer

  12. Nikolai Nikulshin - Late Flyer

  13. Pavel Moysevich - Late Flyer

  14. Simon Wolf - Late Flyer

  15. Dawson Cowan - Late Flyer

  16. Kam Hendrickson - Late Flyer


There we have it, a year of work done. Thank you so much for all the views, likes, subscriptions and discussion both private and public. This is a slog of hard work, and I still am left leaving plenty open to fate in the next few years. It’s a pleasure to share my views and work with everyone, and if you’re interested in joining the community and supporting what I do, click below to get subscribed to the site where you’ll get exclusive content, access to a Discord server, exclusive datasets and more depending on the tier. If not, that’s all good but be sure to subscribe to us on YouTube, Twitch, Instagram and Tiktok, and give us a follow at Scouching on Twitter! Thanks so much, and if you see me in Vegas, be sure to say hi!

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2024 IIHF World U18 Championship Recap

Well fellow draft nerds and hockey fans, another year in the books for the Under-18 World Championship and what a spectacular tournament it was. At the top, the Americans and Canadians dominated as expected, but everywhere else was absolutely filled with surprises. Kazakhstan’s young team winning their first ever game at this level and scoring 3 of the 7 goals Canada allowed in the round robin were huge bright points, but barely getting relegated against another young and promising Norwegian roster ended their tournament in a thrilling shootout finish sending them back to Division 1A. The Slovaks, the youngest team in the tournament, shocked a Czech team with a few players expected to be drafted in the top 50 in the NHL Draft this year, earning their second surprise semifinal appearance in a row. The Finns beat the Latvians who lost to Norway but beat the eventual fourth place Slovaks who surprised the Czechs who surprised the Swedes who barely scraped up a win over the Swiss. Got all that? Essentially outside of the top two teams, it was a bloodbath of craziness.

The real story of the tournament to me was how impressive the 2025 and 2026 NHL Draft-eligible players performed here. Gavin McKenna and Porter Martone formed a dominant pair with Malcolm Spence being a great talent on the Canadian roster as well and Kashawn Aitcheson providing rock solid defense when called upon. James Hagens and Logan Hensler were dynamite, with Hagens breaking the scoring record at this tournament and showcasing himself once again as serious consideration for the 1st overall slot for next year’s draft. Even beyond the biggest names, the 2025 NHL Draft eligible and beyond Slovaks led the way to a second consecutive medal round appearance which I certainly did not expect, and L.J. Mooney, Victor Eklund, Matthew Schaefer, Adam Benák and Daniels Serkins all performed very well and ended up on my preliminary watchlist for next season if they weren’t there already. The future looks bright for many countries here and it’s always a pleasure to see what’s coming beyond this upcoming draft.

In the end, the two best teams got to the end of the tournament and battled it out, with Canada gaining the upper hand after a poor start against the relentless Americans thanks to a silly major penalty from Trevor Connelly that ended their tournament. On the whole, there weren’t a ton of 2024 NHL Draft prospects in this tournament that completely changed my opinion of, but the stage was beginning to be set for the 2025 and 2026 Draft on multiple teams. The teams down the standings were young and energetic, and the teams at the top were relentless and insanely talented, but let’s dig into each team and some key takeaways.


Will’s All-Star Team and Awards

Gavin McKenna - James Hagens - Porter Martone
Cole Hutson - Harrison Brunicke
Carter George

MVP - Gavin McKenna
Top Defenseman - Cole Hutson
Top Goalie - Carter George


Like what you read? Subscribe below for exclusive content, data tools and a Discord server!

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2024 IIHF Under-18 World Championship Preview

It’s that time of year again! The 2024 IIHF World Under-18 Championship is a must-watch event for any NHL Draft nerd such as myself. Scrappy, skilled teams giving everything they have to put a cap on their junior seasons before the big weekend in June, doing what they can to make an impact on the limitless NHL scouts and managers that will be in attendance. For a team like the USA who have played all season together, this is their pinnacle and this season is no different. This iteration looks to be a huge toss up, especially in the middle of the field as many teams are bringing rosters that are strong in key areas but may lack some depth. Switzerland, Finland, Czechia, and even Norway are bringing impressive talents to the table and could make a serious impact at just the right time.

This tournament is a great tool for evaluators such as myself to see their understandings of these players put to the test against their own cohort. To a point, the U18s are a great way to see if the strengths and weaknesses you may see are as much of a factor as you believe them to be when put in a best on best junior hockey situation. Pro players in Europe are back playing junior competition, standout junior players in smaller countries are put up against the best young talent in the world, and players from teams that may overinflate or deflate their perceived value are given a chance for a fresh start and a new perspective. Going and changing your rankings a tremendous amount at this point, or overthinking great and poor performances on the scoresheet in this tournament is a dangerous game, however, and it is always important to remember that any player born in 2005 or from Russia/Belarus are not eligible to be here and don’t receive the same chances that those in this tournament get. There’s plenty of room for biases to kick in, but sticking to the lens of curiousity and open-mindedness has been the right path forward more ofthen than not.

As usual, you can check the embedded sheet in this piece to track the standings, the rosters and all your favorite players in one spot so be sure to keep this open as you watch the games and pick your favourites! As a note, NHLeS is a position, league and age adjust measure of a prospect’s overall value as they are. Generally 20-25 is a baseline for first line production but it is only a guideline and certainly not a rule.

Kazakhstan - NHLeS Average Unavailable - Ranked 10th

Player to Watch: Svyatoslav Yevplov - D - SKA St. Petersburg U16

Last season, Kazakhstan was promoted largely on the back of Ottawa Senators draft pick Vladimir Nikitin who backstopped the team to the championship with a 1.50 GAA and a .936 SPCT. He is not eligible this year. Neither is his backup. In fact there is only one returnee from last season’s team in Roman Bolshedvorsky and he was not a particularly effective defender at the MHL level this season. Many of these players are coming from the junior league in Kazakhstan which is essentially impossible to project into this tournament, so I have no idea how to evaluate their NHLeS metric. I honestly have no clue what to expect from this team, but what does intrigue me is that 8 of these players could be back next year, with one eligible for 2026s installment. All but one of these are playing lower level junior hockey in Russia. Could these be the names that surprise us and put on the list for the next three NHL Drafts? Potentially, because the 2007s don’t bring a tremendous amount of promise. They’re underdogs to say the least, and my hunch is that they’re bringing a very young team to prepare them for a likely Division 1A placement next season that can work their way back in down the road. Going from the Russian U16 level to the Canadian U18 team for 15 year old Svyatoslav Yevplov and his fellow kids would be quite the eye-opening experience to learn from. I’m always interested in the extreme youth that mid-level nations sometimes bring to these tournaments, especially if they’re playing in better nations, but I’m not expecting a ton from this inexperienced Kazakh roster lacking the key player that brought them here last season.


Latvia - NHLeS Average Unavailable - Ranked 9th

Player to Watch: Darels Uljanskis - D - AIK U20

Speaking of youth, Latvia is bringing the youngest team to the tournament on average with three 2026 NHL Draft-eligible players on the roster in Olivers Murnieks, Martins Klaucans and Karlis Flugins coming to Finland. From what I’ve seen of the players on this roster, I don’t think Latvia will be a team to be trifled with. Darels Uljanskis is always a shooting threat on the power play, what I’ve seen of Karlis Flugins has been excellent in Sweden and he may be one to make an impact in this tournament as well. The name I am truly interested in is Maksims Haritoncevs, however. With 25 goals in 22 games with Swedish juniors-only program IFK Täby being fed pucks by current 2026 NHL Draft darling Viggo Björck, he earned himself a transfer to Mora IK where he has performed well, working his way to U20 competition for a game. He’s a shooting threat with some good skill and could be a major part of the team’s potential success. This is likely going to be a team that will need some stellar goaltending however, and I’m not totally sure who is going to be getting the nod in net. None of them have been tested internationally for this team all that much, and while I’ve liked what I’ve seen of Mikus Vecvanags this season, the Latvians will be in tough to match up in their group and are likely to be battling Norway for a quarterfinal spot. There is plenty of room to set the stage for the future of Latvian hockey, however with some interesting younger names like Murnieks and Flugins who could catch some lightning in a bottle if things break their way.


Slovakia - 5.12 Average NHLeS - Ranked 8th

Player to Watch - Tomas Pobezal - C - HK Nitra

After a few very strong teams at this tournament, I’m not sure this Slovak roster quite holds up to those previous iterations. There are some serious bright spots, let most notably by Tomas Pobezal, and 2026 eligible Adam Nemec, brother of Simon has been impressive in the limited pro hockey I’ve seen him play. There are some players that I’ve caught and enjoyed here and there in Adam Belusko and Pavol Prokopovic but there isn’t much in the way of elite talent that makes this team competitive. Miroslav Satan’s gigantic son Miroslav is going to be here and I’ve always had time for the lanky, fluid skating big boy, but my expectations for the team are somewhat limited. That said, this is a group where a large chunk of them have played together at some point this year and last for extended periods with the national team program, which can give you a bit of an advantage in short tournaments, but this is going to be a tough battle for this group of players. They have a bit of an easier trip by avoiding Sweden, Canada, the Czechs and the Swiss, but my expectations are pretty reserved.


Norway - 8.53 Average NHLeS - Ranked 7th

Player to Watch - Mikkel Eriksen - C - Vålerenga U20

If there’s a country outside the top echelon of nations that I am bullish on, it’s Norway. They managed to stay in the top division last year over Germany, bolstered by 2005-born Stian Solberg and returnee Elias Straume Vatne and looked like they deserved it. Four players return from last year’s roster, and at least three of them should be key cogs in the machine this year. The really interesting thing about Norway is their serious talent at the younger end of things. Five players are eligible to return next year, Niklas Aaram Olsen eligible for the year after that. From what I’m told, Aaram Olsen is a serious talent to keep an eye on. For me, Mikkel Eriksen has impressed whenever I’ve seen him and was a bit disappointed to see him leave Sweden to play with hometown team Vålerenga midseason. He was simply dominant at the Norwegian junior level and in the limited time I saw at the pro level, he didn’t look out of place. Nephew of Norwegian legend Espen Knutsen, I’m very curious to see what the youth of Norway can do. On top of that, Elias Vatne could be a player who reminds scouts in person that they shouldn’t completely forget about him. He’s rambunctious, highly skilled and zips around the ice extremely well and may be the most entertaining player at his best to not be ranked on my draft bord for 2024. He should have a serious role for this team as he did last season. In a group with Slovakia, Latvia and Finland, the Norwegians could surprise people and set the stage for a strong few years for junior hockey in Norway, hopefully reviving a hockey federation that has been struggling politically and financially over there. There’s a bright future here, and while Marcus Walberg is going to be very very busy, he did just turn away 27 of 29 shots in two periods of work in a 4-3 overtime loss to, excuse me while I check my notes, Canada.


Switzerland - 7.57 NHLeS Average - Ranked 6th

Player to Watch - Jamiro Reber - C - HV71 J20

The Swiss team this year is not to be looked over with some strong areas that should keep them in contention to perhaps challenge for a quarterfinal upset. Is it likely? Probably not, but with names like Leon Muggli, Daniil Ustinkov, Jamiro Reber and a strong trio of goaltenders who could steal a game here and there. The middle of the roster is also quite impressive as I’ve enjoyed what I’ve seen of Robin Nico Antenen’s well-rounded skill-forward game with plenty of pace in the tank. Basile Sansonnens’ production may not jump out at you but he’s been a solid defensive presence both in Switzerland and internationally. Reber is going to need to be the quarterback of the whole show however. In my viewings of him he’s been an excellent transition presence, getting pucks up the ice with great efficiency and being a pesky defensive presence off the puck, but actually generating offense under pressure and creating space for himself with the puck have been a challenge for him in Sweden and his success is likely Switzerland’s success here. Luckily they have some weapons to deploy on the power play that may be able to keep Switzerland hanging around. Leon Muggli’s shot from the point as well as his timing and vision are key factors for this group, and Daniil Ustinkov always brings the shifty skill and creativity to his power play time that you don’t get to see nearly as often in an offensive situation at 5v5. Does this team come home with a medal? I would be stunned, but this is a team that may be able to hang in there in an elimination game and hold back much better teams while chipping away at them with their offensive pieces on the roster, especially with strong goaltending from arguably any of the three that they’ve brought.


Czechia - 11.72 NHLeS Average - Ranked 5th

Player to Watch - Tomas Galvas - D - Bílí Tygři Liberec

The Czechs are always a bit of a tricky team to project. They often bring strong teams that may not immediately look like they match up well against the top end teams, but they always put forward an effort that puts them right there with them. This year’s iteration of the roster is a strong one in my opinion. Sure, Adam Jecho and Max Curran are probably going to be names people will first look at with their hulking frames and impressive moments of skill and thinking under pressure, but the rest of the roster is peppered with players who have impressed me this season. Adam Benák may be small, but the guy is electrifying. He pushes defenders onto their heels, challenges them, isn’t afraid to chase after his own chips into the offensive zone, and has been a serious offensive catalyst that earned time in the top pro division in Czechia. Not bad for a 5’7” 2025 NHL Draft-eligible. Tomas Galvas has been a favorite of mine, even if his NHL upside may be somewhat of a question mark. He’s agile, dynamic, has creative vision on the ice and certainly puts in the necessary effort defensively that should work just fine at this tournament. I was also legitimately very unhappy when Ondrej Kos was shut down for the season after a pretty strong first few months playing 2nd division pro hockey in Finland with KOOVEE. He’s big, highly skilled, and gives me echoes of what I remember of Jani Nyman a few years ago. Plenty of tools to be a strong power forward with some real high end moments and a quick release that should be a threat, especially if he’s out on the power play. Jakub Fibigr is coming off a great year with the Mississauga Steelheads as a defenseman who leads with his skating and patience with the puck, and while I’ve had some mixed viewings of him this year, he’s still got plenty of great tools that should showcase well here, and he should be a great supplementary offensive weapon behind Galvas for the Czechs. In my view this is a team that certainly could surprise people a bit and work their way to a medal performance with a balanced lineup with some pop at the top. That goes doubly if Matyas Marik can put up numbers like what he’s done in Czechia this season.


Finland - 12.1 Average NHLeS - Ranked 4th

Player to Watch - Aron Kiviharju - D - HIFK

Remember one of the cardinal rules of junior hockey: Never underestimate the Finns. Ever. If there is a country that somehow manages to find a way to win, it’s Finland, regardless of who they put on the roster. This season they seem to have brought quite a strong roster with some serious names in consideration for the 2024 NHL Draft. Of course, all eyes will be trained on Aron Kiviharju who has missed all but 7 games this season and is playing his first competitive hockey since October, and in my view, this tournament is a major point of interest for me to see if his relatively weak performance in Liiga is something to be legitimately concerned about. Veeti Väisänen will bring mobility and skill to the defensive side of the game, and there should be plenty of physical play to go with him in Emil Hemming, Joona Saarelainen and others. Up the middle the team is led of course by Konsta Helenius, coming off of an excellent season in Liiga donning the golden helmet a number of times at the pro level. Daniel Nieminen is a name I’ll have my eyes trained on specifically, though. The skating and skill combination are intriguing and he’s found himself on my list at various points this season, currently sitting on my watchlist for the 2024 NHL Draft. It’s a high profile tournament for him to showcase himself, but his international performances have been strong to date. Up and down the lineup there are players where I’ve gone “huh, that was neat” a number of times when seeing Finland play internationally. Mitja Jokinen, Natan Teshome, Markus Loponen, and Aatos Koivu should ring some good pace to the team even if many lack a certain level of finishing ability that could put this team over the top. Taken as a whole, this is a strong group at the top and should contend for some hardware if things break right, especially with someone like Konsta Helenius being a key focal point for the roster at both ends.


USA - 16.83 Average NHLeS - Ranked 3rd

Player to Watch - James Hagens - C - U.S. National U18 Team

The US national program is often favoured significantly in this tournament every season, but this year I have them a bit lower. This is largely due to just how evenly I see these top three teams. The NTDP roster is deep, and loaded with well-rounded high IQ players with an elite finisher in Cole Eiserman, who I expect will have a feast here, especially on power plays. I’m partially hoping Teddy Stiga has a coming out party, but selfishly I’d prefer him to keep flying under the radar. The defense group is deep and well-rounded, and I’m certainly looking forward to how Logan Hensler performs as he goes into his NHL Draft season next year. There are a lot of similarities to Sam Dickinson in my view and I am imagining that he will be taking the reins a bit here. Trevor Connelly is the only non-NTDP player on the roster but it shouldn’t take long to see why. I’ve found his play with Tri-City to be very individual and a bit ham-fisted, but regardless he was extremely productive and you should be able to see why very quickly here. Fast, skilled, resilient and above all else, confident, Connelly doesn’t shy away from challenging defenders and goaltenders and should be a key offensive weapon for the Americans. Another name I was pleasantly surprised to see here is L.J. Mooney. He’s a very small guy and a 2025 NHL Draft eligible player, but he’s just a lightning bolt out there with tons of skill and a high fun factor that should be an interesting watch. James Hagens may very well be the star of the show, however. The skill level he brings, combined with the smarts and timing with his playmaking are high-end, landing an assist per game this season to go with his 30 goals. While I’m not totally sold on “#1 Prospect for Next Year” status, I can’t see him being much further back and he should be a key cog on the American roster this year. While they may not have the unbelievably deep and skilled offensive roster they have had in years prior, they should have no problem going toe-to-toe with anyone while blowing out some of the smaller teams down the standings.


Sweden - 15.91 Average NHLeS - Ranked 2nd

Player to Watch - Alfons Freij - D - Växjö Lakers HC J20

There is a lot of hesitation in the hockey community about the 2006 class of Swedes but I’m not sure it’s as bad as portrayed. There is plenty of depth and very little in the way of weaknesses here. They have size and strength up the middle in Jack Berglund, and Hugo Orrsten, they have skilled playmaking in Viggo Nordlund, Alex Zetterberg, Lucas Pettersson and Victor Eklund, and defensively have a bit of everything as well. I look forward to Gabriel Eliasson being an insufferable jerk out there in a good way, even if he’s unranked on my board, and Felix Öhrqvist brings almost the polar opposite as an undersized, zippy and skilled offensive defenseman. The Växjö boys should be serious stars of the show though, and while eyes will likely be on Leo Sahlin Wallenius, I’ll be firmly trained on Alfons Freij. This is the biggest test he’s faced, and he’s been absolutely fantastic almost everywhere on the ice in every game I’ve seen, with NHL-projectable offensive skill and playmaking for a defenseman, or at least the kind of offensive defenseman that I’d be looking for personally. Viktor Eklund, brother of William is also here, and he along with Linus Eriksson have had excellent showings in HockeyAllsvenskan playing together. With intensity up and down the ice and remarkable smarts and positioning at any pace of play, especially with Linus Eriksson, they only continue to help round out a talented, balanced and relatively deep Swedish team that can go at it with anybody in the tournament. On top of it all, don’t look away from Love Härenstam in net. He has been excellent as a 2025-eligible in J20 Nationell this year and could backstop this team to a gold medal if he keeps up his level of play that I’ve seen this year.


Canada - 21.54 NHLeS Average - Ranked 1st

Player to Watch - Gavin McKenna - F - Medicine Hat Tigers

Canada often brings a somewhat lower quality team to this tournament as the CHL playoffs are ongoing and some players choosing to heal minor injuries or take some time off before the NHL Draft and Combine. This season seems different, even if they’re missing some key names. At least up front and in net, this roster looks stacked. Up and down the lineup there are just so many names that should be able to take over shifts in this tournament. Cole Beaudoin, Tij Iginla, Marek Vanacker, Carson Wetsch, Liam Greentree and Porter Martone are physical, resilient and determined players who can make an impact in all areas of the ice. Roger McQueen brings a solid power game with good finishing ability, and Ryder Ritchie, Jett Luchanko and Malcolm Spence bring intelligent offensive tools to the picture that should supplement everyone else well. In net you have the highly touted duo of Ryerson Leenders and Jack Ivankovic with Owen Sound’s Carter George, and while I’m partial to the Mississauga boys based on my viewings, any of the three should be strong options here. Defensively, the Canadians should at least have enough there to prevent dangerous chances against and move pucks into the neutral zone with strong efficiency. Harrison Brunicke gets around the ice well with solid shot-first offense, Henry Mews has great vision with the puck on his stick, Charlie Elick will try to ride the line between taking penalties and committing murder, with the rest of the group being younger and a little less refined but showing plenty of promise. I’ll be very curious to lay eyes on the 2025-eligibles, especially Matthew Schaefer who I’ve really enjoyed when watching Erie this year. Of course the star of the show to many will be Gavin McKenna. I’ll admit that I think the hype train on him is a little bit out of control already, he’s still an extraordinarily skilled and confident playmaker with strong finishing ability on his own. If he can avoid being too pressured physically which is where his game fell a bit short in my viewings, he could be a serious offensive threat here. Regardless, he’s the player on this roster who sits #1 in my NHLeS in the entire tournament, and has all the skill, creativity, vision and confidence necessary to be a hugely impactful player here. To me, Canada just brings a tsunami of offensive pieces across the spectrum of how offense can be generated, with a physical side to them that should still manage to keep them out of the box, at least as the tournament wears on. The defense group may be young, but it may not matter a ton with the talent elsewhere in the lineup and they at the very least sit in the top tier of teams in this tournament with the USA and Sweden.


Will’s All-Star Team Predictions

Forwards - Gavin McKenna (CAN) - Tij Iginla (CAN) - James Hagens (USA)

Defense - Alfons Freij (SWE) - Cole Hutson (USA)

Goaltender - Love Härenstam (SWE)

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Scouching’s Penultimate 2024 NHL Draft Ranking

It’s that time again folks. NHL teams are being eliminated from playoff contention and legions of fans flock to people such as myself desperately hoping that their team selects boys who hopefully turn into men that help their not-good hockey teams become less not-good. We don’t have all the answers, but as the Fremen of Arrakis exemplify, sometimes all you have is hope, and hopefully I can provide some of that. It’s just too bad there’s no such thing as the Water of Life… What at least this overcommitted analyst has, is hundreds of games of player performances logged and data tracked, and thousands of games archived from generations past to reflect on and carry forward, and combining the data and video in the storage server can hopefully give you the guidance you’re looking for.

Various hockey leagues around the world are well into their playoff seasons, and with the Under-18 Championships coming in a few weeks, another quick cross-section of the 2024 NHL Draft Class is necessary. Plenty has changed, but my views on many players are solidifying, the takes are heating up, and I’m more and more ready to party when the time comes in Vegas. The 2024 NHL Draft class is certainly an interesting one. While I still believe this isn’t the deepest most loaded pool of players out there, it is definitely one of the more intriguing ones, full of players that will live or die by their development curves. So many players are so talented in certain subsections of the game, but show non-projectable traits in others. Some are balanced, but may not show enough to play a given role in the NHL down the road. Some are supremely talented but need to rely on that talent to get by, while others are supremely intelligent, hard-nosed players who PTFG (or, Play the F***ing Game for the uninitiated) but seem to lack the oomph necessary to drive serious results in the NHL without significant role creation and line construction strategy. Does that make it a “bad “ or “weak” draft class? Absolutely not. I’m not in the business of telling children their dreams won’t come true after all the work they’ve put in. There are players 'I’m skeptical on who may have a longer list of to-dos to work on, but that is a very different concept than their talents weakening the draft pool relative to other years.

On the whole, I’m on the record stating that this year’s draft isn’t a one-horse race to me. In fact, looking back at many recent drafts, you could argue that almost any recent draft isn’t a one-horse race, and drafts like 2023 are the exception rather than the mean. Beyond my first few names on the list, the draft opens up significantly. There are some players commonly ranked quite high who I frankly just think are much more part of the mix, largely because of the concerns around their deficiencies, but they certainly aren’t ineffective. In the mix with them are some highly intelligent and hard working names that might slip through the cracks. It doesn’t take very long for me to respond to the “who shoud we draft” question with “well, I don’t know, what do you value and how do you want your NHL team to play?” and there being a pool of about 40 players to pluck a name from. Past that, I dunno, just take the guys who you like and pray to Lisan Al-Ghaib. Who am I looking for? Players who drive results, put defenders on their heels, and make their linemates lives easier. If they end up and energy forward or a defenseman going out there and plugging holes for 12 minutes a night? Great! I always work from the perspective of NHL playoff hockey and the required traits there and work backwards. Not “who cross-checks the most per 60 minutes” but more, who can you pat on the back to go over the boards, and know you’re getting a 100% competitive effort out of them to play hard, play fast, play as a team, and score some god damned goals, even if you have to get greasy or clever to do it. All of the above is ideal, but past a certain point, I’m looking for players who do not sit back, do not rely on opponent mistakes and rely on their own compete level and their ability to drive play out of their zone and into the offensive zone, with actual offensive output being a nice bonus. Size to me, is not nearly as much of a factor. It just changes the necessary equation of what a player needs to do in order to be successful, and that goes at both extreme ends of that spectrum. Hopefully that helps you sift through and understand my logic a little more.

At this point you probably want me to just get to the dang list of children so fine, here we go.


Tier 1 - The Puppeteer Quadrumvirate

The first tier is pretty broad, but when all is said and done, these guys all could bring some amount of comparable value. Celebrini is of course the top of the heap and the name I’d be calling first, but losing the lottery is not the disaster some fans paint it out to be, at least not this year. All four of these players bring unique, high potential styles of play that any team would be happy to have more of.

Tier 2 - Roller Coaster Rides and Costco Hot Dogs

Every draft there’s a point where things drop off a little bit and a relatively large group of players that bring all kinds of different styles and possibilities depending on your preferences are available. In these cases, I dread being the teams at the top end of this range and would rather trade down and pick volume over everything, and this year is the same but cranked to 11. Some of these guys project to me like a Costco hot dog. Everyone likes them, they’re reliable, you can’t live on them, but you really appreciate it when you have one. Others are complete shots in the dark with high potential and ups and downs that will have to be managed and navigated. This group probably all ends up in somewhat similar spots in a given lineup performing different tasks, but there could be a few players in this range who really pop off over the next few years. Want my 18th ranked player at 5? Sure, I can be swayed based on what is valued and what it is that we’re looking for, but this would be my order of preference navigating this tough group.

Tier 3 - A Bunch of Neat Dudes and Home Run Swings

The separation between tiers 2 and 3 is extremely marginal, especially with the top few names, but I feel as though this group brings a smidge less in terms of potential value, or likelihood of getting where they could possibly get. A lot of these players are highly intelligent players that are still developing the finer points of the game on the ice, which could help boost them up the list a bit, especially the very young ones. A few come of to me as NHL role players down the lineup. They have a job, and they do the job well. Physical defenders, complimentary energy players, bottom six minutes eaters, etc. It’s a curious group of players I’m willing to gamble on and players that show a good amount of projectability, albeit in somewhat limited breadth.

Tier 4 - Spin the Wheel of Destiny

This group is just plain fun. Some inconsistent but highly skilled players, some players who provide great supplemental help without a ton of projection, potential energy players down your lineup, and some home run swings on players you might be able to snag towards the end of the draft. Ranges like the end of Tier 3 and the majority of this tier are why I always would encourage loading up on as many picks in the 20-64 range as you possibly can, because of all of these players, I’m willing to bet that some have just as useful an NHL career as players drafted ahead of them. Some of these players are lower pace guys that invite and adapt to heavy pressure very well which helps their projection somewhat as well. It’s a deep group with plenty going on in a variety of ways, it’ll just be a matter of priority and risk tolerance.

Tier 5 - Size, Skill, and Ludvig Johnson

  • Switching to bullet points for the rest of the list, these are some really interesting players with combinations of size and skill that could be developed into something more, and a few raw tools options that are a different kind of project.

  • Ilya Protas has gotten better as the year has gone on, always showing skill and determination under pressure. He attacks the net, brings a great combination of strength and skill.

  • Harrison Brunicke has some great feet under him, but I think there’s a lot of roughness around the edges with his vision in transition, pass selection, and ability to maintain offensive zone possession outside of fakes and point shots. Plenty to be interested in and let develop in the WHL for two more years though.

  • Ludvig Johnson has been in my back pocket all year after catching him with Leon Muggli early in the season. Johnson is a highly skilled defender with remarkable confidence and one on one talent. There are a ton of “almost really impressive” moments with Johnson, losing possession at the last moment, chipping a puck just a bit too short for him to retrieve it, an extra skill move before a shot, there are a lot of things that have limited Johnson’s potential but it isn’t for lack of trying.

  • Dean Letourneau is the ultimate question mark in the whole class to me. Yes, he dominated the prep high school league with a bagillion goals and kajillion assists, but I’ve come away looking for a bit more out of Letourneau in order to put him way higher like others have him. He’s extremely tall and resilient under pressure with SAC, which is to be expected because well, look at him. His ability to catch and release pucks is strong, however, and he can work his way to scoring areas as a tipping and rebound threat. Could he be an NHLer? Sure. I see him in that Michael Rasmussen/Nick Bjugstad type of giant forward who can shoot in stride and make smart, calculated passes to keep play moving. That’s where Letourneau was strongest with Sioux Falls this year, but time will tell what goes down here.

The Watchlist - Projects and the “Likely Undrafted But Fun Anyways” Group

  • I don’t think I’ve seen a player like Jesse Pulkkinen in a very long time. The guy is a real adventure. Some moments, he’s a talented cerebral passer with some strength behind the plays he puts together, and others he’s making absolutely mystifying decisions carrying pucks, not shoulder-checking on retrievals, and turning pucks over often. His production to me is explained by his ability to pull a puck away from pressure and jam his giant body between the puck and the defender. At the junior level, he was unstoppable, and in Liiga, it all comes and goes. If someone takes him in the first round, it’s a reach to me, but dang nabbit I respect it.

  • Bergström is a player I’ve been very surprised hasn’t taken the offensive step expected in HockeyAllsvenskan. He’s a gifted skater with both straight line speed and mobility to manage gaps and monitor opponents. There are bursts of speed, deception and skill and he was one of the most productive even strength defenders at the U20 level in Sweden.

  • I adore Jacob Therrien. Such an annoying, competitive, and skilled player, Therrien is all potential for me. Some of the most impressive rushes I’ve seen this year have involved quick give and goes and fancy dangles with a lightning quick release in the offensive zone. The possession numbers aren’t great, but Therrien drives great transition results and has plenty of capability of being a shooting threat from range.

  • More intelligent players hit this list in Aatos Koivu, John Whipple and Viggo Gustafsson who all carry signs of skill, and strong vision of the ice with defensive responsibility. Gustafsson especially has impressed me internationally and I hope that trend continues at the U18s.

  • William Nicholl barely plays for London, but he’s stuck out to me here and there watching other players and in isolation looked strong. High skill, uses it intelligently, and I believe with more experience and more of a role, he would grow into it and increase his production. An interesting possession player that is a bit rough around the edges, but has caught my attention.

  • Parker Alcos is one I’ve poked around on here and there this year and just see a strong fundamental to work on. Good skill, good shot, good mobility, good frame, everything with Alcos is fine and I’m going to dig in more before the end of the year. A player on the NHL CSS list who I hadn’t seen yet, and I believe that with time, there could be something with Parker Alcos.

  • Yes yes, I see you googling who Anton Bitev and assume I’ve lost my mind, but here me out. He’s just a really curious and weird case this year but I’ve liked what I’ve seen. He’s a re-entry who was playing in Togliatti below the MHL last season. After a strong start to the year with Togliatti’s MHL team, Bitev was swapped to Spartak' Moscow’s system and was immediately jammed into the bottom levels of the lineup and not playing every game. That said, the pace in his game is fantastic, hopping, skipping and jumping in and out of rushing lanes and chasing down puck possessors with intensity. His lack of production partially comes from playing somewhere in the neighbourhood of 5 minutes a night but seeing him slow things down on the puck and have a somewhat limited offensive approach relying on pure speed off the rush, but I just really enjoy watching players like him. Another year in the MHL likely does Bitev well with Spartak promoting quite a few players, lending him more ice time.

  • Kenta Isogai is still here. I don’t expect him to be drafted but someone like Dallas or whoever bringing him to a camp and handing him a deal they likely don’t regret is possible. He’s added a more incisive mid-range playmaker’s game, following up on pressure in scoring areas, but still the high intensity 200-foot effort player he’s always been.

  • Eemil Laurel is another 2004-born Finnish re-entries who stood out to me watching Sebastian Soini and Ondrej Kos live earlier in the year. Laurel is a ridiculously hard working player on the puck, both pushing and rushing through pressure as much as he likes, even in Mestis. Laurel had ridiculous production on an awful Ilves junior team and showed well in the limited Mestis minutes I watched.

  • Joel Abrahamsson is a player who like teammate Viggo Gustafsson was first on my radar watching Swiss zippy boy Jamiro Reber earlier in the year. Where Reber is all speed, skill, and transition pace without much else, Abrahamsson is a different kind of project. Tall, lanky, but a gifted combination of skill and shot release, Abrahamsson has worked his way up the HV71 food chain over the season and been a standout at the U18 level with some real signs of potential.

  • Speaking of tall, raw forwards with skill who play U18 hockey in Sweden, Cedrik Johansson is still here. He’s still tall, still lanky, still unrefined, but when he gets going and attacks the net, he’s a hard nut to crack. Likely not drafted, Johansson is a strong skater, covering ice with his reach and powerful stride. The shot release is very impressive, however and a major driver of his offense.

  • I watched chunks of the Minnesota high school hockey tournament and checked out some USHL tape of the standouts who participated at that level this year. There weren’t a ton who jumped off the screen at me when looking at USHL footage but Gavin Uhlenkamp certainly has been the one I’ve latched onto. A major reason for Chanhassen’s first finals appearance after a shock upset of Minnetonka, Uhlenkamp is raw speed and power, forcing his way around the ice, fighting through players and getting some great wrist shots off from very strong scoring areas. Another one I need to see more of before June, but he’s been a standout from that side of the world.

  • The Des Moines boys Theo Kiss and Ilya Protas are impressive and it has felt like they’ve improved over the year. Kiss was admittedly not great at the WJAC this season on a poor Slovak roster, but I’ve gone back many times to check him out and he continuously shows a ton of capability as a forechecking forward, but even more potential as a dual threat offensive piece. Similar to Voronin, his timing and overconfidence at times can lead to lower percentage chances, but he’s got a great shot he never fires from poor distances, and he tries to slip passes through traffic often.

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