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Andrei Svechnikov

NHL Draft Combine Results

June 4, 2018 at 9:58 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 2 Comments

The NHL held its annual Draft Combine over the past week, with players able to speak with their potential teams and participate in fitness testing. The physical part of the week was held on Saturday (with a select few tests occurring the day before), with upwards of 100 prospects trying their best to show off their strengths in the gym. Here are the results of the tests, thanks to NHL Central Scouting:

Aerobic Fitness: Test Duration

  1. Xavier Bouchard – 16:45
  2. Curtis Douglas – 16:35
  3. Mattias Samuelsson – 16:30
  4. Kevin Bahl – 16:10
  5. Oskar Back – 16:08

Aerobic Fitness: VO2max (ml/kg/min)

  1. Cameron Hillis – 65.0
  2. Aidan Dudas – 63.0
  3. Xavier Bouchard – 62.0
  4. Jack Drury – 61.0
  5. Ty Dellandrea – 60.0

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Agility & Balance: Pro Agility – Left (sec)

  1. Jonathan Tychonick – 4.2
  2. Liam Foudy – 4.2
  3. Jacob Bernard-Docker – 4.3
  4. Jack Gorniak – 4.3
  5. Aidan Dudas – 4.3

Agility & Balance: Pro Agility – Right (sec)

  1. Jonathan Tychonick – 4.2
  2. Liam Foudy – 4.3
  3. Jack Gorniak – 4.3
  4. Andrei Svechnikov – 4.3
  5. Jacob Bernard-Docker – 4.4

Agility & Balance: Pro Agility – Left Max speed (mph)

  1. Jack Gorniak – 13.5
  2. Carter Robertson – 13.4
  3. Jay O’Brien – 13.1
  4. Ty Smith – 13.0
  5. Nico Gross – 13.0

Agility & Balance: Pro Agility – Right Max speed (mph)

  1. Curtis Hall – 13.2
  2. Carter Robertson – 13.0
  3. Tyler Madden – 13.0
  4. Gabriel Fortier – 12.9
  5. Dominik Bokk – 12.8

Anaerobic Fitness (Wingate Test): Max Effor5 #1 – Mean Power Output (watts/kg)

  1. Gabriel Fortier – 17.2
  2. Adam Boqvist – 16.8
  3. Kristian Reichel – 16.7
  4. Alexander Khovanov – 16.7
  5. Jonathan Gruden – 16.2

Anaerobic Fitness (Wingate Test): Max Effort #1 – Peak Power Output (watts/kg)

  1. Liam Foudy – 19.8
  2. Kristian Reichel – 19.6
  3. Adam Boqvist – 19.6
  4. Alexander Khovanov – 19.1
  5. Luke Henman – 19.1

Anaerobic Fitness (Wingate Test): Fatigue Index

  1. Joseph Veleno – 13.3
  2. Tyler Madden – 14.0
  3. Jordan Harris – 15.6
  4. Kevin Bahl – 17.1
  5. Grigori Denisenko – 17.7

Wing Span (inches)

  1. Kevin Bahl – 81.75
  2. Curtis Douglas – 81.25
  3. Jack McBain – 81.25
  4. Mattias Samuelsson – 80.75
  5. Kevin Mandolese – 80.25

Body Composition Yuhasz % Body Fat

  1. Xavier Bouchard – 6.96
  2. Joel Farabee – 7.28
  3. Tyler Madden – 7.28
  4. Carter Robertson – 7.52
  5. Luke Henman – 7.64

Force Plate: Vertical Jump (inches)

  1. Liam Foudy – 27.65
  2. Nils Lundkvist – 26.7
  3. Martin Fehervary – 24.1
  4. K’Andre Miller – 23.98
  5. Gabriel Fortier – 23.82

Force Plate: Squat Jump (inches)

  1. Martin Fehervary – 23.1
  2. Liam Foudy – 21.87
  3. Eric Florchuk – 21.32
  4. Gabriel Fortier – 21.29
  5. Jack Gorniak – 20.77

Force Plate: No Arm Jump (inches)

  1. Liam Foudy – 27.81
  2. Martin Fehervary – 24.07
  3. Gabriel Fortier – 20.92
  4. Nils Lundkvist – 20.69
  5. Jack Gorniak – 20.51

Musculoskeletal: Bench Press 50% Body Weight – Power (watts/kg)

  1. Rasmus Kupari – 8.25
  2. Ty Emberson – 8.03
  3. Jack Gorniak – 7.74
  4. Liam Foudy – 7.72
  5. Martin Fehervary – 7.59

Musculoskeletal: Left Hand Grip (lbs)

  1. K’Andre Miller – 170
  2. Curtis Douglas – 166
  3. Ryan McLeod – 159
  4. Seth Barton – 156
  5. Brady Tkachuk – 155

Musculoskeletal: Right Hand Grip (lbs)

  1. K’Andre Miller – 180
  2. Curtis Douglas – 179
  3. Gabriel Fortier – 160
  4. Jacob Pivonka – 160
  5. Ryan McLeod – 157

Musculoskeletal: Pull-Ups Consecutive (max #)

  1. Jacob Bernard-Docker – 15
  2. Evan Bouchard – 14
  3. Jordan Harris – 14
  4. Gabriel Fortier – 13
  5. Martin Fehervary – 13

Musculoskeletal: Standing Long Jump (inches)

  1. Liam Foudy – 118.8
  2. Jacob Ingham – 115.0
  3. Nils Lundkvist – 114.5
  4. Martin Fehervary – 113.5
  5. K’Andre Miller – 113.5

Prospects Andrei Svechnikov| Brady Tkachuk| Joseph Veleno| Mattias Samuelsson

2 comments

Montreal Has Tough Decision To Make At Upcoming Draft

June 2, 2018 at 3:25 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 3 Comments

It’s well known that the Montreal Canadiens are looking for a franchise changing center. Usually when you have a top-three pick in a draft, a team can fill their biggest hole right there. However, that isn’t the case in the 2018 NHL Draft as the top of the draft is loaded with wingers and defenseman. Most of the centers are expected to go after the top-10. The Canadiens need help there as they have attempted to convert several players to the center position, including Jonathan Drouin and Alex Galchenyuk, but neither has made a successful conversion. If the team could add a couple of legitimate centers, it could hasten their turnaround.

Recent reports suggest the Canadiens have found themselves getting attached to Finnish center Jesperi Kotkaniemi, who most mock drafts have going after the 10th pick. Admittedly, he has risen up draft boards over the past year after a season in Finland’s top league, SM-liiga and put up 10 goals and 29 points as a 17-year-old among men (ironically he played the wing position there). In fact, at the combine this week, Kotkaniemi said that Canadiens were one of three teams to take him out to a steak dinner this past week. Assuming the Canadiens’ interest in him is genuine, the Canadiens have some critical decisions to make in the next few weeks. Kotkaniemi, who has two years remaining on his contract in Finland, has said there is an out-clause and he could come to North America, depending on the team that drafts him. Regardless, whatever Montreal does with the No. 3 pick will alter the rest of the draft, according to the Montreal Gazette’s Pat Hickey.

One option is to take Kotkaniemi with the third overall pick regardless of the prospect rankings. Afterall, the Columbus Blue Jackets did the same thing in 2016 when they surprised many by taking Pierre-Luc Dubois with the No. 3 pick then. That worked out pretty well. The downside is the team would likely pass on some top talent in either winger Andrei Svechnikov or Filip Zadina (whoever Carolina doesn’t take at No. 2) as well as a number of stud defensemen like Adam Boqvist, Noah Dobson or Quinn Hughes. Montreal needs help at both positions as well.

The second option is for Montreal to trade back and pick up Kotkaniemi at a more reasonable spot and pick up more assets. Unfortunately, several other teams like Kotkaniemi as well, including the Detroit Red Wings (No. 6) and the Chicago Blackhawks (No. 8). By the way, both teams were the only other teams to take Kotkaniemi out to a steak dinner this week. However, earlier in the week, general manager Marc Bergevin said he was reluctant to trade back in the draft. Director of player personnel Trevor Timmons countered that Saturday, suggesting the team could go up or down with all their extra picks in this draft.

Assuming the Canadiens do want to add a center in the draft, then the team will have a big decision to make in the coming weeks about which route they intend to take.

Chicago Blackhawks| Detroit Red Wings| Marc Bergevin| Montreal Canadiens Alex Galchenyuk| Andrei Svechnikov| Jonathan Drouin| NHL Combine| NHL Entry Draft| Pierre-Luc Dubois

3 comments

2018 NHL Scouting Combine Player List

May 28, 2018 at 11:08 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 2 Comments

The 2018 NHL Entry Draft is fast approaching on June 22nd, and the league has released the list of 104 players invited to this year’s scouting combine. The group includes top prospects like Rasmus Dahlin, Andrei Svechnikov and Filip Zadina, along with many others who are just hoping to hear their name called at some point in a few weeks.

Starting today, teams are able to meet this week with potential draft picks for 1-on-1 interviews to better determine the kind of person they are. Though obviously these discussions likely won’t change the first-overall selection, they could bring a player further onto a team’s radar for later in the draft. It’s a chance to impress with your dedication and drive, before getting the opportunity to show them your physical attributes next weekend. The fitness testing will commence on Saturday, with potential top pick Rasmus Dahlin getting involved early (currently scheduled for 8:30am CT).

Below is a full list of the attending players, but for more detailed information check out Scott Wheeler of the Athletic’s Twitter image.

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Calen Addison
Alexander Alexeyev
Oskar Back
Kevin Bahl
Seth Barton
Nicolas Beaufin
Xavier Bernard
Jacob Bernard-Docker
Dominik Bokk
Adam Boqvist
Evan Bouchard
Xavier Bouchard
Michael Callahan
Kody Clark
Rasmus Dahlin
Ty Dellandrea
Stanislav Demin
Grigori Denisenko
Noah Dobson
Lukas Dostal
Curtis Douglas
Jack Drury
Aidan Dudas
Sean Durzi
Ty Emberson
Joel Farabee
Martin Fehervary
Eric Florchuk
Cole Fonstad
Gabriel Fortier
Liam Foudy
Patrik Giles
Adam Ginning
Jack Gorniak
Alexis Gravel
Nico Gross
Benoit-Olivier Groulx
Jonathan Gruden
Curtis Hall
Filip Hallander
Jordan Harris
Barrett Hayton
Luke Henman
Cameron Hillis
Mitchell Hoelscher
Quinn Hughes
Jacob Ingham
Jan Jenik
Blade Jenkins
Filip Johansson
Keegan Karki
Martin Kaut
Michael Kesselring
Alexander Khovanov
Liam Kirk
Jesperi Kotkaniemi
Filip Kral
Vitali Kravtsov
Rasmus Kupari
Philipp Kurashev
Jakub Lauko
Isac Lundestrom
Nils Lundkvist
Anderson MacDonald
Tyler Madden
Kevin Mandolese
Jack McBain
Jared McIsaac
Black McLaughlin
Ryan McLeod
Allan McShane
Ryan Merkley
K’Andre Miller
Serron Noel
Niklas Norgren
Jay O’Brien
Jacob Olofsson
Matej Pekar
Jackson Perbix
Jacob Pivonka
Sampo Ranta
Alec Regula
Kristian Reichel
Carter Robertson
Olivier Rodrigue
Milos Roman
Mattias Samuelsson
Rasmus Sandin
Jakub Skarek
Ty Smith
Riley Stotts
Riley Sutter
Andrei Svechnikov
Akil Thomas
Brady Tkachuk
Jonathan Tychonick
Giovanni Vallati
Joseph Veleno
Oliver Whalstrom
Tyler Weiss
Bode Wilde
Jake Wise
Jett Woo
Filip Zadina

Prospects| Schedule Andrei Svechnikov| Bode Wilde| Brady Tkachuk| Filip Zadina| Joseph Veleno| Martin Kaut| Mattias Samuelsson| NHL Entry Draft

2 comments

CHL Announces Top Players Awards for 2017-18

May 26, 2018 at 4:05 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 1 Comment

The CHL announced their top player awards Saturday with Alex Barre-Boulet garnering the Sportsnet Player of the Year Award. The 21-year-old who played for the Blainville-Boisbriand Armada of the QMJHL, tallied 53 goals and 116 points to capture the award, beating out Everett Silvertips goaltender Carter Hart and the Sarnia Stings forward Jordan Kyrou. The 5-foot-9 Barre-Boulet, who went undrafted, signed an entry level contract in March with the Tampa Bay Lightning and will likely report to their AHL franchise next year.

While Hart fell short of winning the Player of the Year award, he didn’t walk away without one as the Philadelphia Flyers prospect won the Vaughn Goaltending of the Year award for the second time. The 19-year-old who starred for Team Canada at the World Juniors as well, blew the competition away with a 1.60 GAA in 41 games and putting up an impressive .947 save percentage. He beat out Windsor Spitfires Michael DiPietro and Rouyn-Noranda Huskies’ Samuel Harvey.

The Vegas Golden Knights picked up another award as prospect Nicolas Hague won the Superstore Defenseman of the Year award. The second-round pick in 2017 from the OHL’s Mississauga Steelheads totaled 35 goals and 78 points in 67 games last season. He beat out Moose Jaw Warriors Kale Clague and Acadie-Bathurst Titan’s Olivier Galipeau.

Andrei Svechnikov of the Barrie Colts won the Sherwin Williams Top Prospect Award as the Barrie Colts winger put up 40 goals in his rookie year in the OHL. Svenchikov is considered by many to be the second player to come off the board in the 2018 NHL Draft. He beat out Spokane Chiefs defenseman Ty Smith and Halifax Mooseheads Filip Zadina.

Here is a list of all the CHL award winners:

Player of the Year: Alex Barre-Boulet
Defenseman of the Year: Nicolas Hague
Goaltender of the Year: Carter Hart
Rookie of the Year: Alex Lafreniere
Coach of the Year: Drew Bannister
Scholastic Player of the Year: Alexandre Alain
Humanitarian of the Year: Garrett McFadden
Sportsman of the Year: Aleksi Heponiemi
Top Scorer: Jayden Halbegwachs
Top Prospect of Year: Andrei Svechnikov

CHL| OHL| Philadelphia Flyers| QMJHL| Uncategorized| Vegas Golden Knights Alex Barre-Boulet| Andrei Svechnikov| Filip Zadina| Jordan Kyrou| World Juniors

1 comment

Rasmus Dahlin And Other Top Picks Will Attend Scouting Combine

May 23, 2018 at 9:47 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 2 Comments

Though it doesn’t seem like he has much to prove, Rasmus Dahlin will be in Buffalo next week for the NHL Scouting Combine, John Vogl of The Buffalo News reports. The Swedish defenseman is expected to go first-overall in the draft to the Buffalo Sabres, after finding himself at the top of almost every scouting list this season. Mark Scheig of The Hockey Writers confirms that Andrei Svechnikov, Filip Zadina, Brady Tkachuk, Noah Dobson and Evan Bouchard will all also be present at the event, which combines fitness testing with media availability and team meetings over a week-long period.

While fans enjoy seeing the fitness testing results, they rarely make drastic changes to rankings just before the draft. What may be more important are the meetings teams have with the players to start to understand their personalities and history. Those meetings can also be revealing on how the player plans on pursuing a professional career, whether they’re headed to college or back to Europe in the following seasons.

For Buffalo, it will give them the chance to bring in Dahlin and show him around the facilities that he will likely call home in a few months. The young defenseman is expected to step right into the NHL in 2018-19, and play big minutes for the Sabres as they try to rebound from several disappointing seasons. The other top picks will all meet with teams from all around the league, especially in a draft year that features very little consensus after the top few picks.

Buffalo Sabres Andrei Svechnikov| Brady Tkachuk| Filip Zadina| Rasmus Dahlin

2 comments

Carolina Hurricanes Will Make NHL Draft Difficult To Predict

May 6, 2018 at 11:28 am CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 6 Comments

The Carolina Hurricanes were lucky enough to get the second-overall pick in the upcoming 2018 NHL Draft, but who they will take will be even more interesting. While many believe that winger Andrei Svechnikov, who scored 40 goals for the OHL’s Barrie Colts mostly as a 17-year-old, is the obvious answer. However, there are plenty of other variables, according to the Hockey News’ Ryan Kennedy.

An alternate option for Carolina would be to take winger Filip Zadina, countryman and world junior linemate of 2017 first-round center Martin Necas. Zadina put up 44 goals in 57 games in the QMJHL with the Halifax Mooseheads.

However, the scribe writes that neither player fills the team’s most important need for the future which is a first-line center, a similar problem that the Montreal Canadiens face later at the No. 3 spot. If Carolina decides that is more important, then trading down might be the team’s best option. Kennedy adds that has been discussed by the organization. A team like the New York Rangers or the New York Islanders, both with an excess of extra picks both in the first round and later, would be logical trade partners.

Although the team recently hired veteran executive Rick Dudley to fill in, the team needs to hire a general manager before any decision can be made about the direction of their selection. While the team bowed out earlier from the playoff race than they had hoped, Carolina has a significant amount of talent, although they lack a star player. However, with a new owner and eventually new general manager and coach, the team may make quite a few changes over the next few months. Even without a permanent GM, the team already traded off veteran Marcus Kruger and there are rumors the Hurricanes may trade off their top scorer in Jeff Skinner before he hits free agency in 2019.

So Carolina becomes quite a wildcard when it comes to this draft.

 

Carolina Hurricanes| New York Islanders| New York Rangers Andrei Svechnikov| Filip Zadina| Jeff Skinner| Marcus Kruger| Martin Necas

6 comments

Eastern Notes: Carolina GM Search, Simmonds, Islanders

April 29, 2018 at 1:32 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 10 Comments

With just a 9.9 percent chance to finish in the top three, the Carolina Hurricanes beat the odds Saturday when they moved up from a team with the 11th-worst record in the league and were awarded the No. 2 pick in the 2018 draft. While that gives the franchise lots of new options that they weren’t expecting, it also makes their general manager and coaching openings much more attractive, according to Chip Alexander of the News & Observer.

The general manager position, which has been open since the team transitioned former general manager Ron Francis to President of Hockey Operations on Mar. 7, was not a popular destination after new owner Tom Dundon ousted Francis and multiple candidates declined to interview, forcing to team to announce they would wait until the offseason to address their needs. On top of that, the team then lost head coach Bill Peters when he triggered an out-clause in his contract and took the head coaching position with the Calgary Flames.

However, Alexander writes both openings are now more intriguing with the No. 2 pick as adding an impact player immediately after they take the job is always a positive. Adding a winger like Andrei Svechnikov could change the team dramatically as he would likely be the No. 1 overall pick if Rasmus Dahlin not been there.

  • NHL.com’s Bill Meltzer writes the Philadelphia Flyers have a lot of work ahead of them this offseason. To start with, the team must depend on the continued development of their youth, including Nolan Patrick, Travis Konecny, Oskar Lindblom, Travis Sanheim, Robert Hagg and Samuel Morin. However, general manager Ron Hextall intends to make many roster changes to improve the team with the idea of adding more speed, especially to the special teams. Hextall, who is known for making offseason trades, is likely to be active again on the trade market and could attempt to move winger Wayne Simmonds. While Simmonds has said he wants to stay, the team could get a good return as the 30-year-old will enter the final year of a reasonable $3.975MM deal. With plenty of youth in their system working their way up, it would seem unlikely the Flyers would extend his contract.
  • With two picks in the lottery, the New York Islanders have multiple options in front of them, writes Arthur Staple of The Athletic (subscription required). While the team could use the 11th and 12th picks in the 2018 NHL Draft to trade down and pick up a top forward, the team could also stay where they are and rebuild the team’s prospect pool, which isn’t as strong as it once was. The scribe also adds that the team could use one of the picks in a package to acquire a veteran defenseman who could help fix their leaky blueline.

 

Bill Peters| Carolina Hurricanes| New York Islanders| Philadelphia Flyers Andrei Svechnikov| NHL Entry Draft| Nolan Patrick| Oskar Lindblom| Rasmus Dahlin| Robert Hagg| Samuel Morin| Travis Konecny| Travis Sanheim| Wayne Simmonds

10 comments

Draft Notes: Mock Draft, Rangers, Canadiens, Sabres

April 29, 2018 at 10:21 am CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 13 Comments

Now that the lottery portion of the 2018 NHL draft has clarified, TSN’s Craig Button has already released his first mock draft. No surprise, the Buffalo Sabres are projected to take defenseman Rasmus Dahlin. The Carolina Hurricanes are projected to take winger Andrei Svechnikov at No. 2, who Button compares to Marian Hossa and who could walk in and join Carolina immediately next season, aiding their struggling offense.

Wingers Filip Zadina and Brady Tkachuk are targeted to be taken at No. 3 and No. 4 by the Montreal Canadiens and Ottawa Senators, respectively, while the Arizona Coyotes are projected to select defenseman Quinn Hughes with the fifth pick, rounding out the top five.

  • While there is no shot at getting Dahlin, the New York Rangers have made it clear they want to move up in this year’s draft. With the eighth-worst record in the NHL this past season, the team moved back a spot in Saturday’s draft lottery. The Rangers have the ninth-overall pick in the 2018 NHL draft, but have after tearing down their team at the trade deadline, the team has quite a few assets to offer a team willing to trade down. The New York Post’s Larry Brooks writes the team is focusing on two teams, including the Ottawa Senators and Arizona Coyotes, two former trade partners, as potential landing spots at No. 4 and No. 5. While it’s considered to be a deep draft and the Rangers would get a quality player at No. 9, there is said to be a drop off around No. 4 or No. 5. The Rangers not only have the ninth-overall pick, but also have two other first-round picks, including the Tampa Bay Lightning and the Boston Bruins’ first-rounders, which could fall anywhere between 24 and 31. They also have two second and two third-round picks.
  • The Montreal Canadiens might also be a trade possibility for teams looking to move up. While the team had a couple of extra hours to imagine winning the lottery when they were among the top three first announced Saturday, the team ended up at No. 3. While there are plenty of high-quality wingers that would be available to the team, it doesn’t really help with the team’s top need, which is a big center, writes Stu Cowan of the Montreal Gazette. One interesting option would be if the Canadiens trade down or just reach for center Joe Veleno from the Drummondville Voltiguers of the QMJHL and was coached by Dominique Ducharme, who was just hired by Canadiens as an assistant coach. Cowan compares this situation to the 2016 draft when the Columbus Blue Jackets shocked everyone when they took Pierre-Luc Dubois with the third-overall pick, although no one is complaining now.
  • An interesting note from the Buffalo News’ Mike Harrington, the Buffalo Sabres won the lottery twice Saturday. They initially won the No. 1 pick and then again won the No. 3 pick. The No. 3 pick was then was redrawn, which allowed the Montreal Canadiens to move up.

Boston Bruins| Buffalo Sabres| Carolina Hurricanes| Columbus Blue Jackets| Montreal Canadiens| New York Rangers| Ottawa Senators| QMJHL| Tampa Bay Lightning| Utah Mammoth Andrei Svechnikov| Brady Tkachuk| Filip Zadina| Marian Hossa| NHL Entry Draft| Pierre-Luc Dubois| Quinn Hughes| Rasmus Dahlin

13 comments

Ottawa Senators Will Keep Their 2018 First-Round Pick

April 29, 2018 at 9:02 am CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 3 Comments

Another day, another loss for the Ottawa Senators. With a 13.5 percent chance to nab the No. 1 overall pick Saturday night and elite defenseman Rasmus Dahlin, the team didn’t get him. Nor did they win the No. 2 spot or even the No. 3. Instead, the Senators dropped two spots and will pick with the No. 4 pick.

Regardless, Ottawa general manager Pierre Dorion, who has the option of sending either their 2018 or their 2019 first-rounder to the Colorado Avalanche as part of the Matt Duchene trade, said last night that the team will keep their pick this year and the team will trade their 2019 unprotected first-rounder to the Avalanche, according to Ottawa Sun’s Bruce Garrioch. There had been talk several months ago that Ottawa was considering moving this pick if it was outside the top-three in case the team struggled again next year and with an unprotected pick in 2019, the team could lose the potential first-overall pick. However, with the chance to draft this year in the top five, the first time the team has had that chance since 2001, they don’t want to pass it up.

“We’re going to keep the pick,” Dorion said. “There’s no denying that we think that player we’re going to take at No. 4 is someone that’s going to be able to help us maybe as soon as next year … I think it will make us a better hockey team and we’re going to worry about 2019.”

The Senators are hoping to return to the success the team had in the 2016-17 season when the team got into the Eastern Conference Finals before losing to the eventual Stanley Cup champion Pittsburgh Penguins. Garrioch writes the team will have multiple options at No. 4, including getting one of the three coveted wingers in the draft including Barrie Colts’ Andrei Svechnikov, Halifax Moosehead’s Filip Zadina, and Boston University’s Brady Tkachuk.

Colorado Avalanche| Ottawa Senators Andrei Svechnikov| Brady Tkachuk| Filip Zadina| Matt Duchene| Rasmus Dahlin

3 comments

Buffalo Wins The 2018 Draft Lottery; Will Select First Overall

April 28, 2018 at 9:17 pm CDT | by natebrown 11 Comments

The Buffalo Sabres have won the Rasmus Dahlin sweepstakes. Buffalo has one of the most hockey-rabid fan bases in the entire league and their faith has been rewarded with the chance to plant a franchise player on the blue line. After years of suffering with bottom of the standings finishes and placing second in the Connor McDavid race, the Sabres finally have the top choice.

Buffalo’s draw was revealed during the second period intermission of Game Two of the Vegas Golden Knights-San Jose Sharks series, after picks #4-#15 had been revealed earlier in the night. Vaulting their way into the top three was Carolina, who had a 70% chance of picking 12th overall. Instead, the Hurricanes now sit with the second overall pick to add to their collection of young talent, which has implications in terms of getting a chance at selecting a lethal goal scorer in Andrei Svechnikov, Filip Zadina, or Brady Tkachuk.

Montreal’s suffering through the 2017-18 season was eased a bit by getting the third overall pick and a shot at a talent who should be on NHL ice come fall, giving them the goal scorer they so desperately need. They could also go back to addressing the blue line with several high-end options available at the top of the draft, but scoring is a need and Zadina, Svechnikov, or Tkachuk would help with that need.

Dahlin has been pegged as the #1 overall choice for a while now and is projected to dramatically change the fortunes of whichever team won the rights to draft him. Buffalo won that right, tonight.

The top fifteen picks in the 2018 NHL Draft are as follows:

#1- Buffalo Sabres
#2- Carolina Hurricanes
#3- Montreal Canadiens
#4- Ottawa Senators
#5- Arizona Coyotes
#6- Detroit Red Wings
#7- Vancouver Canucks
#8- Chicago Blackhawks
#9- N.Y. Rangers
#10-Edmonton Oilers
#11- N.Y. Islanders
#12- N.Y. Islanders (from Calgary)
#13- Dallas Stars
#14- Philadelphia Flyers (from St. Louis)
#15- Florida Panthers

Buffalo Sabres| Carolina Hurricanes| Montreal Canadiens| Newsstand Andrei Svechnikov| Brady Tkachuk| Filip Zadina| League News| Rasmus Dahlin

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