Utah Hockey Club are No. 7 in 2025 NHL prospect pool rankings – The New York Times


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Welcome to Scott Wheeler’s 2025 rankings of every NHL organization’s prospects. You can find the complete ranking and more information on the project and its criteria here, as we count down daily from No. 32 to No. 1. The series, which includes in-depth evaluations and insight from sources on nearly 500 prospects, runs from Jan. 8 to Feb. 7.
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One of the things Utah HC brought with them from the Coyotes was a decent prospect pool. And while they’ve moved out Conor Geekie and graduated Logan Cooley and Dylan Guenther in the last couple of years, they also had an 11-pick 2024 draft that brought in first-rounders Tij Iginla and Cole Beaudoin. Their pool is seven deep in legit NHL prospects, with a star forward prospect in Iginla, unique length in Dmitri Simashev, Maveric Lamoureux and Daniil But, some potential third-liners in Beaudoin and Josh Doan and top goalie prospect Michael Hrabal.
2024 prospect pool rank: No. 9 (change: +2)
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NHL prospect pool rankings 2025: Scott Wheeler evaluates all 32 farm systems
After playing his rookie season in a limited role with the WHL champion Seattle Thunderbirds — at times even scratched — Tij, the son of Jarome Iginla and the No. 9 pick in the 2021 WHL Bantam Draft, was traded to Kelowna and took off with the Rockets in his draft year, regularly looking dangerous both off the rush and attacking inside the offensive zone. This season, he got off to a strong start in Kelowna before undergoing hip surgery. Since the trade to the Rockets, he has combined for 131 points in 96 combined games between two regular seasons and one playoff run at 17 and barely 18 years old. In between, he had a point in every game at U18 worlds and finished the tournament with goals in the semifinal against Sweden and final against USA to end with 12 points in seven games (fifth in the tournament).
He’s an excellent skater who can beat you in a straight-out race, cut past you laterally with quick weight shifts or build speed through tight crossover patterns around the offensive zone. On the puck, he’s a threatening individual creator who can create in knifing bursts and works quickly to put defenders on their heels, attacking on angles and jumps. Off it, he’s got great instincts for jumping into gaps in coverage to get open for his linemates. His snap shot, which has a traditional look to it and is more wrists and leverage than the curl-and-drag you commonly see now, is a major weapon, consistently beating goalies cleanly with both its pop and how quickly it comes off. He’s got high-end handling (he’s got impressive hands in tight and always seems to handle his first touch at speed, even when pucks are put into his feet) and adjustability, which blends with real creativity to create an often-dynamic one-on-one player. He’s an impressive athlete who performed well in the combine testing. He’s also a fan favorite type who gets after it on the forecheck and involves himself in the play often, with some sneaky strength (though I think his defensive awareness and consistency still need to come and his off-puck play might have been a little overrated in his draft year). Add in NHL puck skill and a dangerous and heavy wrister from midrange, and you’ve got a fun player and prospect. Add in the emergence of a power game that has seen him really begin to take pucks to the inside and drive the net and suddenly you’ve got a perimeter and interior offensive threat who has strength, speed, skill and scoring in his profile. He’s got a top-six, scoring-skill-jump profile. He’s got a ton of tools and they’ve come along at an exciting rate. He’s going to score goals and make plays in the NHL.
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I expect him to be a big part of the Memorial Cup hosts in Kelowna next season and Team Canada at the 2026 World Juniors in Minnesota before making the jump to the NHL in 2026-27.
Every team wants long defensemen who can really skate and Simashev checks both of those boxes as a mobile 6-foot-5 lefty. He’s a rangy, smooth-skating defenseman who played 18 KHL games in his draft year, was great in the MHL playoffs and played full-time in the KHL last year to good results for a defenseman his age, averaging just under 15 minutes in the regular season and 12 in the playoffs. This season, though his numbers haven’t taken a step and remain modest, he has played to good defensive results again and he has done it while playing an increased role (he’s up to 17 minutes per game this year) on a first-place team while featuring regularly on the penalty kill. He also only turns 20 in a few days and already defends at a strong level in a top league.
It’s hard not to like the way he can play in transition, whether defending the rush with his feet and reach, skating back to retrieve pucks or skating through neutral ice/out of the defensive zone in possession. He has shown improved comfort and smarts in control, even if his play with the puck and offensive game are never going to be his calling card. He gaps well and can take away a carrier’s space. He’s got a good stick (he defends more with his length and feet than body) I’m still not as high on him as some others are and didn’t feel he was a No. 6 pick in 2023 but he’s got most of the more important makings of a potential top-four defenseman who can play minutes and drive results with his defensive play, length and skating.
Scouts have long been fascinated by Lamoureux’s towering 6-foot-7 frame and smooth skating. When you watch him in isolation in a practice setting, it’s easy to see why. He’s got a short, compact stride for how big he is, he moves really well, his shot explodes off his stick from the point, he’s naturally athletic and coordinated and he’s got a good first touch. His processing, reads and decision-making have all come a long way to cut down on mistakes and penalties (though he still takes his fair share) and improve his game management with the puck (as well as his choices on when to use his physicality, which has resulted in some discipline at times) as well. His play with the puck has also developed more poise and assuredness. He has also added some muscle to his athletic frame so that he can really impose himself defensively. He plays at a quicker pace now, making his decisions quickly.
This season has been a real promising one as well. He made an immediate two-way impact and looked like a stud in the AHL. He got off to a strong start to his NHL career and I thought showed that he belonged, which is pretty rare for a D his age (he just turned 21 a couple of weeks ago) and size.
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As he continues to tweak and figure things out, there’s real promise that he could become a pretty unique No. 3-5 defenseman (if Simashev hits, Utah’s blue line of the future will have a distinguished look with all of that length/mobility). He was an absolute force against his peers in the QMJHL (I thought he really rose to the challenge on a disappointing Team Canada when he was asked to play a first-pairing role in Tristan Luneau’s absence, too) before a shoulder injury ended his season last year as well, dominating play all over the ice. There are still areas where his game can continue to grow and he has dealt with some injuries that have cost him valuable development time, so for him to already look as strong as he has as a pro and to have made the progress that he has when he has been healthy is quite impressive. He’s got legitimate upside. He’s a great kid, too, and I could see him wearing a letter for Utah someday.
After playing on Russia’s Hlinka Gretzky team three summers ago, But played to a point-per-game level in the MHL as one of its top 2005s three seasons ago and then began his draft year two seasons ago on a tear in the MHL, scoring 11 goals in his first 15 games of the season before earning a mid-October promotion to the KHL for the first time (he then scored his first two pro goals and bounced between the KHL and MHL). Last season, playing as a regular in the KHL with Lokomotiv, But broke 10 goals and 20 points despite playing very limited minutes (9:26 per game). This year, those minutes are up to 12 and a half on average and he has continued to be a regular contributor for the top-of-the-league Lokomotiv. Like his teammate Simashev, he also doesn’t turn 20 until next week and has a unique profile because of his length and talent as a winger.
Scouts were drawn to him because of his size-skill combo as a 6-foot-6 winger with natural skill/scoring touch and a committed 200-foot game, and while he could look a little uncoordinated out there at times earlier in his career, those things have smoothed out, he skates well and his hands are nimble for his size. The draw is real and there are some definite tools there. He’s excellent on the wall in puck protection and also has some outside-in skill so that he can attack off holds into the middle third. He’s got impressive shooting mechanics given how long his stick is and he regularly pulls pucks into his feet to change his angle face-up against goalies. I love the way he shields pucks and waits for his opportunities to attack. While he’s got some work to do to get a little quicker from the jump in the game’s 10-foot races for the NHL, he does have some power and balance through his stride to build upon and skates pretty well for his size and age. It’s hard to be a true top-of-the-lineup forward at his size, though, and he’s not the most physical player so he’ll have to rely on his reach-skill-shooting combo to be an impactful secondary producer in the NHL. I think he projects as a complementary scorer who gives a lineup a bit of a different look. There’s a lot to work with, though, and he’s a legitimate prospect even if, like Simashev, I felt he was picked a little too high at No. 12. He’ll be a unique top-nine winger in the NHL and maybe even a second-line one if he hits.
Early on two seasons ago, when Hrabal arrived from Czechia’s junior league and took the USHL by storm, putting up gaudy numbers through September and into early November, there was first-round buzz about him. Here was this massive 6-foot-7 goalie with an impressive early track record. Then he hit a rut into the new year and lost his job for a spell, only to regain form in March and April, both down the stretch with the Lancers and then as one of the top three players on Czechia at U18 worlds, where I thought he was mostly excellent. Last season, as a freshman at UMass, he was mostly good as well and finished with a .912 save percentage, although his first World Juniors was more of a mixed bag (he was great in Czechia’s upset win over Canada but also had some really rough moments, giving up a number of bad goals). This season, after a summer of good training, Hrabal has begun to really realize all of his potential, playing to a save percentage above .920 as a sophomore at UMass and leading the Czechs to another bronze medal at his second World Juniors with a better tournament that included a huge performance in the bronze medal game (and its IIHF record-long 14-round shootout).
The size jumps out at you right away, but there are layers, good and bad, to the rest of his game. Hrabal gets down into his butterfly a little slowly, opening up his five-hole for shooters (a common problem for bigger goalies), though he has made progress on it this year. Once he’s on his knees he actually scrambles well for a goalie as tall as he is. His hands (both glove and blocker) need some work up high and he has an odd tendency to try to catch low shots instead of making a pad save; I suspect it’s because he doesn’t trust his rebound control on quick shots. I’ve seen him look completely in command, fill the net and take everything away from shooters. I’ve also seen him get beat cleanly and look like he’s not tracking pucks. I would like to see him work on playing the puck as well. The upside is hard to ignore, though, and he’s got some real natural ability and a game-stealing quality when he’s dialed in, sharp on his lines, square to shooters and on his toes. Fewer shots are sneaking through his body and his competitiveness and size are a good combination. He has also developed more and more power to his game, with more that will come as he continues to fill out his frame (though he’s listed at 215 pounds, he still looks wiry), and he moves well for his size and can really take away a shooter’s options when his angles are on point. I believe he should spend at least his junior year in college despite the steps taken this season, and if he can continue to be patient and work on his game I think he’s got real NHL upside. Great kid, too.
The son of Eric Beaudoin, a former OHL captain and fourth-round NHL draft pick who played parts of three seasons in the NHL and had a successful career in Europe, Beaudoin plays a pro style and makes good reads and decisions around the ice. He’s a big, strong, driven, hardworking, average-skilled player who carried over his standout play at the Hlinka Gretzky Cup into his second OHL season with an eight-points-in-four-games preseason last year. While his start to the regular season of his draft campaign was a little slower in production, he worked his way back to a point per game. This season, though he’s playing to just a point per game again in Barrie, he has been one of their top forwards and most productive players as they push to contend — and he plays the hardest minutes of their forwards defensively. Over the years, he has played well in my viewings in Barrie, in Moncton for the CHL/NHL Top Prospects Game, in Finland for U18 worlds, where he again made himself an invaluable part of Team Canada as a go-to penalty killer and its most used center and in Ottawa at selection camp for the World Juniors and then in his first World Juniors, where he struggled to produce offense but was one of their only tone-setters in terms of physicality and heaviness.
An incredibly strong athlete in the gym, he already looks like a pro — and then some — physically. Though he’s definitely not quick (which showed up in the on-ice testing last year) and he needs to work on his skating and hands, he excels in off-ice testing and endurance, and he’s a sturdy skater once he gets into his stride, which allows him to get after it on the forecheck (where he excels) and backcheck (he really tracks pucks) and drive play down ice. He’s also got a high-end motor that never stops, even late in games and late in shifts, constantly applying pressure and leaning on players to win pucks. Beaudoin is a very well-rounded player who supports pucks well on both sides, protects pucks well against defenders and can be relied upon. He’s also got a good shot and an excellent cycle game. He’s already wearing a letter, he’s got great habits and detail, he’s jacked and I could see him as an OHL captain and a really effective bottom-six player in the NHL someday. That’s not a type I typically rank in the first round (he slotted 37th on my board when Utah drafted him 24th) but he’s got the respect of everyone in the OHL (there’s a reason he showed up in multiple categories in the OHL’s coaches poll) and with Hockey Canada and NHL clubs (other clubs were going to take him right after Utah if they passed). He’s got a high floor and will get the most out of his career because of his drive, heaviness on pucks, battle level, strength in the dot, willingness to lay the body or block a shot and his forechecking. If he can refine his touch and work on his hands and his first couple of steps, he’ll have a long career.
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After undergoing a huge growth spurt in the USHL with the Chicago Steel in advance of his second-round selection as an overager in 2021, Doan, who is now 6-foot-2 and 198 pounds, really developed and built a workable, translatable game as a freshman and sophomore at Arizona State, scoring at a point per game across his two seasons in college before turning pro (and serving as the Sun Devils captain in the last of those two seasons). Last season, his first full one at the pro level, Doan led the Roadrunners in goals (26) and points (46) in 62 games and had an excellent first 11 games in the NHL, scoring five goals and nine points. This season, after sticking with the NHL club out of camp, Doan was close to a point per game back in the AHL from the end of October through the New Year and has played well since returning to Utah.
He plays hard, gets to the guts of the ice, works on the forecheck, never strays from his defensive responsibilities, plays a committed game all over the ice, plays a direct and intentional game offensively, always seems to be in good position, has better feel inside the offensive zone than I gave him credit for in Chicago and has come a long, long way in the last few years. He has always played a pro style, he developed the pro frame and he’s got average pro tools across the board with the right mindset. He’s got useful bottom-six forward and secondary scorer written all over him at this point.
One of the top 2004-born Russian prospects, Duda was a dominant two-way defenseman against his peers at home and didn’t look out of place in spot use in the KHL. He made the decision to come to North America instead of climbing up the depth chart in the KHL but couldn’t get NCAA approval due primarily to his pro experience and then took one of the most unique paths a top prospect has taken in years by playing USports hockey in Canada last season before making the jump to the AHL this year. USports is a better level than people realize in that it’s filled with guys in their mid-20s who were top CHL players, including some who played a bit of pro in the AHL and ECHL briefly, some who were NHL draft picks and many who were rookie camp invites. He handled it well, too, playing an important role for Toronto Metropolitan University as their youngest and looking the part of his cachet. He has been excellent (or close) in the AHL for me this year as well, playing 22-23 minutes per game as an impactful two-way, top-four D in Tucson as a 20-year-old.
Duda’s got a little bit of everything in his game. He’s got the frame (6-foot-1, 187 pounds). He likes to carry and shoot the puck and does both well. He can activate off the line to create his own looks or get open into the high slot. He can comfortably lead rushes. He can run a power play but also plays a big-time role on Tucson’s penalty kill. He can create exits and entries with his feet. He’s also got strong posture and core control and an impressive stick defensively. Though he can be a little passive defensively and doesn’t defend particularly hard man-to-man, we can confuse that as needing correcting when, at least in his case, it’s actually quite effective at keeping play to the outside and staying out of the box. (I think he’s enough competitive, too, but he defends to be disruptive and smart rather than physical.) I’m a fan. He’s a very good young player who looks like he’s on a path to the NHL to me.
The No. 1 pick in the 2022 QMJHL draft, Lavoie didn’t produce or show the offense pre-draft that you’d expect of a player of that notoriety coming out of minor hockey, but he played huge, tough minutes in the league last year, regularly logging 25-plus a game, and has now taken a step this season to emerge as a point per game defenseman in the league and one of the most productive D in the QMJHL. A 6-foot-4, already-218-pound D, Lavoie can look heavy out there, which limited his ability to play in transition offensively with his feet and at times one-on-one defending faster players but has slowly come along and has made real progress this year after a good summer. He moves pucks efficiently, has a hard and accurate point shot, has a good head for the game, keeps his eyes up and plays an effective, trusted style. He’s also a physical, strong player who is a competitor and plays hard. He’s got some calm to his game and moves pucks decisively and confidently. His game is effective offensively at getting pucks through. He processes the game well. He’s also by all accounts a good teammate. While he doesn’t look like a star prospect anymore, I do think that with continued development he’s got the size, smarts and two-way maturity to become a solid third-pairing type in the NHL and he should have a good pro career and be a worthy depth call-up option at minimum. I’d expect him to get signed in the near future here as well.
Skahan’s a big 6-foot-5 (up an inch from his draft listing), 215-pound defender with decent mobility for his size and age who played to good defensive underlying numbers on an NTDP blue line that had a tough time and has had a respectable season as a teenaged freshman and depth defenseman (12-14 minutes per game) on the No. 1 team in college hockey at the moment with the Eagles. His offensive game has developed slower than many hoped and expected it would but he outlets the puck well, he’s got a heavy shot, and with his frame and mobility, scouts were intrigued by his potential defensively. His father, Sean, is a strength and conditioning coach who has worked with the Minnesota Wild and Anaheim Ducks, so he comes by the power and strength in his game honestly (he’s stronger than his peers and can push players off pucks, though he also has a good stick). There’s a lot to work with there.
His gap-ups still need some work but he’s a good skater going forward and has some real power to his stride. He’s vulnerable to getting beat wide by quicker players and can misread plays and pull himself out of position and then have to recover, but when he’s dialed in he can make life hard on opposing carriers. He’s also capable of joining the rush and finding the trailer and involved himself more in transition as last season went on. I’d expect him to be more involved down ice with his skating as he gets comfortable in the college game. He’s never going to be a points guy but he can help out in transition and make himself available. I was definitely expecting him to take a bigger step as a big-time two-way defenseman with the U18 team last year than he did, though, and I wasn’t alone in that (he was 64th on my list and Utah drafted him 65th). Utah will be hoping that he can develop into an Alex Vlasic type (Vlasic didn’t have a translatable statistical profile in his three seasons at BU but has made it as an NHLer on the back of his strength, athleticism, size and defensive play), though that would be an absolute best-case outcome and I think it’s probably more likely he becomes a No. 7-8 if all goes well.
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Lipkin followed a late-blooming but steep trajectory to go from second-last pick in the 2021 draft to Chicago Steel captain, the USHL’s fourth-leading goal scorer in his post-draft season, a bronze medalist with USA’s World Junior team and a point-per-game freshman and sophomore as one of Quinnipiac’s leading scorers across his two seasons in college before turning pro. This year, after beginning in very limited usage, he has slowly been given more minutes in Tucson and is now playing 13-17 minutes per game more recently.
He’s a lean 6-foot-2 forward with a well-rounded 200-foot game that includes a commitment to the little things and good enough overall skill to potentially project as a bottom-six player who can give you a consistent, honest game. He’s competitive and detailed, and while his skill level isn’t dynamic he finds ways to get his looks and his shot comes off quickly and with some zip. He can also play both center and wing and is decent in the faceoff circle, which gives him some positional versatility. He should be a good top-nine AHLer at minimum but could in time work his way into the call-up mix.
A back injury cost Lutz most of his draft year, kept him from training for much of his layoff and has resulted in a slower-than-hoped-for development since. His move from the DEL to the USHL made some sense so that he could play with his peers and develop his confidence again, but now he’s bypassed college and jumped right into the pro game — a giant leap that has come with limited minutes as they ease him in. In Green Bay last year, he was one of the league’s most productive players on a points-per-game basis, registering 72 points in 56 combined regular season and playoff games.
Lutz is athletic, and his pro frame (6-foot-2, 192 pounds) and build match a game that looks like it should project to the pro game. He impressed across U18 and U20 competitions on some weak German teams to look like he could hang with the top players of opposing teams. There’s a lot to like about his makeup. He’s a very smooth, balanced skater through his outside edges, leaning through a linear line over his blades to twist, turn, maneuver and weave his way up ice or attack/slash on angles to the middle. He plays the game with some energy and a middle-lane drive, keeps his feet moving and involves himself in plays. He’s got a pro shot through his wrister (which he can get off in motion going downhill) and one-timer. He can make plays on stops and starts below the goal line and sees the ice fairly well. When he’s on, he’ll execute multiple positive touches over the course of a shift and move around the ice with some polish. His rush game is better than his small-area game/creativity but with his athletic tools, there’s a chance he could become a complementary winger or good AHL depth. Now it’s just about staying healthy and building confidence through repetition and practice, which could be difficult to do at the AHL level after he skipped a natural step in between (I do worry about whether he’ll be able to develop in the AHL like he needs to). He’s only playing about 10 minutes per game this year and the results haven’t been great.
St. Andrew’s College, or SAC, has become a bit of a non-traditional draft factory in recent years, regularly producing one to two prospects who garner NHL interest. One of the final cuts for my 2023 draft board, Castagna is one of the latest examples and stepped right in at the NCAA level last year and looked like he more than belonged. Most prep school players take a pitstop for a year in the USHL or Canadian Jr. A but Castagna’s athletic tools allowed him to bypass that and jump directly into good production at Cornell as an 18-year-old freshman. Last year, he posted 25 points in 35 games at Cornell, good for fourth on the team in scoring. This year, though his production has plateaued on a weaker Cornell team, Castagna has continued to be a regular contributor at five-on-five and on both special teams as a teenager.
He’s a tremendous athlete, the kind of player who excels in on-and-off-ice testing and does it in a 6-foot-2, 200-pound pro frame. His game is defined by his skating (acceleration and top gear), his versatility and his drive. I’ve seen him consistently play to the middle of the ice in my viewings. He’s good in the faceoff circle. And while he’s not a natural finisher, there’s a belief that he’s still early in his development on the ice even if he’s ahead of the curve off it. There were some who weren’t surprised when the Coyotes took him in the third round and teams that had him circled for a round or two later on their lists. By all accounts, he was a special kid at SAC, where he excelled in the classroom, on the lacrosse field and also in theater, too. He’s worth monitoring for his athleticism and speed.
Thelin was a positive story for the Coyotes last season before their move to Utah, performing well across levels (J20, Sweden’s third-tier HockeyEttan and HockeyAllsvenskan) and making his first World Juniors in Gothenburg. This year, though he gave up some bad goals as the starter and a returnee at the World Juniors and should have lost the net to the Islanders’ Marcus Gidlöf before they made the switch for the bronze medal game, he has again played well in both J20 and HockeyAllsvenskan, with a sterling record with Bjorkloven (he has outplayed veteran tandem mate Joona Voutilainen).
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Thelin’s an average-sized goalie (6-foot-2 and lean) with good feet and quickness which he relies on to stick with shooters one-on-one, bounce in and out of recoveries and move post-to-post and low-to-high to get to pucks and make difficult saves. He can be a little busy in the net at times, occasionally losing his net, but that’s not uncommon for a lighter, smaller(ish) goalie and he plays with enough control that he can hold his outside edges firmly enough so that it’s not as though he’s swimming. He gives up a lot of goals through his body/on sharp angles, though, and can struggle to seal posts, close his five-hole and hold the triangles between his arms and his pads. Those technical holes have prevented him from getting signed to this point, though his play in Sweden’s second tier is the start of a case for it. I’d like to see him play in the SHL or AHL in the next year or two and work with a goalie coach to fix some of his habits/details.
A top-nine player for Sweden throughout its international schedule at the U18 level, Nordh, who scored his first SHL goal and played 10 games at Sweden’s top flight in his draft year two years ago, was a regular in the second-tier HockeyAllsvenskan last year but left for the OHL after Brynas was promoted to the SHL. He has been a solid player internationally for Sweden and was a late addition to this year’s World Junior team due to injury. After playing a couple of games in the AHL to start the year, he has been a solid contributor for a Soo team in a bit of a transition period, playing to just above a point per game.
Nordh is a well-rounded winger with pro size (6-foot-2, about 200 pounds), good dexterity and reflexes around the net and a willingness to go to the dirty areas and use his size. His game can lack creativity but he plays a direct style effectively. And while his first couple of strides can stomp a little, he’s a strong skater once he’s in flight, with a quick release and the average skill needed to contribute and make the odd play. He tops out as a future fourth-liner and maybe just becomes an AHL third-liner but I do think his game works better on the smaller ice in North America and he knows what he is/his role. I very nearly left him off the list in favor of Czech World Junior forward Vojtech Hradec, who is having a good year and probably has a slightly higher ceiling.
As always, each prospect pool ranking is broken down into team-specific tiers in order to give you a better sense of the proximity from one player — or group of players — to the next.
Utah’s pool is divided into three tiers: 1-4, 5-8, 9-15+.
Considered but not ranked were Hradec (the final cut and a comparable prospect to those ranked 10-15), Nebraska-Omaha forward Tanner Ludtke, Medicine Hat import defenseman Veeti Vasianen, Soo overager Owen Allard, Victoria Royals defenseman Justin Kipke and Tucson defenseman Maksymilian Szuber.
(Photo of Tij Iginla: Ezra Shaw / Getty Images)
Scott Wheeler covers the NHL draft and prospects nationally for The Athletic. Scott has written for the Toronto Star, the Globe and Mail, The Toronto Sun, the National Post, SB Nation and several other outlets in the past. Author of ‘On The Clock: Behind the Scenes with the Toronto Maple Leafs at the NHL Draft’ Follow Scott on Twitter @scottcwheeler

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