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The 2025 NHL draft is taking place on Friday (Round 1) and Saturday (Rounds 2-7) at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles.

This page will be your home for the entire event, as each pick is added below, including scouting notes and team fit analysis for the first-rounders.

More: Grades for all 32
Winners and losers
Prospect rankings
Needs for all 32 teams


Round 1

Team: Erie (OHL)
DOB: 09/05/2007 | Ht: 6-1¾ | Wt: 183 | Shot: L
2024-25 stats: GP: 17 | G: 7 | A: 15 | P: 22

Scouting notes: Schaefer is projected to become a true No. 1 cornerstone for years to come. A dynamic presence at both ends of the ice, he skates with ease and elite mobility to shut down opponents in all situations, while creating offense with quality transition play.

Executives and scouts view him as a future elite NHL defenseman and a foundational piece for a championship-caliber roster. Schaefer’s ability to control play from the blue line, play tough matchups, and run a power play — combined with the belief in his character and leadership — result in many believing that Schaefer has the tools to become a top-10 defender in the league, while wearing a letter as part of a team’s leadership group.

How he fits: After trading Noah Dobson earlier in the day, the Islanders drafted their franchise cornerstone defender. Schaefer does everything well, and is a dynamic skater with elite mobility. He will take on the toughest matchups, help the Islanders exit the zone with smooth passes and carry outs, and drive offense from the back end. He’s a future No. 1 defenseman who will log 25-28 minutes per night and run the power play.

Schaefer’s ability to dictate play from the back end is franchise-changing for the Isles. Schaefer will attend development camp next week, and it is highly likely he starts the season in the NHL lineup. Don’t be surprised if Schaefer is running the power play and logging major minutes by November.

A very emotional Schaefer hugged his family and pulled on the Isles jersey for the first time, with a cancer patch. Through tears, he shared his excitement and emotion, and gained the hearts of a lot more than just Isles fans.


Team: Saginaw (OHL)
DOB: 02/16/2007 | Ht: 6-¾ | Wt: 184 | Shot: L
2024-25 stats: GP: 65 | G: 62 | A: 72 | P: 134

Scouting notes: Granted exceptional status in the OHL in 2022, Misa delivered one of the most remarkable goal-scoring seasons in recent memory in 2024-25, netting 62 goals in just 65 games. He projects to be a top-line forward capable of consistently exceeding 90 points per season in the NHL.

Misa’s offensive instincts are elite. He processes the game at a high level and executes at top speed. Scouts believe he is NHL-ready and has the potential to become an elite top-line center. Away from the puck, Misa excels at finding soft areas in coverage and has a flair for delivering in clutch moments. His combination of high-end playmaking and goal-scoring ability makes him a constant dual threat in the offensive zone.

How he fits: The Sharks kept everyone guessing until the very last moment, but ultimately selected Misa. He is a special talent and adds a second elite two-way center to the organization. He projects as a first-line star, with dual-threat playmaking and scoring ability — notching 62 goals in 65 OHL games.

If Misa’s two-way game continues to improve, there’s a real chance the Sharks will have two centers capable of dominating play in all three zones with 2024 No. 1 pick Macklin Celebrini already in place. On the power play, Misa can facilitate, be a shooting threat and carry the puck on entries. Because of his dual-threat capabilities, he can play the bumper, the flank or down low. With this selection, the Sharks have the potential to feature the best one-two punch down the middle for years to come.


Team: Djurgarden (SWEDEN-2)
DOB: 05/07/2007 | Ht: 6-1 | Wt: 198 | Shot: L
2024-25 stats: GP: 29 | G: 11 | A: 14 | P: 25

Scouting notes: Frondell is a versatile two-way forward that plays both center and right wing. His flexibility is attractive to teams, although many believe he is most likely to reach his potential as a winger in the NHL.

Frondell is coming off one of the most productive seasons by an under-18 player in Allsvenskan history, giving him a confident projection as a first-line NHL forward. He’s a cerebral player, who picks apart defenders in one-on-one situations and defensive coverage in offensive zone play. The details of Frondell’s game are translatable, including excellent forechecking ability, willingness to attack the middle of the ice and high-end anticipation on both sides of the puck.

He has shown play-driving capabilities against men in the Allsvenskan, which has translated to the NHL for other prospects in the past. He’s projected to produce between 75-85 points per season. His style of play translates well and has executives excited about his ability to step in the league in the next 18 months.

How he fits: It was no secret that Chicago wanted to add some size up front, and Frondell is exactly that. He can play center or the wing, and brings an excellent two-way game. He confidently projects as a first-line forward that beats defenders one-on-one, drives play on both ends of the ice, and should score nearly a point per game.

He plays on the inside of the ice and has the ability to score 30-plus goals in the NHL because of his excellent shot. Frondell is a year away from playing in the NHL, and probably two or three from hitting his potential as a top-line forward who drives play. Chicago can play him behind Connor Bedard up the middle, or on Bedard’s line to capitalize on the versatility he brings.


Team: Moncton (QMJHL)
DOB: 04/11/2007 | Ht: 6-1½ | Wt: 178 | Shot: L
2024-25 stats: GP: 56 | G: 35 | A: 49 | P: 84

Scouting notes: Described as a “coach’s dream” because of his ability to take an offensive or checking assignment and execute consistently. He makes smart, simple plays, provides a physical presence on the forecheck and generally agitates and makes life difficult on defenders.

He projects to be a quality second-line center with a decent chance of becoming a first-line player. He’s cerebral, with quick hands and playmaking ability. He’s not flashy, but he’s consistently effective and makes intelligent plays with the puck. As one scouting director described “he’s the type of player you win with.” Some have quietly compared him to Patrice Bergeron and Jonathan Toews, who are lofty comparisons, to say the very least.

How he fits: The Mammoth kept everyone guessing: Would they trade or keep the pick? Ultimately, they kept the pick and selected Desnoyers. He can play in any situation as one of the best two-way players available. He’s a serial winner who plays whatever style of game required to win. If he needs to produce offense, he does. If he needs to shut down the opponent’s best, he does that too.

Utah needed some size and two-way capability to mesh with Logan Cooley, Clayton Keller and Dylan Guenther, and Desnoyers is exactly that. He’ll be NHL-ready a lot sooner than people think because his professional details are top-notch. He projects as a play-driving, two-way, second line center that the Mammoth will turn to in key situations. As noted above, there’s a lot of Jonathan Toews in Desnoyers’ game, which will excite Mammoth fans, management and coaches.


Team: Sault Ste. Marie (OHL)
DOB: 03/16/2007 | Ht: 6-0 | Wt: 178 | Shot: R
2024-25 stats: GP: 57 | G: 33 | A: 39 | P: 72

Scouting notes: A Swiss Army knife type of player who will be most effective on the wing because of his strong wall play, Martin projects as a middle-six forward capable of scoring 20 goals routinely, with upside as a second-line forward.

He’s a wrecking ball that will bring value in all three zones, on and off the puck. Martin has scouts raving about him after an excellent performance at the IIHF under-18 championship, with many opining that he could go very early in the first round. He’s a workhorse without an off switch, who brings a blend of physicality and hard skill. He’s a nightmare to contain with his brute strength, and forces defenders into precarious positions with good speed and willingness to make “winning” plays.

Several teams mentioned how impressive Martin was during interviews at the combine. Combine an attractive personality with the hard-nosed style, and it forms a rare combination that is valuable to many scouts who believe he’s the type of player teams need to win in the playoffs. Surely, his mention of Conn Smythe winner Sam Bennett as a role model grabbed attention.

How he fits: Another pick that was rumored to be on the move, the Predators kept it and selected Martin. Martin is a raw player with functional strength and projects to be a middle-six forward. He will shine as the games get tighter and more physical, and can swing momentum with a brilliant forecheck or big hit.

The hard-nosed style of game was very attractive to many teams, especially with Bennett and the Panthers’ recent success. Martin needs at least another season or two to develop his offensive game, and while the Predators did leave some skill with James Hagens and Porter Martone on the board, they believe Martin can be an impactful player for years to come.


Team: Brampton (OHL)
DOB: 10/26/2006 | Ht: 6-2¾ | Wt: 208 | Shot: R
2024-25 stats: GP: 57 | G: 37 | A: 61 | P: 98

Scouting notes: A big, cerebral forward, Martone is a dual-threat offensive player with ability to score on his own and facilitate. He projects to be a second-line scoring winger who should see top power-play minutes.

His competitive nature will make him an effective agitator as he learns to physically impose himself on opponents. He needs to hone the competitiveness and physicality to increase its effectiveness, but he is exactly the type of player teams covet because of the unique combination of offensive talent and competitive fire.

His unique combination of scoring ability, size and hard skill make him a very attractive prospect. While his most confident projection is as a top-six forward, Martone has a legitimate chance to become a top-line winger if his skating improves.

How he fits: The Flyers got a lot bigger and better with Porter Martone. Considered the smartest player in the draft by scouts, Martone is a dual-threat offensive player with excellent playmaking and shooting ability. There is an aura of competitiveness and physicality that will develop and will undoubtedly make him a fan favorite in Philly.

Martone projects to be a scoring winger who will be tough to handle as he develops his power forward game. The Flyers have some elite young players, and Martone has a big frame with elite talent, and can create offense and make special plays happen. He needs a year or two to improve his skating to fully unlock his potential as a top-six scorer, but Rick Tocchet is going to love this player.

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2:00

Charles Barkley announces Porter Martone as No. 6 pick in NHL draft

NBA Hall of Famer Charles Barkley helps the Flyers select Porter Martone with the sixth pick of the NHL draft.


Team: Boston College (H-EAST)
DOB: 11/03/2006 | Ht: 5-10½ | Wt: 177 | Shot: L
2024-25 stats: GP: 37 | G: 11 | A: 26 | P: 37

Scouting notes: Hagens is projected to be a top-line center, or one of the NHL’s best second-line centers. He lacks the dynamism of Misa, opting for a highly cerebral and efficient play style. He brings a good work rate with excellent speed and passing ability that should see him effectively drive play at the NHL level. Scouts and executives are impressed with the professional details of his game (puck support, winning battles, defensive puck play), and they believe it will ease the transition to the NHL while he finds his offensive gear.

Another season at Boston College to further develop a more a dynamic offensive gear to become a top-line NHL center — the one that had scouts impressed during his NTDP season (with 102 points) — could be the remedy. After playing on one of college hockey’s top lines with Gabe Perreault (New York Rangers) and Ryan Leonard (Washington Capitals), Hagens would now be relied upon to drive his own line, create offense through his own playmaking and play a significant matchup role.

Hagens has the potential to be the complete package in the NHL. His understanding of spacing and ability to anticipate stands out among his peers. He’s smaller and slighter than other prospects, which worries some teams, but there’s a mix of Clayton Keller and Jack Hughes in him in terms of transition play and creativity.

How he fits: The organization starved for centers lucks out as Hagens falls to No. 7. He’s a highly cerebral player, with a nonstop motor, excellent speed and playmaking ability. There is little doubt he will be a play driver at the NHL level. His professional details are already top-notch with puck support, battle success, and strong defensive play.

Another year up the road at Boston College will mean Bruins fans won’t have to go far to watch their prized prospect. Hagens will step into the Bruins’ lineup as their first-line center when he is ready, and David Pastrnak will love that. Hagens has one of the highest ceilings in the draft, especially if his offense continues to develop. Bruins fans should be extremely excited to have their center of the future because he should not have been available at this point.

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1:48

Adam Sandler announces Bruins pick at NHL draft

Adam Sandler gives a nod to his famous “Happy Gilmore” character to announce the Bruins picking Boston College’s James Hagens with the seventh pick.


Team: Brantford (OHL)
DOB: 06/16/2007 | Ht: 6-1¾ | Wt: 172 | Shot: R
2024-25 stats: GP: 66 | G: 32 | A: 66 | P: 98

Scouting notes: Deceptive and incredibly smooth, O’Brien projects to be a point-producing, top-six center with a chance to become a top-line center. The right-handed pivot is one of the best playmakers in the draft, creating high-danger chances with regularity; for my money, he is the best pure creator in the draft.

He consistently manipulates defenders, distributes the puck on the forehand and backhand and uses fakes that send turn defenders and goalies into pretzels. The development will come from simplifying offensive plays to eliminate turnovers caused by holding the puck for too long.

O’Brien’s shot is going to be a necessary development area if his passing is to be an elite threat in the NHL. There is risk here, because he’s slighter than other players available at the center position, but he has room to fill out over the next few years. O’Brien’s elite playmaking skills will be that much more valuable if he can add a speed gear and increase his shooting threat.

How he fits: The Kraken are collecting centers like infinity stones, but O’Brien’s ceiling was too good to pass on at No. 8. O’Brien sees the ice extraordinarily well, has elite playmaking ability and will certainly help facilitate offense. Matty Beniers and Shane Wright play a two-way game, while O’Brien and Berkly Catton can drive offense.

The Kraken are now loaded up the middle, and can easily move one or two players to the wing to round out their top six. O’Brien needs a couple of years to physically mature and improve his shot to become a dual-threat offensive player. As it is, he is more than capable of quarterbacking a power play and facilitating offense. There is no need for the Kraken to rush him, and allowing him to further develop his elite playmaking skills might improve his projection to a first-line forward who tallies a point per game in the NHL.


Team: Seattle (WHL)
DOB: 06/09/2007 | Ht: 6-5¾ | Wt: 207 | Shot: R
2024-25 stats: GP: 43 | G: 3 | A: 32 | P: 35

Scouting notes: A 6-6, right-handed defenseman with decent mobility who plays in all situations has scouts very excited. He’s very difficult to get around, routinely thwarting attackers in their tracks and killing plays. He projects as a top-four, shutdown defenseman because of his excellent stick work, mobility and transition defense. Mrtka uses his mobility to escape pressure, activate in the rush and make quality passes to the middle of the ice.

Mrtka should develop into a strong transition defender, a reliable penalty killer and efficient puck mover. He shoots the puck hard and could become more of a scoring threat if he can pick his spots to get pucks through. While everything flowed through him in Seattle, there are well-placed concerns about his lack of offense.

His size and physicality give him the tools to develop into a minute-munching, shutdown defender if his mobility continues to progress. His late birthday gives him lots of development runway to refine his skating, offensive playmaking, and physicality in all areas of the ice.

How he fits: A big, right-handed defenseman who plays a hard game, Mrtka is at least two or three years away from playing in the NHL. The Sabres have certainly been lacking players who play a hard game, and Mrtka provides that. He is a mobile skater with good puck-moving ability and projects as a shutdown defenseman at the NHL level. Mrtka’s ability to defend in transition, force attackers to the outside and kill plays is attractive.

Mrtka has a late birthday and his development runway is longer than others, giving him time to improve his playmaking, pick his spots physically and become an effective shutdown defender. There was some belief the Sabres would take a forward, and this pick raised some eyebrows, but the Sabres felt they needed a defender like Mrtka to complement Rasmus Dahlin and Owen Power.


Team: Brandon (WHL)
DOB: 10/02/2006 | Ht: 6-5¼ | Wt: 197 | Shot: R
2024-25 stats: GP: 17 | G: 10 | A: 10 | P: 20

Scouting notes: Described as “a unicorn” because he’s a 6-5 center who skates with the speed and mobility that you would expect from a smaller player, McQueen a hot topic all season. He profiles as a prototypical modern-day power forward who blends soft skill with physicality. Elite right-handed centers are rare in the NHL, and McQueen’s size and willingness to physically dictate play adds undeniable value. He has professional defensive habits that are translatable to the NHL, and unique offensive upside that is still developing given the loss of playing time due to a back injury during his draft season.

McQueen dominates the cycle game, creates offense on the rush and uses his physical gifts to dominate the cycle and protect pucks. His projection as an elite top-line center lacks confidence, due to lack of playing time from his back injury. Without the injury, we might be discussing McQueen near the top of this draft class because his package of skating, skill and physical gifts are rare, and the type of toolbox of which executives dream.

He is a textbook case of high-risk, high-reward player; however, his performance at the scouting combine went along to proving his back injury had healed completely. Playing against tougher competition, where McQueen will be forced to develop his ability to protect himself, the puck control and ability to create offense against bigger bodies will be important. If developed without setback, he could become a two-way force in the NHL for years to come.

How he fits: The Ducks swung the bat, and are hoping McQueen is a home run for them at No. 10. Had it not been for injury, there’s a very real chance that McQueen gets taken in the top five. McQueen moves with the speed and agility of a much smaller player. He can dictate play physically, drive play at both ends of the ice and possesses unique offensive upside.

Anaheim has some high-end forwards — and McQueen likely has the highest upside of them all. He can dominate off the rush, on the cycle, and at the net front. The combination of McQueen’s physical gifts, skill and skating make him an easily projectable power forward who changes the course of games. If he can remain healthy, get stronger and improve his puck-protection skills, the Ducks have a special player.

Patience will be key as McQueen needs a few years to develop his skill set, but if he hits his ceiling, he’s going to be a dominant two-way force in the NHL.


Team: Calgary (WHL)
DOB: 04/19/2007 | Ht: 5-10 | Wt: 176 | Shot: R
2024-25 stats: GP: 65 | G: 35 | A: 64 | P: 99

Scouting notes: Kindel is a scoring machine. Following a 60-point rookie campaign in the WHL in 2023-24, he vaulted into elite status this season, finishing seventh in overall scoring, and was excellent at even strength.

Though undersized, Kindel blends pace, vision and quality instincts, and he projects to be a middle-six winger with two-way ability. Kindel’s motor is relentless, which makes up for his lack of speed, and enables him to weave through traffic and execute give-and-go’s with ease. A dual-threat attacker, he pairs an accurate shot with dangerous passing ability. His elite hockey sense allows him to consistently outsmart opponents and set teammates up with creative plays in dangerous areas with time and space, while playing positionally sound hockey off the puck.

Defensively and on the forecheck, Kindel leverages his intelligence, anticipation and effort to win battles despite size disadvantages. He’ll need to refine and improve his skating posture and puck control, while adding another speed gear to succeed in the NHL.

While the potential exists for Kindel to a top-six NHL player, he is more likely to find himself in the middle-six as a complementary piece.

How he fits: Kindel is a facilitator of offense, a brilliant playmaker and somewhat of a surprise at No. 11. Kindel brings high-end hockey sense to identify opportunities to set up teammates in space. He’s undersized, but his package of speed, playmaking and relentless motor should translate well to the NHL.

Kindel’s ceiling is a second-line center who facilitates for his teammates and drives play. If he doesn’t, he’s likely to be a middle-six, secondary producer who plays on the second power-play unit. The Penguins need players who are cerebral, skate well and drive offense — and are certainly swinging on Kindel’s ceiling. If he grows an inch or two as he develops over the next two years, the comparable to Brayden Point is a good one given the similarities in skating, cerebral play, and driving play at that size.


Team: Windsor (OHL)
DOB: 01/12/2007 | Ht: 6-4¼ | Wt: 185 | Shot: L
2024-25 stats: GP: 65 | G: 25 | A: 39 | P: 64

Scouting notes: Nesbitt is an intelligent, two-way center whose game is rooted in competitiveness, defensive reliability, and off-puck hockey IQ. He excels defensively by using his 6-4 frame to break up plays with physical engagement and smart stick positioning to pick off pucks. His hockey sense consistently places him in strong positions in all three zones, allowing him to create turnovers and execute quick passes to create dangerous chances off those turnovers.

His offensive upside hinges on his skating, which is a concern. His stiff skating stride and lack of demonstrated flexibility at the combine might limit how much he can improve. Despite flashes of skill, he struggles to maneuver past defenders, and his inconsistent puck handling under pressure often disrupts his playmaking.

Nesbitt showed improvement throughout the season, leveraging his size offensively and initiating more contact more consistently. If these improvements continue, and he’s able to improve his skating stride, he projects confidently as a dependable middle-six center who can anchor a defensive line and support skilled players higher up the lineup.

How he fits: The Flyers traded with their state rival the Penguins to select Nesbitt. He’s a high-floor player who probably tops out as a third-line center. At his height, he has been described as a “hard to play against” center who plays a throwback game, which fits with the style the Flyers want to play.

There were a lot of rumors this week that Nesbitt would get taken early because of his positional value, blend of size, hard skill and hockey sense. A very intelligent player who executes quality passes, he plays a reliable game. His skating stride will be the ultimate determining factor in his NHL ceiling. If he adds mobility and an extra gear, there’s more offense to unlock, but the focus will be his ability to check. He needs two or three years to develop, but Nesbitt had one of the most confident, low-volatility projections in the draft class as a third-line center.


Team: Everett (WHL)
DOB: 11/04/2006 | Ht: 6-0 | Wt: 179 | Shot: L
2024-25 stats: GP: 56 | G: 40 | A: 42 | P: 82

Scouting notes: Bear is the type of player that a team looking for high-end instincts and playmaking covet. Before a season-ending injury in March, Bear was one of the CHL’s most dangerous offensive players and a reliable defensive forward. He’s versatile, in that he plays center and the wing, and projects as a 65- to 75-point, second-line player, most likely on the wing.

He’s a quality playmaker using different passes to create advantages in dangerous areas. His ability to manipulate defenders and create space for teammates while pulling coverage towards him should translate well in the NHL. He’s got good hands in tight spaces, which make him a threat around the net, and is one of the best offensive facilitators in the draft class.

On top of his offensive gifts, Bear’s defensive play makes him a quality two-way player. His stick positioning allows him to disrupt passes, and he’s a tenacious forechecker who tracks well on the backcheck and finishes hits. His skating posture needs to be more upright to allow him to develop a more explosive stride to take advantage of his offensive skills in transition, but the instincts and execution of plays already exist.

Bear is a good mix of soft and hard skill with projectable traits on both sides of the puck, and he is the type of player who should thrive in a matchup role while contributing offensively.

How he fits: There’s a lot to like about how Bear plays the game, and I’m a believer that there is more offense to give. He has elite hockey sense that he relies on to impact the game on both ends of the ice. A projection as a second-line, two-way player who scores close to 75 points per season should be very exciting for Red Wings fans.

His playmaking ability makes up for a lack of speed, and should fit nicely into what the Red Wings have up front. He’s a unique blend of soft and hard skill that will be reliable in all situations. He can win puck battles, get under the skin of opponents and make a difference in all areas of the ice. He’ll need two or three years to improve his skating and fill out physically, but when he’s ready, he’ll slide right into the Wings’ middle six as an impactful player.


Team: Tri-City (WHL)
DOB: 05/13/2007 | Ht: 6-3¼ | Wt: 195 | Shot: L
2024-25 stats: GP: 68 | G: 11 | A: 43 | P: 54

Scouting notes: Smith is a big, physical defenseman with untapped offensive ability. He possesses all the qualities of a top-four matchup guy. He defends the rush well, closes gaps and steers the play in transition, making him one of the best neutral-zone, transition defenders in the class. Given the importance of transition defense in a matchup role, Smith has a real chance to the guy coaches rely upon to play heavy minutes against the best players.

His blend of skating, size and poise with an offensive game that progressed positively as the season wore on makes me a believer that there is more to give, and playing at Penn State next season should help it along.

Smith stands 6-3, and executives love the simplicity of his game, reading pressure, disrupting plays and making effective passes to exit the zone. He lacks explosive skating, and the consistent creativity required to be a quality offensive contributor at the NHL level, but his reads are there to be a plus transition player and join the rush as a support player.

Smith’s development from here will be about using his excellent mobility to prevent rush offense and becoming a more consistent offensive threat with better puck management. If Smith can drive play on both sides of the puck in transition and become a power-play threat, there’s a real chance he becomes a No. 2 defender at the NHL level.

How he fits: The Blue Jackets tugged on everyone’s heartstrings by having Meredith Gaudreau, the wife of the late Johnny Gaudreau, select Smith. The Penn State commit has untapped offensive potential to blend with his package of physicality, size and skating. He’s poised with the puck, makes quality breakout passes and influences the play. Defensively, he’s excellent in transition, closing gaps and forcing players to the perimeter.

The Blue Jackets needed a defenseman, and getting Smith outside the top 12 is great value. He should reliably play a matchup role on the second pair, and has the potential to play in a No. 2 role. Smith’s development will be about leveraging his mobility to improve his offensive game, and become a more consistent threat with the puck in the offensive zone.

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2:50

Johnny Gaudreau’s wife announces the Blue Jackets’ draft pick

Meredith Gaudreau, Johnny Gaudreau’s widow, joins the NHL draft to announce the Blue Jackets selecting Jackson Smith with the 14th pick.


Team: Seattle (WHL)
DOB: 02/09/2007 | Ht: 5-11¼ | Wt: 183 | Shot: R
2024-25 stats: GP: 60 | G: 26 | A: 37 | P: 63

Scouting notes: Cootes lacks explosive offense, but with some development of his shooting mechanics, he could become a 60-point, two-way center. Scouts love how consistently he moves his feet throughout his shifts, his drive to play through the middle of the ice and his ability to create advantages for himself with his skating and compete level.

His ability to create space for his teammates and move the puck to advantageous areas of the ice is highly translatable. He’s proactive with his contact, moves the puck to the middle of the ice and is reliable on both sides of the puck, in every area of the ice.

A strong skater and leader, his floor is likely a third-line checking center, but there’s potential for him to become a two-way, second-line center.

How he fits: The Canucks need centers, as president of hockey operations Jim Rutherford has stated numerous times this offseason. It was thought the Canucks might select the falling Viktor Eklund, but instead they addressed an organizational need by drafting Cootes.

He’s an-all situations player who can comfortably play a middle-six role, with a floor as a high-energy, third-line center. He’s a quality two-way player with a nonstop motor. The Canucks love his compete level, his willingness to drive the middle of the ice and a tenacious quality to his game.

Cootes has the ability to create space for his teammates, be reliable on both ends of the ice and outskate opponents. There is reason to believe he will develop more offensively. If he does, there’s a chance he becomes a second-line, play-driving center.


Team: Djurgarden (SWEDEN-2)
DOB: 10/03/2006 | Ht: 5-11 | Wt: 161 | Shot: R
2024-25 stats: GP: 42 | G: 19 | A: 12 | P: 31

Scouting notes: Eklund projects as a top-six forward with a good chance of becoming a top-line contributor. Despite concerns about his size, Eklund’s style of play is very translatable to the NHL. He plays a lot bigger than his measurements suggest, and there is room to add strength. Should he grow, which has happened to other prospects in the past, Eklund’s projection becomes more confident as a 70-point producer with a high-end motor and excellent forechecking capability.

Eklund is excellent in transition and attacks defenders with speed and fearlessness, darting to the inside, and positioning his body to win or protect pucks. His smaller size has forced him to learn how to protect the puck with excellent body positioning. If he develops a bigger, stronger frame, those skills will make him even more difficult to defend in the offensive zone.

His off-puck play is mature, and will quickly earn the trust of NHL coaches. Eklund has the potential to be a difference-maker in a second-line role, and his blend of hard-nosed play with soft skill should translate more seamlessly than other players.

How he fits: With their second pick in the first round, the Isles got tremendous value by selecting Eklund. He plays bigger than his frame with excellent forechecking, hard skill and puck-protection skills. He uses above-average speed to attack the middle of the ice, creating offense in transition and below the circles.

Eklund has a motor without an off switch, and competitive fire to burn. The combination of hard-nosed play and soft skill should allow Eklund’s game to translate seamlessly to the NHL. He should fill out physically, and there is a real chance he becomes a difference maker in the top six on the wing. The ceiling for Eklund is higher than any other player who was available in this spot, and he might be ready sooner than some expect. Isles fans should be extremely excited with this pick.


Team: Barrie (OHL)
DOB: 09/21/2006 | Ht: 6-1½ | Wt: 196 | Shot: L
2024-25 stats: GP: 64 | G: 26 | A: 33 | P: 59

Scouting notes: His projection as a No. 4/5 defender sees him below other players with higher upside. Aitcheson plays with all kinds of truculence and aggression, while possessing an aura of confidence on and off the puck. He’s got all the makings of being a complete menace who plays tough minutes as a No. 4 defender.

Whether it is a preseason game or the playoffs, Aitcheson plays the same rough style, and is unafraid of lowering the boom on opponents. He needs to pick his spots better to avoid unnecessary penalties, but he’s the type of player that requires opponents to be aware when he’s on the ice. Scouts see him as hard-nosed, two-way defender with significant bite who can be a momentum-shifter with his physical presence.

He needs development time, as his skating and playmaking are very raw, but the competitive attributes and his development curve this season are very promising. Aitcheson’s offensive involvement developed as the season progressed, rotating with his teammates, diving down towards the high-danger area and becoming more dangerous with open ice.

He’s likely two or three years away from being ready to step in. But when he does, he’s exactly the type of defender every coach and GM want on their team.

How he fits: With their third selection of the first round, the Islanders selected a lot of nastiness in Aitcheson. One of the meanest, aggressive defensemen in the draft, Aitcheson is going to be a nightmare to play against. He’s very raw, and has untapped offensive potential. The competitive attributes make Aitcheson’s playstyle a throwback, and he is likely to become a fan favorite on the island. He can change a game’s momentum with a big hit, but also showed the ability to contribute offensively as the season progressed.

His skating and playmaking are the biggest areas of development, but even if he doesn’t find more than 30 points at the NHL level, Aitcheson is the type of defenseman with whom you win a lot of games. He makes life difficult for opponents, defends his teammates, sacrifices his body to win and is relentless in puck battles. At his ceiling, Aitcheson could become a second-pairing matchup defender who makes forwards think twice before engaging in a puck battle or cutting across the blue line with their head down.


Team: Victoria (WHL)
DOB: 04/06/2007 | Ht: 5-10½ | Wt: 183 | Shot: L
2024-25 stats: GP: 62 | G: 26 | A: 66 | P: 92

Scouting notes: The two-way center brings an excellent mix of hockey sense, playmaking and creativity to be a middle-six contributor capable of consistently producing 60 points. He lacks elite skating, but his combine results raised eyebrows — tying Frondell for tops in VO2 max. While that isn’t indictive of NHL success, it shows a particular dedication to conditioning, and those in NHL circles pay attention to those results.

Reschny is smaller, and relies on his cerebral approach and excellent passing abilities to create advantage all over the ice. He processes the game better than many in the draft class, allowing him to manage pressure and put himself in better puck-protection positions.

Defensively, Reschny’s instincts result in positionally sound play, regularly playing above the puck, disrupting passes, and communicating assignment switches. He’s got the potential to be a great two-way complementary center that creates offense without separating speed. His reads will almost surely see him play a penalty-killing role and someone who is relied upon when his team is holding a lead.

How he fits: The Flames needed a center and they got their guy, drafting Reschny. He is a quality two-way center with creative playmaking abilities and high-end hockey sense. He picks apart defensive coverage with those abilities, consistently putting his team in dangerous areas to score. Off the puck, he’s positionally sound, reliable defensively and he should be a secondary penalty killer.

Reschny’s speed will need to develop, but his ability to process the game better than most players will help him be in the right spots, identify scoring opportunities and drive play. He’ll need two years in the NCAA before he’s ready, but when he is, he’s likely to slot in to a middle-six role and provide value on both ends of the ice.


Team: Blainville-Boisbriand (QMJHL)
DOB: 11/25/2006 | Ht: 6-1 | Wt: 191 | Shot: R
2024-25 stats: GP: 62 | G: 46 | A: 43 | P: 89

Scouting notes: Carbonneau possesses an offensive toolbox that teams covet, including powerful skating and eye-popping creativity. He projects as a second-line scoring forward with significant variance and is likely to end up as a middle-six player who thrives against secondary matchups. Carbonneau can drive offense with his playmaking and shooting ability and plays a well-rounded offensive game that includes playing through contact, excellent puckhandling skills and above-average skating.

As is the case with any player who possess incredible upside, there is inherent risk. He has a physically mature body, and will need to adjust to the speed of the professional game. He thrives when given time and space, and his growth will come from learning to simplify his offensive play and make better decisions with the puck. There are tools to become a very effective power forward in the NHL who can score 25 goals if he adds a cerebral component to his game.

How he fits: Carbonneau is a high-upside, dual-threat player who drives the middle of the ice and has an excellent shot. Off the puck, he finds quiet areas on the inside of the ice and takes advantage of scoring opportunities. Carbonneau has the size and physicality to become a power forward in the NHL, and should fit nicely on the second line and first power-play unit.

He’s a raw player who will need to develop his skating to take advantage of his offensive toolbox, but the upside is very high. Carbonneau’s blend of size, fearless play, creativity and elite shooting ability bode well for his NHL projection. If the Blues are patient, Carbonneau should become a quality power forward in three to four years.


Team: CSKA Jr. (RUSSIA-JR.)
DOB: 01/22/2007 | Ht: 6-0 | Wt: 207 | Catches: L
2024-25 stats: GP: 37 | Mins: 2,195 | GAA: 1.75 | SV%: 0.942 | SO: 3

How he fits: With their second pick of the night, the Blue Jackets raised a lot of eyebrows selecting Andreyanov. Many had expected them to take a second defenseman, but they identified the Russian goalie as their guy.

He’s athletic, and plays an aggressive style, cutting angles down and making life difficult for shooters. He’s a battler, fighting through screens, managing his movements with traffic at the net front, and freezing the puck without sacrificing position. His rebound control needs to improve, but the Blue Jackets like his toolbox and his ability to come up with key saves at critical times.

He could be a reliable NHL backup, with some potential to become a 1B tandem goaltender if his rebound control improves. This is a big bet in the first round, one that the Blue Jackets hope pays off.


Team: Kitchener (OHL)
DOB: 04/08/2007 | Ht: 5-11¾ | Wt: 193 | Shot: L
2024-25 stats: GP: 67 | G: 14 | A: 40 | P: 54

Scouting notes: There’s a lot to love about Reid’s game — and a lot of varying opinions. Some scouts see him as a top-15 value, others see him as a mid-20s value, and it all hinges on their belief in his offensive game. Reid is a play driver from the back end with excellent puck-moving skills and excellent skating. He flashes high-end offensive ability in the form of setups and moving to find and create passing lanes to high-danger areas; however, his shot will need to become more of a threat to avoid his distribution being neutralized in the NHL.

In transition, he’s one of the best on both sides of the ice. His smooth puck retrievals — where he constantly shoulder checks and scans to avoid pressure — led to efficient breakouts. When under duress, he uses elite edgework to escape and shake pressure, following with a quick outlet pass to beat the forecheck.

The consensus belief is that he’s a middle-pairing, transition defender who can turn into a bona fide No. 3 if he develops his offense and grows an inch or two; currently he’s listed at 5-11.

How he fits: Nashville traded up to get Reid, and he’s going to be a stalwart on the blue line. An excellent transition defenseman, Reid makes a quality first pass, and has the potential to drive offense from the back end. Reid’s terrific skating ability allows him to escape forecheckers and join the rush. Defensively, Reid has good gap control, uses his skating to close attackers early and match speed to limit dangerous chances.

He’s going to be a high-end transition defender who could become a 50-plus point producer if his offensive development continues. His elite skating ability allows him to be patient, not get caught doing too much and he’s rarely out of position. He’s two or three years away from making an impact at the NHL level, but when he does, he’ll be a quality second-pairing defender on both ends of the ice.


Team: Rouyn-Noranda (QMJHL)
DOB: 10/03/2006 | Ht: 6-1¾ | Wt: 187 | Shot: L
2024-25 stats: GP: 64 | G: 28 | A: 55 | P: 83

Scouting notes: Zonnon is a relentless and detail-oriented two-way forward who has carved out a reputation as one of the CHL’s hardest-working players. With an 83-point breakout campaign in his first full-time season at center, Zonnon combined a high-end motor, raw but effective playmaking and relentless puck pursuit that allowed him to be a play driver in all three zones. He excels on the forecheck, pressuring defenders into rushed decisions, winning battles and moving pucks to teammates in scoring areas.

Offensively, he makes good reads under pressure, threading pucks through tight lanes and consistently puts his team in advantageous positions. His ability to support defensively, facilitate transitions and physically impose himself makes him ideal the type of forward who teams want in the playoffs.

His skating remains a limiting factor, and he’ll need to improve his agility and posture to reach his offensive ceiling. If Zonnon can refine his stride and continue to develop his playmaking, he projects as a middle-six driver who blends tenacity and has the makings of a valuable third-liner whom playoff teams covet.

How he fits: With their second selection of the first round, the Penguins selected Zonnon, a high-energy, relentless winger. He has elite details, supports the puck, wins puck battles, forces turnovers on the forecheck and finds his teammates in space. Zonnon makes sound decisions with the puck under pressure, facilitates offense and is reliable defensively. His nonstop motor and willingness to get to the hard areas of the ice should help him score at the net front, win pucks back to extend offensive zone time and make life easier for his linemates.

His skating will determine where in the lineup he plays, but his floor as a bottom-six competitive forward who can penalty kill and forecheck is a confident one. If Zonnon’s skating improves over the next two to three years, he should be able to drive play in a middle-six role with tenacity and reliability.


Team: Wisconsin (BIG10)
DOB: 10/14/2006 | Ht: 6-2¼ | Wt: 192 | Shot: R
2024-25 stats: GP: 32 | G: 2 | A: 10 | P: 12

Scouting notes: The 6-2 defender projects to become a second-pair blueliner that excels in transition. He is one of the best neutral-zone defenders and puck movers in the draft, who steadily improved as a true freshman in the NCAA. His puck retrievals, breakout passes and offensive-zone passes consistently put his team in more advantageous attacking positions. Being a right-handed defender with excellent mobility and an easily translatable game makes Hensler a very attractive prospect in this class.

The are concerns among NHL scouts related to Hensler’s offensive abilities and how he might fare in the NHL. However, Hensler showed flashes in the back half of the NCAA season, drawing defenders in and making slick plays for high-danger scoring opportunities. He’s unlikely to become a 60-point defender, but 35-45 points as a steady transition defender who plays a shutdown role seems to be the appropriate projection.

His NHL-ready frame is a plus, and will only improve throughout his collegiate career, which is likely to be another two seasons.

How he fits: The Sens extracted tremendous value by getting Hensler at No. 23. As one of the younger players in college hockey last season, Hensler became an impactful player once he adjusted to that level. His skating and mobility are high-end, allowing him to shut opponents down in transition, kill plays and be a reliable defensive presence. One of the best neutral-zone defenders in the draft, Hensler’s gap control forces dump-ins, and his skating allows him to turn and retrieve those forced dump-ins with ease.

He showed flashes of higher-end offense toward the end of the season, making quality plays to create high-danger chances. He’s physically ready for the NHL, but will benefit from more NCAA development to improve his offensive play and solidify his defensive game. When he’s ready, he could become a great partner for Jake Sanderson or play secondary matchups in the middle pairing.


Team: Michigan (BIG10)
DOB: 01/23/2007 | Ht: 6-4¾ | Wt: 190 | Shot: L
2024-25 stats: GP: 18 | G: 4 | A: 6 | P: 10

Scouting notes: The son of former NHLer Shawn Horcoff, Will projects as a defensively reliable third-line center with size, strength and strong off-puck instincts. At nearly 6-5, he’s a disruptive force in his own zone, using his range and physicality to pressure puck attackers and cause turnovers.

Offensively, he facilitates with smart passes and uses his size to play with contact and protect the puck. He’ll need to develop his skating from a speed and mobility perspective to grow offensively. If he adds a step with some explosiveness and fills out his frame, Horcoff could become a physically imposing, two-way pivot in a bottom-six NHL role who plays against secondary matchups.

How he fits: The Penguins traded up seven spots to make their third selection of the first round in Horcoff. The youngest player in college hockey this season was a steady riser in the back half of the campaign. A bit of a late bloomer, Horcoff has room to fill out his frame, and plays a quality two-way game. Horcoff drives the net and converts chances better than almost any other draft-eligible player, a scoring skill that will translate well to the NHL level.

He projects as a third-line center who uses physicality to separate players from pucks, protect pucks and drive to the middle of the ice. Horcoff will need a few years to develop in the NCAA, and if he can add some speed and explosiveness, there is more offensive potential as a power forward.


Team: Muskegon (USHL)
DOB: 04/06/2007 | Ht: 6-5¼ | Wt: 187 | Shot: R
2024-25 stats: GP: 61 | G: 19 | A: 23 | P: 42

Scouting notes: Nestrašil is a high-upside power forward who projects as a top-six NHL winger if his development continues on its current path.

He is a unique blend of above-average puck skill and playmaking with size, motor and punishing physical play. He excels with give-and-go’s, attacking off the wall, and creating space in traffic. He consistently moves the puck through carries or passes to the middle of the ice, creating more threatening opportunities.

He is raw and somewhat erratic with his reads and timing; his continued improvement and physical toolkit give him legitimate upside. If he becomes a more consistent threat, he’s a second-line force; if not, his defensive value and intensity still project a role as a physical, bottom-six winger.

How he fits: With their second selection in the first round, Chicago selected Nestrašil. I had connected him to the Blackhawks in the final mock draft, given the organization’s edict to draft quality skaters with high-end skill.

Nestrašil has high upside as a power forward in the top six, and brings a package of size, puck skill and playmaking. Another player with a high-end motor, Nestrašil plays well off teammates, attacks off the wall and bullies his way to the middle of the ice.

He has a projectable physical game that will create space for his teammates, and he can separate opponents from pucks and be reliable defensively. He’s a few years away from being ready, but there’s a lot to be excited about with the blend of size, physicality, playmaking and skill.


Team: Madison (USHL)
DOB: 11/08/2006 | Ht: 6-0 | Wt: 170 | Shot: R
2024-25 stats: GP: 58 | G: 31 | A: 37 | P: 68

Scouting notes: One of the most skilled and creative forwards in the draft. Some scouts had Lee ranked in the late teens because of their belief in his upside.

Lee is a dynamic offensive player who consistently cuts through defensive coverage with elite puckhandling and deceptive passes. His one-timer is one of the best in the draft class. With a full complement of high-end tools, Lee has a rare ability to create offense in tight quarters with limited space, and he stood out amongst his USHL peers. He manipulates defenders and delivers elite passes under pressure. He consistently makes translatable plays like one-touch breakouts, fake receptions, and quick releases in scoring areas. As the season progressed, he showed a willingness to forecheck, battle and apply pressure defensively.

The glaring question is his skating. His stride is stiff and lacks explosiveness. Lee will need major strides in mobility to maximize his offensive toolkit at the NHL level. That being said, if he adds a step or two to pair with his skill, Lee has the skill to become a creative, middle-six playmaker with top-six upside.

How he fits: Nashville used its third selection in the first round to select one of the highest-upside players left on the board. Lee is extraordinarily skilled, and is one of the best pure creators in the draft class. A real dynamic player who is a dual threat with his playmaking and elite shooting ability. He creates offense out of nothing, can play in tight spaces, and make defenders look silly.

His play away from the puck developed as the season progressed. To reach his ceiling as a top-six, dynamic offensive threat, Lee needs to add speed and explosiveness. The ability to execute high-skill plays at speed will make or break him as a prospect in the top six. If he hits, the Preds have a special player — but patience is critical. I love this swing from the Preds, as it is exactly the type of player they need in their system.


Team: Moose Jaw (WHL)
DOB: 12/12/2006 | Ht: 6-4¼ | Wt: 190 | Shot: L
2024-25 stats: GP: 47 | G: 27 | A: 31 | P: 58

Scouting notes: The 6-4 left winger has translatable scoring ability, and excellent speed for his size. With room to fill out his frame, Lakovic is an attractive prospect.

He attacks with linear crossovers using his big frame to protect the puck, and makes plays using good deception. He has the potential to be a dual-threat winger at the NHL level if his passing translates the way many believe his shooting will. Lakovic projects to be a middle-six winger with fair confidence because of his scoring ability, speed and size, but there is a chance he becomes a second-line scoring threat.

Lakovic’s development will come on the physical side. While he is supremely skilled, he needs to lean on defenders and force his way to the middle of the ice to take advantage of his quick hands and shot. If he does, he becomes a significantly more dangerous player, as he’ll be a threat in transition and off the cycle. That is certainly a developable skill that translates to any level, and combined with quality offensive instincts and skill, could see Lakovic become a dual-threat, 65-point winger.

How he fits: The Capitals selected Lakovic, a big forward with an excellent shot and quality skating. Lakovic has NHL scoring ability and speed. If he can fill out his frame, should be able to get to the hard areas of the ice with ease. He understands how to protect the puck and play connected with his teammates.

He projects as a middle-six winger with dual-threat ability, and would certainly benefit from adding some physicality to his playstyle to become a skilled power forward. He’ll have Tom Wilson to learn from, and the Capitals have time to develop Lakovic into the complementary scorer he is capable of becoming. This is excellent value for the Capitals at the end of the first round because Lakovic could be ready to contribute in two or three years.


28. Winnipeg Jets: Sascha Boumedienne, D

Team: Boston University (H-EAST)
DOB: 01/17/2007 | Ht: 6-1 | Wt: 175 | Shot: L
2024-25 stats: GP: 40 | G: 3 | A: 10 | P: 13

Scouting notes: One of the most discussed and debated defenders in the draft, Boumedienne projects as a second-pair, two-way defender.

Already known as a brilliant breakout passer with a heavy slap shot and strong stick play, Boumedienne’s defensive game evolved noticeably at Boston University. Buoyed by steadily improving his skating weaknesses, particularly his agility and edge work, he looked the part of a modern shutdown defenseman, specifically in transition. He developed greater stability, enabling more effective gap control and quicker pivots. Proactive reads, strong positioning, physicality and effective disruption of passing lanes allowed his defensive game to blossom.

While his offensive game remains primarily rush-based rather than in the offensive zone, Boumedienne’s willingness to experiment with fakes and deception improved his transition impact significantly. The volatility of his projection remains high, but Boumedienne’s substantial in-season growth, defensive reliability and refined skating offer realistic upside as an effective second-pair, two-way defender at the NHL level who can produce secondary offense.

How he fits: The Jets drafted a fantastic breakout passer in Boumedienne, who should blossom into a quality transition defender. He possesses a quality slap shot, an evolved defensive game and excellent transition play. His skating looks smooth, and still has room to improve in terms of edge work and stability. If it does, he’ll become even more difficult to beat in transition and able to join the rush offensively. He’s strong positionally, engaged physically and kills plays.

He’ll need two or three years before he’s NHL-ready, but the potential to become a second power-play quarterback and middle-pairing, secondary-matchup player is tangible. At a minimum, he’ll provide quality breakout passes, good transition defense and a threatening slapshot.


Team: Edina (HIGH-MN)
DOB: 08/03/2007 | Ht: 6-5¾ | Wt: 215 | Shot: R
2024-25 stats: GP: 31 | G: 27 | A: 22 | P: 49

Scouting notes: Without a doubt, the best overall athlete in the draft class. A high school quarterback with legitimate college football potential and a hockey player who went in the first round of the NHL draft does not come around too often.

West possesses rare mobility, physical tools and intriguing upside. A natural shooter and smooth skater, his production on the Minnesota High School circuit at Edina High was impressive. When he stepped into the USHL, his development hit warp speed.

For obvious reasons, West is very raw as a prospect. He shows flashes of skill, an immovable net-front presence and growing physical engagement. Given his rawness, he will need to develop his puck control, positioning and decision-making. However, he will be able to rely on his QB scanning skills to help develop his decision-making in hockey. With continued development, there is a real chance he becomes a middle-six NHL power forward. The pure raw ability of this elite athlete has executives and scouts very excited.

How he fits: Chicago traded up to make a third selection in the first round, grabbing West, a quarterback and hockey player from Edina High School. One of the youngest players in the draft, West is one of the best pure athlete in the class, elite at two sports.

He has a very long development runway and won’t play in the USHL until after his football season. He combines smooth skating, a strong net-front presence and good play facilitation. West is very raw, with room to develop his puck skill, positioning and decision-making. His spatial awareness is excellent and will allow him to identify open space, bully his way to the middle of the ice and create offense. He’s still a long way away, but if he hits, West has a chance to be a powerful middle-six forward who can score and facilitate offense.


Team: Prince George (WHL)
DOB: 11/27/2006 | Ht: 6-5¼ | Wt: 190 | Catches: R
2024-25 stats: GP: 51 | Mins: 2964 | GAA: 3 | SV%: 0.901 | SO: 0

Scouting notes: Ravensbergen projects a composed, confident demeanor, with a confident projection as a starting NHL goaltender who can handle a significant workload.

At 6-5, he leverages size, elite anticipation and crisp lateral agility, consistently positioning himself perfectly to deny shooters without unnecessary flash. He tracks the puck a level above his peers, which allows him to confidently challenge shooters and cut angles effectively. He is particularly vulnerable through the five-hole, which isn’t atypical for large goalies who hover sticks above the ice. As he develops and refines his technique, this weakness should be corrected long before he reaches the NHL.

A reliable backstop for Prince George, Ravensbergen’s .901 save percentage stands out even more when considering the high-danger chances he regularly faced. His rebound control is well above average, and he has an above-average glove hand. He regularly has his blocker angled well, enabling him to direct shots safely away from danger.

It is likely that Ravensbergen becomes a platoon starter until his mid-20s, when he is capable of become a full-time NHL starter who plays 60-65 games per season.

How he fits: Some thought the Sharks would take a defenseman after getting Misa with the No. 2 pick, but instead they added to their goaltending group with Ravensbergen. There is a very real possibility that Ravensbergen and Yaroslav Askarov develop into one of the best goaltending tandems in the NHL.

Ravensbergen is a southpaw goaltender. He’s composed in his movements, reads the play to limit erratic movement, and challenges shooters effectively. He is the best puck tracker in the draft, finding pucks in traffic, moving efficiently to thwart opportunities and control rebounds. Goaltending development is not linear, and much more difficult to predict, but Ravensbergen should find himself in strong contention for Team Canada at the IIHF world junior championship before turning professional.


Team: London (OHL)
DOB: 02/09/2007 | Ht: 6-1¾ | Wt: 203 | Shot: R
2024-25 stats: GP: 67 | G: 10 | A: 32 | P: 42

Scouting notes: Brzustewicz is the next prospect from the factory that is the London Knights. The blueliner projects as a steady, mobile transition defender with the potential to grow into a No. 4 or 5 NHL blueliner.

A right-handed shot with a strong defensive foundation, he maintains good gap control, moves the puck very well and supports plays while remaining positionally sound. In an elevated role, his offensive creativity developed dramatically. He jumped into the rush, evaded forecheckers and created scoring chances with quality passes to the slot.

If he continues to develop his confidence and play-driving ability, Brzustewicz could evolve into a reliable second-pairing defender. Without that growth, he still holds value as a depth puck mover with a good defensive foundation.

How he fits: The Kings addressed a significant area of need by drafting Brzustewicz. A right-shot defender with quality mobility and reliable transition play. As the season progressed, Brzustewicz facilitated offense, using his skating to attack open space. He makes a good first pass that puts his teammates in position to attack off the rush. Once he moves the puck, he jumps in the play, supports as a secondary rush attacker and can shake defenders to create scoring chances.

He’ll be the go-to guy in London next season, with opportunities to play a matchup role and run the power play, both of which will expedite his development. He’s likely three years away from becoming an NHL contributor but should become a reliable middle-pairing defender.


Team: Arizona State (NCHC)
DOB: 01/10/2007 | Ht: 5-10 | Wt: 172 | Shot: L
2024-25 stats: GP: 35 | G: 13 | A: 9 | P: 22

Scouting notes: Potter is a dynamic skater who is the fastest straight-line skater in the draft class, and his explosive mobility ranks among the draft’s best. Making an uncommon jump from the NTDP’s under-17 team straight to NCAA play, Potter displayed elite acceleration and agility, effortlessly shifting from stride to crossover and cutting sharply through defenders. Initially reliant on raw skill, Potter often avoided physical battles and forced “hope plays,” limiting his effectiveness in the first half of the NCAA season.

Potter’s evolution in the second half of the season elevated his game dramatically, and it was impossible not to notice. He embraced defensive responsibilities, improved his physical play despite his 5-10 frame, won puck battles and filled lanes on the backcheck. Potter’s positional play improved, and his off-puck play improved as a result.

The added defensive dimension complements his offensive talents, elevating his floor to a bottom-six checker, while his upside is very high as a top-six forward because of his steep development curve. Development of his transition play and learning to use his explosive skating and accurate shot while changing gears will make him a more dangerous offensive threat.

How he fits: With their second pick in the first round, the Flames took Potter, the fastest player in the draft. A quality transporter of the puck, Potter uses his elite speed to create offense off the rush with dynamic zone-entry ability. He catches defenders on their heels, and should be able to beat NHL defenders on the outside and cross them up with his crossovers if he can add strength and understand when to change gears.

Potter can tap into his offensive potential by relying on his ability to use speed to create space for his incredibly accurate shot. When given the opportunity, Potter can really rip it, and his release catches goaltenders off guard. If his development curve continues, Potter should become an elite college player and be ready for an NHL role in two years. His floor as a bottom-six checker is good value at this spot, but his upside as a second-line player who scores off the rush should excite Flames fans.


Round 2

33. San Jose Sharks: Haoxi (Simon) Wang, D, Oshawa (OHL)
34. Montreal Canadiens: Alexander Zharovsky, RW, Ufa Jr. (Russia-Jr.)
35. Nashville Predators: Jacob Rombach, D, Lincoln (USHL)
36. Seattle Kraken: Blake Fiddler, D, Edmonton (WHL)
37. Washington Capitals: Milton Gästrin, F, MoDo (J20 Nationell)
38. Philadelphia Flyers: Carter Amico, D, USNTDP (USHL)
39. Pittsburgh Penguins: Peyton Kettles, D, Swift Current (WHL)
40. Philadelphia Flyers: Jack Murtagh, LW, USNTDP (USHL)
41. Carolina Hurricanes: Semyon Frolov, G, Spartak Jr. (Russia-Jr.)
42. New York Islanders: Daniil Prokhorov, RW, Dynamo St. Petersburg (Russia-Jr.)
43. New York Rangers: Malcolm Spence, LW, Erie (OHL)
44. Detroit Red Wings: Eddie Genborg, RW, Linkoping (Sweden)
45. Anaheim Ducks: Eric Nilson, C, Djurgarden Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
46. Utah Mammoth: Max Psenicka, D, Portland (WHL)
47. Vancouver Canucks: Alexei Medvedev, G, London (OHL)
48. Philadelphia Flyers: Shane Vansaghi, RW, Michigan State (BIG10)
49. Carolina Hurricanes: Charlie Cerrato, C, Penn State (BIG10)
50. New Jersey Devils: Conrad Fondrk, C, USNTDP (USHL)
51. Boston Bruins: William Moore, C, USNTDP (USHL)
52. Minnesota Wild: Theodor Hallquisth, D, Orebro Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
53. San Jose Sharks: Cole McKinney, C, USNTDP (USHL)
54. Calgary Flames: Theo Stockselius, C, Djurgarden Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
55. Vegas Golden Knights: Jakob Ihs Wozniak, Lulea Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
56. Tampa Bay Lightning: Ethan Czata, C, Niagara (OHL)
57. Philadelphia Flyers: Matthew Gard, Red Deer (WHL)
58. Nashville Predators: Jack Ivankovic, G, Brampton (OHL)
59. Los Angeles Kings: Vojtech Cihar, LW, Karlovy Vary (Czechia)
60. Anaheim Ducks: Lasse Boelius, D, Assat Jr. (Finland-Jr.)
61. Boston Bruins: Liam Pettersson, D, Vaxjo Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
62. Carolina Hurricanes: Ivan Ryabkin, C, Muskegon (USHL)
63. New Jersey Devils: Ben Kevan, RW, Des Moines (USHL)
64. Toronto Maple Leafs: Tinus Luc Koblar, C, Leksand Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)


Round 3

65. Vancouver Canucks: Kieren Dervin, C, St. Andrew’s College (HIGH-ON)
66. Chicago Blackhawks: Nathan Behm, RW, Kamloops (WHL)
67. Carolina Hurricanes: Kurban Limatov, D, Dynamo Moscow Jr. (Russia-Jr.)
68. Seattle Kraken: Will Reynolds, D, Acadie-Bathurst (QMJHL)
69. Montreal Canadiens: Hayden Paupanekis, C, Kelowna (WHL)
70. New York Rangers: Sean Barnhill, D, Dubuque (USHL)
71. Buffalo Sabres: David Bedkowski, D, Owen Sound (OHL)
72. Anaheim Ducks: Noah Read, C, London (OHL)
73. Pittsburgh Penguins: Charlie Trethewey, D, USNTDP (USHL)
74. New York Islanders: Luca Romano, C, Kitchener (OHL)
75. Detroit Red Wings: Michal Pradel, G, Tri-City (USHL)
76. Columbus Blue Jackets: Malte Vass, D, Farjestad Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
77. Colorado Avalanche: Francesco Dell’elce, D, UMass (H-East)
78. Utah Mammoth: Stepan Hoch, LW, C. Budejovice Jr. (Czechia-Jr.)
79. Boston Bruins: Cooper Simpson, LW, Shakopee (HIGH-MN)
80. Calgary Flames: Maceo Phillips, D, USNTDP (USHL)
81. Montreal Canadiens: Bryce Pickford, D, Medicine Hat (WHL)
82. Montreal Canadiens: Arseni Radkov, G, Tyumen Jr. (Russia-Jr.)
83. Edmonton Oilers: Tommy Lafreniere, RW, Kamloops (WHL)
84. Pittsburgh Penguins: Gabriel D’Aigle, G, Victoriaville (QMJHL)
85. Vegas Golden Knights: Mateo Norbert, C, Blainville-Boisbriand (QMJHL)
86. Toronto Maple Leafs: Tyler Hopkins, C, Kingston (OHL)
87. Carolina Hurricanes: Roman Bausov, D, Dynamo St. Petersburg Jr. (Russia-Jr.)
88. Los Angeles Kings: Kristian Epperson, LW, Saginaw (OHL)
89. New York Rangers: Artyom Gonchar, D, Magnitogorsk Jr. (Russia-Jr.)
90. New Jersey Devils: Mason Moe, C, Madison (USHL)
91. Pittsburgh Penguins: Brady Peddle, D, Waterloo (USHL)
92. Winnipeg Jets: Owen Martin, C, Spokane (WHL)
93. Ottawa Senators: Blake Vanek, RW, Stillwater (HIGH-MN)
94. Dallas Stars: Cameron Schmidt, RW, Vancouver (WHL)
95. San Jose Sharks: Teddy Mutryn, C, Chicago (USHL)
96. Washington Capitals: Maxim Schafer, LW, Eisbaren Berlin (Germany)


Round 4

97. Ottawa Senators: Lucas Beckman, G, Baie-Comeau (QMJHL)
98. Chicago Blackhawks: Julius Sumpf, C, Moncton (QMJHL)
99. New Jersey Devils: Trenten Bennett, G, Kemptville (CCHL)
100. Boston Bruins: Vashek Blanar, D, Troja-Ljungby U18 (Sweden-Jr. U18)
101. Anaheim Ducks: Drew Shock, D, USNTDP (USHL)
102. Minnesota Wild: Adam Benak, C, Youngstown (USHL)
103. Buffalo Sabres: Matous Kucharcik, C, Slavia Jr. (Czechia-Jr.)
104. Anaheim Ducks: Elijah Neuenschwander, G, Fribourg Jr. (Swiss-Jr.)
105. Pittsburgh Penguins: Travis Hayes, RW, Sault Ste. Marie (OHL)
106. New York Islanders: Tomas Poletin, LW, Pelicans (Finland)
107. Chicago Blackhawks: Parker Holmes, LW, Brantford (OHL)
108. Tampa Bay Lightning: Benjamin Rautiainen, C, Tappara (Finland)
109. Detroit Red Wings: Brent Solomon, RW, Champlin Park (HIGH-MN)
110. Utah Mammoth: Yegor Borikov, RW, Minsk (Russia)
111. New York Rangers: Mikkel Eriksen, C, Farjestad Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
112. Florida Panthers: Mads Kongsbak Klyvo, LW, Frolunda Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
113. Montreal Canadiens: L.J. Mooney, C, USNTDP (USHL)
114. New Jersey Devils: Gustav Hillstrom, C, Brynas Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
115. San Jose Sharks: Ilyas Magomedsultanov, D, Yaroslavl Jr. (Russia-Jr.)
116. Buffalo Sabres: Samuel Meloche, G, Rouyn-Norando (QMJHL)
117. Edmonton Oilers: David Lewandowski, LW, Saskatoon (WHL)
118. Colorado Avalanche: Linus Funck, D, Lulea Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
119. Detroit Red Wings: Michael Svrcek, LW, Brynas Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
120. Los Angeles Kings: Caeden Herrington, D, Lincoln (USHL)
121. Minnesota Wild: Lirim Amidovski, RW, North Bay (OHL)
122. Nashville Predators: Alex Huang, D, Chicoutimi (QMJHL)
123. Minnesota Wild: Carter Klippenstein, C, Brandon (WHL)
124. San Jose Sharks: Zachary Sharp, D, Western Michigan (NCHC)
125. Los Angeles Kings: Jimmy Lombardi, C, Flint (OHL)
126. Dallas Stars: Brandon Gorzynski, C, Calgary (WHL)
127. Tampa Bay Lightning: Aiden Foster, C, Prince George (WHL)
128. Florida Panthers: Shea Busch, LW, Everett (WHL)


Round 5

129. Florida Panthers: Shamar Moses, RW, North Bay (OHL)
130. Pittsburgh Penguins: Ryan Miller, C, Portland (WHL)
131. Edmonton Oilers: Asher Barnett, D, USNTDP (USHL)
132. Philadelphia Flyers: Max Westergard, LW, Frolunda Jr. (Sweden)
133. Boston Bruins: Cole Chandler, C, Shawinigan (QMJHL)
134. Seattle Kraken: Maxim Agafonov, D, UFA Jr. (Russia)
135. Buffalo Sabres: Noah Laberge, D, Acadie-Bathurst (QMJHL)
136. Anaheim Ducks: Alexis Mathieu, D, BAIE-Comeau (QMJHL)
137. Toronto Maple Leafs: William Belle, RW, USNTDP (USHL)
138. New York Islanders: Sam Laurila, D, Fargo (USHL)
139. New York Rangers: Zeb Lindgren, D, Skelleftea Jr. (Sweden)
140. Detroit Red Wings: Nikita Tyurin, D, Spartak Jr. (Russia)
141. Minnesota Wild: Justin Kipkie, D, Victoria (WHL)
142. Utah Mammoth: Ivan Tkach-Tkachenko, G, UFA (Russia)
143. Vancouver Canucks: Wilson Bjorck, C, Djurgarden Jr. (Sweden)
144. Calgary Flames: Ethan Wyttenbach, LW, Sioux Falls (USHL)
145. Montreal Canadiens: Alexis Cournoyer, G, Cape Breton (QMJHL)
146. Dallas Stars: Atte Joki, C, Lukko Jr. (Finland)
147. St. Louis Blues: Mikhail Fyodorov, RW, Magnitogorsk Jr. (Russia)
148. Pittsburgh Penguins: Quinn Beauchesne, D, Guelph (OHL)
149. Ottawa Senators: Dmitri Isayev, LW, Yekaterinburg Jr. (Russia)
150. San Jose Sharks: Max Heise, C, Penicton (BCHL)
151. Tampa Bay Lightning: Everett Baldwin, D, St. George’s School (HIGH-RI)
152. Los Angeles Kings: Petteri Rimpinen, G, K-Espoo (Finland)
153. Toronto Maple Leafs: Harry Nansi, RW, Owen Sound (OHL)
154. Pittsburgh Penguins: Jordan Charron, RW, Sault Ste. Marie (OHL)
155. Washington Capitals: Jackson Crowder, C, Chicago (USHL)
156. Winnipeg Jets: Viktor Klingsell, RW, Skelleftea Jr. (Sweden)
157. Philadelphia Flyers: Luke Vlooswyk, D, Red Deer (WHL)
158. Dallas Stars: Mans Goos, G, Farjestad Jr. (Sweden)
159. Anaheim Ducks: Emile Guite, LW, Chicoutimi (QMJHL)
160. Columbus Blue Jackets: Owen Griffin, C, Oshawa (OHL)


Round 6

161. New Jersey Devils: David Rozsival, RW, Liberec Jr. (Czechia-Jr.)
162. Chicago Blackhawks: Ashton Cumby, D, Seattle (WHL)
163. Nashville Predators: Daniel Nieminen, D, Pelicans (Finland)
164. Philadelphia Flyers: Nathan Quinn, C, Quebec (QMJHL)
165. Boston Bruins: Kirill Yemelyanov, C, Yaroslav Jr. (Russia-Jr.)
166. New York Rangers: Samuel Jung, RW, Karpat Jr. (Finland-Jr.)
167. Buffalo Sabres: Ashton Schultz, C, Chicago (USHL)
168. Anaheim Ducks: Anthony Allain-Samake, D, Sioux City (USHL)
169. Pittsburgh Penguins: Carter Sanderson, LW, Muskegon (USHL)
170. New York Islanders: Burke Hood, G, Vancouver (WHL)
171. New York Rangers: Evan Passmore, D, Barrie (OHL)
172. Detroit Red Wings: Will Murphy, D, Cape Breton (QMJHL)
173. Columbus Blue Jackets: Victor Raftheim, D, Brynas Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
174. Utah Mammoth: Ludvig Johnson, D, Zug (Swiss)
175. Vancouver Canucks: Gabriel Chiarot, RW, Brampton, (OHL)
176. Calgary Flames: Aiden Lane, RW, St. Andrew’s College (HIGH-ON)
177. Montreal Canadiens: Carlos Handel, D, Halifax (QMJHL)
178. New Jersey Devils: Sigge Holmgren, D, Brynas U18 (Sweden-Jr. U18)
179. St. Louis Blues: Love Harenstam, G, Skelleftea Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
180. Washington Capitals: Aron Dahlqvist, D, Brynas Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
181. Ottawa Senators: Bruno Idzan, LW, Lincoln (USHL)
182. Utah Mammoth: Reko Alanko, D, Jokerit Jr. (Finland-Jr.)
183. Carolina Hurricanes: Viggo Nordlund, LW, Skelleftea Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
184. Los Angeles Kings: Jan Chovan, C, Tappara Jr. (Finland-Jr.)
185. Toronto Maple Leafs: Rylan Fellinger, D, Flint (OHL)
186. Vegas Golden Knights: Alexander Weiermair, C, Portland (WHL)
187. Vegas Golden Knights: Gustav Sjoqvist, D, AIK (Sweden-2)
188. Winnipeg Jets: Edison Engle, D, Dubuque (USHL)
189. Montreal Canadiens: Andrew MacNiel, D, Kitchener (OHL)
190. Dallas Stars: Dawson Sharkey, RW, Acadie-Bathurst (QMJHL)
191. Edmonton Oilers: Daniel Salonen, G, Lukko Jr. (Finland-Jr.)
192. Florida Panthers: Arvid Drott, RW, Djurgarden Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)


Round 7

193. Tampa Bay Lightning: Caleb Heil, G, Madison (USHL)
194. Chicago Blackhawks: Ilya Kanarsky, G, Akm Tula Jr. (Russia-Jr.)
195. Buffalo Sabres: Melvin Novotny, LW, Leksand Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
196. Los Angeles Kings: Brendan McMorrow, C, Waterloo (USHL)
197. Florida Panthers: Brendan Dunphy, D, Wenatchee (WHL)
198. Columbus Blue Jackets: Jeremy Loranger, C, Sherwood Park (BCHL)
199. Buffalo Sabres: Yevgeni Prokhorov, G, Dinamo-Shinnik Jr. (Russia-Jr.)
200. Anaheim Ducks: Brady Turko, RW, Brandon (WHL)
201. Pittsburgh Penguins: Kale Dach, C, Sherwood Park (BCHL)
202. New York Islanders: Jacob Kvasnicka, RW, USNTDP (USHL)
203. New York Rangers: Felix Farhammar, D, Orebro Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
204. Detroit Red Wings: Grayden Robertson-Palmer, C, Phillips Andover Academy (HIGH-MA)
205. Seattle Kraken: Karl Annborn, D, HV71 Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
206. Tampa Bay Lightning: Roman Luttsev, C, Yaroslavl Jr. (Russia-Jr.)
207. Vancouver Canucks: Matthew Lansing, C, Fargo (USHL)
208. Calgary Flames: Jakob Leander, D, HV71 Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
209. Montreal Canadiens: Maxon Vig, D, Cedar Rapids (USHL)
210. San Jose Sharks: Richard Gallant, LW, USNTDP (USHL)
211. Calgary Flames: Yan Matveiko, LW, CSKA Jr. (Russia-Jr.)
212. Tampa Bay Lightning: Grant Spada, D, Guelph (OHL)
213. Ottawa Senators: Andrei Trofimov, G, Magnitogorsk Jr. (Russia-Jr.)
214. Colorado Avalanche: Nolan Roed, C, Tri-City (USHL)
215. Tampa Bay Lightning: Marco Mignosa, RW, Sault Ste. Marie (OHL)
216. Los Angeles Kings: William Sharpe, D, Kelowna (WHL)
217. Toronto Maple Leafs: Matthew Hlacar, LW, Kitchener (OHL)
218. Seattle Kraken: Loke Krantz, RW, Linkoping Jr. (Sweden-Jr.)
219. Buffalo Sabres: Ryan Rucinski, C, Youngstown (USHL)
220. Winnipeg Jets: Jacob Cloutier, RW, Saginaw (OHL)
221. Carolina Hurricanes: Filip Ekberg, RW, Ottawa (OHL)
222. Dallas Stars: Charlie Paquette, RW, Guelph (OHL)
223. Edmonton Oilers: Aidan Park, C, Green Bay (USHL)
224. Florida Panthers: Yegor Midlak, G, Spartak Jr. (Russia-Jr.)

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Building the perfect trade deadline for the Mets and Phillies

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Building the perfect trade deadline for the Mets and Phillies

There’s plenty of history in the rivalry between the New York Mets and Philadelphia Phillies. It’s about 116 miles from Citi Field to Citizens Bank Park. The two teams been competing for the NL East since 1969. Star players from Tug McGraw to Jerry Koosman to Lenny Dykstra to Pedro Martinez to Zack Wheeler have played for both franchises. Mets fans loathe the Phanatic, and Phillies fans laugh derisively at Mr. Met.

Despite this longevity, the two teams have rarely battled for a division title in the same season. The only years they finished No. 1 and 2 or were battling for a division lead late in the season:

  • 1986: Mets finished 21.5 games ahead

  • 2001: Both finished within six games of the Braves

  • 2006: Mets finished 12 games ahead

  • 2007: Phillies finished one game ahead

  • 2008: Phillies finished three games ahead

  • 2024: Phillies finished six games ahead of Mets and Braves

So it’s a rare treat to see the Mets and Phillies battling for the NL East lead in as New York faces the San Francisco Giants on “Sunday Night Baseball” this week. This season has also been a bit of bumpy ride for both teams, so there is pressure on both front offices to make trade deadline additions in hopes of winning the World Series that has eluded both franchises in recent years despite high payrolls and star-laden rosters. Let’s dig into what both teams need to do before Thursday.

The perfect trade deadline for the Mets

1. Bullpen help

The Mets already acquired hard-throwing lefty Gregory Soto from the Orioles, but David Stearns will likely look for another reliever, given that the Mets’ bullpen has struggled since the beginning of June with a 5.02 ERA. In my grade of the trade, I pointed out the importance for the Mets to add left-handed relief. Think of potential playoff opponents and all the key left-handed batters: Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper on the Phillies; Shohei Ohtani, Freddie Freeman and Max Muncy on the Dodgers; Kyle Tucker, Michael Busch and Pete Crow-Armstrong on the Cubs.

Soto has held lefties to a .138 average this season, and it does help that the Mets have two lefty starters in David Peterson and Sean Manaea. They also just activated Brooks Raley after he had been out since early 2024. If he is back to his 2022-23 form, when he had a 2.74 ERA and held lefties to a .209 average, maybe the Mets will feel good enough about their southpaw relief.

They could still use another dependable righty reliever. Mets starters were hot early on, but they weren’t going deep into games, and outside of Peterson, the lack of longer outings is a big reason the bullpen ERA has skyrocketed. Carlos Mendoza has overworked his setup guys, including Huascar Brazoban and Reed Garrett. Brazoban has never been much of a strike thrower anyway, and Garrett similarly faded in the second half last season. Adding a high-leverage righty to set up Edwin Diaz makes sense. Candidates there include David Bednar of the Pirates, Ryan Helsley of the Cardinals, Griffin Jax or Jhoan Duran of the Twins, or maybe a longer shot such as Emmanuel Clase or Cade Smith of the Guardians.

2. Think big, as in Eugenio Suarez

Mark Vientos was a huge key to last season’s playoff appearance and trip to the NLCS, hitting .266/.322/.516 with 27 home runs after beginning the season in Triple-A. He hasn’t been able to replicate that performance, though, hitting .224/.279/.354. That has led to a revolving door at third base, with Vientos, Brett Baty and Ronny Mauricio starting games there in July. Overall, Mets third basemen ranked 24th in the majors in OPS entering Friday.

Lack of production at third is one reason the Mets’ offense has been mediocre rather than very good — they’re averaging 4.38 runs per game, just below the NL average of 4.43. They could use another premium bat, given the lack of production they’ve received from center field and catcher (not to mention Francisco Lindor‘s slump since the middle of June). Maybe Francisco Alvarez‘s short stint back in Triple-A will get his bat going now that he’s back in the majors, but going after Suarez to hit behind Juan Soto and Pete Alonso would lengthen the lineup.

3. Reacquire Harrison Bader to play CF

Tyrone Taylor is a plus defender in center and has made several incredible catches, but he’s hitting .209/.264/.306 for a lowly OPS+ of 65. Old friend Bader is having a nice season with the Twins, hitting .251/.330/.435. Maybe that’s a little over his head, given that he had a .657 OPS with the Mets last season, but he would still be an offensive upgrade over Taylor without losing anything on defense — and he wouldn’t cost a top-tier prospect. The Mets could still mix in Jeff McNeil against the really tough righties, but adding Suarez and Bader would give this lineup more of a championship feel.

The perfect deadline for the Phillies

1. Acquire Jhoan Duran

Like the Mets, the Phillies already made a move here, signing free agent David Robertson, who had a 3.00 ERA and 99 strikeouts in 72 innings last season with the Rangers. On paper, he should help, but he’s also 40 and will need a few games in the minors to get ready. Even with Robertson, the Phillies could use some more help here. They’ll eventually get Jose Alvarado back from his 60-game PED suspension, but Alvarado is ineligible for the postseason. At least the Mets have an elite closer in Edwin Diaz. Jordan Romano leads the Phillies with eight saves and has a 6.69 ERA. Matt Strahm is solid, but more useful as a lefty setup guy than a closer (think of all those left-handed batters we listed for the Mets, then sub out Juan Soto and Brandon Nimmo for Harper and Schwarber).

And the Phillies’ bullpen has consistently come up short in big games. Think back to last year’s NLDS, when Jeff Hoffman lost twice to the Mets. Or 2023, when Craig Kimbrel lost two games in the NLCS against the Diamondbacks. Or the 2022 World Series, when Yordan Alvarez hit the huge home run off Alvarado in the clinching Game 6.

So, yes, a shutdown closer is a must. Maybe that’s Bednar, maybe Clase if he’s available (although he struggled in last year’s postseason), maybe Helsley. But the guy Dave Dombrowski should go all-in to get: Duran. The window for the Phillies is slowly closing as the core players get older. Duran is under control through 2027, so he’s a fit for now and the immediate future. The trade cost might be painful, but with his 100 mph fastball and splitter, he has the elite stuff you need in October.

2. Add Ryan O’Hearn

The Phillies have received below-average production from both left field (mostly Max Kepler) and center field (Brandon Marsh/Johan Rojas platoon). The center-field market is pretty thin except for Bader or maybe a gamble on Luis Robert Jr. I’d pass on Robert, stick with the Marsh/Rojas platoon and upgrade left field with O’Hearn, who is hitting .281/.375/.452 for the Orioles. He isn’t the perfect fit since, like Kepler, he hits left-handed and struggles against lefties, but he’s a patient hitter with a much better OBP, and he’s passable in the outfield.

3. Acquire Willi Castro

Here’s the bottom line: The Phillies have to admit that some of their long-term position players aren’t getting the job done — such as second baseman Bryson Stott, who has a 77 OPS+. Third baseman Alec Bohm has been better but also has a below-average OPS.

That makes Castro a nice fit. He’s not a star, but he’s an above-average hitter, a switch-hitter who plays all over the field for the Twins, having started games at five different positions. He could play second or third or start in left field against a lefty. Philadelphia could even start him in center instead of Rojas, although that would be a defensive hit. Bottom line: Castro would give the Phillies a lot more versatility — or a significant offensive upgrade over Stott if they start him every day at second.

Note as well: Stott has hit .188 in 33 career postseason games. Bohm has hit .214 with two home runs in 34 postseason games. The Phillies need a different offensive look for October.

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Olney: The 8 teams most desperate to make a deadline deal

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Olney: The 8 teams most desperate to make a deadline deal

It would be ideal if every MLB team were so desperate to win that they would do whatever it takes. But in an industry with so many variables from team to team — roster composition, payroll commitment, market size, owner ambition, fan rabidity and history — some organizations are willing to go further and do more than others.

The New York Mets paid more in luxury taxes last season ($97 million) than the Pittsburgh Pirates have dedicated to payroll this season, and Pittsburgh could attempt to reduce salary commitments even further at this year’s trade deadline.

Some teams are more desperate than others. As we near the July 31 deadline, we present the teams most desperate to make a deal.


New York played in the World Series last year, and in a lot of markets, that might be enough to satisfy a fan base. But not with the Yankees, whose most faithful fans judge them under the George Steinbrenner Doctrine: If you don’t win the World Series, you’ve had a bad year. This is a constant.

The Yankees could return to where they were last October. The 33-year-old Aaron Judge, one of the most dynamic hitters ever, is having another historic season. New York wants to take advantage of that — particularly because the American League is wide open with as many as seven or eight AL teams having reasonable paths to the World Series.

But the Yankees still have distinct holes. They badly need an upgrade at third base, which someone like Eugenio Suarez could fill. Gerrit Cole and Clarke Schmidt suffered season-ending elbow injuries, leaving a need for another experienced starting pitcher. Their bullpen also needs help in the sixth and seventh innings.

After the departure of Juan Soto, Yankees owner Hal Steinbrenner and general manager Brian Cashman are probably under more pressure to do something this season than any of their peers. What else is new?


It’s remarkable how similar this version of the Phillies is to the teams that president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski constructed in Detroit, with Philadelphia’s strong starting pitching (Zack Wheeler and Cristopher Sanchez playing the roles of Justin Verlander and Max Scherzer) and a lineup of sluggers (Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper as Miguel Cabrera and Prince Fielder).

The major question that hangs over this Philadelphia team, as was the case with those Tigers teams, is about the bullpen: Is there enough depth and power? For the Phillies, that is complicated by the situation with lefty Jose Alvarado, who will return in August from his 80-game suspension under the PED policy but not be eligible for the postseason.

The Phillies paid heavily for free agent reliever David Robertson, giving him the equivalent of a $16 million salary for the rest of the regular season, but they could use another reliever who is adept at shutting down high-end right-handed hitters in the postseason.


On the days Tarik Skubal pitches, the Tigers could be the best team in baseball; it’s possible that in the postseason, he could be his generation’s version of Orel Hershiser or Madison Bumgarner, propelling his team through round after round of playoffs to the World Series.

But the Tigers might have Skubal for only the rest of this year and next season, before he, advised by his agent Scott Boras, heads into free agency and becomes maybe the first $400 million pitcher in history.

Now is the time for Detroit to make a push for its first championship in more than four decades. And for Scott Harris, the team’s president of baseball operations, that means adding a couple of high-impact relievers capable of generating a lot of swing-and-misses.


The Mariners showed they are serious about making moves before this deadline with Thursday’s trade for first baseman Josh Naylor.

The last time the Mariners reached the league championship series, Ichiro Suzuki — who will be inducted into the Hall of Fame this weekend — was a rookie. Edgar Martinez was a 38-year-old designated hitter, and Jamie Moyer and Freddy Garcia were the staff aces. You get the point: It has been a really long time since the Mariners have had postseason success, and the team has never reached the World Series.

An opportunity seems to be developing for Seattle. The talented rotation, hammered by injuries in the first months of this season, could be whole for the stretch run. Cal Raleigh is having the greatest season by a catcher, contending with Judge for the AL MVP Award. Julio Rodriguez has generally been a strong second-half player.

Even ownership seems inspired: After a winter in which the Mariners spent almost nothing to upgrade the roster, other teams report that Seattle could absorb money in trades before the deadline.


5. New York Mets

Owner Steve Cohen doesn’t sport the highest payroll this year — the Dodgers’ Mark Walter is wearing that distinction — but the Mets are well over the luxury tax threshold again, in the first season after signing Juan Soto. Cohen has made it clear that generally, he will do what it takes to land the club’s first championship trophy since 1986.

But that does not include preventing David Stearns, the Mets’ respected president of baseball operations, from doing what he does best — making subtle and effective deals at the trade deadline. Rival execs expect that Stearns will work along the same lines he did last year — finding trades that improve the team’s depth without pillaging its growing farm system. That could mean adding a starting pitcher capable of starting Game 1, 2 or 3 of a postseason series, as well as bullpen depth.

Cohen is experiencing the impact of overseeing a front office that made an impetuous win-now trade at the 2021 deadline, when the Mets swapped a minor leaguer named Pete Crow-Armstrong for two months of Javier Baez. That clearly didn’t pan out for them. Cohen is desperate to win, but within the prescribed guardrails.


Last winter, the Padres had to live with the knowledge that they were probably the best team other than the Dodgers and that they came within a win of knocking out L.A. There is a lot about San Diego’s 2025 roster to like: Manny Machado clearly responds to a big stage, and the bullpen could be the most dominant at a time of year when relief corps often decide championships.

However, as Padres general manager A.J. Preller navigates this trade deadline in the hopes of living out late owner Peter Seidler’s dream of winning San Diego’s first World Series title, he has a relatively thin, aging, top-heavy roster with a lot of significant payroll obligations. This is why the Padres are considering trading Dylan Cease, who is potentially the highest-impact starter available on the market. Preller could move Cease to fill other roster needs, current and future ones, and then deal for a cheaper veteran starter to replace him.

“He’ll have to rob Peter to pay Paul,” one of Preller’s peers said.


Hope has emerged after the team’s all-in, $500 million signing of Vladimir Guerrero Jr., with the Blue Jays taking the lead in the AL East.

Toronto’s rotation is comprised of an older group — 34-year-old Kevin Gausman, 36-year-old Chris Bassitt, 40-year-old Max Scherzer and 31-year-old Jose Berrios. Without a clear favorite in the AL, Toronto could break through for its first title since the Jays went back-to-back in 1992-93 — and in just the second season since the club’s expensive renovations of Rogers Centre were completed. When Alex Anthopoulos led the front office a decade ago, he made an all-in push to get the Jays back into the playoffs, adding players like David Price because he believed this was the right time for them to take their shot — and they came very close to getting back to the World Series.

Reportedly, Mark Shapiro — the team’s incoming president at the time — did not approve of Anthopoulos’ strategy. Now, Shapiro’s Blue Jays are in a similar situation in 2025 to where they were under Anthopoulos: Will they wheel and deal aggressively before the deadline, or will they be conservative?


The Dodgers won the World Series in 2024, after taking the title in the shortened season of 2020. So, if they don’t win a championship this year, it’s not as if a bunch of people are getting fired and the roster will be jettisoned. But winning can be intoxicating, especially when the lineup and rotation are loaded with stars: The Dodgers can envision a postseason in which a starting staff of Shohei Ohtani, Blake Snell, Tyler Glasnow and Yoshinobu Yamamoto could propel the team to a second consecutive title.

But the Dodgers’ bullpen — heavily worked in the first months of this season because of injuries to the rotation — is in tatters due to injuries. Will the Dodgers’ push to become the first team to repeat as champions since the 1998-2000 Yankees drive them to swap valuable prospects for needed bullpen help before the deadline? We’re about to find out.


This is a team very well-suited for the postseason: The Cubs are a strong defensive team; they have a deep lineup around Kyle Tucker, in what might be Tucker’s only season in Chicago; and they put the ball in play.

They’ve got a good farm system, as well as an experienced president of baseball operations in Jed Hoyer. He was part of championships in Boston in 2004 and 2007 and was the Cubs’ general manager for their 2016 title. He and Theo Epstein made the Nomar Garciaparra deal at the trade deadline in 2004, in advance of Boston’s breakthrough title in 2004, and the all-in trade for Aroldis Chapman on the way to the Cubs’ first World Series win in 108 years in 2016.

But the X factor for Chicago in recent years is whether ownership operates with the same desperation — in the way that Astros owner Jim Crane did when he pushed through a Justin Verlander trade for Houston in August 2017.

This seems to be a good time for the Cubs to be desperate, to do anything to win another championship. Will a title be a priority for owner Tom Ricketts?

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A’s Kurtz becomes first rookie with 4-HR game

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A's Kurtz becomes first rookie with 4-HR game

Nick Kurtz of the Athletics became the first rookie in Major League Baseball history to hit four home runs in a game, part of a spectacular Friday night for the 22-year-old that will go down as one of the greatest offensive displays the sport has seen.

Kurtz also matched the MLB record with 19 total bases in the 15-3 triumph against the Astros in Houston.

“It’s arguably the best game I’ve ever watched from a single player,” Athletics manager Mark Kotsay said. “This kid continues to have jaw-dropping moments.”

Kurtz didn’t make an out all night, going deep in the second, sixth, eighth and ninth innings. He also doubled — a 381-foot drive that would have been out in six major league ballparks — and singled on his 6-for-6 night to equal Shawn Green, who had four homers, six hits and 19 total bases for the Los Angeles Dodgers on May 23, 2002 at Milwaukee.

Kurtz and Green are the only players with six hits in a four-homer game.

“It’s hard to think about this day being kind of real, it still feels like a dream,” Kurtz said in a postgame television interview. “So it’s pretty remarkable. I’m kind of speechless. Don’t really know what to say.”

It was the 20th four-homer game in major league history and second this season. Arizona’s Eugenio Suárez did it on April 26 against Atlanta. No player has ever hit five home runs in a game.

Kurtz finished with eight RBIs and six runs scored.

The 6-foot-5, 22-year-old slugger has 23 homers in 66 games this season. The fourth pick in last year’s amateur draft out of Wake Forest, he made his major league debut April 23 and hit his first homer May 13.

He is the youngest player with a four-homer game. Pat Seerey of the Chicago White Sox was 25 when he homered four times on July 18, 1948.

“This is the first time my godparents have been here, so they probably have to come in the rest of the year,” Kurtz said. “My parents flew in today. They’ve been here a bunch, but it was cool to have some family here for that.”

On Friday, Kurtz homered off each of the Astros’ four pitchers: Ryan Gusto, Nick Hernandez, Kaleb Ort and outfielder Cooper Hummel, who worked the ninth with the game out of hand. His longest drive was his third, a 414-foot solo shot off Ort in the eighth.

For his fourth homer, Kurtz hit an opposite-field line drive to the Crawford Boxes in left field on a 77 mph, 2-0 pitch from Hummel. The three-run shot made it 15-2.

“With a positional player on the mound, I’m just trying to move the ball forward,” Kurtz said. “You don’t want to be the guy that strikes out. That’s only my second at bat ever off a positional player, so I don’t know. Just trying to move the ball forward and get something that I can touch, and I hit another one.”

Kurtz’s double in the fourth inning hit just below the yellow line over the visitor’s bullpen, narrowly missing what would have been a fifth homer.

“Everybody was just like, laughing,” A’s shortstop Jacob Wilson said. “How is he doing it? This is not normal. He’s playing a different sport than us right now. It’s not baseball, it’s just T-ball what he’s doing right now.”

With the baseballs from his last two homers inside a plastic bag at his locker, Kurtz signed scorecards from all four A’s broadcasters and a lineup card. One of the scorecards and a bat were bound for the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Kurtz has been the best hitter in the majors in July, ranking first in batting average (.425), on-base percentage (.494), slugging percentage (1.082), runs (22), doubles (13), homers (11) and RBIs (27).

He extended his hitting streak to 12 games, and his 23 home runs are the most for an A’s rookie since Yoenis Céspedes in 2012 and fourth most in franchise history.

Kurtz entered Friday as a -325 favorite at ESPN BET to win American League Rookie of the Year. His odds moved to -2500 after Friday night.

Information from ESPN Research and The Associated Press was used in this report.

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