ATSWINS

Montreal Canadiens are No. 3 in 2025 NHL prospect pool rankings

Updated Feb. 6, 2025, 10 a.m. 1 min read
NHL News

Welcome to Scott Wheelers 2025 rankings of every NHL organizations prospects .

You can find the complete ranking and more information on the project and its criteria here , as we count down daily from No.

32 to No.

1.

The series, which includes in-depth evaluations and insight from sources on nearly 500 prospects, runs from Jan.

8 to Feb.

7.

Advertisement The Canadiens pool has everything.

One of the most talented forward prospects in the world, plus several promising others (at both center and wing) behind him.

One of the most talented goalie prospects in the world, plus another top young NHL/AHL goalie.

And two top D prospects not including the two top young D they already have in the NHL, plus some others who could play games there as well.

Now theyve just got to find a way to elevate them all, put them in positions to succeed and get better while doing it with a young team.

Easy, right? 2024 prospect pool rank: No.

10 (change: +7) GO DEEPER NHL prospect pool rankings 2025: Scott Wheeler evaluates all 32 farm systems 1.

Ivan Demidov, RW, 19 (SKA St.

Petersburg) Demidov is the most purely skilled forward prospect in the sport and has just broken the KHLs U20 scoring record, eclipsing the marks previously set by Kirill Kaprizov , Matvei Michkov and Evgeny Kuznetsov.

Last season, Demidovs play during the MHL playoffs (which ended due to a lower-body injury just prior to SKA winning the championship) crystalized him behind Macklin Celebrini as the No.

2 prospect in the 2024 NHL Draft for me.

His play in the last couple of months with SKA in the KHL has done the same for him as one of the top prospects period in the game for me.

Hes got brilliant individual talent but Ive also heard good things about his work ethic on and off the ice, hes in great shape (an athletic 6-foot-0.5 and 190ish pounds) and he has developed some layers to his game so that hes not a one-trick pony as a dancing offensive-zone player (and he has played to excellent two-way results for a winger in the KHL this season because of it).

Demidov is a skill-first playmaking forward who finished third in the MHL in scoring two years ago (extremely rare for a player that age in a league typically dominated by 19- and 20-year-olds) and played at a higher point-per-game pace than the two players in front of him alongside his older brother, Semyon.

Last season, after a strong preseason with SKA, he won a KHL job out of camp but played little and then, after bouncing between levels trying to rediscover his game, injured his knee and missed a month and a half.

After returning, he tore up the MHL with one multi-point game after another and five to 10 shots per game, putting together one of the most productive extended stretches of play ever at Russias top junior level and making pretty goals look casual.

This season, despite averaging under 13 minutes per game on the year (though he has played 18-to-20-plus of late), hes still SKAs second-leading scorer.

Advertisement Demidovs a true play creator and you want the puck in his hands so that he can slip around the ice to make things happen for himself or his linemates.

His ability to get off the wall to the middle with the puck on his stick into traffic, his manipulation one-on-one, his knack for dodging sticks and checks, his heel-to-heel maneuvering, his cross-body handles and his passing through layers to the weak side of coverage are all extremely high-end and look singular to him and his very wide stance/unique posture.

And while his skating in straight lines doesnt have your standard look to it and was a topic of conversation pre-draft, hes still a fast skater and very shifty side to side.

Hes got elite handling (though he can get himself into trouble trying to beat two or three guys in a crowd, he also often beats multiple guys in a sequence and has a major highlight reel quality) and has made more one-on-one skill plays over the last two seasons in the MHL and now KHL than almost any prospect Ive scouted for any draft.

Hes also a pretty engaged off-puck player who keeps his feet moving, hunts pucks on the forecheck and can turn a steal into a game-breaking play in an instant.

Demidovs one of the most dynamic and skilled prospects to come out of Russia in recent memory (his game also has more of a pro style, competitiveness and roundedness to it than Michkovs had at the same age).

He profiles as a point-per-game, first-line, all-star-level winger.

I truly believe hes going to mesmerize in the prime of his career in the NHL.

2.

Jacob Fowler, G, 20 (Boston College) Fowler has established himself as one of the top goalie prospects in the sport with his play over the last three seasons.

That started when he was named to the USHLs All-Rookie Second Team three years ago and its First All-Star Team two years ago after leading the league in both save percentage and goals-against average.

It was stamped last year with a stellar freshman year at BC that saw him play virtually every minute behind the top-ranked team in the country (and while the team in front of him helped, their strength was most pronounced at forward and he stole some games and was deservedly named Hockey East Goaltender of the Year).

And it has been cemented this year with a repeat performance as the MVP (for me) of another top-ranked Boston College team, his save percentage rising from last years .926 to the high .930s.

(I should note that Ive seen him look just OK with Team USA both in Gothenburg at the World Juniors and Plymouth at the World Junior Summer Showcase, but he was also excellent at the World Jr.

A Challenge and the body of work over the last four years is unimpeachable.) Hes the kind of goalie who if he can see a shot and move to it, hes going to stop it.

He had some work to do on some other things (conditioning/fitness, less business on scrambles, losing his posts at times) pre-draft but he has worked hard at it and is by all accounts committed to staying in better shape (hes still listed at a heavy 225 pounds for 6-foot-2 but there has been progress off the ice), and has so many clear tools, highlighted by great hands, an ability to take space away through square angles and sound positioning, high-end tracking/reads, excellent rebound control, legitimate power/movement and a knack for making huge pad saves and stopping high-danger chances.

He rarely gets beat through the body or frozen.

He doesnt show holes in the net and has the reflexes to get a piece of (or ahold of) pucks when he does.

Hes got a legitimate shot not just to be an NHL goaltender but to be a top one, and there arent many goalies his age (or even a little older) Im comfortable saying that about.

He seems to pitch a shutout once or twice a month these days and I think hes got a compelling case for the Hobey Baker this year.

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David Reinbacher , RHD, 20 (Laval Rocket) Reinbachers a likable, desirable player who can do it all at a decent level.

We sometimes see draft-eligible D play their full draft year in a professional league.

We seldom see them play big minutes in a good league, though even when theyre on the older side like Reinbacher was with his October birthday.

But thats what the Austrian did in Switzerlands top flight two seasons ago, where he played over 20 minutes more often than he played under it.

He drove results at both ends in those minutes, too, with a positive goal differential on an under-.500 team that was outscored pretty significantly.

Last year was a lot tougher on a Kloten team that was difficult to watch and frankly a mess, but he was impressive in the AHL right away and showed his very tangible two-way elements with Laval.

He was injured in a hit along the boards early in his first NHL preseason game, though, and after undergoing knee surgery and the six-month timeline that comes with it in the fall hasnt played since.

Reinbachers got pro size, desired handedness and a really strong foundation of tools that all but guarantee hell become a good NHLer.

Hes a solid forward and backward skater (though he can look a little stilted at times) who gaps well and defends the rush effectively with a noticeably long stick.

He looks to take instead of give in the neutral zone, regularly stepping up to try to bump puck carriers off possession and force dumps (though there are times that style can leave him chasing if his timings off or hes flat-footed).

Hes strong.

His head is always up and on a swivel and he does a good job pre-surveying the ice when hes going back to get pucks through frequent shoulder checks.

Hes got some poise and processing under pressure, even if his play with the puck on his stick isnt dynamic per se.

He looked to attack offensively in the AHL last spring, which was nice to see (I think his game works better on the smaller ice generally).

Im not in love with his upside and have reservations about whether his game has what it takes to live up to his draft slot (it just lacks a little juice, if Im being honest), but he should become a really good No.

3-4.

Its too bad he basically lost his first full season in North America this year as well.

Hes a solid, projectable two-way defenseman who looks like how teams want their D to look these days though and hes going to have a long career.

4.

Michael Hage, C, 18 (University of Michigan) On a Michigan team that doesnt have the high-end skill it has had in recent years, Hage has played to above a point per game as an 18-year-old freshman and has made a lot of plays offensively this year.

Coming up, he was a star minor hockey prospect who would have gone at the very top of the OHL draft had he not chosen to go to the Chicago Steel and commit to the Wolverines.

He was then limited to just 13 games (in which he still had 10 points) in his 16-year-old season in the USHL after undergoing shoulder surgery from an injury suffered in an early practice.

There are some in USHL and NCAA circles who believe that had he not lost that time he might have been in the top-10 conversation for the 2024 draft.

Though he didnt play back into that mix last year, he came close, taking off in the second half of his draft year (after the Steel really struggled out of the gate as a team) and looking for a multi-month stretch like debatably the USHLs best forward before finishing with 35 goals and 79 points in 56 combined regular-season and playoff games.

I believe hes got top-six potential, the big question is whether he can do it as a second-line center or if hell be better served moving to the wing (think Jordan Kyrou type).

Hage is a natural center with plenty of offensive dimension.

Hes got pro size (6-foot-1 and 190 pounds despite all of his lost training time due to injury, with plenty more room to add muscle to his still-lean but athletic build) and skating (hes an excellent skater).

Hes got dual-threat skill as a shooter and passer and he can do both in flight and at pace.

Hes naturally talented as a handler.

He can create for himself or make plays for his linemates.

He plays hard, he stays on pucks and hes competitive enough (all of which I think were underrated pre-draft even if hes not defined by his competitiveness).

He reads the game well with an intelligent approach to the way he maneuvers around the ice but also good instincts that he can fall back on.

I like him in puck control/protection, including in full flight.

His detail and work rate are both developing.

Hell finish his checks.

He should have been on Team Canada at U18 worlds last spring and I think he should be in the mix for Team Canada at next years World Juniors in Minnesota.

His blend of skating, skill, scoring, playmaking and sense is hard to come by.

Im a big believer.

5.

Logan Mailloux , RHD, 21 (Laval Rocket/ Montreal Canadiens ) Maillouxs game still needs some work but he made some really important progress at the AHL level last year in particular and he had a really strong rookie season all told, finishing with 47 points in 72 games.

He has made more progress and clearly placed a greater emphasis on working on his decision-making/cutting down on his mistakes defensively in the AHL this year as well and has done a nice job in first-pairing minutes for Laval (up from 20 per game last year to 21 this year), which will serve him well in the future.

Though his early defensive results in the NHL have been predictably a little poor, he has also already shown his offensive presence in his very small sample of games with the Habs.

Advertisement Hes a strong and athletic 6-foot-3, 213-pound right-shot defenseman whos physically advanced and showcases that strength through a strong forward skating stride, a hard and heavy shot (its a real weapon) and a presence over pucks and in board battles.

Hes a confident puck carrier in transition and is eager to take space off the line to look to make a play.

His game does have some notable deficiencies, including the aforementioned decision-making and reads that can let him down but theyve started to become fewer with more reps (his game is always going to come with some brain cramps but youll be able to live with it because of his natural talent and the personality of his game on the ice.

The hiccups show up with the puck in distribution and/or on carries in dangerous spots on the ice and without the puck in choices on when and how to close gaps or puck-watching and losing his man in D-zone coverage.

He has some sloppy stickwork in man-to-man coverage that can require him to overcompensate by trying to make a hard play on the puck (which can result in some penalties) as well.

Hes likely going to have some growing pains once he makes the full-time jump to NHL pace/speed and may never be as buttoned up as youd like but the physical tools and talent are going to carry him.

His game has some very real upside and some clear plus attributes even if itll come with the odd headache.

Though this isnt a projection and he wont get there, hes got a bit of a Brent Burns look to him out there.

6.

Joshua Roy, RW/LW, 21 (Laval Rocket/Montreal Canadiens) Loyal readers will know that Roy is a player I was higher on than most pre-draft (he ranked 34th on my board when he was drafted 150th).

He has progressed nicely since, too and certainly relative to where he was picked.

The multiple 100-point QMJHL seasons.

The 19 points in 14 games across two World Juniors.

Two strong pro seasons as a top player in Laval and his first few NHL goals.

Through it, some real substance has developed in his game, which I believe has several translatable qualities.

Hes got exemplary puck-protection skill.

He does an excellent job leaning on defenders and controlling the puck in the middle of the ice to get to his spots and create chances.

And then when he doesnt have it, his timing and routes help him get open or pounce on rebounds to remain opportunistic.

Hes hard on pucks, hes got great hands in tight (Ive seen him show real one-on-one skill in the last few seasons) and around the net and he scores a lot of weak-side goals.

He seems to elevate his linemates now (which wasnt always the case).

After working hard on his fitness, he has taken steps as a skater and competitor who appears more committed to playing a complete game (even showing some penalty killing proficiency).

He has also developed more of a quality to his game offensively, flashing the skill that made him a No.

1 pick into the QMJHL more consistently.

I like him with the puck, where he can hold onto it and make plays, and I like him more and more without it, where hes now finishing his checks and involving himself in the forecheck more consistently.

His shot is accurate and has developed some heaviness.

Roy has this way of molding himself to his linemates and finding success because of his ability to read and anticipate and because he no longer needs a ton of puck touches (his game has matured a lot that way).

He has also proven himself a big-game player and has worked to become a more competitive, defensively responsible (support positions, shot-blocking, all of it), guts-of-the-ice player who tracks back and then plays an increasingly confident and aggressive style back the other way.

The little things things that were once criticisms of his game for some have started to become strengths.

The reads and positioning on and off the puck.

The engagement level.

The smarter choices he now makes with the puck.

Though he played center growing up, his re-emergence has taken place on the wing and I expect him to develop into a solid top-nine winger.

7.

Owen Beck , C, 21 (Laval Rocket/Montreal Canadiens) Beck is a strong, athletic kid who has endeared himself to scouts and coaches alike over the years for his middle-lane, driven, pro-style game and plus-level speed.

Hes a noticeable shift-to-shift player who excels at getting to the inside, pushing tempo and winning battles.

And theres some skill to his game (hes got good hands and enough talent to make things happen when hes around the puck all the time) even if it fits within more of a hurry-up style than a slow-the-game-down-and-problem-solve style.

He keeps his feet moving, he works north-south to apply pressure and get back and hes a good transition player on entries and give-and-gos.

Hes a tone-setter physically and in work ethic, and supports play really well.

He can drive downhill and play to the interior when its available.

There are times when his execution concerns me in terms of his ability to make more than simple plays at the NHL level but the rest helps to compensate.

He can be relied upon in defensive situations, is strong in the faceoff circle (he has won 52 percent of his draws in the AHL this year, which is promising for a rookie) can drive and play hard at five-on-five and fits with a variety of linemate types.

His statistical profile has always been a little ordinary but he took a step with the Saginaw Spirit following a trade last year, was really good in his second Memorial Cup for them on junior hockeys biggest stage and has built upon that with a strong rookie season in the AHL this year playing to strong two-way results for the Rocket.

Beck projects as a bottom-six center who can play up and down a lineup in a pinch.

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Jakub Dobes , G, 23 (Laval Rocket/Montreal Canadiens) Dobes was drafted in the fifth round all the way back in 2020 and has just slowly progressed and proven himself since.

After climbing from U18 AAA to the NAHL the year before his draft year, he climbed from the NAHL to the USHL in his draft year.

The Canadiens took a fifth-round flier on his size and ability after he stole some games in the NAHL.

He then had a strong post-draft season in the USHL with Omaha and then immediately became Ohio States starter as a freshman, playing almost every game for them in his two years there and finishing his college career with a .926 save percentage across 75 games (Ohio State played a structured defensive game in front of him, but he was the teams backbone nonetheless and one of the better goalies in college hockey as a freshman and sophomore).

After a respectable first pro season in the AHL last year, he has been a great story in his introduction to the NHL this year.

Dobes is an athletic 6-foot-4 goalie who moves his 200-or-so-pound frame well post-to-post and low-to-high.

But the strength of his game is positioning, where he tries to make himself look big in the net and take away a shooters holes by playing sharp and challenging angles designed to swallow the first shot.

When hes deep in his net, hes also got good enough hands, reflexes, tracking and competitiveness to make stops.

Hell occasionally get beat under his arms and let a squeaker in but Dobes checks a ton of boxes and has moved his projection from a No.

2/3 to a No.

1B/2 with the consistency of his play over the years and his strong early showings in the NHL.

9.

Oliver Kapanen, C, 21 (Timra IK) Kapanen has followed the path youd hope a Finnish late second-rounder would follow.

He was a top player in Finlands junior league in his draft year and got a successful taste of the second-tier Mestis.

He spent his post-draft season acclimatizing himself to Liiga in a transitional year but still played for the World Junior team as an 18-year-old.

At 19, he solidified himself as a good Liiga player and played in his second World Juniors with the C on his jersey.

At 20, he took another step in Liiga to go from good player to top player and scored six goals in eight games at mens worlds.

At 21 he made his NHL club out of camp, got a taste there and then went to Sweden to play in the SHL so that he could continue to develop at a higher level than Liiga and he has been a top player for Timra.

Now the expectation is that hell become a bottom-six center in the NHL.

The promise of Kapanen has always been his two-way game but hes got some secondary skill, I think his skating has really smoothed out over the years and he has learned to strike a better balance between being the responsible, no-mistake 200-foot player that defines him and also looking to make some more plays on offense.

Kapanens a highly involved, B-skill player who can execute difficult escapes under pressure, knife through holes with his ability to burst across his outside edges and always seems to be around the play and in good spots on both offense and defense (he can score from the slot with a quick release off either foot as well).

There are times when I think he can oversimplify his game, but that tunnel-visioning normally happens while trying to make a play to the interior instead of drifting to the outside, so its a lot easier to live with.

Add in a buzzing approach, great tracking defensively, knowledge of where to be to support the play, lifts while backchecking and a driven three-zone game and hes a very likable, responsible, trustworthy player.

Hes a low-ceiling player but will have a long pro career.

10.

Adam Engstrom, LHD, 21 (Laval Rocket) Engstrom has become a nice story for the Canadiens over the last couple of years.

He emerged as one of the top 03 defensemen in Sweden with his play in the SHL (where he went from averaging 14 minutes per game as a regular two years ago to closer to 19 minutes per game last year) before making what I would qualify as a very successful jump to the AHL this year in Laval (where he has played 20 minutes per game in a top-four role as a rookie and is now contributing on both special teams).

Hes an athletic 6-foot-2, 198-pound defenseman with soft skill, the ability to shake across the point or side-step pressure, an eagerness to involve himself in transition and a two-way game that has gone from needing work to a borderline strength as he has become reliable at both ends.

Hes an impressive forward skater (some work to do skating backward), hes got a pro build, he shields pucks really well to weave through or around coverage, he plays with confidence and hell usually correct for a mistake with an effort play.

With continued development, he could become a No.

5-6 with some modern elements and should at the very least become a No.

7-8 who gives you something different from the guys like Arber Xhekaj that teams typically like in those roster spots on the depth chart.

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Filip Mesar LW/RW, 21 (Laval Rocket) It has been a bit of a mixed bag since Mesars selection at No.

26 in the 2022 draft.

He skipped the summer World Juniors, had a good rookie tournament and camp with the Canadiens, got off to a hot start in Kitchener and impressed at the 2023 World Juniors in Halifax to help Slovakia to a near quarterfinal upset over Canada (I actually thought he was owed more than his six points in five games and he still led the Slovaks in scoring).

He hit a bit of a wall in the second half of that year and then kind of repeated that cycle last year (hot start in Kitchener, standout performance in some big moments for Slovakia at the World Juniors in Gothenburg and then a bit of a wall production-wise where his numbers just didnt take off like youd hope for out of a first-round pick his age).

Then after registering five points in his first four games in his first full season in the AHL to start this year, he missed eight weeks with a lower-body injury and has been fine but unremarkable in 13-15 minutes per game since returning.

Hes a B-plus or A-minus skater who can play fast, thrives with the puck on his stick, can play on the perimeter or knife to the inside and can use space to feed pucks into it or take it to use his versatile and deceptive shot.

Hes got change of pace, he attacks with confidence and when he plays quickly instead of just moving quickly, hes really noticeable out there.

Against his peers, he was always a highly involved player who worked to use his speed to push tempo and chase down loose pucks.

Ive seen him make NHL skill plays on one shift and win a series of 50/50 battles to make something happen on the next.

Hell track back and work for pucks.

He has shown he can be dangerous on the flank on the power play with his accurate wrister.

He has shown he can play to the interior at five-on-five (though he has had a tougher time getting there early on in the AHL), while still making plays out wide and off the rush.

The fear is that he doesnt have a game-breaking offensive dimension (despite being highly skilled in a variety of areas with his quick hands, feet, cuts), nor the size (5-foot-10, 184 pounds) to turn his enticing package into an everyday NHL player (hes not what coaches look for in checkers despite playing with energy and might not have the brain to be a top-nine skill guy).

I like the skill-skating combo, he processes the game at a high enough level and I do think theres some potential but hes definitely not a sure thing and it may take him longer than most first-rounders to get there.

12.

Bogdan Konyushkov, RHD, 22 (Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod) Konyushkov has been a big-minute defenseman in the KHL for three straight years.

He came out of nowhere to play 21 minutes per game for Torpedo to get drafted in the fourth round as a 20-year-old and he has played 23 minutes per game (including as their No.

1 penalty killer) for them in the two years since.

Konyushkov is a 6-foot righty who plays hard and smart.

Hes also a strong skater with really good footwork and four-way mobility who goes from his heels to his toes and forward to backward effortlessly.

Hes balanced on his skates and strong going forward, but also sets and holds good gaps and can manipulate himself across the line.

He makes the quick play and plays within the flow of the game, connecting plays more than creating them.

He takes good angles defensively and plays with his head up on and off the puck and on both sides of it.

Hes just a very effective, mobile, heady player.

His contract expires at the end of the 2025-26 season and Id work hard to get him over here then.

I think hes got a chance to play in the NHL.

13.

William Trudeau, LHD, 22 (Laval Rocket) Effective is the name of Trudeaus game.

Hes just a good, steady, reliable defenseman.

He walks the line effectively, hes a smooth outlet passer, he plays a strong, physical game when he needs to, hes got a great stick and he never seems to play poorly (theres an admirable consistency to his game-to-game performances, even if the highs arent dominant/take-over highs).

He looked like one of Montreals best players at the rookie tournament in Buffalo for me two falls ago (where he was also the captain) and hes been a solid two-way player for Laval the last two seasons (though the arrival of Engstrom and expanded role for Mailloux has resulted in a drop in his minutes from almost 20 per game last year to 18 this year).

Its not flashy and hes up against the rest of the Habs abundance of young D, but I bet he plays some NHL games at some point and hed make a fine No.

7-8 D.

Hes also exactly the kind of kid/player you want as organizational depth with your AHL team if thats all he is.

His efficiency of detail and execution will take him as far as his game will carry him.

14.

Yevgeni Volokhin, G, 19 (HK Sochi) Volokhin is a skinny but athletic goalie who was drafted at 6-foot, is now 6-foot-3, and has played in a pretty unique situation over the last couple of years: Oddly enough, two of the best young goalies in Russia, Volokhin and Flyers prospect Yegor Zavragin, have both played for the same MHL team in Khanty-Mansiysk in Western Siberia.

Zavragins the better prospect of the two and has been one step ahead of Volokhin (Zavragin got more second-tier VHL play early and then was the first of the two to get a look with Sochi in the KHL) but he has now joined SKA St.

Petersburg and Volokhin has stepped into his place and played well in time split between the KHL and MHL this season.

Volokhin plays with the hunch that many Russian goalies do (see: Bobrovsky, Askarov, etc.), getting way out over his toes and relying on his active feet and a wide stance to really push and shuffle off his outside edges in order to stick with shooters one-on-one.

Hes quick laterally.

Hes comfortable playing the puck.

He gets in and out of his butterfly quickly and can get to second and third chances.

He moves really well post-to-post and low-to-high.

Hell occasionally get pulled off his line being too busy in the net and he can let pucks squeak through his body but hes talented and athletic and absolutely worth following.

15.

Florian Xhekaj, LW, 20 (Laval Rocket) Xhekaj is a wiry but strong winger who, like his brother, plays on instinct and aggression.

He doesnt have great hockey sense or playmaking feel but he plays in straight lines, hunts and wins pucks, finishes checks, stirs the pot, plays in the dirty areas and has some finishing around the home plate area.

I dont think theres much offense, smarts or soft skill to his game but he plays the same way shift to shift and game to game, he does have some quick twitch skill, he can play both centre and wing and his linemates know how to play with him because of how predictable he is.

Hes got a chance to be a high-motor, pain-in-the-ass fourth-liner.

The Tiers As always, each prospect pool ranking is broken down into team-specific tiers in order to give you a better sense of the proximity from one player or group of players to the next.

The Canadiens pool is divided into four tiers: 1, 2-5, 6-11, 12-15+.

Considered but not ranked were Laval forwards Jared Davidson (who is having a solid year), Luke Tuch and Riley Kidney, Finnish forward Aatos Koivu, Denver sophomore Sam Harris, Minnesota junior D Luke Mittelstadt (who Ive always had time for) and Swedish World Junior D Rasmus Bergqvist.

(Photo of Ivan Demidov: Maksim Konstantinov / SOPA Images / LightRocket via Getty Images).

This article has been shared from the original article on theathleticuk, here is the link to the original article.