ATSWINS

Could Sascha Boumedienne, with strong Columbus ties, be a draft fit for Blue Jackets?

Updated June 24, 2025, 11 a.m. 1 min read
NHL News

COLUMBUS, Ohio Hes only 18 years old, but Sascha Boumedienne already has the passport of a diplomat.

Hes lived in six countries, including his native Sweden, and traveled to several others.

Hes lived in three different U.S.

cities and speaks two languages fluently.

Boumedienne, who spent three years in Columbus and whose father, Josef, worked for the Columbus Blue Jackets for more than a decade, will learn of his next destination this weekend when the NHL Draft is staged in Los Angeles.

Advertisement It wont take long for an NHL club to say his name, either.

The first round of the draft is set for Friday at 7 p.m.

Eastern.

Boumedienne, the latest product of the Ohio AAA Blue Jackets program, is expected to be drafted in the back half of the first round, likely somewhere in the 20s.

Hes the type of mobile, skilled defenseman that NHL clubs are looking for, and his speed belies his size.

Hes 6-foot-2, 183 pounds, and growing.

With the way my game grew this year (at Boston University), both defensively and all-around, I see myself being a 200-foot player, a two-way defenseman who can make an impact all over the ice, Boumedienne said.

I want to log a lot of minutes for my team and compete all over the ice.

I play the game the right way.

NHL clubs seem to agree.

At the NHL Scouting Combine this month in Buffalo, Boumedienne interviewed with 28 of the leagues 32 clubs.

The only clubs that didnt ask for a sit-down were Anaheim, Dallas, Montreal and Seattle, he said, and most of the 28 clubs have continued to follow up in the weeks that followed.

The Blue Jackets have the No.

14 and No.

20 picks on Friday.

GM Don Waddell has made clear his willingness (desire?) to trade at least one of those picks for immediate roster help.

But if he ends up using either of those picks, Boumedienne would make sense, especially since the Jackets could use a blue-chip defender in their prospect ranks.

Boumedienne said the interview with Columbus went really well.

Yeah, it was great, Boumedienne said.

That was kind of memorable, actually, because Ive known those guys (the scouts) in the room since I was I-dont-know-how old.

One might wonder if the Blue Jackets drafting Boumedienne would be a touch awkward.

His father, after all, was let go last summer his expiring contract was not renewed after working for the franchise in multiple capacities as a scout and as an assistant coach since 2014.

I dont think it would be weird at all, no, Sascha Boumedienne said.

I think it would be a blast.

Id go to development camp and all of my friends from high school, from Columbus, would be able to come.

Yeah, thatd be great.

Boumedienne is an interesting player to evaluate.

The skill is obvious, and the skating is elite.

But, like every prospect in this draft, the challenge is in predicting their talent ceiling.

But Boumedienne may be more difficult than most.

Hes never played a full season against players his age.

He played two seasons with the Ohio AAA Blue Jackets 16-under team when he was 14 and 15 years old, attending Olentangy Liberty High School in suburban Delaware County for two years.

He played in the USHL (Youngstown) for only one season, when he was 16 years old.

Advertisement When he debuted last season at Boston University, he was the youngest player in college hockey, at 17 years old.

He finished with 3-10-13, plus 33 penalty minutes and a plus-8 rating, in 40 games.

At every step, the adjustment has been quick.

Last season, he was one of Boston U.s top players in the second half of the season, helping the Terriers go all the way to the NCAA Frozen Four championship game.

He knows hell be back in Boston next season, no matter where hes drafted on Friday.

It hurts real bad, still, that we made it all the way (to the championship game) before losing, Boumedienne said.

We struggled at the start of the year.

We had a bumpy road, but we battled back and came together.

Theres even more motivation.

I was lucky to get there (the championship game) in my first season.

Some guys never get there, some guys have to wait three or four years.

But its definitely motivation to get back.

For now, Boumediennes focus is on the weekend.

Hell have well over 20 people in the crowd he said, from his family, extended family, longtime friends and his agent.

His billet family from Youngstown, Brie Seekford and John Tomko, will be there, too.

Boumedienne will be the seventh alum from the Ohio AAA Blue Jackets to be drafted, joining Trent Vogelhuber (2007), Connor Murphy (2011), Sean Kuraly (2011), Cole Cassels (2013), Jack Roslovic (2015) and Carson Meyer (2017).

He could become the third to get drafted in the first round, joining Murphy and Roslovic.

We moved to Columbus (from Sweden) as a whole family (in 2020), and we were so excited, Boumedienne said.

My brother (Wilson) and I were fired up, just to live in an NHL city.

Our dream has always been to play in the NHL, so we knew wed be living in North America at some point.

I had a great time in Columbus.

I met some of my best friends there.

(Photo: Rick Osentoski /Imagn Images).

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