With the NHL season around the corner, teams are evaluating what they have from a prospect standpoint. Here’s a look at each Central Division team’s prospect pool heading into the 2018-19 NHL season, including the top players in the system.
Some ground rules:
• Players listed as “A” prospects project more comfortably into impact roles — that is, players who will fit into top scoring lines or top-four defenses and goalies with starter potential. “B” prospects are players who project comfortably as everyday NHL players but don’t project as comfortably to make a big impact. That’s not to say the B prospects can’t develop into larger roles in the future; it’s just what I see for them for right now.
• Players not listed simply didn’t meet the very high threshold set by the A and B parameters. That doesn’t mean I don’t think they’ll make it or that they can’t develop into better prospects. I just set a high bar for the players included in this section.
• Players are considered prospects until they’ve lost rookie status (using the Calder Trophy eligibility threshold).
• I also have listed one prospect for each team who I think is most likely to help the NHL roster this season, along with one “breakout prospect” who I think could take the biggest step forward this season in his development.
Here’s a peak at the Central Division.
A prospects: Adam Boqvist and Henri Jokiharju
B prospects: Dylan Sikura, Jake Wise, Niklas Nordgren, Nicolas Beaudin, Ian Mitchell, Victor Ejdsell and Artur Kayumov
The Blackhawks are in an unfamiliar position, coming off of a season in which they missed the playoffs and had a chance to draft inside the top 10 for the first time since selecting Patrick Kane first in 2007. They also compiled extra draft picks, including Nashville’s first, and started doing some patchwork on a prospect system that had thinned out quite a bit. As a result, the pool is deeper and better than it was a year ago.