Prospect Info: - 2024 25 Devils DRAFT Thread | Page 12 | HFBoards - NHL Message Board and Forum for National Hockey League

Prospect Info: 2024 25 Devils DRAFT Thread

2025 Draft Profile:

RD Blake Fiddler, Edmonton WHL

Routinely ranked in the 20s and 30s, you can completely throw that out the window when writing up your mock drafts with Blake Fiddler. Why? Well, he's a 6'4-210 right-shot defenseman who skates very well, can shoot the lights out, has NHL bloodlines and is one of the youngest players available for the 2025 draft. NHL front offices go full Pavlovian Dog for the rare draft-eligibles like Fiddler, who is a good bet to sneak into the top 15 come draft day.

Fiddler is a work in progress for certain, but he shows a very high ceiling on both sides of the puck. Defensively, the sky is the limit as Fiddler is an incredibly strong player with a very good work ethic who is not afraid to play the physical game. With his long reach and strong skating, it's very hard to go around him. With his size and power, it's virtually impossible to go through him. The only way to beat Fiddler is to out-think him, as the nuances of his defensive game all need work -- positioning, gaps, anticipation. This is not to say his hockey IQ is lacking -- as stated, with a July birthday Fiddler is very young, and he has thus far over-relied on his physical gifts and simply needs coaching and development to improve in the more subtle aspects of patrolling a blueline.

The knock on Fiddler in this analytic-and-statistic obsessed scouting generation has been his offensive production, which was good-but-not-great with a 10g-33a-43p line in 64 games. The more one watches Fiddler however, the more one realizes the skill set is there and he is further from his ceiling in the offensive game than defensive. He can shoot, he can skate, and he's a better-than-expected puck handler. Though he is susceptible to mental mistakes with the puck, he shows flashes of being a decent passer. Still, with his rocket of a shot I suspect most of his scoring totals will come from simply launching the puck on net.

The team which drafts Fiddler will have to be patient, as he is a raw work in progress and his development arc could take 4 or 5 years before he's ready for the NHL. But the potential rewards are certainly significant -- the possibility of a huge, mobile and physical shut-down defender who can also tally double-digit goal totals annually and offer several 40+ point seasons at the highest levels. As such, it's tough to see him getting past the top 20 picks in the 2025 NHL Draft.
 
2025 Draft Profile:

RD Blake Fiddler, Edmonton WHL

Routinely ranked in the 20s and 30s, you can completely throw that out the window when writing up your mock drafts with Blake Fiddler. Why? Well, he's a 6'4-210 right-shot defenseman who skates very well, can shoot the lights out, has NHL bloodlines and is one of the youngest players available for the 2025 draft. NHL front offices go full Pavlovian Dog for the rare draft-eligibles like Fiddler, who is a good bet to sneak into the top 15 come draft day.

Fiddler is a work in progress for certain, but he shows a very high ceiling on both sides of the puck. Defensively, the sky is the limit as Fiddler is an incredibly strong player with a very good work ethic who is not afraid to play the physical game. With his long reach and strong skating, it's very hard to go around him. With his size and power, it's virtually impossible to go through him. The only way to beat Fiddler is to out-think him, as the nuances of his defensive game all need work -- positioning, gaps, anticipation. This is not to say his hockey IQ is lacking -- as stated, with a July birthday Fiddler is very young, and he has thus far over-relied on his physical gifts and simply needs coaching and development to improve in the more subtle aspects of patrolling a blueline.

The knock on Fiddler in this analytic-and-statistic obsessed scouting generation has been his offensive production, which was good-but-not-great with a 10g-33a-43p line in 64 games. The more one watches Fiddler however, the more one realizes the skill set is there and he is further from his ceiling in the offensive game than defensive. He can shoot, he can skate, and he's a better-than-expected puck handler. Though he is susceptible to mental mistakes with the puck, he shows flashes of being a decent passer. Still, with his rocket of a shot I suspect most of his scoring totals will come from simply launching the puck on net.

The team which drafts Fiddler will have to be patient, as he is a raw work in progress and his development arc could take 4 or 5 years before he's ready for the NHL. But the potential rewards are certainly significant -- the possibility of a huge, mobile and physical shut-down defender who can also tally double-digit goal totals annually and offer several 40+ point seasons at the highest levels. As such, it's tough to see him getting past the top 20 picks in the 2025 NHL Draft.
Is he related to Vern?
 
2025 Draft Profile:

RD Blake Fiddler, Edmonton WHL

Routinely ranked in the 20s and 30s, you can completely throw that out the window when writing up your mock drafts with Blake Fiddler. Why? Well, he's a 6'4-210 right-shot defenseman who skates very well, can shoot the lights out, has NHL bloodlines and is one of the youngest players available for the 2025 draft. NHL front offices go full Pavlovian Dog for the rare draft-eligibles like Fiddler, who is a good bet to sneak into the top 15 come draft day.

Fiddler is a work in progress for certain, but he shows a very high ceiling on both sides of the puck. Defensively, the sky is the limit as Fiddler is an incredibly strong player with a very good work ethic who is not afraid to play the physical game. With his long reach and strong skating, it's very hard to go around him. With his size and power, it's virtually impossible to go through him. The only way to beat Fiddler is to out-think him, as the nuances of his defensive game all need work -- positioning, gaps, anticipation. This is not to say his hockey IQ is lacking -- as stated, with a July birthday Fiddler is very young, and he has thus far over-relied on his physical gifts and simply needs coaching and development to improve in the more subtle aspects of patrolling a blueline.

The knock on Fiddler in this analytic-and-statistic obsessed scouting generation has been his offensive production, which was good-but-not-great with a 10g-33a-43p line in 64 games. The more one watches Fiddler however, the more one realizes the skill set is there and he is further from his ceiling in the offensive game than defensive. He can shoot, he can skate, and he's a better-than-expected puck handler. Though he is susceptible to mental mistakes with the puck, he shows flashes of being a decent passer. Still, with his rocket of a shot I suspect most of his scoring totals will come from simply launching the puck on net.

The team which drafts Fiddler will have to be patient, as he is a raw work in progress and his development arc could take 4 or 5 years before he's ready for the NHL. But the potential rewards are certainly significant -- the possibility of a huge, mobile and physical shut-down defender who can also tally double-digit goal totals annually and offer several 40+ point seasons at the highest levels. As such, it's tough to see him getting past the top 20 picks in the 2025 NHL Draft.
I think Fiddler will be picked higher than expected. GMs and journalists have different opinions about this type of a player. He is right defenseman with skating, physics, size on a weaker draft. He isn't my favorite or something but with years I think Fiddler is the player some GMs would love to draft in the middle of the first round.
 
I think Fiddler will be picked higher than expected. GMs and journalists have different opinions about this type of a player. He is right defenseman with skating, physics, size on a weaker draft. He isn't my favorite or something but with years I think Fiddler is the player some GMs would love to draft in the middle of the first round.

NJ drafted Silayev who is basically a big strong good skating defense first guy and that pick was well received. In today’s NHL you can’t have too many good skaters on defense with size and strength
 
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NJ drafted Silayev who is basically a big strong good skating defense first guy and that pick was well received. In today’s NHL you can’t have too many good skaters on defense with size and strength
Fiddler for the 2025 draft is not close to Silayev for the 2024 draft, but theoretically I agree with you. Silayev could probably handle a role in the NHL right now, while Fiddler might not see the pros until 2029 or so. I love Fiddler as a pick in the 20s which a winning organization can stash and develop. My only worry is that he goes in the 10-15 range because of the size/skating/bloodlines/RD thing and the team which drafts him rushes his development because they took him so high.

I think of Fiddler more like Dylan Samberg (one of my favorite 2017 sleepers as you might recall) in his draft year -- all the tools and intangibles are there, but they have yet to co-align. Like Samberg, Fiddler has a good hockey IQ but not an elite one, so he simply needs time, coaching and reps. It's my conviction Fiddler will get there, it's just going to take time.
 
I think Fiddler will be picked higher than expected. GMs and journalists have different opinions about this type of a player. He is right defenseman with skating, physics, size on a weaker draft. He isn't my favorite or something but with years I think Fiddler is the player some GMs would love to draft in the middle of the first round.
I really like Fiddler, as you can certainly tell, but he might have too much to work on to justify a top 15 pick. I love him anywhere post #20-overall, but of course I agree with you that some NHL front office will be drooling so heavily at his combination of size/skating/bloodlines/RD that he's a possibility to go in the top 12, maybe even the top 10.

I can see Fiddler going as high as #9 to the perennially "what in the world are they thinking?" Buffalo Sabres, who are perennially desperate at RD. We also have to keep in mind that Boston picks #7 and the last time they had early picks in a draft they passed up Kyle Connor and Mat Barzal for Jake Zboril and Zach Senyshyn. They are also a front office with a huge emphasis on size.

Personally I think Mrtka -- a far more polished RD -- goes to one of these two teams, but Fiddler is still a possibility to sneak up higher than we all expect in the draft, as you said.
 
I really like Fiddler, as you can certainly tell, but he might have too much to work on to justify a top 15 pick. I love him anywhere post #20-overall, but of course I agree with you that some NHL front office will be drooling so heavily at his combination of size/skating/bloodlines/RD that he's a possibility to go in the top 12, maybe even the top 10.

I can see Fiddler going as high as #9 to the perennially "what in the world are they thinking?" Buffalo Sabres, who are perennially desperate at RD. We also have to keep in mind that Boston picks #7 and the last time they had early picks in a draft they passed up Kyle Connor and Mat Barzal for Jake Zboril and Zach Senyshyn. They are also a front office with a huge emphasis on size.

Personally I think Mrtka -- a far more polished RD -- goes to one of these two teams, but Fiddler is still a possibility to sneak up higher than we all expect in the draft, as you said.
Reason why I said "in the middle of the first round" is existence of Mrtka. Buffalo looks like a team that desperately need in RD. On the other hand they are drafting BPA in their view draft after draft. So may be they will pass away from both.
I don't know what Boston will do on this dradt. They need everything. It is do sad that Devils didn't trade something nothing to Boston for the first round pick before the 24-25 season or in the beginning of it.

When Fitz said he will change the lineup, its interesting how he wanna act. Does he wanna trade his second round pick for players, or trade some players for picks, or with picks, or sign free agents. Really hard to understand what we can wait from the draft when we know about his desire to make changes but we don't know what kind of a strategy he will pick.
I hope he will save at least some picks for drafting, because like we see, Devils do well in second round, but all of this trades with picks are doing mostly nothing for the big picture. I hope if he will decide to make s trade with picks but for longer term younger player.
 
The Athletic just released a mock draft:

I have a few disagreements, of course. My mock is leaning more like this:

1 NYI LD Schaefer
2 SJ C/W Misa
3 CHI C Frondell
4 UTA C Desnoyers
5 NSH C/W Hagens
6 PHI LW Martone
7 BOS C McQueen
8 SEA LD Smith
9 BUF RD Mrtka
10 ANH C O'Brien
11 PIT LW Lakovic
12 NYR LW Eklund
13 DET LD Aitcheson
14 CLB C Martin
15 VAN LW Bear
 
Seems like more momentum towards Connor Bedard shifting to wing a la Steven Stamkos. I had Porter Martone for the Blackhawks pick but perhaps another center could make sense.

I'd be a little surprised if Brady Martin made it past Pittsburgh. The Sault Ste. Marie connection with Kyle Dubas might be too strong.
 
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