Prospect Info: 2024 7th OA : Carter Yakemchuk (RHD)

Beech

Registered User
Nov 25, 2020
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you have Travis Hamonic who is probably gone.
You have Jensen who will be 35 next year. Will he hold up?
You have JBD who dos not appear to be moving the needle all that much

There are zero RHDs in the AHL that look to be making any impact.

2021 draft pick Ben Rogers (RHD) is a bust. 2022 picks were LHD and do not appear to be moving the needle.

Carter's road to a spot on the Sens in 2025/2026 is paved in gold.

He will be 20 .. He has a late birthday (Sept 29). He was drafted more or less, a year after his peer group.

I will be shocked if the Kid is not up here next year. And if he is not, what will they do. They have 2 spots possibly open.
 

PlayOn

Registered User
Jun 22, 2010
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you have Travis Hamonic who is probably gone.
You have Jensen who will be 35 next year. Will he hold up?
You have JBD who dos not appear to be moving the needle all that much

There are zero RHDs in the AHL that look to be making any impact.

2021 draft pick Ben Rogers (RHD) is a bust. 2022 picks were LHD and do not appear to be moving the needle.

Carter's road to a spot on the Sens in 2025/2026 is paved in gold.

He will be 20 .. He has a late birthday (Sept 29). He was drafted more or less, a year after his peer group.

I will be shocked if the Kid is not up here next year. And if he is not, what will they do. They have 2 spots possibly open.
If the Sens don’t like JBD enough, they can always look for a bottom pairing RD and keep either JBD/Hamonic as a 7.

I hear you on Jensen, but his skating is still really good. It’s hard to fathom a major drop off next season as he should still be able to play even if he does lose a step.

I suspect it’ll have more to do with how good Yakemchuk is than us not having any other options. I don’t think they will keep him in the AHL all year if he’s tearing it up but I don’t think we are in such a dire position that we’ll have to force him into the NHL.
 
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Golden_Jet

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Sep 21, 2005
26,183
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It will be his age 19 season right? There's definitely a chance that he's back in Jr, it is not remotely a guarantee he makes the SENS. The memorial cup is in the W next year too, so there's a little extra motivation to go for it.

Also, in Jr. hockey the concept of a rebuild is not like in the big leagues. Picks are so unpredictable that loading up is not a sure fire path to success. For that reason you see a lot of teams holding on to their stars to chase a playoff win or two, cash in on merchandise sales and hope the player returns for their age 19 season where you'll then have an excellent chance at a deep run. It made no sense that Regina held on to Bedard other than merch and a Hail Mary at a playoff win or two. Point is, there are different things at play than a pending UFA situation.

You used the Giants (Ostapchuk) as an example and I think you're talking about his non injury season in 2022 (which is more comparable to Yaks season now)? That year they underachieved but had a team that showed a lot of positives with Lysell. They actually played the top teams really well before the trade deadline, Everett specifically. They held on to their players and ended up pulling off an upset for the ages that went a lot further for the franchise than blowing it up, I would argue.

We will see what happens. Personally I am hoping he is traded to the BC division (I'm a season ticket holder) but want to see him stay in CGY as long as possible because it's a good development situation for him.
No, he’s 19 now,
 
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Beech

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Nov 25, 2020
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If the Sens don’t like JBD enough, they can always look for a bottom pairing RD and keep either JBD/Hamonic as a 7.

I hear you on Jensen, but his skating is still really good. It’s hard to fathom a major drop off next season as he should still be able to play even if he does lose a step.

I suspect it’ll have more to do with how good Yakemchuk is than us not having any other options. I don’t think they will keep him in the AHL all year if he’s tearing it up but I don’t think we are in such a dire position that we’ll have to force him into the NHL.
Jensen has this year and next on his contract. It pays him $3 M next year. By Christmas, he is down to $1.5 M. Making him perfect trade bait. And making him 35. So, unlikely to re-sign him. Unless you do a 1 and 1.

JDB/HAMONIC are both UFAs.. what do you do???

Come Christmas of 2025, 1-3 spots are almost surely open.

Unless Yak. craps the bed in training camp. You may have little to no choice but to put him on. There is literally no one to play RHD.

Dip into FA and now you take risks. And there are few trade chits.

The wagon is far more hitched to Yak. than people assume. Plus ZUUUUUBBBBB, is starting a pretty good trend, yearly injuries!
 

Micklebot

Moderator
Apr 27, 2010
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34,639
Jensen has this year and next on his contract. It pays him $3 M next year. By Christmas, he is down to $1.5 M. Making him perfect trade bait. And making him 35. So, unlikely to re-sign him. Unless you do a 1 and 1.

JDB/HAMONIC are both UFAs.. what do you do???

Come Christmas of 2025, 1-3 spots are almost surely open.

Unless Yak. craps the bed in training camp. You may have little to no choice but to put him on. There is literally no one to play RHD.

Dip into FA and now you take risks. And there are few trade chits.

The wagon is far more hitched to Yak. than people assume. Plus ZUUUUUBBBBB, is starting a pretty good trend, yearly injuries!
Hamonic is gone after this season, that's the only very likely open spot, and it's not one that is difficult to fill.

We likely re-sign Jensen at the end of next season (essentially he replaces Hamonic's role of older vet), very little chance we'd trade him at the deadline next year unless things are going extremely poorly. Next year should be a year we expect to be in the playoffs, we aren't moving RHD that can play in your top 4 even if he is getting old. Only way we trade him is if Yakemchuk forces him out of the top 4, even then, we'd probably just use him as an internal deadline acquisition.

JBD might get another contract, provided he's still interested in staying here being a 6/7 and not testing the free market. Again, not a hard guy to replace if you aren't worried about upside.

Yakemchuk will certainly get a shot at the roster, particularly if JBD is gone, but I could see us exploring the UFA market as well. We'll want to have the option to start him in the AHL, so there won't be a spot waiting for him. By the 2026-27 season, he should be ready for full time

Guys like Savard, Dumoulin, Maata, Rutta, those are the ones we'll take a look at imo.
 

PlayOn

Registered User
Jun 22, 2010
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2,540
Jensen has this year and next on his contract. It pays him $3 M next year. By Christmas, he is down to $1.5 M. Making him perfect trade bait. And making him 35. So, unlikely to re-sign him. Unless you do a 1 and 1.

JDB/HAMONIC are both UFAs.. what do you do???

Come Christmas of 2025, 1-3 spots are almost surely open.

Unless Yak. craps the bed in training camp. You may have little to no choice but to put him on. There is literally no one to play RHD.

Dip into FA and now you take risks. And there are few trade chits.

The wagon is far more hitched to Yak. than people assume. Plus ZUUUUUBBBBB, is starting a pretty good trend, yearly injuries!
Well yeah if we trade everyone then there is no one to play RD. I assume we won’t be trading everyone.

As it stands we have Jensen, Zub and the ability to choose between Hamonic/JBD as I doubt we keep both. Then you just go find a bottom pairing guy.

I think you’re right that Yak will be needed at some point in the season ie when there are injuries but I don’t think he’ll need to start here unless he dominates in camp/pre-season.
 
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BondraTime

Registered User
Nov 20, 2005
29,711
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East Coast
Think it's extremely, extremely likely he's in the AHL next season.

Sens will sign a placeholder for a season or two.

When he pushes his way up, bring him in, but don't think he's going to be gifted a spot

He's got much to work on, AHL will be beneficial for him
 

Sens in Process

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Oct 1, 2012
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Who’s watching him play? Is he pushing the play 5v5?
@Sens in Process
He is playing with restraint and gambling less under this coaching staff, so pinching and forcing plays is kept to a minimum.

At 5 on 5, the whole team struggles. It is a team that generally cannot sustain pressure in the offensive zone. It is one and done. The team primarily scores at even strength on breakdowns and odd man rushes.

Yak is playing well 5 on 5. His breakout passing, if I may say so, is fairly high end. He hits guys with clean passes, generating speed through the neutral zone, The problem is the team lacks the talent to play the sort of puck possession game that can adequately make use of their defensemen. Two cases in point, Reese Hamilton, an offensive D-man projected to be a 2nd or 3rd rounder in the 2025 draft, has only 3 points in 20 games, while having 31 in 41 games last year. Pisarczyk, another D, had 18 points in 55 games last yea. He has 0 points in 19 games this year. Overall the team is scoring a bit less this year, while shaving off more than 0.5 goals a game. The transition to a more defensive team, combined with mediocre overall talent, has depressed some of offensive numbers.

I think Yak looks great and there are plenty of reasons to optimistic about him. He is a player that will excel when surrounded with better talent.

Calgary has been playing better lately and came off a very successful road trip. They also acquired an overage d-man, Kalem Parker, who should also help.

 

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