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

Senator Stanley

Registered User
Dec 11, 2003
8,117
2,535
Visit site
I'm not totally shocked by Yakemchuk being left out, but he and Parekh both not being there is pretty surprising. In the summer it felt like those two could end up fighting for the same spot, even if it was just as the 7th defenceman.

I think Yakemchuk was hurt by a number of factors. First and most importantly, he wasn't good enough in the summer showcase, where he really needed to stake his claim to a spot. Add in the fact that Sam Dickinson has been absolutely dominant in the OHL, and has basically stolen a PP spot with his play. And add in the fact that Schaefer has really emerged and likely is the new front runner for the 7th defenceman slot. And finally, add in the fact that Yakemchuk has never been seen by Hockey Canada as a top guy in his age group (whereas guys like Cam Allen and Caden Price have been), and Hockey Canada historically likes its pets, making him an underdog to begin with.

Since August he's been not very good at the Hockey Canada camp, he's been fine in the WHL, and he's been - relative to expectations - great in an NHL camp. Evidently, that's not good enough.
 
Last edited:

Sens of Anarchy

Registered User
Jul 9, 2013
67,369
53,153

Who runs Canada’s power play(s) now?

Pronman: The decision to cut Parekh and Yakemchuk will be questioned if Canada’s power play struggles in the big games. Tanner Molendyk, Oliver Bonk, Dickinson and Schaefer are all very talented offensive players, and they are better two-way players. I would not call them true PP1 types for a typical Canada team. I probably would have brought one of Parekh or Yakemchuk and played them in a specialist role.

Bultman: You can make a case that Parekh and Yakemchuk are the best pure offensive D in Canada’s player pool, so leaving them off has to be seen as a major vote of confidence in players like Schaefer, Molendyk and Dickinson (who, to his credit, is outscoring Parekh by a wide margin so far this year). With Dickinson’s two-way profile, though, it felt like this team could take him in a prominent role and still have room for a prototypical power-play QB somewhere else in the lineup.

Certainly, there are multiple players in this group that can run a power play, though — and maybe that ends up being Schaefer, who has been great to start the season in Erie.


Wheeler: Molendyk, Dickinson and Schaefer are the natural candidates to run Canada’s power plays now, no question, but I think there’s also a scenario where Bonk plays his bumper role from London (they used him a little there even last year) and they have two D on one of the units (likely the second).
 

BondraTime

Registered User
Nov 20, 2005
29,817
25,521
East Coast
They have an interview with Staios from 2 weeks ago after their initial projected roster where the Athletic left Yak off, saying Canada would be calling Ottawa begging to release Yak for the WJ’s if they kept him and that he doesn’t see how he’s not top pairing every situation on the WJ team.

Have to be extremely, extremely disappointed he’s not even at their 10 camp invites.

Pronman, unquestionably the biggest Yak believer, said he hasn’t been as good as one would hope, and scouts still don’t trust him defensively:

“Both are top-10 picks who have been excellent junior defensemen and have dynamic offensive traits. However, both of their first halves haven’t been as good as hoped for, and scouts still have some concerns about how trustworthy they are defensively.”

“I would probably take one of those players, even if in a limited role but ultimately the staff likely felt they couldn’t trust either at even strength.“
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Sens of Anarchy

Knave

Registered User
Mar 6, 2007
21,978
2,664
Ottawa
2006 Torino vibes with these camp invites. Not a bad idea to clean up Hockey Canada before the Olympics maybe this tournament will be the impetus. Or who knows, maybe the picks and omissions work out for them.

Regardless for Yakemchuk specifically you hope it lights a fire under him to have more of an overall presence on the ice around things like puck recovery in his own zone, breaking out of the zone, etc...
 

Senator Stanley

Registered User
Dec 11, 2003
8,117
2,535
Visit site
2006 Torino vibes with these camp invites. Not a bad idea to clean up Hockey Canada before the Olympics maybe this tournament will be the impetus. Or who knows, maybe the picks and omissions work out for them.

Regardless for Yakemchuk specifically you hope it lights a fire under him to have more of an overall presence on the ice around things like puck recovery in his own zone, breaking out of the zone, etc...

They just put Al Murray in charge of the U20 team. This is his first year in the job and he will have it for a while.

 

Alf Silfversson

Registered User
Jun 8, 2011
6,088
5,244
We’re talking about an invite to camp here though, not the final team.

What happens if they get to camp and Dickinson struggles to build chemistry as QB of unit one?

Competition is good. Guess not in this selection process.

If they had chosen just one of Parekh/Yak, I would’ve understood. But to leave both off of the camp roster, in favor of Akey, Allen, etc?

Dumb dumb.

So much talent left off in favor of “roles”. This tournament isn’t a 7 game series where you grind the other team down. It’s single game elimination where you have to score.

Based on how this roster is shaping up, we’ll see a similar result to last year.

Yakemchuk isn’t even the biggest snub. I won’t start on the forwards.

I could see Yak being left out. Or Parekh being left out. I agree with you that to have neither of them at least in camp is bizarre.

Parekh to me has a game that could really flourish in the international game.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Bileur and DrEasy

Tuna99

Registered User
Sep 26, 2009
16,130
8,076
Staois G.M. The WJC team to its lowest seeding in 6th place in 25 years so maybe Takemchuk is payback from Hockey Canada
 

Burrowsaurus

Registered User
Mar 20, 2013
44,706
17,683
Not really great to hear pronman say Yakemchuk isn’t playing like he thought given he was obsessed with him last year.


And I mean all his goals are just pp bombs and a lot of his assists are simple passes.

He looked more exciting last year.
 

SpezDispenser

Registered User
Aug 15, 2007
27,586
7,158
Not really great to hear pronman say Yakemchuk isn’t playing like he thought given he was obsessed with him last year.


And I mean all his goals are just pp bombs and a lot of his assists are simple passes.

He looked more exciting last year.
They all count though. 9 goals in 20 games is delicious output.

But then, I'm not sure I care that much about the world juniors, although I usually watch.
 

Erik Alfredsson

Beast Mode Cowboy!
Jan 14, 2012
13,648
5,965
Not really great to hear pronman say Yakemchuk isn’t playing like he thought given he was obsessed with him last year.


And I mean all his goals are just pp bombs and a lot of his assists are simple passes.

He looked more exciting last year.
As long as he's doing those things less in an attempt to focus on rounding out his game by working on some flaws then I have no problem with it. I'm sure the Sens development staff gave him feedback on what they'd like to see him improve on, and his dedication to that is a very important thing.

To still have solid production while focusing on his development first is a promising thing in my opinion.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Nac Mac Feegle

Nac Mac Feegle

wee & free
Jun 10, 2011
35,544
9,941
2006 Torino vibes with these camp invites. Not a bad idea to clean up Hockey Canada before the Olympics maybe this tournament will be the impetus. Or who knows, maybe the picks and omissions work out for them.

Regardless for Yakemchuk specifically you hope it lights a fire under him to have more of an overall presence on the ice around things like puck recovery in his own zone, breaking out of the zone, etc...

I've heard that one before. How many years has HC been all about politicking and favoring certain teams/leagues/agents & reps over others? Seems like it's been at least 2+ decades now. Ever since the program of excellence came in during the 1990s and bigger dollars started flowing into the junior league and the WJC.
 

Tuna99

Registered User
Sep 26, 2009
16,130
8,076
I’d trade Yakumchuk for an elite RW, someone who could play at Timmy’s speed and put up 70-80 points
 

mysens

Registered User
Apr 9, 2013
1,095
964
Sheesh... imagine how Steve Staois and Andlauer feel about this. Another fail is looming. Owning and running an NHL team is harder than they thought.
 

Ad

Upcoming events

Ad

Ad