You're not going anywhere, especially when you just started talking about Carbonneau.
If you insist.
Carbonneau is a bit of a weird one for me in this year's draft. He has been quite inconsistent in my viewings despite being generally a very good player for the Armada this year.
Let me preface this by saying that I like a vast majority of what Carbonneau does on the ice.
Carbonneau has very good skating ability, dangles his way out of trouble on a nightly basis, is a veritable puck-hound along the boards, a physical buzzsaw type of player always getting involved in scrums and stirring things up. Carbonneau also shoots the puck well, has a pretty good release, passes the puck well, protects the puck with very good technique/strength, and he's also 6'1 and 190+ pounds so that's definitely not a small player, moreso considering how strong on his skates Carbonneau is.
And I even like his defense overall, though that tends to be somewhat inconsistent on a night-to-night basis. Some nights you're getting "A+" defense while others you're getting incosistent, maybe even a bit lackadaisical efforts defensively.
So yeah, there's very plainly a lot to like about Carbonneau's game, as I've said.
But then I look a bit more closely and I see shifts (even entire nights) where Carbonneau will play absolutely disheveled, rover-like hockey for Blainville-Boisbriand, and not in a good way. In those shifts, Carbonneau goes absolutely everywhere on the ice but the puck eludes him, and so he spends boatloads of time on the ice trying and playing HARD whilst accomplishing close to nothing concretely.
And that, to me, is a definite red flag in a prospect considering that it could entail a flaw in hockey sense, the single most-important attribute there is.
It is entirely possible that Justin Carbonneau has been masking a very "middling" (or maybe even lesser) hockey sense by using/abusing his amazing combo of skating/skill/strength against CHL competition. He certainly wouldn't be the first, and the Red Wings got burned in the past in a similar way with Zadina (sorry for re-opening wounds but it needed to be said).
Thing is, I also see Carbonneau making very "heads-up" and smart plays while on the ice, he generally tracks the puck well and reacts quickly when it is around him, so those shifts/nights where Carbonneau looks "off" could also be attributed to simple inconsistency rather than an inherent, and thus much-harder to fix, flaw on the player's part.
We'll hopefully know more about that as Blainville-Boisbriand battles for a playoff berth in the East Division of the QMJHL and Carbonneau faces tougher competition and challenges that could potentially help us statuate one way or another on this issue.
But until then I personally am a bit ambivalent about Carbonneau in that I think his ceiling is tremendous, and that his floor is similarly high given how strong he is defensively, but that his rover-style and potential hockey sense issues could majorly hamstring him at the NHL level.
On Carbonneau's good nights, with how "in-your-face" he can get with his speed/strength/skill combo going full-throttle attacking defenders on the rush, challenging them every inch of the way physically, or isolating them to cause turnovers along the boards, he is plain awesome to watch play. When Carbonneau plays in that fashion I legitimately see shades of Brad Marchand in his play.
Which is why I'd still have Carbonneau in my top-15 despite all I've written about my concerns.
I seem to remember him being really well regarded in youth hockey, but only really know him by name. If the public punters are right, he gets taken in the back half of the 1st I assume.
There's a decent chance Nesbitt does get taken in the latter part of the first, but I also think he could slip into the second-round as I find Nesbitt's offensive toolkit to be good all-around but not great.
He also has slight skating issues despite improvements (acceleration is currently below-average for the NHL at best), and is not especially good defensively so a checking-line role might also not be the best fit for his playstyle in the NHL.
Personally, I'd lean towards having Nesbitt as one of the absolute top picks of the second-round. But other people will see things differently and that's fine as well. Heck, they may well be right and I completely wrong.
And that's the beauty of it all.