I hate to wade into the thoughtful and well researched debate on Yak v. Perekh, but I cannot help it. I am impressed by both sides and can fully understand drafting either. Yak's size and gnarl is very tempting. Such a player can become chris pronger clone, with a great shot, and powerful build. Perekh is a totally different player. Much smaller, much more slender, quicker, and sneakier with better skating, better edges, and a sniping wrister.
Personally, Id rather perekh by a mile.
Yak is a major defensive liability. Physicality is only useful if your positioning is sound. His is mediocre. Furthermore, his shot is amazing and he is very physical, but his skating is only OK, and he is a high risk-high reward player for offense. If he played far better defensively and took fewer risks, he'd have 20-30 fewer points (more like 50pts insead of 71), and hes be more or a 2nd round player. This risk taking leads to goals against ALOT and you just cant do that in the big leagues. His near team worst +/- is not a fluke. He played alot of minutes because the team was garbage, but I bet he ends up a bust unless he gets some super duper defensive coaching who teaches him how to make better reads, when to jump up and when not to, and how to play good positional D. Love the size and strength, but the NHL is no longer a league of giants and skill>physicality in today's game.
Perekh is a much more exciting prospect to me. He is all over the place, can walk the blueline, jump in back door, join the rush, and yet also get back and play solid D. His edges are solid, he can transition forward to backward and open himself up nicely. His wrist shot is also completely off the charts. So quick that he can get it off from anywhere in a blink, so in the age of blocked shots, that kind of wrister is gold. This is why he led Saginaw in scoring by over 20 pts while also putting up the +39, which is +11 over the next highest player. Sometimes, guys' stats are big because of the team they play for, but not this time.
the other thing I like about Perekh is that his game translates well to the new NHL, where D needs to be able to join the rush, walk the line, Attack the net, and have good quickness. Also an accurate wrister tops a booming slapper 100 to 1, and Perekh's wrister may be the best in the league. Cale makar is just 5'11". Quinn Hughes is 5'10".. Adam Fox is 5'11". Morissey is 6'0". Size is just not that important if the skating, quick shooting, and hockey sense is there. When Perekh is on the ice, the Defensive wingers better have their head on a swivel because he will sneak down on the back door and snipe. He's exactly the kind of quick offensive defensemen that the sharks need. Muk, Thrun, etc are fine in their own zone, but they aint scaring anybody offensively. Cagnoni and Perekh would give the sharks two of the top scoring D in juniors, who are also both massive + players. With good coaching of defensive positioning, that kind of offensive quickness and danger from the blueline makes all the difference.
BTW, if Perekh were as good as Karlsson in his prime, ummm.... that would be a ridiculously good pick. The dude won a norris!
Frankly, if Perekh falls to 10, I would LOVE the sharks to flip #43 (NJs own pick) and #14 to grab him from NJ. I strongly doubt he'll fall that far, but I would LOVE to grab him. After Buium, Silayev, and Levshunov, I'd rank Perekh fourth best D (in line with central scouting). This is why I suspect he goes 7th overall, with Cele, Demi, and Lind as the other three picks. I dont think the sharks can get into that range and tempt Ottawa or Seattle, though maybe a package of #14, #43, 2025 4th rounder, Bordy, and Cardwell? Ottawa is really short on prospects after not picking in the first three rounds last year and not until #64 in 2022. They need to restock and in this draft, where picks 4-12 are all kinda crapshoots, getting a package of NHL ready young player (Bordy), reasonable rising prospect (cardwell), an additional mid 2nd rounder this year and a 4th mext year is a pretty nice package to move back just 7 spots. For the sharks is a very small price to pay for a high end D prospect since they dont need more young forwards (Mack, Smith, Musty, Bystedt, Haltunnen, Eklund, Edstrom...), they have #33 still for yet another good player, and the 20254th is largely a throw in. It's nearly assured that he will be there at #7 overall since the top 6 are very likely to be some mix of Mack-Demi-Lev-Buium-Lindstrom-Silayev.
That's my two cents.