I like the group we have on defense, but Byram shoots right up to the top of that list pretty easily. The only kid who even be in the conversation in terms of upside/odds is Miller. He's that good.
Granted, taking Byram doesn't solve our center concerns. But I don't rule out the possibility of dealing from a position of strength from our defense and our organizational depth if we get to that point.
In an ideal world, the BPA also fills a need. But in situations where it doesn't quite align that way, I'm okay building high-end depth and potentially filling other areas as we move forward.
As for Lavoie, I continue to be lukewarm on him.
I think he's a player who further along physically, and older than some of his peers and that is what is driving him at the junior levels. He looks like a support player to me. Not a bad support player by any stretch, but I don't know if I see a high-end support player either. For me, there is more intriguing talent in the top 20 or so picks. For a kid who is already 18, and missed last year's draft by a week, I'm not really blown away by what I am seeing. In some cases, he is 9 or 10 months older than some of the other talents slated for the first round of this draft.
My ideal "dream" scenario would be to grab a kid like Byram at 5 or 6, and then have one of the forward falls into the teens (Newhook, Turcotte, Zegras, etc.).
With the way this draft is slated, I would move two firsts in the 20s to get into the teens. In an ideal world, we have four firsts to work with, so moving two picks to move up would still leave us with 3 first rounders. But again, that's the "daydream" scenario.