The absolute hardest player I've watched so far, maybe even back to the last class. I hate guys like this who leave me confused. I had one putrid watch, one strong one (like 10 PPs!), and a couple okay ones.
I actually don't really think he thinks the game fast. His PP/ES splits are both impressive and red flag territory (50 powerplay points). Impressive because he's The Guy on a well coached PP. Great at running half wall; he is a really skillful passer. At 5v5, I find he's all over the place. Not good defensively. But even with the puck, for a guy with good tools, constantly weird choices if it's not some open rush play. He excels with space is my unifying theory. Decisions and skill start breaking down under tighter pressure, ton of invisible shifts. But I see the highs, so I'm more confused than fully out.
The guys at the top of the draft are known commodities -- people sometimes think it's the ceilings, but it's as much or more the floors that put them there. If you want to point to every Kopitar or Bergeron today (again, I think you can't compare drafting practices 20 years old), you'd find it doesn't happen a lot in the ~10-25 range. In a deeper class, I think Desnoyers is more in that 10-20 range skill-set. I'm being generous because 1Cs usually either go in the lottery, or they go in Thomas, Aho, Point, Thompson range. Few in between. Because the next Kopitar (say, Barkov) are either complete knowns with loud tools or harder to predict 99th percentile ceilings, usually with other risks or a non-linear progression.
I think Desnoyers' optimistic ceiling is a 50-60 point center which strong underlying numbers. Valuable. I'll give an example: I had Robert Thomas ranked top 10 with a sub point/game draft year with playoffs. Had him above Suzuki, who had vastly better production (and I was a touch too harsh on him, so it's not all back pats). I wouldn't have said Thomas was a 90 point center in the making, but I saw "It." His tape was also the x factor, well-rounded kind, and frankly, I'm a sucker for that stuff more than flashy and substance free. But the passing chance creating was juicier; his ability to shield the puck to do so felt standout. I just don't know if Desnoyers has that single high end identifiable trait. What is he tangibly plus at? I want something to sink my teeth into and as others have said, the Q isn't terribly strong.