Prospect Info: STI 2024 Devils-Centric Mock Draft For People Sick Of Everyone Else’s Cruddy Mock Drafts

StevenToddIves

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Ok that’s fair. @Guadana and @StevenToddIves and @evnted what say you?
My rankings aren't done yet, but I can say with some conviction that my first tier is Celebrini and Demidov, and my second tier is the next maybe 10 guys. In no order, I see all of these players as similar in overall talent, and who you like might have more to do with what you're looking for in terms of position and play style:

LD Buium, Dickinson, Silayev, Solberg
RD Levshunov, Yakemchuk
LW Catton, Iginla
RW Chernyshov, Nygard
C Hage, Helenius, Lindstrom

Of course I have some guys higher than other guys myself. I'm pretty sold on a 3-4 of Lindstrom and Buium but not sure what order I'll have them in. My 5-8 is looking like some ordering of Dickinson, Helenius, Levshunov and Nygard, but again I'm not sure what exactly it will look like. After that looks like some combination of Catton, Chernyshov, Hage, Iginla, Silayev, Solberg and Yakemchuk.

Ultimately, I disagree that there's any discernible talent differential between Dickinson, Helenius and Nygard. Positionally, I'd agree Dickinson would have the most appeal because he is potentially an all-situations, two-way, 20+ minute D who you can plug in anywhere in your top 4. Obviously, that's more valuable than any forward except maybe a 1C. But as much as that sounds like a huge endorsement of Dickinson, I'd also have trouble saying with any conviction that I have him too far ahead of Silayev or Solberg.

My point is that it's very close after the top 2 in the 2024 NHL draft. I can't say I've ever seen it closer in the 3-to-15 range. Maybe 2019, when I really saw the draft as Jack Hughes then a whole lot of talented kids who would make sense anywhere in the top 10.
 

Xirik

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The reason Dickinson rates higher to me then most of the other defense is that He's captain of his team and he's doing well leading his team towards winning the memorial cup.

He seems to give it his all every shift and I love those players on the Devils. Him having leadership qualities makes it an easy pick if he's available at 10th which I doubt.
 

Guadana

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Ok that’s fair. @Guadana and @StevenToddIves and @evnted what say you?

Dickinson isn't level above Nygard and Helenius now. Its missscoutong.
Even its questionable who has better ceiling because Nygard and Helenius are showing better iq, decision making and compete level on against harder competition. In the same time Dickinson makes positional mistakes and made wrong decisions with the puck.
I like him less than both Nygard and Helenius.

Ofcourse there should be no trades down because Flyers and Wild would love to draft Helenius and Nygard, especially if wild will not have top defensive options on the table.

But. Devils could and may be should draft Dickinson in this case. Dickinson is big, very mobile, fast enough, still good in positioning (if you compare him with other defensemen, its just Helenius and Nygard who are greater in this component of the game) reliable for any situation. He doesn't look like your first pp guy but we don't have to think about him as pp specialist with Luke and Nemec. Dickinson has everything to be top 4 defenseman who will play a lot of minutes. Its more important than finding your third line center or forechecking scorer. Dickinson is doing everything right from the technical part of the game, he has very good wheels. And he is good with the puck. I like his puck protection and puck handling much more than Silayevs. Dickinson is better skater than Buium, than Levshunov, than Parekh or Yakemchuk. Only Silayev looks like a better skater from a top of the draft. Dickinson is a good and fast skater, who is physical, very good with the puck, with hard shot, playing good defensive game, has great potential in puck battles. He is checking every boxes.

Of corse Helenius has ceiling of two way playmaking center and Nygard has ceiling of Tkachukesque player with much better defensive game. So if you are drafting for ceiling, Dickinson could be not your guy. He will kit be playmaking defenseman, he is good in transition, but still north south player. On the other hand he is making mistakes against transition, but I think he will develop this part of the game. Very important to use him on the stucked team, he is playing for very well trained London team as a big and mobile body against weaker competition.

But again - so projectable for very important role. Helenius would be blocked to play second or first center role, it will take time for Nygard to peak his game and its one of the hardest tasks to play power forward game, defensive game and scoring game in the same (its very rare, when player is forechecking, he opens a lot of space, it should be very good brain to not making mistakes and count timings, reason why Nygard is very rare and valuable player on the draft - he is big, smart enough, physical enough, fast enough, good skater etc).

But there are no huge or even big gaps between them now. Its reasonable to draft Dickinson over them. But its reasonable to draft Helenius or Nygard over other two for different reasons. No matter who will be picked, Devils should be very happy with the pick.
 

TBF1972

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STI 2024 Devils-Centric Mock Draft For People Sick Of Everyone Else’s Cruddy Mock Drafts

Yes, I am solving this problem the same way I do every year, which is by writing up my very own cruddy mock draft. Let’s face it — mock drafts are doomed to fail. Some jerk GM always goes off the board at #4 overall and ruins it for the rest of us. I mean, not that I’m insinuating the Columbus front office is jerk-laden, but then again maybe I am.

All 32 picks were made with the team in question’s draft tendencies and organizational needs in mind. This is not a ranking. No, the Devils are not trading the pick for a 36 year old goaltender. Just trying to get all the answers to the stupidest criticisms out of the way early so I can get on with the mock draft. I think those three should cover it. And yes, I realize that “jerk-laden” is not a word, even if you hyphenate it.

1 San Jose: C Macklin Celebrini, Boston U. NCAA let’s not get creative here. Celebrini is a text-book franchise center in every sense of the word. The dude is literally great at everything in hockey which fills a major need for San Jose, who last year was literally terrible at everything in hockey.

2 Chicago: W Ivan Demidov, SKA-St.Petersburg MHL the idea of the Blackhawks passing on a potential franchise forward with elite playmaking and puck handling skills to one day pair with the best shot in the league in Conor Bedard is plain ludicrous. Also, Chicago has another pick at #18, where in the 2024 class there will be other terrific RDs. There will not be any F with even close to the skill of the sublime Demidov.

3 Anaheim: RD Artyom Levshunov, Michigan St. NCAA contrary to popular belief, Anaheim is not thin at RD, they have two very good prospects in Tristan Luneau and Noah Warren. Still, in a stacked-with-talent prospect pipeline, it’s probably their lowest-end position and Levshunov has 1D upside on both sides of the puck.

4 Columbus: LD Anton Silayev, Nizhny Novgorod KHL the Blue Jackets are actually strong organizationally at LD with Mateychuk and Svozil -- but they have concentrated on building from the blueline out over the past year-plus and Silayev’s mix of 6’7 and high-end skating is exceptionally rare.

5 Montreal: C Cayden Lindstrom, Medicine Hat WHL Lindstrom falling to 5 has to be the Habs’ pipe dream — they need centers more than anything, and they need physical forwards aside from Slavkovsky for the top 6. A trio of Lindstrom, Suzuki and Owen Beck would set them up with a strong foundation up the middle for several seasons to come.

6 Utah: RD Zayne Parekh, Saginaw OHL wherever their geographical location, this organization seems to have multiple high picks every year and yet still the wheels keep spinning. Utah lacks a high-end offensive defenseman at the pro or prospect levels, and Parekh — with all his problems off the puck — is the highest end offensive defenseman available since Luke Hughes in 2021.

7 Ottawa: LW Tij Iginla, Kelowna WHL you can just hear all the hearts breaking in Calgary. But Iginla has been a late riser with his elite combination of shooting, stick-handling and compete level, and he’d be a huge PR win for the Senators, as well.

8 Seattle: LD Zeev Buium, Denver NCAA the Kraken need high-end talent on the blueline and Buium fits the bill — he might offer the most offensive upside aside from Parekh in the 2024 class, and he’s also quite strong on the defensive side of the puck.

9 Calgary: LD Sam Dickinson, London OHL the Flames have huge needs on the blueline in the pipeline. Dickinson’s mix of size, speed and exceptional two-way upside would immediately rocket him to the top of their prospect pool.


10 NEW JERSEY DEVILS: RW Michael Brandsegg-Nygård, Mora IK Allvenskan SWE
Honestly, this came down to two players — Nygard or Finnish center Konsta Helenius, and I struggled a lot with the final choice. But GM Tom Fitzgerald has shown and stated a desire to get more physical and tougher to play against in the top 6, and Nygard also offers a lot more than simply a power forward option which the Devils lack throughout the prospect pool. Nygard is also the best defensive forward in the 2024 class and one of the fastest skill forwards available. The 6’1-200 Norwegian also possesses an elite-level shot and an otherworldly combination of hockey IQ and compete level. Throw in the fact he played a great deal of center towards the end of the season, and he just makes perfect sense to New Jersey on too many levels to count.


11 Buffalo: RD Carter Yakemchuk, Calgary WHL the Sabres’ prospect pool is literally loaded at every position except RD, and Yakemchuk has a ton to offer. An electrifying offensive defenseman who hits like a freight train, there are a lot of parallels to a young Dion Phaneuf.

12 Philadelphia: LW/C Berkly Catton, Spokane WHL the Flyers’ forced trade of Cutter Gauthier left them with any top 6 scoring prospects in the pipeline aside from Matvei Michkov, who plays on the RW, not the left. Catton probably ranks 4th in the 2024 class in terms of overall offensive upside after only Demidov, Celebrini and Eiserman… and it’s tough to see a team with John Tortorella as coach drafting a player with as many defensive/hustle issues as Eiserman.

13 Minnesota: C Konsta Helenius, Jukurit FIN the Wild have drafted exceptionally well in the Bill Guerin era, and I can’t see them passing on a talent like Helenius — a player whose hockey IQ might be 2nd in the entire class after only Demidov. Helenius’ calling card is intelligence, but he also plays with enormous heart and checks every physical tool across the board without being quite elite in any of them.

14 San Jose: LW Cole Eiserman, US-NTDP the wild-card of the draft, Eiserman has a devastating shot, the best of a past half-decade of drafts after only Conor Bedard. However, his 200-foot game and consistency of effort are both well below average, which is certain to turn off several teams. For the Sharks, however — well, Eiserman is close friends with Celebrini which they would hope brings out the best in a player with a dynamic and rare ability to regularly top 50+ goals.

15 Detroit: RW Igor Chernyshov, Moskva KHL like the Devils, the Red Wings have a lot of skill in their scoring forwards but not a lot of power/interior play. Chernyshov is in the conversation with Lindstrom and Nygard for the best power forward in the 2024 class and also features an outstanding two-way game and some of the softest hands in the class.

16 St. Louis: RD Adam Jiricek, HC Plzen CZE the Blues are absolutely bereft in the prospect pool at RD and Jircek’s draft-year injury and subsequent rankings-drop could be a gift to them in the long run. Jiricek is a do-it-all bulldog with big-time upside on both sides of the puck.

17 Washington: C Michael Hage, Chicago USHL the Caps are extremely thin organizationally up the middle, and Hage is perhaps one of the most underrated players available for the 2024 class. Hage features high-end skating and a litany of high-end offensive tools, and was far-and-away the best player in the entire USHL over the last couple months of the season when he finally recovered from injury and personal tragedy enough to put his game together.

18 Chicago: RD EJ Emery, US-NTDP the Blackhawks need RD more than anything buy a long-shot. This pick might raise a few eyebrows, but it’s fair to argue that Emery is the best defensive defender in the entire 2024 class and he’s also a terrific skater and athlete. Emery is incredibly competitive and physical; he offers extremely smart play with and without the puck. This kid is just a winner, and as such I expect him to be drafted far higher than his consensus ranking might indicate.

19 Vegas: RW Beckett Sennecke, Oshawa OHL after years of trading picks and picking low, Vegas needs some high-end offensive upside in the system. If he falls this far, Sennecke would fit the bill — his hands are electrifying and his playmaking is high-end, while his size and skating are both very good.

20 NY Islanders: C Sacha Boisvert, Muskegon USHL very much a Lamoriello-type player, Boisvert is an excellent defensive center who can also score and competes and think the game at high levels. After years of dealing away picks, the Islanders need pretty much everything, but Boisvert can certainly make the case for best player available this deep in the draft.

21 Los Angeles: RW Emil Hemming, TPS U20 FIN JR. the Kings looked downright slow and old in a first-round exit from the 2024 playoffs, and Hemming’s combination of speed, size and a canon-like shot would juice some athleticism into the future top 6.

22 Nashville: LD Stian Solberg, Valerenga NOR no organization drafts and develops defenders better than the Predators, who hit it again big-time with Solberg. The young Norwegian mixes outstanding speed and play with the puck with a 6’2-205 frame and perhaps the most devastating physicality of any defender in the draft class. Solberg is a steal here, offering huge upside and near-NHL readiness.

23 Toronto: C Cole Beaudoin, Barrie OHL tough to figure what a desperate Leafs organization will do at the draft in 2024, and trading the pick is certainly a possibility. I have them taking a potentially elite defensive and physical middle-6 center who oozes character and compete, the very things they have seemingly lacked in the Dubas and post-Dubas eras. Beaudoin offers everything but speed and flash, but his in-tight game and forechecking/cycling abilities might be tops of the 2024 center class.

24 Colorado: LW Andrew Basha, Medicine Hat WHL the Avs have been building with team speed for years, and Basha can downright fly. He’s also a high-end playmaker and puck-handler with big-time offensive upside.

25 Ottawa: RD Charlie Elick, Brandon WHL like many teams, the Senators have needs at RD and Elick is everything their front-office loves — huge (6’3-200), physical, Canadian, skates well, smart with the puck and exceptional without it.

26 Montreal: RD Dominik Badinka, Malmo J20 SWE JR. The Habs have built a stunningly talented prospect pool but, like many teams, have needs at RD. Fortunately for these teams, the 2024 class is overflowing with potential top-4 RD. This young Czech is a terrific skater with a smart and polished defensive game, size/physicality and some sneaky offensive upside.

27 Carolina: LW Trevor Connelly, Tri-City USHL as one scout has said, “Connelly has first round talent but last round character”, and that drops a kid who should be a top 10 pick on skill and speed alone far lower in the draft than his natural abilities would normally indicate. Hurricanes coach Rod Brind’Amour has shown a repeated belief that he and he alone can take low character players and make them into clutch team guys, and though it hasn’t really worked yet there is no visible indication of him stopping any time soon.

28 Calgary: RW Ryder Ritchie, Prince Albert WHL the Flames reach into their backyard to take a high-motor speedy winger who can excel on a checking or scoring line. Ryder has more skill than some have credited him with, and he's a player who gets every last ounce out of his natural ability, making him pretty much a can't-miss NHLer.

29 Anaheim: LW/RW Nikita Artamonov, Nizhny Novgorod KHL the Ducks might already have the top prospect pool in the NHL and they get another really good one in the high-effort, high-IQ two-way winger with near elite playmaking ability.

30 NY Rangers: LW/RW Liam Greentree, Windsor OHL though some have him slotted for the top half of the 1st round, it’s possible Greentree’s skating woes drop him a bit towards the end of the round. Rangers GM Chris Drury likes big forwards with skill, and this 6’2-200 forward lit up the OHL for 90 points.

31 Dallas: C Jett Luchanko, C Guelph OHL the Stars draft exceptionally well, and there’s no reason to believe this will not continue with the speedy, smart, skilled and high-motor Luchanko. He’s a versatile player who can slot perfectly into any line and excel on both the PP and PK.

32 Philadephia: LD Alfons Freij, Vaxjo U20 SWE JR. the Flyers need some bolstering in the prospect ranks at both sides of the blueline. Here I have them swinging for the fences with the lightning-fast and sublimely skilled Freij — a project perhaps, but one offering some big-time upside.
devils centric?

i only see one devils pick at #10.

do better next time. you can always mock trade the devils fans from my ignore list to gain more 1st round picks.
 

Guadana

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Im fine with anyone except danes, no danes in New Jersey!
Yeah! Some random swede-danes beef on NJD board!

get your priorities corrected

first dano meme
second like
third whatever
Steve is always trying to prioritize some stupid things like career or personal life. Its great he is losing to do it often.
 

StevenToddIves

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Dickinson isn't level above Nygard and Helenius now. Its missscoutong.
Even its questionable who has better ceiling because Nygard and Helenius are showing better iq, decision making and compete level on against harder competition. In the same time Dickinson makes positional mistakes and made wrong decisions with the puck.
I like him less than both Nygard and Helenius.

Ofcourse there should be no trades down because Flyers and Wild would love to draft Helenius and Nygard, especially if wild will not have top defensive options on the table.

But. Devils could and may be should draft Dickinson in this case. Dickinson is big, very mobile, fast enough, still good in positioning (if you compare him with other defensemen, its just Helenius and Nygard who are greater in this component of the game) reliable for any situation. He doesn't look like your first pp guy but we don't have to think about him as pp specialist with Luke and Nemec. Dickinson has everything to be top 4 defenseman who will play a lot of minutes. Its more important than finding your third line center or forechecking scorer. Dickinson is doing everything right from the technical part of the game, he has very good wheels. And he is good with the puck. I like his puck protection and puck handling much more than Silayevs. Dickinson is better skater than Buium, than Levshunov, than Parekh or Yakemchuk. Only Silayev looks like a better skater from a top of the draft. Dickinson is a good and fast skater, who is physical, very good with the puck, with hard shot, playing good defensive game, has great potential in puck battles. He is checking every boxes.

Of corse Helenius has ceiling of two way playmaking center and Nygard has ceiling of Tkachukesque player with much better defensive game. So if you are drafting for ceiling, Dickinson could be not your guy. He will kit be playmaking defenseman, he is good in transition, but still north south player. On the other hand he is making mistakes against transition, but I think he will develop this part of the game. Very important to use him on the stucked team, he is playing for very well trained London team as a big and mobile body against weaker competition.

But again - so projectable for very important role. Helenius would be blocked to play second or first center role, it will take time for Nygard to peak his game and its one of the hardest tasks to play power forward game, defensive game and scoring game in the same (its very rare, when player is forechecking, he opens a lot of space, it should be very good brain to not making mistakes and count timings, reason why Nygard is very rare and valuable player on the draft - he is big, smart enough, physical enough, fast enough, good skater etc).

But there are no huge or even big gaps between them now. Its reasonable to draft Dickinson over them. But its reasonable to draft Helenius or Nygard over other two for different reasons. No matter who will be picked, Devils should be very happy with the pick.
I honestly would not be completely shocked if all three of Dickinson, Helenius and Nygard were gone by #10 overall. The draft is just that unpredictable this year to me after a clear 1/2 of Celebrini and Demidov.
 

Guadana

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I honestly would not be completely shocked if all three of Dickinson, Helenius and Nygard were gone by #10 overall. The draft is just that unpredictable this year to me after a clear 1/2 of Celebrini and Demidov.
Honestly I cant believe all three as available.

May be there are no clear top-10.
Or top-12/13 like it was in 2020. But there is quite clear top-14\15. So may be it is saying something good about this draft. Dont forget that some people said that Rossi should be second on the draft and Perfetti should be forth on the draft.
Remember there were clear top-9 in 2021. No clear number one talent.
And top... 10 in 2022? Nazar dropped. No clear number one talent. I like and Liked Slafkovsky a lot but still.
May be top-12 in 2023. Yes. there were 4 first overall level talents. Now we have two. This draft looks not that great of course but 2023 was really rare.

So I like this draft. At least first round. So this draft is that unpredictable, but in a good way.
 

Billdo

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If Davidson is there Fitz should be running to the podium and not try and get cute with the Nygard or Huselius.
 
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Homedresser

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With the roster i
If Dickinson or Buium fell to 10OA, do you think there’s a reasonable chance Fitz would pass on them for MBN or Helenius? I’d hope they stay true to their board

If Dickinson or Buium fell to 10OA, do you think there’s a reasonable chance Fitz would pass on them for MBN or Helenius? I’d hope they stay true to their board.
With the roster issues they have and the need to compete immediately, if Fitz actually keeps the pick then that's his first mistake of the offseason.
If Dickinson or Buium fell to 10OA, do you think there’s a reasonable chance Fitz would pass on them for MBN or Helenius? I’d hope they stay true to their board.
 

Lou Bloom

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I think a lot of people on here are overrating Dickinson. I like the player but I don't see a player that's levels above or a no doubt better prospect than players like MBN or Helenius (or other forwards in our draft range like Catton, Iginla and Sennecke). The draft range from around 5-15 is pretty similar in talent throughout.
 

StevenToddIves

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I think a lot of people on here are overrating Dickinson. I like the player but I don't see a player that's levels above or a no doubt better prospect than players like MBN or Helenius (or other forwards in our draft range like Catton, Iginla and Sennecke). The draft range from around 5-15 is pretty similar in talent throughout.
Yep, that's what we're all saying. 100% agreed.

There has never been more discord about picks 3-15 in draft history. Now, while I choose to think it means I'm right and everyone else is wrong, the truth is probably closer to the idea that it's very close in that range, talent-wise.

I work pretty hard on these mock drafts and on getting to know the prospects. People don't need to agree with me, but it might help if they at least listened. I'm actually a huge fan of Dickinson, but saying he's "tiers ahead" of a Helenius or Nygard is downright silly. And over the years, no one has touted big, fast, smart & high-compete defensive-defensemen more than I have.

But you are absolutely correct in your assessment that these are all excellent prospects who offer different things, and in the case of many of the players being discussed -- they all offer different qualities which would highly benefit the Devils going forward.

Ultimately I'll be thrilled if the Devils take Dickinson. But I'll also be thrilled if they take Helenius.
 

Guadana

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With the roster i



With the roster issues they have and the need to compete immediately, if Fitz actually keeps the pick then that's his first mistake of the offseason.
Nope. Wasting top picks is bad management. Free cap space, free agent market, lower assets and trades of lower assets can fix any problems. Dallas is a good team because they drafted a lot of good players, young cheap and talented ELC players is a perfect way to develop contending team. Go check how Ottawa is going on.

So before talking about Fitzy's mistakes, fix your own for the beginning.
 
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StevenToddIves

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Nope. Wasting picks is bad management. Free cap space, free agent market, lower assets and trades of lower assetes can fix any problems. Dallas is a good team because they drafted a lot of good players, young cheap and talented ELC players is a perfect way to develop contending team.

So before talking about Fitzy's mistakes, fix your own for the beginning.
I was trying to simply ignore that post, but you hit the nail on the head.

I'm sure there were panicky Dallas fans saying to trade the #23 in 2021 for Anthony Mantha or Conor Garland, but I think they're happier now with Wyatt Johnston at 1/6 the salary.
 

Guadana

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I was trying to simply ignore that post, but you hit the nail on the head.

I'm sure there were panicky Dallas fans saying to trade the #23 in 2021 for Anthony Mantha or Conor Garland, but I think they're happier now with Wyatt Johnston at 1/6 the salary.
Its offseason, a lot of time, not so many topics to make conversations until free agent market will open and the only prospect conversation has some reason.


I believe its better to have Debrincat for a couple of days and Dominic Kubalic than Korchinski for 7-10 years, and who cares about Daniil But(or Barlow or Moore who were available for the pick) when you can have 2 years of Chychrun even without play off games. May they will trade for something meaningful. Or some other later picks who will take more time for development than original draft pick who was traded from the beginning.
No, its not. Its straight sarcasm.

And its not like we dont have different options on the market or trade lower assets for good players. Like every contending team do - they are not trading high picks, they are trading lower picks or middle rank prospects. Very good prospects and high picks is the perfect material to make the team better and deeper.


For example we can sign Skjei, draft Helenius and have two good players. Or trade and sign Chychrun and have only one player. It will be the same +\- money under the cap. And only one player, not two.
I dont know why people hate good prospects and high draft picks. No one will trade Tkachuk. When one was offered, he denied the deal as I understand. If Brady is on the table, its a good player to trade, but he isnt on the table.
Trading 10OA even for Saros is crazy. He isnt Shestyorkin/Vasilevskiy/Sorokin and even Sorokin and Vasilevsky show how this trade can look after some time.
 
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glenwo2

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STI 2024 Devils-Centric Mock Draft For People Sick Of Everyone Else’s Cruddy Mock Drafts

Yes, I am solving this problem the same way I do every year, which is by writing up my very own cruddy mock draft. Let’s face it — mock drafts are doomed to fail. Some jerk GM always goes off the board at #4 overall and ruins it for the rest of us. I mean, not that I’m insinuating the Columbus front office is jerk-laden, but then again maybe I am.

All 32 picks were made with the team in question’s draft tendencies and organizational needs in mind. This is not a ranking. No, the Devils are not trading the pick for a 36 year old goaltender. Just trying to get all the answers to the stupidest criticisms out of the way early so I can get on with the mock draft. I think those three should cover it. And yes, I realize that “jerk-laden” is not a word, even if you hyphenate it.

1 San Jose: C Macklin Celebrini, Boston U. NCAA let’s not get creative here. Celebrini is a text-book franchise center in every sense of the word. The dude is literally great at everything in hockey which fills a major need for San Jose, who last year was literally terrible at everything in hockey.

2 Chicago: W Ivan Demidov, SKA-St.Petersburg MHL the idea of the Blackhawks passing on a potential franchise forward with elite playmaking and puck handling skills to one day pair with the best shot in the league in Conor Bedard is plain ludicrous. Also, Chicago has another pick at #18, where in the 2024 class there will be other terrific RDs. There will not be any F with even close to the skill of the sublime Demidov.

3 Anaheim: RD Artyom Levshunov, Michigan St. NCAA contrary to popular belief, Anaheim is not thin at RD, they have two very good prospects in Tristan Luneau and Noah Warren. Still, in a stacked-with-talent prospect pipeline, it’s probably their lowest-end position and Levshunov has 1D upside on both sides of the puck.

4 Columbus: LD Anton Silayev, Nizhny Novgorod KHL the Blue Jackets are actually strong organizationally at LD with Mateychuk and Svozil -- but they have concentrated on building from the blueline out over the past year-plus and Silayev’s mix of 6’7 and high-end skating is exceptionally rare.

5 Montreal: C Cayden Lindstrom, Medicine Hat WHL Lindstrom falling to 5 has to be the Habs’ pipe dream — they need centers more than anything, and they need physical forwards aside from Slavkovsky for the top 6. A trio of Lindstrom, Suzuki and Owen Beck would set them up with a strong foundation up the middle for several seasons to come.

6 Utah: RD Zayne Parekh, Saginaw OHL wherever their geographical location, this organization seems to have multiple high picks every year and yet still the wheels keep spinning. Utah lacks a high-end offensive defenseman at the pro or prospect levels, and Parekh — with all his problems off the puck — is the highest end offensive defenseman available since Luke Hughes in 2021.

7 Ottawa: LW Tij Iginla, Kelowna WHL you can just hear all the hearts breaking in Calgary. But Iginla has been a late riser with his elite combination of shooting, stick-handling and compete level, and he’d be a huge PR win for the Senators, as well.

8 Seattle: LD Zeev Buium, Denver NCAA the Kraken need high-end talent on the blueline and Buium fits the bill — he might offer the most offensive upside aside from Parekh in the 2024 class, and he’s also quite strong on the defensive side of the puck.

9 Calgary: LD Sam Dickinson, London OHL the Flames have huge needs on the blueline in the pipeline. Dickinson’s mix of size, speed and exceptional two-way upside would immediately rocket him to the top of their prospect pool.


10 NEW JERSEY DEVILS: RW Michael Brandsegg-Nygård, Mora IK Allvenskan SWE
Honestly, this came down to two players — Nygard or Finnish center Konsta Helenius, and I struggled a lot with the final choice. But GM Tom Fitzgerald has shown and stated a desire to get more physical and tougher to play against in the top 6, and Nygard also offers a lot more than simply a power forward option which the Devils lack throughout the prospect pool. Nygard is also the best defensive forward in the 2024 class and one of the fastest skill forwards available. The 6’1-200 Norwegian also possesses an elite-level shot and an otherworldly combination of hockey IQ and compete level. Throw in the fact he played a great deal of center towards the end of the season, and he just makes perfect sense to New Jersey on too many levels to count.


11 Buffalo: RD Carter Yakemchuk, Calgary WHL the Sabres’ prospect pool is literally loaded at every position except RD, and Yakemchuk has a ton to offer. An electrifying offensive defenseman who hits like a freight train, there are a lot of parallels to a young Dion Phaneuf.

12 Philadelphia: LW/C Berkly Catton, Spokane WHL the Flyers’ forced trade of Cutter Gauthier left them with any top 6 scoring prospects in the pipeline aside from Matvei Michkov, who plays on the RW, not the left. Catton probably ranks 4th in the 2024 class in terms of overall offensive upside after only Demidov, Celebrini and Eiserman… and it’s tough to see a team with John Tortorella as coach drafting a player with as many defensive/hustle issues as Eiserman.

13 Minnesota: C Konsta Helenius, Jukurit FIN the Wild have drafted exceptionally well in the Bill Guerin era, and I can’t see them passing on a talent like Helenius — a player whose hockey IQ might be 2nd in the entire class after only Demidov. Helenius’ calling card is intelligence, but he also plays with enormous heart and checks every physical tool across the board without being quite elite in any of them.

14 San Jose: LW Cole Eiserman, US-NTDP the wild-card of the draft, Eiserman has a devastating shot, the best of a past half-decade of drafts after only Conor Bedard. However, his 200-foot game and consistency of effort are both well below average, which is certain to turn off several teams. For the Sharks, however — well, Eiserman is close friends with Celebrini which they would hope brings out the best in a player with a dynamic and rare ability to regularly top 50+ goals.

15 Detroit: RW Igor Chernyshov, Moskva KHL like the Devils, the Red Wings have a lot of skill in their scoring forwards but not a lot of power/interior play. Chernyshov is in the conversation with Lindstrom and Nygard for the best power forward in the 2024 class and also features an outstanding two-way game and some of the softest hands in the class.

16 St. Louis: RD Adam Jiricek, HC Plzen CZE the Blues are absolutely bereft in the prospect pool at RD and Jircek’s draft-year injury and subsequent rankings-drop could be a gift to them in the long run. Jiricek is a do-it-all bulldog with big-time upside on both sides of the puck.

17 Washington: C Michael Hage, Chicago USHL the Caps are extremely thin organizationally up the middle, and Hage is perhaps one of the most underrated players available for the 2024 class. Hage features high-end skating and a litany of high-end offensive tools, and was far-and-away the best player in the entire USHL over the last couple months of the season when he finally recovered from injury and personal tragedy enough to put his game together.

18 Chicago: RD EJ Emery, US-NTDP the Blackhawks need RD more than anything buy a long-shot. This pick might raise a few eyebrows, but it’s fair to argue that Emery is the best defensive defender in the entire 2024 class and he’s also a terrific skater and athlete. Emery is incredibly competitive and physical; he offers extremely smart play with and without the puck. This kid is just a winner, and as such I expect him to be drafted far higher than his consensus ranking might indicate.

19 Vegas: RW Beckett Sennecke, Oshawa OHL after years of trading picks and picking low, Vegas needs some high-end offensive upside in the system. If he falls this far, Sennecke would fit the bill — his hands are electrifying and his playmaking is high-end, while his size and skating are both very good.

20 NY Islanders: C Sacha Boisvert, Muskegon USHL very much a Lamoriello-type player, Boisvert is an excellent defensive center who can also score and competes and think the game at high levels. After years of dealing away picks, the Islanders need pretty much everything, but Boisvert can certainly make the case for best player available this deep in the draft.

21 Los Angeles: RW Emil Hemming, TPS U20 FIN JR. the Kings looked downright slow and old in a first-round exit from the 2024 playoffs, and Hemming’s combination of speed, size and a canon-like shot would juice some athleticism into the future top 6.

22 Nashville: LD Stian Solberg, Valerenga NOR no organization drafts and develops defenders better than the Predators, who hit it again big-time with Solberg. The young Norwegian mixes outstanding speed and play with the puck with a 6’2-205 frame and perhaps the most devastating physicality of any defender in the draft class. Solberg is a steal here, offering huge upside and near-NHL readiness.

23 Toronto: C Cole Beaudoin, Barrie OHL tough to figure what a desperate Leafs organization will do at the draft in 2024, and trading the pick is certainly a possibility. I have them taking a potentially elite defensive and physical middle-6 center who oozes character and compete, the very things they have seemingly lacked in the Dubas and post-Dubas eras. Beaudoin offers everything but speed and flash, but his in-tight game and forechecking/cycling abilities might be tops of the 2024 center class.

24 Colorado: LW Andrew Basha, Medicine Hat WHL the Avs have been building with team speed for years, and Basha can downright fly. He’s also a high-end playmaker and puck-handler with big-time offensive upside.

25 Ottawa: RD Charlie Elick, Brandon WHL like many teams, the Senators have needs at RD and Elick is everything their front-office loves — huge (6’3-200), physical, Canadian, skates well, smart with the puck and exceptional without it.

26 Montreal: RD Dominik Badinka, Malmo J20 SWE JR. The Habs have built a stunningly talented prospect pool but, like many teams, have needs at RD. Fortunately for these teams, the 2024 class is overflowing with potential top-4 RD. This young Czech is a terrific skater with a smart and polished defensive game, size/physicality and some sneaky offensive upside.

27 Carolina: LW Trevor Connelly, Tri-City USHL as one scout has said, “Connelly has first round talent but last round character”, and that drops a kid who should be a top 10 pick on skill and speed alone far lower in the draft than his natural abilities would normally indicate. Hurricanes coach Rod Brind’Amour has shown a repeated belief that he and he alone can take low character players and make them into clutch team guys, and though it hasn’t really worked yet there is no visible indication of him stopping any time soon.

28 Calgary: RW Ryder Ritchie, Prince Albert WHL the Flames reach into their backyard to take a high-motor speedy winger who can excel on a checking or scoring line. Ryder has more skill than some have credited him with, and he's a player who gets every last ounce out of his natural ability, making him pretty much a can't-miss NHLer.

29 Anaheim: LW/RW Nikita Artamonov, Nizhny Novgorod KHL the Ducks might already have the top prospect pool in the NHL and they get another really good one in the high-effort, high-IQ two-way winger with near elite playmaking ability.

30 NY Rangers: LW/RW Liam Greentree, Windsor OHL though some have him slotted for the top half of the 1st round, it’s possible Greentree’s skating woes drop him a bit towards the end of the round. Rangers GM Chris Drury likes big forwards with skill, and this 6’2-200 forward lit up the OHL for 90 points.

31 Dallas: C Jett Luchanko, C Guelph OHL the Stars draft exceptionally well, and there’s no reason to believe this will not continue with the speedy, smart, skilled and high-motor Luchanko. He’s a versatile player who can slot perfectly into any line and excel on both the PP and PK.

32 Philadephia: LD Alfons Freij, Vaxjo U20 SWE JR. the Flyers need some bolstering in the prospect ranks at both sides of the blueline. Here I have them swinging for the fences with the lightning-fast and sublimely skilled Freij — a project perhaps, but one offering some big-time upside.
10 NEW JERSEY DEVILS: RW Michael Brandsegg-Nygård

Imagine how much "fun" Dano would have in pronouncing that last name. :D
 

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