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Bi Weekly Musings: Where I’m at Before Our First Rankings Call

Written by Austin Garret

On Sunday, December 1st the Smaht Scouting team will get together for our first ranking for the 2025 NHL Draft. We’ll rank an initial 32 players with a scattering of about 5-10ish honorable mentions as well. 

As a North American crossover scout, my focus for the past 4+ months have been players who are playing in North America. This next week I’ll do a quick run through of who our European/Global scouts have put forward as top 32 candidates just so I have an idea of the player and what I see from them through a (much) smaller sample size than the North American players. 

Before I post my own list; I do think it’s important to put out a few disclaimers. Firstly, I have my own biases when I evaluate a player. I will rank forwards who are effective transition players and who can create plays that lead to scoring chances. I put a larger emphasis on offensive ability and microstats for defensemen followed by their defensive ability. My rationale is pretty simple: I view the draft as an opportunity to land players that are harder to acquire through a trade or would cost a fortune in free agency (when you’re paying for their post-prime years). Some of the players I have ranked lower I, personally, would bet that they’ll play more NHL games than some that are ranked higher. However, it’s a risk/reward type of analysis and projecting to these players that formulates my philosophy when I’m drafting.

Secondly, if players come out of the Smaht ranking in a much different order: I won’t be upset. We have a diverse set of thought processes and opinions within the team that I am not expecting a group-think mentality on a lot of these players.

Lastly, when I ran numbers last year for drafts after 2009 I found that the average number of players from a draft to play 200 NHL games was a bit over 2 players per team. Obviously, teams who had multiple first round picks did better than teams who had 3-4 selections and all of them in the mid-late rounds. However, you’re going to miss some of the swings you make in a draft. That’s an obvious conclusion. My question to NHL teams and anyone in this business of scouting would be: what were swinging for when you selected the player? Missing on a fringe player or missing on a player you thought that, if everything broke right, would be a steal in that range? My philosophy lands in the latter part of the question.

Without further adieu, where I’m at going into next weekend.

Five General Thoughts About the Five Tiers

  1. The 2025 North American class is extremely top heavy.

It’s been fun going through the first four names on this list and debating the order they should be in for me. My first post talked about who could unseat James Hagens, but I’ll be honest and say that I thought Hagens had the #1 spot locked up even prior to him playing a game for Boston College. My opinion has changed over the last month.

It’s not so much that Hagens has disappointed, but rather the leap that Misa made from last year to this year as well as the tantalizing prospect that a team with two centers could have in landing one of the best power forwards to come out in a draft class in awhile with Porter Martone. 

I landed on Misa sitting at number one at this point for a couple reasons. The first being that his move to his natural position of center has unlocked a puck-dominant, two-way threat offensively that both shows up in casual viewings and through data analysis.  He drives both shot generation in scoring areas on his own stick as well as is one the best in my data set in setting up scoring chances for others. Hagens has impressed as well, but his play creation isn’t nearly as consistent as Misa (partly because Gabe Perreault has taken the lead on his line for this) and his neutral zone transition game hasn’t been as strong as Misa’s even accounting for the difference in competition levels. Martone isn’t nearly as involved in transition nor as puck dominant as the other two, but his style of game for a team that does not need a play-driving pivot could easily see him become the number one pick in this draft.

Schaefer is rounding into form after his bout of mononucleosis to start the year, and as the year progresses could see himself supplant himself as an option over the other three given an NHL’s team’s need.

  1. If you like fun, then the second tier is for you.

I probably have Cole Reschny a lot higher than my peers. I believe the main reason will be the average pace in his north/south game and he doesn’t make up for it with lateral agility or shiftniness. However, in terms of pure impact on a hockey game when he’s on the ice, he’s one of my favorite players in this class. He generates shot attempts on his own stick, facilitates for his teammates, suffocates space defensively, and is always in support offensively/defensively as a center. He is second in the entire dataset in the number of passes going to scoring areas and isn’t a low volume passer. He’s the only player to be sitting over a 60% offensive transition involvement rate two games into his dataset. He’s a smart, detailed player with quick processing decisions and who is driving results without a top-tier cast of linemates. Love the way this kid plays hockey.

Lynden Lakovic might be the smoothest skater in this draft class when you factor in his size. Players that are 6’4 aren’t supposed move like he does. He also possesses a puck handling ability of a much smaller player, able to play in tight spaces without having to lean on his size as the only way to shield the puck. He’s highly efficient and involved in offensive transitions and gets to dirty areas to get his shot off. He has some developmental growth in his offensive zone playmaking, and if that develops he could be a giant steal come the first round of the NHL Draft.

I don’t know what else Carter Bear has to do during his draft season to get ranked inside the top 8 through consolidated rankings. His point production pops off the sheet, but he’s not just a passenger on Julius Miettinen’s line. He’s fleet of foot and has above average puck skill. He creates on his own and isn’t just a middle or end-of-chain type of producer. He’s secondary in transition, but his involvement is still impressive and his effectiveness as well. He’s tenacious as a defender as a winger. He should climb up rankings lists as the year goes on.

Jackson Smith and Cullen Potter are two players I’ve talked at length about. Putting Potter’s age into consideration for the NCAA and then watching him dictate so much has been impressive. Smith continues to be one of the most electrifying offensive defenders in North America.

  1. The Green Tier of potential

The Ben Kindel ranking and the Roger McQueen ranking are the two I am trusting my process with and hoping I don’t get made a fool of to start the year. Kindel just hasn’t had a bad game yet, and has been getting better every time I see him play. Similar to Reschny, a player that is highly involved and thinks the game very well and quickly as a pivot. His offensive transition success percentage isn’t where I’d like it to be, and it does give me pause given that his skill doesn’t pop off the screen, but everything else screams a mid-first round talent at this time.

Roger McQueen, before he got injured, just never gave me the viewing that I wanted from a player who is touted to be a top pick in this year’s draft. He had just 3 shots at even strength through two games, is one of the least involved players in transition, and neither completed passes or gained the offensive zone at a rate that I could rank higher than this. He flashes high-end skill from time-to-time, but I’d label him a developmental project at the moment. How much you believe you can squeeze that potential out of him will drive your opinion of where to take him in the draft.

Cameron Reid might be the best transition defender I’ve seen in North America, and with a bit more aggressive activation at even strength could challenge to be a top 12 pick in this year’s draft. Jake O’Brien falls into the Reschny/Kindel archetype offensively but plays at a much lower pace, and his defensive game still has a ways to go to be able to play center at the NHL level.

  1. The Purple Tier of massive swings.

I’ll run through these quickly.

  1. The Honorable Mentions

Follow me at @austin716.bsky.social on BlueSky for prospect takes, videos, and general ramblings about the Buffalo Sabres.

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