NHL Releases Mid-Season Rankings for 2022 Draft

Kingston Frontenacs Forward Shane Wright Tops List of North American Skaters

NEW YORK (Jan. 12, 2022) – Shane Wright (Burlington, Ont.), a center from the Ontario Hockey League’s Kingston Frontenacs, ranks No. 1 among North American skaters for the 2022 NHL Draft as the NHL Central Scouting Bureau today released its mid-season rankings. Wright can become the first Frontenacs player selected No. 1 overall in the NHL Draft and the first OHL player since Connor McDavid in 2015.

Wright has recorded 11-19—30 in 22 games with Kingston this season (1.36 P/GP). He was granted exceptional player status to enter the OHL early and was selected with the No. 1 pick by Kingston in the 2019 OHL Priority Selection before claiming Canadian Hockey League and OHL Rookie of the Year honors in 2019-20.

“Shane Wright is a strong stride skater who possesses elusive outside speed to beat defenders and quickness to evade checks or lead a rush,” said Dan Marr, Director of NHL Central Scouting. “He has elite hockey sense with vision, anticipation and composure and has proven that he can carry the load and lead the way when it’s needed in game situations. He has carried himself remarkably despite many disruptions and distractions endured the past year and a half.”

Logan Cooley (Pittsburgh, Penn.), a center for USA Hockey’s National Team Development Program’s Under-18 Team who ranks fourth on the club in points (14-20—34 in 24 GP), is the No. 2-ranked North American Skater. Cooley, who grew up in the Pittsburgh area, was part of the first-ever season of players who took part in Sidney Crosby’s Little Penguins Learn to Play Program, an introductory program for children ages five to nine that provided first-time participants free head-to-toe equipment along with on-ice instruction by the Penguins captain.

“Logan Cooley plays an attack game with his speed and smarts,” said Marr. “To say he has speed that makes a difference is an understatement – he has speed that impacts the game. Logan plays with high energy and his ability to process the game and execute plays at top speed make him one of the highest-ranked players in the 2022 Draft class.”

Matt Savoie (St. Albert, Alta.), a center for the Winnipeg ICE of the Western Hockey League, is the No. 3-ranked North American skater. Savoie, a rookie, leads all WHL skaters in assists and points with 18-34—52 in 34 games including a 13-game point streak from Oct. 30 – Dec. 4, 2021 (8-17—25 in 13 GP).

“Matt Savoie is one of the best natural scorers and offensive players in the 2022 Draft class,” said Marr. “A strong skater with very good balance for his size, he possesses deceptive speed and quickness to lead a rush and navigate through traffic. He’s the type that wants the puck on his stick and has a good shot variety in which to finish his scoring chances.”

Rounding out the top-five North American skaters are No. 4 Conor Geekie (Strathclair, Man.), a center for Winnipeg (WHL) and the brother of Seattle Kraken forward Morgan Geekie, as well as No. 5 Pavel Mintyukov (Moscow, Russia), a defenseman for the OHL’s Saginaw Spirit who ranks tied for 10th among OHL defensemen in points (6-16—22 in 29 games).

Joakim Kemell (Jyvaskyla, Finland), a right wing for JYP in Finland’s top professional league, ranks No. 1 among international skaters, with No. 2-ranked Juraj Slafkovsky (Kosice, Slovakia), a left wing for TPS in Finland and No. 3-ranked Danila Yurov (Chelyabinsk, Russia), a right wing from Magnitogorsk of the KHL making up the top three.

“Joakim Kemell had a sensational start to the season where as a 17-year-old rookie he was leading the league in scoring until an injury late in October,” said Goran Stubb of European Scouting Services. “Kemell is an excellent, smooth skater with great offensive instincts – a highly-skilled playmaker who plays a competitive two-way game.”

Tyler Brennan (Winnipeg, Man.) of Prince George (WHL) is the No. 1-ranked North American goaltender and Topias Leinonen (Jyvaskyla, Finland) of JYP’s junior team tops the list of international goaltenders.

The final rankings feature the top 224 skaters and 32 goaltenders in North America as well as the top 135 skaters and 10 goaltenders internationally.

In its 47th year of operation, NHL Central Scouting provides evaluation and scouting of draft-eligible players to NHL member clubs. Headed by Director of Central Scouting Dan Marr, NHL Central Scouting employs eight full-time scouts throughout North America. To report on prospects playing internationally, the NHL employs the services of Goran Stubb and his staff at European Scouting Services based in Finland.

The 2022 NHL Draft is scheduled from July 7-8, 2022 and will be hosted by the Montreal Canadiens at Bell Centre in Montreal, Que.

For NHL Draft history visit https://records.nhl.com/draft.

Additional prospect profiles are available in the attached document.

### (1/12/22)

Attachments:

2022 Mid-Season Draft Rankings – NA Skaters.pdf

2022 Mid-Season Draft Rankings – ITL Skaters.pdf

2022 Mid-Season Draft Rankings – NA Goalies.pdf

2022 Mid-Season Draft Rankings – ITL Goalies.pdf

MidSeason_Draft_Rankings_011222.pdf

ProspectBios2022_MidSeason.pdf

Better Effort Expected For Canucks, Focusing On The Task At Hand – Beating Lightning Tonight

By Andrew Chernoff 13.01.22

“We know what we’re up against. We know how good they are. And we know we didn’t play good last night, so we know we have to put our best foot forward against a really good team.”

The Vancouver Canucks (16-16-3, 7th Pacific Division) play the second of a five game road trip against the Tampa Bay Lightning (24-9-5, 2nd Atlantic Division) tonight.

The Lightning host Vancouver in the first meeting between the clubs in over two years.

The Canucks lost to Florida Panthers on Tuesday night 5-2, and already are being evaluated, poked and probed, after just one game.

And they just started the road trip. C’mon guys. It’s not fair. Not the Canucks fault they were stopped from playing because of COVID.

“Fair or not fair, it’s reality,” Boudreau told reporters Wednesday when asked about the circumstances prior to going into the road trip, and whether it was fair to judge the team on the results of the games of the road trip and after, based on those circumstances.

“We’re going to definitely know where we are at the end of the 7 game stint”, which includes the two home games flowing the road trip.

Coach Boudreau at Wednesday media availability.

In response to questions from reporter Iain MacIntyre, Boudreau added:

“These seven games,” he continued, “are going to say whether we’ve got a chance to do something serious here or whether we’re going to have to fight and claw and put another eight- or 10-game win streak together just to make the playoffs.”

To that end the team spent Wednesday looking at video of their Florida game, going over the good, bad and ugly, trying to focus on the task at hand: defeating the Tampa Bay Lightning tonight, and hitting the ice for a practice session.

Boudreau had a number of concerns from the Florida game that the Canucks have to be better at against the Lightning, if they’re going to have a chance to win.

“When we move pucks, we’re really good. I think the biggest problem we had, quite frankly, was making bad decisions in the neutral zone and not putting pucks on tape. Making bad passes, mismanaging the puck. When we weren’t mismanaging the puck, we were having alot of O-zone time and doing fairly well.”

“I thought our D-zone coverage was sloppy, a little bit. When we were good, we were really good. But I didn’t think we moved our feet enough in the first period in our D-zone to stop them. They are a very skilled team, they go to the net very well; they got great sticks. You’ve got to eliminate them from doing that or you’re going to be in trouble every night.”

Coach Bruce Boudreau Post-Game Tuesday night.

The game will be the second leg of the marathon-relay, and another monumental challenge for Vancouver.

If Vancouver can mend those deficiencies noted above and others, through team work, over 60 minutes, they could get two points.

What is team work? It’s the ability to work together towards a common vision; the ability to direct individual accomplishments toward team objectives; It is the fuel that allows common people to attain uncommon results.

hockeytraining.com

MATCH-UP INFO

  • Tonight marks the first of two meetings between the Canucks and Lightning this season: Jan. 13 (road), Mar. 13 (home).
  • Vancouver is 4-5-1 in their last 10 games vs Tampa Bay (1-4-0 in their last 5).
  • The Canucks have a 20-13-2-2 all-time record in 37 games against the Lightning. Vancouver holds a 10-9-0-0 record on the road against Tampa.

LIGHTNING STRIKES

  • Tampa Bay begins a two-game homestand tonight
  • The Lightning remain tied for first atop the NHL overall standings with Florida on points (53)
  • The Bolts have ranked first or tied for first in the League standings continuously since Jan. 4
  • Tampa Bay is a perfect 4-0-0 against Pacific Division teams so far this season and has won five straight against Pacific teams going back to the 2019-20 regular season.

QUICK NUMBERS

  • Brock Boeser has eight points (5-3-8) in his last nine games.
  • Bo Horvat has nine points (5-4-9) in his last 12 games.
  • J.T. Miller has 17 points (4-13-17) in his last 13 games.
  • Quinn Hughes has 12 points (0-12-12) in his last 12 games.
  • Conor Garland has 10 points (5-5-10) in his last 13 games.
  • Thatcher Demko has posted a .940 SV% and 1.84 GAA in his last seven games (7-1-0).

CANUCKS RANKINGS