Welcome to my first official ranking for the 2026 NHL Draft class.
This very early top 26 (plus 23 honorable mentions) is the first of seven draft rankings that I will release before next year’s draft. It will be followed by a preseason top 32, top 64 lists in November, January, March and May, and then my final top 100 draft board next June.
The 2026 class is headlined by top prospect Gavin McKenna, a strong Swedish age group, a pair of big OHL forwards and a standout crop of WHL defensemen.
The ranking, packaged in our fully sortable user interface, is broken down into four tiers. They are: 1, 2-6, 7-12, 13-26+.
Note that while I consult scouts, coaches, general managers, team staff, and those around these players (their agents, skills coaches, strength and conditioning coaches, etc.), the following evaluations and rankings are strictly my own.
Here are full reports on the top 26 (honorable mentions sorted alphabetically).
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Tier 1
McKenna is a captivating offensive winger who had one of the most productive age-adjusted seasons in modern CHL history this season.
He’s a fabulous, flowing skater with natural straight-line and corner speed, great edges and a rare ability to make plays while flying around out there. He’s impressive at carrying and dodging sticks through neutral ice to create entries. He has a first touch like glue where the puck just lands and sticks to his blade when he’s catching it, even when it’s coming in hot or into compromising positions. He’s a brilliant puck transporter, transition machine and get-out-of-jail-free card who routinely skates pucks out of the zone himself and relieves pressure. He’s so, so shifty with the puck, blending shoulder fakes into his playmaking. He’s got impressive manueverability and adjustability from his hips down. He plays pucks into space and leads guys at an advanced level. He shields pucks extremely well from defenders’ sticks. He’s constantly changing directions and keeping defenders off of him. He pre-scans and sees and reads the game at an elite level. When he’s on the ice, the talent divide is always clear, even when he has played with top players. Though he’s a natural playmaker first, he’s also got scoring elements, has tons of pre-shot deception in his movements, attackes the middle and goes downhill, and has been one of the WHL’s leaders in shots on goal since entering the league. He can beat you to the middle or the outside if you give it to him. And while he’s lean, he’s also got a really good stick defensively, taking back and lifting a lot of pucks (though there is the odd time when he doesn’t pick up assignment and can puck watch/drive-by instead of stopping on pucks). He projects as a first-line, star and maybe even superstar winger.
Photo:
Steven Ellis / Daily Faceoff


Tier 2
Stenberg is a dynamic left-shot right-winger who has torched his peers over the last couple of years, both domestically at the J20 level and internationally at events such as U17s, the Hlinka Gretzky Cup, the World Jr. A Challenge, playing on Frolunda’s and Sweden’s first line as the lone 2026 on both — and regularly out-producing top 2025s as a top dog offensively. He has also already scored in both the SHL regular season and SHL playoffs (he is just the third player ever to score in the SHL postseason in their Draft-1 season, joining Rasmus Dahlin and Victor Hedman). After McKenna, he’s the most talented player I’ve watched in this age group.
The younger brother of Blues first-rounder Otto, Ivar’s puck skill, offensive instincts, scoring package, and playmaking package are all high-end. He makes guys miss with the puck on his stick, beats goalies one-on-one with his handles regularly, and has a lethal wrister release and a confident one-timer that give him quick-strike ability. He’s not an explosive skater but he’s a good one who beats guys wide with speed, escapes pressure, and is agile on cuts and changes of direction, and can build through his crossovers. He’s also a good passer and facilitator who sees the ice well, is creative, puts pucks into space, and can pick teams apart on the power play when they focus too much on him. Off puck, he’s got good offensive and defensive instincts to get open or cut off passes. I expect he’ll be on the Swedish World Junior team in Minnesota as a draft eligible next season.
Photo:
Steven Ellis / Daily Faceoff


Ryan Roobroeck is a big, tall forward born in late September who came up as a center but has played the wing in junior, applied for exceptional status into the OHL and didn’t get it. Had he been granted exceptional status, he could have been one of the rare players to play four seasons in the OHL before the NHL Draft. Instead, he went back to U16 AAA for a second season as a dominant player, went No. 2 to Niagara in the 2023 OHL draft, and then scored 28 goals and 51 points in 63 games as a 16-year-old to be named to the OHL First All-Rookie Team last year. This year, his second season in the OHL, he has been Niagara’s leading scorer, out-producing drafted NHL prospects like Kevin He (Jets) and Andrei Loshko (Kraken) to score 41 goals and 87 points in 64 games.
He wore an “A” for them this season, played 22 minutes per game, has been an important part of both their power play and their penalty kill and regularly generates 6-10 shots per game. He doesn’t play a particularly physical or imposing game for a player his size, but he’s got tons of skill and feel on the puck and a legit NHL shot that regularly beats goalies from mid-range. Because of his unique skill set, he has played the flank on the power play instead of the net front. He’s also a good, balanced skater for his size who can get out in transition and score off the rush. He’s going to be a very high pick and if he can return to his center position next year and/or play with more presence/power/physicality, it’ll elevate his projection even further.
Photo:
Steven Ellis / Daily Faceoff


Lin is the best defenceman I’ve seen play in this draft and certainly the smartest and most well-rounded. He led the Giants in ice time at nearly 26 minutes a night this season as a 16-year-old and blew me a way with the way he influenced play to guide (literally in the way he guides play) Team Canada White to gold at U17s.
He does everything at a high level, does the small things extremely well, and just plays the game with a rare quality for a D his age, steering play with his quiet efficiency, feel for the game, puck-moving, elite hockey IQ, great stick and reads defensively, and good skating. He’s comfortable in any situation and excels on both special teams. He’s adjustable. He’s got a great first touch. His head is always up and he moves pucks crisply but can also read right through the first layer of pressure into the next right play. He can carry pucks and make plays, but he can also find space off of pucks. He never seems to have to overdo it or overextend to create his offence, knowing when to move it and when to try to make something happen. He closes out nicely, is disruptive and heady defensively, and defends at a high level. He’s not a big, strong, powerful D but he’s just an excellent all-around modern defenceman who gets it and I think there’s some Adam Fox in him (he’s also a better skater than Fox was).
Photo:
Steven Ellis / Daily Faceoff


Verhoeff is a big and talented right-shot defenseman who played 25 minutes per game for the Royals this year and captained Team Canada White to gold at U17s.
He’s got good vision and comfort on the puck, but also a hard shot. He’s competitive. He’s a below-average skater and I’ve seen him struggle with pace, which has left me lower on him than Lin in my viewings, but he can make plays, he can run a power play, he’s responsible and smart in his own zone, he’s a June birthday who has time to work on his mobility and teams are excited about his combination of size, work ethic, poise and skill. There’s some real upside there. If the draft were held today, he’d be the consensus top D prospect even if I’m higher on Lin. He’s got a high ceiling and if the skating can improve the sky’s the limit.
Photo:
Steven Ellis / Daily Faceoff


Bjorck is a highly talented, playmaking center who has made headlines for breaking the U16 scoring record at the J18 level as a 15-year-old last year and breaking the J20 level scoring record (regardless of age) as a 16-year-old this year while playing with his older brother Wilson, and scoring in his HockeyAllsvenskan debut at the pro level.
He’s on the smaller side for a center at the moment but he excels in the faceoff circle, he played the penalty kill with Djurgarden’s junior team this year, Wilson is 6-foot, their dad is 6-foot-2, and he’s expected to grow. Bjorck can play with the puck on his string and make plays as a natural facilitator who has a ton of poise and vision, but he also plays in and out of give-and-gos, will go to the net and finish off plays and has great overall sense on and off the puck. He’s also a quick and fast skater who can play at different paces and challenge both in straight lines and on cuts and turnbacks. I’m confident that because of his hockey sense, he projects as a center up levels, too. He’s a slippery, clever, crafty offensive player but he’s also really smart and just reads the play at an advanced level on both sides of the puck. Once he grows and gets stronger, he could have serious potential. If he were a little bigger right now, he’d be a top-five prospect.
Photo:
Steven Ellis / Daily Faceoff


Tier 3
Preston is a threatening creator with good offensive instincts who has played to just under a point per game since entering the WHL and won gold with Canada White at U17s, leading the tournament in goals with six in five games and coming up big in some big moments, including a hat trick in the semifinal in a goal in the gold medal game.
He’s a shifty skater who attacks inside ice laterally. He’s got slick handles on the puck and can attack off the rush or inside the offensive zone, challenging defenders one-on-one. He’s got a dangerous shot and quick release. He’s lethal in space. He’s just slick and confident. He has also played both wings and been dangerous on either side. He’s also a late July birthday who has still been a top offensive player all the way up with the ‘08s (on top of what he’s done in the WHL and at U17s, he registered four goals and six points in four games at the Youth Olympics and was the CSSHL U15 MVP before that). There are actually some similarities between his makeup/skill set and Spokane teammate and top-10 NHL draft pick Berkly Catton’s (though he’s a winger and Catton’s a center).
Photo:
Steven Ellis / Daily Faceoff


One of the top young players in the USHL this season, Lawrence played to nearly a point per game as a 16-year-old rookie with Muskegon this season, averaging more than 19 minutes per game for the Lumberjacks. That’s not easy to do in the USHL, which is a hard league to have success in at that age, especially as a center — and even more so because of his August birthday. He has also had early success internationally, impressing at both U17s and the Youth Olympics. He’s a Fredericton, N.B., native and the younger brother of Josh, a two-time QMJHL 100-point man and Memorial Cup champion who is now playing in Liiga.
Lawrence has a natural release, getting pucks off his stick quickly after an intentional move to the inside or a pass into his catch-and-release. He’s a good skater who plays with pace and made plays off the rush this year as well as inside the offensive zone. He’s got good hands. He’s not a particularly physical player but he plays the right way, is smart, supports pucks and teammates well, has great instincts off the puck and was a good penalty killer as one of the youngest full-time players in the USHL this year. He’s an excellent young player.
Photo:
Steven Ellis / Daily Faceoff


Belchetz is an extremely physically advanced winger who was the No. 1 pick in the 2024 OHL draft and was 6-foot-5 and over 220 pounds as a 16-year-old in the league this season (he just turned 17 but the OHL regular season is now complete). He got people talking when he got off to a hot start to his rookie season with the Spitfires this year, picking up two points in his debut before a four-goal, six-point night in his third OHL game. He also had a solid tournament for the gold medal-winning Canada White at U17s, though I did think he was less impactful in the higher-pace semi-final and final. His production leveled off as this season went on but he still has NHL clubs drooling for his hulking frame and good skill. His feet can be a little heavy but he’s a specimen and he can get around the ice. And while some of his impact is driven by his sheer size and his ability to stay over pucks and impose himself, he’s also got decent offensive tools and he can really shoot the puck. I’m fascinated to see what he looks like next year because with a good summer, it feels like he could be a force.
Photo:
Natalie Shaver / OHL Images


Novotny was the No. 9 pick in last year’s CHL Import Draft to the Peterborough Petes but played the entirety of this season at Czechia’s top pro level with Mountfield before lighting up Czechia’s U20 level playoffs and then returning to the pro club’s postseason run (where he scored a nice goal last week and a second on Friday). He also impressed at last summer’s Hlinka Gretzky Cup and played for Czechia’s bronze medal-winning team at this year’s World Juniors a month and a half after his 17th birthday. He’s a 6-foot-1, pro-built winger who skates well. He’s also highly skilled offensively and plays the game with confidence. His game should function well in North America as well, and he’s already a strong, sturdy, stocky kid. He has a good feel for the game and enough smarts on and off the puck, with a good sense of where to be and go. And he plays a competitive game for a young player. There’s a lot to like about his combination of tools.
Photo:
Steven Ellis / Daily Faceoff


Rudolph was the No. 1 pick in the 2023 WHL Bantam Draft and after a good but not standout start to his season in Prince Albert and as an alternate captain with Canada White at U17s, he really elevated in the second half of the season to look more like the player who was the CSSHL’s top defenseman at the U15 level and MVP at the U18 level. Rudolph didn’t play the kind of minutes for a Prince Albert team (19 per game) that Lin and Verhoeff played on younger teams, but he became an impact player for the Raiders after the calendar flipped to 2025 and is a legitimate prospect. He’s a good skater whose skating patterns flow and edges are easy. He can manipulate coverage or jump off the line. He sees the ice well and can beat the first layer and then find the backdoor through a second. He defends the rush well and has a good stick. He’s a heady player who thinks the game well. He’s got good size. He’s a player.
Photo:
Steven Ellis / Daily Faceoff


Nemec, the younger brother of Devils No. 2 pick Simon, has followed a similar path, making his debut at Slovakia’s top pro rung with HK Nitra at 16 and then playing and contributing more regularly at 17. His CHL rights belong to the Sudbury Wolves. Unlike his big brother, though, Adam is a forward. He’s a highly skilled and opportunistic winger who can make plays for himself when the puck lands on his stick but also just does a really nice job getting open and finding his way onto pucks around the slot area. He reads the game at an advanced level. His game has some mature detail to it at a young age despite needing to physically mature. He’s got great instincts on and off the puck. He’s got a quick release and good hands to finish off plays. His skating has looked average to me dating back to my first live viewings at last year’s U18s worlds but he works, competes, engages himself and finishes his checks. And he has already produced against men at an early age. I’m looking forward to watching him at his second U18 worlds in a few weeks to see how he tests against his age group as an October ʼ07.
Photo:
Steven Ellis / Daily Faceoff


Tier 4
Aaram-Olsen is a talented Norwegian winger who played to a point per game with Orebro’s J20 team this year and led Norway in scoring at the Division 1A World Juniors as a 16-year-old with six points in five games. He’s a dangerous scorer and shooter who picks corners and beats goalies from mid-range with his heavy snapper or curl-and-drag wrister. He can threaten as a shooter from the bumper or the flank on the power play because he’s also got a hard one-touch shot. He’s a good skater who gets up and down the ice well and is willing to track back on pucks, with room to add strength and smoothen out his stride (which does kick a little). He takes pucks off the wall and is complacent on the outside. I’d like to see him involve himself more off of the puck defensively and play with a little more physicality, but his scoring package is legit and I don’t think he’s a one-way winger from what I’ve seen.

Hermansson impressed at U17 worlds for Sweden, played up at the February Five Nations with the U18 team and was productive on a deep-at-forward Orebro junior team this year. He’s a right shot but he has played a lot of both wings for them, and he impresses with his individual stick skill. He’s not the most well-rounded or defensively responsible winger but he’s talented with the puck in his hands. He wants to go out there and make plays/score goals and he can beat guys one-on-one with his hands. He’s also a threatening shooter off the flank both into his curl-and-drag wrister or getting open for his one-timer. He’s got a bit of an awkward/upright skating posture that bends at the ankles but he’s got some speed and he’s a 6-foot-1 winger with legit handling and finishing who has top-six/first-round talent.
Photo:
Steven Ellis / Daily Faceoff


Tomik is a December ’07 who played the majority of this season in Slovakia’s top pro level with Trencin and impressed at last spring’s U18 worlds in Finland, where he played on Slovakia’s top line as a 16-year-old and was named one of the team’s top three players of the tournament (he also played at this year’s World Juniors just a couple of weeks after his 17th birthday).
He’s got good hands. He’s a decent skater for his age, though I’m not sure he’s a standout one. He’s a natural shooter and finisher who can rip the puck on the power play and has scored some goals from distance over the last couple of years. Though he didn’t penalty kill at the pro level, he can be relied upon, has played all three forward positions and has been a solid penalty killer for the national team and might have dual special teams upside. He projects as a potential top-nine scoring winger and I thought about ranking him a couple of spots higher here. It’s worth noting, too, that his CHL rights belong to the Vancouver Giants, who successfully brought over Slovak forward Samuel Honzek and helped him become a first-round NHL Draft pick.
Photo:
Steven Ellis / Daily Faceoff


Carels is a summer birthday who played 24 minutes per game as a 16-year-old in Prince George this season and had an excellent year for them, driving play at five-on-five and chipping in on both the power play and penalty kill (he also ran PP2 for Canada Red at U17s behind Landon DuPont). I thought about ranking him a spot or two higher here.
Carels is an all-around defenseman with an offensive title. He’s got a good head on his shoulders and his eyes are always up. He’s got a big, hard slapshot that makes him a threat to score. He sees the play well. He’s a strong skater who can push pucks down ice. He defends well with his feet and stick and plays with good timing on close-outs. He’s not a dynamic individual playmaker but he moves pucks, has skill and skating, walks the line well and can hammer it. I’m a fan. He looked like a legit top prospect this season even if some of the other WHL D have more buzz (though NHL scouts are high on him). The other three are all righties as well, so he’s technically my top-ranked left-shot at this stage.
Photo:
Steven Ellis / Daily Faceoff


Nordmark led a talented Swedish team in scoring at U17 worlds and has been very productive through their entire international schedule this season. And while he spent much of his domestic season at the J18 level he was more than a point per game with Djurgården’s J20 team and regularly flashes skill. He’s a talented, shifty forward who has played all three forward positions at different points this season and has great (!) hands. He’s also got good size and a hard, dangerous snapshot (one of the better ones I’ve seen in the age group) he can blow past goalies. Djurgården has a very crowded program at forward but I’ve seen first-round traits.

Holmertz really caught my eye at U17 worlds and hovered around a point per game at the J20 level this season with Linkoping while playing center as a 16-year-old. He’s a standout skater through his edges and in and out of cuts, but also has natural pull-away speed (he’s not explosive in the powerful skater way but he makes guys miss). He’s more of a playmaker than a play finisher but he’s talented and very noticeable on the puck for how smooth he is as both a skater and stickhandler. He makes a lot of crafty little plays inside the offensive zone to put pucks into space for his linemates, too. He’s not the most intense competitor and can kind of play within the flow of the game at times but he’s got offensive talent, skating, skill and feel for the game and I’ve been drawn into him whenever I’ve watched him play.

Berchild, who has worn the “C” at times for USA’s U17s this year and has been productive playing up with the U18s, is a short but stocky and skilled scoring forward (he has played more wing than center but can play both). He reminds me a little of Lightning first-rounder and NTDP alum Isaac Howard.
He’s got legit one-on-one puck skill and handles and has scored some pretty goals this year beating D. He finds his way out of trouble and has some real creativity on the puck. He’s strong. He plays to the interior, goes to the net and plays hard. On the puck, he’s confident and plays to attack, challenge and threaten inside the offensive zone and off the rush. He’s got a lethal shot that comes off his blade hard. If he can grow a couple of inches, he’s a clear first-round talent if he can get to 5-foot-11ish. I trust that he’ll be well-developed at Denver as well.
Photo:
Rena Laverty / USA Hockey’s NTDP


Reid has been an amazing story this season. He started the year as a No. 4 defenseman on an NAHL team and finished it as a point-per-game D playing 25-to-30 minutes per game with the Soo Greyhounds. He grew from sub-6-feet to 6-foot-2 while he did it, too. He’s got poise beyond his years. He escapes pressure well. He’s got a great shot. He’s deadly in transition. He’s got impressive offensive sense and good vision. His play on the D side took strides as the year progressed after it was an adjustment in the OHL at first. And while he’s not explosive as a skater, he’s fundamentally a high-end skater and has impressive mobility/footwork. He and his game are still raw, too, and as he adds power to his frame he’s got legitimate upside. A Michigan State commit, I know the Greyhounds and Spartans are both very high on him too. He’s going to be a first-rounder and has really taken off down a steep development curve.
Photo:
Soo Greyhounds / OHL Images


Mutryn is an athletic 6-foot-2 forward who can play both center and wing and who can really skate. He impressed at U17 worlds, scoring twice in the bronze medal game and drawing praise from scouts. He’s got a pro frame (despite a July 2008 birthday) already and a breezy, flowing skating stride. He’s committed to Boston College, plays a committed two-way game and is competitive. He just looks like he’s going to be an NHLer. He’s not a dynamic offensive talent but he’s got good skill on the puck, makes plays at pace and I expect his production to uptick next season.
Photo:
Steven Ellis / Daily Faceoff


Fyodorov is an all-situations center who was an important player for Nizhny Novgorod’s MHL team this year at 16 and 17 and has been a leader for the 2008 age group in Russia. He’s got good speed and is a good athlete. He tracks and wins inside body positioning against bigger players and has a good stick. He’s a smart player on and off the puck, offensively and defensively. He goes to the net and stays around but can also score from mid-range and make plays out wide. He’s got quick hands and puts a lot of pucks into space for his teammates. I’ve liked what I’ve seen.

Dravecky was a top player for Rogle’s J20 team and the Czech national team this year, playing big minutes (often 21-25 per game), adding penalty killing to his power-play role with Rogle as the season went on and even getting a taste of the SHL.
He’s talented, poised and confident on the puck, absorbing pressure well and setting up the next play with the puck in his hands and his eyes up. He’ll make the heads-up play but also likes to attack and challenge and scored some beautiful goals this year. He’s a solid skater who walks the line well and can jump into the play, though he does need to work on his rush defense and his decision-making on and off the puck.
He’s got the bloodlines, too, as his dad, Vladimir Sr., is a legend in Czechia and still playing at almost 40.
Photo:
Steven Ellis / Daily Faceoff


Villeneuve is a September 2007 who was a couple of weeks away from being eligible for the 2025 draft and will play three seasons in the QMJHL pre-draft. He was the QMJHL’s Defensive Rookie of the Year at 16 and was one of the league’s most productive defensemen at 17, playing to above a point per game this year and logging 20 minutes per game (second on the Armada). He was also a top playmaker, with coaches who will tell you that he might have made more plays than teammate 2025 first-round forward Justin Carbonneau this season en route to double-digit goals and more than 60 points. And though he’s small, it sounds like he’s still very physically immature (a good sign) and I was told his dad is a big guy and that he’s going to grow. His skill level, hockey sense and puck play are all legitimately high-end, too, constantly making plays and finding openings. And while he’s more shifty than fast, his speed has improved, he opens up a lot of space for himself on the ice and he defends smartly for his size. He’s a first-round talent and I decided to rank him here counting on some growth.
Photo:
Blainville-Boisbriand Armada / QMJHL


Murnieks is a heavyset center who was productive as a pro in Latvia and at U18 worlds for the national team at 15, had a really respectable 16-year-old season as a rookie for Sioux City in the USHL this year and centered Latvia’s first line as one of the youngest players at this year’s World Juniors. He didn’t look the least bit out of place in that role (which included leading them in goal differential at plus-4) either, an incredible feat playing on any Latvian team and even more so as a double underager with a July 31 birthday. He’s a pro-built, pro-style center who plays a well-rounded, complete game. He’s strong in the faceoff circle. He’s an excellent two-way player and penalty killer who tracks and wins pucks and plays with great detail for a player his age. He’s a little heavyset, his skating is just average and his skill level isn’t dynamic, but he has secondary skill and looks like a real player. He profiles as a potential 3C someday.
Photo:
Brianna May / Sioux City Musketeers


Schairer’s an athletic 6-foot-2 right-shot defenseman who has impressed scouts in international play with the U17s this year at all three of the U17 worlds, the December Five Nations and the February Five nations, making plays and looking like a high-end defenseman against his peers. He has had a tougher time against USHL competition, where his game has shown that it still has some growing to do, though. Some of the questions I have about Schairer are similar to the ones I had about Logan Hensler at the same age. He has the frame and skating, he’s clearly talented and capable, but I’m not entirely sure what his identity is or his role is at the next level because he’s probably not an offensive type or a defensive type and I’m not sure he fully knows how to be the excellent two-way type quite yet and what that entails. I’ve seen him make plays (he scored a beautiful overtime winner against Czechia at U17s). It will be really important for him to grab it and run with it next year.
Photo:
Rena Laverty / USA Hockey’s NTDP


Tier Honorable Mention
RW
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Tier Honorable Mention
J20

RW
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Tier Honorable Mention
NTDP

C
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Tier Honorable Mention
QMJHL

C
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Tier Honorable Mention
OHL

C
🇨🇦
Tier Honorable Mention
OHL

RHD
🇸🇪
Tier Honorable Mention
J20

C
🇨🇦
Tier Honorable Mention
OHL

C
🇷🇺
Tier Honorable Mention
MHL

RHD
🇸🇰
Tier Honorable Mention
Slovakia

LHD
🇸🇪
Tier Honorable Mention
J20

LW
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Tier Honorable Mention
NTDP

LW
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Tier Honorable Mention
WHL

C
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Tier Honorable Mention
USHL

LW
🇺🇸
Tier Honorable Mention
NTDP

RW
🇨🇿
Tier Honorable Mention
Finland U18

LW
🇨🇦
Tier Honorable Mention
OHL

C
🇷🇺
Tier Honorable Mention
USHL

C
🇷🇺
Tier Honorable Mention
USHL

RW
🇨🇭
Tier Honorable Mention
QMJHL

C
🇨🇦
Tier Honorable Mention
USHL

RW
🇨🇦
Tier Honorable Mention
OHL

C
🇨🇦
Tier Honorable Mention
OHL

RW
🇺🇸
Tier Honorable Mention
NTDP

(Photo: Mathias Bergeld / Sipa via AP Images)