The Hamilton Spectator

Devils make history, select Nico Hischier

- JONAS SIEGEL

CHICAGO — The New Jersey Devils ended a mystery Friday night as the NHL draft finally took centre stage.

The Devils took Nico Hischier with the first No. 1 pick in team history, opting for the so-called “Swiss McDavid” over Nolan Patrick, the big Brandon Wheat Kings centre. It wasn’t clear which way the Devils would go in a draft that lacked the slam-dunk stars of recent years.

Patrick was long expected to be the first pick but he ended up going second to the Philadelph­ia Flyers and will presumably line up as a powerful second centre behind captain Claude Giroux.

Dallas chose defenceman Miro Heiskanen with the third selection, Colorado went with blue liner Cale Makar at No. 4 and the Vancouver Canucks took centre Elias Pettersson to round out the top 5.

The Vegas Golden Knights used their first-ever draft pick to take centre Cody Glass at No. 6.

The Calgary Flames selected defenceman Juuso Valimaki 16th overall while the Toronto Maple Leafs used No. 17 to take another blue liner, Timothy Liljegren of Sweden.

The absence of an Auston Matthews or Connor McDavid helped keep the draft in the background all week as trades and the first expansion draft in 17 years soaked up much of the recent NHL spotlight.

Hischier, an electric centre with game-breaking speed, rose into top spot with an emphatic first season in the Quebec Major Junior League, piling up 38 goals and 86 points in 57 games as a rookie for the Halifax Mooseheads. The 18year-old made an especially notable impression at the world junior championsh­ips this past winter with four goals and seven points in five games for Switzerlan­d.

Hischier is now the highestdra­fted Swiss player in NHL history, surpassing Nino Niederreit­er, who went fifth overall to the Islanders in 2010. He’ll certainly provide a jump-start to the Devils offence, which sputtered to 28th overall last season.

Patrick, a Winnipeg native, was superb two seasons ago with 41 goals and 102 points in 72 games for Brandon before adding the Western Hockey League’s playoff MVP. Injuries marred this past season though for the 18-year-old, who suited up in only 33 games following off-season sports hernia surgery.

He still finished 10th in the WHL with 1.39 points per-game and was dubbed the Canadian Hockey League’s top NHL draft prospect.

His father, Steve, and uncle, James, both played in the NHL — the latter for almost 1,300 games with the New York Rangers.

Earlier this week, the NHL was consumed by the first expansion draft since 2000 with the Golden Knights not only selecting 30 players but scooping up a haul of future draft picks — including five this weekend.

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