Greenwich Time

Rangers have work to do despite having top pick in NHL draft

-

New York Rangers president John Davidson refuses to get ahead of himself with his team in the unique position of holding the No. 1 pick in the NHL draft while also coming off an appearance in the expanded 24team playoffs.

Exciting as it is having the opportunit­y to add someone such as projected top pick, Quebec-born playmaking forward Alexis Lafreniere, to a young, retooling roster once the draft opens Tuesday night, Davidson cautioned the Rangers aren’t anywhere close to being a contender just yet.

The Rangers only made the playoffs because the NHL expanded the format to 24, rather than 16 teams. And even then, New York’s quick exit in being swept in three games by Carolina in the preliminar­y round wasn’t exactly reassuring.

“I think we have work to do, and I’m being bluntly honest,” Davidson said last week.

“Our No. 1 pick is going to be a very good hockey player, there’s no question, maybe even a great player, hopefully. But even he’s going to take some time to get there,” he added. “It’s a long hard climb, and we’re still in the middle of it.”

At least they’re getting a head start courtesy of a coronaviru­s pandemic-altered NHL year, in which the draft lottery fell in favor of the Rangers, and against the seven non-playoff teams with far better odds of landing the top pick. The Los Angeles Kings choose second, followed by the Ottawa Senators, who have three first

round selections, and the Detroit Red Wings, who were bumped to the No. 4 spot despite finishing with the NHL’s worst record.

As a result, the Rangers have the No. 1 pick for the first time since the NHL adopted the universal draft in 1969, and are the first team to select first when coming off a playoff appearance since 1983, when the then-Minnesota North Stars acquired the No. 1 pick in a trade with Pittsburgh.

The draft, originally scheduled to be held in Montreal in June, will instead be conducted with teams staying home to select remotely.

The Rangers, as most teams do before the draft, aren’t tipping their hand on whom they’ll select, though Lafreniere is considered the top contender with a chance to become the first Canadian player chosen No. 1 since Connor McDavid was drafted by Edmonton in 2015.

Ranked first among North American skaters by the

NHL’s Central Scouting Bureau, the 18-year-old has an exemplary resume. In leading the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League with 112 points (35 goals, 77 assists) in 52 games with Rimouski, Lafreniere became the first to earn MVP honors in consecutiv­e seasons since Sidney Crosby in 2004 and ‘05, when he also played for the Oceanic.

At 6-foot-1 and 193 pounds, Lafreniere also helped Canada win the World Junior championsh­ip in January, and was the tournament’s MVP and best forward.

Rounding out the top three prospects are 6-foot-4 center Quinton Byfield, who played for OHL Sudbury, and top-ranked internatio­nal skater, Tim Stutzle, who played pro in his native Germany last season. The topranked U.S.-born prospect is defenseman Jake Sanderson, who is the son of former NHLer Geoff Sanderson.

 ?? Ryan Remiorz / Associated Press ?? Canada’s Alexis Lafreniere shoots during the team’s practice at the World Junior Hockey Championsh­ips in Ostrava, Czech Republic. The New York Rangers might be on the clock in owning the No. 1 pick in the NHL draft on Tuesday.
Ryan Remiorz / Associated Press Canada’s Alexis Lafreniere shoots during the team’s practice at the World Junior Hockey Championsh­ips in Ostrava, Czech Republic. The New York Rangers might be on the clock in owning the No. 1 pick in the NHL draft on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States