Morning Sun

NHL draft difficult to predict beyond top-three picks

- By Johnwawrow

With three picks in the first round of the NHL draft on Tuesday, New Jersey Devils generalman­ager Tomfitzger­ald faces a bit of a dilemma.

Thoughthe prospect pool is considered deep, Fitzgerald is having difficulty sorting inwhichord­er the selections might fall.

“There’s a lot of talent, especially in the top 10, top 12,” Fitzgerald said last week. “I guess the hardest thing is they’re all different — very good, but very different.”

That leaves the Devils, who pick seventh, 18th and 20th, and other teams outside of the top three selections with plenty of decisions to make.

Quebec- born forward Alexis Lafreniere is projected to go first, followed by either German forward Tim Stuetzle and Ontario center Quinton Byfield.

Beyond that is when the guessing begins, with Detroit picking fourth.

Though the coronaviru­s pandemic wiped out the NHL’S annual pre- draft scouting combine and forced teams to meet prospects via video calls as opposed to face to face, scouting staffs benefited from having additional time to pore over film with the draft pushed back from the final weekend of June.

“Every organizati­on is in the same boat. We all have the same informatio­n so we’re comfortabl­e that we have enough informatio­n to make good decisions,” Red Wings GM Steve Yzerman said.

“As far as the draft order, I have no ideawhat is going to happen before us. We can assume. At the fourth pick, we’re pretty excited regardless of how it plays out.”

The following is a capsule look at seven top prospects:

• Alexis Lafreniere (Ri

mouski, QMJHL), left wing, 6-foot-1, 193 pounds.

NHL Central Scouting ranking: No. 1 North American skater

Last season: Led QMJHL with 112 points (35 goals, 77 assists) in becoming first to win consecutiv­e league MVP honors since Sidney Crosby in 2004 and ‘05. Member of Canada’s gold-medal-winning world junior championsh­ip team, and named tournament MVP.

Central Scouting Report: “Exceptiona­lly smart player with top- end speed and pull-away gear. ... Executes under pressure and has great vision and anticipati­on.”

Compared to: Jonathan Huberdeau, Florida.

Could go: 1st ( New York Rangers) or 2nd (Los Angeles). From suburban Mon

treal, has chance to become first Quebec- born player selected No. 1 since Pittsburgh drafted goalie MarcAndre Fleury in 2003.

• Tim Stuetzle ( Manheim, Germany), center/left wing, 6-foot-1, 187 pounds:

NHL Central Scouting ranking: No. 1 internatio­nal skater.

Last season: German pro league rookie of the year with seven goals and 27 assists in 41 games.

Central Scouting Report: “A playmaking hockey artist with a great set of tools including speed, dekes, stickhandl­ing, shot and hockey IQ. Creates something positive on every shift.”

Compared to: Patrick Kane, Chicago.

Could go: 2nd (Los Angeles) or 3rd (Ottawa), with opportunit­y to become third German- born and

-trained player drafted in top 10.

• Quinton Byfield (Sudbury, OHL), center, 6-foot4, 215 pounds.

NHL Central Scouting ranking: No. 2 North American skater

Last season: Led Sudbury and finished 14th in OHL with 82 points (32 goals, 50 assists) in 45 games.

Central Scouting Report: “Powerful skater with breakaway speed. Excellent puck possession player with superior vision, creativity and playmaking ability. Heavy, accurate shot that can overpower goaltender­s. Physically ready for the pro game.”

Compared to: Evgeni Malkin, Pittsburgh.

Could go: 2nd or 3rd.

• Jamie Drysdale (Erie, OHL), defenseman, 5-foot11, 175 pounds.

NHL Central Scouting ranking: No. 3 North American skater

Last season: Ranked 13th among OHL defensemen with 47 points (nine goals, 38 assists) in 49 games. Became just ninth 17-year- old defenseman since 1991 to represent Canada at World Junior championsh­ips, where he had a goal and two assists in seven games.

Central Scouting Report: “Exceptiona­l skater with an excellent transition game that can drive the play and pushthe pace fromthebac­k end. A two-way defenseman with excellent offensive ability.”

Compared to: Cale Makar, Colorado.

Could go: Shouldn’t fall below No. 6 (Anaheim).

• Jake Sanderson ( USA U-18, National Team Developmen­t Program), defenseman, 6-foot-2, 185 pounds.

NHL Central Scouting ranking: No. 4, North American skater

Last season: Captained U-18 team, and led blueliners with 29 points (seven goals, 22 assists) in 47 games.

Central Scouting Report: “Excellent skater who plays all parts of the game at a quick pace. Elite hockey sense allows him to be effective on the attack and while defending.”

Compared to: Charlie Mcavoy, Boston.

Could go: Anywhere from No. 7 (New Jersey) and No. 13 (Carolina). Son of former NHL forward Geoff Sanderson, and committed to playing at North Dakota.

• Cole Perfetti (Saginaw, OHL), center, 5-foot-10, 177 pounds.

NHL Central Scouting ranking: No. 5 North American skater

Last season: Finished second in OHL with 111 points (37 goals, 74 assists) in 61 games. Scored both goals and added three more in shootout in Canada’s 3-2 win over Sweden in semifinal of 2019 Hlinka Gretzky

Cup.

Central Scouting Report: “Puck skills, vision and execution are on another level.”

Compared to: Ryan Nugent-hopkins, Edmonton.

Could go: Anywhere between No. 4 (Detroit) to No. 8 (Buffalo).

“It’s big for me because I want to give back,” Perfetti said about being involved in charitable causes in Saginaw. “Without the community behind us and supporting us, we wouldn’t be able to be a team in Saginaw. ... So it’s the least I can do to give back in the areas that I can.”

• Marco Rossi (Ottawa, OHL), center, 5-foot-9, 183 pounds.

NHL Central Scouting ranking: No. 6 North American skater.

Last season: OHL’S outstandin­g player of the year with 39 goals and leading Canadian Hockey League with 81 assists and 120 points in 56 games.

Central Scouting Report: “Highly skilled offensive player. An excellent skater that plays at a high pace. High-end goal scoring and playmaking ability. ... A huge asset on both special teams.”

Compared to: Brad Marchand, Boston.

Could go: Anywhere between picks No. 4 ( Detroit) and No. 12 (Florida). Chance to become fifth Austrian-born player chosen in first round.

They said it: “My dad lost two jobs in that time,” Rossi said of father, Michael, who would make 90- minute drive to Zurich over fouryear period for his son to attend practice.

“My dad, everything he did forme, I fear I wouldn’t be here especially without my family.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Will the Detroit Redwings take center Marco Rossi in round 1 of today’s NHL Entry Draft?
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Will the Detroit Redwings take center Marco Rossi in round 1 of today’s NHL Entry Draft?

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