Site icon Sound Of Hockey

Where we expect Kraken prospects to play next season

Jagger Firkus

You’ve seen them at development camp. Now it’s time to figure out where the Kraken prospects will play this upcoming season. 

With a few high-profile prospects expected to make the leap from the American Hockey League to the NHL, and several other players set to “graduate” to the AHL from junior hockey, there should be plenty of upward movement in Seattle’s system this year. 


Graduating to NHL

Ryker Evans

Evans, 22, has little left to prove in the AHL. After flirting with being an NHL regular for parts of last season, we expect Evans to fill Brian Dumoulin’s spot on the roster in 2024-25 after the veteran left-shot blueliner was traded to Anaheim on July 2. 

Shane Wright

After a successful campaign in Coachella Valley as a 20-year-old, the former fourth overall pick is poised to make the jump to Seattle’s lineup next season. 

Shane Wright (Photo/Brian Liesse)

In the mix for NHL

Ryan Winterton

Carson Rehkopf

Logan Morrison

Even with the Kraken signing Chandler Stephenson, there’s still room for a player to break into a fourth-line role with Seattle in 2024-25. Another spot could even open up if Brandon Tanev is traded to free up cap space this season, something we could still foresee happening being that he is on the last year of a contract that carries a $3.5 million cap hit.

Winterton, 20, and Morrison, 22, are coming off productive first seasons with Coachella Valley. Winterton, who tallied 35 points in 58 games for the Firebirds, is a good potential fit for a checking line role with his play style and looked good in his end-of-season stint with the Kraken.

Carson Rehkopf is entering his 19-year-old season and isn’t eligible to play in the AHL due to the NHL-CHL transfer agreement. He will likely be sent back to Kitchener in the Ontario Hockey League for one last season of junior hockey. However, Rehkopf is one of Seattle’s best prospects and, while unlikely, he could fight for a roster spot in 2024-25 with a good training camp. 

Logan Morrison (Photo/Brian Liesse)

NHL long shots, likely headed to AHL

Ville Ottavainen

Ottavainen will almost certainly begin the season in the AHL, but he could be in the mix for the first call-up if an injury arises on the Kraken blue line. The 21-year-old rearguard’s development will be better served playing every day in the AHL than as a seventh defenseman for the Kraken, but he’s huge at 6-foot-5, 216 pounds, and he is well regarded in the organization. Ottavainen could have an NHL future.


NHL long shots, likely headed to junior

Berkly Catton

In a similar vein to Rehkopf, Catton, the Kraken’s first-round pick in 2024, has a very slim chance to make the NHL roster. More realistically, he’ll be immediately sent back to junior or, if he impresses in training camp, he’ll play the 10-game trail allotted to prospects while still retaining the option of having their contracts “slide.”

Berkly Catton (Photo/Brian Liesse)

Graduating to AHL

Jagger Firkus 

Ty Nelson

David Goyette

Jani Nyman

Niklas Kokko

Lleyton Roed

Firkus, Nelson, and Goyette are members of Seattle’s exciting 2022 draft class who are finally eligible to play in Coachella Valley after successful junior careers. 

Nyman and goaltender Kokko are also members of said draft class and are expected to make the full-time jump to North America from their native Finland. Nyman had 43 points in 48 games for Ilves in Liiga, Finland’s top league. Kokko played for two teams in Liiga this past season and experienced his best success with Pelicans, posting a .926 save percentage and a 1.49 goals-against average and backstopping that team to the final.

Roed, a college free-agent signing, should be one to watch on Coachella Valley next season. The 21-year-old forward is coming off a 38-point season (30 games) for Bemidji State and can absolutely fly. He’s a fun player to watch.

Niklas Kokko (Photo/Brian Liesse)

Status up in the air

Andrei Loshko

Tyson Jugnauth

Both Loshko and Jugnauth are entering their 20-year-old seasons, meaning they are eligible to play in the AHL, but are unsigned. The Kraken could sign either of them and place them on the AHL roster, but that decision is two-fold: the Kraken first must decide whether it’s wise to add them to their prospect pool, then if there’s enough playing time available to put them on the AHL roster. 

Loshko, a fourth-round selection in 2023, was traded to Rouyn-Noranda of the QMJHL before last season and posted 67 points (28 goals) in 64 games. 

Not getting the role he expected with the Wisconsin Badgers, Jugnauth, a fourth-round pick in 2022, moved to the WHL’s Portland Winterhawks, where he was a point-per-game player (41 points in 41 games). 

Tyson Jugnauth (Photo/Brian Liesse)

Staying/heading overseas

Oscar Fisker Mølgaard

Zeb Forsfjall 

Kim Saarinen

Peetro Seppala

Visa Vedenpaa

Semyon Vyazovoy

Fisker-Mølgaard likely will play a minimum of one more season overseas before heading stateside. The Danish forward is set to return to HV71 in the SHL, Sweden’s top league, where he helped that club stave off relegation last season.

After playing the last two seasons for Coachella Valley, Seppala was signed by Orebro HK in the SHL this offseason. He remains in the Kraken system. 

Oscar Fisker Mølgaard (Photo/Brian Liesse)

Returning to AHL

Tucker Robertson

Jacob Melanson

Luke Henman


Headed back to junior/overseas/NCAA

WHL 

Julius Miettinen (Everett)

Caden Price (Kelowna)

Lukas Dragicevic (Prince Albert)

Ollie Josephson (Red Deer) 

Clarke Caswell (Swift Current)

Kaden Hammell (Everett)

QMJHL

Alexis Bernier (Baie-Comeau)

OHL

Nathan Villeneuve (Sudbury)

Jakub Fibigr (Mississauga)

Eduard Sale (Kitchener)

NCAA

Zaccharya Wisdom (Colorado College)

Barrett Hall (St. Cloud State)

Justin Janicke (Notre Dame)

Ben MacDonald (Harvard)

All of the listed CHL players are too young for the AHL and will head back to juniors this next season.

We might not see the NCAA players for a while. The Kraken hold their rights until they run out of eligibility in college hockey. Janicke, an incoming senior at Notre Dame, is the closest to graduation of the bunch.

Exit mobile version