Welcome to Down on the Farm (written edition). Your favorite segment on The Sound Of Hockey Podcast comes to the website with a weekly check-in on all Seattle Kraken prospects. The goal is to delve deeper than we can on the podcast, featuring a prospect each week, and to broaden our coverage with a statistical update on every Kraken-affiliated player below the NHL level.
Typically, these updates will include the following data: (1) year-to-date performance, (2) the player’s production in the last week, (3) the player’s Data Score (for rough cross-league comparisons), and (4) the player’s schedule for the week ahead.
Starting next week, I’ll also plan to answer one Kraken prospect question each week, if you have them. So, send your questions in the comments of a previous week’s article, on X (formerly known as Twitter) @deepseahockey or @sound_hockey, or in the Sound Of Hockey Discord.
Without further ado, let’s go down on the farm…
Featured Kraken prospect: Andrei Loshko
Niagara IceDogs (OHL) | 7 games played | 5 goals | 8 assists | 1.86 PPG | 55.5 Data Score
The Kraken drafted the Belarusian-born Andrei Loshko in the fourth round of the 2023 NHL Draft out of the QMJHL. He was traded within that league halfway through last season. This year he finds himself with yet another new junior club, the Niagara IceDogs; and this time he’s in an entirely new league too—the OHL. Loshko was a top-of-the-lineup player in the QMJHL, but he got caught up in a numbers game, as teams can only have a fixed number of European-born “import” players and players 20 years old or older. Fitting into both categories, Loshko was squeezed out.
At Kraken rookie camp, Loshko’s appeal as a prospect was apparent. He won contested puck situations and board battles, and consistently made plays to advance the puck or set up his teammates with simple, composed actions amidst surrounding chaos. His frame and speed combination appeared adequate for the professional level too. Overall, Loshko had the look of an effective role player with a realistic pro trajectory.
Following camp, Loshko returned to the IceDogs and has been on a scoring tear. He has five goals and eight assists in seven games played, for a 1.86 points-per-game (PPG) clip. He has scored in six of the seven games he has played in and is currently sixth in the OHL in scoring, tied with none other than Carson Rehkopf. Beyond the scoring, he has shown a knack for give-and-go plays in transition and in the offensive zone—a skill players often can carry into the pro game. This is encouraging. If he can maintain his career-best scoring pace, it will further bolster his profile.
Loshko is currently unsigned. As a 2023 draft pick out of the CHL, the Kraken have until the end of this season—June 1, 2025, to be exact—to sign Loshko to an NHL contract, or the team will lose his exclusive rights. His contract status will be one to watch as the season progresses.
Let’s Get Quizzical
The Kraken have drafted only one player out of the U.S. National Team Development Program. Whomst? Read on for the answer. (Hint: Kraken draft pick Matty Beniers played for the U.S. National Team Development Program but was drafted from the University of Michigan. So it’s not him.)
Notes on three more Kraken prospects
Berkly Catton
Spokane Chiefs (WHL) | 9 games played | 3 goals | 12 assists | 1.67 PPG | 55.0 Data Score
That one could look at Catton’s 1.67 PPG across nine Spokane Chiefs contests and shrug their shoulders is an indication of Catton’s established greatness in the junior ranks. After all, he averaged 1.7 PPG last season. That said, the scoring came with increasing frequency over the last week, as he tallied two goals and seven assists in four games, achieving a 2.25 PPG clip. He’s your Sound Of Hockey Prospect of the Week.
Nathan Villeneuve
Sudbury Wolves (OHL) | 2 games played | 0 goals | 1 assist | 0.5 PPG | 19.3 Data Score
After Villeneuve’s impressive preseason stint with the Kraken, he returned to his junior team, the Sudbury Wolves, as a still-suspended player. His 15-game ban related to a violation of the OHL’s social media policy and carried over from last year. He got back into game action this week, though, recording an assist in two games. More notably, he continued to agitate and mix things up physically, tallying a fighting major in just his second game back.
Justin Janicke
Univ. of Notre Dame (NCAA) | 2 games played | 1 goal | 3 assists | 2 PPG | 56.9 Data Score
An unsigned 2021 seventh-round draft pick, Janicke is likely one of the more under-the-radar Kraken prospects. Drafted out of the U.S. National Team Development Program—there’s your trivia answer—he has played the last four seasons for the University of Notre Dame. While his production has slowly ticked up over the years, he has never topped more than half a point per game in college, playing more of a forechecking role. Now, as a senior, he’s part of the Fighting Irish leadership group and has four points in Notre Dame’s first two contests. Janicke may not keep up this pace—as noted by Kraken Stats on X, his one goal was a strange one—nor ultimately get signed by the Kraken, but he was a standout in his first weekend of NCAA play and deserves to be highlighted.
Kraken prospect data
Our week-in-review tracking will begin next week, but, in addition to the note on Catton above, I’ll call out Alexis Bernier, who had two assists yesterday (Thursday) for Baie-Comeau Drakkar in a game against the Blainville-Boisbriand Armada. He was a +4 in on-ice goal differential over the last three games.
As mentioned above, Loshko and Rehkopf are in the top 10 in scoring in the OHL. Catton is in the top 10 overall in the WHL, with both Caden Price and Tyson Jugnauth in the top 5 in the WHL among defensemen—trailing only Tarin Smith and exceptional-status player Landon Dupont, both of the Everett Silvertips.

As a whole, Seattle’s goalie prospects haven’t gotten off to the strongest start, with no player’s save percentage currently above .900. That said, it is notable and encouraging that Semyon Vyazovoy has drawn six starts already in the KHL (Russia’s highest pro league), and Kim Saarinen, at just 18 years old, has five starts in Liiga (Finland’s highest pro league). Saarinen’s total is the second most among 18-year-olds in Liiga. Top prospect Niklas Kokko has yet to debut with the Coachella Valley Firebirds, with veteran Ales Stezka starting the team’s first two games.

Previewing the week ahead
The Kansas City Mavericks’ regular season opener is tonight (Friday) at 5:05 pm PT. You can catch that game on FloHockey. With the Mavericks joining the fray this week, only Ben MacDonald’s Harvard Crimson have yet to begin the 2024-25 hockey season. The Ivy League always starts later.
Oscar Fisker Mølgaard is still out with an injury he suffered in HV71’s regular season opener. He’s likely still a few weeks from returning.
The Firebirds have only one game in the next seven days, as their AHL schedule continues to be light in the early going. That game is tonight at 7:00 pm PT at San Diego. Again, you can catch it on FloHockey.
As is typical, the junior players have a busy slate of weekend games coming up. The Everett Silvertips and prospects Julius Miettinen and Kaden Hammell will take on the Portland Winterhawks and Tyson Jugnauth in Portland on Saturday. Prospect Caden Price will be back in Washington State over the weekend as Kelowna takes on Wenatchee on Friday and Tri-City on Saturday. You can catch those games, and all CHL games, on CHL TV.
Here are the games for the week ahead—from today through next Thursday:

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Reminder to send us your prospect questions, and we’ll plan to feature them in a future post. Also, if you have ideas for additional information you’d like to see or how to deliver it, let me know. I have a few improvements I’m going to roll out over the next few weeks, but I’d like to tailor this to what you all want to see.





Good writeup. A couple of queries.
1. The only external evidence we have of how the Kraken feel about Loshko is the non-signing. Is there any better intel on their intentions? Where would you rank him among the prospects?
2. I cannot wait until Catton graduates. As he cannot go to the AHL even next season and another season of juniors (2025-26) would seem a waste, do you think he makes the NHL roster fulltime next season?
3. The only draftee 3R or lower NA skater they have not signed is Ben MacDonald. Any thoughts on his future with the Kraken?
Semyon Vyazovoy finally made it to the big Russian league, did he? Good deal. You can never tell how goalies will develop, so who knows? He may make it out to North America yet. It would sure be nice to have another goalie prospect in the minors.
Other than the assumption that this is my favorite segment on the Pod…this was fantastic. I’ve never been big on following prospects. But this makes it really easy to get into the idea of who will be scoring goals for the Kraken in a few years.
Thanks for your work on this, Curtis!
17 PIM in 2 games? That’s… kind of impressive!