Welcome to “Down on the Farm,” Sound Of Hockey‘s weekly update on Seattle Kraken prospects. This week we’ll take a look at Tyson Jugnauth’s play for the Portland Winterhawks, highlight an area where the Kraken front office is lapping the competition, provide updates on a few standout goaltending performances, share scouting video on Jani Nyman, and much more.
If you have a prospect-related question you’d like to see featured in a future column, drop us a note below or on X or BlueSky @deepseahockey. Let’s dig in.
Jugnauth is leading from the blue line in Portland
When Sound Of Hockey spoke with Kraken director of player development Jeff Tambellini a few weeks ago, Tambellini brought up one player in entirely unsolicited fashion: 2022 fourth-round pick Tyson Jugnauth. According to Tambellini, the 5-foot-11 blueliner has been “outstanding” in his second WHL campaign.
Those who follow Kraken prospects closely are familiar with Jugnauth’s unique journey at this point. He played for the University of Wisconsin for over a year following the draft before making the decision in December 2023 to jump from a depth role in college to a featured role in the WHL.
Since the move, he has 121 points in 102 WHL games. His 64 points from the blue line this season (as of Saturday, Jan. 25) are 15 more than the second place defenseman in the WHL. (Kraken prospect Lukas Dagicevic is second with 49 points.)
“To decide to go from college hockey back to the Western League is a really big decision,” Tambellini said. “And then to go perform the way he has for the last year and a half, it’s really impressive.”
It was evident to the Kraken at training camp that they were onto something with Jugnauth. “Our NHL [personnel] kept saying, who’s the [defenseman] with the white stick?” Tambellini recounted, referring to Jugnauth. “[It was] so good to watch him against our best players. He’s playing out of pressure, spinning guys off. There’s something there.”
Fast forward today, and “he’s been putting on a show” in the WHL. His smoothness and skill in his movements, as well as his calm demeanor dealing with pressure, immediately stand out on his junior tape. “He is playing the game with such ease and setting up goals that are just really impressive,” Tambellini said.
Jugnauth’s uncommon skating ability allowed him to dissect the entire Saskatoon defense to score a goal on Jan. 15.
HOW DO THEY KEEP LETTING HIM DO THIS?!? 😱 pic.twitter.com/iQX7P8oIOf
— Portland Winterhawks (@pdxwinterhawks) January 16, 2025
Later in that same game, Jugnauth showed uncommon stick skills to match when he went over the boards as one of Portland’s first shootout shooters.
2⃣ of the filthiest shootout goals you're ever going to see and a Stebi save for good measure 😤 pic.twitter.com/u6fPkCdeNA
— Portland Winterhawks (@pdxwinterhawks) January 16, 2025
Jugnauth is currently unsigned and bound for Michigan State University in the fall. But if he keeps up this scoring production, I’d wager he’ll be joining the Seattle organization sooner or later.
Kraken have proven adept at finding talent in the middle rounds
Amidst the frustration of what is shaping up to be a second straight season out of the NHL playoffs, it is tempting to view everything about the Kraken through the prism of organizational failure (or “crisis,” if you will). Things are rarely so simple, though, and The Athletic provided a good reminder of that with a recent column ranking the 50 best under-23 prospects in the league that were drafted outside the first round.
The Kraken have stockpiled second- and third-round picks in recent years, so it is not surprising that the team fared well in this exercise. What is notable, though, is that Seattle have by far the most players ranked—six of the top 50. (The next closest teams had only three such players.)

As we have discussed here and on the Sound Of Hockey Podcast, the likelihood of identifying future NHL players drops off precipitously outside the top half of the first round of the draft. Seattle’s unparalleled ability to identify potential NHL contributors outside this range sets the franchise up well for sustained success in the not-too-distant future.
Indeed, it is easy enough to dream on a balanced, competitive, and almost-entirely homegrown team to begin the 2026-27 season (see box). Of course, we are very unlikely to see a lineup like this in reality for a variety of reasons, not the least being prospect attrition. But it is an enviable situation to have the depth of NHL-caliber talent that such a thought experiment is even possible. (What’s more, this hypothetical lineup would leave many interesting prospects knocking on the door at the AHL, including Julius Miettinen, Clarke Caswell, Caden Price, Lukas Dragicevic, and Semyon Vyazovoy.)
Notes on three more Kraken prospects
Kim Saarinen | G | HPK (Liiga)
Goalie prospect Kim Saarinen is the Sound Of Hockey Prospect of the Week. He posted two shutouts and a one-goal game in three starts this week—his first Liiga action since his trip to Canada for the World Juniors. His .911 save percentage ranks fourth in Liiga, and second among under-22 goalies (behind only World Juniors teammate Petteri Rimpinen).
We began the season impressed that the Liiga rookie was simply getting regular opportunities in a professional net as an 18-year-old. His recent production has been a showstopper. That said, the development path for goalies—even the best goalies—is long. I’d expect him to remain in Finland for at least one if not two more years. (His contract with HPK goes through 2026-27, per Elite Prospects.)
Jani Nyman | F | Coachella Valley Firebirds (AHL)
Jani Nyman added a goal this week, bringing his season total to 16—the most among all rookies and players aged 20 or younger in the AHL. We looked at his early-career accomplishments last week. Check out his shifts from Coachella Valley’s Jan. 12, 2025, game against the Chicago Wolves below.
Ty Nelson | D | Coachella Valley Firebirds (AHL)
Ty Nelson has flown under the radar in this his first full professional season with the Firebirds. He was very quiet in terms of production in the early going, but it was clear that he earned the trust of the coaching staff from the beginning. While every other rookie sat for at least one game in the first month, Nelson was a lineup stalwart. Mix in some impressive durability and he is one of only two Firebirds to have appeared in every game for the team. (Logan Morrison is the other.) In his last four games, his hard work has been rewarded on the scoresheet too. He has two goals and two assists in that span. His plus-six on-ice plus-minus for the season is seventh-best on the team.
Kraken prospects data update
After an impressive World Juniors performance and a trade to the Lethbridge Hurricanes, Caden Price would be forgiven if his head were still spinning a bit. His scoring production has taken a dip in the last couple weeks. Elsewhere Ollie Josephson has been missing from the Red Deer lineup for a few weeks, and both Zeb Forsfjall and Julius Miettinen have not yet returned to their respective club team lineups since the World Juniors.
Everything College Hockey recently followed Kraken prospect and Colorado College forward Zaccharya Wisdom for a day and produced a ten-minute video on the experience. It’s worth a watch.
If not for Kim Saarinen’s standout performance, Semyon Vyazovoy likely would have been in the running for Prospect of the Week honors. His run of stellar play continues. He is currently tied for third in the KHL in save percentage—as a 21-year-old rookie.
Visa Vedenpaa remains sidelined, but that’s the only real blemish on the organizational goaltending depth chart right now.
2024-25 Sound Of Hockey Prospect of the Week tracker
Clarke Caswell: 2
Berkly Catton: 2
Tyson Jugnauth: 2
Alexis Bernier: 1
Andrei Loshko: 1
Oscar Fisker Mølgaard: 1
Victor Östman: 1
Caden Price: 1
Kim Saarinen: 1
Nathan Villeneuve: 1
Semyon Vyazovoy: 1
Previewing the week ahead
The Everett Silvertips take on their rival Seattle Thunderbirds on Saturday night at Angel of the Winds Arena.
Recent prospect updates
January 17, 2025: Jani Nyman’s scoring, 2025 NHL Draft coverage
January 10, 2025: Interview with Kraken director of player development Jeff Tambellini
January 3, 2025: Stock Up, Stock Down for Kraken prospects at the World Junior Championship
December 20, 2024: Kraken system after the Kaapo Kakko trade, David Goyette’s progress, and World Juniors
December 13, 2024: Three Kraken prospects make Team Canada WJC roster
December 6, 2024: Seattle Kraken goalie prospects progressing in the professional ranks





Thank You Curtis for the weekly updates of down at the farm.
Looks like a lot of promising prospects. The future looks bright indeed.
Biggest reason we won’t see that lineup is that Chandler Stephenson will still be around.
I look forward to this every week. Great stuff, and thank you!
Wondering if you could address one “elephant in the room”. What is going on with David Goyette??? Has anyone released any insights about why his transition has been particularly rough? He looked to have so many skills translatable to the next level (skating, hockey iq). I wonder how much his move to wing has played a part?
I shared some thoughts on Goyette earlier this season here (https://soundofhockey.com/2024/12/20/down-on-the-farm-kraken-system-after-the-kaapo-kakko-trade-david-goyettes-progress-and-world-juniors/). I’ll plan to circle back on him at the end of the season because I agree he’s one of the more interesting cases in the system right now.
Thank You Curtis for doing what I do not have time to do.
Thanks for the great content every week Curtis.
Maybe a potential topic for a future article would be what a credible development path is for our prospect goalies. Given Vyazovoy‘s success this year, might we see him in CV next season? Or is he under contract in Russia beyond this season? Given Kokko’s success, what’s a potential timeline for him arriving in the NHL? I’ve been assuming he’d need at least another successful year in the AHL, as the primary goalie, before he’d be considered for a backup role in the NHL. So potentially a Grubauer replacement (if his contract isn’t bought out sooner).
Elite Prospects has Semyon Vyazovoy’s contract going through this season. Not sure if that’s accurate, but assuming it’s right, I wouldn’t be surprised if the Kraken took a run at bringing him over this summer with the thought that the best two of Vyazovoy/Kokko/Ostman are a tandem in Coachella Valley with the other (I’d assume Ostman) in Kansas City. Kokko’s timeline would include at least one more year in Coachella Valley, I’d think. If Vyazovoy comes over this summer, next year’s Coachella Valley net would probably be the audition for the next in line to be a long-term Kraken goalie (with Daccord).
Curtis – Thanks as always for hard work regarding Kraken prospects, you’re giving us hope for the future! FYI a SOH “competitor” mocked up an future SI cover (featuring Shane Wright) titled “Your 2028 Stanley Cup Champions”. Never hurts to be a cockeyed optimist I guess. 🙂
Noticed you made Catton a winger on your hypothetical future team. Is Molgaard that good? Love Lleyton Roed, his game is very Tanev-esqe.
I was really excited to see Athletics’s list of best fifty U23 non-first rounders. Then I went down the list and saw he had Matthew Rempe at #36. Whaaaat? Was looking forward to their mid-season update of NHL farm systems, now not so sure lol.
I believe the Kraken organization thinks there is a future with Catton as a center. I could see that, but I could also see him unleashed offensively (particularly in transition) if you put him on the wing. All of that said, I have him on the wing in the little thought experiment I did mostly as a matter of roster composition. If Kakko-Beniers could be a long term relationship, that’s on a first or second line. And I think you want Wright in the top six at center too. In that case, you could think about putting Catton on the wing. I’m intrigued about the level of offense a Catton-Wright pairing could reach. Catton is showing in the WHL right now that he can perform really well when put on a line with another high offensive IQ player. As for Molgaard, I do think he’s very good and an NHL future as a two-way 3C seems attainable.