“Down on the Farm” is your weekly Seattle Kraken prospects update. This week we’ll focus on Firebirds rookie center Oscar Fisker Mølgaard and his rapid ascension into an important role in North America. After that, we’ll pass along injury news, standout performances, and other notes from the Kraken system.
As always, if you have a Kraken prospect-related question you’d like to see featured in a future column, drop us a note below or on X or BlueSky @deepseahockey or @sound_hockey. Let’s dive in.
Oscar Fisker Mølgaard shows skill and maturity in key AHL minutes
When we highlighted Oscar Fisker Mølgaard last season, we noted that the Danish center was an impressive but underexposed prospect. His career to date had been in the Swedish league, and his trade was speed, smarts, and defensive ability, rather than gaudy scoring production.
Mølgaard came to North America for a cup of coffee with the Coachella Valley Firebirds at the end of last season. During that stint, he gave fans a hint that his game would translate to a smaller ice surface and the more physical, pressure-based play style of the AHL and NHL. But he was a role player in his time in the Valley, focused on acclimating.
“[Mølgaard] is a 20-year-old player, but he’s been playing with the men in the [SHL] for three years, [and] three years on the Danish Men’s National Team as well,” Firebirds vice president of hockey and business operations Troy Bodie said. “He’s a very smart player, good skill. We saw that last year when he adapted to not only the league, but he’s never played on the small ice. In a lot of ways it’s a different game. Just how smart of a player he is, he adapted very well.”
Mølgaard discussed his journey with Sound Of Hockey at Kraken Rookie Camp this summer.
As Kraken training camp progressed, players were re-assigned to junior leagues or the Firebirds in multiple waves, but Mølgaard remained. He stuck with the team until the very last day of cuts, along with players like John Hayden and Ville Ottavainen—both of whom have already been recalled to the Kraken for stints in the NHL early this season. This gave us a hint of the team’s view of the young Dane.
“It means a lot because you’re [still with the NHL team] in the final stages here,” head coach Lane Lambert said of the last group of cuts. “And let’s be clear, this is an NHL season, which is 82 games. It’s an Olympic year, which condenses those 82 games, and you’re going to need players. There’s a lot of games in a short period of time, and so anyone who’s here at this point in time… it bodes well for them, for sure.”
Even though he had only played a handful of AHL games, the team viewed Mølgaard as a top option for the big club.
Fair or not, this raised expectations for Mølgaard. It was up to him to prove that he could meet that standard on the ice in Coachella Valley. From my vantage—and, apparently, the team’s—he has done all of that and more.
“Oscar is a very intelligent, very skilled, two-way player,” Bodie said. “He’ll be a big part of [the Firebirds].”
With only two AHL “veterans” on the Firebirds roster at the moment (and one of them is day-to-day with a lower-body injury), Coachella Valley has been leaning on its young players in key roles. No first-year player has responded as well as Mølgaard.
He quickly assimilated to the smaller spaces available to him on North American ice; his speed through the neutral zone transporting the puck into the offensive zone is perhaps even more noticeable now than it was in Europe. It allows him to tilt the ice in his team’s favor, particularly when matched with his strong backchecking, shot blocking, and defensive-zone instincts. Those latter aspects of his game could be true high-end traits at his peak.
On the penalty kill he is active and instinctual, particularly as the high neutral-zone forechecker. He is responsible for a handful of disruptions in the early going that have helped the Firebirds qualify as a top-10 penalty-kill unit.
Most surprising to me is his deployment on the power play, where he has been the first center over the boards, taking the draw and manning the half-wall “quarterback” position. He can connect on a one-timer when the situation calls for it, but that is not a strength of his game at this point. Even still, he has been comfortable skating and passing the puck to open areas from the half wall, which is a skillset we didn’t see from him in Europe (perhaps because he never had the chance).
His overall offensive production, including a willingness to get to the net front, has also surpassed my expectations. I have seen a skill level in his hands in the early going that wasn’t evident in his role within his SHL team’s structure. If he can keep it going, and add some necessary size, his projection will look more and more like a middle-six player than a bottom-six defensive specialist.
Notes on five more Kraken prospects
Eduard Sale | F | Coachella Valley Firebirds (AHL)
Injuries have been a theme of the early season for the NHL team. Kraken prospects in the system have fared a bit better so far, but the strain on the Kraken has been felt by the Firebirds as well—with key players like John Hayden and Ben Meyers unavailable to the team because they are filling roles in the NHL. The forward depth will be tested further with Eduard Sale also out week-to-week with an upper-body injury. (Luckily, Mølgaard did not miss any additional time after leaving the team’s game on Oct. 10.)
Ty Nelson | D | Coachella Valley Firebirds (AHL)
Add to the strain on the Firebirds forwards a recent week-to-week lower-body injury for defenseman Ty Nelson, and the Firebirds are certainly undermanned at the moment. Nelson was one of only two players to play every game for the Firebirds last year, so his absence will be keenly felt.
Kaden Hammell | D | Coachella Valley Firebirds (AHL)
Hammell made his AHL debut this week and picked up both his first professional assist and first professional goal in two contests. With Nelson out, Hammell should have an extended opportunity to make his mark and prove he deserves to remain active on game days. His size and physical play are valuable, though there are some details in his reads that he needs to improve to succeed at the AHL level.
HAMMELL WITH HIS FIRST AHL GOAL 🥹 pic.twitter.com/PoHYhbZtvb
— Coachella Valley Firebirds (@Firebirds) October 23, 2025
Semyon Vyazovoi | G | Salavat Yulaev Ufa (KHL)
Semyon Vyazovoi started the season playing sparingly, likely hampered by an injury. When he did get in there, the results were not up to his standard. That changed over the last week, with Vyazovoi earning each of his KHL team’s starts and performing well. He was 2-1-0 from Friday, Oct. 17, through Thursday, Oct. 23—the time period technically covered by this late-arriving column—with a .931 save percentage. With that, all of a sudden, he leads the Kraken organization in save percentage again, as he frequently has done in recent years. His performance makes him our Sound Of Hockey Prospect of the Week. (He also added a .958 save percentage win on Saturday, Oct. 25, but we’re objective here and did not allow that to sway our player of the week “voting.”)
Let’s Get Quzzical: Two of Vyazovoi’s starts last week matched him up against a former Kraken goaltender. Name the goalie. Answer later in the column.
Jake O’Brien | F | Brantford Bulldogs (OHL)
You know you’re a star 19-year-old in junior hockey when a two-point-per-game week qualifies as “ho hum” and actually lowers your season average. That said, Sound Of Hockey got an in-person viewing of O’Brien last week from our OHL Correspondent John Barr. Check out that conversation at about the eight-minute mark in the most recent Sound Of Hockey Podcast.
Kraken prospects data update
(Author’s Note: This update covers games through Thursday, Oct. 23.)
Loke Krantz returned to the Swedish U20 league and had a productive week, scoring three goals and adding two assists.
Logan Morrison has stepped up as a top forward for the Firebirds in the early going, playing key minutes. As a third-year player, he qualifies as an experienced leader on this year’s club.
Kim Saarinen has had a couple of tough outings in recent weeks, but he continues to operate as a lead goalie for HPK in Liiga.
Victor Ostman cracked the Firebirds lineup last week, and while his numbers weren’t very good, he was mostly solid. He should be productive if he continues as the AHL backup this season. The longevity of the three-goaltender situation at the NHL level remains a question mark.
Let’s Get Quizzical Answer: The former Kraken goalie that Vyazovoi faced twice last week was Chris Driedger, who is playing for Traktor this season. Vyazovoi was 1-1-0 in those contests.
Sound Of Hockey Prospect of the Week tracker
2: Kim Saarinen, Julius Miettinen
1: Jake O’Brien, Semyon Vyazovoi
Previewing the week ahead
With apologies that this is coming late, hopefully it can still orient your watching for Saturday and the remainder of the week. Both Clarke Caswell’s Denver team and Ollie Josephson’s North Dakota team will have games available to stream on ESPN+ this weekend. The Deep Sea Hockey Game of the Week is a Sunday matchup between two top WHL squads: Julius Miettinen’s Everett Silvertips and the Spokane Chiefs.
Tracking 2026 NHL Draft prospects: Ryan Roobroeck
While he has been overshadowed by some buzzier prospects, few can match the junior scoring production of OHL forward Ryan Roobroeck. Add in a 6-foot-4, 216-pound frame and there is a lot to dream on with this player. Roobroeck has had a relatively quiet (by his standards) 11 points through 12 games this season.
Recent prospect updates
October 17, 2025: Tyson Jugnauth earns important role with the Firebirds
October 10, 2025: Firebirds drop the puck on the 2025-26 season
October 3, 2025: Catton makes his case for the NHL Roster
September 26, 2025: Junior seasons begin, J.R. Avon settles in





What deficiencies are you seeing in Hammel’s game?
Reading these articles it sure feels like Seattle is doing amazingly well with it’s prospects taken beyond the first round. Around the league it seems like teams have one or two of these guys making it to the NHL and the Kraken already have more than that with more on the way.
On the Friday Athletic Hockey Show podcast Pronman and Bultman have scathing take downs of Roobroeck and Wheeler added he’d had multiple scouts across the league text him that they’re “super, super down on Roobroeck right now”. Sounds like a story that bears watching.
Thanks Curtis…
Good Stuff.
Go Kraken!!!
Love the minor league and injury updates.
Curtis;
Thanks as always for these summaries, excited about OFM.
Listened to the podcast and John’s comments on Jake O’Brien – he literally stole the thought from my brain regarding center prospects with his Matty Barzal/Jake O’Brien comp. Saw Barzal play for the T-Birds many times, and he was consistently dynamic and dominant. Having viewed O’Brien game tapes have seen him on FloTV (and will continue to do so) so far, he looks underwhelming to me.
While Sale may be a bust, O’Brien could disappoint and Jani Nyman’s game is limited, it’s great to see hope from unexpected sources. Very reasonable to project Catton and OFM as top 6 forwards. Melanson could be a classic 4th liner. My favorite prospect that no one talks about – Julius Miettenan – is off to a great start. He’s not flashy, but is huge, skates well, and isn’t afraid to be physical and has decent skill. Barring injuries, he should be a 100-point scorer this season. Best case – the 2nd coming of Jamie Benn. Firkus scored 2 goals last night – with continued improvement he may have an NHL future. Hopefully Carson Rehkopf develops into a legit scorer. On D, both Ottavainen and Ty Nelson could become solid NHL defensemen.
The Kraken have several decent prospects, but (apart from Catton) no top-tier talent, transformative talent needed to make this franchise a consistent playoff team. The FO will need to try something other than their draft-and-develop philosophy (IDK trading prospects?) to achieve that. Let’s hope they’re up to the task.
I concur with your post, good insights. Yes, I think Miettenan certainly has an NHL future.
You have stated the problem exactly “(apart from Catton) no top-tier talent, transformative talent needed to make this franchise a consistent playoff team.” Outside of bottom line and bottom pairing players, it is difficult to feel there are any top-line, top-pairing NHLers coming from the prospects.
Even the Catton choice to me may have not been the right one. The draft year when there were many top D, I felt at the time and I think most commentators agreed that the Kraken should have taken Zeev Buium instead. He is already an established NHLer with 7 points in 9 games this season as a 19 y.o. Difficult decisions for sure but do you go for a projected 2L winger or a top pairing D?
We will see how things go at CV this season, as it is usually after Christmas before players fully adjust. That team may not do well this season with all the youth but certainly has given the opportunity to all the 2021-23 draft picks to make an NHL future for themselves.
Thanks for your response.
I get the point on Buium – he’ll be a perenniel all-start in a couple years. Regarding another defenseman – I watched the preseason game @ Calgary, and Zane Parekh was far and away the best player (not just rookie) on the ice. Both may have been better picks – particularly if the Kraken insist on making Catton a FT winger. Probably won’t happen this year. but the team needs to at least give Catton an extended tryout at center next season. His skating and passing/stickhandling are exemplary – why not put him in a position where he can use the whole ice?
Regarding the post after Winnepag game – I’m really tired, brain-dead orthodox wisdom that says “you always take a center, its the most valuable position.” No you don’t take a mediocre center over a legit top-line forward. I wish Shane Wright becomes a poor man’s version of Patrice Bergeron, but that seems fanciful, while Zegras will likely be a reliable 30+ – goal scorer
I’m a little confused here. TFL…
I thought Chuckles was taking about Cutter Gauthier – a winger who ended up turning into Jamie Drysdale for the Flyers – as opposed to Shane Wright… but now somehow Trevor Zegras is being “aspirationally” brought into this conversation.
I’m sure I’m missing something here and I don’t want to dismiss this idea that the Kraken organization has – along with everything else – somehow been poor at drafting… but could you fill me in on just what Trevor Zegras has to do with Shane Wright?
Ugh yes I meant Cuttier Gauthier…even looked up his stats prior to posting 😕