An independent blog on the New York Islanders, the NHL and AHL by a guy from New York.

Saturday, June 23, 2018

The New York Islanders 2018 NHL Entry Draft & John Tavares Update



While many hoped to hear about a trade for a top goaltender, very few can find flaws in the choices the Islanders made this year based on the players that were somehow available when it came time for the team to make their selections.



According to NHL insiders, the Islanders did very well with the 11th and 12th selection in this year’s NHL Entry Draft. When I did my Draft Preview, I didn’t see the players they chose as being available, both being ranked in the top 7 by Central Scouting. It seemed to be the theme of the day. The Oilers selected my first choice for the Islanders by taking D, Evan Bouchard. But the Isles did select RW, Oliver Wahlstrom at 11 and D, Noah Dobson with the 12th pick. "They are outstanding prospects," Lamoriello said. "The offensive player (Wahlstrom) is a prolific scorer, he has great hands, very talented and the defenseman from Quebec, Dobson, has so much upside as far as skill and offense." These selections could turn out to be some of the best of the entire draft.



#11      Oliver Wahlstrom, RW, 6’1, 208#

Wahlstrom is a “big, strong power forward” who idolizes and has been compared to Alex Ovechkin and Patrick Laine. A lot of fans can’t wait to see him with Kieffer Bellows in the Blue & White Scrimmage, and beyond. Wahlstrom, a product of the US National Development Program (40 goals in 54 games) led all US born players with 7 goals at the U18WJC. While he is set to return to Boston College next season, Wahlstrom wants to get noticed by his NHL team. He lists some of his best on-ice attributes as skill, creativity and a hard, heavy shot. He also said he has to fine tune his skill set, but he’s more than confident when called upon to step right in when he gets the chance. Many thought Wahlstrom was a top 5 offensive talent in this year’s draft. He is a dual-citizen of the United States and Sweden.



#12      Noah Dobson, D, 6’3, 177#

Noah Dobson is a highly skilled, puck-moving, offensive defensemen who is projected to be a top 4 D-Man who could lead an NHL PP one day. With his speed, Dobson is well suited for the modern NHL game for a blue liner. He said he models his game after the Blues, Alex Pietrangelo. Per Dobson, "The goal this summer is to be able to get my body to a level and add some strength where I can go into an NHL camp with the Islanders in September and compete against men and not be out of place and make a decision tough on management to send me back to junior," Dobson (2 & 5 for 7 pts) captured a QMJHL title with the Acadie-Bathurst Titan and a Memorial Cup. "I bring a two-way, puck-moving game. I think I’m a very reliable defenseman, able to play against other team’s top players, but at the same time get up in the rush and create offense and produce offensively." Dobson was proud to be selected by New York, “Just to be at the NHL Draft and a chance to be selected is pretty surreal itself," Dobson said "I was happy to join any NHL organization here today, so to join the Islanders I'm very excited and happy to join this team."



On Day two, the Islanders had the opportunity to use the #41, #43, #72, #103, #134 and 196th pick to add to their prospect pool. Here’s a breakdown on their selections.



Round 2



#41      Bode Wilde, D, 6’4, 198#

Bode Wilde was ranked 18th in the draft. He is a Canadian born player with US citizenship, playing with the U.S. national U18 squad. Wilde has been called a two-way D with size & strength, good offensive instincts & has a low hard, heavy shot. His tenaciousness and competitive nature keeps him in pursuit of the puck. He has good awareness and positioning in all three zones and limits the space available for the opposition, regularly forcing them to the outside. On the rush, Wilde can start the transition or carry the puck and use his skating to open up space in the offensive zone and has a strong, accurate shot. He is known for a good hockey IQ and can makes good decisions on the ice. His skill level had him in the first round, but much like a Josh Ho-Sang, he is said to have some issues with coachability and discipline. He was slated to play at Michigan, but wants to play in OHL next season.



#43      Ruslan Iskhakov, LW, 5’8, 152#

A smaller, highly skilled winger, Iskhakov showed what he could do on the Russian National U18 team. While not as highly ranked as some of the other quality players on the squad due to his size, his hands and playmaking ability is said to be better than most. He is a strong, quick skater who creates space, uses his agility to turn and slip away from defenders and the awareness and mobility not to be positionally compromised by larger opposition players. Iskhakov is a hard-working player who uses the forecheck well despite his size and steals the puck, creating turnovers in all three zones. A very under-rated player by many insiders.



Round 3

#72      Jakub Skarek, G, 6’3, 196#

Skarek is a highly competitive, athletic goaltender who has been a pro since the age of 16. While faltering in other WJCs, he was instrumental in helping the Czech’s win gold at the 2016 Hlinka Tournament. He has size, positioning, quickness and a refined ability to track the puck. A strong butterfly goalie who moves the puck well, has a quick glove and isn’t afraid to challenge shooters. Per Craig Balloch, InGoal Magazine, “To the naked eye, Skarek’s skating ability may look suspect – but he makes up for it with excellent edgework while in the butterfly. This works for his style, because he likes to seal the ice first, and move from the butterfly position. His wonderful frame allows him to pre-set in the reverse-VH position in sharp-angle situations, and his post-integration is extremely advanced for his age. His talent ceiling is one of the highest in the draft class, regardless of the type of year he has.”



Round 4

#103    Jacob Pivonka, C, 6’0, 201#

Pivonka is a quick two-way center with NHL bloodlines (father, Michal Pivonka, WSH) who plays a fast-paced game and can score off the rush with a quick, accurate shot. Known for his hard work ethic and positive attitude, Pivonka is also known as a strong face-off specialist. It isn’t known is Pivonka will go to OHL or stay with Notre Dame.



Round 4

#134    Blade Jenkins, C, 6’2, 194#

Blade Jenkins is a U.S. born player who transitioned from the USHL to the OHL. He can score, plays with intensity and an aggressive edge. Jenkins can move the puck and is known to have the smarts to pick up new systems quickly.



Round 7

#196    Christian Krygier, D, 6’2, 192#

Christian Krygier calls himself a hard-nosed, shut down defensemen who’s hard to play against. He’s played for the U.S. National Team and set to play for Michigan State University.





Several selections the Islanders capitalized on today were higher projected players than many had anticipated being around when their numbers were called. Even in the later picks, the prospects chosen, seem to have a lot of upside once properly seasoned.


All-in-all, a great draft for New York.




On John Tavares:


Now we wait to hear about the choice made by captain, John Tavares. Per Larry Brooks, “I am told (though not by agent or NYI) that Tavares will meet with five teams during interview period that opens tomorrow. Rangers are not among them.” Pat Brisson, JT’s agent confirmed this to Pierre LeBrun. So, he will entertain proposals with a short list of teams’ that will vie for his services prior to entering the July 1st opening to free agency. The five-day negotiating window starts Monday.


Per Arthur Staple, the teams are Toronto Maple Leafs, San Jose Sharks, Dallas Stars, Tampa Bay Lightning, and Los Angeles Kings.


Aside from the Islanders, IMO, Toronto and the TBL are the only young teams that gives JT a place to win. We were told negotiations are going well, so we wait. Ownership has opened the future to the team starting with Lamoriello, Trotz, Arena, Practice Facility, New House on Island, etc. It’s not the same old Isles culture Tavares has dealt with before, but it’s his choice. He’s also getting married this summer. If he does just walk away and for nothing, it’s a real shame.



“Even with Tavares taking these meetings, just about everyone around the league feels he's going back to Isles.” -Staple





Isles Notes:



Per David Pagnotta, “Told the Islanders have officially tabled Tavares a contract offer. It’s an eight-year deal worth $88M. Also the first formal offer made to Tavares camp from Isles.”


Per Andy Graziano, “From what I'm hearing from those exiting Dallas, #isles goaltending targets seem to be centering on Craig Anderson and Jimmy Howard. Thought is Cam Talbot little too pricey for what seems a stopgap in a weaker market. #nhl.”


Isles have $32.8M in cap space after new $79.5M limit.

F (RFA) Nelson, Johnston, Quine, Prince (UFA) Tavares, Wagner D (RFA) Pulock, Davidson (UFA) de Haan, Hickey, Seidenberg G (UFA) Halak.



Islanders release 2018-19 schedule. Will play 11 of their final 15 home games at the Coliseum.  That’s 8 additional games.   




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