NHL Prospect Pool Overview '25-26: Boston Bruins Start To Stock The Cupboard

The NHL off-season gives us the perfect opportunity to examine each team’s prospect pools, continuing now with the Boston Bruins.

In this series, Tony Ferrari will dig into each NHL team’s strengths and weaknesses, a quick overview of the latest draft class, where each team's positional depth chart stands and who could be next in line for an NHL opportunity.

A player who no longer holds rookie eligibility in the NHL is considered graduated and no longer a prospect for these exercises.

Initial Thoughts

After over a decade of being one of the NHL’s most dangerous contenders, the Boston Bruins are beginning to look toward the future. Whether you call it a retool or a rebuild, the Bruins sent key players out the door at the trade deadline, and they seem to have their eyes on the draft and the world of prospects. They acquired Marat Khusnutdinov, Will Zellers and Fraser Minten at the deadline, which started stocking up their cupboard. 

Khusnutdinov is an incredibly smart, tactical forward who can play both center and on the wing. His speed and transition ability are quite impressive, and although he wasn’t able to break through offensively in a limited role both pre and post-trade, he has some really intriguing dual-threat ability. He will stay in the lineup because of his 200-foot game, but his skill and transition game will help him find a nice role in the middle six. 

Zellers is an incredibly skilled puck handler who could have one of the most entertaining highlight reels of any prospect. His offensive tools allow him to get into excellent scoring position, and his shot has come a long way over the last couple of years. His scoring comes from dangling a defender and getting his shot off quickly and accurately. He’s not really a typical Bruins-style player, but there is a lot to like in terms of betting on upside and skill. 

Minten is much more of a Bruins pick, being an intense, intelligent player who can play with some jam. His shot is good, and he plays a simple, north-south game that won’t wow anyone. Minten’s entire game is based around his ability to read the ice and make the right play. He isn’t flashy, but he’s effective. 

Fabian Lysell played a dozen NHL games last season, and despite not really finding the scoresheet too often, the impact he had on the Bruins after the trade deadline was impressive. His speed and transition ability were immediately evident. Lysell will have to win a spot on the roster in training camp, but the pure talent is as high as almost anyone in the pipeline outside of James Hagens, who was just drafted seventh overall. Lysell has had some growing pains because when you figuratively go 110 miles per hour every time you’re on the ice, you can have some issues. If Lysell can slow down a bit at times and play a bit more tactically, he could be a stud for the Bruins. 

The blueline is a bit bare for the Bruins. Jackson Edwards brings a really interesting physical edge, and maybe there is something there as a bottom-pair guy. 

Loke Johansson is a big, defensive-minded blueliner who is mobile, but he’s not really much of a difference-maker. Kristian Kostadinski could be an interesting defender if he can refine his defensive game at Boston College with his physical edge.

Key U-23 Players Likely To Play NHL Games This Season

Fraser Minten (C), Matthew Poitras (RW), Marat Khusnutdinov (C/LW), Fabian Lysell (RW/LW)

2025 NHL Draft Class

Round 1, 7th overall - James Hagens, C, Boston College (NCAA)

Round 2, 51st overall - Will Moore, C, U.S. NTDP (USHL)

Round 2, 61st overall - Liam Pettersson, D, Vaxjo Jr. (Swe.)

Round 3, 79th overall - Cooper Simpson, L, Shakopee (Minn. H.S.)

Round 4, 100th overall - Vashek Blanar, D, Troja-Ljungby Jr. (Swe)

Round 5, 133rd overall - Cole Chandler, C, Shawinigan (QMJHL)

Round 6, 165th overall - Kirill Yemelyanov, C, Loko Yaroslavl Jr. (Rus.)

When the Bruins decided to trade key pieces at the trade deadline, it signalled that the 2025 NHL draft would be the beginning of a new era for the Bruins. Although they didn’t quite reach the bottom of the standings, they were selecting in the top 10 with their own pick for the first time in a long time.

Despite the best efforts from teams like the New York Islanders to trade up and try to get ahead of the Bruins, it didn’t happen, and they chose the center from Boston College, James Hagens

The fit is about as perfect as it could be. The Bruins need a new centerpiece for the future, and Hagens has the potential to be that. Coming into the year, Hagens was the top prospect for this year’s draft class, but strong seasons from a few others and a year that wasn’t quite on par with recent college draft eligibles Adam Fantilli and Macklin Celebrini resulted in Hagens dropping down the board.

Hagens is a supremely skilled playmaker with incredible creativity. His skating is agile and swift. He moves with a shiftiness that can give defenders fits. It’s given him the ability to open up passing lanes and create small advantages for himself all over the ice. Hagens is no slouch as a goal-scorer either, using his speed to attack the slot, and he has a wicked snap shot that can pick corners. He even seemed to add some level of physicality to his game despite his undersized frame. Hagens has a real chance of being the face of the Bruins one day. 

James Hagens is selected as the seventh-overall pick by the Boston Bruins in the first round of the 2025 NHL Draft. (Kirby Lee-Imagn Images)

In the second round, the Bruins selected a future teammate of Hagens at Boston College, Will Moore. The NTDP center is a play connector who always looks to move the puck in a positive direction. He’s a strong passer who works give-and-gos at a high level and shows excellent touch on passes all over the ice. Moore brings a physical edge as well. He lacks the top-end gear of a high-end producer, but he brings a steadiness you need in the middle six. 

Swedish defender Liam Pettersson’s game is raw, but the upside is incredibly intriguing. His skating and passing in transition allow him to get the play moving up ice. Pettersson is a shifty puck handler who can evade pressure and fire off passes to outlets. His defensive game will need lots of improvement, but with the tools and a bit of physical maturity, he could be really intriguing. 

Cooper Simpson was one of the most intriguing high school players in the draft because of his wicked shot, high-end skating and versatile puckhandling. As with most high schoolers, there are some concerns with how he will translate at the pro level, as he doesn’t bring much in the way of a physical game and can falter under physical pressure. Simpson excels in space and loves to attack downhill, which should bode well for him as he advances to higher pace environments. He needs to work on his defensive game, but Simpson is a scorer, so that’s what the Bruins hope to have found. 

The Bruins' selection of Vashek Blanar was a bit unexpected, but after watching some additional tape on him, it looks like the Bruins are betting on size and potential. He shows flashes of play creation from the back end and is very close to pulling plays off at the offensive blueline, even if he comes up a bit short at times. Defensively, he uses his length well and closes quickly most of the time. There are times you’d like to see him get a bit more intense, but there is a solid foundation of tools and size to work with. 

Cole Chandler is a typical Bruins-style, underappreciated player. He does a lot of the little things well and plays a high-energy, detail-oriented game. Chandler looks to initiate contact in puck races and tries to gain the little advantages. He isn’t the most skilled, the fastest, or even the strongest player, but he does so many of the right things. He could end up being a player who finds a nice role in the bottom-six down the road. 

A late-round swing on Kirill Yemelyanov might be a sneaky good pick for the Bruins as they add a center who plays a sound 200-foot game. He isn’t the most skilled or fleetest of foot, but he has enough there to be a legitimate prospect. Yemelyanov shows some really smart passing and seems to understand how to move the puck with short, simple passes to get it into excellent positions up ice. 

Strengths

Despite a number of weak points, the Bruins have done a good job of finding players who fill their depth chart down the middle. Players like Letourneau and Gasseau have been centers quite often in their careers to this point, but likely project as wingers at the next level. Even with that, they added Hagens and Moore to a group that already features Locmelis and Minten, both of whom could play NHL games this season. 

Weaknesses

The Bruins have been a very good team for a very long time, and although they’ve committed to at least a retool, they lack prospects in a major way. 

The pipeline has quite a few weaknesses, including a complete lack of U-23 talent in net. That’s somewhat excusable, though, considering that Boston has its goalie of the future in Jeremy Swayman already on the big club. 

What is increasingly concerning is their lack of defense prospects, specifically on the right side. Wanner is the only notable right-handed defender in the system. Their left side is almost as bad. The Bruins need to infuse their prospect pool with some defense prospects because they have no one who projects as more than a depth player.

Hidden Gem: Dans Locmelis, C/W

One of the best examples of a player with a bunch of average to slightly above average tools with the ability to become more than the sum of his parts, Locmelis is going to be an interesting player for the Bruins in the beginning years of their rebuild. 

After a solid season at UMass in the NCAA, Locmelis jumped into the AHL and put up 12 points in just six games. His playoff didn’t go quite as well with just one point across four contests, but there is a ton of promise as a depth scorer. Locmelis has been one of the most impactful performers for the Latvian national team at all levels, from U-18 to the men’s squad. He is continuously improving on that stage, so finding a role in the Bruins system looks like a decent bet. 

Next Man Up: Fraser Minten, C

The Bruins added Minten at the deadline last season, getting him in the deal that sent Brandon Carlo to Toronto. Minten is an intelligent, steady center who has a very good shot and a stout 200-foot game. He lacks the dynamism and upside of a true top-six center, but he brings everything you could want in a third-line center. His motor never quits, he takes excellent routes around the ice, and he isn’t a guy who is going to chase for offense. Minten was a very solid get for the Bruins, and he’s a player that they were able to almost immediately put into their lineup, signifying the beginning of a new era of Boston hockey. 

Prospect Depth Chart Notables

LW: Cooper Simpson, Will Zellers, Cole Spicer, Brett Harrison, Andre Gasseau, Christopher Pelosi

C: James Hagens, Fraser Minten, Dans Locmelis, Will Moore, Cole Chandler, Kirill Yemelyanov

RW: Fabian Lysell, Dean Letourneau, Ryan Walsh

LD: Jackson Edward, Loke Johansson, Kristian Kostadinski, Frederic Brunet, Elliott Groenewold

RD: Max Wanner

G: Philip Svedeback

For a deeper dive into the prospect pool with player rankings, check out the Yearbook and Future Watch editions of the Hockey News print edition.

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