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Count Kings GM Ken Holland among those who prefer how NHL drafts used to be held

Henry Brzustewicz, left, stands with NHL commissioner Gary Bettman.
Henry Brzustewicz, left, stands with NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman after being selected by the Kings at No. 31 overall in the NHL draft at the Peacock Theater in downtown Los Angeles on Friday. (Damian Dovarganes / Associated Press)

For Ken Holland, the Kings’ decidedly old-school general manager, new isn’t necessarily better. Take the NHL draft, for example.

Holland presided over more than a quarter-century of drafts with the Detroit Red Wings and Edmonton Oilers, and they were generally held in one place, with everyone from the executives doing the drafting to the players being drafted on site.

On Friday, for the first time in a non-pandemic environment, the draft was conducted semi-remotely, with the top 93 draft-eligible players and their families filling some of the seats in the half-empty Peacock Theater in Los Angeles while team representatives made their selections from their home markets.

Read more:Kings hire Hall of Famer Ken Holland as their new general manager

And whatever the league was attempting to accomplish with the decentralized format, other than saving on travel, it didn’t work.

After each pick was announced on a giant video board that took up two-thirds of the theater’s massive stage, players made their way up the aisle to be greeted by Commissioner Gary Bettman. They then pulled on a team jersey and hat before being led into the "Draft House" — a small virtual reality room in the center of the stage — for what amounted to a congratulatory Zoom call with the club’s brass.

The Peacock Theater in downtown Los Angeles is played host to the NHL draft.
The Peacock Theater in downtown Los Angeles hosts the NHL draft. (Juan Ocampo / NHLI via Getty Images)

The young men were celebrating the biggest moment of their lives yet they came off like Dorothy speaking to the Wizard of Oz. Much of it was awkward, especially when James Hagens, the eighth selection, was left waving at Boston Bruins general manager Don Sweeney after the audio in the Bruins’ war room in Boston went mute. That was just one of multiple technical glitches that included echoes and timing delays that left players and executives talking over one another.

When it became obvious the painfully slow-paced event would plod past 4½ hours, the Draft House was closed to some teams.

Brady Martin, the fifth pick, didn’t even bother to come to L.A. So when Nashville announced his selection — via a celebrity video taped at a golf course — the NHL showed a video of Martin working on his family’s farm. Russian goaltender Pyotr Andreyanov wouldn’t even get that treatment. When he was announced as the 20th overall pick, the NHL had nothing to show, making Andreyanov the first no-show of the no-show draft.

Matthew Schaefer, a 17-year-old defenseman from Hamilton, Canada,, who was taken with the No. 1 pick by the New York Islanders, said being part of video draft did not spoil his big day.

Matthew Schaefer stands between Michael Misa, left, and Anton Frondell after being selected 1-2-3 in the NHL draft.
Matthew Schaefer stands between Michael Misa, left, and Anton Frondell after being selected 1-2-3, respectively, in the NHL draft at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles on Friday. (Bruce Bennett / Getty Images)

“I'm just honored to be picked,” said Schaefer who cried, alongside his dad and brother, when his name was called. “I dreamt about it my whole life. It’s such an honor. Especially the first pick overall.”

For Holland, however, none of that counts as progress.

“I’m old and I’m old fashioned. So I like the old way,” said the Kings general manager, whose view was shared by other GMs around the league. “You draft some player in the sixth round and all of a sudden you hear ‘yay!’ way up in the corner. It’s him, it’s his family, and they’re all excited to hear [his] name announced by an NHL team.

“This weekend, to me, is about the young players.”

Aside from the technical difficulties, the actual draft went largely to form. The Ducks, as expected, took Roger McQueen, an 18-year-old forward from Saskatchewan, with their top pick, the 10th overall selection. The Kings, meanwhile, traded their first pick, No. 24 overall, to the Pittsburgh Penguins. After moving down seven spots they took right-handed-shooting defenseman Henry Brzustewicz, 18, a Minnesota native, with the penultimate pick of the first day.

Round two through seven of the draft will be conducted Saturday.

Roger McQueen poses for photos with NHL commissioner Gary Bettman, right, Joshua Jackson, left, and Marguerite Moreau.
Roger McQueen, second from right, poses for photos with NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman, right, and actors Joshua Jackson, left, and Marguerite Moreau, second from left, after being drafted by the Ducks at No. 10 overall. (Damian Dovarganes / Associated Press)

The Ducks, who had a top-10 pick for a seventh straight year, see the 6-foot-5 McQueen as a raw talent who can develop into a top-line center.

“He has a big body. But what goes along with that is his skill and skating ability,” said general manager Pat Verbeek, whose team has 10 picks this weekend.

For the Kings, this draft was the first public move in what could be an intense couple of weeks. Defenseman Vladislav Gavrikov and winger Andrei Kuzmenko are unrestricted free agents and the team would like to re-sign both before they hit the open market Tuesday.

“If we re-sign Gavrikov, there’s not going to be a ton of change,” Holland said. “If we don’t, then there’s going to be change.”

Gavrikov, 29, emerged as a solid presence on the blue line, playing a career-high 82 games and posting the best goals-against average of the 17 defensemen to play at least 1,500 minutes. Former Kings GM Rob Blake made Gavrikov a contract offer last March, said Holland, who has since sweetened the deal twice. Replacing him, the GM said, could require a couple of signings.

Kuzmenko, 29, reenergized the offense after coming over from Philadelphia at the trade deadline, with the Kings going 17-5 and averaging nearly four goals a game down the stretch.

Kings fans cheer after Henry Brzustewicz is drafted by the team at No. 31 overall.
Kings fans cheer after Henry Brzustewicz is drafted by the team at No. 31 overall. (Damian Dovarganes / Associated Press)

“We like Kuzmenko. Kuzmenko likes it here; he likes his role,” Holland said. “I’m talking to him. I talked two, three, four times this week with his agent. So we’ll see.”

Signing both players would put a big dent in the Kings’ $21.7 million in salary-cap space.

“We have a lot of cap space but it doesn’t take much and it’s gone,” Holland said. “We’ve got to figure out how we want to spend our money and they need to figure out how much money they can get.”

Aside from Gavrikov and Kuzmenko, the Kings don’t have many loose ends to tie up. The team is confident it can get forward Alex Laferriere, a restricted free agent, to agree to a short-term deal and it has to decide whether to re-sign David Rittich, an unrestricted free agent, as the backup to starting goalkeeper Darcy Kuemper.

Two players who could be moving on are forward Tanner Jeannot and defenseman Jordan Spence, both of whom are looking for more ice time and may have to leave to get it.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Blues Draft Carbonneau With First Round Pick

ST. LOUIS – The St. Louis Blues were left out of the Friday trades in the NHL but added what they hope is their next version of a pure goal scorer.

The St. Louis Blues selected right wing Justin Carbonneau (left), with NHL commissioner Gary Bettman, with the 19th pick of the 2025 NHL Draft in Los Angeles on Friday. (Kirby Lee-Imagn Images)

The Blues selected right wing Justin Carbonneau with the No. 19 pick of the 2025 NHL Draft on Friday in Los Angeles, hoping they will one day in the not-too-distant future have a quality franchise-grown player become the next Blues great.

Carbonneau, 18, is 6-foot-2, 205 pounds who had 89 points (46 goals, 43 assists) in 62 games for Blainville-Boisbriand Armada of the Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League. His 89 points were second in the league.

Carbonneau scored 77 goals the past two seasons and had 148 points in 130 games.

“I’m not a big crying guy, but all the emotions that went through my head when I heard my name, I thought about my parents, my brother, everybody that was here with me,” Carbonneau said. “My guys, my teammates in Blainville. I’m grateful to have them here every single day. They shoot me some texts about the draft and can’t wait to just call them and meet my family too. I cried a bit thinking about all that, but right now, it’s just pure happiness.

“It’s cool to be drafted and it’s a great opportunity, but to be honest, I didn’t really cry because of the rank or whatever. I think the team first of all, it’s incredible to be in St. Louis. Second of all, I talked about it, but to see my family like this, also proud because they have done so much for me over the last few years. They got early at the rink and sometimes you don’t listen to them when you’re younger after a game and all that. They helped me a lot along the way. Their thing is just my teammates in Blainville, it’s cliché to say things about my teammates, but I would not be here without them today. They help me every single day to be a better teammate, a better player, a better scorer, better leader every single day. There’s different guys being there that help me be the player and the person I am today for the last three years. When I got drafted, it made me think about that. Some good flashbacks. It was emotional, but it was pretty good.”

Carbonneau is a shooter and stick handler, and doesn’t shy away from doing the things that have netted him 77 goals at the junior level the past two seasons.

“I destroyed my whole house when I was younger shooting pucks,” Carbonneau said. “I was walking with some roller blades all day since I was like five years old. My floors, I had to change it too. It’s been something I’ve been working on since I was young, just shooting the puck, walking around with some roller blades, all those things. I think my skills came from a long time ago, but I still work on them every single day.”

And this is why the Blues had Carbonneau ranked high on their draft board.

“He's a goal scorer,” Blues general manager Doug Armstrong said. “He's someone that enjoys the fruits of his labors of scoring goals, someone I think in a league that is going toward goal-scoring, he brings us another element when you stack that on some of the guys that we have right now. He's a good complement with [Jimmy] Snuggerud, [Jordan] Kyrou and [Zack] Bolduc, ‘Buch’ and ‘Holly’ who can score goals. You add another player to that.

“Our goal is to be a three-line scoring team and this gives us an opportunity. Now saying that, I don't expect him to be filling the net with regularity for a few years, so guys will mature out and do other things. It just gives us another option in another area that's hard to do.”

Carbonneau said he fits in the mold of an Adrian Kempe of the Los Angeles Kings and Travis Konecny of the Philadelphia Flyers, guys that like to play between the dots and play physical to get there. Carbonneau has some football background in his profile.

“I think his size, speed and shot,” Carbonneau said of Kempe. “I think I bring that, and Konecny, his mindset. I’m not scared of anyone. I score goals in the paint and dirty areas. He’s 5-8 or 5-10, and he shoots the puck and he goes to the net and doesn’t care about getting hit or slashed or whatever. It’s always his mentality, something I want to bring too.

“I wouldn’t call it maybe a career, but I just play football. I used to play running back. I stopped a few years ago, but I just like the contact, like on the ice a little bit. I like to get hit, I like to throw some hits. It’s a part of my game. I play inside (the) dots, I don’t play outside. Yes, I score goals and I make plays offensively, but I do it the right way. I do it strong on my stick and I can relate to my running back when I played. I had some fun playing football.”

Playing strong-minded and a between-the-dots player has always been in Carbonneau’s DNA.

“I think that I always had it in me. I play with a lot of fire,” he said. “I’m not really scared of anyone. I know that the 6-8 guys are stronger probably than me and bigger, but I’m going to still try, I think I always had that in me. Goals are scored in those areas. Outside dots, yes, you can score some goals, but you’re not going to score 50 goals from outside the dots, you’re going to score inside the dots. You have to find ways to get there and I use my body and my speed to get there. It’s important if you want to score goals like a goal-scorer like me.”

Armstrong said that the Blues considered moving up as well as moving back in the draft, especially if Carbonneau was off the board as the last player the Blues had in their block of players they had considered where they picked.

“The top 10 went, not in the exact order we had them, but the spray started after 10,” Armstrong said. “I think the mock drafts had him somewhere (Nos.) 14-18, so we thought that he would be a little bit of a stretch but he might get to us.

“I think it was a difficult year to move up because we didn't have a second, third or fourth. We don't have a second next year because we had to trade it to get a second this year, so the game plays on. If we were going to move up, we were going to have to use our pick, plus someone that we've drafted that we've already put money into develop and it would've had to take us to a different block. We didn't see that. We did talk to a couple of teams that if a player in our block wasn't there, and ‘Carbo’ was the last player in our block, if he wasn't there, we would've considered moving back, but only a couple of slots. When you're looking at 19, we wouldn't have gone to 27 or 28. We might've been able to go to 22 or 23, and acquire a late second or a third and cross your fingers that you don't lose three guys in five picks. We didn't have to do that because at 19, there was a player that we were excited about in our block.”

Carbonneau had met with the Blues prior to the draft at the combine, feeling it would be a good spot for him to land but also open to wherever he went and whoever took him.

“I spoke with the Blues this year,” he said. “I spoke with the mental coach a few hours this year to kind of get with my mindset and all that, and at the combine, I had a good meeting with them too. Some good talks and good people in St. Louis. It’s going to be fun to meet them the next few days.”

Carbonneau will be in St. Louis beginning Monday for a four-day developmental camp, then the two sides will decide on where he will play next season. His choices are Boston College or back in junior.

Justin Carbonneau gets emotional after the right wing was selected with the 19th pick of the 2025 NHL Draft by the St. Louis Blues on Friday in Los Angeles. (Kirby Lee-Imagn Images)

“We've always tried to listen to the player and tell him that we're in this for the marathon and what does he think is best for him -- how is he going to mature,” Armstrong said. “I've never in my experience as a manager asked a team to trade a player or told a player where to go because if it doesn't work out, he puts it on your plate. These guys, they're young men, 18-19 years old. They have to do what they think is right for them. We know that he wants to be an NHL hockey player, there are different avenues to do it, and we're going to support whatever he does. Like we did with ‘Snuggy,’ we wanted ‘Snuggy’ to turn pro -- he knew that, we knew that. He wanted to go back and as soon as he said he was going back, our attention turned to him having the best year he could have at Minnesota and I think it worked out. We gained his trust by not trying to strong-arm him and he rewarded us with a great season at Minnesota, turning pro and being ready. So what we try and do is work with them, but allow them to make their own decisions.”

Carbonneau said he’s open-minded.

“That’s one of the topics to talk with the Blues,” he said. “It’s Boston College, great option for me next year to develop with older guys and all that. Or Blainville. But my goal is to bring a Stanley Cup. Maybe not next year, but I’ll get there. When you have the mindset and you’re willing to do it, I’m not worried about it. If I play in Blainville, same thing. Winning a Cup with a championship team. Two good options, but some talks that I’m going to do with St. Louis and decide in the next few days.”

Reaction: Penguins Take Will Horcoff As 24th Overall Selection

After a long night of anticipation, the Pittsburgh Penguins made what is presumed to be their final draft selection in the first round of the 2025 NHL Draft.

With the 24th overall pick, the Penguins selected center Will Horcoff out of the University of Michigan. 

Horcoff, 18, recorded four goals and 10 points in 18 games with Michigan last season. The 6-foot-5, 203-pound centerman may not be known for his footspeed, but he plays a physical, straightforward game, and he has a shot that could play at the NHL level.

March 8, 2025; Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA; Michigan Wolverines forward Will Horcoff (44) handles the puck during the first period against the Penn State Nittany Lions at Yost Ice Arena. Mandatory Credit: Brian Bradshaw Sevald-Imagn Images

Horcoff's father, Shawn, played parts of 15 seasons in the NHL for the Edmonton Oilers, Dallas Stars, and Anaheim Ducks from 2000-16. Drafted in the fourth round (99th overall) by the Oilers in 1998, Shawn registered 186 goals and 511 points in 1,008 NHL games. 

Dubas and the Penguins - after their trade earlier in the draft that sent the 12th overall pick from the New York Rangers to the Philadelphia Flyers for picks 22 and 31 - traded up to 24 for Horcoff. While he wasn't rated super high on draft boards, the Penguins clearly valued center depth.

Overall, I like this selection. The Penguins got size and upside with this pick, which never hurts.


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2025 NHL Draft: Where Things Stand With The Devils

On Saturday, Day 2 of the 2025 NHL Draft will begin at noon ET and feature Rounds 2-7.  The New Jersey Devils have seven selections, including two in the second round. Below are all the picks the club will begin the day with. 
Round 250th overall 63rd overall (from Edmonton Oilers via Utah Mammoth

Round 390th overall (from Vegas Golden Knights)

Round 4

99th overall (from Nashville Predators)114th overall 
Round 6161st overall (from San Jose Sharks)178th overall

**The Devils did not have a first-round selection as their 2025 pick was traded to the Calgary Flames as part of last season’s Jacob Markstrom trade.

It is worth noting that Day 2 of the 2024 NHL Draft proved to be a busy one for the Devils. It was on that day the club acquired forward Paul Cotter from the Vegas Golden Knights and sent defenseman John Marino to the Utah Mammoth with a fifth-round pick in the 2024 NHL Draft for a second-round pick in 2024 and a second-round pick in 2025.

After a disappointing playoff exit in a Round 1 series against the Carolina Hurricanes, changes are expected. Thus far, general manager Tom Fitzgerald signed forward Juho Lammikko to a one-year, one-way contract worth $800,000 and traded veteran Erik Haula to the Nashville Predators for Jeremy Hanzel and a fourth-round pick in 2025 NHL Draft.

With regards to Devils restricted free agent (RFA)  Cody Glass, Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman provided an update on the 26-year-old center.

"New Jersey indicated that they weren't going to qualify him," Friedman said on 32 Thoughts: The Podcast. "I think their goal was to sign him to a smaller deal that wasn't as high as an arbitration number or qualifying number. I have heard there is a lot of interest in Glass, a right-shot center. Obviously, he is not going to break the bank or anything like that, but I heard it is going to be hard for the Devils to be able to do that."

Glass is one of three RFAs joining defenseman Luke Hughes and forward Nolan Foote. The list of unrestricted free agents (UFAS) include Nathan Bastian, Justin Dowling, Curtis Lazar, Daniel Sprong, Brian Dumoulin, and Jake Allen.  

Make sure you bookmark THN's New Jersey Devils site for THN's latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more.

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Photo Credit: © Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Moose Jaw Warriors Lynden Lakovic Drafted 27th Overall By The Washington Capitals

The Washington Capitals have selected Lynden Lakovic 18th overall in the 2025 NHL Entry Draft. The 18-year-old was the eighth WHLer selected and the sixth forward drafted. Listed at 6'4", 190 lbs, Lakovic showed major improvement in his game and has rounded out a lot of his skills.

Although Lakovic missed a chunk of the year due to inury, the career Warrior showed off a 19-point increase in points from the 2023-24 season, despite playing 21 fewer games. The Kelowna product could have a future as a middle-to-top six role in the NHL.

Credit Mark Peterson // Prince Albert Raiders

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Victoria Royals Cole Reschny Drafted 18th Overall By The Calgary Flames

Tri-City Americans Jackson Smith Drafted 14th Overall By The Columbus Blue Jackets

Everett Silvertips Carter Bear Drafted 13th Overall By The Detroit Red Wings

Calgary Hitmen Ben Kindel Drafted 11th Overall By The Pittsburgh Penguins

Brandon Wheat Kings Roger McQueen Drafted Tenth Overall By The Anaheim Ducks

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