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NHL Draft Grades: Central Division

Julian Catalfo / theScore

The 2025 NHL Draft is complete, and we're handing out grades to each team for their prospect haul.

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Pick No. Player Pos. Team League
3 Anton Frondell C Djurgarden Sweden-2
25 Vaclav Nestrasil RW Muskegon USHL
29 Mason West C Edina HS-MN
66 Nathan Behm RW Kamloops WHL
98 Julius Sumpf C Moncton QMJHL
107 Parker Holmes LW Brantford OHL
162 Ashton Cumby LHD Seattle WHL
194 Ilya Kanarsky G AKM Tula Jr. MHL

Frondell looked like a slam-dunk top-three pick from mid-January through mid-March. The rest of his campaign left more to be desired. Frondell needs to improve his consistency to blossom into the elite goal-scoring center with two-way prowess that the Blackhawks are expecting by taking him at No. 3.

Nestrasil and West are fun projects given their size and skill. Sumpf had been passed over twice in the draft, but he's coming off a splendid campaign on the top team in the QMJHL, and he impressed at the world juniors for Germany.

Pick No. Player Pos. Team League
77 Francesco Dell'Elce LHD UMass NCAA
118 Linus Funck RHD Lulea Jr. Sweden Jr.
214 Nolan Roed C Tri-City USHL

Dell'Elce twice went undrafted before finally hearing his name called Saturday. He had an impressive freshman campaign at UMass, accumulating seven goals and 24 points and a plus-18 rating in 40 contests on a team that went to the national championship game. He's closer to cracking an NHL lineup than the 17- or 18-year-olds that comprise most of the draft.

Pick No. Player Pos. Team League
94 Cameron Schmidt RW Vancouver WHL
126 Brandon Gorzynski C Calgary WHL
146 Atte Joki C Lukko Jr. Finland Jr.
158 Mans Goos G Farjestad Jr. Sweden Jr.
190 Dawson Sharkey RW Acadie-Bathurst QMJHL
222 Charlie Paquette RW Guelph OHL

Schmidt is a first-round talent. He has blazing speed and a legit shot, but he's very small at 5-foot-8 and 160 pounds. The Stars had success developing Logan Stankoven and hope to replicate it with Schmidt. It's easy to take this kind of chance on upside when Dallas' first pick is this late in the draft. Schmidt has top-six potential, which you just can't say for most prospects taken in the 90s. Oh, and the Stars snagged the best name in the draft, Mans Goos.

Pick No. Player Pos. Team League
52 Theodor Hallquisth RHD Orebro Jr. Sweden Jr.
102 Adam Benak C Youngstown USHL
121 Lirim Amidovski RW North Bay OHL
123 Carter Klippenstein C Brandon WHL
141 Justin Kipkie LHD Victoria WHL

Hallquisth was Minnesota's first pick, but Benak is the draw here. The 5-foot-8 forward impressed on the international stage with Czechia and in the USHL. Benak is the all-time scoring leader at the Hlinka Gretzky Cup, he notched seven points in four games at the Under-18s this spring, and he scored over a point per game in the USHL. That's exactly the kind of swing you want your team to take in the middle parts of the draft.

Kipkie is the rare double draftee: He was first selected 160th in 2023 by the Arizona Coyotes but went unsigned in June. He's a tall defender with bottom-pairing potential.

Pick No. Player Pos. Team League
5 Brady Martin C Sault Ste. Marie OHL
21 Cameron Reid LHD Kitchener OHL
26 Ryker Lee RW Madison USHL
35 Jacob Rombach LHD Lincoln USHL
58 Jack Ivankovic G Brampton OHL
122 Alex Huang RHD Chicoutimi QMJHL
163 Daniel Nieminen LHD Lahti Liiga

The Predators once again did well to add upside throughout the draft, but their class will ultimately be defined by what Martin becomes. It's easy to fall in love with his hitting, forechecking, and underrated skill, especially after the playoff run Sam Bennett just had. But a talent-starved Nashville team also passed on more skilled and offense-oriented players to take Martin. If the farm boy from Elmira, Ontario, only becomes a bottom-six checker, that'll be detrimental for general manager Barry Trotz.

Pick No. Player Pos. Team League
19 Justin Carbonneau RW Blainville-Boisbriand QMJHL
147 Mikhail Fyodorov RW Magnitogorsk Jr. MHL
179 Love Harenstam G Skelleftea Jr. Sweden Jr.

The speed, shooting ability, and puck-handling that Carbonneau possesses give him one of the best highlight reels in the draft and make him a very intriguing swing for the Blues at the end of the teens. Fyodorov is a slight forward who had a good scoring season in Russia.

Pick No. Player Pos. Team League
4 Caleb Desnoyers C Moncton QMJHL
46 Max Psenicka RHD Portland WHL
78 Stepan Hoch LW Ceske Budejovice Jr. Czechia Jr.
110 Yegor Borikov RW Minsk KHL
142 Ivan Tkach-Tkachenko G Ufa Jr. MHL
174 Ludvig Johnson LHD Zug Switzerland
182 Reko Alanko RHD Jokerit Jr. Finland Jr.

Desnoyers is a perfect fit for the Mammoth. He adds size down the middle and plays a mature, two-way game, making him an ideal complement to Logan Cooley - think of the New Jersey Devils with Nico Hischier and Jack Hughes. Psenicka didn't have flashy production but posted intriguing underlying metrics and has great defensive potential at 6-foot-5. Borikov tallied 25 points in the KHL at 19 years old.

Pick No. Player Pos. Team League
28 Sascha Boumedienne LHD Boston NCAA
92 Owen Martin C Spokane WHL
156 Viktor Klingsell RW Skelleftea Jr. Sweden Jr.
188 Edison Engle LHD Dubuque USHL
220 Jacob Cloutier RW Saginaw OHL

Boumedienne played important minutes on a top Boston University team, then flourished at the Under-18s with Sweden. He's not flashy offensively, but his skating and defensive profile give him top-four potential. Martin was productive in a secondary role with Spokane and could flourish as he takes more responsibility. Klingsell has top-nine potential as an intelligent scorer.

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