Where Do The TOP Winnipeg Jets Prospects Rank In The System?
The Winnipeg Jets prospect pool for skaters has only grown in talent. And on tonight’s episode, we are breaking down tiers A through C for some of their top 10 skater prospects. Your Locked On Jets, your daily podcast on the Winnipeg Jets, part of the Locked On Network, your team every day. Greetings friends and welcome to tonight’s episode of Locked On. Winnipeg Jets, part of the Locked on Podcast Network, your team every day. I’m your host Harrison Lee and I have a Winnipeg Jets fan and an online blogger. You can follow me on Twitter at age living loco and at l winnipeg jets. Thanks for making Locked on Jets your first listen of the day every day. If you like what you’re hearing, be sure to like, follow, and subscribe on all of your favorite podcasting platforms and YouTube. Doing so, of course, is always free of charge and ensures you never miss another episode. More than anything, though, we just love and appreciate your support. Especially tonight, we’ve got a fun one for you. Uh, a lot of you are probably looking at this off season and you might not be that excited, but in my mind, even if this offseason doesn’t have a ton of big movement, I am extremely excited about the upcoming training camp and preeason in just a couple of months. I know it doesn’t seem like it’s all that close because we’re not even through the cup finals yet, but I promise you August and September will roll around before you even realize it. And we’ll be back in Pentictton. We’ll be seeing a lot of the young guns for the Jets. And I think Winnipeg has uh a very well-rounded, very interesting prospect group. And to try and tackle some of the skater questions, you know, who reigns supreme in the system? Where do folks kind of fit in the the talent tier tree, if you want to call it that? Uh, I’ve thought of about 10 of Winnipeg’s top skater prospects, and I’ve attempted to rank them from A, B, and C tiers. Now, each of these tiers corresponds to, you know, maybe projectability, what I think their potential for NHL uh talent is, and it doesn’t mean that they’re a bad prospect if they’re in the lower tiers. It just means that they may need a little more seasoning and work before they finally reach that. Of course, we’re going to start off with the A tier. But before we do, did want to let you know that today’s episode is brought to you by FanDuel. Right now, new FanDuel customers can get $200 in bonus bets if your first $5 bet wins. Now, just like making a bet when you draft a prospect, you are taking a bit of a shot in the dark sometimes. Often times though, you’ve got good scouts to identify some really good tool sets, and that shot in the dark is going to be a little more educated. And with Winnipeg, I think they’ve generally gotten the hang of drafting some pretty good prospects. Now, their A tier is a very interesting one and perhaps a, you know, a slight bit controversial. Uh, we’re not going to have Brad Lambert in the A tier. First off, we’re going to be starting instead with Elias Salammonson. Now, Salo is probably a name that a lot of you are already familiar with. And in terms of Jets defenders, I don’t think he really has an equal in our prospect system. There is another name that’s in the C tier that maybe you could consider uh a a closestish analog to, but Salammonson in my mind is one of the most talented defenders the Jets have ever drafted. He’s strong, he’s mature. Uh he plays well above his age, which yes, you will watch him with the Moose. You’ll see him be impetuous with decision-m and stuff. You’ll notice that he does have some turnovers. He’ll make risky play uh plays and choices, but you have to understand, you know, he’s a young early 20s guy in his first North American season, and yet he was one of Manitoba’s top scorers. For a young Swedish defender who also missed quite a bit of time this year due to an injury, uh it’s it’s really unusual to find him settling in so quickly and adapting to North American ice uh as as fast as he was. But quite honestly, I did think that he had the ability to to reach this level very quickly. Um, one thing that’s always stood out with him when he came into camp and even from some of his SHL days was that he does play a very mature game. He’s been a pro for several years now. And you start to realize that he just mentally and and uh I guess emotionally plays the game at a much older level than you would think. Ye has a few years of experience ingrained in the way that he thinks about the ice. Uh he’s got great vision. He’s got great skating. He’s a a dynamo on the back end with a great shot and smart passing instincts. And I just wasn’t really expecting him to already be such a prolific attacking bliner, but he’s shown that there is quite a bit of potential with him. I have him in the A tier because I really do feel like he has uh potentially first pairing uh ability. you know, this is a guy who in a couple of years I easily think the Jets um have him next to Morrisy. Uh it it just seems to be the natural track, right? And they may ask him to be a little bit less aggressive. Although, you know, if you’re looking at Morrisy maybe slowing down a little bit over the next few years, perhaps Salammonson’s going to be that guy um you know, the the more offensively minded player while perhaps Morrisy starts to adopt some more dloike responsibilities. So there’s a lot of opportunity here. Uh Salammonson has been known to be a very strong two-way presence in previous uh iterations of his form and he’s just continuing to grow. He’s getting better and I really feel like the Jets envision him being the num the you know the number two alongside Moresy. The Jets just don’t have that many elite right-sided D prospects and he could be one of their crown jewels in the system. There aren’t many players in in the pool that I would say are untouchable, but Salammonson might as well be. He’s one of our most exciting prospects, and I can’t wait to see what he becomes. The next prospect in our A tier is Braden Joerger. Now, I know Joerger has some question about his ultimate ceiling, and I think in a lot of ways he projects to be a very good middle six center. Uh I know a lot of people have already anointed him the 2C of the future. I myself kind of think that that’s where he’s tracking. I just wonder, you know, once he reaches the NHL, how much of his offensive potential is really going to be uh put on display? In camp, he was mature. He played a really strong two-way game. I thought he backed well. His defensive positioning and interceptions and and forced turnovers were nice. I saw a lot to like in his game. And obviously for Team Canada, you know, you know, for the juniors and stuff, a lot of people will say that he didn’t have that impressive of a tournament, but I I don’t really read into that stuff. I want to see what he’s like when he’s in his more consistent, more routine uh environments. And in the juniors, he’s been really good. So, I think that there’s um a real interesting player there. Again, the tool sets may have some limitations with just how much will be, you know, elite offensive potential. His release is elite. In terms of, you know, the creativity and stuff and and really the high-end technical skill, I don’t know if he has as much of that. his game, you know, can be a little more reliant on that shot and and perhaps just finding softer spaces between defenders, but I think he does project to be a very clear NHLer. I think that he plays a more mature game for his age, and I do think that there is a real chance um coming out of camp next season, that he is closer to an NHL spot than uh a lot of folks might imagine. I don’t know if he’ll get a starting spot necessarily. It really depends on what happens with this coming off season. And I don’t think the Jets really want to throw him in immediately, but if he impresses during preseason, at the very least, I expect him to be a very late cut. I would think he’s probably one of the last uh demotions. So, you know, keep him in mind. I think that he very much projects to be a really good NHLer. Um I think for what Winnipeg needs, he’s more of a better fit than McGory was. And so, I’m excited to see him. I very much want to see what he’s like in camp and preseason. I have him very high on this list. Uh, one of our one of our best prospects and very clearly somebody who while he may have some caps to his total offensive potential. Maybe he doesn’t have the crazy McDavid or McKinnon skill. What he does have is a lot of defensive maturity, a great forcheing presence, and an elite release. So, there is a lot to like. Now, the last guy who’s got in my A tier is partly because I I think that there’s maybe a little more to Chupacov than maybe meets the eye. Uh he has been a prolific scorer in, you know, almost every level that he’s played in, whether it was overseas or in North America. Had he not been injured this year, he would have been crazy for the Moose. And honestly, he should have been up with the Jets. I thought he looked the most ready among our our fringe NHL prospects uh during this past preseason in camp. he seemed like he could actually do the job and he actually did score a couple of a couple of NHL goals. So, he’s kind of on the cusp for me of graduating to that next level. He’s almost not a prospect. Um, but because he kind of still is and really hasn’t had a full NHL ride just yet, I have him still in this prospect tier. Uh, I think he’s going to be a very good middle to potentially top six winger. I’m curious to know how the Jets will deploy him. I think the most natural fit is to replace Appleton on the third line and help out Lowry with some really good offensive potential and finishing talent. Um, he’s got a relentless motor. He’s a great skater. I think that he will be a very big impact player for this team and he’s the exact kind of guy that Winnipeg really needs more of in their top nine. So, get excited for Shipperov as well. You know, obviously out of this tier, he’s the most likely to make the Jets in this coming uh season. I I very much project him to be a third or perhaps even second liner depending on what happens with you know the Jets acquisitions and trades and what they do with the draft. So Shubberov very much is is going to be a Jet. I’m excited about him and I hope you are too. Now obviously the next tier has some more work to do, right? These are guys who are perhaps a little newer to the Jets prospect pool or maybe they haven’t quite yet seized uh and taken the reigns the way that I think Winnipeg and its fan base have expected. We’ll chat about this tier in just a brief moment. The NBA playoffs are in full swing and every night delivers highlight worthy performances, major momentum shifts, and can’t miss moments. Whether it’s a game-winning shot or a breakout player, there’s never been a better time to get in on the action than right now. FanDuel makes it easy to stay in the game before tip off and live. With player props, uh performance trends, and same game parlays, fans have more ways than ever to play smart and win big. Now, it’s not just the NBA playoffs. I’m not as big of a a basketball fan myself, but a lot of you are probably going to be tuning into the Stanley Cup finals. 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Hey friends, welcome back to this episode of Locked On Winnipeg Jets, part of the Locked On podcast network, your team every day. Every day, thank you so much for joining us on tonight’s episode as we’re ranking tiers of Jets skater prospects. Uh you might notice that I have conspicuously ignored goalies for now. Goalies to me are voodoo. Um, obviously Devincentes and Milich are among our top prospects, but I think for the sake of of sticking to what is a little more projectable and a little easier to figure out, we’re going to start with the skaters, right? Maybe we do uh goalies a different night. But we talked about the A tier, right? Shippov, uh, Salammonson, Jerger. What about the B tier? Does does this B team have issues? Why are they in this tier? Well, I think the first way to think about this is that the B tier either has a little more to show in in needing to be dominant or uh perhaps there are newer arrivals to this pool or maybe they’ve even earned some promotion right from the previous tier. And I think the perfect example of all of this is Brad Lambert. Lambert has probably bounced up and down the rankings in the Jets pool more than any other prospect. People just can’t really get a handle on who he is and what he’s capable of. His NHL stint so far has looked okay. Uh I don’t think he looked out of place, but I do feel like you were looking for him to be more assertive. And as he started to finally get a little more confidence at the NHL level, he then got returned back down to the Moose. And so with the Moose this past year, his numbers looked grim on paper, but when you look at how Manitoba actually scored, the uh record of goal scoring for that team and the general offensive approach, which was just dire if we’re being real, uh Lambert actually was one of their top performers. He had a consistent hand in assisting tons of goals. He um was one of their top points performers. And you know, for a team that was very anemic on the on the attack, uh, Lambert at least provided a level of threat. Unfortunately for him, the shooting percentage really took a nose dive. And I don’t know if there was maybe an underlying injury that just wasn’t publicized or if it was just confidence, maybe some puck luck. Very hard to tell. Uh, either way, you know, I think what happened with him this year is a bit of an anomaly. I kind of blame it more on the moose just being awful than anything. And so for me, what he does in preseason is kind of going to be a m, you know, a makeorb breakak moment. Uh, he needs to prove that he’s ready to take on an NHL role. And if he can’t, you know, you’re looking more likely at some sort of a trade for some very present, very near-term help. As much as I love Lambert and as much as I am probably willing to give him more leash than a lot of other people might, you know, there comes a point at which the Jets are in their competitive window. And if Lambert can’t seize the moment this coming summer and upcoming season, then it might be time for the Jets to figure out if there’s another team who’s willing to swap and bring in some more immediate NHL help. I think Lambert is is very talented. I I do believe that there is a role for him here in Winnipeg. I just don’t know if he’s going to find it in time. So, you know, with him having a weird season and a lot of the the chaos with his uh you know, uh performances the last couple of years, partly more environment focused than maybe other prospects. I’ve got him in the B tier. I think he could very easily slide back up into the A tier, but I just need to see more from him this coming season. Also in the B tier, uh you’ve got um Demetri Rashevski. Now, Rasheeski’s put up very respectable numbers for an early 20s skater in Russia. Uh, he’s been one of Moscow’s better finishers and actually is their their goal scorer of record uh for the past couple of years. And I don’t really know how his game’s going to translate to the NHL. I don’t think he has like the craziest, most explosive skating, but he does tend to find really soft areas of the ice. Um, he’s got very good vision. I feel like he likes to attack from those faceoff circles and he just seems to be, you know, a positive contributor on offense. Maybe he’s the second pass uh right before the goal scorer or perhaps he’s finishing off an opportunity himself. Uh I feel like he’s a tertiary guy and maybe it’s going to take a higherend center to bring out the best in him, but he could be an intriguing wild card. I do feel that because of his production and talent level, I’ve got him ranked fairly highly in the Jets pool, but you know, how this all kind of pans out, whether he comes over or or stays in in Russia, um could slide him, uh, you know, either up or down depending what happens in preseason. But for now, let’s let’s keep in the B tier. I think he’s got some intrigue. Uh, I really want to see what he does in camp this year. and based on his pro numbers overseas, there’s real reason to believe that he could be almost an an internal rental and an internal upgrade. So, keep an eye on Rashevski for camp if he comes over. Very excited about him. The last two players in the B tier uh are both really fun picks in my mind. Kevin, the first one, you know, we’ve we’ve chatted with him before um in, you know, an earlier point the season when he was on that really crazy points tear. Obviously, what he did was pretty unsustainable and eventually his his points totals uh definitely took a a bit of a dive, relatively speaking. You know, he was he was putting up like two points per game for the start of the year and eventually settled down to a more uh normal looking 1.2. But Kevin’s got that dog in him. Uh and I don’t just mean because he’s on the ice dogs. He’s a a relentless player. He’s got a great motor, tons of leadership ethic. Uh, I feel like his ability to time his shots well and to know when somebody’s vulnerable makes him a great scorer. I think he’s a very pesky player. The only thing with him, and kind of why I’m looking at it as more of like the second tier for now, is you want to see him maybe develop some of those elite tool sets a little more, right? He doesn’t have like the world’s hardest shot and maybe there’s like a level of technical skill um that you want him to keep perfecting. But I I do feel he’s one of those players who’s going to be uh maybe a little bit of a slow burner, but somebody who even if it takes some time to start really finding the score sheet at at the pro level, he’ll still be a positive contributor, you know, one way or another. I think he’s going to be great in the locker room. I think he’s got a great motor. He will be very fast and attack those four checking areas. U I think he’ll be a pest in the corners trying to force uh turnovers, create good offense out of the counter. There’s just a lot to his game that’s already there and now it’s kind of adding those elite finishing talent and and and touches to make him a next level threat at, you know, the NHL or even the AHL level. Uh, I think his pro career is going to be fun. I think he’ll be a fan favorite and I’m very excited for him. Now, the last guy in this B tier is a player who in my mind is actually on the fringes of of reaching uh the very top of the Jets pool, and that’s Kieran Walton. Walton has had one of the most meteoric rises we’ve ever seen from a prospect. And in some ways, when he talks about uh modeling his game after Thompson, you also see it in his transformation year-over-year. last year. He looked like a huge uh intriguing winger/center, more winger than anything with some, you know, potential skating challenges, but a a great head on the shoulders, very smart offensively, fantastic passer, and an absolute menace down low in front of goal. This year, he took that to an absolutely comical level, and even earned himself an atto uh with a moose. It was or actually it might have been a PTO. Um, but it was just an incredible year for him with the Sbury Wolves. He was fantastic putting up uh almost 1.4 points per game. And he just could not be stopped. You know, he’s a smooth skater. Still a little bit sluggish, but he’s working on it and getting better. And, you know, just generally that that offensive presence that he has. He’s got elite hand eye coordination, a great shot, and super super smart offensive instincts. He just seems to identify passing and shooting lanes before they develop. And if all of it starts to really translate to the next level, Walton could be one of the best home run picks the Jets have ever gotten, especially considering where he was taken. He was a super late pick. I have uh a lot of time for him and I would not be shocked if by this time next year he’s in the A tier or even above that if we start to get into S tier conversations. But he is a super fascinating prospect. I think he’s going to be a big impact on each other and uh look out for him. He is one of our hottest prospects in the system. Now, we have one last tier to cover here. That is the C tier. And these are guys who for one reason or another have either fallen a little bit out of favor with the system and and maybe don’t rank as highly as they did initially when they were first drafted or, you know, they’ve still got some real development to do and are relatively newcomers to this prospect pool. We’ll chat about tierc for the Jets prospects in one brief moment. Hey friends, welcome back to this episode of Locked On Winnipeg Jets, part of the Locked On podcast network, your team every day. Everyday, thank you so much for rejoining us in tonight’s closing thoughts as we are chatting about Ctier of Winnipeg skater prospects. And you know, I I talked a lot about A and B and sort of the differences between A being maybe the most pro ready or or most projectable. B tier needing some work. C tier has a more significant development curve uh or perhaps uh declines in performance from what we’d normally expect. And if you’re talking about declines in performance, you probably know where I’m going with this. Kobe Barlo and Jacob Julian have both taken considerable step backs from what I think people were really expecting. The difference was Barlo kind of figured it out in the OHL playoffs this year. Julian has kind of done some of the same, but for the most part, I think both guys really haven’t quite found their footing. And, you know, with Barlo, I think it sort of speaks to some of the concerns I had uh this past year with his development track. There were moments uh during the season where he just really wasn’t using his shot much and rather than being, you know, that prolific goal scorer, he tried to do maybe too much and wasn’t really a noticeable creator at 5v5. And so now, you know, he’s he’s ripping shots left and right. He’s been a a much more noticeable presence. Um, and so, you know, it seems like he’s rediscovered his form. But I think for me with Barlo, I I still have questions about what his NHL career might be. Uh, you could make him an insulated middle six kind of forward with a great shot. Maybe he kind of becomes like a Drew Stafford sort of player. That’s kind of where I I get this vibe of him, you know, translating to. uh he’s got some skating challenges and I feel like maybe the the decision-making and stuff is kind of off somehow. I I don’t quite know how to describe it. You don’t really see many players with his profile scoring as many points as he does, but having the the curious kind of limitations that he also seems to possess. So, he is a really interesting one. I don’t know if he’s really long for the Jets system or if he’s going to be one of those players that when the Jets try and, you know, trade for a center, they maybe move Barlo out. uh you know he’s been talked about as a future captain type and so maybe he carves out a career as like a boon Jenner sort of player where perhaps his numbers don’t jump off the page but he eventually starts to really hit a stride as a strong forch checker and a guy who can you know maybe grind into those dirty areas and sneak a a bit of a snipe here and there. So uh very intriguing one. I don’t know really how I feel about him personally. Other than that, I just don’t know if he’s going to be the kind of guy who eventually hits the top six, but you never want to write anyone off. You know, you always have uh prospects who are late bloomers, and maybe he eventually sorts it out and adds that layer of skill that, you know, you wanted to see from him. Julian, on the other hand, I feel a little bit better about now. Julian, obviously, last year he really had an offensive explosion. This year, it it sort of died on the vine. And while his numbers aren’t terrible, for the sort of season that he’s in where he’s about to make the jump to pro pretty pretty soon, uh, Yida thought that he would have consider, you know, continued his success from last year and grown his game, but it actually went the reverse direction. I’m not as worried about it in some ways. Uh, based on what we saw with camp in preseason, I do feel like he’s going to be a very solid bottom six player. You know, he’s got the defensive awareness. He’ll back checkck aggressively. He’s strong on the puck. I don’t worry about that. I just wonder if his offense is not going to be as much of a factor. Maybe he gets 10 to 15 or even 20 points a season, but that that offensive explosion that we had last season might have been more of a mirage. So, I don’t know what to make of him. Uh I like him as, you know, maybe a really good fourthline player. And, you know, beyond that, we’ll see, right? He’s going to take some time, you know, maybe to hit a stride at the NHL or even the AHL level. Uh, but I do think that he’ll still be in perhaps the same way that Kevin He is a positive impact player. Uh, even if he’s not scoring, I think he’ll have some great defensive shifts. I think he’ll be a strong fourthline player. Um, just remains to be seen if he can find some of that scoring talent that he was showcasing uh, last year. And again, like I said, in the same vein of Barlo, don’t write him off. You know, he might have had a rougher season, but he could be a player to keep an eye on as a sleeper in this pool. Now, the last guy that’s interesting to me, and I have him kind of in the C tier because he’s still a very raw prospect and is still figuring out uh the pro game, it’s Alfons Frey. Frey is super talented and there’s no doubt that he’s got skating for days. Um the big thing with him is obviously he’s kind of working his way up through the Swedish ranks. You know, he’s in the second tier uh for for a good stretch of the season. He’s played some with the under20 team uh for um Bjork Lorvin. I hope I pronounced that right. Obviously, you know, players like him take some some time to really ramp up in the Swedish pro ranks and really just the European pro ranks. Uh but he has been getting some some nice responsibility. Uh slowly working his way up. It’s just tough for a young kid who’s, you know, probably still working to earn the trust of the coaching staff and will have those youthful impetuous moments. Uh, I put him in the C tier because I think he really does possess some fantastic offensive tools, but it also comes with a lot of of growth and development needed in the decision-m, the gapping and spacing, uh, the backing and and all that kind of stuff, right? Like nothing really surprising. Uh, I don’t know if he projects to be a Jets player at this level. Um, but you know, with this kind of prospect, it’s hard for me to really get super excited because I also see how the Jets tend to look at European smaller defenders who are great skaters and very gifted with the puck movement, but don’t have like that size and grit that this the team seems to really obsess over. So, uh, you know, with him, I think he could slide very much into the B tier here next season or the year beyond, but for now, let’s keep him in the C tier. Uh, I want to see his growth coming uh for for next season. Hopefully, he can move his way up the uh the Swedish ranks into maybe some tougher competition and and more minutes, but for now, you know what? He’s going to be uh making some some adjustments, I’m sure, and working this summer. But probably one of those players that I’m not going to think about too much just yet, but in two to three years, ask me again. Curious to know how you feel about a lot of these prospects, though. Are there any in these tiers that you feel should go in a different one? Are there other prospects that you want me to talk about or think that I missed? Let me know in the comments below or at my social medias at HLLO and at LO_Winnipeg Jets. Tomorrow’s episode, I think I want to talk about some of the wildcard prospects. And these are guys who are either for one reason or or another uh a little bit under the radar because maybe their programs don’t get a lot of uh coverage. Maybe there’s not a lot of footage out there. Scouting information is limited. But they might be players to keep a very close eye on, especially say a guy like Garrett Brown who could become Winnipeg’s next Dylan Samberg. But we’ll chat about all of that on tomorrow’s show. For tonight’s episode though, that’s going to be all the time that we have. I thank you so much for listening to uh Locked on Winnipeg Jets, making us your first listen of the day every day. We will see you here tomorrow. So have a great night and as always, go Jets. Go.
The baby Winnipeg Jets continue to increase in number, and figuring out which skaters stand at the top of the pool can be challenging. To sort things a bit more cleanly, we’ve divided Winnipeg’s top 10 skater prospects into a 3-tier system. Which prospects made the A-tier list? Is Brad Lambert truly a B-tier prospect, or is there more to his circumstances worth considering? Will Kieron Walton leapfrog the middle-tier to ascend to A-tier or beyond? Why might Colby Barlow have found himself towards the back of the pack in the C-tier?
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1 comment
Something I've been thinking about Chevy is like KyleDubas he likes his guys.
If nothing is able to happen trades/free agents and there's still need on roster ik it would let alot of Jets fans down could he bring back an Appleton,Tanev or Armia.
I doubt Roslovic would come since he wanted out.
The Moose likely won't be a good team again Jets run them like a overage junior team. Rarely until last year do they have 2way deals.
Yager,Julien,Wagner,Barlow,Salmonsson,Milic,Divincentiis,Zhilkin,Ford,Lambert,Chibrikov,Bauer,Zloty all younger.
Our old cast of prospects who didn't pane out left team this year Lucius,Nikkanen,Torgersson,NathenSmith demanded trade,and Gawanke,you'd have to think writing is on Wall for Lundmark and Heinola.