The final order for the 2025 NHL Draft is more or less set. With the Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers facing off once more in the Stanley Cup only the final two spots in the first round are yet to be decided, with both teams already having traded away their picks as part of deals that got them to this point.

We’ll have time ahead of the draft to dive deeper into these prospects, but here’s the full first round as I see it, followed by a breakdown of why I think the Top 5 is going to pan out the way it is.

2025 NHL Mock Draft

Pick

Team

Name

Position

Current Team

Nationality

Pick

Team

Name

Position

Current Team

Nationality

1

New York Islanders

Michael Misa

C

Saginaw Spirit

CAN

2

San Jose Sharks

Matthew Schaefer

D

Erie Otters

CAN

3

Chicago Blackhawks

Porter Martone

RW

Brampton Steelheads

CAN

4

Utah Mammoth

James Hagens

C

Boston College

USA

5

Nashville Predators

Caleb Desoyners

C

Moncton Wildcats

CAN

6

Philadelphia Flyers

Anton Frondell

C

Djurgårdens

SWE

7

Boston Bruins

Victor Eklund

LW

Djurgårdens

SWE

8

Seattle Kraken

Radim Mrtka

D

Seattle Thunderbirds

CZE

9

Buffalo Sabres

Jackson Smith

D

Tri-City Americans

CAN

10

Anaheim Ducks

Roger McQueen

C

Brandon Wheat Kings

CAN

11

Pittsbugh Penguins

Jake O’Brien

C

Brantford Bulldogs

CAN

12

New York Rangers

Lyden Lakovic

LW

Moose Jaw Warriors

CAN

13

Detroit Red Wings

Kashawn Aitcheson

D

Barrie Colts

CAN

14

Columbus Blue Jackets

Cullen Potter

LW

Arizona State

USA

15

Vancouver Canucks

Cameron Reid

D

Kitchener Rangers

CAN

16

Montreal Canadiens (from Flames)

Brady Martin

C

Soo Greyhounds

CAN

17

Montreal Canadiens

Justin Carbonneau

RW

Blainville-Boisbriand Armada

CAN

18

Calgary Flames (from Devils)

Cole Reschny

C

Victoria Royals

CAN

19

St. Louis Blues

Ben Kindel

RW

Calgary Hitmen

CAN

20

Columbus Blue Jackets (from Wild)

Cole McKinney

C

Michigan

USA

21

Ottawa Senators

Carter Bear

C

Everett Silvertips

CAN

22

Philadelphia Flyers (from Avalanche)

Kurban Limatov

D

Dynamo Moskva

RUS

23

Nashville Predators (from Lightning)

Malcolm Spence

LW

Erie Otters

CAN

24

Los Angeles Kings

Braeden Cootes

C

Seattle Thunderbirds

CAN

25

Chicago Blackhawks (from Maple Leafs)

Jack Nesbitt

C

Windsor Spitfires

CAN

26

Nashville Predators (from Golden Knights)

Logan Hensler

D

Wisconsin

USA

27

Washington Capitals

Jack Murtagh

C

Boston University

USA

28

Winnipeg Jets

Bill Zonnon

LW

Rouyn-Noranda Huskies

CAN

29

Carolina Hurricanes

Joshua Ravensbergen

G

Prince George Cougars

CAN

30

San Jose Sharks (from Stars)

Sascha Boumedienne

D

Boston University

SWE

31

Philadelphia Flyers (from Oilers)

Blake Fiddler

D

Edmonton Oil Kings

CAN

32

Calgary Flames (from Panthers)

William Horcroff

C

U.S. National U18

USA

No. 1: New York Islanders — C Michael Misa

There’s not really a wrong way to go between Misa and Matthew Schaefer with the No. 1 pick, but at the end of the day the Islanders need scoring — and the majority of their best forwards are on the wrong side of 30.

Misa is the kind of offensive forward this team is in desperate need of. He can make the jump quickly and have an impact on this team with his playmaking ability, smooth skating, and willingness to mix it up on the forecheck to fight for the puck.

Perhaps most importantly he’s someone who can set the tempo. This team needs leadership amongst its forwards and someone who can forge a new identity for this team. Michael Misa can be that kind of guy.

No. 2: San Jose Sharks — D Matthew Schaefer

The old adage goes that the less you hear a defenseman’s name the better, and you don’t hear Schaefer’s name often when he’s on the ice. A brilliant all-around blueliner with play that’s reminiscent of Jaccob Slavin, Schaefer can be a lifer for the Sharks and do literally everything this team needs as a top line defenseman.

He’s a solid skater, a great passer, and has ludicrous hockey IQ when it comes to his body and stick positioning. It’s rare to see a player this young with those traits and still possess an NHL body, but he has it all. Schaefer can make the jump immediately and have an impact from the jump.

This is likely who the Sharks would have taken with the No. 1 overall pick, and that makes it a boon that he’s still available at No. 2.

No. 3: Chicago Blackhawks — RW Porter Martone

I totally understand the need to get a second line center to bolster the depth, but right now this team is in dire need of someone to pair with Connor Bedard who can score the damn puck.

Right now nothing is more important than Chicago putting help around Bedard and turning him into the 100 point monster he should be. Ryan Donato just is not enough, and the nightmare scenario is that Bedard grows weary of playing for a perennial loser and asks out.

Martone scored 37 times for Brampton in 57 games this year and his shot placement might be the best in this class. Pair that with a willingness to use his frame in the corners to play in the dirty parts of the ice and he’s someone who can immediately make Bedard better, and be better as a result.

No. 4: Utah Mammoth — C James Hagens

The incredible thing about Hagens is his ability to morph into whatever his team needs. An elite goal scorer for the U.S. U18 team, Hagens morphed at Boston College last year to be a distributor, notching 26 assists in his first year in the NCAA.

Utah needs multi-faceted skaters who can move around the lines a lot while they find a combination that works, and I think in time Hagens can form a really dangerous pairing with Dylan Guenther that’s too promising not to see happen.

No. 5: Nashville Predators — C Caleb Desoyners

Desoyners can do it all, and that’s exactly what the Preds are looking for. A multi-faceted young center, this is a kid who is equally talented at scoring and playmaking. While he may not have the high ceiling of guys taken before him, Desoyners makes up for that with perhaps the best hockey IQ of any forward in this class.

Nashville has four solid centers who are all getting older. By the time Desoyners is ready to be called up it’s entirely likely we’ll see the twilight of Filip Forsberg, Jonathan Marchessault, Steven Stamkos, and Ryan O’Reilly. That means getting youth in the center spot is of paramount importance.

Desoyners can easily be a Forsberg-type do-everything player with time and conditioning.