Macklin Celebrini, the Canadian who was drafted first overall by San Jose just four months ago, has already done a bit of everything. First, the 18-year-old forward made his Sharks debut on 10 October and registered two points in a 5-4 overtime loss to St. Louis, including his first career goal. Although he is skilled, fast, and exciting, that first one was a bit flukey. Coming down the right side, he made a spin-o-rama pass in front that ricocheted off the skate of St. Louis defenceman Matt Kessel and past goalie Joel Hofer. Celebrini didn’t realize it was his goal at first.
The North Vancouver native added an assist but also suffered a lower-body injury later in the game, and is now on the injury list week to week. He is the NHL’s youngest player. He dominated at the 2023 IIHF Ice Hockey U18 World Championship and the 2024 IIHF World Junior Championship for Canada. In 2024, he also became the youngest player to win the Hobey Baker Award.
Celebrini’s teammate, American Will Smith, also started his NHL career in the same game. Drafted fourth overall in 2023, Smith has been held pointless through three games so far, but he arrives in the NHL at age 19 with a wealth of IIHF success under his belt. He won a silver medal at the 2022 U18 Worlds, and a year later led the U.S. to gold and was named tournament MVP. This past season he was also a big part of the American gold at the World Juniors, and he finished his 2023-24 season by playing in the IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship in Czechia.
Jett Luchanko, drafted 13th overall this year, has also played his first two games, with Philadelphia on 11 and 15 October. He was part of Canada’s gold-medal-winning U18 team this past season. He played 14:36 in his first game for the Flyers against Vancouver and 17:00 against Edmonton.
Lane Hutson has also been whipping up a storm since joining Montreal out of training camp. The 20-year-old blueliner from Chicago has four assists in his first four games after a junior career with the U.S. that rivals any compatriot of recent times. He played two games for Montreal last season and already has five IIHF tournaments under his belt (two U18, two World Juniors, one Worlds). His puck skills have enthralled Habs fans so far.
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