2024 NHL Draft Tracker: Every pick made

The 2024 NHL Draft will take place this weekend at the Sphere in Las Vegas. You can keep up with every pick made with the NHL Draft Tracker.

The boos for Utah owners Ryan and Ashley Smith rained down at Vegas Sphere immediately after Gary Bettman welcomed the two to the draft stage Friday night. 

“You can’t boo us,” joked Ryan, “we haven’t even done anything yet.”

That all changed seconds later, when Ashley became public enemy no. 1 in Calgary for selecting Tij Iginla sixth overall.

So much for Calgary’s dream draft scenario.

It took all of about five minutes and three picks later for the Flames’ focus to turn quickly on another exciting storyline that saw the club land the most intriguing and dynamic defencemen available this year: Zayne Parekh.

One year after setting an OHL record for defencemen with 21 goals as a 16-year-old rookie, the native of Nobleton, Ont., posted a season for the ages, scoring 33 goals and finishing with 96 points to lead all CHL blue liners.   

Tidy work for a 66-game season that saw him turn 18 in February.

His high-risk, high-reward style of play drew comparisons to Erik Karlsson, which is lofty praise for a six-foot, 180-pound defender.

“You should have seen me at the start of the year – it wasn’t too pretty,” laughed Parekh when asked by Pat Steinberg on Sportsnet 960 about his defensive adventures. 

“But at the end of the year, I really dialled it in.

“You’re not drafting me to defend, you’re drafting me to be a dynamic puck mover.

I’m still ironing out that side of the game and it’s a big thing for me.”

By season’s end, he was good enough to help Saginaw raise the Memorial Cup.

“I think he could be special,” said Flames GM Craig Conroy.

“The offence, the way he sees the ice… he’s got some risk on the ice but that’s what makes him so special.

“I know people are going to say he’s going to have to work defensively, but he’s got special offensive gifts for sure. He just sees stuff other people don’t. We can teach him how to defend.”

Learning is his forte, as Parekh graduated high school early and enrolled in classes at the University of Toronto as a 17-year-old.

For what it’s worth, he was the only prospect capable of completing the Rubik’s Cube at this year’s combine. 

In less than 40 seconds, he’s quick to add.

The only thing he’s got more of than scoring instincts is confidence.

“I think I’m an offensive defenceman, a really dynamic one,” said the OHL’s most outstanding defenceman, who added 16 points in 18 playoff games.

“I like to play with the puck. I think I’m a creative kid and like to express my creativity on the ice. I have a pretty good hockey IQ too. Not a bad combination there, I think it’s pretty deadly. It helps me play hockey.”

Parekh finished four points ahead of Kitchener’s Hunter Brzustewicz, who the Flames acquired last season in the Elias Lindholm trade, giving the Flames an exciting pair of studs to build around on a back end the team is working hard to replenish.

They already have a rapport.

“Hunter has been a pretty big influence on me this year,” said Parekh.

“I’ve competed with him all year to beat him out for a couple things. I won’t list those things. He texts me all the time and congratulates me all the time on things that have happened and I text him and congratulate him too. 

“Unreal kid. Great person and personality.”

The Flames have been familiar with the Parekh family for a while, as Zayne’s 20-year-old brother, Isa, was recently invited to attend the Flames summer development camp, also as a defenceman.

“My agent brought it up and said, ‘ya, you can beat him up if you want,’” laughed the effervescent Parekh, whose brother played with Nanaimo last year. 

“I’ve got to get a photo with him when we get to camp.”

Toronto’s GM likes big guys who play defence and curve their stick right.

Considering the club’s anemic right side on the blueline, GM Brad Treliving and chief amateur scout Wes Clark targeted the Oshawa Generals defender, who ranked lower on most teams’ draft board.

“He’s a real intelligent player, real competitive guy. A right-shot defenceman. He’s a guy our staff was really focused in on, and that’s why we traded down. Took a chance,” Treliving told Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman on the broadcast.

“High character kid. Moves really well. He’s just scratching the surface of what he can be.”

Clark’s draft philosophy is simple: “The more bullets, the better.”

So, it should not have arrived as a huge surprise that the Leafs — who have been routinely shedding picks for players by trade deadline — dealt their 23rd-overall selection in the 2024 NHL Draft and doubled their ammo.

The rebuilding Anaheim Ducks jumped up to snatch Norwegian defenceman Stian Solberg (remember that name) and packaged the 31st and 58th picks to Toronto.

While some experts will have ranked Danford outside of the first round, Clark has had success in this depth, snatching Matthew Knies at 57th, Fraser Minten at 38th, and OHL MVP Easton Cowan last year at 28th.

“Everything he did this year was on Easton, and I think he exceed our expectations, no doubt,” Clark said. “I know you guys thought we reached for him last year.

“Stick to what we believe in and attack it.”

Danford vows to attack his path as a prospect.

Posting 32 assists and a plus-27 rating as an OHL sophomore in 2023-24, he describes himself as a two-way defenceman who excels in all situations. A strong skater with great hockey sense. He also recognizes that his offence can grow.

Danford scored just once in the regular season but four times in Oshawa’s 21-game playoff run, where he welcomed hard labour.

“I compete hard,” he said. “I block shots. I do anything for the team to win.”

On Day 2 of the draft Saturday, the Maple Leafs are slated to pick in Round 2 (58), Round 4 (120th overall), thrice in Round 5 (151, 152, 157), and twice in Round 7 (200, 216).

Seven more bullets in the chamber.

Demidov brings superstar potential to Canadiens team in need of it

He’s a human highlight reel — a six-foot, 192-pound winger with the deft touch, pristine skating ability, deceptiveness and hockey sense to embarrass his opponents on any given play — and the Canadiens don’t have another player like him in their arsenal.

The first round of the 2024 NHL Draft is complete and while there was no surprise at the very top of the order, there were plenty of twists and turns after Macklin Celebrini’s name was called by the San Jose Sharks.

Alas, we didn’t get the kind of trade flurry we were expecting — but hope remains that those fireworks could kick off on Day 2, where blockbusters have happened before.

As we close off the blog for another year, we finished by looking at some of the biggest surprises from the first-round picks, the possible steals who fell further than expected, and who are the first-round calibre prospects not selected that will be there for the taking in Round 2.

NHL Draft top stories

We asked Dan Milstein to describe Ivan Demidov in one sentence, and the agent for the young Russian chosen fifth overall in the 2024 NHL Draft immediately fired back two words via text from Las Vegas: “Absolute superstar.”

Demidov was unquestionably the best player available when the Montreal Canadiens stepped up to the podium at the Sphere on Friday evening. We’re talking about an offensive dynamo projected to become a top-line forward in the world’s greatest hockey league, a self-described gamebreaker, and he now belongs to the team that arguably needed him more than any other participating in this draft.

The Canadiens haven’t had a player produce a point per game over an entire season since Alex Kovalev put up 84 points in 82 games during the 2007-08 campaign. They haven’t had a forward in possession of such tantalizing skill since Kovalev left to sign with the Ottawa Senators in 2010. And you could argue that no player on their current roster has more potential to change all of that than Demidov.

He’s a human highlight reel — a six-foot, 192-pound winger with the deft touch, pristine skating ability, deceptiveness and hockey sense to embarrass his opponents on any given play — and the Canadiens don’t have another player like him in their arsenal.

Nick Suzuki, Cole Caufield, Juraj Slafkovsky and Kirby Dach all have the ability to bring the fans out of their seats on any given night, and they’re all forwards at the core of a flourishing nucleus in Montreal. But it’s debatable any of them possess as many of the offensive tools Demidov ritually displays.

As the first round was wrapping, general manager Kent Hughes was asked by reporters on site where exactly the Canadiens ranked the Russian on their list.

He responded, “No. 1.”

Hughes added that Macklin Celebrini, who went first overall to the San Jose Sharks, obviously wasn’t discussed, and then he said he was somewhat surprised to have Demidov available to the Canadiens, especially with two of the three teams slotted between San Jose and them taking forwards.

The Chicago Blackhawks, who took Connor Bedard first overall in 2023, opted for right-shooting defenceman Artyom Levshunov with the second pick of this draft. Then the Anaheim Ducks took big winger Beckett Sennecke before the Columbus Blue Jackets took centre Cayden Lindstrom.

Perhaps all of them were concerned that Demidov hadn’t played against pros in Russia this past season, or that he hadn’t played in international competition, or that he might be relegated for a third-straight season to Russia’s top junior league because SKA St. Petersburg of the KHL won’t want him with them due to his commitment to leave for the NHL once his one-year contract expires.

Or maybe they were concerned SKA will want Demidov so much that they’ll force him into extending his contract beyond the coming season.

But Hughes said none of that concerned him and the Canadiens as much as the possibility to draft Demidov excited them.

Sitting in a Canadiens sweater, donning their hat for the first time, Demidov told reporters he was “pretty happy to be with Habs,” and that he intends to start with them after his current contract with SKA expires.

The 18-year-old did so with as strong of a command over the English language as possible for someone who began learning it one-and-a-half years ago. He said he classifies himself as a game-breaker because he adopted Kobe Bryant’s mamba mentality and scored many game-winning goals with SKA-1946, posting the highest point total (60 in 30 games) of any player coming out of that league in their draft year.

His two points per game gave him a points percentage that was .59 more than Tampa Bay Lightning superstar Nikita Kucherov had over the 2010-11 season.

Kucherov was one of the players Demidov compared himself to when he was asked on Friday who his models his game after.

The others?

“I think (New Jersey Devils leading scorer) Jack Hughes and (Minnesota Wild leading scorer) Kirill Kaprizov — a combo,” Demidov said.

Kucherov and Kaprizov have both topped 100 points in the NHL, and Hughes (who was taken first overall in 2019) had 99 points in 78 games over the 2022-23 season.

The Canadiens haven’t had a player produce on that level since Vincent Damphousse and Pierre Turgeon scored 94 and 96 points, respectively, in 1995-96. The last time they had a player top 100 was Mats Naslund, who scored 110 points 37 years ago.

It’s not a stretch to think Demidov can one day play at that level, which is exactly why the Canadiens took him.

Hughes said the Canadiens top priority in Las Vegas was to “continue to add offensive firepower to our group,” and qualified Demidov’s availability at five as one of two things that happened to make Friday night go as planned.

The trade the GM made Friday morning — to acquire the 21st-overall pick for picks 26, 57 and 198 in this draft — was the other.

With it, the Canadiens selected six-foot-one centre Michael Hage, who produced 33 goals and 75 points in 54 games this past season with the USHL’s Chicago Steel.

“We had Michael Hage way higher than 21 on our list,” Hughes said. “We hoped he’d fall to us, and we had other plans if he didn’t fall. We talked to a lot of teams and had many options… if he hadn’t fallen, we’d have made a trade.”

The Canadiens explored moving up from fifth, as well, and might have moved down the order had Demidov or some other top forwards on their list not been available to them.

“I would say it fell perfectly,” Hughes said.

He mentioned the Canadiens’ interest in Demidov dated back to last year’s draft, and he told Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman on the floor of the Sphere that the Canadiens’ brass was high on Hage this year for multiple reasons.

“Our guys loved his speed, his skillset, his character, the fact that he’s going to get a couple more years in college to keep getting stronger, and they think he’s going to be a really good player,” Hughes said.

Hage, who dealt with a shoulder injury that cut his 2022-23 season down to just five games and then faced the unthinkable tragedy of losing his father, Alain, in a freak swimming pool accident, hopes to get much better at the University of Michigan next season.

Tij says his dad talks more about 2010 — “you know, the Golden Goal and everything” — but there is some poetry in the 17-year-old making a little history in Utah.

“It’s a milestone moment for all of us — for our state, I think, for hockey. We’re excited,” says Utah owner Ryan Smith. “We couldn’t be more thrilled this is happening. But if you would have told me in February that we’d be sitting here right now at draft, I would have said you’re crazy.

“Today’s a big moment. A milestone for everything that we’ve been working on.”

For Utah and for Tij, who lit up the WHL with a 47-goal, 84-point campaign.

“It’s a huge honour, for sure,” Tij said. “It would’ve been a surreal feeling to get picked by any team. But to be the first pick of a franchise is really cool as well.”

The sentimental Flames fan was hoping Iginla might fall to Calgary in the 9-hole, and Tij admits there was “definitely a thought” he might don the Flaming C. 

“Oh, yeah, I’d be OK with that, and talking to him, he likes Calgary, too,” Jarome told Sportsnet’s Eric Francis leading up to the draft.

“There are tons of things I loved about Calgary, obviously: great place to live, close to home, passionate hockey market.

“But he’d be more than happy to go anywhere.

“As soon as he’s drafted, it will be our job, and his job, to focus on all the great things that organization and opportunity has.”

Bubbling with cap space and trade capital and an owner ready to spend, Utah symbolizes opportunity.

And the club was never shy about its interest in its new six-foot centre.

Executives from Utah had been calling Tij throughout the season, and the prospect was encouraged by his positive meeting with GM Bill Armstrong at the Combine in Buffalo.

Then, Armstrong and his team met with Tij, Jarome and the rest of the Iginla family Thursday morning in Las Vegas.

A big basketball fan who attended Celtics games while playing minor hockey in Boston, Tij is excited to be sharing a home with the Jazz and thrilled to reunite with Utah winger Dylan Guenther, a boyhood friend.

Still, Tij says he doesn’t want to rush his own development and is preparing to play out his 19-year-old season in junior.

As the sixth-overall pick, Tij can hold bragging rights over his old man, who fell all the way to 11th in the ’95 draft.

“Yeah, I mean, he had a pretty good career,” Tij said, smiling. “So, I guess I have to start trying to build my resume.”

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