The 2026 NHL Draft gave several teams a chance to swing big on prospects who could reshape their futures, and a few clubs came away looking especially sharp. From high-upside scorers to defensemen who can drive offense, the class had plenty of names that could look a lot more valuable in a few years than they did on draft night.
At the top of the list is Xavier Villeneuve, whom the Chicago Blackhawks grabbed 34th overall. That pick stands out as a major steal.
On talent alone, only Gavin McKenna is ranked ahead of Villeneuve, and his elite offensive ability addresses a clear need for Chicago. There’s already plenty of discussion around the Blackhawks’ decision to move the fourth overall pick for Bowen Byram, but Villeneuve and Byram are being viewed as the future top defensive pairing in Chicago.
When it comes to pure skill and long-term upside, Villeneuve was the best selection in the draft.
Chicago showed up again at No. 5 with Ryan Roobroeck, another second-round pick who could end up looking far better than where he was taken. Roobroeck entered the season as a top-10 player to watch, but his stock slipped after things didn’t go as planned.
That drop worked in the Blackhawks’ favor. He brings strong instincts and elite shooting, which gives him real boom-or-bust potential at the next level.
Chicago plans to be patient with his development, and if he reaches his ceiling, the comparison being floated is Jason Robertson. The Blackhawks may have walked out of the second round with two elite talents that other teams let slip away.
The Rangers made one of the bolder calls in the first round when they selected Alberts Smits fifth overall, and the payoff could be immediate. Smits is considered one of the draft’s top defensive prospects, but his offensive game is what gives New York a chance to see quick returns.
The Rangers needed help on defense, and they took arguably the best offensive-minded defenseman in the 2026 NHL Draft. Within the first few months of the 2026-2027 season, Smits is expected to be on New York’s top power play line.
Seattle’s Chase Reid comes in at No. 3 after slipping to pick seven, which was a surprise for the Kraken. His arrival gives Seattle’s blue line an instant boost.
Reid’s playmaking and shooting should make an impact right away, and he’s also projected to work his way onto Seattle’s top power play line in his rookie season. That kind of production would put him squarely in the conversation for the Calder Memorial Trophy.
Nikita Klepov lands at No. 2 after Anaheim selected him 15th overall. The Ducks added one of the draft’s most intriguing offensive prospects, even if the writeup around him is framed with a strange contradiction: he doesn’t offer much offensively, but he still carries tremendous offensive upside.
Klepov is coming off a season in which he became the first OHL rookie scoring champion in more than 50 years, and he joins a Ducks roster that already saw elite rookie production from Beckett Sennecke. For Anaheim, it’s another strong addition to a group that keeps stacking young talent.
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Ducks Still Have One Huge Blue Line Question Before Free Agency
The Ducks are still staring at a familiar problem on the blue line as free agency approaches, and the market for defensemen is only making the conversation more interesting. A recent look at the top pending UFA blueliners puts a spotlight on a group that could shape how several teams fill out their back ends, with names like Rasmus Andersson, John Carlson, Jacob Trouba, Mario Ferraro and Ryan Shea all drawing attention for different reasons.
For Anaheim, the bigger picture is less about who is available than what kind of move still makes sense after a summer of turnover and evaluation. Carlsons UFA rights already changed hands during the draft, Trouba has re-emerged as a relevant piece after his latest bounce-back, and Andersson sits near the top of the class as a player teams will monitor closely if he does not stay put. The Ducks do not need just another body on defense, they need the right answer, and the next few weeks could decide how aggressive they can afford to be. [Read more 🡒]
Ducks Just Made A Blue Line Move Fans Will Debate Hard
A blue-line swap ahead of the 2026 NHL Draft gave Anaheim another one of those moves fans will argue over for a while. The Ducks sent Olen Zellweger to Buffalo and, in return, added young center Anton Wahlberg plus the 45th overall pick, a package that fits the clubs habit of chasing future value while trying to keep the roster flexible.
Wahlberg arrived as a 2023 second-rounder who has not yet played in the NHL, and Anaheim already used that pick on Jayden Kurtz, a University of Wisconsin commit. Zellwegers situation adds another layer to the discussion, since he is slated to become a restricted free agent on July 1, leaving the Ducks with one more high-stakes decision to sort through as the offseason unfolds. [Read more 🡒]
One Year Later John Gibson Trade Still Haunts Ducks Rebuild Debate
A year after Anaheim dealt John Gibson, the trade still sits in that uneasy middle ground where neither side can declare victory and neither can quite move on. The Ducks got Petr Mrazek plus future draft capital in return, while Gibson landed in Detroit and immediately gave the Red Wings a steady presence in net during his first season there.
For Anaheim, the debate is less about what happened than what comes next. Mrazek was a short stop for the Ducks before being moved again, and the picks only matter if they turn into real help down the line. Until the second-round selection plays out and Gibsons Detroit future settles into a clearer shape, this one remains more of a wait-and-see evaluation than a clean rebuild win. [Read more 🡒]
