Daxon Rudolph is still getting used to the idea that he’s a first-round NHL draft pick, but the Buffalo Sabres defenseman said Monday that development camp has made it feel a lot more real.
“I’m one step closer,” Rudolph said at the start of the Sabres’ development camp at LECOM Harborcenter. “I don’t think today, it’s kind of started to, just being on the ice with all the guys and starting camp.”
The Sabres took Rudolph, a defenseman from Prince Albert of the Western Hockey League, with the No. 4 pick in the first round of the NHL draft on Friday at KeyBank Center. The 6-foot-4, 205-pound blueliner scored 26 goals with 30 assists in 66 games with the Raiders in 2024-25.
He spent the weekend in Buffalo for the draft and pre-draft events before heading back to KeyBank Center on Saturday to watch his friends get selected by NHL teams. After that, he and his family returned to Alberta on Sunday before coming back to Buffalo for development camp.
“That was pretty cool,” Rudolph said. “I’ve never seen it before.”
He was back on the ice at Harborcenter on Monday, one of 26 players taking part in this year’s Sabres development camp. The group includes all five of Buffalo’s draft picks this year: Rudolph, Ilya Morozov, Livs Murnie Saint John of the Quebec Maritime Junior Hockey League; Roman Szongeoth, a center from Goo Goo Winlanid and Dylan Dumont, a right wing from Brummondville of the OHL.
Davin McCarthy of Clarenace of Boston University and Patrick Geary of Buffalo are also attending the camp, which runs through an annual intrsquad scrimmage at 8:30 a.m. Thursday.
A week ago, few expected Rudolph would even be tied to Buffalo. There had been speculation he could become trade capital as the first round of the draft neared, but the Sabres never projected him to fall out of the top 10. In fact, he didn’t meet with the Sabres until the morning of the draft, after attending the NHL scouting combine earlier this month in Buffalo.
Still, the Sabres saw him as the best player available when general manager Jarmo Kekalainen made the pick. That fit with the view of Rochester coach Michael Leone, who is overseeing the prospects at development camp.
“There’s a lot of information being thrown out at these kids,” Leone said. “Take it all in.”
Leone said the process is as much about helping the players build relationships as it is about evaluating them on the ice. That matters to the Sabres, too, especially when it comes to learning how prospects think, communicate and respond over the course of a season.
“Just getting to and building the relationships, that’s one of the most important things here,” said Kleber, who drafted in 2024. “It also fits into the outlook of Rochester coach Michael Leone, who is overseeing the prospects at Sabres development camp.”
Rudolph is in his third development camp with the Sabres, and this week gives him his first real test of the team’s fitness work. He called Monday’s session “a tough day in the gym,” but said the whole experience has been exactly what he expected.
“It’s something you only experience once, so you try to be where your feet are and enjoy it, but it’s busy, it’s super-exciting and it’s just a lot of fun,” he said.
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