Flames Prospect Is Taking A Calgary Path Fans Have Seen Work Before

Jakob Leander looks to follow in the footsteps of fellow Swede Axel Hurtig as he begins his North American hockey career with the Calgary Hitmen, bringing a physical edge and fresh enthusiasm to the rink.

The Calgary Hitmen may have found another one in Jakob Leander.

That’s the hope, anyway, after the Flames prospect was selected by the Hitmen in last month’s Canadian Hockey League Import Draft, setting up a potential WHL route that looks a lot like the one Axel Hurtig took through Calgary. Hurtig, another seventh-round Flames pick, turned two seasons with the Hitmen into a 2025-26 breakthrough that brought him the captaincy and his first NHL contract.

Leander is paying attention to that blueprint. The 2025 NHL draftee, a big-bodied defenceman from Jönköping, said he spoke with Hurtig around Christmas and got a firsthand sense of what the move to Canada can mean.

“I had a call with Axel at Christmas,” Leander said during a quick conversation at Flames Development Camp earlier this month. “He chatted to me about what it’s like to live in Canada compared to Sweden, and stuff like that.”

For Leander, the attraction goes beyond familiarity. He’s already had a second look at Calgary’s summer camp, and that extra time around the city has made the idea of starting his North American career there feel more real - and more appealing.

“I'm really excited to play in the WHL,” Leander said. “It’s a little rink compared to Sweden, where it’s kind of bigger.

“So it's probably a much tougher game, and I think it's going to fit me more.”

That word - tougher - is the one Leander keeps circling back to. At 19, he says he’s about seven kilos heavier than he was a year ago, and at 6-foot-4, he believes his frame is built for a physical, shutdown role. He sees that side of his game as the area that grew most over the past season.

It was a difficult year for HV71’s junior team, which finished ninth in the southern division of Sweden’s U20 circuit, but Leander says he came out of it with a clearer identity.

“We had a tough season, like as a team, but for me, I think I have developed my hits,” Leander said, describing a seek-and-destroy attitude that saw him take out many an opposing forward.

“That's what I did well this season.”

Now he’s headed toward a Calgary winter that carries a little extra meaning. A year after the Flames drafted him, Leander is set to be part of the Scotiabank Saddledome’s farewell season as a Hitmen defender. And every time he shows up at the rink, the construction work across the street at Scotia Place is a reminder of the bigger dream waiting down the line.

Like Hurtig, Leander wants to become a player Calgary fans latch onto.

“It’s going to be really fun,” he said of the upcoming campaign. “I’ve heard it's a lot of fans attending the games.

“I’m really excited to play in front of them.”

In Other News...

Flames Rebuild Feels Far From Over As More Moves Loom

The Flames rebuild still looks like a work in progress, and the recent movement around the roster only reinforced that sense. Calgary has already shown a willingness to keep reshaping the group, and the expectation is that trade chatter will continue to pop up throughout the summer as the front office weighs what fits the next phase of the roster.

Morgan Frost remains one name still circulating in those discussions, while Zach Whitecloud is also drawing interest from teams that could see him as a useful addition. Nothing is done yet, which is part of the point for Calgary right now - the club appears comfortable keeping its options open, even if the next move does not come right away. [Read more 🡒]

Flames Power Play Reset Could Change Everything Next Season

The Flames power play was one of the clearest reasons last season never really found a rhythm, finishing near the bottom of the league and leaving plenty of room for a reset. Now the group around it is changing, and Calgary is heading into 2026-27 with a very different look on the man advantage, one that will depend less on familiar faces and more on whether the next wave can turn opportunity into something more dangerous.

Matvei Gridin, Jonathan Huberdeau, Morgan Frost, Matt Coronato and Zayne Parekh are among the names expected to be mixed into those new looks, which gives the staff a lot of options but not necessarily a finished answer. Simon Nemec also looms as an important piece, and the bigger question is whether Calgary can build enough balance and shot variety to make the reset matter when the games start counting again. [Read more 🡒]

Matthew Tkachuk Just Revealed How Wild Edmonton Got During That Rivalry

Matthew Tkachuk has never been a stranger to the Battle of Alberta, but he recently revisited just how charged things felt when he was wearing a Flames sweater and heading into Edmonton. The former Calgary winger talked about the hostility he ran into from Oilers fans, a reminder that this rivalry went well beyond the usual boos and jeers and into something far more personal whenever he showed up at Rogers Place.

Tkachuk also put that era in perspective by noting how much attention and security the Flames needed around those visits, which says plenty about the temperature of the series at the time. Since then, he has moved on to Florida, and the Panthers have gone on to beat Edmonton in back-to-back Stanley Cup Finals, but his comments still underline how deep the edge ran in those Alberta showdowns. [Read more 🡒]