The Calgary Flames’ wing picture is crowded, uneven and, in a few spots, genuinely encouraging. That’s the snapshot as the organization keeps sorting through its depth chart on both sides, from the NHL roster all the way down through junior and overseas leagues.
The biggest takeaway? The Flames have plenty of bodies on the wing, but the quality is split pretty sharply between left and right.
On the left side, the NHL group is packed. Jonathan Huberdeau, Yegor Sharangovich, Connor Zary, Sam Honzek and Martin Pospisil are all listed at the league’s top level, with Brennan Othmann sitting in the AHL/NHL mix. Dryden Hunt, Aydar Suniev and Andrew Basha are in the AHL/WHL pipeline, while Chase Harrington is in the WHL and Simon Katolicky is in U20 SM-Sarja.
That’s a lot of names, and it creates a real logjam. The Flames currently have six left wingers who played NHL games last season, so there’s not much room left to sort out.
Huberdeau and Sharangovich are roster locks in 2026-27, while Honzek, Pospisil and Othmann are set to fight for the final two spots. Zary, though, is the wild card.
He has reportedly asked for a change of scenery, and it wouldn’t be a shock if he’s wearing a different sweater by October. If he stays, he’s a lock for opening night, which would leave only one left wing job open when camp starts.
Even with the congestion, the left side still looks thin in terms of impact talent. Huberdeau is 33 and coming off major surgery.
Sharangovich has gone two years without reaching 35 points. Zary and Honzek still need to prove they can be full-time difference-makers, and Pospisil “barely looked like an NHL player last season.”
Othmann could always be the one who changes the conversation, but as it stands, this side of the roster doesn’t offer much certainty.
The pipeline is a little more interesting. Suniev and Basha are the names that stand out most, and both are expected to be full-time AHL players in 2026-27.
Suniev got into six NHL games last season and put up 16 goals and 24 points in the NHL. He doesn’t project as a high-end scorer, but the 2023 third-round pick has the tools to grow into a useful bottom-six winger.
Basha’s path has been more uneven. He struggled in 27 AHL games before going back to the WHL last season, where he dominated with 50 points in 32 games. At 20 years old, he’s the most promising left winger in the organization right now, with the hope that he can eventually become an offensive middle-six winger.
Chase Harrington is the newest addition to that group. Taken 36th overall in the 2026 NHL draft, he doesn’t bring elite scoring upside, but scouts like his work ethic and competitiveness. He’s still several years away, but the Flames could eventually have a solid bottom-six energy winger there.
The right side tells a much different story. There are fewer players in the system, but the quality is better.
Matt Coronato, Joel Farabee, Matvei Gridin and Adam Klapka are the four right wingers who played regular NHL minutes last season, with William Stromgren in the AHL and Ethan Wyttenbach, Trevor Hoskin and Aidan Lane in the NCAA. Alan Shaikhlislamov is in the MHL.
Coronato and Gridin are the headliners. Both look like foundational pieces for the future, and both project as top-six wingers for a long time.
Coronato just signed a huge extension and has real 30-goal upside. Gridin is coming off a huge rookie season, finishing with 20 points in 37 games at age 19.
Between them, the Flames have two of their most important wing pieces on the right side.
Farabee gives the group another reliable NHL option. He’s coming off a 20-goal season and could slide into the Blake Coleman role now that Coleman is in Minnesota.
Klapka’s stock, meanwhile, has taken a hit. After a tough 2026-27 season, he looks more like a fringe NHL player than a long-term answer, and he could be the first right winger squeezed out once the younger players push harder for jobs.
Stromgren is also in danger of being overtaken. The 2021 second-round pick has not made the expected progress at the AHL level and could be pushed out by younger talent.
There are still some intriguing names in the right-wing pipeline. Wyttenbach, a 2025 fifth-round pick, was outstanding at Quinnipiac last season and led the nation with 59 points in 40 games. There are questions about how high his NHL ceiling really goes, but he looks like he could become a meaningful part of the Flames’ future on the wing.
Shaikhlislamov is another one to keep an eye on. The 2026 fifth-round pick is the youngest player in the organization and has some sneaky skill. He’s a major project and a long way off, but he’s at least a name worth tracking.
For all the progress, the Flames still don’t have the one thing every rebuilding team wants most: a true blue-chipper on the wing. The system has moved from bare to promising, but it still lacks that game-breaking player who can sit near a point per game year after year.
Whether that talent arrives through the draft, free agency or a trade remains to be seen. For now, though, the direction is better than it was.
In Other News...
Flames Pipeline Takes Another Hit As Familiar Names Move On
The Flames development pipeline took another familiar turn this week as another group of players with North American experience charted a path back to Russia. Goaltender Ivan Prosvetov, who had been part of the organizations broader depth picture, is moving on after a KHL rights transaction opened the door for his next step, while the Wranglers are also seeing two more prospects head elsewhere after their time in the AHL.
Maxim Sklokin and Artem Grushnikov are both returning to the CSKA Moscow organization, adding to the sense that Calgarys minor-league roster has been in a steady state of turnover. For the Flames, it is another reminder of how quickly prospect depth can shift, especially when players with overseas ties decide the next chapter is better served back home rather than continuing to push for an NHL opening in North America. [Read more 🡒]
Canucks Reset Is Turning Into A Pacific Debate Flames Fans Know Well
The Canucks reset has become the kind of Pacific Division cautionary tale Flames fans know all too well, with fatigue, injuries and a season that spiraled into a last-place finish and franchise-record lows. Vancouver is now trying to dig out of that mess the hard way, leaning into a rebuild while sorting through which pieces still fit and which names are better remembered as part of what went wrong.
There are still a few reasons to watch the next chapter, though, especially with former winger Vasily Podkolzin finding new life after moving on and putting together the best numbers of his career in Edmonton. The bigger question for Vancouver is whether that kind of bounce-back can be replicated inside its own reset, because the schedule and the roster both suggest another difficult year could be waiting if the early momentum does not come quickly. [Read more 🡒]
Evander Kane Feels Like The Flames Debate Fans Dread Most
Evander Kane is still out there as an unrestricted free agent, and the conversation around him is the kind that tends to follow a veteran scorer in late summer. After playing 71 games for Vancouver last season and finishing with 13 goals and 18 assists, he remains a name teams have to at least consider, especially clubs looking for experience without making a long-term commitment.
For Calgary, the interest is easy to understand because the Flames are always weighing whether a proven forward can fit into the mix without blocking longer-range plans. Edmonton and Philadelphia are also in the picture, which only adds to the sense that this could turn into a waiting game, with the market and the player both trying to find the right match before anything becomes real. [Read more 🡒]
