William Whitelaw may not be the loudest name in the Columbus Blue Jackets’ prospect pool, but he’s making a strong case that he belongs on the radar. Since last July’s Development Camp in Columbus, the 2023 third-round pick has taken clear steps forward, and the Blue Jackets are seeing a more complete player than the one they had before.
Whitelaw, selected 66th overall in the 2023 NHL Draft, has already bounced through three college programs in three years. Now, though, he looks settled at Western Michigan, where he posted his best season and is set to return to Kalamazoo, Michigan, for his senior year.
At Development Camp, after the prospect game for the Stinger Cup on the final day, Whitelaw talked about the biggest area of growth in his game.
“One thing I have really added is my 200-foot game this year. I was used in all situations, first (unit) penalty kill, first (unit) power play, first line, and relied on in all situations, and that is one thing, for me, going into this season that I still want to continue to build on,” said Whitelaw.
That evolution mattered for a Western Michigan team that went 27-11-1 and reached the NCAA Regional Final before falling to Denver University, the eventual national champions. The Broncos finished sixth in both the USCHO and USA Hockey final polls and extended their NCAA Tournament streak to five straight appearances.
What makes Whitelaw interesting is the mix. He brings speed, quick hands, and enough grit to survive the hard areas of the ice. That last part is what has helped separate him from the pack.
“The game of hockey is won on the walls, and I think that is one thing I have struggled with in years past, especially defensively, and I think most games this year, like nine out of ten times I am making the right play on the wall,” said Whitelaw. “If you make the right play on the wall you get into the offensive zone, and that is kind of where I take over. Doing that consistently is how you make it into the NHL.”
That’s the kind of detail that can change a prospect’s trajectory. Whitelaw already had the offensive instincts; now he’s adding the stuff that makes coaches trust him in bigger roles. That’s why he looks like a player who could carve out a useful future in AHL Cleveland and, if things keep trending the right way, push toward Columbus down the line.
His work at camp backed that up. Whitelaw scored two goals in the prospect game and added two more in the shootout that followed, helping force a 3-3 tie in the Battle for the Stinger Cup. He also drew praise from Blue Jackets Development Coach Tommy Cross.
“He (Whitelaw) has always had speed, he’s always had energy, but he’s applying those two traits in a more direct way now,” Cross said. “The trust that he has gotten from his coaching staff, that he has earned, comes from his battle level and compete on pucks, and he has really grown to see the value in those things, even if they don’t show up on the score sheet.”
There’s also a shot that makes people stop and notice. Mark Scheig of The Hockey Writers noted a comparison to Montreal Canadiens 50-goal scorer Cole Caufield, and Whitelaw also mentioned Logan Stankoven when asked about it.
“I see it a little bit, a little (Logan) Stankoven too I think, I only need one shot to score, and that is one thing I have always had,” said Whitelaw.
That finishing touch, paired with his ability to place the puck and get it off quickly, gives him a real chance to keep climbing. If Columbus can keep unlocking more of what he has, the Blue Jackets may have found one of the draft’s better value picks from 2023, the same class that included Adam Fantilli at third overall.
Whitelaw also said the NCHC has been a tougher place to score than the Big Ten, where he spent two seasons with Wisconsin and Michigan.
“Honestly, the NCHC is harder to score in for sure. Teams are a little older, a little stronger, and really well structured,” said Whitelaw. “The Big Ten has a lot more high-end skill, a lot more 2-on-1’s and 3-on-2’s and odd man rushes, but both leagues lead you right to the NHL.”
For now, his focus stays on Western Michigan. The Blue Jackets will keep watching closely, along with other NCAA names like Jackson Smith and Cayden Lindstrom, but Whitelaw has put himself in the conversation as a player worth tracking this season. The Broncos open against Ferris State at home at Lawson Arena on October 8th.
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