The Florida Panthers have a promising blue-line prospect still working his way through the college ranks in Vladislav Lukashevich, the Russian defenseman they took in the fourth round of the 2021 NHL Entry Draft at 120th overall.
Lukashevich’s path has been a steady climb. In his draft year, he played 36 games for Loko Yaroslavl in Russia’s MHL, putting up three goals and 19 points while wearing an assistant captain’s letter. He spent two more seasons in the MHL before heading to North America for the 2023-24 season with the USHL’s Tri-City Storm.
That move paid off quickly. In his lone year with Tri-City, Lukashevich finished third among league defensemen in points with 43, and he ranked fourth in both goals with 11 and assists with 32. Those numbers earned him Second-Team All-USHL honors.
He was also on Florida’s radar up close that year, attending the Panthers’ 2024 Development Camp while wearing No. 40. Around that same time, he changed his NCAA commitment from Northern Michigan to Michigan State.
His first season with the Spartans was a mixed one. Lukashevich appeared in 29 games, averaged 11:43 of ice time, and finished with a goal and six assists.
That lone goal came on January 4 in the outdoor Winter Classic against Wisconsin at Wrigley Field. After battling through health issues and a quiet stretch on the scoresheet, he did close the year on a better note, picking up assists in each game of the final series at Notre Dame.
Looking for more ice time and a bigger role, Lukashevich moved on after one season and entered the transfer portal, landing at Miami in the NCHC.
The change of scenery worked. In 33 games for the RedHawks, he posted two goals and a team-high 19 assists, along with a team-best plus-11 rating.
His 21 points led all Miami defensemen and ranked fourth on the team behind Kocha Delic, Matteo Giampa and David Deputy. He also blocked 37 shots, the third-highest total on the roster.
Lukashevich was back at Florida’s recent 2026 Development Camp as one of eight defensemen in attendance, and he scored the lone goal for Team Red in the 3-on-3 scrimmage on the final day.
A smooth skater who thrives in transition, Lukashevich still looks like a player with room to grow at the college level before turning pro. The Panthers control his rights through 2028, so there’s no need to rush the process.
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Even among all that, a few nights still stand out as pure Panthers oddity, the sort of stuff longtime fans bring up when the conversation turns to the teams most unusual eras. There was the marathon shootout against Washington in 2014, the kind of game that seemed to bend time, and a season later came one of those moments that reminded everyone just how thin the line can be between routine hockey and complete chaos in net. [Read more 🡒]
