Predators Get Their First Real Test Of This Draft Class

As NHL development camps kick off, promising young talents eagerly showcase their potential while seasoned players step up to mentor the next wave of hockey stars.

Development camps are barely underway, and already the new faces are making noise.

In Philadelphia, the Flyers’ opening sessions had a familiar edge to them: the young group that pushed through last season was back on the ice and acting like they still have something to prove. Porter Martone, Denver Barkey and Alex Bump - all effectively penciled in for opening night after their breakthroughs - still showed up Monday for camp.

Martone summed up the mindset with a simple line to Nick Tricome with PhillyVoice: “There’s still a team to make and a job to earn.” Riley Armstrong, the team’s player development director, said that kind of buy-in from the returning youngsters is exactly what the organization wants to see carry forward.

But the real attention in Voorhees landed on Maksim Sokolovskii.

The 6-foot-7 first-round pick, taken 27th overall, made a strong first impression with movement that stood out immediately for a player that size. Even the guys skating around him noticed.

Barkey, working alongside Sokolovskii in drills, told The Hockey News, “It doesn’t make me feel too good about myself.” Jack Nesbitt, another first-rounder at 6-foot-5 who faced Sokolovskii in the OHL last season, was just as blunt about the challenge he presents: “Definitely a big boy, and he can hit alright.

Try to stay away from him a little bit.” Afterward, Sokolovskii told Broad Street Hockey he felt “amazing” wearing the Flyers logo for the first time.

He’s expected to go back to the London Knights in the OHL this season, and he’s already committed to the University of Maine for 2027-28.

Pittsburgh took a different approach at its camp, separating identical twins Liam Ruck and Markus Ruck into different practice groups right away. That was a change of pace for two players who, per Wes Crosby on NHL.com, had never gone more than four days apart since Markus arrived eight minutes before Liam on Feb. 21, 2008, in Osoyoos, British Columbia.

The brothers have already stacked up big junior numbers. Markus led the WHL with 108 points and 87 assists, while Liam finished second in points with 104 and led the league with 45 goals.

Still, they weren’t making a big deal out of being split up. Markus said, “We don’t tell each other, ‘Hey, you score.

Hey, you pass.’ It’s just kind of the way it unfolds.”

Both players said there’s value in learning to handle time apart, with Markus pointing to the possibility of injury or ending up on different teams. Even so, the shared goal remains the same: an NHL debut together.

Next season, they’ll return to Medicine Hat before heading to North Dakota in 2027-28.

Nashville’s first look at its top picks brought a little mutual appreciation too. Wyatt Cullen, the 10th overall selection, and Tommy Bleyl, taken 31st, skated in the same group Monday and quickly came away impressed by each other.

Bleyl told the Predators’ team site, “He’s a great player,” adding, “We were doing some shooting a little bit beforehand, and he has a great shot. I can tell he’s a fast player, really fun to play with.”

Cullen returned the favor, calling Bleyl “such a dynamic defenseman, such a good skater, such a good puck handler.”

Cullen brings a familiar name to Nashville as the son of three-time Stanley Cup champion Matt Cullen, who played for the Predators from 2013-15. Bleyl, meanwhile, arrives with hardware of his own, coming in as the reigning QMJHL Defenseman of the Year and Rookie of the Year.

In Other News...

Penguins Came Uncomfortably Close To A Franchise Shifting Trade Decision

The Penguins offseason search for a difference-maker has apparently been active enough to reach one of the biggest names on the market, with Jason Robertson surfacing in trade chatter around the league. For a team trying to stay competitive while also threading the needle on long-term roster decisions, that alone speaks to how aggressive Pittsburgh has been willing to get as it weighs what kind of move would actually move the needle.

Kyle Dubas has kept the door open to more talks, which is usually the part of these negotiations that matters most when a high-end player is involved. Even so, no agreement came together, and that leaves the Penguins in the uncomfortable spot of having explored a franchise-altering path without actually crossing that line, a reminder that the asking price, the fit, or both can turn a bold idea into nothing more than a near miss. [Read more 🡒]

Penguins Trade Raises Bigger Questions About Their Offseason Identity

The Penguins made another quiet roster move this week, dealing Jack St. Ivany and adding a center in David Gustafsson, a swap that says plenty about how they are trying to shape the bottom of the lineup. St. Ivany brought size and a physical edge on defense, but injuries kept him from becoming a dependable presence, while Gustafsson arrives with limited NHL scoring to his name and comes off a season spent in the AHL.

For Pittsburgh, the trade is less about headline value than about what kind of supporting cast this front office wants around its core. Gustafsson could fit as a depth option in the middle, especially with Joona Koppanen potentially headed back to Europe, but the move also fits into a broader summer pattern that has left some of the roster's tougher elements looking less certain by the day. [Read more 🡒]

Daniel Russell Is Already Forcing His Way Into Penguins Camp Conversation

Daniel Russell is the kind of young name that tends to get attention quickly when camp opens, especially after a brief but encouraging start in Wilkes-Barre/Scranton last season. He signed with the Penguins organization in the spring, got into four AHL games and made the most of his first two appearances before sticking with the club through its playoff run, even without seeing game action.

Now Russell is back in the mix at Pittsburghs Development Camp, using the summer to sharpen his game and push himself into a real conversation for a roster spot when the season opens. For a player who has already shown he can adapt quickly at the pro level, the next step is proving that his early momentum can carry into a bigger opportunity. [Read more 🡒]