Flames Rebuild May Be Closer Than Canucks Fans Want To Admit

Ambitious young talents from the Flames' recent drafts are setting their sights on making the leap to the NHL by next season, signaling a promising future for the team's rebuild.

The Calgary Flames may not be waiting long to see some of their newest draft picks in red and gold.

Carson Carels, who went sixth overall last Friday, says he wants his time at the University of North Dakota to be a short stop. He sees himself as a one-and-done college player and is aiming to be in the mix for NHL games by the end of the 2026-27 season.

Cole Reschny, selected 18th overall in 2025, is heading to North Dakota with the same kind of timeline in mind. He wants to move on to pro hockey next spring. Cullen Potter, the Flames’ No. 32 pick last year, is set to play at Michigan State this season and also wants to be in Calgary within a year.

That is exactly the kind of conversation general manager Craig Conroy is already planning around.

“I have to save contracts for them, that’s the first thing,” Conroy said Wednesday from the Flames’ development camp, where he spoke to the media after a quiet morning on Day 1 of NHL free-agency.

“That’s why a lot of signings wouldn’t make a lot of sense. They said the same thing to me ‘We all want to come out after the year’ so I think their teams would know that, too.

I’ve talked to their coaches and for the most part, if not all of them, it’s good. It give them a goal and we’ll watch them all year.”

Conroy said he would like to keep four or five contracts available for when the college season wraps up. As of Wednesday morning, he said the Flames had 42 contracts on the books, leaving some breathing room under the NHL’s 50-contract limit.

Another prospect who could be in that conversation is Ethan Wyttenbach. After a huge season at Quinnipiac University, he might be knocking on the door too if he can repeat the production that saw him post 25 goals and 34 assists in 40 games.

For Flames fans, that kind of depth is the point. Rebuilds are slow by nature, but the organization’s next wave is starting to look real, and director of player development Ray Edwards said Wednesday at Winsport that the talent on display at the annual camps was the best he has seen.

He said he isn’t surprised that several of the top prospects are hoping to turn pro next spring.

“There’s a handful of guys who are going to force us to make decisions, and that’s what we want,” Edwards said. “There are a number of those guys where we did talk about it last year and we went through it with their agents and their families and had a really good back and forth and dialogue and at the end of the day decided it was the best thing for all of them to go back. They’re going to be pushing, for sure”

Carels is embracing the college route as a way to make the leap feel manageable rather than overwhelming.

“I think one year at (North Dakota) is going to be a good step for me to make (it be) a step instead of a leap to this next level,” Carels explained. “I think UND going to shape me to be a more complete player and continue my maturity as a player so I think it’s going to be a good step.”

Reschny said he sees the same value in another year at North Dakota, even while making his NHL ambition plain.

“That’s the goal, yeah,” Reschny said. “I think one more good year at North Dakota will kind of help develop me more as a player and as a person off the ice, my body in the gym, nutrition-wise.

“That’s the goal, to win a national championship there and then make the jump at the end of the year, hopefully get a couple games in and get that experience.”

The rebuild still takes time, but Calgary’s next group of prospects is making the finish line look a lot closer.

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