Sharks draft Macklin Celebrini with
No. 1 overall pick
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[June 29, 2024]
The San Jose Sharks chose center Macklin Celebrini with the
first overall pick in the 2024 NHL Draft on Friday in Las Vegas.
Celebrini, who turned 18 on June 13, was the youngest player in NCAA
Division I last season and the youngest to win the Hobey Baker Award
after producing 32 goals and 32 assists in 38 games at Boston
University.
He's just the fourth freshman to be named the top college player.
Former Sharks star Joe Thornton announced Celebrini as the first
pick.
"Just a surreal feeling," Celebrini said on the ESPN broadcast.
"I've dreamed about this moment ever since I was a kid and for it to
come true, it's an amazing feeling."
Celebrini, who is 6-foot, 190 pounds, also starred at the 2024 IIHF
World Junior Championship last winter in Sweden, totaling four goals
and four assists in five games for Canada.
Celebrini grew up in Vancouver, B.C., before his family relocated to
the Bay Area of California six years ago when his father, Rick
Celebrini, accepted a position with the NBA's Golden State Warriors
as the vice president of player health and performance.
"Off the ice, he is actually an alter ego of himself on the ice,"
Rick Celebrini said. "He's very relaxed and chill, very thoughtful
at times. But on the ice, as soon as he steps on the ice, he just
changes into competitive, snarling and aggressive."
The Sharks landed the top pick for the first time in franchise
history after finishing with the fewest points in the NHL last
season (47).
They fired coach David Quinn six days after the end of the regular
season and replaced him with Ryan Warsofsky, who was an assistant
coach with San Jose the past two seasons.
Connor Bedard, the No. 1 overall pick by the Chicago Blackhawks last
season, announced 18-year-old defenseman Artyom Levshunov as the
second overall pick for Chicago.
Levshunov, a native of from Belarus, was the third-youngest player
in college hockey as a freshman at Michigan State last season.
"That's awesome," Levshunov said of hearing Bedard announce his
name. "Now it's real."
The Ducks picked third and surprised many by taking Beckett Sennecke,
a 6-foot-2 forward for the Oshawa Generals of the Ontario Hockey
League.
He had 27 goals and 41 assists during the regular season before
putting up 10 goals and 12 assists in the playoffs to help the
Generals to the OHL finals.
"I had a couple meetings yesterday and today and Anaheim wasn't one
of them," Sennecke said. "I didn't think it was a possibility, but
obviously I'm super happy."
Cayden Lindstrom went fourth overall to the Columbus Blue Jackets.
Lindstrom is a power forward who scored 27 goals in 32 games for
Medicine Hat of the Western Hockey League before missing the second
half of last season with a back injury.
Celine Dion came on stage to announce that the Montreal Canadiens
selected Russian right wing Ivan Demidov fifth overall.
Demidov's offensive skills are impressive on tape, but scouts have
had few opportunities to view him in person while playing in the
KHL's junior league.
The Utah Hockey Club made its first pick in franchise history and
grabbed Tij Iginla, the son of Hockey Hall of Fame forward Jarome
Iginla, the 11th overall pick of the 1995 NHL Draft.
"You dream of it, (but) you don't know how the day's going to be,"
Jarome Iginla said. "He's worked hard and it's a good day."
[to top of second column] |
Apr 11, 2024; Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA; Boston U. forward Macklin
Celebrini (71) carries the puck in the semifinals of the 2024 Frozen
Four college ice hockey tournament during the third period against
Denver at Xcel Energy Center. Mandatory Credit: Brace Hemmelgarn-USA
TODAY Sports
Tij Iginla, who won't turn 18 until August, had 47
goals and 37 assists in 64 games for the Kelowna Rockets of the WHL
last season, and another nine goals and six assists in 11 playoff
games.
The Ottawa Senators also selected a player that many analysts didn't
have in their top eight, taking defenseman Carter Yakemchuk of the
Calgary Hitmen seventh overall.
Yakemchuk scored 71 points for the Hitmen last season, which was
second-most on his team and fifth among all defensemen in the WHL.
The Seattle Kraken followed by selecting center Berkly Catton eighth
overall. Catton is small in size, but makes up for it with elite
skating and puck-handling abilities.
He spent last season with the Spokane Chiefs of the WHL, where he
produced 54 goals and 116 points in 68 games.
The Calgary Flames drafted defenseman Zayne Parekh ninth overall.
Parekh spent the past two years playing for the Saginaw Spirit,
where he had 33 goals and 63 assists in 66 games last season to lead
all OHL defensemen in goals and points (96).
The New Jersey Devils rounded out the top 10 by taking 6-foot-7
Russian defenseman Anton Silayev.
He most recently played for Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod of the KHL as an
18-year-old, using his size to his advantage by blocking 74 shots
and delivering a team-leading 98 hits.
The Sharks owned the 11th pick after a trade with Buffalo earlier
this week and selected London Knights defenseman Sam Dickinson, who
many expected to go in the top five.
He had 18 goals and 52 assists in 68 games with the Knights last
season and posted a plus-56.
The Philadelphia Flyers traded the No. 12 pick to the Minnesota Wild
for their pick at No. 13 and a third-round selection in 2025.
The Wild then chose defenseman Zeev Buium, who led all NCAA
blueliners with 50 points (11 goals, 39 assists) in 42 games for
University of Denver last season.
Boxing announcer Michael Buffer then took the stage and shouted out
Jett Luchanko as Philadelphia's pick at No. 13. He had a
team-leading 74 points (20 goals, 54 assists) as a center for the
Guelph Storm of the OHL last season.
The Buffalo Sabres selected Finnish center Konsta Helenius at No.
14.
He played part of last season with Jukurit in Liiga, the top
professional league in Finland, posting 14 goals and 22 assists in
51 games.
The Red Wings then made history at No. 15 when they selected right
wing Michael Brandsegg-Nygard, the first Norwegian-born player
drafted in the first round of the NHL.
--Field Level Media
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