Kraken

Seattle Kraken mock expansion draft version 7.0 – FINAL

By Ed Stein

Today is the day Seattle Kraken (and NHL) fans have been anticipating. It’s time for the expansion draft. Before the event happens, we have our final mock draft.

By this point, anyone interested in the Seattle Kraken has read mock drafts until their eyes filled with squid ink. That’s why we will keep our final mock draft much shorter than usual.

Early free agency

The Kraken had an exclusive two-day negotiating window from July 18-20. If Seattle signs someone during this period, he counts as the player selected from his former team.

How much big game hunting did the team do? Rumor has it GM Ron Francis signed goalie Chris Driedger away from Florida. There are plenty of other big-ticket free agents out there, such as Gabriel Landeskog (Colorado) and Taylor Hall (Boston), and Dougie Hamilton (Carolina).

All along, I thought the Kraken should go hard after Landeskog. He’s the kind of player and leader a team can build around. Landeskog’s contract demands could make him cost-prohibitive, but he’s with the effort. There are other free agents I think the Kraken should sign pre-draft, and they are included with their likely salary.

Before proceeding to the mock draft, I encourage everyone to read this article on how the Seattle Kraken should handle their draft. In short, it’s how Francis can take advantage of supply and demand to build a strong organization.

Update 8:00 AM PDT – The Seattle Kraken signed defenseman Adam Larsson from Edmonton for 4-years, $16M ($4M AAV).

Draft rules

The NHL has a precise set of expansion draft rules. They are the same ones used by the Vegas Golden Knights in 2019. All parameters existing teams must follow when protecting players are listed below.

Here is a brief recap of the rules in place when the Seattle Kraken selects the Expansion Draft. They are quite favorable to the drafting team. Remember, Vegas went to the Stanley Cup Finals in their first year of existence.

  • All teams except Vegas (exempt as part of their franchise agreement) have two options for protecting players.
  • Option 1: Protect seven forwards, three defensemen, and one goalie.
  • Option 2: Protect eight skaters in any combination of forwards or defensemen and one goalie.
  • At least one defenseman, two forwards (who played at least 27 games in the prior year or 54 games in the two previous years) under contract, and one goalie (goalies can be restricted free agents) must be made available.
  • First and second-year players, in addition to unsigned draft choices, are exempt. Due to COVID-19, many young players are ineligible because they haven’t played in enough NHL games over the last two seasons.

Again, there is no way to account for trades Francis makes or backroom deals he puts together before and during the draft. There is no cap on the number of transactions he can make.

For now, with the help of Capfriendly.com’s Expansion Draft Simulator, this is our preliminary team.

Next: Page 2 – Goalies and defensemen

Goalies

Casey DeSmith – Pittsburgh, 29, 1-year, $1.25M

Chris Driedger – Florida, 27, 3-years, $10.50M)

Braden Holtby – Vancouver, 31, 1-year, $4.3M

Kaapo Kahkonen – Minnesota, 24, 1-year, $725K

Keith Kinkaid – New York Rangers, 31, $825K

Vitek Vanecek – Washington, 25, 717K

As mentioned above, Driedger is Francis’ choice as the franchise’s first goalie. He should be able to flip Holtby, Kinkaid, and DeSmith for good returns. That leaves two excellent goalie prospects in Kahkonen and Vanecek. They can rotate between Driedgers backup and starting AHL games.

Defense

Josh Brown – Ottawa, 27, 1-year, $1.20M

Vince Dunn – St. Louis, 24, RFA

Haydn Fleury – Anaheim, 24, 1-year, $1.30M

Jake Gardiner – Carolina, 31, 2-years, $4.05M

Oliver Kylington – Calgary, 24, RFA

Adam Larsson – Edmonton, 28, 4-years, $4.00M

Jeremy Lauzon – Boston, 1-year, $850K

Colin Miller – Buffalo, 28, 1-year, $3.88M

Radim Simek – San Jose, 28, 3-years, $2.25M

Nikita Zadorov – Chicago, 26, RFA

Pairings

  1. Gardiner – Larsson
  2. Zadorov – Dunn
  3. Simek – Lauzon

Francis should have no problems moving Miller, Fleury, Brown, and, Kylington. If there is an opportunity to get a huge return on Gardiner, then the Kraken can deal him and keep Miller.

Dunn and Gardiner can both quarterback the power play. Lauzon is becoming a good stay-at-home defender. Newly signed Adam Larsson is just starting his prime and still has untapped potential. Zadorov is a steady defense partner for Dunn, while Simek should hold down third pair minutes.

Next: Page 3 – Forwards

Forwards

Mason Appleton, RW – Winnipeg, 25, 1-year, $900K

Nathan Bastian, RW, C – New Jersey, 23, 2-years, $825K

Michael Dal Colle, LW – New York Islanders, 25, RFA

Joonas Donskoi, RW – Colorado, 29, 2-years, $3.90M

Jonathan Drouin, LW – Montreal, 26, 2-years, $5.50M

Matt Duchene, C – Nashville, 30, 5-years, $8.00M

Christian Fischer, LW, RW – Arizona, 24, 1-year, 1.00M

Luke Glendening, C – Detroit, 31, (proposed 2-years, $2.5M, $1.25M AAV)

Zach Hyman, LW, RW – Toronto, 29, (proposed 5-years, $27M, $5.40M AAV)

Tyler Johnson, LW, C – Tampa Bay, 30 (3-years, $5.00M)

Tanner Kero, LW – Dallas, 28, 2-years, $750K

Blake Lizotte, C – Los Angeles, 23, 1-year, $800K

Kevin Stenlund, RW – Columbus, 24, 1-year, 1.05M

James van Riemsdyk, LW – Philadelphia, 32, 2-years, $7M

Lines

  1. Van Riemsdyk – Duchene – Hyman
  2. Druin – Johnson – Donskoi
  3. Kero – Glendening – Appleton/ Stenlund
  4. Dal Colle – Lizotte – Bastian

This is a very good top six. It would be better if the second line had a stronger pivot and Johnson moved to wing on the third. Additionally, the team could use a legitimate tough guy. Francis will make enough trades to get both. At worst, he signs a free agent or two later in the summer. *Note: If the Seattle Kraken and Landeskog reach an agreement, he replaces Donskoi. Max Domi becomes the pick from Columbus over Stenlund, and Calle Jarnkrok replaces Duchene as the Preds selection.

Final Thoughts

Once all the players are announced, fans will see the extent of how the Kraken did in the exclusive free-agent negotiating window and the trade market. There will be fans who are disappointed with some of the picks. Those players could be the results of some backroom deals. It will be very interesting to see how many early round draft picks Seattle comes away with.

Related Story: How the Seattle Kraken can shake up the NHL and profit at the same time

Are you ready for the Seattle Kraken Expansion Draft? Let us know your thoughts in the comments section below or on social media.

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Ed Stein