logo
Wild's Judd Brackett discusses 2025 NHL Draft plans, Marco Rossi, prospects and more

Wild's Judd Brackett discusses 2025 NHL Draft plans, Marco Rossi, prospects and more

New York Times7 days ago

This year's NHL Scouting Combine was different for Minnesota Wild director of amateur scouting Judd Brackett.
The Wild don't have a first-round pick (thanks to the David Jiricek trade), nor did they have a third-rounder. So there weren't nearly as many interviews in Buffalo as they focused on who they might take as their second-rounder (No. 52).
Advertisement
'It's certainly harder to predict,' Brackett said on the 'Fellowship of the Rink' podcast. 'Years past, when you know whether it's 13 or a specific number, you can start to ballpark maybe four, five, six players. Forecasting 52 is way out of your control.'
The Wild feel they've hit on some gems in the second round in recent years, from Ryder Ritchie last year to Riley Heidt (2023) and Hunter Haight (2022). Does the fact they don't have a first or third put more pressure on Brackett and his staff to hit on this year's second?
'To say, 'Is there more pressure?' Probably not — we want to hit on all these players,' Brackett said. 'Do we have less insurance in terms of if we do miss, we don't have the backup third-round pick or didn't already maybe hit on the first-round pick. So, yes, in that instance, yes, this second-round pick becomes our first chance at a National Hockey League Player.
'The odds, as we all know, go down as the draft progresses, so this is our best chance.'
The Wild have the No. 2-ranked prospect pool in the NHL, according to The Athletic's Scott Wheeler. That's driven a lot from the top of the list, with last year's first-rounder Zeev Buium already getting his first taste of the NHL during the Stanley Cup playoffs (then winning a World Championship with Team USA). There's Danila Yurov, who signed his three-year, entry-level contract a few weeks ago and is expected to be part of the lineup next season.
Brackett discussed how the Wild stick to their philosophy on drafting and the characteristics they seek in players.
'There's always biases year to year,' Brackett said. 'We'll see in a couple weeks the winner of the Stanley Cup. That blueprint might change a little bit. Is it a heavy two-way physical team that gets in your face? Or is it speed and skill? Not that you can find a guy that fast (Connor McDavid) anywhere else. The blueprint can change when teams have success. You have to be firm in your beliefs and stick to what you believe is going to be the causality behind a Minnesota Wild championship team.'
A lot of great stuff from #mnwild director of amateur scouting Judd Brackett on latest @FOTRshow. *Approach w/no 1st, 3rd*Team philosophy *Any regrets?*Insight on Rossi, Stramel, Yurov, Haight, Ohgren + moreYouTube: https://t.co/N4UNVzpJocPodcast: https://t.co/VVUlKFrDvd pic.twitter.com/D366RHvvfJ
— Joe Smith (@JoeSmithNHL) June 12, 2025
Hindsight is always 20-20, especially when it comes to the draft. It's an inexact science, prime for second-guessing. There was the Charlie Stramel pick at No. 21 in the 2023 NHL Draft, with Gabe Perreault going a couple picks later to the New York Rangers. Sam Rinzel and Jimmy Snuggerud went after Liam Ohgren at No. 19 in the 2022 draft (the Wild got a strong combo of Oghren and Yurov in the first round). Wyatt Johnston went three picks after the Wild took potential goalie of the future Jesper Wallstedt at No. 20 in 2021. The Wild took defenseman Jack Peart in the second round that year (No. 54). Matthew Knies went three picks later.
Advertisement
Does Brackett, in general, ever have any regrets?
'Always,' Brackett said. 'This is an incredibly humbling business. We're talking about 17-, 18-year-olds. This is a draft and development, much like MLB. It's not a plug-and-play into your lineup and your scheme. It can be very humbling. What you thought might happen doesn't. There's always times where you love a player and someone picks them two picks in front of you. The opportunity wasn't there to do it.
'There's always retrospect and looking back and learning from it. I try not to name names on the record. But there are players we look back on and say, 'Man, we were so close, or 'We had it this way, imagine if it was one or two off?' But you stay to your core values and stick with your staff and truly believe in the picks you make, you're going to be thrilled with what you have and stand behind the player you picked and hope they continue to develop the way you envisioned on draft day.'
The Wild made Marco Rossi the No. 9 pick in 2020. He's overcome a missed year of development due to COVID-19 and a subsequent heart condition. Rossi was the team's second-leading scorer last season, though he could be moved this summer if the Wild can't come to an agreement on a contract with the pending restricted free agent.
Brackett and the team's brass took Rossi over the likes of Anton Lundell, Seth Jarvis.
'I think on draft day, what it was with us for Marco, outside of the 40 goals, 80 assists, the monster production, it was the detail he played with,' Brackett said. 'An import player coming over that's undersized that takes the OHL by storm, that doesn't happen. And, you know what, more than just the production, it was the driver. It was making others better. We were steadfast that he was going to be a National Hockey League center and he would be a top-six center. His hockey sense was unparalleled. It probably was a slower roll to becoming that player, but I think Marco has become the player we thought he'd be.'
Advertisement
When asked what prospects Brackett is most excited about, he said the 'headliner' is Buium.
'He wins another World Junior, goes to win the World Championship, gets the taste of the National Hockey League,' Brackett said. 'He's the headliner in a sense that he continues to deliver. There's excitement about his play, the skill level. It goes without saying what he brings.
'He's got an infectious personality. The skill level is there. This is where he wants to be. I think honestly, when he steps on the ice every night, he wants to be the best player. I don't see that from a cocky, arrogant standpoint, he truly thinks he can and will be. That'll continue to drive his game and I think what his future potential might be is honestly up to him.'
Brackett also weighed in on several other Wild prospects:
On Ryder Ritchie: 'He's an August birthday, still 18 years old. His age is also a part of where he is in his maturity. You see his body is still changing. He looks like he's pushing around 6-1 right now. A player who dealt with injuries in his draft year, settled in nicely, had injuries this year with a skate to the eye, still finished with 40 goals. There's no question about his ability to release the puck and mesh with other high-end talent. His game is still very much in its infancy.'
On David Jiricek: 'The hallmark of David's game is his compete level. You've got the huge, hulking frame, 6-4, right shot. Moves well enough; it's still an area he continues to work on. But you see him off the ice, he's still very much got pounds to put on and man strength to come. I think with that you'll see more strength, more balance, more engagement on the ice. He plays a very assertive game, loves to pinch at the offensive blue line and get involved. He has a huge shot.
'At the time of his draft year, he already had played in a men's league, had world junior experience, had been on the big stage and a leader for his team nationally. He's a player we believe in. He just needs a bit of streamlining in his development path. There's been a lot of ups and downs for him. That speaks to the caliber of player — he's so close that, at times, you think he's ready. But sometimes he needs a little bit more seasoning. A player we're excited about. Great attitude, comes to work every day. It's a really hard player to find. Right shot with that size with that pedigree. Looking at your defense for under-23 with (Brock) Faber, Buium and Jiricek, there's a lot to be excited about.'
Advertisement
On Danila Yurov: 'Another player who had surgery. Even if you saw how quickly he came back from the last injury, you see how much fire there is in this player. Another one of ours who won a championship. He led his team in scoring. Plays up the middle. Two-way. Can skate, handles the puck, terrific shot. I'm excited to see his integration to North America. He's got a great personality, there's always a smile on his face. He's been talking about being in North America since the day we met him in Montreal. I expect him to attack it with that kind of vigor.'
On Charlie Stramel: 'That was the perfect situation this year. A familiar coach, a program on the rise. A big opportunity. I think it goes without saying that Will Morlock and the strength and conditioning staff at MSU did a great job. Charlie is significantly lighter this year, moving great. I think also with (coach Adam Nightingale), his identity is very clear. He's straight-line, he's getting to the net, he's making room, he's winning faceoffs. It was fun to watch Charlie, he was enjoying hockey again. It was a tough track for him. He's been through some things off the ice, he went in early to school, had a coaching change, maybe lacked some support as well. He had a great year and we want to see him go back and do it again and hopefully win a national championship.'
On Liam Ohgren: 'For Marco and Liam, the conscientious two-way game can sometimes supersede the offensive ability. Liam can shoot the puck as well as anybody. For me, one of his strengths his draft year was his ability to forecheck. As he gets more and more comfortable and more of an opportunity to get in and pressure pucks and create turnovers, you're going to see how strong he is at that. He's great at angling, has a really good stick, can create turnovers down low. He can beat goalies clean from that level with his shot, which is not easy to do. He's coming. The confidence is there. I'm excited to see how he arrives at camp. He's built like a tank.'
On Hunter Haight: 'I think a big one for Hunter is his mindset. He's already had that first good step, quickness and speed, skill, hockey sense. But I think for a guy in his frame, part of what makes him really successful is he chose to be. He chose to engage in battles, he chose to win pucks, never takes the long route. He's quick on pucks, he forces things and he can read and react off others. A lot of it is he decides to be as good as he is going to be. That was his choice for him to go out and make an impression (in AHL Iowa). It started at rookie camp, even amongst his peers, he wanted to stand out. It's not always about ability, sometimes it's also about that drive and that compete, that will to want to get there, and I think Hunter has that.'
(Top photo of Marco Rossi: Steph Chambers / Getty Images)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pacers vs. Thunder NBA Finals: Tyrese Haliburton's devastating injury a brutal reminder of the precariousness of the game
Pacers vs. Thunder NBA Finals: Tyrese Haliburton's devastating injury a brutal reminder of the precariousness of the game

Yahoo

time22 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Pacers vs. Thunder NBA Finals: Tyrese Haliburton's devastating injury a brutal reminder of the precariousness of the game

Tyrese Haliburton knew. He knew from the second he planted to try to drive, slipped, hit the ground and lost the ball midway through the first quarter that he wasn't right — that the 'lower leg thing' that had him limping after Game 2 of the 2025 NBA Finals had snowballed into something worse. But it was Game 5 of a tied championship series, and the sun around which the Indiana Pacers revolves knew how much more difficult the Oklahoma City Thunder would be to topple if he wasn't out there giving them advanced math problems to solve on every defensive possession. Advertisement Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle said after Game 5 that he and his staff were 'concerned at halftime' about Haliburton's movement on that strained calf — but that his superstar point guard 'insisted on playing' the rest of the way. 'I mean, it's the NBA Finals. It's the Finals, man,' Haliburton said after Indiana's Game 5 loss. 'I've worked my whole life to be here and I want to be out there to compete. Help my teammates any way I can. I was not great tonight by any means, but it's not really a thought of mine to not play here. 'If I can walk, then I want to play.' A follow-up MRI confirmed Haliburton was working on a strained right calf — an injury that, if he'd picked it up during the regular season, may well have put him on the shelf for weeks. In the Finals, though, with the Pacers' backs against the wall, Haliburton and Indiana's medical and training teams explored every option to get him back on the floor as safely as possible. Tyrese Haliburton of the Indiana Pacers remains down on the court during the first quarter as teammate T.J. McConnell and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander of the Oklahoma City Thunder check on him in Game 7 of the 2025 NBA Finals at Paycom Center on June 22, 2025, in Oklahoma City. (Photo by) (Justin Ford via Getty Images) 'I think I have to be as smart as I want to be,' Haliburton said at the Pacers' practice session before Game 6. 'Have to understand the risks, ask the right questions. I'm a competitor. I want to play … I have a lot of trust in our medical staff. I have a lot of trust in our organization to make the right decision. Advertisement 'I think there's been many situations through the course of my career where they've trusted me on my body. … They trust me to make the right decision on my body when the power is in my hands. I'm trying to try my best to do that.' So Haliburton played — and he played great, scoring 14 points with five assists and three 3-pointers in 23 minutes, during which the Pacers outscored the Thunder by 25 points, to help propel Indiana to a series-leveling victory to force a Game 7. 'I just look at it as I want to be out there to compete with my brothers,' Haliburton said after Game 6. 'These are guys that I'm willing to go to war with, and we've had such a special year, and we have a special bond as a group, and, you know, I think I'd beat myself up if I didn't give it a chance.' That chance came only after what Haliburton termed 'an honest conversation' with Carlisle. 'You know, if I didn't look like myself and was hurting the team, like, sit me down,' Haliburton said. 'Obviously, I want to be on the floor. But I want to win more than anything … like I said, if I can walk, I want to be out there.' Advertisement And so, after two more days of round-the-clock treatment that he said Saturday left him 'pretty much in the same standpoint I was before Game 6 — a little stiff, a little sore, Haliburton was out there to start Game 7: the ultimate competitive crucible, the proving ground for the immortals, the situation Haliburton said he'd 'dreamed of being in [for] my whole life.' And he was throwing flames. Five shots in the first five minutes — an extremely aggressive start for a player at times derided for his pass-first play. Nine points on three deep triples to stake the visiting Pacers to an early lead. Confident, sneering; the wolf at the door. And then, midway through the first, Haliburton caught a pass, planted to try to drive, slipped, hit the ground and lost the ball … and he knew. Advertisement Knew from the second he made impact. Slapping the floor, again and again; burying his face in his forearm; grimacing, crying, screaming no, no, no. He couldn't walk. He couldn't be out there. 'I couldn't imagine playing the biggest game of my life and something like that happening,' Thunder superstar Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said after the game. 'It's not fair. But competition isn't fair sometimes.' At halftime, Haliburton's father, John, confirmed to ESPN's Lisa Salters the worst-case scenario diagnosis that everyone from NBA superstars to fans on their couches had immediately made: It was the Achilles, and while we don't know yet the severity of the injury, it was impossible not to think of Kevin Durant, and Damian Lillard, and Jayson Tatum, and the miserable gnawing left in the pits of our stomachs as we watched them first writhe, then hobble, off the floor and out of sight. Advertisement The Pacers fought like champions after losing their heart and soul, rallying to take a 48-47 lead into halftime — where, Carlisle said, Haliburton 'was in the locker room, and he was very much a part of a group that believed that they could do this.' (Asked later what Haliburton said to the team at that time, though, Pacers center Myles Turner said, 'Tyrese was getting medical attention at halftime.') Indiana couldn't sustain that surge of adrenaline, though, scoring just 20 points in 23 possessions in the third quarter and committing eight turnovers leading to 18 Thunder points. It was a stretch that laid bare just how badly these Pacers need Haliburton — how everything Indiana is on the offensive end flows from him and through him, and how, without his visionary pace-pushing playmaking, the Pacers just aren't the Pacers — and one that blew Game 7 wide open, sending Oklahoma City on the way to the NBA championship. Haliburton couldn't walk; he couldn't be out there. But, with the aid of crutches, he could greet his teammates after the game, congratulating them on a race well run, offering what he could in one of the darkest moments of all of their careers. 'That's who he is as a person, a teammate,' said backup point guard T.J. McConnell, who tried his damnedest to pick up the slack in Haliburton's absence, scoring 16 points with six rebounds and three assists off the bench. 'He put his ego aside constantly. He could have been in the locker room feeling sorry for himself after something like that happened, but he wasn't. He was up greeting us. A lot of us were hurting from the loss, and he was up there consoling us. That's who Tyrese Haliburton is. He's just the greatest, man.' Advertisement Haliburton spent the last two months captivating the basketball-watching world, delivering moment after moment, hitting some of the greatest clutch shots we've ever seen in the postseason — building a résumé as one of the premier crunch-time assassins the NBA's ever seen in real time. He deserved a better ending than this; the Pacers, their fans, all of us deserved a better ending than this. But competition isn't fair sometimes. 'What happened with Tyrese, all of our hearts dropped,' Carlisle said. 'But he will be back. I don't have any medical information about what may or may not have happened, but he'll be back in time, and I believe he'll make a full recovery.' Haliburton turns 26 in February and is still just approaching his prime; as a big guard whose game is built on his processing speed, passing touch and 3-point shooting, it seems reasonable to be optimistic about his chances of remaining a highly effective player when he returns to the court. The question now hanging over the Pacers' franchise, though: When will he make that return? And what will the team look like when he does? Heading into Game 7, Indiana appeared to be poised for an extended run of contention at the top of an Eastern Conference that figures to be in flux. The Celtics, still reeling from the loss of Tatum, could find themselves needing to shed talent to pare down a staggering luxury tax bill. The Bucks, likewise, will be without Lillard, and enter yet another summer facing existential questions surrounding the prospect of trading Giannis Antetokounmpo. The Knicks just fired the head coach who brought them to the Eastern Conference finals, and have yet to hire his replacement. It remains to be seen whether the Cavaliers will change course after winning 64 games but again failing to advance past the second round — thanks largely to Haliburton and these Pacers. There is no clear and dominant force in the East — no skyscraping juggernaut standing in the way of a team whose relentlessly frenetic style had made them the conference's unsolvable equation. And the Pacers, fresh off consecutive Eastern Conference finals berths and a trip to the NBA Finals, already have nine of their top 10 players locked in for next season, with plenty of pre-free-agency reporting suggesting that ownership's willing to finally go into the luxury tax to retain the 10th — starting center Turner, the floor-spacing 5 who helps unlock Haliburton's freewheeling playmaking and who defended like an absolute demon against Oklahoma City. Advertisement Maybe that's still ownership's plan. Maybe Pacers brass looks at what'll be left in the cupboard while Haliburton rehabs — Pascal Siakam, an absolute dynamo in this postseason; a ton of young talent (Andrew Nembhard, Aaron Nesmith, Obi Toppin, Bennedict Mathurin, Ben Sheppard, Jarace Walker, rising sophomore Johnny Furphy) with room to grow; Carlisle, who just burnished his reputation as one of the game's premier tacticians — and thinks that, with a returning Turner, Indiana still has a chance to make the playoffs for the third straight season, give its rabid hometown fans a team worth showing up to support, and hold down the fort until its signature star can return to lead a roster built on continuity and what Turner famously called 'the power of friendship.' If they take a more jaundiced view, though, and come away thinking that a team built to very exacting specifications cannot properly function without its very particular pilot … well, organizations have made decisions to pivot — to trade present-tense contributors for future assets or financial flexibility reflecting a substantially changed competitive timeline — based on a hell of a lot less. That's the cruel trick of it all, the devastating dislocation of a moment like Haliburton and the Pacers experienced midway through the first quarter on Sunday: that these opportunities are so rare, so fleeting, so difficult to put yourself in position to grasp, and when one slips through your fingers, or is wrested away from you by fickle fate, it can be so, so difficult to get back. 'Chuck Daly once said: If people had any idea how difficult it was to win one game in the NBA — in the regular season, one game — you know, they would be shocked,' Carlisle said after Game 6. '... Not everybody's been deep in the playoffs or to the Finals. But I guarantee you that people have a very good idea what goes on, and how difficult it is to get here, and how challenging it is.' Advertisement That's why Siakam, who won an NBA championship in his third season and wandered for the next six years in search of a shot at a second, spent the last two months telling his teammates and the media that he wasn't going to take this opportunity for granted. That's why Carlisle consistently refused to look back at the past or forward into the future in his news conferences, repeatedly snapping his and his team's focus back to the present, to the process, to the pursuit of this one singular goal. That's why Haliburton was willing to do whatever he could to put himself in position to seize his opportunity. 'We've got one game,' Haliburton said after Game 6. 'One game. Nothing that's happened before matters, and nothing that's going to happen after matters. It's all about that one game.' After that game, though, the sun still rises and you have to face tomorrow. And that's why what happened on Sunday night — not just losing that one game, but losing Haliburton, maybe for an entire year; losing this opportunity without any promise that a franchise that's yet to win an NBA championship will ever see another — hurts so, so much.

Alabama 4-Star Commit Shuts Down Recruitment
Alabama 4-Star Commit Shuts Down Recruitment

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Alabama 4-Star Commit Shuts Down Recruitment

Alabama 4-Star Commit Shuts Down Recruitment originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The Alabama Crimson Tide football program has eight "commits" for the 2026 class. Although verbal commits, also known as hard commits, are nice, players cannot sign a letter of intent until their senior year during one of two signing periods, meaning those pledged to Alabama for the 2026 season are in no way, shape, or form locked into their oath. Alabama Crimson Tide head coach Kalen DeBoer© Matt Pendleton-Imagn Images Despite the new standard in the NIL era, which is to expect the unexpected with verbal commits, 2026 four-star interior offensive lineman Chris Booker is likely to hold firm with his commitment to head coach Kalen DeBoer and Alabama. Advertisement On Sunday, Booker shut down his recruitment, per On3Sports. A top 20 interior offensive lineman, per 247Sports, Booker verbally committed to Alabama in mid-February. Despite his pledge, he has since taken official visits to the University of Florida Gators and the University of Georgia Bulldogs. It appears the Georgia native was unmoved by the other two programs, effectively shutting down his recruiting. He also has offers from the Ole Miss Rebels, UCF Knights, Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets, Kentucky Wildcats, Mississippi State Bulldogs, Western Michigan Broncos, and Wake Forest Demon Deacons. The Hapeville Charter High School product is part of a 2026 Alabama Crimson Tide recruiting group that also features fellow four-star offensive lineman Samuelu Utu. Advertisement The Tide is yet to earn a commitment from a five-star prospect in 2026, according to the On3 rankings. Alabama has signed at least three five-star recruits, including 2025 blue chip superstar quarterback Keelon Russell, each season since On3 began ranking in 2021. Related: Nick Saban Possibly Playing Major Role in Recruitment of 5-Star Linebacker This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 23, 2025, where it first appeared.

Live updates: Coastal Carolina baseball knocks off Arizona 7-4 in Game 1
Live updates: Coastal Carolina baseball knocks off Arizona 7-4 in Game 1

Yahoo

time30 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Live updates: Coastal Carolina baseball knocks off Arizona 7-4 in Game 1

OMAHA, Neb. (WBTW) — Coastal Carolina baseball knocked off Arizona 7-4 in Game 1 of the Men's College World Series on Friday thanks to a three-run eighth inning. FINAL — 7-4 Coastal Arizona brought the tying run to the plate with no outs, but Chanticleers reliever Dominick Carbone got a strikeout and induced a game-ending double play. Coastal Carolina will play Sunday against the winner of Louisville and Oregon State. 8TH INNING — 7-4 Coastal An RBI single from Sebastian Alexander put the Chanticleers up 5-4 before a two-run double from Blake Barthol gave Coastal Carolina a 7-4 lead. The Chanticleers are three outs away from starting 1-0 in Omaha. 6TH INNING — 4-4 TIE Arizona briefly took its first lead after scoring two runs in the top of the 6th, aided by three hit batters by Cameron Flukey. Coastal Carolina answered in the bottom half in the form of an RBI groundout from Caden Bodine. 5TH INNING — 3-2 Coastal The Chanticleers answered back in the bottom of the 5th thanks to three singles, including an RBI knock from Blagen Pado to put CCU back in front. 4TH INNING — 2-2 TIE The Wildcats found paydirt against Chanticleers' starter Riley Eikhoff after a solo home run from Mason White and an RBI double from Maddox Mihalakis to tie things at 2. Coastal Carolina stranded runners on first and third in the bottom half of the fourth. 2ND INNING — 2-0 Coastal The Chanticleers struck first against the Wildcats in the bottom of the second inning on a bases loaded two-run single from Wells Sykes. Advertisement Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to WBTW.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store