The seventh round of the NHL Draft is a wacky time. Some teams have completed all of their picks already and are headed to the airport to go back home. Some teams are trying to remember the name of that one kid they saw in a Rhode Island prep school league.
And then there’s the Calgary Flames, who have somehow managed to squeeze value out of some of their late picks.
Here’s a brief look at how the Flames have fared in recent years drafting in the 200th overall range.
Here are the last five drafts worth of first-round selections for the Flames:
Year | Pick | Player | Team |
2024 | — | — | — |
2023 | 208 | D Axel Hurtig | Rogle BK (J20 Nationell) |
2022 | 219 | F Cade Littler | Wenatchee (BCHL) |
2021 | 205 | G Arsenii Sergeev | Shreveport (NAHL) |
2020 | 205 | D Ilya Solovyov | Saginaw (OHL) |
Notes:
It’s hard to Monday morning quarterback these picks, because you can understand the rationale for them.
In the late rounds, you roll the dice of traits that might project to the pro level. The Flames have, at the very least, found seventh-rounders that have played pro hockey for them.
2019 seventh-rounder Dustin Wolf was voted a finalist for the Calder Trophy in 2024-25 and is the team’s current starting goaltender. That’s pretty good. His 71 games played with the Flames, so far, is the most of any seventh-rounder in nearly 20 years.
Prior to Wolf, 2001 seventh-rounder David Moss broke through and played over 300 games with the Flames (and over 500 games in the NHL overall).
Honestly, you can’t call any seventh-rounder a bust. At that point in the draft, it’s about trying to find value in different ways and the odds of any of them playing professional games – let alone NHL games – is so minute that you’re looking for things to be mad about if you get too riled up about seventh-rounders.
But c’mon, man, C.J. Severyn at 186th overall in 2007 when Justin Braun was still available?!
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