Connor Bedard. Anne-Marie Sorvin-USA TODAY Sports

The final rankings from NHL Central Scouting are out, and Connor Bedard is the top-ranked player for the 2023 draft. Bedard will almost certainly be the first overall selection at this summer’s draft. Central Scouting vice president Dan Marr says this about the talented forward:

Bedard has the elite skills and attributes that elite NHL players have, and it’s the precision in which he reads the play, is always in the right place and how he executes and capitalizes on plays. 

What places him in that Connor McDavid-special category is his natural presence of mind and instincts that allow him to channel all these attributes to dominate when the opportunity is there and when it’s needed most by his team.

Second place goes to Adam Fantilli, as expected, who recently won the Hobey Baker as college hockey’s top player. The 6-foot-2 power forward would lead the way in many draft classes and will be a very nice consolation prize for the second lottery winner.

Notably, the North American list is dominated by forwards. The top-ranked defenseman, Lukas Dragicevic, doesn’t appear until no. 18.

The top ten North America skaters are:

  1. Connor Bedard, Regina Pats (WHL).
  2. Adam Fantilli, Michigan (NCAA).
  3. William Smith, USNTDP.
  4. Matthew Wood, UConn (NCAA).
  5. Ryan Leonard, USNTDP.
  6. Zach Benson, Winnipeg Ice (WHL).
  7. Nate Danielson, Brandon Wheat Kings (WHL).
  8. Oliver Moore, USNTDP.
  9. Samuel Honzek, Vancouver Giants (WHL).
  10. Gabriel Perreault, USNTDP.

On the international side, Swedish center Leo Carlsson comes in at the top of the list, ahead of Russian sniper Matvei Michkov, whose path to the NHL is still unclear. The European group is much more positionally balanced, too, with three defensemen coming in the top ten, led by Swiss pro David Reinbacher.

The top 10 international skaters are:

  1. Leo Carlsson, Orebro (SHL).
  2. Matvei Michkov, SKA St. Petersburg (KHL).
  3. Dalibor Dvorsky, AIK (Allsvenskan).
  4. Eduard Sale, Brno (Czech).
  5. David Reinbacher, Kloten (NL).
  6. Otto Stenberg, Frolunda (Sweden Jr.).
  7. Axel Sandin Pellikka, Skelleftea (Sweden Jr.).
  8. Lenni Hameenaho, Assat (Liiga).
  9. Daniil But, Yaroslavl (Russia Jr.).
  10. Mikhail Gulyayev, Omsk (Russia Jr.).

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Mavericks ride 'Luka Magic' on both ends late to win Game 1
Panthers shut out Rangers 3-0 in Eastern Conference Final opener
NBA announces 2023-24 All-NBA teams
Star Padres infielder to miss significant time with shoulder injury
LeBron James, Charles Barkley passionately defend Caitlin Clark from 'petty' haters
Roger Goodell discusses factors for possible 18-game NFL season
Cowboys QB Dak Prescott has intriguing comment on his contract situation
Celtics toying around with surprise Jayson Tatum move in conference finals
Former teammate warns Tee Higgins about pitfalls of playing on franchise tag
Watch: Timberwolves and Mavericks trade dunks in third quarter
Yankees owner Hal Steinbrenner tempers expectations for Juan Soto extension
Canucks' Rick Tocchet wins 2024 Jack Adams Award
Incredible Orioles streak finally comes to end against Cardinals
Raiders QB shares surprising reason for switching jersey number
New Jersey Devils to hire just-fired head coach to lead bench
Latest announcements show how deep Knicks' injury issues ran
Veteran WR announces retirement after nine seasons
Eagles stars defend new DC following criticism
Steelers first-round pick still confident following 'rough' practice
Angel Reese pulls notable sports ownership move