
Gang, we’re about 10 weeks away from a pretty important two days on the National Hockey League calendar: the annual entry draft.
Since Craig Conroy became general manager in May 2023, the Flames have really done what Conroy said they would: attempt to build through the draft. The Flames have made 24 picks over the past three drafts. They’re primed to make many picks, and early ones at that, in the 2026 edition of the draft.
Here’s a snapshot of where things sit with just a few days remaining in the 2025-26 regular season.
As of Sunday evening, the Flames have control of the following 11 draft choices:
Since the NHL Draft moved to seven rounds in 2005, the Flames have made 138 picks – an average of 6.6 picks per year. The most picks the Flames have made in the current era is 10, which happened in 2024.
The most first-round picks the Flames have ever made is three in 2013 – Sean Monahan (6th), Emile Poirier (22nd) and Morgan Klimchuk (28th). This is the third consecutive year they’re slated to have multi first-rounders.
The most selections the Flames have made in the first two rounds is four, which has happened four times:
The Flames have control of six picks in the first two rounds of the 2026 draft.
The most selections the Flames have made in the first three rounds is six, which has happened twice:
The Flames have control of eight picks in the first three rounds of the 2026 draft.
As you can see: quality and quantity have not exactly gone hand-in-hand in Flames draft history. (At least where 1997 is concerned.)
Is there an ideal number of picks for the Flames to be making in this year’s draft? Especially given they’ve had a few pretty strong drafts in recent years? We’ll be digging into the pros and cons of many picks, and the Flames’ chances to potentially move up given the many picks they have, in the coming weeks.
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