Right defense was a sore spot for the Ottawa Senators throughout the entire 2024-25 season. They iced five different players on the right-side, and even parted with Jacob Bernard-Docker at the trade deadline.
For top Senators prospect Carter Yakemchuk, that lineup weakness stands as a golden opportunity. Now in his first year of NHL/AHL eligibility, Yakemchuk told Julian McKenzie of The Athletic that he’s fully geared towards making the NHL roster out of camp.
Yakemchuk shared that he has returned to working with Calgary-based CRASH Conditioning this summer, after joining the program following his draft selection last year. In that regiment, his summer training is overseen by Seattle Kraken assistant coach Dave Lowry — as well as former pro-turned-coach Dan Bakala and David Liffiton, who will move to an assistant coach role with the AHL’s Calgary Wranglers next season. Yakemchuk emphasizes that the coaching staff has him on the right path, telling McKenzie:
"I’m looking forward to [training camp]. My goal is to make the opening roster … And I’m looking forward to putting in the work that it takes to make that."
Building out his defensive game has been a key focus of Yakemchuk’s development. Lowry pointed out to McKenzie that Yakemchuk’s offense is already, clearly, at a top level — and it’s the hard-nosed play away from the puck that he’ll need to earn an NHL role. Luckily, that’s the exact point that other coaches praised when reflecting on Yakemchuk’s summer.
Liffiton — who coached Yakemchuk at the WHL’s Calgary Hitmen last season — emphasized that Yakemchuk’s defensive game has taken major strides forward, which helps explain his drastic decrease in scoring this season. After netting 30 goals and 71 points in 66 games last year, the former No. 7 pick scored just 17 goals and 49 points in 56 games this year.
But as pointed out by the CRASH coaches, that decrease was all by design. Even through the spot scoring, Yakemchuk prevailed as one of the best puck-moving defensemen in his age group. He continued to dominate possession and flash exciting stickhandling for a defender of his size – but showed the patience to make smart passes to his forwards, like 2025 No. 11 pick Benjamin Kindel. All the while, Yakemchuk continued to grow in his ability to dominate the corners and low-slot with his heavy frame. Strong skating helped him get chippy with opponents in front, and it was rare that an opposing body-check knocked him off balance.
In the name of growing defense, Yakemchuk’s breakout goal-scoring from 2023-24 can afford to subside a bit. He’s a burly 6-foot-4, 200-pound defender who throws hits just as hard as he shoots — evidenced by his 202 penalty minutes in 122 WHL games over the last two seasons. Those will be the attributes that earn him a full-time role on a Senators’ blue-line already housing the fearless Artem Zub and Nick Jensen on the right-side.
If Yakemchuk’s growing physicality sticks, he could find incredible opportunity in Ottawa’s lineup. Neither Zub nor Jensen offer much scoring upside at all, which seems to limit the ground that star left-defenders Jake Sanderson and Thomas Chabot can gain. Bringing in another burly defender capable of driving the puck all the way down the ice, and creating strong scoring chances, could go a long way towards clearing up more space for Ottawa’s best defenders.
Yakemchuk is no stranger to a tough role. He seemed to be on the ice for every one of the Hitmen’s biggest moments over the last two seasons, and averaged 18 minutes of even-strength ice-time alone in both years. That conditioning could come in handy as he joins a team that’s no stranger to awarding their top defenders with 23 or 24 minutes a night.
The lucrative lineup role ahead, and determined focus on making the roster, will make Yakemchuk a pivotal player to watch as training camps roll around.
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