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GhostRiver/kraken
General information
SportIce hockey
Date(s)July 21, 2021
Time8 p.m. (ET) / 5 p.m. (PT)
LocationGas Works Park (Seattle, Washington)
Network(s)
Sponsored byUpper Deck
Overview
30 total selections
LeagueNational Hockey League
Expansion teamsSeattle Kraken
Expansion season2021–22
← 2017

The 2021 NHL Expansion Draft was held on July 21, 2021, at Gas Works Park in Seattle. The National Hockey League (NHL) conducted the expansion draft for the Seattle Kraken to build their roster prior to the team's debut during the 2021–22 NHL season.

Background

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Professional ice hockey in Seattle began with the Seattle Metropolitans in 1915 and continued through 1975 with the Seattle Totems.[1] While Totems owner Vince Abbey was awarded a National Hockey League (NHL) franchise in Seattle as part of a 1974 expansion, he failed to make a required payment, and the league rescinded the offer. Another attempt at a Seattle expansion team, headed by Bill MacFarland in 1990, failed when Bill Ackerley withdrew his support.[2] Further complicating expansion efforts was a 1994-95 rebuild of the KeyArena, which left the playing surface too small to meet NHL standards.[3]

Hopes for a Seattle team resurfaced in December 2017, when the Seattle City Council approved a memorandum of understanding for a $600 million renovation of KeyArena.[4] The renovations took place over three years, during which the stadium, renamed Climate Pledge Arena, nearly doubled its square footage.[5] That month, the NHL announced that it would accept an expansion application from Seattle, with considerations based on a season ticket deposit drive to gauge interest.[6] The Oak View Group filed its application in February 2018, with the understanding that the team would begin play once arena renovations were complete.[7] and the league approved the franchise on December 4, 2018, with the season to begin during the 2021-22 season.[8]

Procedure

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The Seattle Kraken followed the same procedure that the Vegas Golden Knights had during the 2017 NHL Expansion Draft.[9] Seattle had to select one player from every NHL team except the Golden Knights, who agreed to forfeit their share of the NHL's expansion fee in exchange for a draft exemption.[10] The Kraken had an exclusive window from July 18 to 21 to interview and sign pending free agents. If they signed a player during this span, that player would be counted as their old team's draft pick.[9] Of these 30 selections, at least 14 had to be forwards, nine defensemen, and three goaltenders. At least two-thirds of Seattle's draft picks were required to have a contract for the 2021-22 season, and the total salary of selected players had to add up to between 60 and 100 percent of the previous season's $81.5 million salary cap.[9][11]

Protected players

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Teams were required to submit their list of protected players to the NHL by 5 p.m. (ET) on July 17, 2021,[12] and the league announced the list of protected players the following day.[13] Once teams submitted their protection lists, all NHL rosters were frozen until 1 p.m. (ET) on July 22.[14]

Players whose names are listed in italics were protected for contractual reasons.[15]

Eastern Conference

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Atlantic Division
Position Boston Buffalo Detroit Florida Montreal Ottawa Tampa Bay Toronto
Forwards Patrice Bergeron Rasmus Asplund Tyler Bertuzzi Aleksander Barkov Josh Anderson Drake Batherson Anthony Cirelli Mitch Marner
Charlie Coyle Anders Bjork Adam Erne Sam Bennett Joel Armia Connor Brown Nikita Kucherov Auston Matthews
Jake DeBrusk Jack Eichel Robby Fabbri Anthony Duclair Jake Evans Logan Brown Brayden Point William Nylander
Trent Frederic Casey Mittelstadt Dylan Larkin Patric Hornqvist Brendan Gallagher Nick Paul Steven Stamkos John Tavares
Brad Marchand Victor Olofsson Michael Rasmussen Jonathan Huberdeau Jesperi Kotkaniemi Brady Tkachuk
David Pastrnak Sam Reinhart Givani Smith Mason Marchment Artturi Lehkonen Austin Watson
Craig Smith Tage Thompson Jakub Vrana Carter Verhaeghe Tyler Toffoli Colin White
Defensemen Brandon Carlo Rasmus Dahlin Filip Hronek Aaron Ekblad Ben Chiarot Thomas Chabot Erik Cernak T. J. Brodie
Matt Grzelcyk Henri Jokiharju Nick Leddy Gustav Forsling Joel Edmundson Victor Mete Victor Hedman Justin Holl
Charlie McAvoy Rasmus Ristolainen Gustav Lindstrom MacKenzie Weegar Jeff Petry Nikita Zaitsev Ryan McDonagh Jake Muzzin
Mikhail Sergachev Morgan Rielly
Goaltender Daniel Vladar Linus Ullmark Thomas Greiss Sergei Bobrovsky Jake Allen Filip Gustavsson Andrei Vasilevskiy Jack Campbell
Metropolitan Division
Position Carolina Columbus New Jersey NY Islanders NY Rangers Philadelphia Pittsburgh Washington
Forwards Sebastian Aho Cam Atkinson Jesper Bratt Mathew Barzal Pavel Buchnevich Nicolas Aube-Kubel Teddy Blueger Nicklas Backstrom
Jesper Fast Oliver Bjorkstrand Nico Hischier Anthony Beauvillier Filip Chytil Sean Couturier Jeff Carter Lars Eller
Warren Foegele Boone Jenner Janne Kuokkanen Cal Clutterbuck Chris Kreider Claude Giroux Sidney Crosby Evgeny Kuznetsov
Jordan Staal Patrik Laine Michael McLeod Anders Lee Artemi Panarin Kevin Hayes Jake Guentzel Anthony Mantha
Andrei Svechnikov Gustav Nyquist Yegor Sharangovich Matt Martin Kevin Rooney Travis Konecny Kasperi Kapanen T. J. Oshie
Teuvo Teravainen Eric Robinson Miles Wood Brock Nelson Ryan Strome Scott Laughton Evgeni Malkin Daniel Sprong
Vincent Trocheck Jack Roslovic Pavel Zacha Jean-Gabriel Pageau Mika Zibanejad Oskar Lindblom Bryan Rust Tom Wilson
Defensemen Brett Pesce Vladislav Gavrikov Ryan Graves Adam Pelech Libor Hajek Ryan Ellis Brian Dumoulin John Carlson
Brady Skjei Seth Jones Damon Severson Ryan Pulock Ryan Lindgren Ivan Provorov Kris Letang Dmitry Orlov
Jaccob Slavin Zach Werenski Jonas Siegenthaler Scott Mayfield Jacob Trouba Travis Sanheim Mike Matheson Trevor van Riemsdyk
Goaltender Alex Nedeljkovic Joonas Korpisalo Mackenzie Blackwood Semyon Varlamov Alexandar Georgiev Carter Hart Tristan Jarry Ilya Samsonov

Western Conference

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Central Division
Position Arizona Chicago Colorado Dallas Minnesota Nashville St. Louis Winnipeg
Forwards Lawson Crouse Henrik Borgstrom Andre Burakovsky Jamie Benn Joel Eriksson Ek Filip Forsberg Ivan Barbashev Kyle Connor
Christian Dvorak Alex DeBrincat Tyson Jost Radek Faksa Kevin Fiala Tanner Jeannot Jordan Kyrou Andrew Copp
Conor Garland Brandon Hagel Nazem Kadri Denis Gurianov Marcus Foligno Luke Kunin Ryan O'Reilly Pierre-Luc Dubois
Clayton Keller David Kampf Nathan MacKinnon Roope Hintz Jordan Greenway David Perron Nikolaj Ehlers
Phil Kessel Patrick Kane Valeri Nichushkin Joe Pavelski Ryan Hartman Brayden Schenn Adam Lowry
Johan Larsson Dylan Strome Logan O'Connor Alexander Radulov Nico Sturm Oskar Sundqvist Mark Scheifele
Nick Schmaltz Jonathan Toews Mikko Rantanen Tyler Seguin Mats Zuccarello Robert Thomas Blake Wheeler
Defensemen Kyle Capobianco Caleb Jones Sam Girard Miro Heiskanen Jonas Brodin Alexandre Carrier Justin Faulk Josh Morrissey
Jakob Chychrun Connor Murphy Cale Makar John Klingberg Matt Dumba Mattias Ekholm Torey Krug Neal Pionk
Oliver Ekman-Larsson Riley Stillman Devon Toews Esa Lindell Jared Spurgeon Dante Fabbro Colton Parayko Logan Stanley
Roman Josi
Philippe Myers
Goaltender Darcy Kuemper Kevin Lankinen Philipp Grubauer Anton Khudobin Cam Talbot Juuse Saros Jordan Binnington Connor Hellebuyck
Pacific Division
Position Anaheim Calgary Edmonton Los Angeles San Jose Seattle Vancouver Vegas
Forwards Nicolas Deslauriers Mikael Backlund Josh Archibald Lias Andersson Rudolfs Balcers Drafting Brock Boeser Exempt
Max Jones Dillon Dube Leon Draisaitl Viktor Arvidsson Logan Couture Jason Dickinson
Isac Lundestrom Johnny Gaudreau Zack Kassian Dustin Brown Jonathan Dahlen Bo Horvat
Rickard Rakell Elias Lindholm Connor McDavid Alex Iafallo Tomas Hertl J. T. Miller
Jakob Silfverberg Andrew Mangiapane Ryan Nugent-Hopkins Adrian Kempe Evander Kane Tyler Motte
Sam Steel Sean Monahan Jesse Puljujarvi Anze Kopitar Kevin Labanc Tanner Pearson
Troy Terry Matthew Tkachuk Kailer Yamamoto Trevor Moore Timo Meier Elias Pettersson
Defensemen Cam Fowler Rasmus Andersson Ethan Bear Drew Doughty Brent Burns Olli Juolevi
Hampus Lindholm Noah Hanifin Duncan Keith Matt Roy Erik Karlsson Tyler Myers
Josh Manson Christopher Tanev Darnell Nurse Sean Walker Marc-Edouard Vlasic Nate Schmidt
Goaltender John Gibson Jacob Markstrom Stuart Skinner Cal Petersen Adin Hill Thatcher Demko

Results

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The Kraken were required to submit their draft picks to the NHL by 10 a.m. (ET) on July 21, and the results were announced at 8 p.m. that evening.[16] The draft took place at Gas Works Park in Seattle, with free tickets available to the public.[17] Draft picks were announced in alphabetical order of the player's previous team. Selections from the Atlantic Division were first, followed by the Metropolitan and Central, and ending with the Pacific Division.[18][19]

Key
NHL All-Star
Pick Player Position Age Previous team
Atlantic Division
1 Jérémy Lauzon Defenceman 24 Boston Bruins
2 Will Borgen Defenceman 24 Buffalo Sabres
3 Dennis Cholowski Defenceman 23 Detroit Red Wings
4 Chris Driedger Goaltender 27 Florida Panthers
5 Cale Fleury Defenceman 22 Montreal Canadiens
6 Joey Daccord Goaltender 24 Ottawa Senators
7 Yanni Gourde Centre 29 Tampa Bay Lightning
8 Jared McCann Centre 25 Toronto Maple Leafs
Metropolitan Division
9 Morgan Geekie Centre 23 Carolina Hurricanes
10 Gavin Bayreuther Defenceman 27 Columbus Blue Jackets
11 Nathan Bastian Right wing 23 New Jersey Devils
12 Jordan Eberle Right wing 31 New York Islanders
13 Colin Blackwell Centre 28 New York Rangers
14 Carsen Twarynski Left wing 23 Philadelphia Flyers
15 Brandon Tanev Left wing 29 Pittsburgh Penguins
16 Vítek Vaněček Goaltender 25 Washington Capitals
Central Division
17 Tyler Pitlick Centre 29 Arizona Coyotes
18 John Quenneville Centre 25 Chicago Blackhawks
19 Joonas Donskoi Right wing 29 Colorado Avalanche
20 Jamie Oleksiak Defenceman 28 Dallas Stars
21 Carson Soucy Defenceman 26 Minnesota Wild
22 Calle Järnkrok Centre 29 Nashville Predators
23 Vince Dunn Defenceman 24 St. Louis Blues
24 Mason Appleton Centre 25 Winnipeg Jets
Pacific Division
25 Haydn Fleury Defenceman 25 Anaheim Ducks
26 Mark Giordano Defenceman 37 Calgary Flames
27 Adam Larsson Defenceman 28 Edmonton Oilers
28 Kurtis MacDermid Defenceman 27 Los Angeles Kings
29 Alexander True Centre 24 San Jose Sharks
30 Kole Lind Right wing 22 Vancouver Canucks

Aftermath

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The Kraken made no trades for "expansion draft considerations", in which assets were exchanged to ensure that Seattle would select or avoid selecting a certain unprotected player.[20] Some expansion players were traded in the days following the draft. Tyler Pitlick went to the Calgary Flames on July 22 in exchange for a fourth-round pick in the 2022 NHL Entry Draft.[21] On July 27, the Kraken traded Kurtis MacDermid to the Colorado Avalanche in exchange for a fourth-round pick in the 2023 NHL Entry Draft.[22] The next day, Seattle returned goaltender Vítek Vaněček to the Washington Capitals, receiving a second-round pick in 2023 that Washington had acquired from the Winnipeg Jets.[23] Two players taken in the expansion draft were pending unrestricted free agents who did not sign with Seattle. Gavin Bayreuther re-signed with the Columbus Blue Jackets on a two-year contract,[24] while John Quenneville joined the ZSC Lions of the Swiss National League.[25]

UFA signings

Draft analysis

References

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  1. ^ "Mets, Eskimos, Ironmen, Totems: Seattle's hockey history is richer than you think". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. October 23, 2021. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
  2. ^ Baker, Scott (December 2, 2018). "More than the Metropolitans: Beforre NHL arrives, a comprehensive Seattle hockey history". The Seattle Times. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
  3. ^ Andriesen, David (January 31, 2007). "Will the puck stop here?". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
  4. ^ Baker, Geoff (December 4, 2017). "NHL? NBA? A look at what could happen now that Seattle approved KeyArena renovation". The Seattle Times. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
  5. ^ Bishop, Greg (April 21, 2023). "How The Kraken Quickly Turned Seattle Into a Hockey Town". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
  6. ^ "Bettman says NHL will consider Seattle expansion bid". USA Today. Associated Press. December 7, 2017. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
  7. ^ "Seattle applies for NHL expansion team". National Hockey League. February 13, 2018. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
  8. ^ "National Hockey League approves expansion team in Seattle". National Hockey League. Seattle Kraken. December 4, 2018. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
  9. ^ a b c "Kraken 2021 NHL Expansion Draft rules same as Golden Knights followed". National Hockey League. July 20, 2021. Retrieved August 19, 2023.
  10. ^ Granger, Jesse (December 5, 2018). "Exempt from Seattle's expansion draft, Vegas can manipulate that to its benefit". The Athletic. Retrieved August 19, 2023.
  11. ^ Gulitti, Tom (July 10, 2020). "NHL, NHLPA ratify CBA extension through 2025-26 season". National Hockey League. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
  12. ^ Spiegel, Jackie (July 18, 2021). "NHL Expansion Draft 2021: Full list of players protected by all 30 teams". The Sporting News. Retrieved April 25, 2023.
  13. ^ "NHL announces protected list for 2021 NHL Expansion Draft". National Hockey League. NHL Public Relations. July 18, 2021. Retrieved April 25, 2023.
  14. ^ Myers, Tracey (July 18, 2021). "Kraken excited to begin process of building roster with Expansion Draft". National Hockey League. Retrieved August 17, 2023.
  15. ^ Douglas, Kayla (July 18, 2021). "Protected lists revealed for Kraken expansion draft". theScore. Retrieved April 25, 2023.
  16. ^ Rosen, Dan (July 21, 2021). "Seattle Kraken to hold 2021 NHL Expansion Draft". National Hockey League. Retrieved August 17, 2023.
  17. ^ Baker, Geoff (July 13, 2021). "NHL to hold Kraken expansion draft at Gas Works Park with fans in attendance". The Seattle Times. Retrieved August 17, 2023.
  18. ^ Rosen, Dan (July 21, 2021). "NHL Expansion Draft selection tracker for Kraken". National Hockey League. Retrieved April 24, 2023.
  19. ^ "Seattle Kraken expansion draft live results: Players selected from 30 NHL teams". ESPN. July 21, 2021. Retrieved April 24, 2023.
  20. ^ Larkin, Matt (July 22, 2021). "Winners and Losers of the Kraken Expansion Draft". The Hockey News. Sports Illustrated. Retrieved August 17, 2023.
  21. ^ Baker, Geoff (July 22, 2021). "Kraken makes first franchise trade, sending forward Tyler Pitlick to Calgary for fourth-round draft pick". The Seattle Times. Retrieved August 17, 2023.
  22. ^ Chambers, Mike (July 27, 2021). "Avalanche acquires hulking defenseman Kurtis MacDermid from Seattle Kraken". The Denver Post. Retrieved August 17, 2023.
  23. ^ Pell, Samantha (July 28, 2021). "A week after losing Vitek Vanecek to Seattle, Capitals reacquire goalie from Kraken". The Washington Post. Retrieved August 17, 2023.
  24. ^ Hedger, Brian (September 30, 2021). "Selected by Kraken, Bayreuther thrilled with Blue Jackets return: 'I just feel home here'". The Columbus Dispatch. Retrieved August 17, 2023.
  25. ^ "ZSC Lions testen John Quenneville" (in German). ZSC Lions. August 10, 2021. Archived from the original on August 11, 2021. Retrieved August 17, 2023.
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