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Building Historic Draft Classes with Flames 2026 Draft Slots

Building Historic Draft Classes with Flames 2026 Draft Slots

The Calgary Flames will enter the 2026 NHL Draft with a whopping 11 draft picks, including six in the first two rounds, giving them their largest draft class in years. History can provide some clues about what the Flames’ 2026 draft class will likely look like when it’s all said and done. By examining previous drafts and what players were selected in each of the Flames’ 2026 draft slots, we can create a hypothetical draft class from each year. Let’s take a look.

We’ll start with the 2022 draft as it’s still far too early to look at the 2023, 2024 and 2025 drafts. A reminder that the Vegas Golden Knights will forfeit their second-round pick, meaning the Flames’ picks between the 3-7 rounds will be bumped up by one slot.

2022 draft

Pick Player NHL GP 2025-26 League
6th David Jiricek (D) 85 NHL/AHL
30th Brad Lambert (F) 31 NHL/AHL
35th Jagger Firkus (F) 0 AHL
36th Artyom Duda (D) 0 AHL
51st Jack Hughes (F) 0 AHL
55th Elias Salomonsson (D) 32 NHL/AHL
64th Filip Nordberg (D) 0 NCAA
67th Miko Matikka (F) 0 AHL
99th Garrett Brown (D) 0 NCAA
131st Matthew Morden (D) 0 NCAA
163rd Maksymilian Szuber (D) 1 AHL

Even though the 2022 draft was four years ago, it’s still too early to be super critical of the above draft class. With that said, the early returns aren’t promising. So far, of the 11 players selected, just four have played NHL games, and not a single one was an NHL regular last season. Jiricek has been a massive flop at 6th overall and is already onto his third team, which has killed the above draft class. Lambert, struggling to earn regular NHL minutes after being picked 30th overall, doesn’t help either.

2021 draft

Pick Player NHL GP 2025-26 League
6th Simon Edvinsson (D) 175 NHL
30th Zachary Dean (F) 9 AHL
35th Ryker Evans (D) 176 NHL
36th Shai Buium (D) 0 AHL
51st Ville Koivunen (F) 47 AHL
55th Vincent Iorio (D) 36 NHL/AHL
64th Oliver Kapanen (F) 100 NHL
67th Ryan Winterton (F) 89 NHL
99th Ville Ottavainen (D) 1 AHL
131st Jacob Melanson (F) 37 NHL/AHL
163rd Semyon Vyazovoi (G) 0 KHL

Now we’re talking. If the Calgary Flames can walk out of the 2026 draft with a class like this, I think everyone would be pretty happy. Of the 11 players selected, nine have already played NHL games so far. In fact, four of them were NHL regulars in 2025-26. Getting four NHL regulars out of one draft class is a massive win, no matter how you look at it. Add in a couple of other names who split time between the NHL and AHL last year, and six of the 11 players played NHL games in 2025-26.

Edvinsson and Evans are both everyday NHL defenders, while Koivunen had a superb year in the AHL in 2025-26. Kapanen, meanwhile, looks like a steal at 64th overall after posting 22 goals and 37 points for the Habs in 2025-26.

2020 draft

Pick Player NHL GP 2025-26 League
6th Jamie Drysdale (D) 295 NHL
30th Mavrik Bourque (F) 156 NHL
35th Helge Grans (D) 6 AHL
36th Sam Colangelo (F) 44 AHL
51st Theodor Niederbach (F) 0 SHL
55th Cross Hanas (F) 0 AHL
64th Topi Niemela (D) 0 AHL
67th Ian Moore (D) 70 NHL
99th Jaromir Pytilk (F) 0 Czech
131st Matteo Costantini (F) 0 AHL
163rd Will Cranley (G) 0 ECHL

While 2021 was an example of a good outcome for the Calgary Flames’ 2026 draft class, 2020 was the opposite. This class is highlighted by miss after miss, with just five of the 11 players having played NHL games thus far. Of those five, only three were NHL regulars last season. The class is anchored by Jamie Drysdale, the 2020 6th overall pick. While he had his most promising year yet in 2025-26, he’s yet to prove he was worth the 6th overall selection.

The highlight of this class is finding Mavrik Bourque at 30th overall. The 24-year-old is coming off a 41-point season in 2025-26 and looks like a big-time steal at 30th. After him, this class is one gigantic whiff.

2019 draft

Pick Player NHL GP 2025-26 League
6th Moritz Seider (D) 410 NHL
30th John Beecher (F) 165 NHL
35th Antti Tuomisto (D) 0 AHL
36th Pyotr Kochetkov (G) 125 NHL/AHL
51st Simon Lundmark (D) 1 AHL
55th Dillon Hamaliuk (F) 0 ECHL
64th Mattias Norlinder (D) 6 SHL
67th Erik Portillo (G) 1 AHL
99th Cade Webber (D) 0 AHL
131st Rhett Pitlick (F) 0 AHL
163rd Will Francis (D) 0 ECHL

The 2019 class is the definition of top-heavy. At 6th overall, you hit a homerun with a true Norris-level defenceman, and then the next 10 picks get ugly. Beecher is a fringe NHL player at least, and Kochetkov has been a decent backup, but after those two, there’s absolutely no value in this class. You have a combined eight NHL games among the eight other players. It begs the question: Would you take landing an all-star level player at 6th if it meant the next 10 picks amounted to virtually nothing of value?

2018 draft

Pick Player NHL GP 2025-26 League
6th Filip Zadina (F) 262 Swiss-A
30th Joe Veleno (F) 367 NHL
35th Jesse Ylonen (F) 111 SHL
36th Jared McIsaac (D) 0 Slovak Extraliga
51st Akil Thomas (F) 32 AHL
55th Kevin Bahl (D) 297 NHL
64th Justus Annunen (G) 80 NHL
67th Alec Regula (D) 51 NHL/AHL
99th Slava Demin (D) 0 ECHL
131st Spencer Stastney (D) 117 NHL
163rd Simon Kjellberg (D) 0 Retired

This draft class is pretty underwhelming. It’s more about quantity instead of quality. Sure, there are five NHL regulars from the class, but none of them are impact players. Kevin Bahl is probably the best name from the entire class, and while he’s been a good piece for the Flames, his ceiling is a serviceable second-pairing defender and nothing more. Otherwise, you have a few bottom-of-the-lineup NHLers in Veleno, Regula, Stastney, and a backup goalie in Annunen.

For 11 picks, this is a pretty dreadful return eight years later.

The best-case scenario

Going back through every draft this century, what has been the absolute best class taken with the Flames’ 2026 draft slots? Flames fans will likely remember it.

2013 draft

Pick Player NHL GP 2025-26 League
6th Sean Monahan (F) 896 NHL
30th Ryan Hartman (F) 725 NHL
35th J.T. Compher (F) 658 NHL
36th Zach Fucale (G) 4 KHL
51st Carl Dahlstrom (D) 67 Swiss-A
55th Artturi Lehkonen (F) 660 NHL
64th Jonathan-Ismael Diaby (D) 0 Retired (Shoresy)
67th Keegan Kanzig (D) 0 Retired
99th Juuse Saros (D) 467 NHL
131st Cole Ully (F) 0 EIHL
163rd Brendan Burke (G) 0 Retired

This class has it all. A number one centre in Monahan, a second-line centre in Hartman, a top-six winger in Lehkonen, a depth forward in Compher, and a Vezina-calibre starting goaltender in Saros. You can’t ask for much more. While there aren’t any bona fide superstars here, Saros was pretty close during his prime, and at his peak, Monahan was a point-per-game centre.

If the Flames can walk away from the 2026 draft with a class like this, it will be a massive win for the future of the organization.

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