DobberProspects

WHL Report – February 2020 (feat. Seth Jarvis)

 

Hello my friends, hello. 

At the beginning of the season, many draft experts claimed that the WHL wasn’t quite the hot bed that last year was. It is tough to follow a year which saw Byram, Dach, Cozens, Krebs and company featured in the top 20 but hold the phone…

Defenseman Braden Schneider and forward Connor Zary have been in most top-45 rankings since the beginning of the year and it looks like Portland Winterhawks forward Seth Jarvis and PA Raider D-man Kaiden Guhle could be making their splash as for-sure first rounders. There are a lot of names into the top-60 who come from the WHL and each of them seem to be creeping higher and higher on lists. 

Lets take a look at some of the numbers from the month of January to get a snapshot. At this point in time, teams have made their trades and players really hit strides and separate themselves from the pack. 

 

Player

Team

Games

Goals

Assists

Shots per game

           

Connor Zary

Kamloops

9

8

9

5.38

Seth Jarvis

Portland

10

11

18

4.5

Jake Neighbours

Edmonton

12

3

10

3.92

Ozzy Wiesblatt

Prince Albert

13

2

9

2.23

Tristan Robins

Saskatoon

12

12

9

4.42

Connor McClennon

Winnipeg

6

3

8

3.16

Ridly Greig

Brandon

9

5

8

3.00

Pavel Novak

Kelowna

13

5

5

3.38

Josh Pillar

Kamloops

12

7

7

3.08

Lukas Svejkovsky

Medicine Hat

13

8

7

3.62

Kyle Crnkovic

Saskatoon

13

4

19

2.46

Justin Sourdif

Vancouver

10

2

3

1.90

 

Some things to note:

 

Player

Team

Games

Goals

Assists

Shots per game

           

Kaiden Guhle

Prince Albert

13

2

8

3.15

Braden Schnieder

Brandon

10

1

4

1.60

Alex Cotton

Lethbridge

10

4

7

3.30

Daniel Baker

Medicine Hat

13

4

7

2.23

Some things to note:


The Drafted!

 

Player

Team

Games

Goals

Assists

Shots per game

           

Adam Beckman(MIN)

Spokane

12

7

11

4.50

Dylan Cozens(BUF)

Lethbridge

6

8

5

4.33

Aliaksi Protas(WSH)

Prince Albert

13

2

8

3.23

Cole Fonstad(MTL)

Everett

12

5

10

3.25

Reece Newkirk (NYI)

Portland

12

9

6

4.17

Sasha Mutala(COL)

Tri-City

12

6

6

3.83

Brayden Tracey(ANA)

Victoria

15

5

10

2.4

Peyton Krebs(VGK)

Winnipeg

12

6

17

2.83

Nolan Foote(TBL)

Kelowna

1

0

0

1.00

Observations: 

 

Player

Team

Games

Goals

Assists

Shots per game

           

John Ludvig(FLA)

Portland

12

3

11

3.33

Filip Kral(TOR)

Spokane

12

2

8

1.67

Calen Addison(PIT)

Lethbridge

5

1

10

3.00

Kaedan Korczak(VGK)

Kelowna

10

2

5

3.90

Ty Smith(NJ)

Spokane

9

3

9

2.56

Jett Woo(VAN)

Calgary

13

0

12

1.85

Jake Christiansen(undrafted)

Everett

12

5

8

4.83

Observations:

_____

Ok. That was long. But… I wanted to be intense, ya know? I wanted to give you the good stuff. If you’re lasted this long then you’re in for a bit of a treat. Here is a profile on Seth Jarvis. If you do not get to see him play very regularly, here are some of the aspects which made him have such a standout month offensively. 

Let’s go. 

Seth Jarvis – 5’10, 172lbs – F – Portland Winterhawks

He was a first round draft pick by Portland in the 2017 WHL draft and as I type, he currently sits in fourth place in WHL scoring with 67 points in 47 games. 

One thing you’ll find with Seth Jarvis that he is constant in motion, especially if he wants to gain speed entering the offensive zone. Whether the puck is on his stick or not, his ability to read the play effectively means he is at high speed when others are standing still. Here he is on a zone entry, showing his patience on the pass, and ability to change speeds to open up lanes. 

He’s number 24. 

Here he is moving in the O-zone, showing his high end ability to evade stick checks and keep the play in his possession. 

Here he is, showing his ability to find open space and read the play very well. When the puck is not on his stick, he is able to find open ice consistently. As a Flames writer, this aspect of his game reminds me of Sean Monahan. 

Does he have a good shot? Yeah he really does. He never particularly tries to overpower the shot though. From my viewings, his one-timer isn’t the biggest wind-up which allows for more accuracy.

If you’ve made it this far in the article, and you haven’t seen this highlight reel play from Seth Jarvis, you’re welcome. When you can move laterally, while dragging the puck so crazy far and elevate the puck in tight like this, you are scary. Really scary. The one big question mark I’ve personally had about Jarvis is… Does he pre-plan these types of moves, or does he have the ability and control to react to these moments? 

The more I’ve watched, the more sure I am that… he does not plan these things. 

He adapts. He reads the plays so well. Maintaining balance.

That makes him a legit first-round NHL prospect. 

Crazy. 

Enjoy. 

Thanks for reading!

As always, I cover the WHL and the Calgary Flames for Dobber Prospects. 

You can find me on twitter @datchockeydoe

Cheers

Joel Henderson

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