Montreal Canadiens: Why Shane Wright Fell To Fourth Overall In The NHL Draft

OSHAWA, ONTARIO - NOVEMBER 21: Shane Wright #51 of the Kingston Frontenacs skates against the Oshawa Generals at Tribute Communities Centre on November 21, 2021 in Oshawa, Ontario. (Photo by Chris Tanouye/Getty Images)
OSHAWA, ONTARIO - NOVEMBER 21: Shane Wright #51 of the Kingston Frontenacs skates against the Oshawa Generals at Tribute Communities Centre on November 21, 2021 in Oshawa, Ontario. (Photo by Chris Tanouye/Getty Images) /
facebooktwitterreddit
Prev
2 of 3
Next
Jul 7, 2022; Montreal, Quebec, CANADA; Shane Wright. Mandatory Credit: Eric Bolte-USA TODAY Sports
Jul 7, 2022; Montreal, Quebec, CANADA; Shane Wright. Mandatory Credit: Eric Bolte-USA TODAY Sports /

Wright was Exceptional

Shane Wright was given exceptional status as a young teenager to play in the big leagues. But being granted exceptional status does not necessarily guarantee a great NHL hockey player. The players that have been granted exceptional statuses are Connor McDavid, John Tavares, Aaron Ekblad, Joe Veleno and Sean Day. Day is now 24 and has played just two NHL games so far, and not with the team that drafted him.

Veleno is still young, but hasn’t broken out as you would hope an exceptional player would. He was drafted in 2018, played his first NHL game in the 2020-21 season and played the whole last season, while recording a statline of eight goals and 15 points in 66 games.

Connor McDavid is the epitome of an exceptional player. He breaks the game and is the best player in the league. Tavares and Ekblad have been stars in their own right, but haven’t set the league on fire. Maybe my views on exceptional are a bit too high.

Wright lost a year (as did all hockey players) due to the pandemic, and did struggle in this past year. Wright isn’t very flashy in his game, and for many, that can be a turn off. Watching his highlights next to Slafkovsky’s or Cooley’s and you will more than likely going to be left wanting on the Wright front.

Shane Wright is also a high floor/high ceiling player. He is smart and skilled enough that he is at least going to be a good NHL option, probably great. The risk is low, but the reward is high. Is it quite as high as Cooley’s or Slafkovsky’s if they hit their ceilings? Probably not, but Wright also would likely right around that skill level.

But the theme of the early first round was high risk/high reward. Montreal, New Jersey and Arizona all swung for the fences, ignoring the safer option in the hope that their draft pick will develop correctly and become the best player in the draft.

If Juraj Slafkovsky gets to his ceilling, he is a dominant power forward capable of scoring 40 goals and 80 points in a season. Kent Hughes and the Montreal Canadiens are banking of Slafkovsky hitting his peak, and not becoming another Josh Anderson-type prototypical power forward.

Because if neither grows to their full potential, I think that Wright would be the better player. But if both players reach their potential, I think that Slafkovsky has the edge.