September 19, 2024

The Edmonton Oilers have employed 34 defencemen who played more than 200 regular season games with the team, led by Kevin Lowe at 1037.

 

And Edmonton has iced 31 d-men who scored more than 0.4 points per game, led by Paul Coffey at 1.26 per game in his seven seasons with the Oilers.

 

The Oilers have also had a number of smaller d-men who put up a good number of points in their Edmonton careers:

 

  • 5-8, 170-pound Reijo Ruotsalainen, 0.81 points per game
  • 5-9 180-pound Risto Siltanen 0.73 per game
  • Tyson Barrie, 5-11, 197. 0.69 per game
  • Ilya Byakin, 5-10 183 pounds, 0.64 per game
  • Norm Maciver, 5-11, 180. 0.59 per game
  • Lubomir Visnovsky, 5-10 197, 0.59 per game
  • Greg Hawgood, 5-10 204, 0.58 per game
  • Marc-Andre Bergeron 5-9, 198, 0.47 per game.

That is eight smaller d-men in franchise history who were solid on the attack, a few of them offensive beasts, up there with the best attacking d-men in Edmonton history.

 

But there is one kind of player in these categories who is exceedingly rare, a smaller d-man who can put up points but has also lasted with the team.

 

Of the eight smaller offensive blueline dynamos on the Oilers, only one of them, the brilliant-skating, hard-shooting Siltanen, played more than 200 regular season games for the team. The rest of them were off the team in one, two or three seasons. As good as some of them were, their careers in Edmonton were short-lived.

 

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Perhaps Beau Akey will defy that trend. He’s Edmonton’s top ranked d-man prospect this year, edging out big man Maximus Wanner. Akey was ranked ninth last year. This year he is third overall.

Akey, who won’t turn 20 until February, was the 56th overall pick in the 2023 draft. He’s 6-feet, 186-pounds, and he’s had his setbacks, including a broken nose, then a shoulder injury that required surgery last fall. But there’s plenty to like in his game, in particular his skating and passing.

 

Before the 2023 draft, the scouts were bullish on the Ontario Hockey League player.

 

Said Steven Ellis of The Daily Faceoff, “He does an excellent job of rushing the puck down the ice from his own zone and he panic-passes the puck far less these days.”

Said Elite Prospects: “He can pivot with a single step without losing speed, explode forward with short, explosive steps, and stack his full weight over one of his outside edges to abruptly change direction.”

And The Athletic’s Corey Pronman: “He can make tough plays with the puck while also having a hard point shot that can beat goaltenders clean.”

 

And Kyle Pereira of The Last Word on Sports: “One of the best skaters in the draft class. He possesses excellent edges and agility, allowing him to have strong four-way mobility. His stride is also smooth, and looks effortless at times… There’s very little not to love about his skating.”

And Nick Richard of Dobber Prospects: “Potential as a top-four defenseman if he continues to improve his overall processing speed.”

 

And The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler: “Akey is a beautiful, flowing skater with plus-level mobility in all four directions… I like him defending the rush, where he uses his feet and stick to manage gaps and steer opposing carriers. His game defensively does lack a little polish and attention to detail at times.”

And, finally,Brock Otten of OHL Prospects: “I wanted to see more positive development in his skill/confidence with the puck and in his defensive zone decision making. Instead, he reverted into a bit of a shell with the puck and some sloppy habits crept into his game. All that said, I still like Akey and I do believe that he can possibly turn things around, I’m just not quite as confident as I was early on… He can get caught flat footed when defending because he lacks assertiveness and allows the opposition to dictate pace and direction. All of these things are extremely fixable. In a lot of ways, Akey’s raw two-way approach and lack of refinement in utilizing his mobility reminds me of TJ Brodie in his draft year.”

Akey made a positive impression with Cult of Hockey writers at his first NHL training camp, where he got into one NHL pre-season game. The Cult’s Bruce McCurdy summed up his play: “Akey’s game is built around his outstanding skating, an attribute that he uses to best advantage on the offensive side of the puck, on puck retrievals and at neutralizing opposition rushes in the neutral zone. Not surprisingly, he had some challenges in the d-zone. At 6’0, 186 pounds — and more significantly, at 18 years of age — he was at times in over his head against bigger, more mature men. He competed hard, taking a handful of penalties in the process, and found a way to impose his positive elements at times in every game he played.”

Edmonton signed Akey to an Entry Level Contract last October, but after 14 OHL games came his dislocated shoulder and surgery. But the Oilers are still high on him.

 

“His skating is a difference-maker,” top scout Rick Pracey told NHL.com’s Derek Van Diest. “When you combine that with his hockey sense and ability to move the puck, (zone) exits and entries and a two-way style game that’s transitional to the NHL level.”

Expectations for 2024-25 season: Recover from his shoulder surgery as season goes along, put up a point per game in his final OHL season, and put a stranglehold on the spot of being Edmonton’s top d-man prospect. As for years to come, much will depend on Akey’s health, his willingness to work and his ability to master defensive technique. He doesn’t have to be a Big Bobby Clobber to make it in the NHL, just play smart and courageous positional defence. If he can master that, maybe he’ll be the first smaller d-man in Edmonton history to stick five or six seasons with the team.

 

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