FlamesNation has no direct affiliation to the Calgary Flames, Calgary Sports and Entertainment, NHL, or NHLPA
FlamesNation Top 20 Prospects: Wrapping up the full lists, rankings
alt
Photo credit: Sergei Belski / USA Today Sports
Ari Yanover
Sep 2, 2017, 10:00 EDTUpdated: Sep 1, 2017, 10:40 EDT
It’s September! You know what that means? The Penticton Tournament is nearly upon us. Prospects camp. Actual training camp to follow soon after, and with it, preseason. We aren’t at the point where the Calgary Flames will be playing meaningful hockey – not yet – but we are this close to the point where they are actually playing hockey.
Thank goodness.
But before we move on to that, we should take a moment to reflect on the month that was. August, the scourge of the hockey calendar, wherein nothing happens so we spend the month visiting the Flames’ farm system and ranking the rookies – to much approval, angst, and debate, it would appear.
Let’s pull back the curtain for one last look.

The top 20

At the very beginning, we visited the no-votes and runners up. Now, let’s see how those who made the top 20 placed where they did.
Points are determined by placement on someone’s list. So a vote for the top prospect gets a player 20 points, a second place vote gets 19 points, and so on, all the way down to 20th place, which allows for one point.
Rank
Prospect
Points
Tyler Parsons
140
Rasmus Andersson
124
Juuso Valimaki
120
Adam Fox
117
Oliver Kylington
111
Mark Jankowski
106
Spencer Foo
93
Dillon Dube
91
Andrew Mangiapane
89
Morgan Klimchuk
85
Jon Gillies
84
Matthew Phillips
64
Hunter Shinkaruk
57
David Rittich
51
Emile Poirier
42
Adam Ruzicka
32
Eetu Tuulola
23
Daniel Pribyl
20
Adam Ollas Mattsson
15
Ryan Lomberg
11
There are some clear levels here. While Parsons ran away with the list – how badly do the Flames need a goalie since Miikka Kiprusoff retired, anyway? – it should come as no surprise that a bunch of defencemen rank right at the top; after all, it’s probably the strongest position throughout the organization. Andersson, Valimaki, and Fox don’t have much separation between them.
Kylington, meanwhile, edged out Jankowski – the highest ranked forward – to stay in that defensive group. Jankowski was clearly the king of the forwards, though, with 13 points separating him from Foo. Not that Foo ranked clearly ahead of anyone else – he, Dube, and Mangiapane all ranked really close together, with Klimchuk bringing up the rear.
Right on Klimchuk’s heels, though – not to mention the heels of the top 10 – came Gillies, just one point back from making that cut. From there, the cutoff is much more steep. Phillips didn’t get any high-ranking love, but he got enough to clearly separate himself from the rest of the pack. Shinkaruk and Rittich ended up with a similar number of points, with a clear separation above Poirier, who in turn clearly separated himself from Ruzicka, who separated himself from, well, the rest.
Lindstrom, who finished 21st, was just three points back from Lomberg.

Individual lists

Here’s the part where you get to yell at us! Yayyyy.
Rank
Ari
Kent
Ryan
Mike
Christian T
Christian R
Taylor
1
Tyler Parsons
Tyler Parsons
Tyler Parsons
Tyler Parsons
Tyler Parsons
Tyler Parsons
tyler parsons
2
Juuso Valimaki
Rasmus Andersson
Mark Jankowski
Rasmus Andersson
Rasmus Andersson
Adam Fox
rasmus andersson
3
Adam Fox
Juuso Valimaki
Adam Fox
Adam Fox
Oliver Kylington
Juuso Valimaki
jusso valimaki
4
Rasmus Andersson
Adam Fox
Juuso Valimaki
Oliver Kylington
Spencer Foo
Rasmus Andersson
oliver kylington
5
Mark Jankowski
Mark Jankowski
Spencer Foo
Juuso Valimaki
Andrew Mangiapane
Oliver Kylington
andrew mangiapane
6
Oliver Kylington
Oliver Kylington
Dillon Dube
Mark Jankowski
Dillon Dube
Mark Jankowski
spencer foo
7
Jon Gillies
Jon Gillies
Rasmus Andersson
Jon Gillies
Juuso Valimaki
Dillon Dube
adam fox
8
Spencer Foo
Spencer Foo
Oliver Kylington
Andrew Mangiapane
Adam Fox
Spencer Foo
mark Jankowski
9
Andrew Mangiapane
Dillon Dube
Andrew Mangiapane
Dillon Dube
Mark Jankowski
Jon Gillies
dillon dube
10
Dillon Dube
David Rittich
Morgan Klimchuk
Spencer Foo
Matthew Phillips
Matthew Phillips
hunter shinkaruk
11
Morgan Klimchuk
Andrew Mangiapane
Jon Gillies
Matthew Phillips
Jon Gillies
Andrew Mangiapane
jon gillies
12
Emile Poirier
Matthew Phillips
Hunter Shinkaruk
David Rittich
David Rittich
David Rittich
matthew phillips
13
Hunter Shinkaruk
Morgan Klimchuk
Emile Poirier
Morgan Klimchuk
Hunter Shinkaruk
Morgan Klimchuk
Emile poirier
14
Matthew Phillips
Hunter Shinkaruk
Matthew Phillips
Hunter Shinkaruk
Morgan Klimchuk
Hunter Shinkaruk
david rittich
15
David Rittich
Eetu Tuulola
Adam Ruzicka
Emile Poirier
Emile Poirier
Adam Ruzicka
morgan klimchuk
16
Adam Ruzicka
Emile Poirier
Ryan Lomberg
Adam Ruzicka
Adam Ruzicka
Linus Lindstrom
Adam ruzicka
17
Daniel Pribyl
Daniel Pribyl
Daniel Pribyl
Eetu Tuulola
Eetu Tuulola
Adam Ollas Mattsson
eetu tuulola
18
Adam Ollas Mattsson
Adam Ollas Mattsson
Eetu Tuulola
Daniel Pribyl
Daniel Pribyl
D’Artagnan Joly
adam ollas mattsson
19
Eetu Tuulola
Linus Lidstrom
D’Artagnan Joly
Linus Lindstrom
Ryan Lomberg
Ryan Lomberg
daniel pribyl
20
Josh Healey
Ryan Lomberg
Adam Ollas Mattsson
Adam Ollas Mattsson
Linus Lindstrom
Josh Healey
ryan lomberg
I can’t speak to anyone else’s lists, just mine. I’m really not a good list maker – at least, I don’t think I am – so this was pretty tricky.
I basically had players grouped together, and decided how to order them from there. So, for example, Parsons, Valimaki, Fox, and Andersson made up one group for me, while Jankowski, Kylington, and Gillies were a second group, and so on. Depending on how I was feeling I used potential (group one) or NHL readiness (group two) as tiebreakers. It is all extremely unscientific and filled with gut feelings and biases (I think I’m more in Poirier’s corner than most of the other writers, and Tuulola will always have a place in my heart).
And there you have it! How closely do our lists match up against your own? What glaring errors do you see? Better yet, what did we get right? Share your thoughts in the comments!