
Patrice Bergeron (Acadie-Bathurst), Brandon Carlo (Tri-City), Charlie Coyle (Saint John), Jake DeBrusk (Red Deer), Nick Foligno (Sudbury), A.J. Josh Brown (Oshawa), Jakob Chychrun* (Sarnia), Lawson Crouse (Kingston), Christian Fischer (Windsor), Dylan Guenther (Edmonton), Barrett Hayton (Soo), Connor Ingram (Kamloops), Zack Kassian (Windsor), Andrew Ladd* (Calgary), Bryan Little* (Barrie), Dysin Mayo (Edmonton), Ben McCartney* (Brandon), Liam O’Brien (Rouyn-Noranda), Nick Ritchie (Soo), Conor Timmins (Soo), Juuso Valimaki (Tri-City). Nathan Beaulieu (Saint John), Simon Benoit (Shawinigan), Sam Carrick* (Brampton), Max Comtois (Drummondville), Jamie Drysdale (Erie), Cam Fowler (Windsor), Glenn Gawdin* (Swift Current), John Gibson (Kitchener), Adam Henrique (Windsor), Max Jones (Kingston), Dmitry Kulikov (Drummondville), Brett Leason (Prince Albert), Mason McTavish (Hamilton), John Moore* (Kitchener), Anthony Stolarz (London), Ryan Strome (Niagara), Colton White (Soo). The Drummondville Voltigeurs are the QMJHL’s most represented team with 10 players.Īmong the NHL’s 32 clubs, the Vegas Golden Knights lead the way with 21 CHL graduates followed by the Edmonton Oilers with 19 and the Chicago Blackhawks, Montreal Canadiens, and Tampa Bay Lightning each with 18. The London Knights lead all CHL clubs with 27 graduates followed by the Soo Greyhounds with 20 and the Kelowna Rockets with 14. In all, 59 CHL clubs are represented by at least one graduate counting 199 players from the Ontario Hockey League, 121 from the Western Hockey League, and 85 from the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League.



A total of 405 Canadian Hockey League graduates have been named to opening rosters for the 2022-23 National Hockey League regular season.
