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{{Short description|Sport event}}
The '''NHL Entry Draft''' is a collective meeting in which the franchises of the [[National Hockey League]] systematically select the rights to available amateur players who meet the eligibility requirements to play professional hockey in the [[NHL]].
{{about|<!--not used-->|the most recent draft|2024 NHL entry draft|the upcoming draft|2025 NHL entry draft}}
[[File:2008 NHL Entry Draft Stage.JPG|right|thumb|300px|The stage at the [[2008 NHL entry draft]] in [[Ottawa]], [[Ontario]]]]
The '''NHL entry draft''' ({{langx|fr|Repêchage d'entrée dans la LNH}}) is an annual meeting in which every franchise of the [[National Hockey League]] (NHL) systematically [[draft (sports)|select the rights to available]] [[ice hockey]] players who meet draft eligibility requirements (North American players 18–20 years old and European/international players 18–21 years old; all others enter the league as unrestricted free agents). The NHL entry draft is held once every year, generally within two to three months after the conclusion of the previous regular [[List of NHL seasons|season]]. During the draft, teams take turns selecting amateur players from [[junior ice hockey|junior]] or collegiate leagues and professional players from European leagues.


The [[1963 NHL entry draft|first draft]] was held in 1963, and has been held every year since. The NHL entry draft was known as the '''NHL amateur draft''' until 1979. The entry draft has only been a public event since 1980, and a televised event since 1984.<ref name="History" />
==History==
The first NHL Amateur Draft was held on [[June 5]], [[1963]] at the [[Queen Elizabeth Hotel]] in [[Montreal, Quebec]]. Any amateur player that was 17 years of age and older and was not already sponsored by an NHL club was eligible to be drafted.


Up to 1994, the order was solely determined by the standings at the end of the regular season. In 1995, the [[#Selection order and draft lottery|NHL draft lottery]] was introduced where only teams who had missed the playoffs could participate. The lottery winner moved up the draft order a maximum of four places, meaning only the five worst teams, based on regular season points in a given season, could pick first in the draft, and no team in the non-playoff group could move down more than one place. The chances of winning the lottery were weighted towards the teams at the bottom of the regular season standings. From 2013 to 2015, there was no limit of moving up in the draft order, so the lottery winner would automatically receive the first overall pick, and any teams above it in the draft order would still move down one spot. From 2015 to 2020, there were three lottery winners that received the top three picks, and any teams above it in the draft order would move down no more than three spots. In 2021, the lottery system was changed to include two lottery winners, and they received the top two overall picks, and any teams above it in the draft order would move down no more than two spots.
In [[1969]] the rules were changed so that any amateur player under the age of 20 was eligible to be drafted. 84 players (more than four times the average in each of the first six drafts) were selected that year.


Beginning in 2022, the two lottery winners are limited to move up no more than ten places in the draft order, meaning that only the bottom eleven teams based on regular season points, could win first pick in the draft. If a team outside the bottom eleven teams wins the first draft lottery they move up ten spots (e.g. fourteenth team wins the lottery and moves up to fourth overall) and lowest finishing team from the previous season is then awarded the first overall selection.
In [[1979]], the name of the Draft was changed from "Amateur" to "Entry" to accommodate a rule change that allowed players who had previously played professionally to be drafted. This rule change was made to facilitate the absorption of players from the now defunct [[World Hockey Association]].


== History ==
Beginning in [[1980]] and continuing today, any player who is 18–20 years old is eligible to be drafted. In addition, any non-North American player over the age of 20 can be selected.
The [[1963 NHL entry draft|first NHL entry draft]] (at that time known as the "NHL amateur draft") was held on June 5, 1963, at the [[Queen Elizabeth Hotel]] in [[Montreal]], [[Quebec]].<ref name="History" /> In 1967, NHL president [[Clarence Campbell]] and [[Canadian Amateur Hockey Association]] (CAHA) president [[Fred Page]] announced a new tentative five-year agreement on August 19, 1966, with several proposed changes to the existing system, effective July 1, 1967. The direct sponsorship of junior teams by the NHL was to be phased out in the upcoming year, and no new sponsored players could be registered or be required to sign a contract restricting movement between teams.<ref name="pro-am-pact">{{cite news|title=Sweeping Changes In Pro-Am Hockey Pact|date=August 19, 1966|newspaper=Winnipeg Free Press|location=Winnipeg, Manitoba|page=22|url=https://newspaperarchive.com/sports-clipping-aug-19-1966-1087023/}}{{free access}}</ref> The agreement eliminated the A, B and C forms, which had angered the parents of amateur players and were the source of legal action threats when the professional team refused to release a player.<ref>{{cite news|title=CAHA Becomes Bonus Baby Sitter|last=Gross|first=George|date=August 30, 1966|newspaper=Brandon Sun|location=Brandon, Manitoba|page=8|url=https://newspaperarchive.com/sports-clipping-aug-30-1966-1087032/}}{{free access}}</ref> Junior-aged players became eligible for the draft once they graduate from junior hockey, or to be signed as a free agent in the year the player reaches his 20th birthday. The NHL agreed to pay development fees to the CAHA for the drafted players. The new agreement came at a time that also leveled the playing field for new NHL clubs in the [[1967 NHL expansion]].<ref name="pro-am-pact" />


The NHL briefly changed the drafting age from 20 years old to 18-year-olds in 1974, to compete with the new WHA which was allowing teams to sign underage junior players. The 20-year old rule returned for the 1975 draft.
Also in 1980, the Entry Draft became a public event. Prior to this year the Entry Draft was conducted in Montreal hotels or League offices and was closed to the general public. The 1980 draft was held in the [[Montreal Forum]] and there were more than 2,500 fans in attendance.


In 1979, the rules were changed allowing players who had previously played professionally to be drafted. This rule change was made to facilitate the absorption of players from the defunct [[World Hockey Association]]. Consequently, the name of the draft was changed from "NHL amateur draft" to "NHL entry draft". The draft age was also dropped to include 19-year old "underage" players. In 1980, the age was dropped further to 18, so that any player who is between the ages of 18&nbsp;and 20 is eligible to be drafted. In addition, any non-North American player over the age of&nbsp;20 can be selected. From 1987 through 1991, 18 and 19-year-old players could only be drafted in the first three rounds unless they met another criterion of experience which required them to have played in major junior, U.S. college and high school, or European hockey.<ref name="History">{{cite web|url=http://www.nhl.com/futures/drafthistory.html|title=NHL Draft History|publisher=[[National Hockey League]]|access-date=July 2, 2009|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20010128131400/http://nhl.com/futures/drafthistory.html|archive-date=January 28, 2001}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nhl.com/ice/news.htm?id=424812|title= Picking top 3 all-time draft classes easy as 1 2 3 |last=Kimelman|first=Adam|date=June 10, 2009|publisher=[[National Hockey League]]|access-date=July 2, 2009}}</ref>
In 1985 the first draft outside of Montreal was held at the [[Metro Toronto Convention Centre]] in [[Toronto, Ontario]] in [[1985]]. The event was attended by 7,000 fans.


Live television coverage of the Draft began in [[1984]] when the [[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation]] covered the event in both English and French for [[Canada|Canadian]] audiences. [[SportsChannel America]] began covering the event in the [[United States]] in [[1989]].
In 1980, the entry draft became a public event, and was held at the [[Montreal Forum]]. Prior to that year the entry draft was conducted in Montreal hotels or league offices and was closed to the general public.<ref name="History" /> The first draft outside of Montreal was held at the [[Metro Toronto Convention Centre]] in [[Toronto]], [[Ontario]], in 1985.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nhl.com/ice/news.htm?id=431703|title=Drafting by the Numbers |last=Kreiser|first=John|date=June 25, 2009|publisher=[[National Hockey League]]|access-date=July 2, 2009}}</ref> Live television coverage of the draft began in 1984&nbsp;when the [[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation]] covered the event in both English and French for Canadian audiences. The 1987 entry draft, held at [[Joe Louis Arena]] in [[Detroit, Michigan]], was the first NHL draft to be held in the United States. [[SportsChannel America]] began covering the event in the United States in 1989.<ref name="History" />


Prior to the development of the draft, NHL teams sponsored junior teams, and signed prospects in their teens to the junior teams. Players were signed to one of three forms: the "A" form, which committed a player to a tryout; a "B" form, which gave the team an option to sign a player in return for a bonus; and the "C" form, which committed a player's professional rights. The "C" form could only be signed by the player at age eighteen or by the player's parents, often in exchange for some signing bonus.<ref>{{cite book |last=Brunt |first=Stephen |title=Searching for Bobby Orr |year=2006 |isbn=978-0-676-97651-9 |page=53}}</ref> The first drafts (up until the 1968 amateur draft) were held to assign players who had not signed with an NHL organization before the sponsorship of junior teams was discontinued after 1968.
===C form===
The '''C form''' was the standard document issued by the [[National Hockey League]] to acquire amateur players in the [[Original Six]] era. Prior to the Universal Draft of 1969, amateur drafts were for players who were not on a sponsorship list.


In October 2023, owners approved a proposal to switch the NHL Draft to a "decentralized" model in line with that of the [[NBA draft|NBA]] and [[National Football League Draft|NFL]] drafts, in which only prospects and team representatives will be present in-person at the Draft venue, and business would be conducted remotely from the teams' front offices. These changes are scheduled to take effect in 2025.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-12-05 |title=NHL finalizing details to hold ‘dramatic’ 2024 NHL Draft in Vegas Sphere |url=https://www.nhl.com/news/2024-nhl-draft-in-las-vegas-sphere-being-finalized |access-date=2023-12-07 |website=NHL.com |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Johnston |first=Chris |title=Majority of NHL teams support decentralization of draft |url=https://theathletic.com/4999604/2023/10/25/nhl-teams-decentralization-draft/ |access-date=2023-12-07 |website=The Athletic |language=en}}</ref>
The form, which usually led to a professional contract, would be signed by an amateur prospect at age 18 and it was permissible to be renewed only once. The player would usually be a member of a junior team that was affiliated with a [[National Hockey League]] franchise.


== Selection order and draft lottery ==
====Misconceptions about the C form====
The selection order in the NHL entry draft is determined by a combination of [[lottery]], regular season standing, and playoff results. While teams are permitted to trade draft picks both during the draft and prior to it (sometimes several years prior), in all cases, the selection order of the draft picks is based on the original holder of the pick, not a team which may have acquired the pick via a trade or other means.<ref name="D1">{{cite web|url=http://www.nhl.com/ice/news.htm?id=418259#&navid=nhl-search|title=Islanders have best shot at top pick |date=April 14, 2009|publisher=[[National Hockey League]]|access-date=July 2, 2009}}</ref><ref name="D2">{{cite web|url=http://www.nhl.com/ice/news.htm?id=425557|title=Final order for Entry Draft set |last=Kimelman|first=Adam|date=June 13, 2009|publisher=[[National Hockey League]]|access-date=July 2, 2009}}</ref> The order of picks discussed in this section always references the original team.
There was a popular view at the time that parents signed very young children's hockey lives over to the teams. This comes from the fact that at the time, most Junior clubs were owned or subsidised by [[National Hockey League|NHL]] teams, and usually subsidised minor hockey in their areas.


The basic order of the NHL entry draft is determined based on the standings of the teams in the previous season. As with the other major sports leagues, the basic draft order is intended to favour the teams with the weakest performance who presumably need the most improvement in their roster to compete with the other teams. Subject to the results of the NHL draft lottery (discussed below), the teams pick in the same order each round, with each team getting one pick per round.
However, a prospect had to be 18 years of age or older to sign a C-Form. Players as young as 14 could be put on a 4-name future negotiation list (as was the case for [[Bobby Orr]] in 1962).
The basic order of the picks is determined as follows:<ref name="Lottery">{{cite web|url=http://www.nhl.com/ice/page.htm?id=26377 |title=Hockey Operations Guidelines |date=May 10, 2010|publisher=[[National Hockey League]]|access-date=April 18, 2016}}</ref>


# The teams that did not qualify for the playoffs the previous season (picks 1–16)
==List of Drafts==
# The teams that made the playoffs in the previous season but did not win either their division in the regular season or play in the Conference Finals (picks 17–24 up to 28)
*[[2009 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[Bell Centre]] - [[Montreal, Quebec]]
# The teams that won their divisions in the previous season but did not play in the Conference Finals (potentially picks 25–28)
*[[2008 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[Scotiabank Place]] - [[Ottawa, Ontario]]
# The teams that lose in Conference Finals (picks 29 and 30)
*[[2007 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[Nationwide Arena]] - [[Columbus, Ohio]]
# The team that was the runner-up in the Stanley Cup Finals (pick 31)
*[[2006 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[GM Place]] - [[Vancouver, British Columbia]]
# The team that won the Stanley Cup in the previous season (pick 32)
*[[2005 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[Westin Hotels|The Westin Ottawa]] - [[Ottawa, Ontario]]
*[[2004 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[RBC Center]] - [[Raleigh, North Carolina]]
*[[2003 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[Gaylord Entertainment Center]] - [[Nashville, Tennessee]]
*[[2002 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[Air Canada Centre]] - Toronto, Ontario
*[[2001 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[BankAtlantic Center|National Car Rental Center]] - [[Sunrise, Florida]]
*[[2000 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[Pengrowth Saddledome]] - [[Calgary, Alberta]]
*[[1999 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[TD Banknorth Garden|FleetCenter]] - [[Boston, Massachusetts]]
*[[1998 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[HSBC Arena|Marine Midland Arena]] - [[Buffalo, New York]]
*[[1997 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[Mellon Arena|Civic Arena]] - [[Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania]]
*[[1996 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[Scottrade Center|Kiel Center]] - [[St. Louis, Missouri]]
*[[1995 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[Edmonton Coliseum]] - [[Edmonton, Alberta]]
*[[1994 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[Hartford Civic Center Coliseum|Hartford Civic Center]] - [[Hartford, Connecticut]]
*[[1993 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[Colisée Pepsi|Colisée de Quebec]] - [[Quebec City, Quebec]]
*[[1992 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[Montreal Forum]] - [[Montreal, Quebec]]
*[[1991 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[Buffalo Memorial Auditorium|Memorial Auditorium]] - Buffalo, New York
*[[1990 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[BC Place Stadium|B.C. Place]], Vancouver, British Columbia
*[[1989 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[Metropolitan Sports Center]] - [[Bloomington, Minnesota]]
*[[1988 NHL Entry Draft]] - Montreal Forum - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1987 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[Joe Louis Arena]] - [[Detroit, Michigan]]
*[[1986 NHL Entry Draft]] - Montreal Forum - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1985 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[Metro Toronto Convention Centre]] - [[Toronto, Ontario]]
*[[1984 NHL Entry Draft]] - Montreal Forum - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1983 NHL Entry Draft]] - Montreal Forum - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1982 NHL Entry Draft]] - Montreal Forum - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1981 NHL Entry Draft]] - Montreal Forum - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1980 NHL Entry Draft]] - Montreal Forum - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1979 NHL Entry Draft]] - [[Queen Elizabeth Hotel]] - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1978 NHL Amateur Draft]] - Queen Elizabeth Hotel - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1977 NHL Amateur Draft]] - [[Mount Royal Hotel]] - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1976 NHL Amateur Draft]] - NHL Office - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1975 NHL Amateur Draft]] - NHL Office - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1974 NHL Amateur Draft]] - NHL Office - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1973 NHL Amateur Draft]] - Mount Royal Hotel - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1972 NHL Amateur Draft]] - Queen Elizabeth Hotel - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1971 NHL Amateur Draft]] - Queen Elizabeth Hotel - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1970 NHL Amateur Draft]] - Queen Elizabeth Hotel - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1969 NHL Amateur Draft]] - Queen Elizabeth Hotel - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1968 NHL Amateur Draft]] - Queen Elizabeth Hotel - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1967 NHL Amateur Draft]] - Queen Elizabeth Hotel - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1966 NHL Amateur Draft]] - Mount Royal Hotel - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1965 NHL Amateur Draft]] - Queen Elizabeth Hotel - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1964 NHL Amateur Draft]] - Queen Elizabeth Hotel - Montreal, Quebec
*[[1963 NHL Amateur Draft]] - Queen Elizabeth Hotel - Montreal, Quebec


The number of teams in the second and third group depends on whether the Conference finalists also won their division. The teams in each group (other than the Stanley Cup winner and runner up) are ordered within that group based on their point totals in the preceding regular season (with the lowest point total picking first). Tie-breakers are governed by the same rules used to determine ties in the regular season standings. The order of picks 1–16 may change during the first round of the draft based on the results of the NHL draft lottery. In the subsequent rounds, the basic order based on point totals is used.<ref name="D2" />
==NHL Draft busts and steals==
The NHL draft is often unpredictable in terms of what a draft pick will achieve as a professional. It is impossible to predict with absolute certainty how successful a young player will be in the NHL, and many factors weigh on a player's development. Determining a young player's potential is not an exact science: scouts and managers can misevaluate talent or young players can simply fail to reach their potential. Some players are heralded as the next [[Mario Lemieux]] and selected with an early pick only to end up a career minor leaguer. Such players are considered draft "busts".


When teams lose their rights to a first-round draft choice, because that player was not signed to a contract and consequently re-entered the entry draft or became an unrestricted [[free agent]], they are awarded a compensatory draft pick. This selection will be the same numerical choice as the first round draft pick who was not signed, but in the second round. For example, if a team cannot sign the seventh overall first round draft choice, it will receive the seventh pick in the second round of the next draft as compensation.<ref>[http://www.nhlfa.com/CBA/cba_agreement8.asp National Hockey League Collective Bargaining Agreement, Article 8: Entry Draft] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120324023923/http://www.nhlfa.com/CBA/cba_agreement8.asp |date=March 24, 2012 }}</ref>
Examples:


===Draft lottery===
*[[1999]]-[[Patrick Stefan]], [[Atlanta Thrashers]] (1st overall)
At the conclusion of the regular season, the 16 teams that did not qualify for the playoffs are entered in a weighted lottery to determine the initial draft picks in the first round. The teams are seeded in the basic draft order based on their regular season point totals. The odds of winning the lottery are weighted on a descending scale that gives the greatest chance of winning to the team with the lowest point total (18.5%), and the worst chance to the team with the highest point total (1.0%).
*[[1999]]-[[Pavel Brendl]], [[New York Rangers]] (4th overall)
*[[1999]]-[[Brian Finley]]. [[Nashville Predators]] (6th overall)
*[[1998]]-[[Rico Fata]], [[Calgary Flames]] (6th overall)
*[[1997]]-[[Daniel Tkaczuk]], [[Calgary Flames]] (6th overall)
*[[1996]]-[[Alexandre Volchkov]], [[Washington Capitals]] (4th overall)
*[[1995]]-[[Aki Berg]], [[Los Angeles Kings]] (3rd overall)
*[[1994]]-[[Jason Bonsignore]], [[Edmonton Oilers]] (4th overall)
*[[1993]]-[[Alexandre Daigle]], [[Ottawa Senators]] (1st overall)
*[[1992]]-[[Ryan Sittler]], [[Philadelphia Flyers]] (7th overall)
*[[1991]]-[[Pat Falloon]], [[San Jose Sharks]] (2nd overall)
*[[1989]]-[[Dave Chyzowski]], [[New York Islanders]] (2nd overall)
*[[1987]]-[[Bryan Fogarty]], [[Quebec Nordiques]] (7th overall)
*[[1983]]-[[Brian Lawton]], [[Minnesota North Stars]] (1st overall)
*[[1982]]-[[Gord Kluzak]], [[Boston Bruins]] (1st overall)
*[[1980]]-[[Doug Wickenheiser]], [[Montreal Canadiens]] (1st overall)
*[[1975]]-[[Barry Dean]], [[Kansas City Scouts]] (2nd overall)
*[[1974]]-[[Greg Joly]], [[Washington Capitals]] (1st overall)


The prize for winning the draft lottery is to be upgraded to the highest eligible pick in the first round of the draft, with each team that preceded the winner in the basic draft order bumped one pick lower. For example, if the team with the 5th worst point total wins the lottery, it would pick first, and the teams with the worst through 4th-worst records would pick second through fifth. The remaining teams would be unaffected. The teams would return to the basic order for the second and all subsequent rounds.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Staff |first=TSN ca |date=2023-06-29 |title=NHL Draft Lottery History |url=https://www.tsn.ca/nhl/draftcentre/nhl-draft-lottery-history-1.236014 |access-date=2024-03-03 |website=TSN |language=en-CA}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=NHL draft lottery to debut in 1995 |url=https://www.tampabay.com/archive/1994/03/25/nhl-draft-lottery-to-debut-in-1995/ |access-date=2024-03-03 |website=Tampa Bay Times |language=en}}</ref>
Likewise, a prospect that had been shrugged off by scouts as not having an impact in the NHL ends up having a fruitful or outstanding career in the league. In this case, a player is considered to be a draft "steal".


From its inception through 2015, there was one winner of the lottery; from 1995 to 2012, the team that won the draft lottery moved up no more than four positions in the draft order.<ref>{{Cite web |title=How the NHL Draft Lottery has changed over the years |url=https://www.sportsnet.ca/hockey/nhl/looking-history-nhls-draft-lottery/ |access-date=2024-03-03 |website=www.sportsnet.ca |language=en}}</ref> If the winner of the lottery was among the five worst teams in a given season, that team won the first pick in the draft. Otherwise, the team will move up no more than four spots, and that team will not receive the first pick in the draft; from 2013 to 2015 the lottery winner received the first pick overall regardless of regular season point totals amongst the non-playoff teams. Beginning with the 2016 draft and lasting until the 2020 draft, the first three selections were determined by the lottery. Any team that did not make the playoffs had a weighted chance to be selected in the first, second, or third slot. Beginning in 2021, only two draws will be held for the first two selections. Starting with the 2022 lottery; the teams winning one of the two lotteries will only be allowed to move up a maximum of ten spots in the draft order, and teams will only be allowed to advance in the draft order because of winning a lottery twice in five years. The two-in-five-years rule only applies to teams jumping up in the draft order. This means the team with the worst record can win any lottery selection an unlimited number of times while the second-worst can do the same for the second overall pick only.<ref>{{cite news |last=Gulitti |first=Tom |date=March 23, 2021 |title=NHL Draft Lottery changes announced for 2021 |url=https://www.nhl.com/news/nhl-draft-lottery-changes-announced-for-2021/c-322838154 |access-date=April 9, 2021}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-05-08 |title=How does the NHL draft lottery work? Everything you need to know |url=https://www.espn.com/nhl/story/_/id/37555787/how-nhl-draft-lottery-works-2023-connor-bedard-chances-odds |access-date=2024-03-03 |website=ESPN.com |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Larkin |first=Matt |date=2021-03-24 |title=Which Recent NHL Draft Lottery Outcomes Led to the New Rule Changes? |url=https://thehockeynews.com/news/which-recent-nhl-draft-lottery-outcomes-led-to-the-new-rule-changes |access-date=2024-06-10 |website=The Hockey News |language=en}}</ref> The remaining teams maintains their order of selection based on the points accrued the previous season. As the lottery determines the top two slots, no team can drop more than two places from the position established based on previous season point totals.<ref>{{cite news|title=NHL announces changes to Draft Lottery format|url=https://www.nhl.com/ice/news.htm?id=728795|access-date=March 4, 2016|newspaper=NHL.com|date=August 20, 2014}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Allen |first=Kevin |title=NHL making changes to draft lottery |url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nhl/draft/2014/08/20/nhl-draft-lottery-revisions/14348353/ |access-date=2024-03-03 |website=USA TODAY |language=en-US}}</ref>
Examples:
*[[2001]]-[[Marek Zidlicky]], [[New York Rangers]] (6th round, 176th overall)
*[[2000]]-[[Henrik Lundqvist]], [[New York Rangers]] (7th round, 205th overall)
*[[1999]]-[[Henrik Zetterberg]], [[Detroit Red Wings]] (7th round, 210th overall)
*[[1998]]-[[Pavel Datsyuk]], [[Detroit Red Wings]] (6th round, 171st overall)
*[[1996]]-[[Tomas Kaberle]], [[Toronto Maple Leafs]] (8th round, 204th overall)
*[[1995]]-[[Miikka Kiprusoff]], [[San Jose Sharks]] (5th round, 116th overall)
*[[1994]]-[[Daniel Alfredsson]], [[Ottawa Senators]] (6th round, 133rd overall)
*[[1994]]-[[Tomas Holmström]], [[Detroit Red Wings]] (10th round, 257 overall)
*[[1993]]-[[Pavol Demitra]], [[Ottawa Senators]] (9th round, 227th overall)
*[[1992]]-[[Nikolai Khabibulin]], [[Winnipeg Jets]] (9th round, 204th overall)
*[[1990]]-[[Peter Bondra]], [[Washington Capitals]] (8th round, 156th overall)
*[[1989]]-[[Pavel Bure]], [[Vancouver Canucks]] (6th round, 113th overall)
*[[1987]]-[[Theoren Fleury]], [[Calgary Flames]] (8th round, 166th overall)
*[[1984]]-[[Luc Robitaille]], [[Los Angeles Kings]] (9th round, 171st overall)
*[[1984]]-[[Brett Hull]], [[Calgary Flames]] (6th round, 117th overall)
*[[1983]]-[[Dominik Hasek]], [[Chicago Blackhawks]] (10th round, 199th overall)
*[[1982]]-[[Doug Gilmour]], [[St. Louis Blues (hockey)|St. Louis Blues]] (7th round, 134th overall)
*[[1980]]-[[Steve Larmer]], [[Chicago Blackhawks]] (6th round, 120th overall)


The NHL draft lottery takes place just before or during the [[Stanley Cup playoffs]] and is hosted at the [[NHL Network (American TV channel)|NHL Network]]'s studios in [[Secaucus, New Jersey]], from 2020 onwards. The draft lottery previously took place at [[Sportsnet]]'s studios in [[Toronto]] from 2015 to 2019, and at [[The Sports Network|TSN]]'s studios in Toronto from 2006 to 2014.
There are no set criteria for labeling a player a bust or a steal, so the terminology is subjective by definition. Most of the time, players are termed busts if they are selected early in the draft and never make it as an NHL player, and players are considered steals if they are taken in the later rounds and become a top NHL pro. However, the terms can also be used more loosely: any player who fails to live up to expectations could be called a bust, and any player who outperforms those who were taken ahead of him could be called a steal.


The odds for the first overall pick are determined as follows:
==Draft oddities==


{| class="wikitable"
In the 1974 entry draft, [[Buffalo Sabres]] General Manager [[Punch Imlach]] deliberately selected an imaginary Japanese center, [[Taro Tsujimoto]], supposedly of the Tokyo Katanas of the Japanese Ice Hockey League, in the 11th round (183rd overall). Only after weeks had passed did the league discover that Tsujimoto did not in fact exist. Imlach later revealed that he had played the prank because of his frustration with the excessive tedium and length of that year's draft proceedings. Today, the league officially records the 183rd selection of the 1974 entry draft as an "invalid claim".
|+ Draft position odds (2000–12)
! Finish in <br> previous season
! 1st
! 2nd
! 3rd
! 4th
! 5th
! 6th
! 7th
! 8th
! 9th
! 10th
! 11th
! 12th
! 13th
! 14th
|-
! 30th
|48.2%||51.2%|| || || || || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 29th
|18.8%||42.0%||39.2%|| || || || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 28th
|14.2%|| ||56.1%||29.7%|| || || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 27th
| 10.7% || || || 66.7% ||22.6% || || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 26th
| 8.1% || || || || 74.7%||17.2% || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 25th
| || 6.2% || || || || 72.7%||19.6%|| || || || || || ||
|-
! 24th
| || || 4.7% || || || ||81.1% || 14.2% || || || || || ||
|-
! 23rd
| || || || 3.6%|| || || ||87.2% || 9.2% || || || || ||
|-
! 22nd
| || || || || 2.7%|| || || ||91.6% || 5.7% || || || ||
|-
! 21st
| || || || || || 2.1%|| || || ||94.8% || 3.1% || || ||
|-
! 20th
| || || || || || || 1.5%|| || || ||80.6% || 16.6% || ||
|-
! 19th
| || || || || || || || 1.1%|| || || ||88.0% ||9.3%||
|-
! 18th
| || || || || || || || || 0.8%|| || || ||90.1% ||9.9%
|-
!17th
| || || || ||||||||||||0.5%|| || || ||99.5%
|}


{| class="wikitable"
Likewise, the [[Florida Panthers]] attempted to draft Russian hockey phenomenon [[Alexander Ovechkin]] in 2003, even though his birthday was two days after the cut-off. The Panther's GM claimed that, with the addition of extra days falling on [[Leap Year]], Ovechkin was actually eligible to be drafted.
|+ Draft position odds (2013–14)
! Finish in <br> previous season
! 1st
! 2nd
! 3rd
! 4th
! 5th
! 6th
! 7th
! 8th
! 9th
! 10th
! 11th
! 12th
! 13th
! 14th
|-
! 30th
|25.0%||75.0%|| || || || || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 29th
|18.8%||25.0%||56.2%|| || || || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 28th
|14.2%|| ||43.8%||42.0%|| || || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 27th
| 10.7% || || || 58.0% ||31.3% || || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 26th
| 8.1% || || || || 68.7%||23.2% || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 25th
| 6.2% || || || || || 76.8%||17.0%|| || || || || || ||
|-
! 24th
| 4.7% || || || || || ||83.0% || 12.3% || || || || || ||
|-
! 23rd
| 3.6% || || || || || || ||87.7% || 8.7% || || || || ||
|-
! 22nd
| 2.7% || || || || || || || ||91.3% || 6.0% || || || ||
|-
! 21st
| 2.1% || || || || || || || || ||94.0% || 3.9% || || ||
|-
! 20th
| 1.5% || || || || || || || || || ||80.4% || 18.1% || ||
|-
! 19th
| 1.1% || || || || || || || || || || ||86.0% ||12.9%||
|-
! 18th
| 0.8% || || || || || || || || || || || ||94.7% ||3.2%
|-
!17th
| 0.5% || || || || || || || || || || || || ||99.5%
|}


{| class="wikitable"
==Player numbers by league summary==
|+ Draft position odds (2015)
Below is a chart showing where players have been drafted from by year. The leagues represented are the [[Ontario Hockey League]], [[Western Hockey League]], [[Quebec Major Junior Hockey League]], United States Colleges, United States High Schools, International players. Those player listed under Other do not fit any of the other listed categories. International players who were playing for teams in North American leagues are listed in the chart as being drafted from their respective league rather than being listed as international. [http://scoreboards.canoe.ca/default.asp?c=canoe&page=nhl/misc/DRAFT-HISTORICAL.htm ]
! Finish in <br> previous season
! 1st
! 2nd
! 3rd
! 4th
! 5th
! 6th
! 7th
! 8th
! 9th
! 10th
! 11th
! 12th
! 13th
! 14th
|-
! 30th
| 20.0% || 80.0%|| || || || || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 29th
| 13.5% || 20.0% ||66.5%|| || || || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 28th
| 11.5% || ||33.5%||55.0%|| || || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 27th
| 9.5% || || || 45.0% ||45.5% || || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 26th
| 8.5% || || || || 9.1%||35.5% || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 25th
| 7.5% || || || || || 63.0%||29.5%|| || || || || || ||
|-
! 24th
| 6.5% || || || || || ||70.5% || 23.0% || || || || || ||
|-
! 23rd
| 6.0% || || || || || || ||77.0% || 17.0% || || || || ||
|-
! 22nd
| 5.0% || || || || || || || ||83.0% || 12.0% || || || ||
|-
! 21st
| 3.5% || || || || || || || || ||88.0% || 8.5% || || ||
|-
! 20th
| 3.0% || || || || || || || || || ||91.5% || 5.5% || ||
|-
! 19th
| 2.5% || || || || || || || || || || ||94.5% ||3.0%||
|-
! 18th
| 2.0% || || || || || || || || || || || ||97.0% ||1.0%
|-
!17th
| 1.0% || || || || || || || || || || || || ||99.0%
|}


{| class="wikitable"
{| width="500" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" border="1" class="wikitable sortable" style="margin:auto;"
|+ Draft position odds (2016–2017)
|- align="center" bgcolor="#e0e0e0"
! Finish in <br> previous season
| Year
! 1st
| OHL
! 2nd
| WHL
! 3rd
| QMJHL
! 4th
| NCAA
! 5th
| USHS
! 6th
| Int'l
! 7th
| Other
! 8th
|- align="center"
! 9th
| 2007
! 10th
| 35
! 11th
| 27
! 12th
| 25
! 13th
| 8
! 14th
| 15
| 35
|-
! 30th
| 56
| 20.0% || 17.5%||15.0%||47.5%|| || || || || || || || || ||
|- align="center"
|-
| 2006
! 29th
| 29
| 13.5% || 13.1% ||12.5%||35.2% || 25.8% || || || || || || || || ||
| 24
| 25
|-
! 28th
| 22
| 11.5% || 11.4%||11.3%||14.2%||37.8% || 13.8% || || || || || || || ||
| 18
| 63
|-
! 27th
| 35
| 9.5% || 9.7% || 9.8% || 3.15% ||27.3% ||33.2% ||7.4%|| || || || || || ||
|- align="center"
|-
| 2005
! 26th
| 43
| 8.5% || 8.8% ||9.0% || || 9.1%||35.5% ||25.5%||3.7%|| || || || || ||
| 43
| 23
|-
! 25th
| 13
| 7.5% || 7.8% ||8.1%|| || || 17.5%||39.3%||17.9%||1.7%|| || || || ||
| 18
| 50
|-
! 24th
| 40
| 6.5% || 6.9% || 7.2% || || || ||27.9% || 39.1% || 11.7% || 0.7% || || || ||
|- align="center"
|-
| 2004
! 23rd
| 42
| 6.0% || 6.4% || 6.8% || || || || ||39.2% || 34.8% || 6.6% || 0.3% || || ||
| 44
| 27
|-
! 22nd
| 28
| 5.0% || 5.4% || 5.8% || || || || || ||51.8% || 28.6% || 3.4% || 0.1% || ||
| 18
| 88
|-
! 21st
| 44
| 3.5% || 3.8% || 4.2% || || || || || || ||64.0% || 22.8% || 1.6% || 0.1% ||
|- align="center"
|-
| 2003
! 20th
| 44
| 3.0% || 3.3% || 3.6% || || || || || || || ||73.5% || 15.9% || 0.6% || 0.1%
| 41
| 38
|-
! 19th
| 23
| 2.5% || 2.7% ||3.0%|| || || || || || || || ||82.3% ||9.2%||0.1%
| 10
| 93
|-
! 18th
| 43
| 2.0% ||2.2%||2.4%|| || || || || || ||
|- align="center"
|| || ||90.1% ||3.2%
| 2002
| 35
|-
!17th
| 43
| 1.0% || 1.1%||1.2% || || || || || || || || || ||
| 23
||96.6%
| 41
| 6
|}

| 110
{| class="wikitable"
| 32
|+ Draft position odds (2017–2021)
|- align="center"
! Finish in <br> previous season
| 2001
! 1st
| 41
! 2nd
| 45
! 3rd
| 26
! 4th
| 24
! 5th
| 8
! 6th
| 119
! 7th
| 26
! 8th
|- align="center"
! 9th
| 2000
! 10th
| 39
! 11th
| 41
! 12th
| 21
! 13th
| 35
! 14th
| 7
! 15th
| 123
| 27
|-
! 31st
|- align="center"
| 18.5% || 16.5% || 14.4% ||50.6% || || || || || || || || || || ||
| 1999
| 52
|-
!30th
| 40
| 13.5% || 13.0% || 12.3% || 33.3% ||27.9% || || || || || || || || || ||
| 20
| 36
|-
! 29th
| 9
| 11.5% || 11.3% || 11.1% || 13.2% || 37.7% || 15.2% || || || || || || || || ||
| 94
| 21
|-
!28th
|- align="center"
| 9.5% || 9.6% || 9.7% || 2.8% || 26.1% ||34.0% || 8.3% || || || || || || || ||
| 1998
| 50
|-
! 27th
| 44
| 8.5% || 8.7% || 8.9% || || 8.4% || 34.5% ||26.7% || 4.3% || || || || || || ||
| 41
| 27
|-
! 26th
| 7
| 7.5% || 7.8% || 8.0% || || || 16.3% || 38.9% || 19.4% || 2.1% || || || || || ||
| 75
| 14
|-
!25th
|- align="center"
| 6.5% || 6.8% || 7.1% || || || || 26.0% ||39.5% || 13.1% || 1.0% || || || || ||
| 1997
| 52
|-
!24th
| 63
| 6.0% || 6.3% || 6.7% || || || || || 36.8% ||36.0% || 7.8% || 0.4% || || || ||
| 19
| 26
|-
!23rd
| 5.0% || 5.3% || 5.7% || || || || || || 48.8% || 30.7% || 4.3% || 0.1% || || ||
|-
!22nd
| 3.5% || 3.8% || 4.1% || || || || || || || 60.5% ||25.7% || 2.4% || <0.1% || ||
|-
!21st
| 3.0% || 3.3% || 3.6% || || || || || || || || 69.6% ||19.4% || 1.1% || <0.1% ||
|-
! 20th
| 2.5% || 2.7% || 3.0% || || || || || || || || || 78.0% || 13.3% || 0.4% || <0.1%
|-
!19th
| 2.0% || 2.2% || 2.4% || || || || || || || || || ||85.5% || 7.8% || 0.1%
|-
!18th
| 1.5% || 1.7% || 1.8% || || || || || || || || || || ||91.8% || 3.2%
|-
!17th
| 1.0% || 1.1% || 1.2% || || || || || || || || || || || ||96.7%
|}

{| class="wikitable"
|+ Draft position odds (2022–)
! Finish in <br> previous season
! 1st
! 2nd
! 3rd
! 4th
! 5th
! 6th
! 7th
! 8th
! 9th
! 10th
! 11th
! 12th
! 13th
! 14th
! 15th
! 16th
|-
! 32nd
| 25.5% || 18.8% || 55.7% || || || || || || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 31st
| 13.5% || 14.4% || 32.0% || 40.2% || || || || || || || || || || || ||
|-
!30th
| 11.5% || 11.5% || 7.4% || 40.7% || 28.8% || || || || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 29th
| 9.5% || 9.8% || || 15.4% || 44.9% || 20.5% || || || || || || || || || ||
|-
!28th
| 8.5% || 8.8% || || || 24.5% || 44.2% || 13.9% || || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 27th
| 7.5% || 7.9% || || || || 34.1% || 41.4% || 9.1% || || || || || || || ||
|-
! 26th
| 6.5% || 6.9% || || || || || 44.4% ||36.5% || 5.6% || || || || || || ||
|-
!25th
| 6.0% || 6.4% || || || || || || 54.4% ||30.0% || 3.2% || || || || || ||
|-
!24th
| 5.0% || 5.4% || || || || || || || 64.4% || 23.5% || 1.7% || || || || ||
|-
!23rd
| 3.5% || 3.8% || || || || || || || || 73.3% ||18.4% || 0.9% || || || ||
|-
!22nd
| 3.0% || 3.3% || || || || || || || || || 79.9% ||13.4% || 0.5% || || ||
|-
!21st
| || 5.3% || || || || || || || || || || 85.7% || 8.9% || 0.2% || ||
|-
! 20th
| || || 4.3% || || || || || || || || || ||90.7% || 5.1% || <0.1% ||
|-
!19th
| || || || 3.1% || || || || || || || || || ||94.7% || 2.1% || <0.1%
|-
!18th
| || || || || 1.1% || || || || || || || || || || 97.9% || 1.1%
|-
!17th
| || || || || || 1.0% || || || || || || || || || || 98.9%
|}

== Eligible players ==
All players who will be 18 years old on or before September 15 and not older than 20 years old before December 31 of the draft year are eligible for selection for that year's NHL Entry Draft. In addition, non-North American players aged 21 are eligible.<ref>{{cite web|url= https://cdn.nhlpa.com/img/assets/file/NHL_NHLPA_2013_CBA.pdf |title= COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AGREEMENT BETWEEN NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE AND NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE PLAYERS' ASSOCIATION |publisher=[[National Hockey League Players' Association|NHLPA]]|access-date=January 6, 2023}}</ref>

== List of NHL entry drafts ==
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="width:100%"
|-
!width=5%|Draft
!width=17%|Location
!width=16%|City
!width=12%|Date
!width=4%|Rounds
!width=7%|Total drafted
!width=26%|No. 1 pick
|-
| [[1963 NHL amateur draft|1963]]
|rowspan="3"| [[Queen Elizabeth Hotel]]
|rowspan="22"| [[Montreal, Quebec]]
| {{Dts|1963|June|5}}
| 4
| 4
| 63
| 19
|- align="center"
| 1996
| 51
| 54
| 31
| 25
| 6
| 58
| 16
|- align="center"
| 1995
| 54
| 55
| 35
| 5
| 2
| 69
| 14
|- align="center"
| 1994
| 45
| 66
| 28
| 6
| 28
| 80
| 33
|- align="center"
| 1993
| 60
| 44
| 23
| 17
| 33
| 78
| 31
|- align="center"
| 1992
| 57
| 45
| 22
| 9
| 25
| 84
| 22
|- align="center"
| 1991
| 43
| 40
| 25
| 43
| 37
| 55
| 21
| 21
| {{sortname|Garry|Monahan}} ([[Montreal Canadiens]])
|- align="center"
|-
| 1990
| [[1964 NHL amateur draft|1964]]
| 39
| {{Dts|1964|June|11}}
| 33
| 14
| 4
| 38
| 57
| 53
| 16
|- align="center"
| 1989
| 39
| 44
| 16
| 48
| 47
| 38
| 20
|- align="center"
| 1988
| 32
| 30
| 22
| 48
| 56
| 39
| 25
|- align="center"
| 1987
| 32
| 36
| 17
| 40
| 69
| 38
| 20
|- align="center"
| 1986
| 66
| 32
| 22
| 22
| 40
| 28
| 42
|- align="center"
| 1985
| 59
| 47
| 15
| 20
| 48
| 31
| 31
|- align="center"
| 1984
| 55
| 37
| 16
| 22
| 44
| 40
| 36
|- align="center"
| 1983
| 57
| 41
| 24
| 24
| {{sortname|Claude|Gauthier|dab=ice hockey}} ([[Detroit Red Wings]])
| 14
| 35
|-
| [[1965 NHL amateur draft|1965]]
| 34
| {{Dts|1965|April|27}}
| 37
| 3
|- align="center"
| 1982
| 11
| {{sortname|Andre|Veilleux|André Veilleux}} ([[New York Rangers]])
| 60
| 55
|-
| [[1966 NHL amateur draft|1966]]
| 17
| [[Les Cours Mont-Royal|Mount Royal Hotel]]
| 20
| {{Dts|1966|April|25}}
| 47
| 35
| 4
| 24
| {{sortname|Barry|Gibbs}} ([[Boston Bruins]])
|-
| [[1967 NHL amateur draft|1967]]
|rowspan="6"| [[Queen Elizabeth Hotel]]
| {{Dts|1967|July|7}}
| 3
| 18
| 18
| {{sortname|Rick|Pagnutti}} ([[Los Angeles Kings]])
|- align="center"
|-
| 1981
| [[1968 NHL amateur draft|1968]]
| 59
| {{Dts|1968|June|13}}
| 37
| 28
| 3
| 21
| 17
| 32
| 17
|- align="center"
| 1980
| 73
| 41
| 24
| 24
| {{sortname|Michel|Plasse}} (Montreal Canadiens)
| 42
| 7
|-
| [[1969 NHL amateur draft|1969]]
| 13
| {{Dts|1969|June|11}}
| 10
| 10
| 84
|- align="center"
| {{sortname|Rejean|Houle|Réjean Houle}} (Montreal Canadiens)
| 1979
| 48
|-
| [[1970 NHL amateur draft|1970]]
| 37
| {{Dts|1970|June|11}}
| 19
| 13
| 115
| {{sortname|Gilbert|Perreault}} ([[Buffalo Sabres]])
|-
| [[1971 NHL amateur draft|1971]]
| {{Dts|1971|June|10}}
| 15
| 15
| -
| 117
| {{sortname|Guy|Lafleur}} (Montreal Canadiens)
| 6
| 1
|-
| [[1972 NHL amateur draft|1972]]
|- align="center"
| {{Dts|1972|June|8}}
| 1978
| 59
| 11
| 48
| 152
| {{sortname|Billy|Harris|dab=ice hockey, born 1952}} ([[New York Islanders]])
| 22
| 73
|-
| [[1973 NHL amateur draft|1973]]
| -
| Mount Royal Hotel
| 16
| {{Dts|1973|May|15}}
| 16
| 13
|- align="center"
| 1977
| 168
| {{sortname|Denis|Potvin}} (New York Islanders)
| 42
| 44
|-
| [[1974 NHL amateur draft|1974]]
| 40
|rowspan="4"| NHL Montreal Office
| 49
| {{Dts|1974|May|28}}
| -
| 5
| 25
| 5
| 247
| {{sortname|Greg|Joly}} ([[Washington Capitals]])
|- align="center"
|-
| 1976
| [[1975 NHL amateur draft|1975]]
| 47
| {{Dts|1975|June|3}}
| 33
| 18
| 18
| 26
| 217
| {{sortname|Mel|Bridgman}} ([[Philadelphia Flyers]])
| -
| 8
|-
| [[1976 NHL amateur draft|1976]]
| 3
| {{Dts|1976|June|1}}
|- align="center"
| 1975
| 15
| 55
| 135
| {{sortname|Rick|Green|dab=ice hockey}} (Washington Capitals)
| 57
| 28
|-
| [[1977 NHL amateur draft|1977]]
| 59
| {{Dts|1977|June|14}}
| -
| 17
| 185
| {{sortname|Dale|McCourt}} (Detroit Red Wings)
|-
| [[1978 NHL amateur draft|1978]]
| rowspan="2"|Queen Elizabeth Hotel
| {{Dts|1978|June|15}}
| 22
| 234
| {{sortname|Bobby|Smith|dab=ice hockey}} ([[Minnesota North Stars]])
|-
| [[1979 NHL entry draft|1979]]
| {{Dts|1979|August|9}}
| 6
| 6
| 126
| {{sortname|Rob|Ramage}} ([[Colorado Rockies (NHL)|Colorado Rockies]])
|-
| [[1980 NHL entry draft|1980]]
|rowspan="5" |[[Montreal Forum]]
| {{Dts|1980|June|11}}
| 10
| 210
| {{sortname|Doug|Wickenheiser}} (Montreal Canadiens)
|-
| [[1981 NHL entry draft|1981]]
| {{Dts|1981|June|10}}
| 11
| 211
| {{sortname|Dale|Hawerchuk}} ([[Winnipeg Jets (1972–96)|Winnipeg Jets]])
|-
| [[1982 NHL entry draft|1982]]
| {{Dts|1982|June|9}}
| 12
| 12
| 252
|- align="center"
| {{sortname|Gord|Kluzak}} (Boston Bruins)
| 1974
| 69
|-
| [[1983 NHL entry draft|1983]]
| 66
| {{Dts|1983|June|8}}
| 40
| 41
| 12
| -
| 242
| {{sortname|Brian|Lawton}} (Minnesota North Stars)
| 6
| 25
|-
| [[1984 NHL entry draft|1984]]
|- align="center"
| {{Dts|1984|June|9}}
| 1973
| 56
| 12
| 49
| 250
| {{sortname|Mario|Lemieux}} ([[Pittsburgh Penguins]])
| 24
| 25
|-
| [[1985 NHL entry draft|1985]]
| -
| [[Metro Toronto Convention Centre|Toronto Convention Centre]]
| -
| [[Toronto, Ontario]]
| 14
| {{Dts|1985|June|15}}
|- align="center"
| 1972
| 12
| 46
| 252
| {{sortname|Wendel|Clark}} ([[Toronto Maple Leafs]])
| 44
| 30
|-
| [[1986 NHL entry draft|1986]]
| 21
| Montreal Forum
| -
| Montreal, Quebec
| -
| {{Dts|1986|June|21}}
| 12
| 252
| {{sortname|Joe|Murphy|dab=ice hockey}} (Detroit Red Wings)
|-
| [[1987 NHL entry draft|1987]]
| [[Joe Louis Arena]]
| [[Detroit, Michigan]]
| {{Dts|1987|June|13}}
| 12
| 252
| {{sortname|Pierre|Turgeon}} (Buffalo Sabres)
|-
| [[1988 NHL entry draft|1988]]
| Montreal Forum
| Montreal, Quebec
| {{Dts|1988|June|11}}
| 12
| 252
| {{sortname|Mike|Modano}} (Minnesota North Stars)
|-
| [[1989 NHL entry draft|1989]]
| [[Met Center]]
| [[Bloomington, Minnesota]]
| {{Dts|1989|June|17}}
| 12
| 252
| {{sortname|Mats|Sundin}} ([[Quebec Nordiques]])
|-
| [[1990 NHL entry draft|1990]]
| [[BC Place]]
| [[Vancouver, British Columbia]]
| {{Dts|1990|June|16}}
| 12
| 250
| {{sortname|Owen|Nolan}} (Quebec Nordiques)
|-
| [[1991 NHL entry draft|1991]]
| [[Buffalo Memorial Auditorium]]
| [[Buffalo, New York]]
| {{Dts|1991|June|22}}
| 12
| 264
| {{sortname|Eric|Lindros}} (Quebec Nordiques)
|-
| [[1992 NHL entry draft|1992]]
| Montreal Forum
| Montreal, Quebec
| {{Dts|1992|June|20}}
| 11
| 11
| 264
|- align="center"
| {{sortname|Roman|Hamrlik|Roman Hamrlík}} ([[Tampa Bay Lightning]])
| 1971
| 41
|-
| [[1993 NHL entry draft|1993]]
| 28
| [[Colisée de Québec]]
| 13
| [[Quebec City, Quebec]]
| 22
| June 26–27, 1993
| -
| -
| 13
|- align="center"
| 1970
| 51
| 22
| 13
| 16
| -
| -
| 13
|- align="center"
| 1969
| 36
| 20
| 11
| 11
| 7
| 286
| {{sortname|Alexandre|Daigle}} ([[Ottawa Senators]])
| -
| 1
|-
| [[1994 NHL entry draft|1994]]
| [[Hartford Civic Center]]
| [[Hartford, Connecticut]]
| {{Dts|1994|June|28}}
| 11
| 286
| {{sortname|Ed|Jovanovski}} ([[Florida Panthers]])
|-
| [[1995 NHL entry draft|1995]]
| [[Edmonton Coliseum]]
| [[Edmonton]], [[Alberta]]
| {{Dts|1995|July|8}}
| 9
| 9
| 234
|- align="center"
| {{sortname|Bryan|Berard}} (Ottawa Senators)
| Total
|-
| 1893
| [[1996 NHL entry draft|1996]]
| 1641
| [[Kiel Center]]
| 925
| [[St. Louis, Missouri]]
| 1077
| {{Dts|1996|June|22}}
| 718
| 1766
| 9
| 888
| 241
| {{sortname|Chris|Phillips}} (Ottawa Senators)
|- bgcolor="#e0e0e0" align="center"
|-
| colspan="7" align="right" | Total Players Drafted (1969–2007):
| [[1997 NHL entry draft|1997]]
| 8,908
| [[Civic Arena (Pittsburgh)|Civic Arena]]
| [[Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania]]
| {{Dts|1997|June|21}}
| 9
| 246
| {{sortname|Joe|Thornton}} (Boston Bruins)
|-
| [[1998 NHL entry draft|1998]]
| [[Marine Midland Arena]]
| Buffalo, New York
| {{Dts|1998|June|27}}
| 9
| 258
| {{sortname|Vincent|Lecavalier}} (Tampa Bay Lightning)
|-
| [[1999 NHL entry draft|1999]]
| [[FleetCenter (Boston)|FleetCenter]]
| [[Boston, Massachusetts]]
| {{Dts|1999|June|26}}
| 9
| 272
| {{sortname|Patrik|Stefan|Patrik Štefan}} ([[Atlanta Thrashers]])
|-
| [[2000 NHL entry draft|2000]]
| [[Canadian Airlines Saddledome]]
| [[Calgary, Alberta]]
| June 24–25, 2000
| 9
| 293
| {{sortname|Rick|DiPietro}} (New York Islanders)
|-
| [[2001 NHL entry draft|2001]]
| [[National Car Rental Center]]
| [[Sunrise, Florida]]
| June 23–24, 2001
| 9
| 289
| {{sortname|Ilya|Kovalchuk}} (Atlanta Thrashers)
|-
| [[2002 NHL entry draft|2002]]
| [[Air Canada Centre]]
| Toronto, Ontario
| June 22–23, 2002
| 9
| 290
| {{sortname|Rick|Nash}} ([[Columbus Blue Jackets]])
|-
| [[2003 NHL entry draft|2003]]
| [[Gaylord Entertainment Center]]
| [[Nashville, Tennessee]]
| June 21–22, 2003
| 9
| 292
| {{sortname|Marc-Andre|Fleury|Marc-André Fleury}} (Pittsburgh Penguins)
|-
| [[2004 NHL entry draft|2004]]
| [[RBC Center]]
| [[Raleigh, North Carolina]]
| June 26–27, 2004
| 9
| 291
| {{sortname|Alexander|Ovechkin}} (Washington Capitals)
|-
| [[2005 NHL entry draft|2005]]
| [[Westin Hotels|Westin Hotel Ottawa]]<sup>1</sup>
| [[Ottawa, Ontario]]
| {{Dts|2005|July|30}}
| 7
| 230
| {{sortname|Sidney|Crosby}} (Pittsburgh Penguins)
|-
| [[2006 NHL entry draft|2006]]
| [[General Motors Place]]
| Vancouver, British Columbia
| {{Dts|2006|June|24}}
| 7
| 213
| {{sortname|Erik|Johnson}} ([[St. Louis Blues]])
|-
| [[2007 NHL entry draft|2007]]
| [[Nationwide Arena]]
| [[Columbus, Ohio]]
| June 22–23, 2007
| 7
| 211
| {{sortname|Patrick|Kane}} ([[Chicago Blackhawks]])
|-
| [[2008 NHL entry draft|2008]]
| [[Scotiabank Place]]
| Ottawa, Ontario
| June 20–21, 2008
| 7
| 211
| {{sortname|Steven|Stamkos}} (Tampa Bay Lightning)
|-
| [[2009 NHL entry draft|2009]]
| [[Bell Centre]]
| Montreal, Quebec
| June 26–27, 2009
| 7
| 211
| {{sortname|John|Tavares}} (New York Islanders)
|-
| [[2010 NHL entry draft|2010]]
| [[Staples Center]]
| [[Los Angeles, California]]
| June 25–26, 2010
| 7
| 210
| {{sortname|Taylor|Hall}} ([[Edmonton Oilers]])
|-
| [[2011 NHL entry draft|2011]]
| [[Xcel Energy Center]]
| [[St. Paul, Minnesota]]
| June 24–25, 2011
| 7
| 211
| {{sortname|Ryan|Nugent-Hopkins}} (Edmonton Oilers)
|-
| [[2012 NHL entry draft|2012]]
| [[Consol Energy Center]]
| Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
| June 22–23, 2012
| 7
| 211
|{{sortname|Nail|Yakupov}} (Edmonton Oilers)
|-
| [[2013 NHL entry draft|2013]]
| [[Prudential Center]]
| [[Newark, New Jersey]]
| {{Dts|2013|June|30}}
| 7
| 211
| [[Nathan MacKinnon]] ([[Colorado Avalanche]])
|-
| [[2014 NHL entry draft|2014]]
| [[Wells Fargo Center (Philadelphia)|Wells Fargo Center]]
| [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania]]
| June 27–28, 2014
| 7
| 210
| [[Aaron Ekblad]] (Florida Panthers)
|-
| [[2015 NHL entry draft|2015]]
| [[BB&T Center (Sunrise, Florida)|BB&T Center]]
| Sunrise, Florida
| June 26–27, 2015
| 7
| 211
| [[Connor McDavid]] (Edmonton Oilers)
|-
| [[2016 NHL entry draft|2016]]
| [[First Niagara Center]]
| Buffalo, New York
| June 24–25, 2016
| 7
| 211
| [[Auston Matthews]] ([[Toronto Maple Leafs]])
|-
| [[2017 NHL entry draft|2017]]
| [[United Center]]
| [[Chicago, Illinois]]
| June 23–24, 2017
| 7
| 217
| [[Nico Hischier]] ([[New Jersey Devils]])
|-
| [[2018 NHL entry draft|2018]]
| [[American Airlines Center]]
| [[Dallas, Texas]]
| June 22–23, 2018
| 7
| 217
| [[Rasmus Dahlin]] (Buffalo Sabres)
|-
| [[2019 NHL entry draft|2019]]
| [[Rogers Arena]]
| Vancouver, British Columbia
| June 21–22, 2019
| 7
| 217
| [[Jack Hughes]] (New Jersey Devils)
|-
| [[2020 NHL entry draft|2020]]
| rowspan=2| NHL Network studios<sup>2</sup>
| rowspan=2| [[Secaucus, New Jersey]]
| October 6–7, 2020
| 7
| 216<sup>3</sup>
| [[Alexis Lafrenière|Alexis Lafreniere]] (New York Rangers)
|-
| [[2021 NHL entry draft|2021]]
| July 23–24, 2021
| 7
| 223<sup>3</sup>
| [[Owen Power]] (Buffalo Sabres)
|-
| [[2022 NHL entry draft|2022]]
| Bell Centre
| Montreal, Quebec
| July 7–8, 2022
| 7
| 225
| [[Juraj Slafkovský|Juraj Slafkovsky]] (Montreal Canadiens)
|-
| [[2023 NHL entry draft|2023]]
| [[Bridgestone Arena]]
| Nashville, Tennessee
| June 28–29, 2023
| 7
| 224
| [[Connor Bedard]] (Chicago Blackhawks)
|-
|[[2024 NHL entry draft|2024]]
|[[Sphere (venue)|Sphere]]
|[[Paradise, Nevada]]
|June 28–29, 2024
| 7
| 225
| [[Macklin Celebrini]] (San Jose Sharks)
|}
|}


;Notes
==Player numbers by team==
# Originally scheduled to be hosted at [[Corel Centre]]; venue location changed due to scheduling conflict related to the league's [[NHL Collective Bargaining Agreement|CBA]] negotiations that ended the 2004–05 lockout.
{{Unreferencedsection|date=January 2008}}
# Originally scheduled to be hosted at the Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec, from June 26–27 before the season was suspended after March 11, 2020, due to the [[COVID-19 pandemic]]; draft was held via conference call as a result. The 2021 draft was also held via conference call due to the pandemic.
This is a ranking of the minor teams who have provided the most players to the NHL as of the 2007 NHL Entry Draft.
# The [[Arizona Coyotes]] forfeited their 2020 second-round pick as the result of a penalty due to violations of the NHL Combine Testing Policy during the [[2019–20 NHL season]]. They also forfeited their [[2021 NHL entry draft|2021]] first-round pick.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nhl.com/news/nhl-announces-sanctions-to-coyotes-for-violating-combine-testing-policy/c-318762274|title=NHL announces sanctions to Coyotes for violating combine testing policy|date=August 26, 2020|access-date=October 1, 2020}}</ref>


==Broadcasting==
Rank - Team, League - Players
#[[Peterborough Petes]], [[Ontario Hockey League|OHL]] - 162
#[[Oshawa Generals]], OHL - 146
#[[Kitchener Rangers]], OHL - 140
#[[London Knights]], OHL - 140
#[[Ottawa 67's]], OHL - 132
#[[Saskatoon Blades]], WHL - 108
#[[Regina Pats]], [[Western Hockey League|WHL]] - 107
#[[Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds]], OHL - 107
#[[Sudbury Wolves]], OHL - 107
#[[Kamloops Blazers]], WHL - 105
#[[Portland Winter Hawks]], WHL - 105
#[[Medicine Hat Tigers]], WHL - 101
#[[Brandon Wheat Kings]], WHL - 97
#[[Toronto Marlboros]], OHL - 97 (defunct)
#[[Kingston Frontenacs]], OHL - 94
#[[Seattle Thunderbirds]], WHL - 91
#[[Lethbridge Hurricanes]], WHL - 87
#[[Prince Albert Raiders]], WHL - 80
#[[Windsor Spitfires]], OHL - 76
#[[Shawinigan Cataractes]], [[QMJHL]] - 74
#[[Gatineau Olympiques|Hull/Gatineau Olympiques]], QMJHL - 72
#[[Niagara Falls Thunder]], OHL - 72 (defunct)
#[[Victoria Cougars (WHL)|Victoria Cougars]], WHL - 70 (defunct)
#[[Minnesota Golden Gophers men's ice hockey|Minnesota]], [[National Collegiate Athletic Association|NCAA]]'s [[Western Collegiate Hockey Association|WCHA]] - 68
#[[Guelph Storm]], OHL - 67
#[[Michigan Wolverines#Ice hockey|Michigan]], NCAA's [[Central Collegiate Hockey Association|CCHA]] - 66
#[[Calgary Wranglers]], WHL - 66 (defunct)
#[[Sherbrooke Castors]], QMJHL - 63 (defunct)
#[[Hamilton Steelhawks]], OHL - 62 (defunct)
#[[New Westminster Bruins]], WHL - 62 (defunct)
#[[HC CSKA Moscow|CSKA Moscow]], [[Russian Super League|Russia]] - 60
#[[Spokane Chiefs]], WHL - 60
#[[Belleville Bulls]], OHL - 59
#[[Moose Jaw Warriors]], WHL - 58
#[[Swift Current Broncos]], WHL - 58
#[[North Bay Centennials]], OHL - 56 (defunct)
#[[Plymouth Whalers]], OHL - 54
#[[Laval Titan]], QMJHL - 54 (defunct)
#[[Drummondville Voltigeurs]], QMJHL - 53
#[[Hamilton Fincups]], [[Ontario Hockey League|OHA]] - 52 (defunct)
#[[Chicoutimi Saguenéens]], QMJHL - 51
#[[Tri-City Americans]], WHL - 51
#[[Boston University men's ice hockey|Boston University]], NCAA's [[Hockey East]] - 50
#[[Quebec Remparts]], QMJHL - 49
#[[Michigan State Spartans men's ice hockey|Michigan State]], NCAA's CCHA - 47
#[[Trois-Rivières Draveurs]], QMJHL - 47 (defunct)
#[[HC Dynamo Moscow|Dynamo Moscow]], [[Russian Super League|Russia]] - 46
#[[Michigan Technological University#Men's_ice_hockey|Michigan Tech]], NCAA's WCHA - 46
#[[Cornwall Royals]], QMJHL - 45 (defunct)
#[[Denver Pioneers men's ice hockey|Denver]], NCAA's WCHA - 43
#[[Yale University#Sports|Yale]], NCAA's [[ECAC Hockey|ECAC]] - 43
#[[Wisconsin Badgers#Ice Hockey|Wisconsin]], NCAA's WCHA - 41
#[[Red Deer Rebels]], WHL - 40
#[[Frölunda HC|Frölunda Indians]], [[Elitserien|Sweden]] - 39
#[[North Dakota Fighting Sioux hockey|North Dakota]], NCAA's WCHA - 39
#[[Flin Flon Bombers]], [[Western Hockey League|WCHL]] - 39 (defunct)
#[[Edmonton Oil Kings (WCHL)|Edmonton Oil Kings]], WCHL - 38 (defunct)
#[[Djurgårdens IF Hockey|Djurgårdens IF]], [[Elitserien|Sweden]] - 37
#[[Cornwall Royals]], OHL - 37 (defunct)
#[[Boston College Eagles#Men's hockey|Boston College]], NCAA's Hockey East - 36
#[[HIFK (ice hockey)|HIFK Helsinki]], [[SM-liiga|Finland]] - 35
#[[MODO Hockey|MODO Hockey Örnsköldsvik]], [[Elitserien|Sweden]] - 35
#[[Cornell Big Red|Cornell]], NCAA's [[ECAC Hockey|ECAC]] - 34
#[[Harvard University#Sports and athletic facilities|Harvard]], NCAA's ECAC - 34
#[[Jokerit| Jokerit Helsinki]], [[SM-liiga|Finland]] - 34
#[[Providence College#Athletics|Providence]], NCAA's Hockey East - 34
#[[TPS (ice hockey)|TPS Turku]], [[SM-liiga|Finland]] - 34
#[[Winnipeg Warriors]], WHL - 34 (defunct)
#[[Colorado College#Athletics|Colorado College]], NCAA's WCHA - 33
#[[HC Litvínov|HC Chemopetrol Litvínov]], [[Czech Extraliga|Czech Republic]] - 33
#[[Clarkson University#Athletics|Clarkson]], NCAA's ECAC - 32
#[[Färjestads BK|Färjestads BK Karlstad]], [[Elitserien|Sweden]] - 32
#[[Notre Dame Fighting Irish men's ice hockey|Notre Dame]], NCAA's CCHA - 32
#[[Montreal Junior Canadiens]], QMJHL - 32 (defunct)
#[[Ilves|Ilves Tampere]], [[SM-liiga|Finland]] - 31
#[[Krylja Sovetov|Krylya Sovetov Moskva]], [[Vysshaya Liga (ice hockey)|Russia]] - 31
#[[New Hampshire Wildcats|New Hampshire]], NCAA's Hockey East - 31
#[[Victoriaville Tigres]], QMJHL - 31
#[[Granby Prédateurs]], QMJHL - 30 (defunct)


[[SportsChannel America]] began covering the NHL Draft in the United States with the [[1989 NHL Entry Draft]] being the first NHL draft ever televised.
Note: Totals for [[Canadian Hockey League]] teams include all teams from that city, regardless of franchise moves except for Toronto, Quebec City, Montreal, Calgary and Vancouver.

Currently the rights to the draft are held by [[ESPN]], [[Sportsnet]], [[TVA Sports]] and the [[NHL Network (American TV channel)|NHL Network]] which only broadcasts the second to last round of the draft.

Formerly the rights to the drafts were held by [[NBC Sports]] and were aired on [[NBCSN]] (formerly known as Versus from 2006 to 2011).

== See also ==
* [[KHL Junior Draft]]
* [[List of first overall NHL draft picks]]
* [[List of undrafted NHL players with 100 games played]]
* [[Taro Tsujimoto]]

== References ==

;General
* {{cite web|url=http://www.nhl.com/ice/page.htm?id=31886|title=NHL Draft – Historical Top Draft Picks|publisher=[[National Hockey League]]|access-date=July 1, 2009}}
* {{cite web|url=http://www.nhl.com/ice/page.htm?id=31885|title=NHL Draft Historic Locations|publisher=[[National Hockey League]]|access-date=July 1, 2009}}
* {{cite web|url=http://www.nhl.com/futures/drafthistory.html|title=NHL Draft History|publisher=[[National Hockey League]]|access-date=July 2, 2009|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20010128131400/http://nhl.com/futures/drafthistory.html|archive-date=January 28, 2001}}

;Specific
{{reflist}}

== External links ==
* {{Commons category-inline|NHL Entry Draft}}


==See also==
*[[List of NHL first overall draft choices]]
*[[List of NHL players]]
*[[List of undrafted NHL players]]
{{NHL}}
{{NHL}}
{{NHL topics}}
{{NHL topics}}
{{NHL Drafts}}


[[Category:National Hockey League Entry Draft|*]]
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[[Category:NHL entry draft| ]]

[[Category:Recurring sporting events established in 1963]]
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[[Category:Annual sporting events in Canada]]
[[fi:NHL:n varaustilaisuus]]
[[Category:Annual sporting events in the United States]]
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[[ja:NHLドラフト]]
[[ru:Драфт НХЛ]]
[[sv:NHL Entry Draft]]

Latest revision as of 19:15, 13 November 2024

The stage at the 2008 NHL entry draft in Ottawa, Ontario

The NHL entry draft (French: Repêchage d'entrée dans la LNH) is an annual meeting in which every franchise of the National Hockey League (NHL) systematically select the rights to available ice hockey players who meet draft eligibility requirements (North American players 18–20 years old and European/international players 18–21 years old; all others enter the league as unrestricted free agents). The NHL entry draft is held once every year, generally within two to three months after the conclusion of the previous regular season. During the draft, teams take turns selecting amateur players from junior or collegiate leagues and professional players from European leagues.

The first draft was held in 1963, and has been held every year since. The NHL entry draft was known as the NHL amateur draft until 1979. The entry draft has only been a public event since 1980, and a televised event since 1984.[1]

Up to 1994, the order was solely determined by the standings at the end of the regular season. In 1995, the NHL draft lottery was introduced where only teams who had missed the playoffs could participate. The lottery winner moved up the draft order a maximum of four places, meaning only the five worst teams, based on regular season points in a given season, could pick first in the draft, and no team in the non-playoff group could move down more than one place. The chances of winning the lottery were weighted towards the teams at the bottom of the regular season standings. From 2013 to 2015, there was no limit of moving up in the draft order, so the lottery winner would automatically receive the first overall pick, and any teams above it in the draft order would still move down one spot. From 2015 to 2020, there were three lottery winners that received the top three picks, and any teams above it in the draft order would move down no more than three spots. In 2021, the lottery system was changed to include two lottery winners, and they received the top two overall picks, and any teams above it in the draft order would move down no more than two spots.

Beginning in 2022, the two lottery winners are limited to move up no more than ten places in the draft order, meaning that only the bottom eleven teams based on regular season points, could win first pick in the draft. If a team outside the bottom eleven teams wins the first draft lottery they move up ten spots (e.g. fourteenth team wins the lottery and moves up to fourth overall) and lowest finishing team from the previous season is then awarded the first overall selection.

History

[edit]

The first NHL entry draft (at that time known as the "NHL amateur draft") was held on June 5, 1963, at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel in Montreal, Quebec.[1] In 1967, NHL president Clarence Campbell and Canadian Amateur Hockey Association (CAHA) president Fred Page announced a new tentative five-year agreement on August 19, 1966, with several proposed changes to the existing system, effective July 1, 1967. The direct sponsorship of junior teams by the NHL was to be phased out in the upcoming year, and no new sponsored players could be registered or be required to sign a contract restricting movement between teams.[2] The agreement eliminated the A, B and C forms, which had angered the parents of amateur players and were the source of legal action threats when the professional team refused to release a player.[3] Junior-aged players became eligible for the draft once they graduate from junior hockey, or to be signed as a free agent in the year the player reaches his 20th birthday. The NHL agreed to pay development fees to the CAHA for the drafted players. The new agreement came at a time that also leveled the playing field for new NHL clubs in the 1967 NHL expansion.[2]

The NHL briefly changed the drafting age from 20 years old to 18-year-olds in 1974, to compete with the new WHA which was allowing teams to sign underage junior players. The 20-year old rule returned for the 1975 draft.

In 1979, the rules were changed allowing players who had previously played professionally to be drafted. This rule change was made to facilitate the absorption of players from the defunct World Hockey Association. Consequently, the name of the draft was changed from "NHL amateur draft" to "NHL entry draft". The draft age was also dropped to include 19-year old "underage" players. In 1980, the age was dropped further to 18, so that any player who is between the ages of 18 and 20 is eligible to be drafted. In addition, any non-North American player over the age of 20 can be selected. From 1987 through 1991, 18 and 19-year-old players could only be drafted in the first three rounds unless they met another criterion of experience which required them to have played in major junior, U.S. college and high school, or European hockey.[1][4]

In 1980, the entry draft became a public event, and was held at the Montreal Forum. Prior to that year the entry draft was conducted in Montreal hotels or league offices and was closed to the general public.[1] The first draft outside of Montreal was held at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre in Toronto, Ontario, in 1985.[5] Live television coverage of the draft began in 1984 when the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation covered the event in both English and French for Canadian audiences. The 1987 entry draft, held at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit, Michigan, was the first NHL draft to be held in the United States. SportsChannel America began covering the event in the United States in 1989.[1]

Prior to the development of the draft, NHL teams sponsored junior teams, and signed prospects in their teens to the junior teams. Players were signed to one of three forms: the "A" form, which committed a player to a tryout; a "B" form, which gave the team an option to sign a player in return for a bonus; and the "C" form, which committed a player's professional rights. The "C" form could only be signed by the player at age eighteen or by the player's parents, often in exchange for some signing bonus.[6] The first drafts (up until the 1968 amateur draft) were held to assign players who had not signed with an NHL organization before the sponsorship of junior teams was discontinued after 1968.

In October 2023, owners approved a proposal to switch the NHL Draft to a "decentralized" model in line with that of the NBA and NFL drafts, in which only prospects and team representatives will be present in-person at the Draft venue, and business would be conducted remotely from the teams' front offices. These changes are scheduled to take effect in 2025.[7][8]

Selection order and draft lottery

[edit]

The selection order in the NHL entry draft is determined by a combination of lottery, regular season standing, and playoff results. While teams are permitted to trade draft picks both during the draft and prior to it (sometimes several years prior), in all cases, the selection order of the draft picks is based on the original holder of the pick, not a team which may have acquired the pick via a trade or other means.[9][10] The order of picks discussed in this section always references the original team.

The basic order of the NHL entry draft is determined based on the standings of the teams in the previous season. As with the other major sports leagues, the basic draft order is intended to favour the teams with the weakest performance who presumably need the most improvement in their roster to compete with the other teams. Subject to the results of the NHL draft lottery (discussed below), the teams pick in the same order each round, with each team getting one pick per round. The basic order of the picks is determined as follows:[11]

  1. The teams that did not qualify for the playoffs the previous season (picks 1–16)
  2. The teams that made the playoffs in the previous season but did not win either their division in the regular season or play in the Conference Finals (picks 17–24 up to 28)
  3. The teams that won their divisions in the previous season but did not play in the Conference Finals (potentially picks 25–28)
  4. The teams that lose in Conference Finals (picks 29 and 30)
  5. The team that was the runner-up in the Stanley Cup Finals (pick 31)
  6. The team that won the Stanley Cup in the previous season (pick 32)

The number of teams in the second and third group depends on whether the Conference finalists also won their division. The teams in each group (other than the Stanley Cup winner and runner up) are ordered within that group based on their point totals in the preceding regular season (with the lowest point total picking first). Tie-breakers are governed by the same rules used to determine ties in the regular season standings. The order of picks 1–16 may change during the first round of the draft based on the results of the NHL draft lottery. In the subsequent rounds, the basic order based on point totals is used.[10]

When teams lose their rights to a first-round draft choice, because that player was not signed to a contract and consequently re-entered the entry draft or became an unrestricted free agent, they are awarded a compensatory draft pick. This selection will be the same numerical choice as the first round draft pick who was not signed, but in the second round. For example, if a team cannot sign the seventh overall first round draft choice, it will receive the seventh pick in the second round of the next draft as compensation.[12]

Draft lottery

[edit]

At the conclusion of the regular season, the 16 teams that did not qualify for the playoffs are entered in a weighted lottery to determine the initial draft picks in the first round. The teams are seeded in the basic draft order based on their regular season point totals. The odds of winning the lottery are weighted on a descending scale that gives the greatest chance of winning to the team with the lowest point total (18.5%), and the worst chance to the team with the highest point total (1.0%).

The prize for winning the draft lottery is to be upgraded to the highest eligible pick in the first round of the draft, with each team that preceded the winner in the basic draft order bumped one pick lower. For example, if the team with the 5th worst point total wins the lottery, it would pick first, and the teams with the worst through 4th-worst records would pick second through fifth. The remaining teams would be unaffected. The teams would return to the basic order for the second and all subsequent rounds.[13][14]

From its inception through 2015, there was one winner of the lottery; from 1995 to 2012, the team that won the draft lottery moved up no more than four positions in the draft order.[15] If the winner of the lottery was among the five worst teams in a given season, that team won the first pick in the draft. Otherwise, the team will move up no more than four spots, and that team will not receive the first pick in the draft; from 2013 to 2015 the lottery winner received the first pick overall regardless of regular season point totals amongst the non-playoff teams. Beginning with the 2016 draft and lasting until the 2020 draft, the first three selections were determined by the lottery. Any team that did not make the playoffs had a weighted chance to be selected in the first, second, or third slot. Beginning in 2021, only two draws will be held for the first two selections. Starting with the 2022 lottery; the teams winning one of the two lotteries will only be allowed to move up a maximum of ten spots in the draft order, and teams will only be allowed to advance in the draft order because of winning a lottery twice in five years. The two-in-five-years rule only applies to teams jumping up in the draft order. This means the team with the worst record can win any lottery selection an unlimited number of times while the second-worst can do the same for the second overall pick only.[16][17][18] The remaining teams maintains their order of selection based on the points accrued the previous season. As the lottery determines the top two slots, no team can drop more than two places from the position established based on previous season point totals.[19][20]

The NHL draft lottery takes place just before or during the Stanley Cup playoffs and is hosted at the NHL Network's studios in Secaucus, New Jersey, from 2020 onwards. The draft lottery previously took place at Sportsnet's studios in Toronto from 2015 to 2019, and at TSN's studios in Toronto from 2006 to 2014.

The odds for the first overall pick are determined as follows:

Draft position odds (2000–12)
Finish in
previous season
1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th 13th 14th
30th 48.2% 51.2%
29th 18.8% 42.0% 39.2%
28th 14.2% 56.1% 29.7%
27th 10.7% 66.7% 22.6%
26th 8.1% 74.7% 17.2%
25th 6.2% 72.7% 19.6%
24th 4.7% 81.1% 14.2%
23rd 3.6% 87.2% 9.2%
22nd 2.7% 91.6% 5.7%
21st 2.1% 94.8% 3.1%
20th 1.5% 80.6% 16.6%
19th 1.1% 88.0% 9.3%
18th 0.8% 90.1% 9.9%
17th 0.5% 99.5%
Draft position odds (2013–14)
Finish in
previous season
1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th 13th 14th
30th 25.0% 75.0%
29th 18.8% 25.0% 56.2%
28th 14.2% 43.8% 42.0%
27th 10.7% 58.0% 31.3%
26th 8.1% 68.7% 23.2%
25th 6.2% 76.8% 17.0%
24th 4.7% 83.0% 12.3%
23rd 3.6% 87.7% 8.7%
22nd 2.7% 91.3% 6.0%
21st 2.1% 94.0% 3.9%
20th 1.5% 80.4% 18.1%
19th 1.1% 86.0% 12.9%
18th 0.8% 94.7% 3.2%
17th 0.5% 99.5%
Draft position odds (2015)
Finish in
previous season
1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th 13th 14th
30th 20.0% 80.0%
29th 13.5% 20.0% 66.5%
28th 11.5% 33.5% 55.0%
27th 9.5% 45.0% 45.5%
26th 8.5% 9.1% 35.5%
25th 7.5% 63.0% 29.5%
24th 6.5% 70.5% 23.0%
23rd 6.0% 77.0% 17.0%
22nd 5.0% 83.0% 12.0%
21st 3.5% 88.0% 8.5%
20th 3.0% 91.5% 5.5%
19th 2.5% 94.5% 3.0%
18th 2.0% 97.0% 1.0%
17th 1.0% 99.0%
Draft position odds (2016–2017)
Finish in
previous season
1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th 13th 14th
30th 20.0% 17.5% 15.0% 47.5%
29th 13.5% 13.1% 12.5% 35.2% 25.8%
28th 11.5% 11.4% 11.3% 14.2% 37.8% 13.8%
27th 9.5% 9.7% 9.8% 3.15% 27.3% 33.2% 7.4%
26th 8.5% 8.8% 9.0% 9.1% 35.5% 25.5% 3.7%
25th 7.5% 7.8% 8.1% 17.5% 39.3% 17.9% 1.7%
24th 6.5% 6.9% 7.2% 27.9% 39.1% 11.7% 0.7%
23rd 6.0% 6.4% 6.8% 39.2% 34.8% 6.6% 0.3%
22nd 5.0% 5.4% 5.8% 51.8% 28.6% 3.4% 0.1%
21st 3.5% 3.8% 4.2% 64.0% 22.8% 1.6% 0.1%
20th 3.0% 3.3% 3.6% 73.5% 15.9% 0.6% 0.1%
19th 2.5% 2.7% 3.0% 82.3% 9.2% 0.1%
18th 2.0% 2.2% 2.4% 90.1% 3.2%
17th 1.0% 1.1% 1.2% 96.6%
Draft position odds (2017–2021)
Finish in
previous season
1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th 13th 14th 15th
31st 18.5% 16.5% 14.4% 50.6%
30th 13.5% 13.0% 12.3% 33.3% 27.9%
29th 11.5% 11.3% 11.1% 13.2% 37.7% 15.2%
28th 9.5% 9.6% 9.7% 2.8% 26.1% 34.0% 8.3%
27th 8.5% 8.7% 8.9% 8.4% 34.5% 26.7% 4.3%
26th 7.5% 7.8% 8.0% 16.3% 38.9% 19.4% 2.1%
25th 6.5% 6.8% 7.1% 26.0% 39.5% 13.1% 1.0%
24th 6.0% 6.3% 6.7% 36.8% 36.0% 7.8% 0.4%
23rd 5.0% 5.3% 5.7% 48.8% 30.7% 4.3% 0.1%
22nd 3.5% 3.8% 4.1% 60.5% 25.7% 2.4% <0.1%
21st 3.0% 3.3% 3.6% 69.6% 19.4% 1.1% <0.1%
20th 2.5% 2.7% 3.0% 78.0% 13.3% 0.4% <0.1%
19th 2.0% 2.2% 2.4% 85.5% 7.8% 0.1%
18th 1.5% 1.7% 1.8% 91.8% 3.2%
17th 1.0% 1.1% 1.2% 96.7%
Draft position odds (2022–)
Finish in
previous season
1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th 13th 14th 15th 16th
32nd 25.5% 18.8% 55.7%
31st 13.5% 14.4% 32.0% 40.2%
30th 11.5% 11.5% 7.4% 40.7% 28.8%
29th 9.5% 9.8% 15.4% 44.9% 20.5%
28th 8.5% 8.8% 24.5% 44.2% 13.9%
27th 7.5% 7.9% 34.1% 41.4% 9.1%
26th 6.5% 6.9% 44.4% 36.5% 5.6%
25th 6.0% 6.4% 54.4% 30.0% 3.2%
24th 5.0% 5.4% 64.4% 23.5% 1.7%
23rd 3.5% 3.8% 73.3% 18.4% 0.9%
22nd 3.0% 3.3% 79.9% 13.4% 0.5%
21st 5.3% 85.7% 8.9% 0.2%
20th 4.3% 90.7% 5.1% <0.1%
19th 3.1% 94.7% 2.1% <0.1%
18th 1.1% 97.9% 1.1%
17th 1.0% 98.9%

Eligible players

[edit]

All players who will be 18 years old on or before September 15 and not older than 20 years old before December 31 of the draft year are eligible for selection for that year's NHL Entry Draft. In addition, non-North American players aged 21 are eligible.[21]

List of NHL entry drafts

[edit]
Draft Location City Date Rounds Total drafted No. 1 pick
1963 Queen Elizabeth Hotel Montreal, Quebec June 5, 1963 4 21 Garry Monahan (Montreal Canadiens)
1964 June 11, 1964 4 24 Claude Gauthier (Detroit Red Wings)
1965 April 27, 1965 3 11 Andre Veilleux (New York Rangers)
1966 Mount Royal Hotel April 25, 1966 4 24 Barry Gibbs (Boston Bruins)
1967 Queen Elizabeth Hotel July 7, 1967 3 18 Rick Pagnutti (Los Angeles Kings)
1968 June 13, 1968 3 24 Michel Plasse (Montreal Canadiens)
1969 June 11, 1969 10 84 Rejean Houle (Montreal Canadiens)
1970 June 11, 1970 13 115 Gilbert Perreault (Buffalo Sabres)
1971 June 10, 1971 15 117 Guy Lafleur (Montreal Canadiens)
1972 June 8, 1972 11 152 Billy Harris (New York Islanders)
1973 Mount Royal Hotel May 15, 1973 13 168 Denis Potvin (New York Islanders)
1974 NHL Montreal Office May 28, 1974 25 247 Greg Joly (Washington Capitals)
1975 June 3, 1975 18 217 Mel Bridgman (Philadelphia Flyers)
1976 June 1, 1976 15 135 Rick Green (Washington Capitals)
1977 June 14, 1977 17 185 Dale McCourt (Detroit Red Wings)
1978 Queen Elizabeth Hotel June 15, 1978 22 234 Bobby Smith (Minnesota North Stars)
1979 August 9, 1979 6 126 Rob Ramage (Colorado Rockies)
1980 Montreal Forum June 11, 1980 10 210 Doug Wickenheiser (Montreal Canadiens)
1981 June 10, 1981 11 211 Dale Hawerchuk (Winnipeg Jets)
1982 June 9, 1982 12 252 Gord Kluzak (Boston Bruins)
1983 June 8, 1983 12 242 Brian Lawton (Minnesota North Stars)
1984 June 9, 1984 12 250 Mario Lemieux (Pittsburgh Penguins)
1985 Toronto Convention Centre Toronto, Ontario June 15, 1985 12 252 Wendel Clark (Toronto Maple Leafs)
1986 Montreal Forum Montreal, Quebec June 21, 1986 12 252 Joe Murphy (Detroit Red Wings)
1987 Joe Louis Arena Detroit, Michigan June 13, 1987 12 252 Pierre Turgeon (Buffalo Sabres)
1988 Montreal Forum Montreal, Quebec June 11, 1988 12 252 Mike Modano (Minnesota North Stars)
1989 Met Center Bloomington, Minnesota June 17, 1989 12 252 Mats Sundin (Quebec Nordiques)
1990 BC Place Vancouver, British Columbia June 16, 1990 12 250 Owen Nolan (Quebec Nordiques)
1991 Buffalo Memorial Auditorium Buffalo, New York June 22, 1991 12 264 Eric Lindros (Quebec Nordiques)
1992 Montreal Forum Montreal, Quebec June 20, 1992 11 264 Roman Hamrlik (Tampa Bay Lightning)
1993 Colisée de Québec Quebec City, Quebec June 26–27, 1993 11 286 Alexandre Daigle (Ottawa Senators)
1994 Hartford Civic Center Hartford, Connecticut June 28, 1994 11 286 Ed Jovanovski (Florida Panthers)
1995 Edmonton Coliseum Edmonton, Alberta July 8, 1995 9 234 Bryan Berard (Ottawa Senators)
1996 Kiel Center St. Louis, Missouri June 22, 1996 9 241 Chris Phillips (Ottawa Senators)
1997 Civic Arena Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania June 21, 1997 9 246 Joe Thornton (Boston Bruins)
1998 Marine Midland Arena Buffalo, New York June 27, 1998 9 258 Vincent Lecavalier (Tampa Bay Lightning)
1999 FleetCenter Boston, Massachusetts June 26, 1999 9 272 Patrik Stefan (Atlanta Thrashers)
2000 Canadian Airlines Saddledome Calgary, Alberta June 24–25, 2000 9 293 Rick DiPietro (New York Islanders)
2001 National Car Rental Center Sunrise, Florida June 23–24, 2001 9 289 Ilya Kovalchuk (Atlanta Thrashers)
2002 Air Canada Centre Toronto, Ontario June 22–23, 2002 9 290 Rick Nash (Columbus Blue Jackets)
2003 Gaylord Entertainment Center Nashville, Tennessee June 21–22, 2003 9 292 Marc-Andre Fleury (Pittsburgh Penguins)
2004 RBC Center Raleigh, North Carolina June 26–27, 2004 9 291 Alexander Ovechkin (Washington Capitals)
2005 Westin Hotel Ottawa1 Ottawa, Ontario July 30, 2005 7 230 Sidney Crosby (Pittsburgh Penguins)
2006 General Motors Place Vancouver, British Columbia June 24, 2006 7 213 Erik Johnson (St. Louis Blues)
2007 Nationwide Arena Columbus, Ohio June 22–23, 2007 7 211 Patrick Kane (Chicago Blackhawks)
2008 Scotiabank Place Ottawa, Ontario June 20–21, 2008 7 211 Steven Stamkos (Tampa Bay Lightning)
2009 Bell Centre Montreal, Quebec June 26–27, 2009 7 211 John Tavares (New York Islanders)
2010 Staples Center Los Angeles, California June 25–26, 2010 7 210 Taylor Hall (Edmonton Oilers)
2011 Xcel Energy Center St. Paul, Minnesota June 24–25, 2011 7 211 Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (Edmonton Oilers)
2012 Consol Energy Center Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania June 22–23, 2012 7 211 Nail Yakupov (Edmonton Oilers)
2013 Prudential Center Newark, New Jersey June 30, 2013 7 211 Nathan MacKinnon (Colorado Avalanche)
2014 Wells Fargo Center Philadelphia, Pennsylvania June 27–28, 2014 7 210 Aaron Ekblad (Florida Panthers)
2015 BB&T Center Sunrise, Florida June 26–27, 2015 7 211 Connor McDavid (Edmonton Oilers)
2016 First Niagara Center Buffalo, New York June 24–25, 2016 7 211 Auston Matthews (Toronto Maple Leafs)
2017 United Center Chicago, Illinois June 23–24, 2017 7 217 Nico Hischier (New Jersey Devils)
2018 American Airlines Center Dallas, Texas June 22–23, 2018 7 217 Rasmus Dahlin (Buffalo Sabres)
2019 Rogers Arena Vancouver, British Columbia June 21–22, 2019 7 217 Jack Hughes (New Jersey Devils)
2020 NHL Network studios2 Secaucus, New Jersey October 6–7, 2020 7 2163 Alexis Lafreniere (New York Rangers)
2021 July 23–24, 2021 7 2233 Owen Power (Buffalo Sabres)
2022 Bell Centre Montreal, Quebec July 7–8, 2022 7 225 Juraj Slafkovsky (Montreal Canadiens)
2023 Bridgestone Arena Nashville, Tennessee June 28–29, 2023 7 224 Connor Bedard (Chicago Blackhawks)
2024 Sphere Paradise, Nevada June 28–29, 2024 7 225 Macklin Celebrini (San Jose Sharks)
Notes
  1. Originally scheduled to be hosted at Corel Centre; venue location changed due to scheduling conflict related to the league's CBA negotiations that ended the 2004–05 lockout.
  2. Originally scheduled to be hosted at the Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec, from June 26–27 before the season was suspended after March 11, 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic; draft was held via conference call as a result. The 2021 draft was also held via conference call due to the pandemic.
  3. The Arizona Coyotes forfeited their 2020 second-round pick as the result of a penalty due to violations of the NHL Combine Testing Policy during the 2019–20 NHL season. They also forfeited their 2021 first-round pick.[22]

Broadcasting

[edit]

SportsChannel America began covering the NHL Draft in the United States with the 1989 NHL Entry Draft being the first NHL draft ever televised.

Currently the rights to the draft are held by ESPN, Sportsnet, TVA Sports and the NHL Network which only broadcasts the second to last round of the draft.

Formerly the rights to the drafts were held by NBC Sports and were aired on NBCSN (formerly known as Versus from 2006 to 2011).

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
General
  • "NHL Draft – Historical Top Draft Picks". National Hockey League. Retrieved July 1, 2009.
  • "NHL Draft Historic Locations". National Hockey League. Retrieved July 1, 2009.
  • "NHL Draft History". National Hockey League. Archived from the original on January 28, 2001. Retrieved July 2, 2009.
Specific
  1. ^ a b c d e "NHL Draft History". National Hockey League. Archived from the original on January 28, 2001. Retrieved July 2, 2009.
  2. ^ a b "Sweeping Changes In Pro-Am Hockey Pact". Winnipeg Free Press. Winnipeg, Manitoba. August 19, 1966. p. 22.Free access icon
  3. ^ Gross, George (August 30, 1966). "CAHA Becomes Bonus Baby Sitter". Brandon Sun. Brandon, Manitoba. p. 8.Free access icon
  4. ^ Kimelman, Adam (June 10, 2009). "Picking top 3 all-time draft classes easy as 1 2 3". National Hockey League. Retrieved July 2, 2009.
  5. ^ Kreiser, John (June 25, 2009). "Drafting by the Numbers". National Hockey League. Retrieved July 2, 2009.
  6. ^ Brunt, Stephen (2006). Searching for Bobby Orr. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-676-97651-9.
  7. ^ "NHL finalizing details to hold 'dramatic' 2024 NHL Draft in Vegas Sphere". NHL.com. 2023-12-05. Retrieved 2023-12-07.
  8. ^ Johnston, Chris. "Majority of NHL teams support decentralization of draft". The Athletic. Retrieved 2023-12-07.
  9. ^ "Islanders have best shot at top pick". National Hockey League. April 14, 2009. Retrieved July 2, 2009.
  10. ^ a b Kimelman, Adam (June 13, 2009). "Final order for Entry Draft set". National Hockey League. Retrieved July 2, 2009.
  11. ^ "Hockey Operations Guidelines". National Hockey League. May 10, 2010. Retrieved April 18, 2016.
  12. ^ National Hockey League Collective Bargaining Agreement, Article 8: Entry Draft Archived March 24, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ Staff, TSN ca (2023-06-29). "NHL Draft Lottery History". TSN. Retrieved 2024-03-03.
  14. ^ "NHL draft lottery to debut in 1995". Tampa Bay Times. Retrieved 2024-03-03.
  15. ^ "How the NHL Draft Lottery has changed over the years". www.sportsnet.ca. Retrieved 2024-03-03.
  16. ^ Gulitti, Tom (March 23, 2021). "NHL Draft Lottery changes announced for 2021". Retrieved April 9, 2021.
  17. ^ "How does the NHL draft lottery work? Everything you need to know". ESPN.com. 2023-05-08. Retrieved 2024-03-03.
  18. ^ Larkin, Matt (2021-03-24). "Which Recent NHL Draft Lottery Outcomes Led to the New Rule Changes?". The Hockey News. Retrieved 2024-06-10.
  19. ^ "NHL announces changes to Draft Lottery format". NHL.com. August 20, 2014. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  20. ^ Allen, Kevin. "NHL making changes to draft lottery". USA TODAY. Retrieved 2024-03-03.
  21. ^ "COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AGREEMENT BETWEEN NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE AND NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE PLAYERS' ASSOCIATION" (PDF). NHLPA. Retrieved January 6, 2023.
  22. ^ "NHL announces sanctions to Coyotes for violating combine testing policy". August 26, 2020. Retrieved October 1, 2020.
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