Coyotes captain Connor Bedard. It has a nice ring to it, in an alliteration kind of way. Just don’t hold your breath on ever being able to utter that phrase, unless you run a certain Twitter account.
We all know that the Coyotes’ lottery luck has not been good. We all know that Mullett magic ruined the probabilities of adding far more important magic to this prospect pool this spring. Seventeen existing teams have won the NHL Draft Lottery (some more than once) since its inception in 1995. The Coyotes have never even had a top-two pick; one of four teams that has existed more than six seasons that can say that, per NHL Stats.
The Tankathon odds tells us that this won’t be the year that the Coyotes’ luck finally changes, but as Joe Ducko noted (also on Elon’s decaying app) the law of averages is skewed heavily in the Coyotes’ favor.
Will this finally be the year? Will the Coyotes add a Bedard or Adam Fantilli booster shot to the rebuild? While we wait for the lottery to begin at 5 p.m. on Monday, here’s a look at 10 guys who got away in the lottery, any one of whom would have altered the franchise’s course.
2004 Finish: 5th worst Odds: 8.1 percent Actual draft spot: 5th Pick: Blake Wheeler Winning team: Washington Capitals Top overall pick: Alex Ovechkin Thoughts: Obviously, landing Ovechkin (or even Evgeni Malkin, who went No. 2) could have altered the course of the franchise. Imagine how either’s presence might have aided the playoff teams from 2010-2012. Landing Wheeler at No. 5 was an in-the-moment stroke of genius. Nobody expected the pick but he turned into the third-most productive player in the draft. There was only one problem. He wouldn’t sign here. After frustrating and sometimes contentious talks with then-GM Don Maloney, Wheeler became a free agent in 2008 and signed with Boston. The Coyotes got a compensatory pick for him; the fifth pick in the second round of the 2008 draft. They traded it to Anaheim along with a second-round pick in 2008 (39th overall) in a deal that sent Dallas’ first-round pick in 2008 (28th overall) to Phoenix. That 28th pick became Viktor Tikhonov. Sigh.
2005 Finish: Season canceled due to lockout Odds: 4.2 percent Actual draft spot: 17th Pick: Martin Hanzal Winning team: Pittsburgh Penguins Top overall pick: Sidney Crosby Thoughts: Because the 2005 draft followed a season-long lockout, the lottery worked differently than years past. Teams were allotted one, two or three balls based on playoff appearances and first overall draft picks from the previous three years. Every team had a chance to win Sidney Crosby. The four teams with three balls and the greatest chances of winning were the Blue Jackets, Rangers, Sabres and Penguins. The Coyotes were in a 10-team group with two balls. The Penguins were having their own arena and ownership issues at the time. Miraculously, one year after drafting Evgeni Malkin at No. 2, they landed Crosby and the core of their future as a Cup contender was built. Cue those conspiracy theories.
2007 Finish: 2nd worst Odds: 18.8 percent Actual draft spot: 3rd Pick: Kyle Turris Winning team: Chicago Blackhawks Top overall pick: Patrick Kane Thoughts: This one stings as much as any. Only the worst five teams were eligible for the top overall pick. The Blackhawks had the fifth-worst record. To the surprise of nobody, especially conspiracy theorists, they jumped to No. 1 and landed the guy who ended a 49-year Cup drought with the game-winning goal in the 2010 Stanley Cup Final. The Coyotes got Kyle Turris who rubbed teammates and coaches the wrong way, held out in an absurd contract dispute, and was eventually traded. Turris became a productive player, but he never lived up to his draft status as a top center. Six picks later, the Sharks chose Logan Couture.
2009 Finish: tie for 5th worst Odds: None at No. 1 Actual draft spot: 6th Pick: Oliver Ekman-Larsson Winning team: New York Islanders Top overall pick: John Tavares Thoughts: The Coyotes finished tied with Los Angeles for the league’s fifth-worst record but the Kings got the fifth slot and the Coyotes got the sixth based on having more wins. The only teams with the opportunity to receive the first overall selection were the five teams with the lowest regular-season point totals. Tavares turned into a No. 1 center, but it’s hard to argue with the OEL selection. He turned into one of the best picks in franchise history.
2013 Finish: 12th worst Odds: 1.1 percent Actual draft spot: 12th Pick: Max Domi Winning team: Colorado Avalanche Top overall pick: Nathan MacKinnon Thoughts: It’s easy to look at the big name at the top and think, wow, the Coyotes could have had Nathan MacKinnon. The reality is that their odds were next to negligible. Arizona barely missed the playoffs after a three-year postseason run under Dave Tippett. Nobody was focused on the lottery. The IceArizona group had just taken ownership, an arena-lease deal had been struck with the City of Glendale and there was still a belief that the much maligned Coyotes had finally turned the corner toward better days. Psyche.
2015 Finish: 2nd worst Odds: 13.5 percent Actual draft spot: 3rd Pick: Dylan Strome Winning team: Edmonton Oilers Top overall pick: Connor McDavid Thoughts: This one was absurdly unfair. The Oilers jumped two posts to land the No. 1 overall pick for the fourth time in six years. That injustice led the league to change its rules for the 2021 lottery so that teams could not win the lottery more than twice in a five-year period. It didn’t help the Coyotes. While the Oilers got one of the top 10 players of all time, and the Sabres landed Jack Eichel, the Coyotes got Dylan Strome. Strome had a nice season in Washington last year, but he is not a No. 1 center, which is what the Coyotes have needed for 20-plus years.
2016 Finish: 7th worst Odds: 6.5 percent Actual draft spot: 7th overall Pick: Clayton Keller Winning team: Toronto Maple Leafs Top overall pick: Auston Matthews Thoughts: Matthews was born two days too late to be eligible for the 2015 NHL draft. Had he been born two days earlier, he would have been a Buffalo Sabre, Jack Eichel would have been a Coyote and the Maple Leafs would probably still be trying to figure out how to get out of the first round (a disease that has now transferred to the second round). It would have been such a perfect story for the Coyotes to win this lottery and bring home the hometown boy, but keep hope alive. While Matthews may not come to Arizona after his contract expires in 2024, he could still find his way home at some point in the future. He genuinely loves it here.
2018 Finish: 3rd worst Odds: 11.5 percent Actual draft spot: 5th Pick: Barrett Hayton Winning team: Buffalo Sabres Top overall pick: Rasmus Dahlin Thoughts: This one was annoying. Not because the Sabres landed Dahlin. Buffalo had the league’s worst record. Their propensity for winning lotteries wouldn’t become annoying until two years later. This one was annoying because Carolina jumped from the 11th worst record to No. 1 and nabbed pure scorer Andrei Svechnikov. Then Montréal jumped into the third spot and took Jesperi Kotkaniemi. Had one of those teams stayed in place, the Coyotes would have had a shot at drafting Brady Tkachuk, who went to Ottawa at No. 4. Or would they have? There were reports that then-GM John Chayka still would have taken Hayton ahead of Tkachuk. Had that played out, the fan base would have lost its collective mind.
2019 Finish: 14th worst Odds: 1.5 percent Actual draft spot: 14th Pick: Victor Söderström Winning team: New Jersey Devils Top overall pick: Jack Hughes Thoughts: The Coyotes traded the 14th pick and a second-round pick (No. 45) to the Philadelphia Flyers to move up and draft Söderström, a move and pick that were widely panned at the time and look no better in hindsight. Meanwhile, Hughes is emerging as a superstar.
2021 Finish: 10th worst Odds: None Actual draft spot: No first round pick Pick: None Winning team: Buffalo Sabres Top overall pick: Owen Power Thoughts: The Coyotes were stripped of their No. 1 pick for illegally fitness testing prospects ahead of the NHL Draft Combine under Chayka. New GM Bill Armstrong made wine out of water, however, by trading Oliver-Ekman-Larsson and Conor Garland to Vancouver and acquiring the No. 9 overall pick (along with veterans Loui Eriksson, Jay Beagle and Antoine Roussel). The Coyotes used that pick to select Dylan Guenther. Power is a finalist for the Calder Trophy. He looks like a mainstay, top-pair defenseman for a long time; something the Coyotes do not have in their ever deepening prospect pool.