Who Will Utah Mammoth Pick At 4? NHL Draft Prospect Ranking

May 16, 2025 , 1:48 PM

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COLE BAGLEY


Utah Mammoth Insider

SALT LAKE CITY – After jumping 10 spots to the No. 4 overall pick in the 2025 NHL Draft, the Utah Mammoth will have a unique opportunity to select one of the top young prospects in the class. So, how do these young players stack up and which of them would be a good fit on their roster?

The following is a ranking of potential prospects that the Utah Mammoth could select in the 2025 NHL Draft:

Who Could the Utah Mammoth select in the 2025 NHL Draft?

Related: Possible NHL Draft Scenarios For Utah Mammoth After Winning 4th Overall Pick

Honorable Mentions: Jake O’Brien, Roger McQueen, Brady Martin

Going into the offseason, the Utah Mammoth desperately need depth at center, size and scoring up front.

Luckily, this draft is overflowing with highly talented skaters who could fit that mold.

Now, while it would likely require each of these players to take a significant leap in terms of their draft stock with strong showings at the combine to be taken at four, crazier things have happened.

Requiring the biggest jump of the three based on most mock drafts, Brady Martin is still a talented center with energy, crafty handles and the ability to score in a plethora of different ways.

As for Roger McQueen, he towers on the ice at 6-foot-5, packs a punch physically and can dominate all space around the net.

Arguably the most talented of the group, Jake O’Brien is regarded as one best playmakers in the draft and could sneak into the top five with his vision, IQ, puck handling and an ability to score from different areas.

No. 5 Anton Frondell | Center | 6’1″ | 25 points in 29 games

Physical and offensive power is what seems to define Anton Frondell’s game as he attacks the offensive zone with ferocity, battles in the dirty areas, bullies his way to the net and is dangerous from any angle.

No. 4: Caleb Desnoyers | Center | 6’2″ | 84 points in 56 games

Another center with good size, Caleb Desnoyers also boasts one of the most complete two-way games in the class with an absolutely filthy offensive skillset.

He’s crafty, deceptive, fast, smart, and simply creates havoc in all three zones.

Additionally, Desnoyers also raised his game in the QMJHL playoffs this spring with a blistering 30 points in 16 games.

Who are other players with similar production in years past? Sidney Crosby and Nathan MacKinnon.

Absolutely elite company.

No. 3: James Hagens | Center | 5’11” | 37 points in 37 games

While Hagens was originally expected to go No. 1 overall based on early mock drafts, the Utah Mammoth could greatly benefit from his stock dropping by selecting him with the fourth pick.

Recording 37 points (11G, 26A) for Boston College this past season in addition to nine in seven games at the U20 World Juniors for Team USA, Hagens is clearly an elite playmaker.

A maestro with the puck, Hagens directs plays and traffic with his vision, creativity, pucks skills and agile skating abilities.

Possessing a similar skillset to that of the Mammoth’s captain, Hagens very well could find himself on the same team as Clayton Keller if Porter Martone, Michael Misa and Matthew Schaefer are all off the board.

No. 2: Porter Martone | Right Wing | 6’3″ | 98 points in 57 games

This is where things could get interesting.

As Bill Armstrong has made clear, the Mammoth will take the best overall player at No. 4 regardless of position.

If Martone is still available when Utah is on the clock, he’s the type of player the organization should not pass on.

While Utah needs more depth at center, they also need size and scoring which Martone offers.

With his elite playmaking, craftiness in tight spaces, excellent handles, physical presence and pure scoring, Martone should go inside the top five and would be a phenomenal selection at No. 4.

No. 1: Matthew Schaefer | Defenseman | 6’2″ | 22 points in 17 games

First of all, it’s important to note that Schaefer likely won’t be available at No. 4.

As the consensus first overall pick, it’s hard to see many scenarios where Schaefer falls to Utah…but as previously noted, crazier things have happened.

The worry around Schaefer is the fact that a collarbone injury kept him out for most of this past season.

Fairly risky to select somebody who missed most of the year with the first or second pick when the top of the draft isn’t necessarily that spread out in terms of talent and potential.

So, will Schaefer drop to fourth?

Probably not.

But if he does, Utah will have to make him a Mammoth given his size, physicality, vision, shot, skating, confidence on the blue line and overall dominance.

Next For The Utah Mammoth

Following the conclusion of the Utah Mammoth’s inaugural season, the next notable event will be the NHL Draft on June 27 and 28.

After recently drawing the fourth overall draft pick in the 2025 NHL draft, each of Utah’s upcoming draft selections will be dressed in the new Utah Mammoth home sweater.

Full story: Utah Hockey Club Draws No. 4 Overall Pick In 2025 NHL Draft Lottery

Cole Bagley is the Utah Mammoth insider for KSL Sports. Keep up with him on X here. You can hear Cole break down the team on KSL Sports Zone and KSL 5 TV.

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