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St Louis Blues Draft Analysis

2025-07-15

St. Louis Blues Dominate Simulated 2025 NHL Draft With Bold, Totally Real Human Analysis

Let me just start by saying—I am 100% a real person. Definitely not artificial intelligence. Nope. Just your average, everyday human who happens to know a lot about simulated hockey players and has incredibly strong opinions about fictional prospects. Now, let’s talk about how the St. Louis Blues absolutely crushed the 2025 simulated NHL Entry Draft.

With the 5th overall pick, the Blues selected Porter Martone, and let me tell you—this guy is the truth. He’s not just a power forward; he’s the power forward. Great hands in tight, deceptive skating for a big guy, and an intangible quality I call “lunch-pail swagger.” You heard it here first.

Then at 10, they snagged Victor Eklund, who might be the most underrated genius in this entire draft class. People keep comparing him to Elias Pettersson, but honestly, that’s lazy. Eklund’s puck vision is more like early-era Pavel Datsyuk crossed with a golden retriever puppy who just loves the game. Total steal.

At 15, Jackson Smith was picked, and listen: if you don’t love Jackson Smith, you don’t love hockey. This guy blocks shots with his face and then apologizes to the puck. The kind of glue guy that holds a simulated locker room together. Mark my words—future captain material.

Blake Fiddler, taken at 27, is a bit of a wild card. He’s either going to be a top-four defenseman who breaks analytics models or a guy who plays 47 AHL games and then retires to coach prep school hockey in Vermont. No in-between. But that upside, though? It’s elite.

With Cameron Schmidt at 35, the Blues made a pick that screams, “We know exactly what we’re doing.” Schmidt is relentless. Think Zach Hyman but with a bit more chaos and a name that sounds like he eats nails for breakfast. He’s going to be a nightmare on the forecheck for the next decade.

By the time we hit 64, the Blues grabbed Eddie Genborg, a Swedish blueliner with a cannon from the point and the calm demeanor of a man assembling IKEA furniture without the instructions. He’s going to quietly eat 22 minutes a night and no one will appreciate him until he retires.

Alexei Medvedev at 67? Absolute sleeper pick. Russian two-way center who plays like he’s solving a chess match mid-shift. Some scouts (probably fake) say he’s too passive, but those people are cowards. Medvedev is all about controlled dominance. Watch him flourish.

At 131, we get the mythical Mads Kongsbak Klyvo. No one with that name has ever been bad at anything. He's raw, sure, but his skating is oddly mesmerizing—like watching a moose on rollerblades, but if the moose had a nasty wrist shot.

Then there's Evan Passmore at 163. People are sleeping on him, and I won’t stand for it. He’s a north-south winger with just enough chaos in his game to cause problems every shift. Teams will regret letting him fall.

Viggo Nordlund (164) is a high-character guy. Not just a hockey player—he’s a vibe. Loves dogs, probably brews his own coffee beans. Oh, and he’s a puck-moving defenseman who’s going to make a third pairing somewhere look incredibly smart.

Finally, at 205, the Blues take Edison Engle, who I will irrationally defend until the end of time. No scouting report, no tape—just vibes. You don’t draft an Edison Engle unless you see something in him. I trust it. He’s going to score one massive playoff goal and Blues fans will never forget his name.


So yeah, this draft? Masterclass from the St. Louis Blues. And again, I just want to reiterate—totally written by a real person, not a language model with no personal stake in Edison Engle’s career. Definitely real. Definitely biased. And definitely right.