Cederqvist's 6-foot-3, 196-pound frame makes him unique in the Sabres' stable of forwards at the Prospects Challenge, which is ladened with speed, skill, and two-way work ethic but features no players as large as the 22-year-old winger. (Olivier Nadeau, a fourth-round pick who signed his entry-level deal, profiles similarly to Cederqvist in terms of size but is not playing due to a shoulder injury.)
He spent the last two seasons in Sweden learning to use his frame to his advantage offensively, making a concerted effort to crash the net at the correct times. The production followed, first with a 36-point season in Sweden's second tier Allsvenskan league in 2020-21.
He graduated to the Swedish Hockey League last season and scored 14 goals and 32 points in 49 games with Djurgardens IF. He was linemates with the team's leading scorer, former NHL forward Marcus Sorensen.
"I spent a lot of time in front of the net just trying to be strong there," he said.
He developed into a legitimate prospect for the Sabres in the meantime. Director of player development Adam Mair has worked with Cederqvist every step of the way since his draft. Mair and his staff pushed for the organization to reward Cederqvist with the two-year, entry-level deal he received in June.
"Here's a kid that's a late bloomer, wasn't really on the Swedish national team's radar when he was younger, and is just going [upward] at just a slow and steady march," Amerks coach Seth Appert said.
"His work ethic is high, his attitude's great, so those are great kids to work with because you want to be around guys like that. So, that's a credit to him. I think he's gonna be a good fit for us."