Tyson Hinds said two emotions quickly come to mind when he thinks about the 2021 NHL Draft.
"I'm a little bit stressed, I'm not going to lie to you," the defenseman for Rimouski of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League said. "But I'm excited."
Hinds is one of at least six players of color who could be selected in the 2021 NHL Draft. The first round is July 23 (8 p.m. ET; ESPN2, SN, SN Now) with rounds 2-7 Saturday (11 a.m. ET; NHLN, SN NOW).
Here's a look at some of the players available:
Tyson Hinds, D, Rimouski (QMJHL)NHL Central Scouting ranking: No. 73 (North American skaters)
Hinds (6-foot-3, 178 pounds) credits a change of scenery for taking him from a draft question mark to an attractive prospect.
The 18-year-old from Gatineau, Quebec, scored 15 points (six goals, nine assists) in 23 games with Rimouski after he was acquired in a trade with Shawinigan, where he had one assist in 10 games.
"At the beginning of the season, I wasn't really confident," he said. "When I got traded to Rimouski, it was a new start for me."
The change made Hinds become one of the most improved QMJHL players last season, Central Scouting's Jean-Francois Damphousse said.
"He obviously got the opportunity to play an offensive game more, got some power-play time and did extremely well," Damphousse said. "Early in the year, I started to doubt if he would be drafted at all. With the progression I've seen in Rimouski, I wouldn't be surprised to see him go mid-draft."
Trevor Wong, LW, Kelowna (WHL)NHL Central Scouting ranking: No. 90 (North American skaters)
Wong (5-8, 154) averaged a point a game last season, scoring 16 points (six goals, 10 assists) in 16 games with Kelowna of the Western Hockey League. The 18-year-old Vancouver native scored 14 points (six goals, eight assists) in 58 games in 2019-20.
"I wasn't in the first (2021) rankings," said Wong, who is of Chinese and Indonesian heritage. "I had a chat with my coach, and I said, 'I'm not worried at all, I know I'm a good player, I know what I can do.' I didn't think about the draft at all during the short season. I just went out and played my game."
Kelowna coach Kris Mallette said Wong is "a smaller player, quite tenacious, has very good edges and skates extremely well."
"I'd say he's more of a playmaker," Mallette said. "I'd like him to be a little bit more selfish at times."
Wong said he's working to heed his coach's advice.
"I've been working on my shot," he said. "I definitely need to get that 'shoot a little bit more' mentality."