It's turned out to be the right decision for Valimaki (6-foot-1, 204 pounds) who is third among WHL defensemen with 12 goals and 35 points. He earned an A rating from NHL Central Scouting on its players to watch list for the 2017 NHL Draft.
Helping in his success this season has been his family; his mother, Mia, and two brothers moved to Kennewick, Washington in August, and Juuso lives with them along with teammate Michael Rasmussen, a center who also earned an A rating from Central Scouting.
"We knew we were going to have different billets," Valimaki said. "Me and Michael wanted to live together. We didn't know where we were going to go and what was going to happen.
"Then my mom had an idea and she saw the opportunity there to move. I think it's been really good for us. I think it's been good for [his brothers] too, to see another country, another culture. My brothers are both in school and playing here too. I think it's been a really good experience for them too."
Mia and Juuso's younger brothers Niko, age 14, and Rasmus, 6, have had the opportunity to watch Valimaki continue to build on a solid first season in Tri-City, when he had seven goals and 32 points in 56 games, and helped Finland to a gold medal as captain at the 2016 IIHF World Under-18 Championship.
"I think his offensive game has really come along this year," said John Williams of NHL Central Scouting. "He's got a fair number of goals and he's pushing the game offensively more than he did last year. Last year he was good offensively … he moved the puck but he got hurt and missed a lot of time. He was feeling his way more last year.
"This year he's been more assertive and he's trying to dictate the game more."