Rounding out the top five International skaters are right wing Vasili Podkolzin (6-1, 190) of SKA St. Petersburg in Russia's junior league; defenseman Philip Broberg (6-3, 199) of AIK in Sweden's second division; center Ilya Nikolaev (6-0, 190) of Yaroslavl in Russia's junior league; and defenseman Victor Soderstrom (5-11, 179) of Brynas in the Swedish Hockey League.
"Kakko and Podkolzin are both excellent players but Kakko is, at present, the better player," NHL director of European Scouting Goran Stubb said. "Kakko is more mature, bigger and stronger. In their local leagues Kakko is playing in Finland's top league with a big role on a strong team. I would say at present there is still a pretty good gap between the two."
The No. 1 North American goalie is Spencer Knight (6-3, 197) of the NTDP. He's followed by Hunter Jones (6-4, 196) of Peterborough in the Ontario Hockey League, Mads Sogaard (6-7, 192) of Medicine Hat (WHL), and Cameron Rowe (6-2, 201) of the NTDP.
"Knight has a lot of the same qualities as Carey Price (Montreal Canadiens) in his draft year," Al Jensen of NHL Central Scouting said. "He's one of the best goalie prospects I've seen in years. He's calm, poised and has the size. He's smart and his instincts are very good."
The 17-year-old stopped 12 of 13 shots in 29:52 of ice time for Team Jamie Langenbrunner at the USA Hockey All-American Prospects Game on Sept. 19. Committed to Boston College for 2019-20, he is 14-2-0 with a 2.42 goals-against average and .920 save percentage in 18 games this season.
The No. 1 International goalie is Pyotr Kochetkov (6-3, 205) of Ryazan in Russia's junior league. The 19-year-old went 4-1-0 with a 1.45 goals-against average and .953 save percentage in five games for Russia, which won the bronze medal at the WJC.
"Kochetkov is a late bloomer," Stubb said. "He's had an excellent fall with Ryazan in the minors and was solid for Russia at the World Junior tournament."